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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1958)
TUESDAY, JUNE 3. 1958 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE THREE Court Records KLAMATH FALLS Ml NICIPAL COtHT John H. Jackson, drunk in auto, $35 forfeited. Patrick Wynne, drunk, tZS or US davt. - Charlei Holquin drunk. S2S forfeited Godfrey J. Rainbo. drunk, or 12', days. Albert G. Lynch, vagrancy, $100 and 30 days (sutpcnded it leaves town.' Lynn Braracomb. drunk and disor derly, 150 forfriied. Richard R. Wood, drunk, $23 or UVi days. William A. Goben, drunk. $23 or 12' days. William B. Cowan, drunk. $25 or 12' days. William M. Jones, drunk In auto, 125 forfeited. KLAMATH COI'STY Dlii fRlCT C'ULRT Clarence Wesley Sheehy, driving wmie mioxicaiea. dismissed upon mo tion of distnrt attorney. Donald E. Larson, overlength, 33 Rex Edward Griffith, axle overload, S31 bail forfeited. David Lee Grimes, no operator's 11- Owen Robert Storey, fall display 11 . een&e olates 17.50. James Owen Osborne, sitting and lejkins load. 7.50. Edgar Robert Palmer, violation bas ic rule. $10 bail forfeited. Elmer Wayne Baird, violation basic ru'L, $10. Jphn Thomas Del an e Wolfrum, vio lation oasic rule. 97.50. Claude haymond Howell, tandem axle overload. $39 bail forfeited. t'Ohn Themis Delane Wolfrum, vi olation basic rule. $7.50. RalDh Dale Lvon. violation hide rule. $17.50. I Woodrow J. Chambers, fail dim headlights, $5. 1 Harry Allen Galloway, violation bas ic rule, tll.oO bail forfeited. Frederick Jay Thomson, violation bailr rule, $10. William Edward Shreeva, Improper mufflers, $5. Daniel Lo Freeman! fail itop at top sign, $3. Francis Rey Kelley. passing insuffi cient clearance, $7.50. Clarence Wesley Sheehy, reckless driving, $230. Lora Bllenn Say, no muffler. $7.30. Freddie Gene Tyree. inadequate brakes, $5 hail forfeited. Wesley Arthur Brown, axle overload, $20 bail forfeited. Carl Dean Temple ton, fall drive on right half, $7.50. On The Record KLAMATH FALLS BIRTHS NICHOLSON Born to Mr. and .Mrs. G. R. Nicholson May 29 in Klam ath Valley Hospital a girl weighing CLAUSON Born to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Clauson May .10 In Klamath vancy Hoipuai a gin weigning 0 ids. 6'j OH. LELLI Born to Mr. and Mrs. Quer- fno A. Lelli'June 1 in Klamath Valley uospitai a gin woigning 0 ids., iv ozs. BOYS SANCHEZ Born to Mr. and Mrs, Victor Sanchez Mav 30 In Klamath Val ley Hospital a boy weighing 6 lbs., 11 . SWEEK Born to Mr. and Mrs. .James Sweeie June 1 in Klamath Val ley Hotpitai a boy weighing 9 lbs., 8 ozs. last ROUNDUP Girls 195 Boys 208 Firm Held Up In Portland PORTLAND AP The Holly wood distric branch office of the Local Loan Co. was held up late Monday afternoon by a well dressed gunman, who fled with an undisclosed amount of cash. The roboer wore natty slacks, an Ivy Lejpue cap, a cream-colored sports coat and sun glasses. Miss Jean Houseman, a cashier in the second floor office of the loan company, said he walked in and handed her a note reading: "This is a holdup. Give me your cash." She said he then pulled back his coat, revealing the butt of a Run in a holster. She op.-ned a drawer and handed him the cash. After taking it he toon back the note and walked out. So well executed was the holdup that customers and other cashiers were unaware of what was going on until the man had left. OPEN SEASON "That s where my husband installed his Hi Fi wasn't he clever?" Alabama Voters Go To Poll To Decide 'Thorny' Issue GOP Leader Hat In Ring NEW YORK (AP) Leonard W Hall has made it official: his hat is in the ring for the Republican nomination for governor. . By announcing his candidacy yesterday, the former GOP na tional chairman became the first of several likely contenders to en ter the race openly. Hall s an nouncement had been expected for some time. The 57-year-old Hall entered the Tace with a flourish. He blasted 'Gov. Averell Harriman, a Demo crat who is seeking reelection, as "a governor who does not lead and who spends most of his en ergy running for the presidential nomination." . Hall, now a practicing lawyer in Nassau County on Long Island, has served seven terms each in the New York Assembly and the U. S. House nf Representatives. His father was Theodore Roose velt's coachman and later his li brarian. Hall's chief potential rivals for the GOP nomination are Nelson A. Rockefeller of Westchester County, a philanthropist who has held federal posts in both Demo cratic and Republican administra tions, and Sen. Walter J. Mahoney of Buffalo, State Senate majority leader. Neither has publicly announced his candidacy. Chinese Faces Deportation DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) - "They want me to leave. Why?" in an almost uncomprehending voice Harry Lee, a 72-year-old nearly blind retired Chinese cook, repeated, "I don't know why." Lee has been living in this coun try one month short of 40 years. Now he faces deportation to Red China. The U. S. Immigration Service has given Lee 30 days in which to produce sworn affidavits that he has not left this country since 1924. Lee said this will be difficult because in 40 years, he has lived in various cities and most of his old friends are dead. Lee entered New York City as a stowaway in 1918. Nearly 24 years later he registered with the Chinese consulate in New York. He said he has filed alien reports lor more than 10 years. He came to this area in 1944 as a cook and restaurant operator. Now nearly blind from cataracts, he receives $90 a month social se curity. Lee's atlorney Harry Ferguson quoted an immigration official as saying Lee's files were checked during "a slow period." BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) Attention centers on v charges of Ku Klux Klan support and the thorny issue of Democratic party loyalty today as Alabamians vote in a runoff primary election. Eighth Graders To Get Diplomas DORRIS Principal Buel Fisher, of the Dorris Elementary School, announced this week that 30. eighth graders will receive di plomas at graduation exercises Wednesday, June 4. at b p.m. in the Butte Valley High School gymnasium. Guest speaker will be Sam I. Ritchie. Klamath Falls area man ager of the California Oregon Power Company. Stephanie Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Jones ot uorns, will eive the valedictory address Sharon Houston, the invocation; David Newhouse. the opening ad dress: Charles Butler, the class will; Delena McDaniel, the proph ecy. Man Guilty In Waterfowl Case DORRIS Charles Franklin Shaw, 25. Box 212, Merrill, en tered a plea of guilty before Judge Les Chase in Dorris Judicial Court on May 27 to a charge of taking waterfowl curing the closed sea-son. Shaw .was cited to court by California game warden and a U.S. game management agent. The officers testified that Shaw had capturd a young Canada goose from the Lower Klamath area along the State Line Road, and tied it to a bush by its leg. When Shaw returned some time later, the gosling was dead. Judge Chase imposed a fine of $50. Weather Table Bv United Press International Temperatures and rainfall for 4 hours ending at 4 a.m. Paul Rogers of American Legion Post No. 164. Tulelake, will pre sent the American . Legion citizen ship, scholarship and leadership awards. School trustees Hilda ,Stum baugh, Richard Fenwick and Arch ie Milligan will present the di- Dlomas. Musical selections by the school band and cnorus will be under the direction of Hugh Yeats. Graduating are Charles Butler, Ronald Ademec. Harry Beck, Don na Clark, Don Dysert, Teddy Crutchfield, Linda Daws, Betty Hodnett, Sharon Houston, Gary Filipoe. Katherine Kindle, ueiena Mc Daniel. Brenda McBride, Gloria Shoemaker. Bert Holtzhauser, Ed ward Kemp, Stephanie Jones, ui- anna Van Meter, Jerry Lane, Da vid Newhouse. William Olson. Glenn Padgett, Linda Crawford, Claudie Mark- wick, William Stevenson, Jimmie Struble, James Woodward, Royce White, Bart Hadwick and Jo Ann Downing. High Low Rain Albuquerque Sfi 69 Atlanta 92 68 Bakersfield M 60 Boise 70 49 Brownsville H9 71 Chicago . 59 53 Denver 90 52 Detroit 64 44 El Centro 96 71 Fairbanks 82 56 Fort Worth 95 73 Fresno 0 54 .02 Helena 67 51 .12 Kansas Ci'y 75 63 Los Angeles 77 60 Miami 82 77 Minneapolis 61 46 .04 New Orleans 91 73 New York 72 59 Oakland 73 61 .02 Oklahoma City 90 70 Phoenix 64 70 Pittsburgh 63 46 Red Bluff 76 55 .30 Reno 69 41 .04 Sacramento 75 52 .01 Salt Lake City 86 60 San Diego 73 62 San Francifco . 72 55 .02 Seattle 73 52 Spokane "3 51 Stockton 74 53 .12- Thermal 99 "0 Tucson 101 70 Washington 80 61 Driver Enters Guilty Plea Edgar Newman, construction worker whrse auto struck down a 7-year-old g'rl last Thursday aft ernoon, receipted for a $500 fine and 90 days in jail Monday, after pleading guilty to drunk driving. Ihe sentence was administered by District Judge D. E. Van Vac-tor. Injured in the mishap was Bar bara Jean Rush of 1707 Wiard Street, daughter of a state police man. She was riding her bicycle on Wiard 'hen it was struck in the rear by Newman's car. The child was Knocked to the pave ment and received cuts and bruises, plus shock. She was Mealed at Klamath Val ley Hospital and allowed to go home after being kept some four hours. Landowners and Investors George Osgood Klinkus Weds Pretty Sophomore The voters will choose between Ihe two top contenders of a first primary field of 14 candidates for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. Seventeen members of the State Democratic Executive Committee will be elected on the same ballot. Along with 55 committeemen named in the first primary May they will decide whether to re tain the controversial party loy alty oath which, in presidential elections, now binds Alabama to the national party. Runoff candidates for the nom ination for governor are Atty. Gen. John Patterson, 36, who led the first primary field, and 38-year-old Circuit Judge George Wallace. Patterson is the son of the late . L. Patterson, an antivice cru sader. Charges that Patterson is cam paigning with the support of the Klan have been made by the Montgomery Advertiser, a daily newspaper; the Greensboro Watchman, a weekly; and Wal lace. All said the attorney general has been associated in the cam paign with Grand Dragon Robert Shelton. Patterson acknowledged that he was acquainted with Shelton, but said he did not know he was a leader in the Klan. States righters, who are pledged to repeal the loyalty oath, are struggling with national party loyalists for state committee con trol. In last month's primary, the states righters won 32 seals and the loyalists 23. To gain control of the 72-member committee, the states righters must win only five of the remaining 17 seats today. The loyalty oath requires that before anyone can run in Demo cratic primaries, he must pledge allegiance to the national party LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) -I A formal military wedding on the Jordan High School campus has united George Osgood Klinkus and a pretty sophomore coed. George, probably the best known student in the school, wore a mask. The ceremony concluded. the young couple marched under a bridge of crossed sabers in the best military tradition. There was no honeymoon. There never will be. Actually. George Osgood Klinkus doesn't exist. He's a living gag on the Jordan campus. He was enrolled more than a year ago. The administration may not like him, and certain faculty members have fallen prey to the conspiracy involved, but George is oflicially tolerated in the inter est of student morale. George has taken some of the standardized examinations. What really happened? A student filled out an extra exam paper for George. Sometimes, ironically enough, George s test grade was belter than his proxy's. , "George Osgood Klinkus isn't nonexistent George has a going to be graduated with this ENGINEERING FRATERNITY Max De Hciken of Klamath Falls is one of eight juniors in electrical engineering at Oregon State College lo be selected for membership in Eta Kanoa Nu. na tional electrical engineering honor society. Hciken graduated from Klamath Union High School in 1950. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ernest H. Heiken of 204 North Third Street. The complete set of records in the office of the registrar. Once he was expelled for smoking. It was hard to convince some teachers that George really doesn't exist. They had seen his name on the absence rolls from time to lime. Some teacher had to go along with the gag at the start, ol course. She helped with the en rollment. A oke is a joke, even in the serious pursuit of knowl edge, and Principal Milton Sager says this joke.hasn t gotten out of ryind. FOR LEASE: new, modern Eugene beauty talon NO INVESTMENT NEEDED! Completely equip ped with facilities for four operators. Prestige locai tion in down town Eugene. , Street level no stairs for your customers to climb. Rent: $250.00 Per Month 925 Pearl Street, Eugene Phono Manager Dl 4-1461 senior class." Sacer said. "There have been sly rumors to that ef fect. This joke always has been within bounds and it will stay within them. It has caused some teachers some trouble, but I don't think anyone has taken this thing seriously." , When Ihe high school pancr came off the presses last week it announced that Georee had been suspended. It said he was indefinitely absent TBM. It explained he was to be married. The ROTC unit stood by as Bob Bragole, post chaplain, recited the vows for George and 15-year-old Ann Metheisen, who was attired in a beautiful white formal gown, with bridal veil. The witnesses couldn't keep from laughing be cause of George's grotesque mask and because he wore so many medals that his ROTC uni form sagged. Says Principal Sager: "I'd be happy to attend George Osgood Klinkus' funeral." As flavorful a bourbon as ever graced your glass! 56th ANNIVERSARY SALE STARTS - THURSDAY SEE YOUR WEDNESDAY EDITION FOR TREMENDOUS SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT EVERY DROP IS YEARS OLD 45 QUART Taste 7-year-old Crab Orchard. "Ah," you'll say, "that's what I call good bourbon!" Aged and mel lowed to a smooth luxury of Savor, Crab Orchard is made for people who want honest bourbon and honest value. Try it QfichiWid STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 86 PROOF NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS COMPANY NEW YORK, NEW YORK Locations Desired Hov you investigated the return possible on your in vestment in building and leasing a Nationally known Dari-Delite store in your community. Complete blue prints furnished tree. Building size 18'x26 Call or write: Wallace Sterling, 2642 Cen tral Blvd., Eugene, Oregon. Dance Review Variety Program Fluorescent Lighting 'Tap 'Acrobatics "Ballet 'Hawaiian MILLS AUDITORIUM Presented By Pupils of Edna Howell From The Normadean Dance Studio TONIGHT -7:30 P.M. Enrollment For Summer Schedule To Begin June 9th Ph. 4-3672 or 2-3S96 rtil y STARTS. Cj 'S ENDS . ' V-'ejgl 3fc ITS ED SULLIVAN'S 10" (ft 7ft j (ft fl n f A- ANNIVERSARY ON TV WE'RE ' P r n 0 1 M CELEBRATING WITH A vDU LbUiniLii I J KfflW t3 1 "We've got a really bie V W'. , Anniversary Show lined up for you WQ ' ( ) June 22. Don't miss it" Y X SUMMER TYPING 8 Weeks-Beginning June 9 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. 5 days per week MINIMUM AGE 12 YEARS ENROLL NOW! Do two-thirds of a School Year's Work in 8 Weeks ROBERTSON SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 411 MAIN, KLAMATH FALLS Phone TU 2-4126 BUY NOW! SAVE NOW! SPECIAL LOW, LOW PRICES! SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY DEALS Just in time for your vacation Don't miss this special oppor tunity! AU this month we aro celebrating the 10th Anniversary of THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW with spectacu lar buys. Not only special low prices, but unusually high trade-in allowances. It's the biggest money-saving event of the year. V Wide choice of models We have a wido selection of y models and colors in stock for this event. Chances are you can get immediate delivery on the model you want by acting fast. Choose from sta tion wagons, convertibles, hardtops, sedans. Prices start below 42 models of the "low-price 3." yt. Every one a Performance "5cfe. Champion. Mercury offers the biggent, most powerful cars you can buy at such low prices. Mercury leads its field for all-around bigness, horsepower (up to 360), compreasion, torque, and power-per-pound. Most important. Mercury's thrifty engines deliver more power from less gas. MERCURY PERFORMANCE CHAMPION SPECIAL BUYS THIS MONTH ON USED CARS, TOO ALL MAKES Bull SEE THE MERCURY DEALER IN YOUR COMMUNITY