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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1958)
FWDAY, FEBRUAKY, 21. 1958 I1ERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON 1 PAGE FIVE CITY BRIEFS Muzanita Social Club is sponsoring a Family Fun Night at tie YMCA Hall Saturday, Feb ruary 22, at 7:30. Kntertainment will be provided for children. Cards will start promptly at 8 p.m. Friends are cordially invited. Fd Sale International Or der of Job's Daughters Bethel No. 6 will bold a baked food sale Sat urday, February 22, at the J. C. Penney Company from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Oregon Food Store No. 3 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Childhood Education A meet ing of the Association of Child hoot Education will be held Sat urday, February 22, at the Klam ath County Library. Ann Rife, Klamath Falls, is chairman of the 9:30 coffee hour with the primary teachers from Shasta School as hostesses. Lyle Ashcraft, consult ant with the D. C. Heath Com pany, will talk on Literature Adds to Living. Ia Korea Sgt. Lloyd L. Hart ley, 25, whose wife, Rhoda, lives at 2740 Derby, is a member of the Seventh Division s 17th Infan try Battalion in Korea. The ser geant son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd F. Hirley, 5071 Harlan Drive, is a 1931 graduate of Klamath Union High School. Crib Feed for members of the Ifacht Club with lots of crab is phnned for Saturday, February 22, at the club house. Serving from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. For reservations call Mary Maxwell, TU 4-7207 or Mary Juckeland, TU 4-4832. . Merry Mixers dance tonight at tie South Sixth Street Commun ity Hall. Shirley Mayhew will teach round dancing. Take dough nuts or cream puffs. lood Sale The Student Wives of OTI will hold a food sale, Sat urday, February 22, at the Market Basket, South Sixth and Shasta Way from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. First Methodist Church Edna Holder Circle of the First Meth odist Church, will hold a cooked food sale. Saturday, February 22. beginning at 9 a.m. at the Market Basket, Ninth and fine streets, Program Mrs. Kathleen Ward will slow her colored slides and will tak on her trip to India at the final session of the school of missiors, Sunday, February 23, at the Fi:st Methodist Church. The discussion leader will be Wilbur Women The program will' follow 5:30 potluck supper. Farn Bureau Women of KlamaJt County will hold a noon lunchem, Friday, February 28, in the Empire Room of the Winema Hotel, Evelyn Cooper, Klamath County librarian will head a forum on one subject of the Great De cision orofiram for 1958. Reserva tions tor the luncheon may be . made t the farm bureau omce, i TU 2-Sol or with" Mrs. Lloyd Hank- ins, Bonanza, 2174 by Tuesday mornirg, February 25. This is the first neeting of the year. AH in terest farm women are Invited ' to attend. 1 44- -IsZ - MRS. VICTORIA THALER Clerk Seeks Reelection TULELAKE Mrs. Victoria Leopold Seeks New Prison Job To Prepare For Parole JOL1ET, 111. n Nathan Leo pold, one of the nation s most widely known convicts, who was granted a parole yesterday, im mediately began planting a change in prison jobs to better Thaler, incumbent, has filed tor! Burns; the office of city clerk which shc!"e(sslg' has held since 1943, one year aft- Rites Slated For Rancher Funeral services w.ll be held Saturday, February 22, at 2 p.m. in Lakeview for I oring T. (Boss) Richardson, 0. who died in Pen dleton following a long illness. Mr. Richardson ranched for many years in the Bly-Lakeview-Burns areas and was well known as ro deo rider in the Klamath Basin Roundup. His ranch home at the time of his death was near Burns. He was born in Picard, Califor nia, now the town of Dorris and began his rodeo career at the age ot 13. He lived in this area dur ing the 1930s and 1940s. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Thelma Richardson; two daugh ters. Lorraine and Elaine, all of prepare him for "a life of service to his fellow man." Now a clerk in the chief engi neer's office at Stateville Prison, Leopold told his attorney that he wanted to be shifted to the prison hospital. Leopold s parole plea focused on the offer of a $10-a-month job as laboratory technician in a rural hospital operated by the Church of the Brethern in Castaper, Puer to Rico. Where hell go will be decided by parole officials. It may take three or four weeks until he actually leaves prison. Leopold now wants only this opportunity to serve his fellow man. said his attorney, LUner Gertz. "He wants to avoid the glare of publicity and continue the rigid routine of hard work to his mother, Mrs. Elma San Anselmo, California: sisters, Mrs. Agnes Crawford, Chi- PAffn. nnH Mrs Klhpl Oinsp Fnrl er arriving in the lulelake Ba- Klamath: half brothers, Louie sin from Maryland. She is a na- Hessig, Yreka. and Harold Hessig. live Of South Carolina. Her name ilnhn Sun Anwlmn r.ilifnrnia- al. win De on ine April o election iso three grandchildren. uauui. Prior to coming here with her family, she had been employed as a - secretary and bookkeeper for General Motors in Washington, D.C. for 15 years, later was pay roll clerk for the federal govern ment in the capital city. Her hus band, Dick Thaler, came to the Japanese internment camp with the Department of the Interior, during World War II. ' , Mrs. Thaler became city police judge in 1949 and with the con solidation of the city and justice courts, became judge of the Tule-i lake Judicial District, an office that requires previous experience as a judge or attorney or qualifi cation by successful- examination. I She is a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the American Le-1 gion Auxiliary, is a past presi dent of the Tulelake Business and; Professional Women's Club and a member of Amaranth. She is the; mother of a son, Leslie of Cedar- i ville, California, a daughter, Mrs. i G. Twyman, Redding, and has five grandchildren. . 1 HOUSE FIRE The County Fire Department extinguished a fire late Thursday afternoon in the home of C. E. Carpenter, Route 3. Box 1056, Wo cus. Investigating officers said that the fire started in the living room of the one-story frame house and did considerable damage to the room, floor and walls. OTI's Fire Department was also at the. scene, officials said. Attorney Billed For Local Meet E. C, Prestbye, chief attorney for the Federal Land Bank, Spo kane, will speak at the annual stockholders meeting of the Klamath-Lake National Farm Loan As sociation meeting, March 1, to be held in the Pine Grove Room of the Willard Hotel. A complimen tary luncheon will be served at 12 noon for members, their wives and guests. Annual reports will be given. More than 100 are expected for the meeting. Free parking has been arranged through the courtesy of the city traffic department during the meeting hours. which he dedicated himself in more than 33 years in prison." Gertz and Ralph Newman, Lin coln scholar and book dealer who is a friend of the Leopold family, were with Leopold before and aft er he received news of the pa role. Leopold has been in Stateville since Sept. 11. 1924. for his part in the thrill slaying of Bobby Franks, 14, in Chicago. Sent to prison with him for terms of life for murder and 99 years for kidnaping was Richard Loeb, who was slashed to death by another inmate in 1936. Their attorney for the Franks' crime was the late famed attorney, Clarence Darrow, who saved the youths from a death sentence. The balding, paunchy Leopold, 53, will remain in the prison three or four weeks, officials said, as they check and approve his ar rangements for a home and iob. Leopold's parole for five years came on a split vote of the five man Illinois Parole and Pardon Board. The vote was not an nounced. But the board asreed unani mously to parole Roger Touhy, 60, prohibition-era gang leader serving a long term for a kidnap ing and a prison break out. Touhy claimed the kidnaping never oc curred, a contention that has woo considerable support, Told that the board had given him a definite sentence parole, Leopold said he wanted to remain in section rather than meet with newsmen. Warden Joseph Ragen honored Leopold's request and distributed a statement Leopold had typed. In it. Leopold expressed grate fulness to his friends, the parole board, the press and first ot all to God." "I am acutely conscious that more than my own future hangs in the balance. Thousands of pris oners, especially long-term pris oners, look to me to vindicate the rehabilitation theory of imprison ment. I will do my best not to fail in that trust, it concluded. Gertz said Leopold has a $50,000 trust left him by his father and brother and that income from this trust "will assure that Leopold will never become a public liabil ity." TREE SERVICE Coll Baker's Nursery TU 2-3167 OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT inquire DREWS MANSTORE Ph. TU 4-4122 Happy Hour Club will meet at the Pelican Grill at 1:30 p.m. on Tuesday, February 25. Mrs. Jernie Hurn will be the hostess Called Anay Mr. and Mrs Ma-tin Snyder have been called to Redding, by the death of Mrs. Sn;der's father, Frank Sorabar, a foimer employe ol the weyer haiiuser Timber Company. He left hee in 1950 to ranch in California. H died Monday, February 17. VALLEY PUMP AND EQUIPMENT COMPANY COMPLETE PUMPING SERVICE ALL MAKES REPAIRED Call TU 4-9776 2175 So. 6th St IT'S A WONDIRFUI ST0,k, Saturday Check Saturday Night G?ed lam Dorrit, California Music By PEE WEE STIDHAM and the Butte Valley Rangeri No increase 1ft admiision prices Dancing 9 till 1 90c Person Repeat of a LUCAS SPECIAL! Cithollc Daughters will hold ther regular meeting, 8 p.m. Mon dav, February 24, in the parish hall MANEUVERS KILL FIVE STtTTGART, Germany UP) Fout American soldiers and an 11-year-old German girl were killed in accidents during the re cent U.S. Army Sabre Hawk ma neuiers, it was announced today. Amy officials said the accident toll was about half the normal rat. Some 125,000 men and thou sands of tanks, trucks and air planes ranged over a 5,000-square mib area for 10 days. I "Recordially Yours" by Norman Weser From Dixieland to daisies, Family Weekly's music col umnist hat hit fingers en the puHe of the recording beat. Read his commend en the latest in hi-fi. Feb. 23 Family. TVeeJcIy In The SUNDAY Compare with other Groups A. SZs x'W' I if ll;V" Pjr Selling for $399.95 CSSBP , f M 1 H Z Zj only $9Q?5 $5? m Down K- I a. ?( mm WeraM letel 1 1 (922iw'v eet - (. Low Monthly Payments! Buy Now! Here's what you get: Long section, curved sectional and love seat (use together or separately), 2 tiered end tables and beautiful cock tail table, 2 gorgeous decorator lamps, and 2 pillows perfectly de signed for use with this modern ensemble. High fashion at a budget price , . . and Biltwell workrhanship is famous . . , designed to keep its beauty for years! Choice of Modern Texture Decorator Fabrics and Colors! FREE Delivery 1 Lucas Furniture 195 E. Main Ph. 4-3134 List OF GOOD VALUES Washington's birthday coat salt only $17.76 . . . regularly up to $59.95. all wool tweeds, cashmere - mohair blends, all colors. pleated cotton print dress only $9.98 . . . advertised in San Fran cisco at $11.98. shirtmaker style, con-, vertible collar, permanent knife pleats, just wash and drip dry. colored print on white background. 10-18. new spring chemise salts only $25.95 ... in the big city $29.95. . cotton and viscose blend, tweeds and solids, grey, beige and pastels. Glenhaven suits spring's favorite unlined suit, only, $22.95 . . . new shipment, a large col lection of variations of style, save $3.00 or more. brass button chemise buttons down the front, only $15.95 . . . should be $17.95. 2 large patch, pockets, standaway collar, new semi chemise styling, has belted front, cocoon back, navy, orange ice, lemon yellow. nylon hose in all the west only LaPointe's has "Better Than Gold" 60 gauge, 15 denier hose, box of three pairs, $1.95 . . . that's only 66c per pair, they com pare favorably with hose selling na tionally, for $1.35 per, pair. sheath chemist a new washable cotton, executive stripe, only $10.98 . . . should be $12.98. step-in front, back belt, pocket trim with colored scarf, brown and. white or charcoal and white. maternity wear middy top only $3.29 . . . should be $6.98. in red with colorful white trim, drip-dry cotton, also pedal pushers to match at only $4.29. red and turquoise. drip-dry cotton duster sculptured cotton only $3.29 . . . made to sell for $5.98. lace edged collar and cuffs, washes in a jiffy, needs no iron ing, pink or blue. nylon tricot slips our best seller, only $3.29 . . . new shipment with new styles, white in short, medium and tall, wash and wear, should sell for much more. nylon lace trimmed panties only $2.85 for three pair . . . should be $125 each, brief style, white and many colors, lots of lace and frills. 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