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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1958)
PAGE 2 A HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON J WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 22. 1933 Local Soft Drink Company Being Sued For $10,000 The Coca-Cola Bottling Company, suit said. The insurance company has been named in a $10,000 dam age suit filed in circuit court on behalf of a 12-year-old girl. The suit, filed by Marie Norris as aunt and guardian of the girl, maintains that the girl became vi olently ill and required the serv ices of a doctor after drinking a bottle of Coke bought in Chiloquin last July 12. In the Coke, alleges the suit. was a piece of contaminated meat. The suit alleges physical pain and mental anguish Klamath Falls Creamery has filed suit against George F. and Oma S. Maker seeking payment ot a 2,197 promissory note writ ten September 30, 1957, plus six per cent interest, plus attorney's fees; or a first lien on property the defendant own in Merrill. The Oregon Bureau of Labor has sued Louis Soukup for $75 wages said due L. V. Fmkenbind er, a ranch foreman who worked from September 30 to October 8, 1356. The state bureau also seeks terest from that time, a $300 pen alty representing a month s wages plus interest from November 1956. and a $7.50 fine for failure to pay the wages. State Farm Mutual Auto Insur ance Company seeks $2,300 from Pelican Motors which is said rep resented the value of a car Peli can wrongfully sold." The car was stolen January 19, 1956 from Stanley and Madic McCollum (rep resentee By the insurance com pany), acquired by Pelican Janu ary 20 and sold the next day, the paid the McCollums $2,300 to sat isfy a claim, and seeks reimburse ment from the car dealer BSA Leaders Set Training The fall training program for Boy bcout leaders will get under way at 7:30 tonight at the scout office. 1819 Manzanita Street. Jim Voung, Klamath District training chairman, announces. The training consists of three Wednesday sessions of "basic train ing." calculated to help leaders un derstand scouting. This evening's session will deal with What Boy scouting Is. "Troop Operation i: the subject of next week's session and "Meetings and Activities" ii the third. Five more Wednesday sessions will oiler additional training. Sub jects to be covered include "How- to Train Junior Leaders in the Patrol Method." November 12 "Advancement," November 19 Leadership," December 3; "The Troop Committee," December 10: and "The Outdoor Program," De cember 17. i Ole Lunde Is In charge of the stall which Is giving the instruc tion during the program. Leader's Day Set By CFG "The World Around Her. She iCares, Do You?" is to be the theme of the sixth annual Camp Fire Girls Leader's Dav Con ference to be held in Klamath Falls Thursday. October 23. The meeting will emphasize the Gold en Jubilee of Camp Fire which will evolve into a two and a half-year-long project of tree planting and wild life conservation on a national scale. Thursday's meeting, to be held at Peace Memorial Presbyterian Church, will coincide with this week's visit of Gwen Harper, Spo kane, regional field adviser, here to make her annual visit to the Klamath Area Council of Camp Fire. The conference will include six workshops, three tor Camp Fire leaders, three for Bluebird leaders. Topics at each level will he "Let's Look at a Tree," "Sil houettes Against the Sky," and "Our Fine Feathered Friends." During her visit Miss Harper has on her agenda a visit to Camp Esther Applegate, Lake of the Woods, meetings with various coun cil committees, staff members, and with Mrs. Robert L. Smith, OT1 council president. Girls of the local council plan to take a tree census to be used or the remainder of the protect, Ihc census to determine the kind of trees to be planted in this lo cale. This will be the tirst phase of the project. The second will stress "Habitat Improvement for wildlile; Among speakers at the Thursday conference will be Don Hummel, Weyerhaeuser forestry expert and a second speaker, also informed on forestry conservation, Charles Glidden. 'DENNIS THE MENACE" "eft? '' '' ' " 4 'HEY AWRGARETI100KA ME! IMA 6K5HIT.NO?' DOORS OPEN 6:00 P.M. ENDS TONIGHT ! FIATURC :45 I 4' Salem Farmer Hunt Victim SALEM (API A former presi dent of the Oregon Farmers Uni on was wounded by a bullet from his own rifle as he hunted deer near here Tuesday. The victim of tho accidental shooting was Amnion S. Gricc. 5'J. who operates a large farm near here. Ho was listed in criti cal condition. Sheriff Tony Neufeldt said Grice was hunting on a neighbor ing farm when the accident oc curred. The sheriff said Grice's rifle discharged as he walked through a brushy thicket. He was carried more than a mile to an ambu lance. A spokesman at Salem General Hospital said Grice was wounded in the abdomen. Weather Table United Press International Temperatures and rainfall for 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. High Low Rain Albuquerque Atlanta Bakerstield Boise Boston Hrownsville Chicago Denver Detroit El Centra Fairbanks Fort Worth Fresno Helena Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York Oakland Oklahoma City Phoenix Pittsburgh Red Bluff Reno Sacramento Salt Lake City San Diego San Francisco Seattle Spokane Stockton Thermal Tucson Washington 61 37 75 54 85 54 53 36 53 49 86 71 77 53 .07 57 31 68 52 85 59 7 -15 78 54 .26 80 47 50 21 70 47 83 62 82 65 65 40 79 59 53 52 8.1 60 72 43 84 61 65 411 .02 79 50 62 21 76 51 53 27 73 61 76 56 66 47 52 33 77 47 88 48 79 56 60 54 .76 Slxx.il At 15 Only Won ol th B L. J ' JOEL McCREA mam. CO-FlATURt MAN1MHO lANpAtl Double Death Boy Released Youth Enroll In Rifle Club More than 80 youngsters, most ot them w an their parents, swarmed into city police headquar ters the other night to resistor for the police department's Junior Hille Club. As a result, Lt. Bud Adkins said. registrations for the first course were filled in something like an hour and a half Monday. The youngsters will begin classes the first week in November. However, another course is planned 10 weeks from now. so more young-ters may enroll in the popular Junior Rule Club. Ad kins said registrations would open sometime around February 1, and he advised a check with the news paper at that time. Actually, 82 students were cn Bomb Threat Hits School WICHITA FALLS, Tex. AP Classrooms were evacuated brief ly at integrated Midwestern Uni versity Tuesday after the second threatening anonymous telephone call in two weeks. Eddie Wyatt, senior and univer sity telephone operator, said a man told him over the phone to "get everybody out of there by II o'clock." Wyatt said the caller sounded like the man who phoned two weeks ago. asked if Negroes were students at Midwestern and said, "We give you until tomorrow to get everybody out of the building." That call was ignored but Dr. Travis White, president of the city-owned school, ordered class rooms emptied after the second one. About 1,400 persons left the classrooms for about 20 minutes. Dr. White said Negroes have at tended the school for five years without previous incidents. Record List Of Voters Prepare For Balloting Bermuda is the oldest self-1 In the 1880's about 200 hours governing colony in the British were required to make a section Commonwealth. Bermuda was of plate glass. Today it takes less claimed by the British m 1609. 'than nine hours. By D. HAROLD OLIVER WASHINGTON IAP) Official and unofficial estimates today placed the nation's eligible voters for the Nov, 4 elections at 76.145. 600. This is a record for a mid term election. Despite scattered reports of voter apathy, the same sources estimated the probable total vote in the 48 states at 48.131,226, in cluding the 284,226 already offi cially recorded for Senate candi dates in Maine Sept. 8. This also would be the highest for any non presidential year. The Associated Press tabulation is based on estimates gathered from state officials, party chair men and in . a few instances from veteran political writers. It showed a gain of 1,266,454 qualified voters over the record established in the last midterm election in 1354. However, it is about four million under the total of eligibles for the 1956 presiden tial election. The estimated vote represents an increase of 3.683.700 over the previous midterm highest vote in 1954. That total of 44,447,496 was reached by adding the top vote in each state whether for senator, governor or combined House vote. The 1954 official vote for repre sentatives was 42.582,927, includ ing 22,366,386 for Democratic can didates and 20,016,809 for Republi cans. The remainder went to in dependent and small party candi dates. The largest presidential vote was more than 62 million in 1958. The estimate of 76.145.600 eligi bles for this year compares with a Census Bureau estimate of 104, 609.000 "potential" voters for the coming election (civilians 21 years of age and over: 18 and over in Georgia and Kentucky). The po tential vote has gained 4,377,000 over 19S4. Twenty-seven states show gains over 1954 in the estimated num ber of persons who have regis tered, paid poll taxes, or other wise have met state voting re quirements for the elections Nov. 4. The biggest gains are in Cali fornia, 867.000, and Iowa and North Carolina, 200,000 each. Nine states have qualified fewer voters than in 1954, although in some instances election officials said their estimates four years ago were too high. The nine states: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, New Mexico, Ohio. South Carolina, Tennessee and West Virginia. Estimated registrations for 12 states remained about the same as 1954. States showing gains of 200,000 or more in estimated vote, over 1954's combined House vote, are California. Massachusetts, New York, Ohio and Texas. Quakes Slam Java Sector Weeks Warns On Spending ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) Secretary of Commerce Weeks criticized Congress for unneces sary defense spending Tuesday. Weeks told the St. Petersburg Chamber of Commerce that Con gress was wrong in increasing! personnel in the National Guard; and reserve units over what the administration and Joint Chiefs of State recommended. "They had better recognize that the next war will be different and ease up on things that are not necessary, the Cabinet official said. Weeks said defense spending al ready is taking 77 per cent of the government's money and warned NEW YORK (I'PI) Mclvin Dean Nimer. the 8-year-old boy who once said he stabbed his parents to death, will leave the Hellcviic Psychiatlic Ward Tnurs- d:iy to be taken to Utah to luejrollod in an ae group ranging with his grandparents. Irom 10 through 15 years tor the The boy, who is called by hi; classes beginning next month. Reg middle name of Dean, underwent ;ilranls already have been divid six weeks ot psychiatric rxamina-jtd into lour ciasos. the tir.-t be lion alter he allegedly "con-icinning Monday. November 3. the foscl" killing his parents, Dr Uecond. Tuod.iy. the tli rd. Wed and Mrs. Mclvin A. Nimer Jr..in-day and the fourth. Thursday, then recanted the story. (.'la.-ses start at 7 o'clock each The child's attorney. H.irris R ew n:n. The course, including in Steinherg. satd Tuesday that psy-truction in humma sak-ty and ri chiatrws at Bellevuc tound Dean j lie handling with lots of .22 target li.ul "an emotional riisturhamcjpractice. lasts Id weeks. It is in that requires close n-ychiatric charge ot Adkins and Patrolman iipen ision" and the condition ap parently pre - dated the Sept. 2 double murder of h:s parents. JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - Rcnorts reached Jakarta todav of an earthquake in central and eastithis figure shouldn't go higher. Java which killed seven persons and injured 1,856 in the town of Blitar. The quake earlier this week de stroyed 95 houses, heavily dam aged 206 and slightly damaged 51, the reports said. The major cities of Surabaja, Maland and Jogja karta also were shaken. Do your wfndows tweatf STORM WINDOWS Made to Measure FREE ESTIMATES George Clark Phil Chlopek. chief instructor. Ln,'j:U;j.1 HOW SHOWING! In TECHNICOLOR TECMNlRAMA UPEN fe:3Q p. M. COUNTRY 4 fStI P. M. DOORS C PSN 6:iO Deborah Robert KERfWIITCHUM TODAY and TOMORROW! i JWSf'J ! .SKA, . Hi i Official Asked To Resign DOKRIS - The Mount Shasta City Council has uHed tor the re.-:snjt:on of Carl Bers. city as sessor, tor what councilnifn termed the arbitrary and inequitable as sessment ot property. Mayor Pete Chinca sa.d a letter has been sent to Bers requesting is resignation. Berg, an appoint .e otficial. was out of town. Counciinun stated the assess ment rolls will be im estimated: complete reassessment made, nd new b:lls sent to taxpayers. Officials said numerous protests ere made to'lowing receipt of the tax statements mailed about October 1. They related they tound some assessments doubled and some reduced with the city asses sor not following any city, coun ty or other rules (or determining '.he values. "It was discovered by the city council th a t the assessments, in many instances, were so crossly raised by the ci'y asessur for the tax year oi I't.va l.ev.i that an ad justment will be necessary." May or Chinca stated. The city council was advised by the City attorney that these as sessments should be gone over and corrected and a corrects tat . 11 mailed to aii ;ae:. 111 I 5& 100 THIN? I Look for j yiUy GYMNASIUMS I PHYSICAL CULTURE J jy SHOULDER PADS I j YELLOW PAGES I 11"' T 1 17 "TiTiTiUm.; fjrj Improve Your Fireplace! 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