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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1954)
1 LTANUARY 13, 1954 HERALD AND JJEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE NINE t.ie ASSOCIATED PRESS n, of the country today but a airer s tho immediate frigid weather In the snow- WYear-Oc Lion Kept $ house rei oy ramiiy I ... . . ,1. in Ktf 11 FahI i4a I LuCHEB. 111. W A le years oiu e tds. lives in uk - - lily he. , J ,P lion, called lex, was (uibuu . irPKh Irom the African , hv Bobbyetta Porter, 28. ...:., pill 31. shares her liiou for the Hon and helps W . ... thpir ninth. lor mill, us I'"" Dour Horier. i'bbyctta bought Tex when he 1, dealer in Texas. Tex has raised in a case onlv because she ,.i- that anv animal that has V caged should be kept there i:ant!y. has his own room. kies Clear Bn East, ut Colder Weather lAoves Dn Over Area ami tonight. More $now also was t morning in Brownsville, Tex., and forecast in the western sections the fairly warm weather prevailed Friday, oyer southern Texas and along the The 11 a Cove at Newark, N. J., Gulf Coast. j was a record low for Jan. 13. . Jn the West, 6 inches of fresh There were some mild spots in snow fell at Las Vegas, Nev., while the country. It was 64 above this light snow fell over the southern Rockies and the Southern Plateau region and npr the Ast ward across the plains to the eastern Dakotas. In the Far West, California was shaken yesterday by an earth quake which Jolted cities from the Mexican border to Sacramento, '50Q miles north. No injuries were reported but electric wires were mapped and plaster shattered in several buildings. Rain, snow and hail a I. so hit areas in California yesterday. Transportation was back to near normal In major Eastern cities hit by the snow storm. New York City's snowfall of 10 inches was the heaviest In five years. Boston was hit by a fall measuring: nearly 1 foot while In Caribou, Me., the fresh snow measured 15 inches. covered Northeast ana extended westward to the Rockies and dipped into the South. It was below freezing as far aouih as southern Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi. New England reported the sea son's coldest weather. Tempera tures ranged from the teens to 25 F Boys On EG Top List Klamath County boys were ng the 129 boys and girls, ibers of the Oregon Green rd, who qualified for a "service it Fire" badge and certificate ij the 1953 forest fire season. are diii inuiacy, 'i w nsorincs Drive, and Billy Tay. J9. Box 55, Chemult. ,c honor of wearing uiis naage ranted to those Guards who actually participated in the irtinz or assisting in the sup- Line of a fire. The awards are le only upon tne recommenua- of an adult wno witnessed efforts. e alertness of these youngsters of tremendous help in getting b action on the suppression of I. according to Joe LaClair. lo- ichairman of the Keep Oregon n Association. mily Cars In mily Crash pCHITA, Kan. Ml . Worried her husband failed to arrive : on time, Mrs. Louise E. 'Wil !i, set out to search for htm krdiy in one of the family's r search ended with a bang. car became involved in a traf- feccident with an automobile n by Terance A. Wilson her und. faffic Investigator Dale Hearon tea wnson. He was charged driving under the influence of icating liquors. ipping Clerks - nd Up Strike fW YORK Wl Shipping fs In New York's garment ra enaca a day-long strike Idav after five pmnlnvpr m-nuns ted to lllPPt with the rlni-Vc' n to discuss collective bargain on a HOW rnnlrat f'e than l.ooo men who pack- isarmcnis and push dress carls Ml blltinPCe In hiiri -1. I. fne morning. The union, the I International Ladies Garment fliers Union, said the action af fi some 23,000 workers. GUILTY yLTlMORE i.?iAn East Balti- .( ueiunnnrnnnri -.. n ,n..j fair by an outbreak of broken "inaowf, plate glass store ''! and street lamps. i -tnnuy jroiicc apprencna ee boys carrying slingshots. r-" urocer samuel Voklin, Mias hplH In dm u.:t - WlnB a sngshot to an far-old boy. Voklin pleaded in- pine 10 by 12-foot den, facing on but separated from the living room by bars. The Porters live on a farm nnd recently built a ranch house with a living room especial ly designed for the lion's comfort. A TV set is in view of his cage and he contentedly watches TV shows. Bobbyetta and Bill spend hours Inside Tox's cage. They play and wrestle with him and Instruct him. He Is houscbroken and obeys commands. Every morning Bobbyetta gives Tex ft uponge bath and combs his mane, she also brushes his tcoth. "He's a wild animal," she said, "but acts more like a puppy.' - She said a gun is kept outside the cage in case it ever should be needed, buttshe never has taken a rod. whip or gun into the cage with her. Human Ladder Saves Life Of Youth PHILADELPHIA Wl Four city firemen formed a human ladder yesterday to rescue a young boy who was being swept along an underground sewer drain. Eight - year . old Albert Salvia fell 20 feet down a manhole into the icy water, which was about three feet deep. The firemen, one on top of the other and lashed struggling youngster and raised him to safety as hundreds of cheer ing spectators gathered around the scene. degrees below srero In northern Maine. Snow in the area during the siorm since Sunday ranged from 4 to 15 inches, with southeastern Massachusetts and northern Maine getting the heaviest amounts. The storm in the Northeast, the worst in five years, was blamed for at least 76 deaths.' It was biting cold in sections of the Midwest again today. Temper atures, however, moderated in northern Minnesota, where it was around 40 degrees below zero Tues day. It was -22 in Eau Claire, Wis., today and in Duluth, Minn., where yesterday's top reading was 6 below. But at International Falls, Minn., on the Canadian border, it was a comparative mild 7 below zero today compared to 39 degrees be low yesterday. Temperatures moderated in the eastern Dakotas. ' In New York stntc temperatures were predicted to range from 5 above to 10 below. It was 14 in New York City early today with continued cold in prospect today Tragedy Follows Illness In Home METHUEN, Mass. Ml Mrs. Nellie O'Brien, 78, complained of a leg aliment and her son hastily shoveled out the drivewoy yester day so an ambulance could take her to Bon Secours Hospital. Later John E. O'Brien, 50, re membered some medicine his mo ther was accustomed to take. He walked a mile and a half through heavy snow to deliver it to her. Arriving at the hospital entrance, he collapsed and died of a heart attack. BAN . ATLANTA im Alligator hunting in Georgia was ouUawcd today to protect deer.. The State Game and Fish Com mission voted to close the season on 'gators in the six southeastern counties because numerous deer have been killed at night by per sons claiming they were hunting alligators. 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