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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 20, 1958)
-TUESDAY. MAY 20. 1958 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE THREB NAACP Accuses Powell Of 'Extreme Racialism' Basin Briefs Honored Mrs. Velma Hoyt, Tulelake. was honored May 16 by I 'Northern Rebekah Lodge No. 208, --Alturas. on the thirtieth anniver sary of her admittance to that Jodja as a member. . . Float-;Modoc County Historical society enierea a noac in tne civu ' Defence nararie in Altnrac Kahii-- . AaW Mill IT n.n.'nJ nit!.. f yesteryear were Mrs. Warren ,ioss. Mrs. (red wyiie, Mrs. Al -Hosa Briles, Mrs. Ora Demich. Jim Kelly, Al Howe and Archie, Close. Injured Mrs. A. K. Sweet, . treatment at Modoc Medical Cen- ter, Cedarville. Friday night. May jfi. rill tn iniliries rereived frnm ; a fell. To North Dakota Tom O'Con ' nor left Bonanza May 16 for Cart- '. wriehU North Dakota, to attend lunvrai Mivitei lur ilia iuumici, , Jiirs. joe u uonnor, wno aiea tot : lowing a heart attack on May IS. : Visiting Mrs. Lydia Grate Huntington Beach. California, is , spending several weeks in Lancell Valley with her daughter, Mrs. Harry Martin, and family. Alpine California, visitors at the home of her brother, Peter . Hricziscse. and family of Langell Valley were Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Scott. Bonanza Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sparks and son, Lloyd, Bonanza, are spending several days in Port- ', land with another son, Everett .Sparks, and family. Guild of St. Barnabas Episco- pal Church will meet at the home of Mrs. Paul Monroe of Langell Valley at 2 p.m. Thursday. May . 22. Members and friends are in j vited to attend. Injured Pat O'Connor. 4-year- .'old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom O'Connor. Bonanza, cut her toot on broken bottles as she was playing barefooted in the Bonanza park on May 15. Completes Course Pvt. Albert H. McDonald, 22, son of Mr. and " Mrs. John L. McDonald, Route 2. Anderson." California. recently completed a panel bridge construc- tion course with the 511th Engineer Company at Ft. Campbell Ken . tucky. McDonald is a 1955 graduate '. of Anderson High School and at tended Shasta College. He entered ' tlie Armv last November and cora '. pleted basic training at Fort Ord I Reds Plan Golf Course RIIDAPEST (A Communist 1c tmnLrin0 nt mil ninp a on I memDers irown on me game. Rpfnre Word War 11 there were four golf courses in Hungary, old timers say, inciuuiiig two in duuci pest. All have disappeared under the Communist regime, and there is now only a smail four-hole lay out used almost entirely by diplo mats, on property belonging to the U.S. legation. The newspaper Hetfoei Hirck says the new course would be built at Balalonfoeldvar, on the shores of Lake Balaton. This one of the region's most popular resorts. Although the golf course plan is for the more distant future, tour ism officials say, some other cap italist innovations may be seen sooner. The architects have three types of motels on the drawing boards, to be built at points where main roads meet the lake, on the . larger towns. Another architect has come up with an idea of building small ' artificial islands of concrete a short distance from the shore. Balaton is shallow, especially on '. the southern side, and bathers now . have to walk hundreds of feet be- fore getting out to their depth for ' a swim. NEW YORK (A The National Assn. (or the Advancement of Colored People has accused Hep. Adam Clayton Powell Jr. of what it calls "extreme racialism." The NAACP also said yester day: "We cannot condemn racism in others while using it ourselves." In a statement issued by Execu tive Secretary Roy Wilkins, the NAACP disassociated itself from the Harlem Negro Democrat s i parade down of the members YOU AUTO BUY NOW week was inaugurated Saturday morning with Main Street which was lead by the KUHS band. Shown here are some of the band, followed by the beginning of the auto parade. The parade sparked the be ginning of a week-long campaign by Klamath Falls automobile dealers to "Keep the Ba sin's Prosperity Roliin. " The promotion was aimed at bolstering the confidence of the people in the prosperity of the area, and Is being highlighted by especially attractive inducements to back up the slogan of "You Auto Buy Now." - Court Records KI.AMATH COINTY UlSTKII'T COl'RT Cdmund Moraich. dnvin during Uspcnded period, pit id not guilty. Jury trial set tor May 29. ID a Hugh A- Wilton, combination over load. S33 forfeited. Keith I. Mathefion. Da tun on creal 01 niu, ss. Henrv Lea. violation oamr mie. Richard L. Lath, violation baic ni f as uouBia o. snuey. violation Dasic rule, di unified. tioidia s. Garner. laiiura to aim headhchti. S5 AiDri w. tanrieia. iaiiur to arive 1 right side, dismissed. Dale E. Walker, no muffler. S3. John B Amuchaslenut. violation baa- ic rule. 11150 forfeited. Manuel leon. no HUC nermlt. Bis forfeited. uaroivn E. Nicholas, drlvinff while int"xtcaica. pieaas not guilty, jury tri al set for June 3. 10 a.m. Alfred L.. uuincv Jr.. failure tr make statement of residence on li cense application. $100 and routs. &an l.. umgarner, comoinaiion overload. HI forfeited. if "Kit 11" I ' MR. and MRS. JOHN H. RONFELDT Afier More Than 50 fears, Couple Plans Germany Trip DEATH FALL By RUTH KING More lhan half a century has passrd since Mr. and Mrs. John H. Ronfeldt have seen the land where they were born. By the last week in May they will have re turned there, to Sclileswig-llols-tein. a province near Hamburg. Germany. Mrs. Ronfeldt to he greeted by an only sister, Mr. Ronfeldt by numerous cousins. He is 82 years old. Mrs. Ronfeldt, 73. Both are a bit fluttcry about the trip to be made by air. Neith er has ever flown but all arrange ments have been made for them through a travel service and they will wing their way by United Air Lines to New York, starting May 26. From there they take the Luf thansa line to their destination. Mr. Ronfeldt came lo America vhen he was 17 years old, stayed for 12 years and lonely for a com panion, returned to his country to look for a bride. He found a pret ty girl this way. With a cousin, he stood as many young men do, evcing up the lasses as they strolled bv. 'There comes a cute one." said the cousin, the boy from America looked, decided she NEW YORK (Pi-While walking '. his dog on the roof of the building . In which he lived, John Gunning, 69, a blind man, fell five storiei . lo his death last night. The dog. a little terrier, ran frcightened down to the apartment where Gun nine lived with relatives. was lovelier than all the rest and one month later they were en route back to the United Slates. Wedding bells rang out for them in Nebraska soon after they ar rived. Mr. Ronfeldt has ranched, has been in the lumbering business and for, 12 years before his retirement was employed by the Weyerhaeu ser Timber Company. He has been retired for several years. The fam ily home is at 808 Mt. Whitney. I'iiey celebrated their golden wed ding anniversary three years ago. t MM-MM-M GOOD! i Breads and Postries P from Electric Bakery 1042 E. Main Aftermath Of A Tornado - One Year Later KANSAS CITY Wl A simple memorial it the only structural reminder that a year ago today a tornado whirled through suburban Ruskin Heights at more than 500 miles an hour. Forty-seven graves are an eter nal reminder. The flattened homes, the unbe lievable rubble, the upturned cars arc no longer there. Ruskin Heights has been rebuilt. The work that has been done is not so much reconstruction as is resurrection. If you didn't go through those frenzied minutes yourself, you have to look at pictures to see the change. From the air today the streets form the same gentle S curves they did after the tornado. But then they looked mushy, like wheatfield after harvest. Today you are irucK ny tne sharply de- tinea lines of the light rooftops. ihe tornado was spawned at 5:30 p.m. from black rain clouds at Emporia, Kan., some 100 miles away. It moved northeastward killing at Ottawa and Hill City in Kansas, destroyed Martin Citv, Mo., and did its worst at Ruskin Heights. Thirty-nine persons were killed and 483 homes destroyed or dam aged there. The memorial, a brick structure about 15 feet high, is located at the center of the devastated Rus kin Heights area. It was dedicat ed yesterday while 2,000 persons watched. It has three windows at the top. "They symbolize faith, hope and love," said N. M. Roach, president of the Ruskin Heights Homes assn. "They are the things that rebuilt Ruskin Heights." squabble with Tammany Ball. Particularly, Wilkins said, the association wishes to disassoci ate itself completely from the threats made by Mr. Powell or the Powell organization against any person's right to go freely about the city of New lork or about the nation." This referred to a remark by Powell last Sunday at the Abys sinian Baptist Church, of which he is pastor. Powell said Hulan Jack. Negro Manhattan borough president, and Carmine DeSapio, head of Tammany Hall, "better not walk up and down Harlem streets too much." Powell added: "We're not going to give them the same treatment the Communists gave vice rres- ident Nixon and his wife, but we will make it mighty uncomfortable for them. At an NAACP antisegregation rally last Saturday, Powell de clared the United States is a "white man's country." He called his Negro political opponents "Uncle Tom tools of white political bosses, denounced DeSapio as a "Mississippi boss" and accused him of trying to change "Harlem into Mississippi." Powell has been associated with the NAACP for years. Jack, a Tammany Hall leader. struck back at Powell, accusing the congressman of "hooligan ism" and of preaching racial and religious hatred. Jack had been hissed at the rally Saturday. Last night, Powell said Jack "has been dumped by the people of Harlem and he's trying to grasp at a straw to save himself." Powell said he deplores hooli ganism and added: "This is a hissing and booing committee in Harlem of about 450.000 rjenDle. I have no hissing and booing com- iimiee ana aon l want one. Powell has been dumped by Tammany leaders, ostensibly for supporting President Eisenhower in 1956. At that time. Powell said he was crossing party lines to sup port the President for re-election because of the civil rights Issue. Maico Hearing Clinic i NEW WAY TO HEAR HEARING GLASSES A "miniature miracle" of concealed heartnr Male Medfard SIS 8. Cantrat WINEMA HOTEL Klamath Foils MAY 21 ond 22 10 A.M. 4 P.M. Henry Myhre Maico of Medford KLAMATH FAM.S Ml'NIt lPAL COl'RT Edumtno Lovata. drunk. S23 or da . Clifford v. Jones, drunk. S25 or days. Donald K. crook, drunk. S25 or days. Alfred M. Rascon, drunk, S25 or l' dayi. Charlea L. Reed, rrrklria drivltlf. $29 or 12'a dayi impended. uavid Mile, vasrancy. siuo ana 30 days. Andrew rosier, drunk 25 or 12'fc days. Lloyd Henderson, drunk. S2A or days elbert P. Leonard, drunk. 25 or 12 days. L. J. Doolev. drunk and disorderly conduct, SlOO and 30 days. niauro .to.ueaa. vasrancy. a i s- mlssed. Four Juveniles arrested for violation curfew ordinance. Three Juveniles arrested lor county juvenile aumoruies. iwo juveniles cuea ior iraiiic vitiations.' une juvenile arrested for larceny. Old Tradition Hit By Paris Police PARIS Wi Paris police today took a crack at an old journalistic tradition that yesterday's news papers are good only to wrap up tomorrow's fish. Starling June 1, they ordered. no more using old newspapers to wrap up fish, chicken, meat or delicatessen products. Old news papers aren't sanitary, the police ruled. Slayer Says He Hates Doctor LINCOLN, Neb. (UP)-Charles Starkweather. 19. who has not co operated with his lawyers' at tempts to have him acquitted of the murder of Robert Jensen by reason of insanity, said Monday he would like to blow up with a hand grenade the psychologist who said he was unable to distinguish between right and wrong. The defense will call a final psy chiatric witness today. Then the prosecution will attempt to conv bat the insanity plea with its own witnesses. The case was expected to reach the jury by late Wednesday Thursday. SPORTSMEN! JUST A FEW CENTS A DAT jivei jou '10,000 of Allstate Personal liability Insurance Accident happen even to careful sportsmen. Protect yourself against financial loss, for just pennies a day. 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