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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 15, 1958)
TTFSDAY. JULY 15. 105ft HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Court Rerrrds KLAMATH rAI.I. MI NK IPAI COCRT Garry T MrGauthry, disorder.' Conduct. S2.1 forfeited. Jay E Mnntnomery, disorderly con durt. 2.S forfeited Albert E. Strom, drunk and disorder y. $50 or 2.1 days. Cmine Hunt, drunk. 123 or 12' Larry Carmichael, drunk. $25 or 12' d Patricia Jarkion. drunk. $2.1 forfeit Raymond Jackson, drunk tin M in. days- Benjamin Frenchman, drunk. llfW or SO days. Charles H. Perkins, drunk. 23 for feited. Godfrey Rim bo. drunk, $25 or 12', daw Marvin Tupper. drunk, $im or 50 day Clifford C Voight. fail yield riant of ay to vehicle, dismissed. Donald E. Kohl, engaging in ipeed contest, dismissed. Mar.'ha E Slewnrt. full yield right of way to vehicle. $10 forfeited. Jess H. Wood, driving wrong way on One way street. $5. -J? ,E ,Cox vlo,lin Pd ordinance. $20 forfeited. Joaquin G Hernandez, fail it on at in. M forfeited. Joseph V. Barkdoll, full leave name and address at scene of accident. $50 forfeited. Emma B Davis, turn from wrong lane. $5 forfeited, no operator li cense. $5 forfeited. Winfred S. Robinson, following too Closely, 5 forfeited. KLAMATH COINTY DISTRICT COIiRT Willis Evan Banes, following too Closely. $20 hail forfeited. Theodore Shade, one headlight, dis missed upon motion district attorney Frank Drew Bell, fail stop at atop tpn. $5. " v DoloreB Faye Wynant, no operator's excessive Robert Earl T.fnH.... lensth. $15 bail forfeited. James Salterfield Jr.. violation bas ic rule, dismissed upon motion district attorney. Frances Ann Jones, violation basic rule. $7.50 bail forfeited. James Michael Harris. improper safety chains. $15 hail forfeited. Evan Corner Samuel, group axle ov erload. $41 hail forfeited. Ernest Edward Walker, motor truck speeding. $7.50. Charles Alan Hahn. violation basic rule. $40 hail forfeited. Toby Duran Jr., violation basic rule, $10.50. Jack Wesley Francis, violation bas ic rule. $15 hail forfeited. John Alfred Beattie, violation basic rule, dismissed. Cyril Victor Cook, violation basic rule, dismissed. EdwHrd Jay Gueck. no operator's license, dismissed upon motion district, attorney. I Edward Paul Ebert. throwing burn ing material from motor vehicle dis missed. George Spring, overlength load. $15 ball forfeited. Helen Mae Warner, fail stop at atop sign, dismissed. Vincent Jasper Hunt, vagrancv. en ter plea of guilty; 30 days in county jail: committed. Newman p. Andrus, overlength, 115 rail forfeited. Robert Elmer Llewellyn, driving while intoxicated. 30 days county jail: and $200 fine and costs or 97',-a days In tieu of fine; committed. Elia Lawton. being Intoxicated upon public highway. $35 or 15 days in lieu of fine; committed. 0 , HJT.:.J, i. M r MMntrt, M . Jj Neighborly Understanding Program To Be Instituted A Catholic census and an infor mation program designed to pro mote neighborly understanding and good will is to he instituted in the Klamath Basin area the lirst week in October. In preparation, church dignitar ies, including the Most Rev. Fran- CATHOLIC CHURCH dignitaries were present in Klamath Falls Friday for the purpose of making arrangements to conduct a Catholic census in this area and to promote clas ses on information on Catholicism in Sacred Heart and Pope Pius X parishes. Left is the Rt. Rev. Monsignor T. P. Casey, pastor of Sacred Heart Church; the Most Rev. Francis P. Leipzig, DD, bishop of the Baker Diocese and the Rev. John A. O'Brien, Ph.D., LOD, research professor in the graduate school, University of Notre Dame. Middle East Policy Faces Collapse OVER THE GARDEN GATE Mrs. Scott McKendree was elected director of the Klamath District at the annual convention recently in Kugene ol the Oregon Federation of Garden Clubs, Inc. Among awards presented was one for a scrapbook made by Mrs. Noah Nyhart of Mt. Laki, who won Hirst prize. Other local women attending from Northern California-Southern Oregon, were Mrs. Earl Redman, who received an award for a bird scrapbook. Mrs. Glenn Ferguson Mrs. Vcrda Urbach, Mrs. David Goehring, Mrs. Hugh O'Connor and Mrs. Curtis Heidrich. Regional clubs represented in cluded Northside, Fastside and Klamath Falls garden clubs. In addition to receiving lessons in flower arranging, the conven tioning women were treated to a lour of private and municipal rose gardens. The Fugcne Garden Club hosted a tea following the tour. Installation of district directors was handled by Mrs. W. L. Franks, slate past president. On the same evening, the horticulture awards were made. Colored Slides On Erin Slated Coldred slides of Ireland will be shown by Charlotte Carmichael, who recently returned from there, at the Klamath Camera Club meeting tonight, July 15. Charlotte spent three weeks in Ireland and attended the Kilbeg gan horse races and Mullingar (Inotball game). She also visited fllarney Castle and Dublin and has pictures of home life in the rural sections, of Ireland. The program starts at 8 p.m.. upstairs in the county library. Charlotte's many friends are in vited, but all visitors are welcome. National Park Begins Lectures The summer program of illus trated lectures has now begun at Lava Beds National Monument, Irving D. Kerr, superintendent, announces. Two lectures are scheduled each Sunday afternoon at Mushpot Cave, monument headquarters. The first lecture, at 3 o'clock PDST. is on the Modoc Indian War. The second, at 4 o'clock, is on the natural history of the Lava Beds area. The lectures will be presented each Sunday until September 1 By CHARLES M. MeCANN L'PI Foreign News Analyst United States policy in the Mid dle East appears to be threatened with virtual collapse. The revolt in Iraq constitutes a diplomatic defeat that could turn into a disaster. It threatens to cripple the Mid dle Eastern treaty organization the Baghdad Pact which t h e United Stales sponsored as part ol its long chain of alliances against Russian Communist aggression. It seriously weakens any real meaning which the Eisenhower Doctrine, planned to strongmen pro-Western governments of the Middle East, might have had. It is a victory for President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the new United Arab Republic, who as pires to make himself the head man ot the entire Arab worm. In that it adds to the general turmoil in the Middle East, it is a victory for Soviet Russia's pol icy of penetration and subversion in the Arab states. The Iraq rebellion came while Civic Center Club Honors Historians ALTURAS Dr. Rockwell D. Hunt, resident emeritus of the Conference of California Historical Societies, and Dr. H. Coke Wood, executive secretary of the confer ence, both of the College of Paci fic, Stockton, were honored guests at the Civic Center Club in Fort Bidwell on Tuesday. July 8. ot tne Modoc County Historical Society. Forty eight members and guests attended. Dr. Hunt and Dr. Wood were also honored by the Fort Crook Histori cal Society of Fall River when they met at the home of Mrs. Muple Perkins, Fall River, for potluck dinner on Thursday night, July 10. Mrs. Lee James, Adin. organizing officer of the confer ence, was also an honored guest. the pro-Western government ,' of Lebanon is fighting, with a dis couraging lack of success, a rebel lion by pro-Nasser elements. Finally, Ihe revolt cany iust one day before the four Moslum members of the Baghdad Pact Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Pakistan were to meet in Istanbul. Tur key. It seems not too much to sug gest that Secretary of State John Foster Dulles must now face the necessity for a really agonizing review of American policy. Critics of State Department pol icy might go back three years in tracing a course of events which can not be separated from the crises in Lebanon and Iraq. First, there is the Baghdad Pact. Dulles conceived that pact ano ine united states strongly sponsored it. But the United Stales refused to join. It has adhered to various committees of the Middle Eastern treaty organization but has reject ed frequent strong appeals that it necomc a tun member. Then came Nasser's seizure of the Suez Canal in lfl.ifi. Dulles sponsored a strong program of re prisals by canal-using countries But he backed down, step by step. until the program became mean ingless. In November, lfl.iti, Israel at tacked Egypt. Britain and France seized Ihe opportunity to demand a cease fire and. when it did not come about, they attacked the canal zone. The Uniled States an grily denounced the attack and led Ihe Uniled Nations in forcing Britain and France to withdraw. Many people believe that had it not been for Dulles' part in that. Nasser would have been over thrown within a few days. Instead, he was handed a triumph and re lations between the United States and Britain were seriously strained. In 1937 came the Eisenhower Doctrine, designed lo strengthen governments like those of Iraq and Lebanon against attack by any pro-Communist country such. say, as Egypt or Syria. It proved to he a paper tiger. Only recent ly, however. Dulles broadened it and advanced the possibility that the United States might aid Leb anon with its armed forces. But neither the United States nor the U.N. has given Lebanon any help, though it can hardly be doubted Egypt ana Syria have given mas sive help to the rebels. Mother Jailed For Burning Girl LOS ANGELES (API-A mother accused of burning her 4-year-old daughter s hands has been sen tenced lo 90 days in jail. Mrs. Consuelo M. Arcc, 28, also lost custody of the child, Frances, who was placed in a foster home. Mrs. Arce was convicted after officers testified she held Frances' hands over a slove burner because she took a tortilla while her moth er was away. People Read SPOT ADS - you are Dependable Coverage MAYFLOWER AUTO INSURANCE Reasonable Rates VERN W EMLEY Orflr I'hnn 2-33311 2IMII Hn Nth eis P. Leipzig, DD. Bishop of the Baker Diocese. Baker, and his in vited guest, the Rev. John A O'brien. Ph. D., LOD, professor ol research in Ihe graduate school n! Notre Dame, South Bend, Indi ana, conferred here with Monsignor T. P. Casey, pastor of Sacred Heart Church, Klamath Falls. Rev. O'Brien assisted Bishop Leipzig and priests of Sacred Heart and Pope Pius X parishes organize plans for developing an accurate, up-to-date list of names of Catholic people in the commu nity; to help orient newcomer Cath olics with respective parishes and to establish information classes in each parish at "which the pastor will explain in a friendly way, teachings and practices of the Catholic faith and the opportunity for Catholics to get a deeper, more accurate understanding of their faith: and to offer the op portunity to any interested, non- church going and unaffiliated fam ily to learn what the Catholic Church teaches." Speaking further. Rev. O'Rrien said. "These classes will seek to promote neighborly understanding and good will and explanation of the more common misconceptions of the Catholic faith and thus pro- mole the solidarity of citizens in the community." This, he staled, is part of a program which will extend through the two slates of Ore gon and Idaho, lo he conducted simultaneously, starting the first week in October under Ihe gener al leadership of Archbishop Ed ward D. Howard, of Portland. Bishop Leipzig. Baker, and Bishop E. Byrne. Boise. Idaho. These three dioceses will he Ihe 21-22-23 in the Uniled Sates to con duct such a program. Rev. O'Brien is Ihe Catholic co-chairman of the commission on religious organizations of the Na tional Conference of Christians and Jews and has written sev cral of their widely circulaled booklcls. among them, "The American Dream." "Must Our Churches Fight Each Other?" a reprint of. the Look magazine ar :icle. "A Catholic Platform of r.ood Will," and "Are You Fair to .lews?" He has also authored some 20 books in the field of religion, most widely known being "The Failh of Millions," which has been translated into many languages of Europe and the Orient: "Fruits Men Live By." "Happy Marriage." which has passed Ihe quarter mil lion mark in circulation: "The Road to Damascus," his most re cent hook, and "The Life of Christ.'.' Rev. O'Brien served for many years as chaplain of Catholic stu dents at the University of Illinois. While there he received a gold Knights of Columbus emblem from the Acacia Fraternity, com posed exclusively of Masons and Protestants in appreciation of the influence be exerted in the defense of Protestant ministers of this country from the charges made in the widely circulated Mercury magazine article published re cently. Anyone interested it invited lo attend the classes starting in Oc loher in the two parishes. There will be an open house period be fore opening of the classes, and tours about Ihe churches. Sacred Heart Academy, the Sisters' con vent and the ccnfessional. Ques tions will he invited on any subject dealing with the Catholic faith. GUARANTEED Vocuum Cleaner REPAIRS Specialized Servic "on all Makes! Ports, Bags, filters in Stock Fret Pick Up and Delivery Dean's Stark's 122 Ss. 9th TU 4-7193 Remember the PROFESSIONAL RODEO July 25-26-27 JOB OPPORTUNITY! ASSISTANT PRODUCTION MANAGER IN FOREST PRODUCTS INDUSTRY Well-established firm in Willamette valley needs experi enced man to assist in control of production of plywood and lumber, development of new products, and supervision of construction and maintenance. Applicant should have engineering degree (background in forest products industry desirable) be 26-36 in age, with v executive ability and desire to get ahead. Good salary. Fine opportunity with excellent future for right man. All replies will be held confidential. Send qualifications to Box 257, this paper. i !"-' PI il $960 m nin 1 & JfgL 0 IP M WIM 1 I II f; DIhmC I Ijj There's no Gin like X ioo mmut spirits msium hum cum. rw. cordon s dry tin co , no.. uof, n, t. Distributors: ParroM & Co., San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle Keep Cool in an Air-Conditioned FORD ... it costs less than many medium-priced cars without air conditioning I PARENTS HOLLYWOOD 'API Spike .lones and his wife, singer Helen Grayco, are the parents of a 7 pound, B-ounce sirl, their third child. They're calling her Gina. 23 yexM A(p Mondoy, July 15, 1935 "The Obligotion of Our Community to Our Indigent Sick" will be the topic of Dr Warren Hunt when he oddresses the Klamath Kiwonis Club at the Noon Luncheon, Thursday. George Mclntyre will preside. Tueidoy, July 14, 1935 A group of "young bloods" of the state legislature will visit Klomoth Falls this week-end at the guests of Representative Harry Boivin. Boivin will take the visitors on a fishing trip to Rocky Point, where he has o summer cabin. Wednesday, July 17, 1935 Merit E. Smith who has been ossocioted with the B'g Basin Applionce store here for the post yeor and o half, has left for Medford where he hos ac cepted a new position. Thursday, July 18, 1935 The Elks' donkey baseball team hos been organized, and will meet the 20-30 Club ot Modoc Field Saturday night. Members of the Elks' team: Frank Driscoll, Estin Kiger, B. Rawlins, John Rafetto, John Houston, Cher Moore, Harry Molatore, Ken Clark and Bob Thompson. Subs ore Slander, Bromhall and Sisemore. Friday, July 19, 1935 TNT Bridge Club met Tuesday even ing ot the home ot Mrs. A. C. Bockes on Pocific Terrace. High score for the evening wos won by Mrs. Phil Fahnlander and second high by Miss May Tolle. Low score went to Mi Carol Petty. Miss Tolle will be hostess to the club ot its next fortnightly meeting. Saturday, July 20, 1935 Interesting reports of the recent grond chanter meeting in Portland were presented Tuesday evening when Aloha chopter, OES, held its regular meeting. Mrs, Walter West, past matron, presided in the absence of Mrs. Fred Cofer, worthy matron, and reports were presented by Mrs, West, Mn. George Casper ond Mrs. H E. Getz, Iniurt With THE FIRE WABILITY Paul O. Landry V. T. Johnson 419 Main Str.er Ph. TU 2-2526 AUTO PROPERTY I , , , ; " ' -- . - , . tMi i 4 !.-. . Every Ford has SAFETY GLASS In every windo The Tfliinderbird-inspired Fairlane VJO Town Victoria NOW MORE THAN EVER makes it foolish to put off buying a new car ! Right now during Ford's Summer Trading Picnic you ran make thp yoar's fcesf deal on a beautiful new 58 Forrl. Whether you want a convertible, V-8 sprlan or station wagon, you'll find KorH has the lowest price in all the land! Ford saves you money while you drive, too, Itecause Ford has the on; modern short-stroke, low-friction Six. In the past two Mobilgas Economy Runs, this engine delivered the most orlunl mile per ijnllnn in Class A! Ford's exclusive Automatic Ride Control is standard equip ment on erery Ford car. And only Ford in the low price field has foam-rubber padding in the front seats of every model, another of the many eWra benefits that Ford brings you at nn extra cost! You can have Thunderbird GO, too! Imagine ... the Thunder hird's own brand of V-8 power can be yours in every Ford. It's the biggest, newest engine in its field . . . and it can save you up to 15 on gas when teamed with optional new Cruise-O-Matic Drive. Your present car will mcr or wjvtt mn than it is rijhi nov during your Ford Dealer's Summer Trading Picnic. Why not come in and discover how Unit it costs to one of these beautiful 58 Fords! COME IN AND SAVE DURING THE FOBS SUMS MIS FG DALSIGEJ? MOTOR CO, Main & Esplonadc Ft,. FOR A BETTER BU IN A USED CAR OR TRtCX, BB4U&BTO 8BB OJJ& QR OTttjSB SELECTIONS