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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1958)
F&DAY, JUNE 20, 193B HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OltEGON PAGE V k if s , in 1 e a WORKMEN ARE shown here preparing to lay foundation for a new building at Fourth and Pine streets which will provide space for two business offices. Job is expected to be done in 30 days, according to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Di Battista, owners of the lot. Struc ture will feature modern-type brick exterior. Republicans Hope For Business Upturn To Take Heat Off he called the "Eisenhower-Nixon inflation" with a new attack on Adams. He said the cost of living has gone up $2.25 a week under the Republicans. "To an administration that thinks nothing of accepting lavish gifts ... it is understandable that $2.25 a week doesn't make much impression." he said, "but to the unemployed worker it may well mean a meal for himself and his family which he cannot afford to buy." WASHINGTON (AP) Repub-, licans apparently hope a substan tial upturn, in business will come along soon to get them off the political hook of the Sherman Adams controversy. GOP members of Congress are divided in support and opposition New Business Building Set Ground-leveling has been com pleted and foundations are to be poured Wednesday for a new build ing at Fourth and Pine streets to provide two business offices. The land is owned by Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dl Battista. Di Battista, operator of the Sun down Tent and Awning Company, said the one-story structure will be ready for occupancy in about 60 days. Leases are now being negotiated for both offices, he reported. The building will have a mod ern, golden buff brick finish. It will front on Fourth Street and be by 50 feet in size. L. W. McGuire is the general contractor. The Di Battistas also own the remainder of the half block be tween the alley and Pine on Fourth and may modernize the rest of it with future growth of this area I I r f V ROBERT H. ENMAN Court Records KLAMATH FALLS MUNICIPAL COURT James L. Montoya. drunk,' $25 or John B. MeitaB, drunk. $25 or 13A da vs. William Johnson, drunk, $25 or 12Va Cecil Messer. drunk. S2.1 or 12'. 4 davs. Geraldine Keluchle, drunk, $100 and u days. Robert E. Ledbetter. drunk, $25 for feited. Robert B. Campbell, drunk, $25 forfeited. Paul R. Hawk, drunk, $25 or 12Vt davs. Owen C. Riddle Jr., drunk, $50 or 25 days. KLAMATH COUNTY DISTRICT COURT Harold Moore, no operator's- license, zu or 7',-a aays in lieu oi line; cam- in i uea. Victor S. Vallcoff. violation basic1 rule. $20 bail forfeited. Ernest Arnold Swartsfager, improper muffler, $7.50 bail forfeited. Robert Lloyd Bryant, fail display li cense plates, $5. Robert Leon McConathy, no operat or's license, $7.50 bail forfeited. Edwin Frederick Soderberg, viola tion basic rule, $25 bail forfeited. Jtmmie Dewayne Green, violation ba sic rule, $7.50. . Dallas Laverne Cochran, violation ba ric rule. $8.50 ball forfeited. Robert Lee Gorser, combination over load, $41 bail forfeited. Anthony John Gratzer, no operator's Ronald Dalvln House, violation ba sic rule, $9. Eugene John Heath, sifting and leak ing load, $7.50 bail forfeited. Robert Lee Owens, violation basic rule. S15. Donald Bertrah Orrell, violation ba sic rule. $7.50. Robert Riley, motor truck speeding, tin hnil forfeited. Charles Arthur Smith, fail dim head lights, dismissed. James Wells Hunt, no trailer license. 95. Clifford Laurence Ambers, no muf fler. $5. Donald McMillan Montgomery, Inad auate muffler. SS bail forfeited. William Grover Adams, no stop light, Harold Jack Totten. Improper muf fler. 7 50 ball forfeited. Lee Edmond Hoilenbeak, fail stop at top sign, S5. John Clarence Arnell, fail signal left-hand turn. S5. Aidan Ambrose Fenwlck, fall stop basic rule, $7.50. Scholarship At Yale Won By Local Man A Klamath County resident, Robert H. Enman, has been awarded a scholarship to Yale University, School of Music to study for his masters degree in piano theory and composition. Young Enman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Enman of the Henley district. He is a graduate of Henley High School and received his early mu sic training here, piano from Mrs Julia Zumwalt, now living in Ash land and violin instruction from Harry Borel. He received his bachelor of arts degree in music with high honors at Lewis ana and Clark College. Portland this month. He has been a schol arship student during his four years at Lewis and Clark, was voted the outstanding senior man in music by Phi Mu Alpha fra ternity and received the Sigma Phi Epsilon scholarship trophy .for four years of outstanding scholas tic achievement. Bob has played in the violin sec tion as first violinist with the Portland Chamber Orchestra, and recently performed the Mozart pi ano concerto in D minor with the college symphony in addition to giving a senior recital in tvans Hall on the campus. He will remain in Portland for further study during the summer, going to Yale for opening of the fall term of school. 97 Travel Shows Gain Highway traffic on U.S. 97, as recorded automatically six miles south of here, showed an 8.1 per cent increase in May over May, 1957, the State Highway Depart ment reports. It said 2.387 cars passed the Midland check point in May this year, versus 2,208 in the like month a year ago. Maximum traf fic day was May 30 and maxi mum hour for the month was from 10 to 11 a.m. on that date when 217 cars were recorded. The department reported an op posite picture for Highway 97 at a check point one mile south of Chemult. May's 1,733 cars were 12.6 per cent off from the May, 1957. total of 1,983. Maximum daily volume at this point was also Memorial Day and the best hour was from 9 to 10 a.m. on that day when 286 cars were checked. For the first five months of this year, traffic at the Chemult check point was only down 0.7 per cent from the like 1957 period. Canada OK's Cuttinq Of Atom Secrecy OTTAWA (AP)' Canada's Par liament has approved the air de fense agreement with the United Stales setting up a unified com mand to protect North America from attack. The agreement covers the oper .itions of the North American Air Defense Command iNorad), which has headquarters at Colorado Springs, Colo. It is headed by U. S. Gen. Karle rartnage. Ca nadian Air Marshal Roy Slemon is his dcouty. The House of Commons vote yesterday was 200-8, with the So cialists ooDosine the agreement They want Norad placed under di-! reel control ot me iorm mianuc Treaty Organization. Prime Min ister Diefenbaker argued tne agreement "strengthens NATO and that is all that matters. Radioactivity In Humans Up WAYNESVILLE. N. C. (AP) I Radioactivity in human bodies has increased about 100 per cent in the last two years, but the amount still need not be regarded as harmful, says a nuclear medicine specialist. Col. James B. Hartgering of Washington, D. C. yesterday ad dressed the Mountain-Top Medical Assembly, made up of .doctors from seven states. He is director of the division of nuclear medi cine and chemistry at the Insti tute of Research, Walter Reed Army Medical Center. He attributed the increases of radioactive materials in humans to increases in nuclear testing by the United States, Great Britain and the Soviet Union. Marine Chief Calls For Help WASHINGTON (AP) Marine combat correspondents of World War II are being urged to help save the corps from what Gen. Clifton B. Cates terms the dan gers in President Eisenhower s defense reorganization plan. Cates, who was Marine com mandant from 1948 to 1952, has sent out letters appealing "from one Marine to another" for help. We have lost in the House of Representatives, but we can still fight in the Senate," he said. We must try to amend tne House bill to restore effective civ ilian control and to retain the con stitutional responsibilities of Con gress with respect to the balance and composition of . the armed forces." Cates made it plain that he does not believe the bill passed by the. House last week, 402-1, is anything but the Eisenhower, program for reorganization. to President Eisenhower's deci sion to keep Adams at work as his righthand man despite the furor over Adams' acceptance of costly favors from millionaire in dustrialist Bernard Goldfine. But few Republicans doubt that the Adams incident has hurt their chances of reelection in about the same degree that Democratic can didates were affected by corrup tion charges against the Truman administration in 19o2. The Republican hope is that there will be more important and more cheering matters to dis cuss in September and October, before the general election vote. Fundamentally most of the Re publicans have felt that the eco nomic situation in October is like ly to be more influential on the election results than almost any other single issue. It was for that reason they were cheered with Eisenhower s report to the Republican state chairmen that there are some clear signs of a business upswings Newsmen were given no details of the picture Eisenhower painted in response to the state chair man's Questions. But a number of government reports on sales, in ventories, employment and other indicators have shown gains in re cent weeks. The Assn. of Ameri can Railroads reported yesterday that last week's freight carload ings reached a new high for 1958. Federal Reserve officials re ported that while current easy money policies are being contin ued, they no longer see a need for pouring more millions into the money supply. Adams On the other hand they indicated ' no present plan to raise interest1 rafes or take other anti-inflationary steps. The economic picture remains clouded, with conflicting indica tions. National Chairman Paul M. Butler told a Democratic rally in Gary, Ind., last night that "the Republican administration is at tempting to cover up the real un employment situation by adding up small seasonal gains in an ef fort to present a rosy but false picture of the nation's economy." Butler said Labor Department figures show 13 of every 100 work ers in ouraDie goods lines are job less. He said 16 of evcrv 100 in transportation equipment and 14 oi iou in primary metals are unemployed. Butler coupled criticism of what E Saturday Night Hied Bam Darrii, California FREE Motorcycle ThisWeek! Music By PEE WEE STIDHAM and the Butte Valley Rangers Ne incrtoM In admiulon price Dancing 9 till 1 90c Person Since the 1950 census, 21,700.000 people have been added to the population of the united states FIND MOUNT CLEMENS. Mich. (AP) Maurice Sucaet was plowing on his farm May 9 when he turned up a broken jar. Sucaet was about to throw the Jar away when he noticed the cor ner of a $5 bill in a ball of mud inside the jar. He sent the jar and the mud t the Treasury De partment. The department notified Sucaet yesterday tke remains of bills in tke mui were worth $1,095 and it was frwrn a credit for that mwimt. TV SERVICE COMPLETE All Mokes - All Model! Coll 'S 333 E. Main Ph. 4-4616 Metorola Dealer TORNADO BORGER. Tex. (AP) The De partment of Public Safety said a tornado struck down just north of this Panhandle town early today and injured two persons. The DPS said the twister smashed a path about 150 yards long, unroofed buildings, damaged three trailer houses and destroyed another. Injured were Martha Cator, 45 of Borger, and George Mars, 50, of Stinnett, Tex. DENOUNCED ' WASHINGTON (AP) Con gress and the State Department, in separate actions, have de nounced the execution of leading figures in Hungary s ill-starred r volt in 1956. By a 91-0 vote, the Senate late yesterday adopted a resolution ac cusing Russia of barbarism and perfidy in the execution of Imre Nagy, Hungary's revolutionary premier: Gen. Pal M a 1 e t e r, Nagy s defense minister, and two others. The House then followed suit by a vote of 171-0. The State Department said in a statement that the execution of the Hungarian freedom leaders "is an affront to all members of the U.N. and to the conscience of the world." PICTURE THEFT HOLLYWOOD (API Blonde actress Sandra Giles apparently has an over enthusiastic fan. She told police someone broke into her apartment and stole 75 photo graphs of her and that s all DANCE! SHOW! ARMORY WED. 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