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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1958)
FRIDAY. JUNE 20. 1358 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE 5 A ' Hagerty Now On Free Gift List By Some TAMPA, Fla. IAPI Presiden tial press secretary James C. Hagerty and his wife received Jree golf lessons, lodgings and meals to the tune of $260.97 from a swank resort club in 1957, the Tampa Tribune said today. Hagerty and his wife vacationed (or five-days as guests of the ex clusive Ponte Verda club near Jacksonville Beach from Jan. 27 through Feb. 1, the newspaper said. J. P. LeMaster president of Ponte Verda Corp., told the news paper, "when he got here, Hager ty insisted on paying his bill. We wouldn't let him do it." Mayhugh C o u r s o n, assistant manager of the club, said honored guests don't receive bills. In Washington, Hagerty said: "The account is correct as re ported, except for one thing. I did pay for my golf lessons. I per sonally paid the club pro. "I did insist, as the account says, on paying my entire bill. but the club would not let me do o. "Under the circumstances, there was nothing wrong in this. I don't see how anyone could make anything of my being a guest of the club at their insist ence." Rick Fanlin, the club's golf pro. (aid the Hagertys spent most of their time golfing. LeMaster said there was thought of gaining a favor by pay ing Hagerty's bill. "I thought we were very for tunate in having him here." Le Master said. He explained that the publicity gained by the press secretary's visit more than offset expenses borne by the club. "mm, yXm IWwpx mm- riiiiimiitmiiiirtimi f-i-iil NEW YOftK (API-Mrs. Annie Visconti, 64, was retiring after 28 years with a cable and radio firm. Turkish Cypriot Leaders Veto British Idea For New Government On Troubled Isle Woman Holds Off Police In Gun Fight WATERV1LLE, Wash. (AP) - Cornered alter a wild chase, an Oregon woman accused of rob bery held off lawmen for nearly three hours Thursday before lay ing down her pistol and surrend ering meekly. The woman, Lee Mae Webb, 41, of Arlington, Ore., was taken to the Douglas County jail and held in connection with the $400 rob bery of an east Wenatchee su nermarket earlier Thursday. A deputy sheriff and state pa trolmen chased Mrs. Webb (or 28 miles as She drove her 1958 pickup truck over winding mountain roads and across north central Washington wheat flatlands. About seven miles south of here, she abandoned the truck. She fired an aimless shot from her .38 cali ber pistol and then fled to a wood pn railroad trestle. ' Officers surrounded the spot and during the three-hour siege Mrs Wphh fired three more shots, all apparently in the air. When she surrendered, the woman turned nupr hpr eun and about $400. State Patrolman Emmett Smith aid Mrs. Webb told him she came to the Wenatchee area earlier this week to find work. This failing, the said she became deeply de-! jpondent and needed money aes perately. Band Leader's Son Arrested LOS ANGELES (API-Orchestra leader Bob Crosby's son Chris topher, 15, and a companion were arrested early today. Police said they had pushed a sports car out of a Bel-Air driveway. Ynnne Crosbv and Jeffrey Da irisnn. 16. were booked at the West Los Angeles police station on suspicion of "temporarily depriv ing the owner of a vehicle (joy riding)." , "Christopher said he didn t know why they did It. that it was a crazy idea and they just want ed to try it out," Officer W. R. Maxwell reported. Young Crosby was released to his mother, Mrs. June Crosby, and Davidson to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ravmond Davidson, West Los Angeles. The youths said they were cruising in the fashionable Bel-Air district in a convertible owned by rhi-uinnher's father, when they spotted a 1958 Corvette parked in a driveway. Peter Heisser, owner of the nnrlis rar. called police. He told them he had heard a noise. tasked tit nf his hsuse and saw two vrths uhine the car ut back ward s his driveway. H sevd he rin utsKie. ytllin. d lh IM m fed. Th eWsT Crssbyl car km parked jctm tta trn. atavU Mad h d Officer W. r. DscfT wott-rf T"4 Cri ,- tefaiftij I hUtll St t corner, ft roult t ths ttition KH CDriK-oor. the srfficers en-ted op fount tmiivn. kite WWA.V Tei it-itw Hrt ti Ittffj to tt to it bit for VYS ,M Ml 0I W'l TWm Munda?. tm'tr rtsss. A'tiofrrd t sim i ees Iftd kull Nrwtcor" ercen the 111 sv it stiss face. QUEEN CORRINA NORDMAN, center, of the Sisters Rodeo, will preside over the Queen's Ball, which will Iciclcoff the three-day celebration, sponsored by the Sisters V.F.W., tonight. Two days of rodeo will begin tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. after a 9:45 horse show and children's contest and an I I o'clock parade. The day will end with a Buclcaroo Dance at 9:30 p.m., while Sunday will begin with a Buclcaroo Breakfast at 6 o'clock, the rodeo resuming at 1:30 p.m. Queen Corrina, who is 21, rides with the Redmond Saddle Club. Her two princesses are Gail Marr, left, of the Rim Rock Riders, Bend, and the queen's sister, Barbara, 17, right. NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) Turk ish Cypriot leaders have rejected Britain's partnership plan for gov erning this embattled island. The Turkish government agreed to talk about it and the Greek Cy priots awaited word from Athens oday. A Greek government source said Premier Constantine Kara manlis' Cabinet definitely would reject the plan, which calls for the Greek and Turkish governments to join Britain in governing the island, the NA10 allies were putting strong pressure on Greece at least to join in discussions and Britain planned to go ahead with the plan in any event. Archbishop Makarios, exiled leader of the Greek Cypriot move ment to unite the island with Greece, conferred in Athens with Cypriot mayors. He said he would hena nis views iu uie muiaii iu- day. Thirty, thousand British troops waited .tensely to put down any new violence growing oui oi me Japs Hit Back At Communists TOKYO (AP) The Japanese Foreign Office accused Russia and Red China today of viewing this country as a hypothetical enemy. It made clear it didn t like it. The Foreign Office was reply ing in an informal statement to Kussian note delivered Mon day. The note said Moscow did not intend to intimidate Japan but considered U. S. bases here "and bringing in nuclear weapons to such bases" to be threats to Far Eastern peace. The reply noted that Japan has answered similar Soviet notes in the past by saying nuclear weap ons are not permitted here. "The United States knows this and will certainly respect it," the state ment added. THEFT PORTLAND (AP) The Town Finance Co. was robbed by a ner vous gunman of an estimated $100 Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Pat Sinclair, casnier, said the man entered the office and asked James R. Hill, the manager, how to go about obtaining a loan Hill replied that good credit was necessary. The man then draw a revolver and instructed Hill to give him all the currency in the main cash drawer at the front counter. He got it. qourbest ouy in house paiht... Sherwin-Williams Now better than Stretches ths years hafmsM paint job Endcrad by boding pea MM jseiu&m wcm& suunm. '- 'IT 't. O Pru fSSaihly ModeB" I A li if (White I flli Retirement Dinner Plans End In Sadness And Death Bomb Victim To Be Treated In Russian Zone TOKYO (API Hisako Nagala, 21, a survivor of the American alom bombing of Nagasaki in 1945, left lor Moscow today for a vear's free medical treatment she hopes may remove her scars and restore her voice. Miss Nagata. petite daughter of Nagasaki school teacher, is the first Japanese atomic victim to he invited by the Soviet Union for free treatment. Three years ago U. S. group brought 2S scarred girl victims of the Hiroshima A-blast to New York for plastic surgery. Hisako was found near death in Nagasaki beside' the bodies of her mother and sister She sur vived with large throat scars and can now only whisper. All my friends told me not to become a Communist," she said as she boarded the plane for Copenhagen. "Why do they say such a thing to me? I am a base ball fan." So 13 of her women co-workers planned a farewell dinner for her last night at a Greenwich Village restaurant. Mrs. Visconti had been looking forward to the parly. She had a line new party dress for the big occasion. But she had been ill for the past few days. She promised she's get o the party "if I have to crawl ". SUE i LOS ANGELES (AP) Eight heirs or the late Jeanne Eagles, Broadway and Hollywood actress. seek $950,000 . damages for use of her name and likeness in a motion picture. Defendants in a suit on file in superior court today are George Sidney Productions. Inc., and Col umbia Pictures Corp.. who pro duced and distributed the film, "The Jeanne Eagles Story." The complaint by a sister, four nephews and three nieces of the actress charged the film depicted .Miss hack's as a dissolute and immoral person." Miss Eagles died at 35 in 1929 while at the peak of her career. So the women gathered at the restaurant early and had the stage set for the guest of honor's grand entrance at 6: IS. They waited, telling jokes. laughing. Then some of them be gan to look up at the clock. They grew uneasy. Came 7:30, and still no Mrs. Visconti. Some one said they should tele phone her home. No answer. The women became more anxious. hone calls were made to Mrs. Viscontini's husband, who was at work, and the superintendent of their apartment house. They found Mrs. Visconti dead apparently stricken with a heart attack while putting on her party clothes. The news was telephoned to the restaurant. Mrs. Visconti's friends ate In silence. Then they went tiome, taking her gifts with them. MELBA'S Salon of Beauty NOW OPEN MONDAYS Ph. Til 111 Pin SI three-nation tug of war which threatens the Mediterranean an chor of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Rioting between Greek and Turkish Cypriots has cost 17 lives this month. Although the Turks sent a note rejecting the plan as such, they agree to negotiate on it and at tend any conference with Britain and Greece. Earlier Turk Cypriot leader Rauf Denktash said the plan did not set up safeguards to keep the island from uniting with Greece and "we are not interest ed." The Turkish minority wants Cyprus partitioned. The new British plan calls for participation by the Greek and Turkish governments in the con trol of Cyprus for the next seven years and partitioning the island legislature, although not the island itself. It gives a measure of self-gov ernment to the Cypriot people hile Britain, in consultation with Greece and Turkey, retains con trol of defense, internal security and foreign affairs. The islanders could choose Greek or Turkish citizenship in addition to the Brit ish citizenship they now hold. The Greek and Turk Cypriots would have separate Houses of Representatives for their com munity affairs, now controlled by the British. The Greek and Turk ish governments would be repre sented in an Upper Council head ed by the British governor. If this "adventure in partner ship," as Prime Minister Macmil- lan described it in the House oi Commons yesterday, works out well after seven years, all three nations would share sovereignty over Cyprus. The plan was envisioned as a compromise of the British, Greek and Turkish demands tor tne is land's future. Gov. Sir Hugh Foot said Britain will leave the details open for fu- ure discussions but is going ahead with the plan for govern ing the island s 400,000 Greeks and 100.000 Turks no matter what tney say. Foot told newsmen that if one group refuses to join the new gov ernment, the other still could participate. NAMED SALEM (AP) Mrs. Thomas G. Wright Jr., wife of Gov. Rob ert D. Holmes' press secretary will be public relations coordina lor of the governor's campaign committee. The appointment was .announced by Harry Hogan, The Dalles, campaign secretary. Mrs. Wright is a former reporter and editorial writer on the Oregon Statesman. HELD SALEM (AP The state Indus trial Accident Commission is hold ing 49 workers' checks totaling $1,790. It can't deliver them be cause nf incorrect addresses. The biggest check is for $495. Vac. 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