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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1952)
t m w rMQuB Uul uuiyJUDSHS : Mb .s Br rilANK JKNKINH To everyone who bud followed understanding Iv the preliminary auarrlng, It appeared certain that Ilia hluh dramatlo hour o( Uie llenubllcan national convention ul IW6a would come when the docUloiu ol Uie organisation-ruled credon- lata committee reached the con vention Door on appeal. Wlml happened laat nlitlit fully juntllled that juriiiineut. The roll call hy alalea that roveracd the oommlllee'e decision on Georgia waa hluh, tenae, emotion-packed drama. . It waa more than that. It wm hhtory-making In Uie raw. If fir la what hairnetied! 'lte old leadorshlu of the Repub lican parly came to the end ol It alrlnit and new leadership took over. Hi lurnlntt point. It seemed to me. came aloiiK lowatd the end of Uie linpaaaloned oraUon by Sen elor Dtrknen of llllnola In behalf ol the Tall tlelegetea from Georgia. He turned to Uovernor Uewev of New York, who 1 aupporllng Elseii bower, and said to him what amounted to Uil: "We followed , vou to defeat. We followed vou loyally TWICK to defeat. We Uilnk we re entitled to demand now Unit YOU FOLLOW U8 TO DEFEAT." Thone weren't hit worda. but Uial la what a majority of the delexalea ' on the floor took his words to mean. 11 Infuriated them, tliey I.. ...nnrf In fnlloW ANY- ni.iY to defeat. They want to fnilow somebody to vlriorv and the reronitrucllon of America In a new and better pattern. At that moment the llnee hard eneil From there on. Inalcal erRti I until had no weight. Men set their Jaws ai.d voted grlmlv according ., . ti.... ..n..ctived Ia be the bare and naked Issues of till his toric convention. . The issue Uisl stood put bare and naked waa this' The old eader- ..... -i . ... naniitillean nartv haa outlived H dav. It's hluh tune for NEW leaderaitip. M. i I i-llu t the vol bv -inn - , . Males on the Oeornla contest told the story. When lv waa mw the new Iraderahln waa In control. .......i ii .n .iiu In enntrfll and can nominate Oeneral F-enhower aa Ita candidate remains " It an ancient and hallowed ahlbbolelh of the polltlclana that anvlhlnt can happen at a cmvta lion. But I think no one doubta Una morning that Oeneral Eisen hower la the probable nominee of thla convention. What we aaw laat nlRht waa the birth of a new nemibllcan parlv. 11 was born In turmoil and tense ....... ui wa Iteveo hloh and .,' iiniu There wore tlsl tlgbla on tlx floor. . Put that U the. way great new . ... ,-. I MAuamMii mrm hnen. Th.nl la the wav the Republican parlv llseil waa oorn oac m daya of lsoO. There were fist flRhl then plenty oi tncm. ana t bloody notes. ti it in momenta of hlRn and i.n.o nintmn that men rise to their Idcallatlo best. What happened laat night was ruKited. Al times. It waa brutal. ,.., I.. Ill- ! brutal What VIA WftlS seelnR last nlfthl waa the end of the old bull Uiat nas ruiea me herd. In hia dav, ha ruled II wlaelv and well, protecting It aitalnst the circling wolves. n..i h nM hull ean't live for ever. In time, a voung bull arises and chnllenitea his leadership, wnai follows Is no lea parlv. It la battle I ih finuh with nn hnlda barred. What we aaw In Chlcano last nlpht waa the end of the old bull's reln. The grim, determined over, throw of the credentials committee decision on Georgia left no doubt of that. I don't doubt that In the new leadership of the Republican pnrtv that ahowed Its power last nlRht there are men who are looking for neraonal advancement. But In the main this thing that came Into iselnn on the floor ol the convention hall In Chlcano in the late nlRht hours of yoslerdav lin t lust a political campalRn to Rel Into power and divide the offices, it is more In the nature ol a muvc WENT. In Its essence. It Is another search for Uie Holy Grail. It Is ,- another Third Crusade. I know that sounds Idealistic But the Declaration of Indepcnd ' ence was Idealism of the hlRhcst order. Ho was the constitution of the United States. So. for that matter, was the vounu Republican party Pack in lnoo when it nomi nated Abraham Lincoln, one of the treat Idealist of all lime. It wasn't lust POWER those Rcpublt can deleRatea were looking for then. In their minds waa the Ideal Of an UN8EVERED Union and the end of human slavery In America. ' You will itather from all thla. t suppose, that I too am a starry- aved dreamer. Well, to an extent, Hint Is true. You have to DREAM before you can DO, Anyway, millions of Americans look upon tills struggle to nominate Oeneral Elsenhower as a sacred sause rather than as a campaign :o Ret your man into office. That why It hss shown such strenKth it Chlcano. Roosevelt Likes Ike DENVER m Elliott Roosevelt, inn of the late presidont said Thursday he Intends to vote lor lcn. Dwlght D. Elsenhowor In lovembcr if the general gets the lepubllcsn presidential nomlna Ion. - " Roosevelt ' Is vacationing on anch near Meeker In Northwest rn Colorado. Ho told Uis Denver Post by telo- ihone: "I've long been an Ike nupport r, I was for him In 1018. I'm r him now." Roosevelt, described himself as one of the millions of democrats" 'ho will vote (or Elsenhower If wins the nomination, UUID Republican Platform Favors West By B. L. MVINOHTONE CHICAGO lpi Republican Col toy trainers came out Thursday with a platform carefully tailored to western prohlema, going all the way for groator development and morn local control ol the Weal's natural resourcea. A a western platform plank, It waa a loughly-worded attack on fcdenU "bureuuerary" and "soc ialistic valley authorities." It favored return to the atutes of the oll.ru h offshore tidal lands, "reasonable" tax depletion allow. ancea fur oil and other mineral producers, uvernmenl Incentives for mineral exploration, and protec tion of American flsherlea agnlnst "unfair forelitn competition It rapped the growing amount of lax-fice lederitl lands, and came out lor legislation Riving stale courts independent review of "ad' mlnlutrative invasion" of the rights of local cltlr.eua, Ht'iiMirn:i) Aa submitted to the convention, the OOP western policy statement JuM about fit the measurements provided by western deleiiatea, A pre-convention conference of representatives of Uie 11 western stslea, presided over by Patrick J, Hurley ol New Mexico, drafted a list of recommendations followed pretty neutrally by the platform committee. In many respects II waa a broad er statement ol uor western aims than that adopted by Uie ItHi con vention. 'nils waa especially true respect Iiir that section dealing with public lanus. The western stales conference ac-nuuiirru wnai iv canea KrowinR I eitcmMrlimeiiL nf lh nnvemmjinl on western land with resultant loss to stale tax rolls. It also was crit ical ol lack ol "legal redress' by ranchers and others on govern ment Iwnd The platform submitted to the 1962 convention favored "restora tion of tin traditional Republican public land policy, which provided opportunity for ownership by cit Ixens to promote Uie highest land use. TAX HTI'DY It also favored an Impartial study of lax-free federal lands and their effect on state and local econ omies. Policy draflera came out most strongly, however, lor "elimination of arbitrary bureaucratic pracll ces In lederal menaRemcnl ol public lands and forests. "To this end," they said, "we favor leulslatlon to define the rights and privileges of graters and oUier cooperation and users, to provide Uie protection of Inde pendent Judicial review agnlnat ad ministrative Invasions of those right and privileges, and to pro tect Uie puollo against corrupt or monopolistic exploitation and bu rraucrallo favoritism." The platform also took note of Russian and Japanese Imports of crab and fish with declaration In favor of "protection of our fisher ies by domestic regulation and treaties, Including safeguards against unfair foreign- competi tion." DFPI.ORK rOMCIF.g Platform drafters "deplored the policies of Uie present administra tion which allows special premiums to foreign producers of minerals available In the United Bitten." and favored apeclal premium In centives for exploration and pro duction of strategic and critical raw materials required for stock piling. "We favor reasonable depletion allowances," they declared, "de fense procurement policies, synthe tic fuels research, and public lands policies. Including good faith ad ministration of our mining laws, which will encourage exploration and development of our mineral resources consistent with our grow. lng Industrial and defense needs "on" the score of public works and water policy, the platform endorsed "programs of economically lustlft able publlo works" and "orderly execution" of Water programs in both floods and water-shortage areas, (Complete Republican Platform on Page A.I Bus Driver Wins Oregon's Delegation To Convention By MARY JANE MERRYMAN July 7, Chicago Barney the Bus driver has captured the Oregon del egation by acclamation. He Is Oregon's own chartered bus- driver and handles his 60-posscn-ger bus something in tho style of General Patlon, complete with screaming police escort Somehow 80 steaming Orcgonlans pack them selves m and somehow Barney manages to get them to or from (he Convention Hall all in one piece. more is tne snarp 4 onnnH nf indrawn roams . as , uc skids around the solid steel pillars of the elevated and a sigh of re lief as he emerges Into the clear. ' Then he yells I- "Who's lor Elscn , hower" and the bus rocks with cheers. Chicago knows Oregon is lieio , .Bus 60 gets a wide elenrance for the whole lour-mlle trln. I roue, ones from tho Ilrst ses sion wedged In between Senator Wayne Morse, Jesse Oard of Port land, Bill McAllister ot Mndford and Mrs. Bill Walsh of Coos Bay . . everyone Jubilant over the vic tory of the rules regulation and shouting congratulations to Mrs. Walsh on her husband's hard hitting1 speech before the conveu Hon. He gave a clear, decisive pic ture of the moral Issue Involved and was quick enough to get It Jn before the crowd wilted. What surprise to be back with fen tm ' n S y , , , 0 -i Price Five Cento M Page- KLAMATH FALLH, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1852 Telephone 1111 No. M4 1 rPAST ACCOMPUSIiMMTSHe &muiv mmof mnx l IMS , L ClMrirtt Nmm ... f. Civilian IVirtM t aa - , I ... T. mffo m urn A IROAD OUTLINE ot th Klamath Chamber of Com merce'j "Build the Benin" Elah li;' outlined on Jhe big nner in the fop picture'. In the lower pholo, ( standing, I to r) Frank Tucker, chamber manager, end Olcer Gabbart, "Build the Bin" adviior, confer with E. H. Thompion, who ii co-chairman with Yarn Owtni. Sharp Quake Rocks LA. LOS ANGELES lifl Many sleep ing residents In the Los Angeles area and adjoining communities were roused by a short, sharp earthquake Jolt early Thursday bul there was apparently little dam age. The quake was felt at 1:45 a.m. (PDT) and lasted (or a second or two. In some areas residents said they felt two shocks. Police switch boards were swamped with calls reporting explosions, prowlers and burglars. Many burglar alarms were set off. From reports It appeared the tremor was stronger In West Los Angeles than in other areas. In this secUon ot town a water main In the street broke but emer gency crews quickly went to work repairing it. a Western crowd . , . having been In Chlcivgo (for two years, I had forgotten that fine old custom of men giving their seats to women I Not an Oregon woman Is allowed to stand, although after ine nard seals In the amphitheater it might be a relief. Maybe that accounts for the startled expression on Uie faces of Chlcagoans as Bus 66 ca reens down the street , , . they probably never saw a woman sit ting down In a bus, Oregonlans start' their dav off with breakfast at the Palmer House Some complaints about the t2M bill lor orange Juice, scrambled eggs, hnnii toast and two cups of coffee but everyone fortified him self mightily to make up for the prolonged diet of hot dogs and coke which is nil the convention hall of fers to anyone who doesn't want to loso his soat on the floor. Oregon Is In the front two rows and not a delegate left his scat during the prolonged battle over the rules which opened up the convention. Tn contrast to the packed main floor, the galleries are only half filled. Television has taken its toll of - the slght-seers.- People who brave the orowds take a dim view of television . . . the klleg lights lust about counter-balance the new ly-installed nir-conditloning system. one advantage to Uie small orowd Is that you can pick out your friends all over the huge hall . . , had no trouble at all locating Rep. Harris Ellsworth In a box back of the rostrum. Perhaps It was his summer white suit I Men who braved .the hall In wool coats wore eying him, green with envy. AT taw 4Xi II tl M IS tm H I MM SrKt TO c. 0nmt rv tTftn & touohirmi eorrm it, , -4kwi mg k ri .. i to. t4 I'llfir n. m v 4V ; l Idttorf Tout i L Qmfn-forQtoi : i s st Tule To Have Two-Day Fair TULELAKE September 11-13 have been set as the dates for the 195J Tulelake Agricultural Fair and Junior Livestock Show and Sale. according to an announcement made today by Sam Kellett, new fair manager. The lair has been scheduled for one day only In the last three years, and has stressed SAM KELLETT principally the showing and selling of prime livestock by Four-H and Future Farmer ol America grow ers. Kellett ,who comes highly recom mended tor the duties of whipping the expanding agriculture show into a lull-scale affair, was manager or tne Sacramento county Fair for two and one halt years and of the Napa County Fair for three years. He was accompanied here by Mrs. Kellett. The show and sale will be held again this year on the grounds of the high school, since creation of the new 10-A fair district bv the state legislature came too late for moving tne lair to a new location. Money for prises and premiums nas oeen maae available by the state. In the past the local Rotary club has been responsible for the success ol the Livestock Show and will officiate again this year In cooperation with the fair district. A contest will be conducted be fore the fair for a name. Residents of the fair district only will be eligible to compete for the 1100 cash prise lor tho winning title. All entries must be postmarked noi later man August si and should be mailed to Kellett at his office In the Tulelake Grower's Building, 'j MtMMH Llsva tr9 V LfaMUoq anOaaMrsi iptfwvitk imv Htmm4ttUn . .tl. fnaMl . ' r.tw isArr', , t mut L Chi - a o l Owr reiqrM j. Ur U Hmv , t. Tjw-mr i rnsql4 t Convention Timetable CHICAGO (Pi The Republi can National Committee's offlcal program has been thrown out ot gear by contests over seating rival delegations, but here is the approximate order of business lor Thursday's session: Convention called to order at 10 a.m. PDT. National Anthem. Installation of Rep. Joseph W. Martin Jr., of Massachusetts as permanent chairman. Report of the Resolutions plat form Committee. Address by Sen. Harry P. Cain of Washington. Roll call of states for nomina tions for president. Nominating speeches. Balloting on presidential nom inations. While the balloting was origi nally scheduled to start Wednes day night. Indications arc that It . will be delayed untU Friday with the nominating speeches filling out Thursday's program. Manhunt On Near Eugene EUGENE M" A prisoner en route to Uie slate penitentiary at Salem escaped at Creswell Thurs day, touching on a widespread manhunt. Police set un road-checks at Springfield Bnd Cottage Grove for rrank uayior, 23, wno was Deing taken by Sheriff Loyd Lewis of Josephine County to the state prison. Convicted of forgery in Josephine county, uayior was sentenced to two years in prison. Lewis said Oaylor asked to stop at a Cfeswell garage rest room. While inside, he broke a window and escaped out the back. State police and the Lane County sherilf's office Joined in the search. Springfield and Cottage Grove po lice sot up the road checks. Weather FORECAST Klamath Falla and vicinity and Northern Callfornlai Fair except for possible thunder showers In afternoon and evening today and tomorrow. Low tonight 58, high tomorrow 85. . High yesterday 95 Low last night s........... 87 Preclp yesterday 0 Precip since Oct. 1 . 17.11 Same period last year H.84 Normal for period .- 12.16 (Additional Weather eh Pare 4.) ."" ymmV-U 'i iani.l.in.iiiiui ii il null. i aaistti i si i - ii ii ail M I'd , t. Irff k M n . ITJa, Chamber Eyes Future Basin By WALLACE MYERS If early enthusiasm continues to grow and is transformed into positive action, a Klamath Coun ty Chamber of Commerce cam- pamn now under way may open a new era of growth and stability lor the Klamath country. The chamber is now In the op ganlzatlonal phase of this am bitious "Build the Basin." It Is far more than a mere drive: it is designed to be a long-range activity that calls for a complete reorganization of the chamber structure. Need for such a program has been in the minds of chamber lead ers for several years and spade- work on tne program was actually started several months ago. NEW STRENGTH The campaign is of such magni tude and Importance that it will require a vastly stronger chamber than the present organisation. This first phase of the campaign is channeled- toward-- gaming - this new strength UirouRh increased mem bership and more active participa tion on the part of old members. This week's acUvity is concerned with explaining Uie Dron-am's need and broad outlines to Klamath bus iness and professional men next week, the actual membership drive will be under way. In deciding to launch the cam paign, the chamber Board of Dir ectors secured the services of Os car oabbert, of a national firm of specialists In such. work. Gabbert's work, here ends with this week's educational meetings. Nine basic goals have been list ed for the overall program. They are: water policy. Industrial, tour ist promotion, roads, traffic, agri culture, aviation, recreation and civic affairs. Rpvernl nM.iflA nrn- jects are listed as subheads under each of these divisions. During this week's meetings, at tendees are being asked to criU cle these goals, offering sugges tions as to importance, deletions or additions. CHANGE Frank Tucker, chamber mona ger. has been largely instrumental in adoption of Uie program. As the chamber now functions, a great deal of Tucker's time is consumed by more or less routine chamber business. This reorganisation Dlan Is aimed at freeing Tucker from most of this work in order that he may devote most of his time to pursuing the objectives laid down in the orogram. (In subsequent stories, various phases of this new chamber ac tivity will be published, along with day-by-day reports on the eampaign's progress.) L m ftrer .i-pftH Jbtyi, Utuad 6.1 CfWMr' L feaV I. KS- !frl ." ' LtVwFi sVtSr isV U l. Puerto Rican Delegate Becomes New GOP Hero By ARTHUR EDSON CHICAGO (A The Republican party has a new hero and his name isn't Eisenhower or Taft. He's the man who gave the ten sion-ridden 25th GOP convention its first big relaxing belly laugh. He out some honest fun into the dead ly 'serious politics here. His name Is Senor Marcelino Romany ot Santurce, Puerto Rico. In less time than It takes to click a costenent, Senor Romany changed the Btmosphere of a national con vention from one roaring with ran cor to one roaring with laughter. A great man. the senor, but one who doesn't look like a hero. He's a short, potbellied, 59-year-old law yer and onetime Judge, with his name next to last on the list of 1,206 delegates. How he came to he a hero Is a remarkable story of a remarkoble nleht In the history of the Grand Old Party. Argument had rolled on and on over which delegation from Geor gia should be seated: One favor ing Sen. Robert A. Taft or one favoring Gen. Dwlght D. Elsenhow er. Names had been called, and the man who still Is the titular head of the party, Tom Detoey be cause he has Its last presidential nominee had been loudly booed. It looked like-a situation in which a single wrong word might be the spark which could blow up the par ty. The rollcnll had gone on, labor Ikemen Try For Victoryi Bandwagon By JACK BELL CONVENTION HALL. CHICAGO Oen. Dwlght D. Elsenhower's Jubilant partisans strove Thursday to turn smashing test-vote tri umphs over Sen. Robert A. Taft Into a victory bandwagon for the grand prize of this Republican con vention Uie presidenUal nomina tion. They claimed It was all over but the balloting as a result of Eisen hower's decisive edge in the turb ulent floor battle with Taft at Wednesday night's session stretching into Uie early morning over contested delegates from Georgia and Texas. Taft was not conceding a thing. He said: "I expect to be nominated on an early ballot." And supporters of Earl Warren and Harold Stassen said they still saw a chance for an Elsenhower- Taft deadlock that could deny the nominaUon to either of the two front-runners. Three uncommitted delegates iwo from Arizona and one from Alabama Jumped to the Eisen hower camp in morning: state ments. With their leaps, the AP tabula tion of delegate standings waa; cisennower 017. Taft 486. Others 110. Uncommitted S3. DECISION The big decision mav come Thursday night. Convention managers manned out a schedule which left that pos sibility. - 7 . . And the delegates trickling- Into' then- big arena down by the stock yards for their fourth day-seemed In a mood to get on with the main business. In the wake of Wednesdav nio-ht's rough and tumble, there was more talk about Gen. Douglas MacAr- thur. Some of the Taft supporters were saying privately that Mac Arthur might be a good man if It developed that Taft could not make the grade. Taft's top aides were insisting. however, that there was no reason yet to question that Taft could it sic it Paul Walker, chief of delegate relations for the Taft camp, said It was a "coalition" that beat Taft on the Georgia and Texas con tests. The Warren and Stassen del egates stood with the Eisenhower camo on that. McKELDIN Gov. McKeldin of Maryland, tap ped to put Eisenhower in nomina tion, gave the bandwagon effort a push with a prediction that the general will win on the first ballot. He declared he Is confident that Maryland's 24 votes will be cast unanimously for Eisenhower. But Maryland's Sen. John Mar shall Butler, a Taft supporter, told reporters he feels Taft is still in the running. "I think be is still very much in the fight," Butler said. Barring last-minute changes Senator Taft will be Uie first to be placed in nomination for the presidency. General Eisenhower, who moved out in front of Taft in the delegate (Continued on Page 4.) that the Eisenhower forces had won, but the tension hadn't les- sened. And then the reading clerk bawled: "Puerto Rico, three votes." Thus began something rignt out oi comic opera, The reply came back. "Puerto Rico casts three votes no." The senor moved onstage and stole the show. He began by demanding that the delegation all three members- be polled Individually Just like New York's 96 and Pennsylvania's io naa oeen. Big discussion on the platform. Was Puerto Rico's delegation In dispute? Could the challenge be maaer At last, the answer: Yes. Incredibly, it must have taken five minutes to call the three names. Because It turned up such complications as tnis: "Mrs, Provldencla Romas de VII lamil," cried the reading clerk. "What was the name, please?" came the heavily accented voice, as if the place were filled with women with similar names. "Mrs. Provldencla Romas de Vll lamil." cried the R. C. Again. "It's all right," came the voice from the floor. "She's not here." Another name was called. Again the voice. "He Is a delegate. He Is not here." But the senor won his point. When his name was called, he voted yes. So Uiat which was three noes and . no yeses became two noes and one yes. The no votes were cast by the absent delegates' alternates. . , . Burns Injure Mother As Rescue Fails A 7-year-old girl. Roxle May Cummlngs, was burned to death In a lire that destroyed tne lamuy home at 2327 Kiln Street early this morning. She was the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. James T. Cummlngs. The father Is a box factory employe at Klamath Lumber and Box, and the mother, Bertha Cummlngs. was em ployed as a nurse' aide at Hillside Hospital. Mrs. Cummlngs was painfully burned trying to save the little girl. Another child, Richard Leroy escaped from Uie flames. Mrs. Cummings waa awakened by flames spreading through Uie bouse a few minutes before 1 a.m. and roused the rest of the family to get them out of Uie house. Apparently the little girl got up but wasn't fully awake and crawled back into bed . OUTSIDE trutslde the house Mr. and Mrs. Cummlngs missed Roxle May and saw her through a window, seem ingly asleep on her bed. Mrs. Cum mings was ourned trying to get the girl out through Uie window. As the rescue attempt was being made, the flaming roof caved in on the little girl. When city fire eoulDment ar rived .the house was' ablaze and be. yond saving. Firemen received the call to the house at 12:54 a.m. and were on Uie scene about two hours. Only a shell of Uie frame and shake bouse remained standing. airs, taimmings was taken to Klamath Valley Hospital for treat ment, and this morning her condi tion was reported as good. Tne little girl's bodv was taken to Ward's Funeral Home. Mrs. cummings aald at the hos pital that Uie fire started In Uie kitchen. A wood stove was located there, but she said it bad not been used for a day. A considerable crowd of persons were attracted to the early morn ing blaze. Northwest's Heat Hangs On By The Associated Press The Northwest's heat wave burned hotly again Thursday in Easterp Oregon and Washington as the western parts of the states began getUng some relief. It still was hat. but the Weather Bureau suggested that such read ings as The Dalies' 106, Medford's 104, Walla Walla's and Yakima's 102, would not be repeated immed iately. They were among the highest- in the United States Wednes day. Cooler maritime air began flow ing into northwestern Oregon and southwestern Washington valleys Thursday morning. Temperatures dropped and humidity rose. As a result, fire restrictions In Western Washington were eased, leaving noon closure of logging in effect only In Lewis County and the Elbe district of Eastern Lewis.' and Pierce Counties. The forecast was for tempera tures to continue high into the 90s in' Eastern Oregon and Washing ton, possibly into the 90s in Uie southern parts of western Oregon, ' ano in tne range nsi moving north into Washington. There were 12 forest fires in Washington Wednesday but they covered only tnree acres. Hot Here, Too Here's how a downtown record ing thermometer measured the temperature Wednesday the hot test day of the year in Klamath Falls. So far. that is: Noon (Wednesday; 2 p.m. 3 p.m. 6 p.m. 9 p.m. Midnight 3 a.m. (Thursday) 6 a.m 9 a.m. Noon wsHt 9 0'dcck Special j v MARION BAKER Ubov.l, 2360 Orchard Avenue, wet snapped this morning on her way to elaitai at Klamath Business Collage, iously, painfully. It was obvious ; i