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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1955)
SUNDAY. AUGUST 21. 1955 HKRALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE THREE WW fir .. 1 1 'i: t . vl - i. v f 21 Wa-SW Peronists ally For Leader BUENOS AIRES. Argentina Ifl Thousands oi Perouusia Party (Members shouted their allegiance to President Juan Peron. the party's founder. Friday niRht tn their lirsl Dig rally since the June 16 revolt. Demonstrations following the rally were punctuated by gunfire. No' casualties were repotted. The lhrce-h.wr party rally was billed ns the kick-j.i in a campaign pump irc.sn energy into the peronisia movement. It appeared to signal an end to the political aspects of ttie "pe.cincaiion ' pro- grum I'cron called lor lollowing the abortive rebellion against his government. The new Pciomsta Parly chief, Alejandro Loloir, told the cheering crowd "the people's loyalty to Peron Is invincible. . . . The Peron- istas aie going iorth into the streets ... to unmask the enemies ol the nation." The Peronislus have accused op position political groups oi not ac cepting the "truce ' oltercd by Peron. Leloir made no reference to the government's dispute witn the Ro man Catholic Churcn. Earlier Fri day, Argentine Catholic leaders protested against what they called renewal of a campaign of "calum ny and defamation" by govern ment authorities and the pro-government press against the church. Surging from the rally, the party members staged a noisy 10-block march in downtown Buenos Aires, snouting "Peron, Peron." Shortly afterward a smaller group exchanged shots from the street with persons on a balcony. II y , i 'Turncoat' Treatment Attacked by MUSIC AND FUN is the stock and trade of Maddox Broth and Rose, booked for the armory Saturday, August 27, Baldy evens. It will be the western groups 14th appearance here. Shown above is Rose Maddox, feminine star of the troupe. Also featured with the aggregation are Rosie and Retta, who record for Columbia Records. Ko. CITY BRIEFS "MISS KLAMATH," considered one of rodeo's greatest bucking horses, is shown here being conquered for the first and only time by Bill Ward at the Klamath Basin Roundup on July 4. Shortly thereafter she broke both hind legs in an accident at Ogden, Utah and was de stroyed. Word of her demise was learned recently from I rodeo magazine. BASIN BRIEFS Garden Tour The Mt. Lakl . for Monday, August 29, at 7 p.m. Garden Club will hold a garden tour next Tuesday. They will meet at the home of Mrs. I. W. White at 9:30 a.m. and proceed to Mrs. Will Blackman's home at noon. Members are asked to bring a sack lunch. Any interested persons are welcome to join the tour. Rehearsal All Lake County 4-H clothing club girls who are entering the 4-H Style Revue on September 2, are to meet at the Lakeview High School auditorium at 2 p.m. on Friday, August 20 lor a rehearsal, announces Mrs: Rob ert Weir Jr., chairman ol the style show. t Football Practice Jerry Mos by, Lakeview High School -coach, has called a pie-season meeting of Lakeview High School football players on Tuesday, August 23 at 1 p.m. at the gym. The Honkers first football practice is scheduled Sentence Time Set By Judge YREKA Tuesday. August 23 has been set as the dale lor sentencine Verle Clarence Wick- ham, 37, of Redding, who pleaded Ruilty last week to two counts ot iorgerv at his appearance in the Siskiyou County superior court. Wickham was arrested by sher iffs deputies July 23 aller a 10- mile-an-hour chase on the Klamath River highway and U. S. High- vay 99. He was accused of issuing bad checks to Peter Mulloy lor $92 and to the Evans Mercantile Company for $160. After accepting the check, Mul lay investigated and lound n to be bogus. Ke notified the sheriff's office and deputies spotted Wick ham on the Klamath River high way near Beaver Creek. He was apprehended near the Bur Bel re sort on Highway 99. Dunsmuir Youths Face Charges DUNSMUIR Four minor boys i : were certified to the juvenile j CUUl k Hill-1 usjnrwi mg i in men parents in Dunsmuir judicial court to answer charges of possessing and drinkiiiR Intoxicating liquor, driving without an operator's li cense, permitting an unauthorized driver to drive and erratic driving. The youths and a companion over 18 were arrested by the Call iornia Highway Patrol last week Lawrence Aram, he fifth mem ber of the group, was gnen a 90 dav suspended sentence in the Siskivou County jail, fined $25 and olnced on one year's probation, t Weekend Visitors at the home1 of Mr. . and Mrs. Rudy Harkins at Keno were Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wallace of Los Angeles. Joe DeGrande is back at work at the Keno Grange after un dergoing minor surgery on his shoulder. Roy Powell has returned to Keno from Port Townsend, Wash ington, where he attended the fu neral of his sister, Mrs. Irene Mc Centere. , t Gert Powell and sons, Del- bert and Alvin, of Keno, have gone to Taberaash, Colorado, to aitend the golden wedding anniversary of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Shadrick. A Son was born August 16 to Mr. and Mrs. Mike Carrol of Keno. Mrs. Carrol is the former Helen Scherer. Visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Ramsey in Keno were their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Ramsey of Idaho Falls. Tulelake The Department of Motor Vehicles otfice in Tulelake will be closed from Wednesday, September 7. unUl October 3 dur ing the vacation period of its man ager, P. W. Barnt. Lakeview A barbecued lamb dinner will be served outdoors at the Lakeview Fairgrounds Wednes day August 24, starting at 6:30 p.m., sponsored by the Fremont Sheepmen's Association. Merrill A joint special meet ing will be held ai 6:30 p.m., September 8, by Merrill Rebekan Lodee No. 151 and Fraternity Re bckah Lodge No. 106. Potluck din ner will precsde the meeting. There will be no regular meeting on Scotember 5. Larry Owens has returned to Keno from a business trip to Cres cent City. Vave Howard is improving at her home in Keno after undergo' ing surgery at Klamath Valley Hospital. Marines Offer Women's Jobs Hells Canyon Study Slated WASHINGTON (ft The long- smouldering Hells Canyon power fight will come under the scrutiny of two Senate subcommittees dur ing a series of public hearings here next month. Sen. O'Mahoney (D-Wyo)t chair man of the judiciary anti-monopoly subcommittee, said Friday his group and the interior subcommit tee on irrigation and reclamation will conduct the hearings. O'Mahoney said the two subcom mittees will investigate the circum stances surrounding the Federal Power Commission's recent action in licensing Idaho Power Co. to build three low level dams in the Hells Canyon area of the Snake River where a high federal dam has been proposed. The federal dam site would be flooded out by the backwaters from the low level dams which Idaho Power has been authorized to build. O'Mahoney also said the sub committees will probe the "pro posed merger of the Puget Sound Power & Light Co. with the Wash ington Water Power Co., both Washington State private utilities." The two groups also will take under consideration, O'Mahoney said, past, present and contem plated Interior Department poli cies dealing with the power prefer ence clause in operations of fed eral hydroelectric projects. Under the power preference clause, public agencies, coopera tives and other non-profit organi zations receive priority in power purchases through reclamation and flood control laws. SICK? If to, writt to Speori Chiropractic Sanitarium and Hoipital, Dinvtr, Colo., for Teitimoniol Proof of rt suits in arthritis, concar, polio tpi lepsy, rheumatic fever, multiplo scler osis, cerebral palsy, muscular dys trophy, strokes heart, liver, skin, stomach, kidney and scores of other ailments, NOW ELASTIC STOCKINGS Leg flattering beauty firm comfortable sup- port . . . P"" r-i-c: n.,.N:r VTear them with or i.hout overho. They launder X 075 ...;iv. Hrv fan and they last! O ONLY Y Elastic Stockings LEE HENDRICKS "Your Neighborhood Druggist" 2212 So. 6th Phont 4321 Field Geologists Hold Surveys LAKEVIEW Atomic Energy Commission field geologists were in Lakeview last week and made surveys of the White King and Lucky Lass uranium mines. Mine owners stated it probably would be 10 days before results are known. This analysis will de termine the issuance of AEC ore shipping contracts for the mines. To date, no contract for shipping ore from the Lakeview area has been issued. (Editor's Note: This is the sev enth in a series of articles ex plaining the Marine Corps' school ing program, designed to train en listees for particular Job fields.) Women Marines may not spend any time on the frontlines, but they do just about everything else done by their male counterparts. This means that they must ac-i autre considerable technical knowl edge in the fields in which they pre to work. This is where the Marine schooling program enters '.he Dicturc. Such occupational items as in telligence, logistics and dratting and surveying involve study of manv subiects. . The intelligence schooling in cludes such subiects as cartogra phy, use of stereoscope and aerial photographic interpretation, among others. Logistics is a less technical field. The work includes the planning and supervision of movement, housing and supply of personnel. Elemen tary accounting and office manage ment are examples ot tne supjecis taught in this school. Probably the most Involved of the three fields is that of drafting and surs'eying. Intensive study is needed in oroer to be able to determine and sur vey data, prepare architectural, mechanical and Illustrative draw ings and construct' topographic maps. The study includes map and aerial photograph reading, map projections, and geodetic computa tions, plus other related subjects Bv the time the students com plete these subjects they are ready to take over a man s worn. it r r '..1 .J"" lO::i PREMATURE TRIPLETS PALO ALTO lUP) Premature girl triplets born early yesterday to the wile ol a Redwood City laboratory technician, were report ed in good condition today. Mrs. Dean Wineland gave birth to the triplets at Palo Alto Hospit al between 1:40 a.m. and 3 a.m yesterday, the three infants weighing 48, 49 and 50 ounces were placed m incubators. To proltcf your house To beautify your home MART1N-SEN0UR PAINTS in ShelterTones Exltrior paint in ltrt cued te nature GOELLERS 522 Moin Phone 4704 WILLIAM A. KENNEBECK, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Kennebeck, Midland, is cur rently enrolled in basic mili tary training with the United States Air Force at Parks AFB, California. , Kennebeck, who entered the Air Force on July 1 1, 1955, attended Hen ley High School. Eugene Member Talks To Rotary What makes Rotary great Is the ideas of individual Rotarians and individual Rotary clubs, was the statement of Alton P. Baker of Eu gene, governor of District 154 Ro tary International, In a talk to the Klamath Falls club Friday noon at the Wlllard Hotel. Rotary now has 419.000 mem bers in 8.811 clubs In 92 countries of the world and should be in every country in another 25 years but its opportunity ior service still lies with each individual mem ber, the governor said. Governor Baker had held a club assembly with officers and com mittee chairman Thursday night, when the four avenues of service club, vocational, International and community were reviewed. He will have visited 51 clubs in Oregon and Southwestern Washing ton during the Rotary year. Rex Liye, executive secretary of the Klamath County United Fund, was introduced at the meet ing as a new member of Rotary. WASHINGTON (jPI Sen tauver ID-Tcnn said Saturday he is dissatislied with the "lack of anything substantial" in the newly proclaimed code of mili(ary con-due;. In a caustic vein. Kefauver wrote Secretary of Du'euoe Wilson, terming the code "a fine patriotic set ot principles which are excel lent and beneficial lor club con ditions . . ." But," Keiauver continued. "I wonder how they would serve the man exhausted by battle, hungry, cold, facing hostile Interrogators, and the prospect of more suffer ing and unknown dangers any bet ter than do the present Articles of War ..." The Tennessee senator, a mem ber of the Senate Armed Services Commutes, told Wilson he hopes "you will undertake a more thor-ous-h studv of the treatment of re turned prisoners of war and their nerds for the future. Kefauver made the letter public President Eisenhower last Wed nesday proclaimed the new mili tary code which sets forth guide- posts for the conouct of American fighting men, stressing the highest ideals of valor in an effort to strengthen them against severe tests either in the front lines or In enemy prison camps. Kefauver asked whether "as a nation (we) are playing square with some of the boys whose pho tographs I have seen hi the papers upon returning home , . . boys who had but a few years of edu cation, who now are labeled 'turn coats,1 tried and given very little chance to resume the life of an American citizen." Robin A. Bltneli of Klamath Falls, a student of Oregon State ' College, was one of the 681 Signal Corps POTC cadet who completed a six weeks encampment at Camp Gordon, Georgia, August 5. Frank D. Bridge son of Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Bridge. 149 Hill side, Klamath Falls, a student In the department of radio engineer ing at Tri-Stalc College, Angola, Indiana, has been honored at the collese by selection as a Trl-8tate student director. Membership la achieved only by selection, based on scholastic achievement, leader ship, cooperation, dependability ana willingness to serve. He will assist in the orientation and reg istration programs at the college late in September. Peace Memorial The Wom en's Association of the Peace Me morial Presbyterian Church will meet Monday evening at 8 o'clock at the church. The program will be Christian Approach to Commu nism" and "Medical Missions." Special summer offering will be tuken for medical missions. This Is a joint meeting which will be lield in lieu of the regular month ly circle meetings. All members and friends are invited. M:iriaers Club The Mariners Cluo of Peace Memorial Church held a picnic at Collier Park after church. Sunday, August 14, A chicken dinner was preceded by games lor both young and old. Hosts for the day were the Dar ren Potters, the Eddon Paysants and the Earl Roberts. The next meeting of the Mariner Club will be September 19. Portland The office or the Oregon Apprenticeship Council and the state director of apprentice ship has been moved from the State Ollice building to 717 SB Main street. The move was made to obtain more desirable office quarters for the field staff. CLOSING OUT SALE continual KLAMATH FURNITURE CO. 221 Moin I CTr TcI1 Talelangiing CorM ft I Art present! WWV kind of hearini with new way of weartig Ko need to advertise your'heartna ton. Wtieo't new miounuc roiMclc. Ihe Transm-Ear heutna id ti to liny you wear it in your hair. Yea wer it naturally, you hear sound more naluraUy, and yov. know where sound la coming from. SPECIAL SHOWING One Day Only TUESDAY, AUGUST 23RD Noon 6 p.m. WINEMA HOTEL Klamath Falls, Oregon u f YOURS at STANDARD OPTICAL America's Biggest 35 mm CAME RA VALUE PLAYING NIGHTLY -IN THE- P0NDER0SA ROOM -OF THE - WILLARD HOTEL Starlighter Trio A local group trior is going over big with the after dark crowd. DINING DANCING COCKTAILS Camera ONLY NOTHING DOWN ONLY $1 WEEK Matching Accessories I Choice of Lenses - ACCESSORIES - Extension Tubes Moqnoicope Bellowi Flash Attachments -LENSES- F2.8 Zeiss Tessar F1.9 Primoplan F2. Auto. Westaqon F2.8 Auto. Westonar Telephoto Lenses from 100mm to 400mm 10-DAY FREE TRIAL i 7950 kill! M i FX I Sinqle-lem reflex yV Shutter Vi ice. to 1500 fi Double-exposure prevention iji Fast F2.8 leni (Jg m LATEST 1955 PRAKTIFLEX Focal-plane shutter MX Synchronization Interchangeable lens Adaptable for eye-level prismatic view finder 715 Main St., Klamath Falls I- tr