Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 18, 1958, Page 3, Image 3

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    TODAY. JULY IB. 19SS
' HERALD ANT) NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE 3 A
CITY BRIEFS
Home Mrs. William Wales,
her two daughters, Diana and Sal
ly and her mother, Mrs. Kenneth
Foust, lola. Kansas, have returned
Irom a several weeks visit to Ha-
California Weather
Northern California Fair Fri
day nisht and Saturday except
scattered thunderstorms in the
mountains and foe nn ih enact
Warmer in the northern interior
ana most inland sections Satur
day. Coastal winds mostly north
west 818 miles an hour.
estern Oregon Sunny in the
aiternoon. but mostly cloudv nicht
and morning Friday and Salur-
oay. Little change in tempera
ture. High 75-85 in interior to
about 65 along coast. Low Friday
night 52-60. Westerly to north
westerly coastal winds ot 10 to 20
miles an hour.
Eastern Oregon Partlv Hnnrtv
through Saturday. A few afternoon
ana evening thundershowers,
mostly over the south. Cooler in
north today. High from 82-92 in
north to 72-82 in the south. Low
inday night 50-80.
Grants Pass and vicinity Con-
liderable cloudiness with after
noon and evening thundershowers
becoming scattered Saturday.
High 80-85. Low Friday night Si
ts.
Baker and vicinity Partly
cloudy with scattered showers and
thundershowers Saturday. High
bmii. low rnaay night 55-60.
Northern Oregon Beaches
Night and morning overcast with
occasional drizzle, brief periods of
afternoon sun through Saturday.
Beacn winas west to southwest ,5-
15 miles an hour. Temperature
range 58-68.
Fire Weather Low fire danger
in coast ranee and moderate dan
ger elsewhere in Oregon through
Saturday. Temperatures below
normal in most areas and humidi
ties above normal.
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
Western Washington and West
ern Oregon: Temperatures aver
aging above normal except near
normal io southwest Oregon.
Chance of scattered showers after
Sunday. Isolated thundershowers
near mountains. Highs mostly 74-
R4 in Western Washington and 76
KO Western Oregon, except 65-70
along coast. Mmimums 52-56.
Eastern Washington, Eastern
Oregon and Northern Idaho: Tern
peratures averaging above nor
mal except near normal in south
ern half of Eastern Oregon. Scat
tered afternoon and evening
thundershowers through about
Sunday. Highs generally 85-95, ex
cept 75-85 southeastern Oregon
Minimums 50-65.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Five-
day weather forecast for Northern
California: Few showers or thun
derstorms in mountains but nc
precipitation otherwise through
Wednesday: temperatures below
normal, rising to normal early
next week: normal minimum-max
imum Sacramento 57-92', Red Bluff
67-100, Eureka 52-61, Santa Rosa
48-82, Blue Canyon 60-79.
Crippled Boy
Crash Victim
BORDENTOWN, N. .1. (AP)
Everybody knew little Eddie
O'Neil Rodgers, the crippled kid
who thumped about on crutches
twinging his braced legs before
him.
He'd been shining shoes since
he was able, a little hunchbacked
13-year-old hopping here and there
In search of customers.
Hurrying, hurrying on his tor
tured way, he would raise his
thumb for rides.
"I guess Eddie used to cover
20 square miles." said Slate
'Trooper Joseph Rogalski. "We
knew he loved to hitchhike, but
we sort of you might say didn't
molest him."
Eddie hitched a ride last night
with Airman John W. Souders Jr.
of Philadelphia. Eddie was a fa
vorite of servicemen at nearby Ft.
Dix and McGuire Air Force base.
At Hcdding, Souders car spun
out of control and off the side of
the road. A utility pole sheared
off the top. The two were pitched
out.
Rodgers was in serious condition
at Ft. Dix Hospital.
Beside him lay his splintered
crutches.
waii. Mrs. Foust will remain here
or the remainder of July.
Honor Roll Mrs. Ken Ellis
Mary Ann Munsoni was listed on
both the winter and spring term
honor rolls at Central Washington
College, Ellensberg, Washington.
YMC'A family night, this eve
ning, rain or shine, at the home of
.Mr. and Mrsi Glen Fundenberger,
Old Midland Road. Time is 6:30.
Salon 365 Eight and Forty
ill hold its annual picnic Sunday.
July 20, at the Veterans Memorial
Park. Husbands will be guests. In
event of rain, the picnic will go to
the Legion Hall on North Eighth
street.
Zulcima Nile Club members
ill sew for the Shriners Hospital
Wednesday, July 23, starting at
10:30 at the home of Kathleen
Ward, 863 Lakeshore Drive. Take
a sack lunch.
Tickets for the Shakespearean
Festival play to open for the sea
son July 28 at Ashland are avail
able at Rickys Jewelers. Plays to
be given in rotation for night per
formances are "Much Ado About
Nothing," "The Merchant of Ven
ice," "King Lear" and "Trolius
and Cressida." Final performance
will be September 4.
Home Lona Martin, Klamath
Falls resident, is home from
Bangkok, Thailand, where she
spent two years as secretary for
the International Corporation of
America. She will spend some
time here with her mother, Mrs.
Rose Martin, 2435 Orchard Ave
nue, who met her daughter in
Denver for the return trip home.
Miss Martin has an assignment
to work in Rio de Janeiro. While
in Denver they visited Bob and
Shirley Perkins who have moved
into a new home in the Lakewood
District. Visiting here also at the
Martin home are Mr. and Mrs
Lawson Martin of Fresno, son and
daughter-in-law of Mrs. Martin,
Board Meeting for the board
members of the Klamath Falls.
Business and Professional Women
at the Willard Hotel, 7:30 p.m,
Monday, July 21.
Thimble Club Neighbors of
Woodcraft Thimble Club will hold
its annual potluck picnic at Wiard
Park on July 23 at 6:30 p.m
Members please bring table serv
ice for your family.
Neighbors of Woodcraft will
meet at the KC Hall Monday, July
21, at 8 p.m. Members please
attend.
Retired Teachers Association
will meet Saturday, July 19, for a
potluck picnic at the Lawrence
Horton ranch in Poe Valley at
12:30 p.m. All'retired teachers are
invited. For transportation call
TU 4-5089 or TU 4-5704. '
From Albuquerque Mrs. John
Clark and two sons, Robbie and
Howard, Albuquerque.- New Mexi
co, are guests at the home of
Mrs. Clark s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Eldon Tillman, 2113 Madison
Street.
Shasta View Grange will hold
a regular meeting Friday, July 18,
at 8 p.m. at the community hall
on the corner of Shasta Way and
Madison Street.
Picnic A joint picnic of Shas
ta View and Midland granges will
be held at Moore Park on Sunday,
July 21, at 12:30 p.m.
Gideons Klamath Falls Gide
ons will hold their regular monthly
potluck dinner and business meet
ing in Memorial Park on Sunday
July 20, at 1:30 p.m. All Gideons,
their families and triends are in
vited. If the weather is inclement.
the meeting will be held in the
basement of the Klamath temple
on Pine Street.
Dance An old-time dance will
be held at the KC Hall Saturday
night from 9 to 1 as usual. Music
by the Smoothies. Everybody is
welcome to come.
"Look at the way she's dressed if there' anything I
hate it's an exhibitionist!"
Weather Table
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
24 hours to 4:30 a. m. Friday
Max. Min. Prep.
Baker 90 59 T
Eugene 80 57 T
Lakeview 68 48 .47
Medford 80 63 .62
Newport 66 58
North Bend 67 58
Pendleton 99 73
Portland Airport 76 60
Redmond 91 55 -.04
Roseburg 80 57
Salem 80 53 T
United Pren International
Temperatures and rainfall for
24 hours ending at 4 a.m.
High Low Rain
Albuquerque 91 69
Atlanta 93 72
Bakersfield 85 59
Boise !M 55 .04
Boston 80 60
Brownsville 92 74
Chicago 72 65 T.
Denver 89 62
Detroit 74 65
E! Centro 103 77
Fairbanks 71 57 T.
Fort Worth 97 78
Fresno 83 60
Helena 84 53 .04
Kansas City 84 63 .90
Los Angeles 80 62
Miami 85 80
Minneapolis 75 61
New Orleans 91 74
New York 79 69
Oakland 71 61
Oklahoma City 95 73
Phoenix 106 87
Pittsburgh 76 62
Red Bluff 85 67
Reno 73 45 .06
Sacramento 82 57
Salt Lake City . 93 -65
San Diego 75 64
San Francisco 72 59
Seattle 83 57
Spokane 93 65
Stockton 77 57
TREES BEAR FRUIT
ORLANDO Flo IIIPli Tt,
governors of all the states and
U.S. terrilnripc will renoiua chin.
merits of frozen orange juice from
ineir own trees this month. Each
chief executive was given a tree
in "governors' orove" last voar
muring me sum annual governors
conierence nere.
Tribal Committee Calls For Termination Repeal
By JAMES PHILLIPS
The Klamath Tribal Executive
Committee, a 10-member body
elected by tribe members, has ap
proved a resolution calling for re
peal of the termination act in its
entirety.
On June 28. the committee
sought to have tribal members ap
prove a resolution for repeal of
only Section 5 of the law the sec
tion covering sale of tribal assets
lor purposes of paying off members-
who voted to withdraw from
the tribe.
However, a quorum was not ob
tained and voting did not take
place.
Search Party
Seeking Tots
ORR, Minn. 'API ""We've got
to find them today or there prob
ably won't be much use looking
any more."
This alert was sounded today
by Ray McDermott as he ap
pealed for volunteers in the search
for Francine Crego, 10, and her
brother Michael, 8, missing since
they went out to pick blueberries
in this remote northern wilderness
area at midday Wednesday.
McDermott, chief St. Louis Coun
ty deputy sheriff, directed the ap
peal for help to Hibbing, home of
the missing children 60 miles
south of here. He said other vol
unteers were expected from Inter
national Falls, on the Canadian
border 40 miles to the north.
Ground searchers aided by two
planes an an Air Force helicopter
found no trace of the children in
a daylong survey ot the roadless
and tangled brush and bog coun
try yesterday.
The children were staying at
their grandfather's remote Ash
Lake cabin while Iheir father Lyle
Crego Jr. was here to help with
some family logging.
SURGERY
HOLLYWOOD (UPD-Comedian
Joe E. Lewis undergoes surgery
at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital to
day for an undisclosed ailment.
He entered the hospital for tests
Thursday.
State Law
Action Lags
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Sen
ate appeared unlikely today to act
on a House-passed bill to protect
state laws which parallel federal
enactments.
This was the outlook despite
strong support of the legislation
by Sen. James O. Eastland ID
Miss), chairman of the Senate
Judiciary Committee and a spon
sor of a companion Senate bill.
The House passed the bill 241-155.
Eastland declined to predict its
prospects in the Senate.
The House measure provides
that federal laws shall not nullify
state laws on the same subject
unless there is a direct and irrec
oncilable conflict between them or I
unless acts passed by Congress1
expressly say .so. I
The bill had its origin in a Su
preme Court decision overturning
the state court conviction of Steve
Nelson, a Pennsylvania Commu
nist leader.
The court ruled that Congress.
by passing the Smith Act and oth
er anti-Communist legislation, had
pre-empted the field of prosecu
ting sedition cases. The effect was
to invalidate all state sedition
laws and indirectly to lay open to
question state laws in other fields
in which Congress has acted.
Opponents protested that the
bill would offer an open invitation
to slate legislatures to enact laws!
removing the teeth from federal
statutes dealing with civil rights,
labor, railroads and agriculture.
Both the Justice and the Labor
departments have opposed it.
But supporters of the bill, ignor
ing predictions that it would be
vetoed by President Eisenhower.
argued it' was necessary to pre
vent the Supreme Court from in
validating state laws contrary to
the intent of Congress.
Now the executive committee
has officially passed on its own a
new resolution asking repeal of
the whole termination law, passed
by Congress in 1954.
The group said the law is "detri
mental" and not "in the best in
terests of the Klamath Tribe,
Klaamth Basin and state of Ore
gon." The resolution also notes that
the U.S. ((institution requires just
compensation" for those yielding
property for public use. The com
mittee feels that under present
law. "just compensation" to tribe
members withdrawing could not be
achieved, due to "fire sale prices
for assets ttimber and land) to
be sold.
The resolution mentions, too, the
objectionable feature of the pres
ent act that does not require pri
vate timber purchasers to cut on a
sustained yield basis.
It asks that the "future destiny'
of the tribe be decided only after
lull consultations and consent of
members.
Copies of the resolution have
been sent to all this area's con
gressional representatives, to the
Indian affairs committees in Con
gress, Interior Department offi
cials and to many other groups
and individuals having a hand in
termination.
If the act were repealed, a mul
titude of plans for winding up
U.S. stewardship of the reserva
tion would be halted.
Among these 'would be sale af
ter August 13, 1958, of
and land to pay off the 77 per
cent of the tribe which voted to
withdraw last April. The tribe also
would remain intact since the elec
tion would be nullified. A trustee
ship to administer remaining as
sets for remaining members
would also be nullified.
Repeal would mean. too. that
deeds to privately owned Indian
homesteads would not be trans
ferred to owners as is now sched
uled for alter August 13.
Present plans to turn over reser
vation roads to the county would
be halted as well as plans for an
Indian education program after
termination and various other im
plementations set forth in the
Man Fined For
Cruelty To Birds
KANSAS CITY (AP) - Stanley
Frank Pearson, fined $25 yester
day for cruelty to sparrows, con
tends he really likes birds.
Three witnesses testified that
Pearson lured sparrows with grain
into a wire contraption in his back
yard and then kept the birds
locked in his garage without wa
ter. Pearson. 34. said he periodically
took the sparrows to the country
and released them.
He told the judge he merely
tried to discourage the sparrows.
He said the little brown birds kept
more colorful wildlife such as
bluejays and cardinals away from
timber his yard.
lengthy termination act, known as
Public Law 587.
The committee's action in pass
ing the resolution means it would
not consider adequate enactment
of an amendment now being con.
sidered in Congress calling for cer.
tain changes in the original termi
nation law.
An amendment already passed
by the Senate calls for, among oth
er things, U private buyers to
guarantee cutting on a sustained
yield basis: 2: federal purchase
of tribal assets not sold by Jan
uary 1, 1961: and 3 fair mar
ket" value return to Indians with
drawing from the tribe.
Since the Senate okayed this
measure, a House of Representa
tives Indian subcommittee has
okayed a different version. It also
calls for a "reappraisal" of tribal
assets, but does not call for'
private purchasers to guarantee
sustained yield operations.
Instead, it calls for buyers to
operate so far as "practicable" to
furnish a continuous supply of
timber," in accordance with a plan
they would submit to the interior
secretary for his approval.
The proposal has yet to clear
the whole House.
2 DAY
Servie
1 tmiwT"
i$ TO MAIN H 10WNACOUNTIV
Fashion Villa's We're Moving
Clearance Continues!
We're moving around the corner into new and larger foelllties to ntaka
Faihlan Villa one of your biggeir reody-to.weor thopi in he baiin. Watch far t
our grand opening! In the meantime, toka advantage of thaia tremendous laving! ,
during eur clearance sqlel
DRESS SALE
Values from 14.95 to 35.00
$8. $10. $14.
SCRAMBLE TABLE
Ridiculously low prices on merchandise frem
ell over the store, including:
Pedal Pushers Swim Suits
Riding Pants T-Shirts
Brassieres Girdles
And many other Items priced as marked!
Famous Brand
SWEATERS
Values to 11.95
$ C $ 50
3 and O
Famous Brand
SWIM SUITS
V3 OFF
Fashion Villa
Town & Country Casuals
Shop Till 9 P.M.
I Taylor's I
Income Tax, Our
Specialty
Open 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Monday thru Saturday
Phane TU 2-2772
CHARCOAL BRIQUETS
Super Q7e 1"
Quality O lbs.
BELL'S HARDWARE
Now Is the Time to
Modernize Your Home
Let Us Help You Plan That
Extra Bedroom,
Recreation Room,
Garage or Car Port,
Fire Place, Patio,
Medcrnixe Yeur Kitchen or Bath
We Con Arronge Your Financing With
Nothing Down and Up Ta 0
Morvthi To Poy.
K Gbifgafioft
No Jeb Toe Small Or Too Large
50d5 Shasta Wov Ph. t-S2
fc (Wift Bi"jjujJji iuu.I nii ;jx; v lrnimiiniinTiiiiii
ACE TV TIPS
o
o
O Your eyes, unlike your ears, are critically
trained and will notice any defective picture
presentation on your TV screen. A recent
Hhilco survey showed that customers are as
skilled as most TV technicians in properly ad
justing their sets to please their eyes.
If your picture seems a bit out of shape, too
dark or a bit shaky, don't be afraid to turn
the controls in bock of the set that have regu
lar tuning shafts or knobs. The one marked
"AGC" can do wonders to take the shake and
shimmy out of your picture. The ones marked
"Vert. Lin." and "Height" can make the head
and feet go back to proportion. Take your
time, be careful, and you II tmd it s simple.
NO we can't say we've been here the last 25
YEARS, but being of a forward and progres
sive nature, we can soy we WILL BE HERE in
business for the next 40 YEARS. We like
Klamath Falls!
The two partners that make up ACE-TV only
had Uncle Sam for an address the last 21
years, both having served that long in the U.S.
Navy as Radar and Fire-Control technicians.
We would have loved being in the T-V busi
ness instead of in the Navy during the two
wars. ONE thing nice tho, we didn't develop
any under-the-counter attitudes during those
fat post-war years.
O Our modern building was built from the ground
up as a TV ond Radio service-soles shop.
Come in, we service all electronic eauipment,
and sell guolity Zenith T-V, Radio and Phono
sets.
REMEMBER
Seve That Face At
ACE TV
ftfrrottudta Owe PH. TU 4-1541
feui 9 to 7 Man, kSru Sat.
Authorised Salet and Stnrlca
Penney's
This weekend, take time out to take in the big bargains at Penney'sl Friday! Saturday I Pick up buys that will
make your whole summer brighter, and give you extra spending money besides. We're spotlighting the most
sizzling values from our regular stocks, PIUS really torrid specials in every deportment! DON'T MISS THEM I
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE , PREPARE EARLY FOR SCHOOL
OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9 P.M.
OTHER DAYS 9:30 - 5:30 PASSENGER ELEVATOR SERVICE
PENNEY'S EASY LAYAWAY
USE IT! FOR ALL YOUR SHOPPING NEEDS
Completely Washabk!
MEN'S ORLON
SWEATERS
WHAT A TERRIFIC VALUI!
Not odds and tndi . . , First quality in tvery
woy ojpd a complete stock of all tiiei and oil
colors. Knit to a perfect fit of the finest orlon
yarns. Wonderful to wear . . . Easy to care
for. Everyone loves them and ot prices you want
to poy. Buy Several!
2
Completely Washable!
MEN'S PLAID
SPORT SHIRTS
WHAT A TERRIFIC VALUE!
Two for nearly the price you'd ordinorily pay
for one. These are beautiful! Plaids you'll wear
over ond ever again fn the finast rayon and
cetate. Wrinkle resistant ... Shrinkage cen
MAIN FLOOR trolled in siioi S. M. L.
FOR
00
WAIT FOR PBWS BLANKET EVENT
-ten
JULY
28th