Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 21, 1958, Page 9, Image 9

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    FRIDAY. NOVF.MRER 21. 105R
HF.RALT) ANT) NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Basin Briefs
i' Public Card Party Klamath
County Pomona (irance annual
card party will he held at the
Midland Granse Hall Saturday No
vemher 22, at B p.m. The public
Is invited.
Turkey Shixit sponsored by
t the Sprasue River Fire Depart
i ment. to raise funds or a fire-
house, will lake place at the
Sprasue River Gravel Pit Sunday,
beginning at 12 noon. There are
; 26 turkeys, weighing 12 to 15
i pounds each, to be won, with en
! tries a dollar a shot. Shotguns
and rifles may be used. Lunch will
be available at the grounds.
; ' Hard Times Parly Merrill
I Women of the Moose Drum Corps
will sponsor a hard times penny
party Saturday, November 22. at
the Merrill Moose Hall. Potluck
dinner starling at 7 o'clock with
entertainment for the whole fam
ily following. All are asked to wear
bard time clothing. Moose mem
bers, their families and guests arc
invited.
. Montague GOC will hold a
potluck dinner meeting on Friday
' evening. November 21, 7:30 p.m.
at the Montague Elementary School
for members and their families
only.
Withdrawal From Dictmrt Givon Annrnvn R PT
VRKKA Kndorsement (or the
proposed withdrawal of the Vreka
High School attendance area from
the Siskiyou I'nion High School
Returned Home from a three
weeks' vacation trip is Mrs. Rose
Sylvia of Yrcka. She had cone to
the east coast to visit with her
ron-in-law and daughter, S.Sgt. and
Mrs. Glen Kanig and son Edward
ef Durham, North Carolina. She
was accompanied on the journey
by her sister, Mrs. Edith Laski
of Oakland.
Training Completed Mrs.
Mae K. Wagner of Yreka recently
received word that her son. Pvt.
Steven R. Wagner, U.S. Army, re
cently completed his eight weeks
basic combat training at Fort Ril
ey, Kansas. He graduated from
v Yreka High School in 1956, and
attended San Francisco State Col
lege, prior to entering the Army.
"DICKENS' CHRISTMAS" is the theme of a bazaar scheduled for December 6 at
St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Eighth and Jefferson streets. The program will include a
luncheon and a spaghetti dinner planned for 6 p.m. Baiaar items include stuffed toys,
starched angels, prayer caps, fancy work, white elephant booth as well as fruit cakes
and cooked foods. Here Mrs. H. E. Geti, left, Mrs. Norman Guyer, standing, and Mrs.
James Swansen have tea at a table depicting the theme.
;i Thanksgiving Dance will be
-f ponsored by the Shasta Valley
'Community Club, on Thursday
evening, November 27, at the Mon
.tague auditorium, according to the
report released by Mrs. Hilda
Coolcy, president of the organ
ization. Music will be furnished by
, the Tip Toppers. Mrs. Cooley also
wished to remind interested mem
, bers that election of new officers
fo the club is slated for the De
' cember 3 meeting, in the club
j foom of the hall at 8 p.m.
i To Oakland Mrs. Lulu Pcn-t-.ner
of Langell Valley is spending
j several weeks with friends at Oak
land, California.
f Visitors Mrs. Chock Chung
end her daughter, Mrs. Mabel Hee,
of Honolulu, Hawaii, have been
visiting Mr. and Mrs. George Wu
of Bonanza. They all attended the
wedding in Sacramento of Grace
Chung of Honolulu and Alfred
Wu of Bonanza. The newlyweds
will make their home in Bonanza.
Card Party The Rebekah So
cial Club of Bonanza Fraternity
106 will sponsor a card party Sat
urday night. November 22. at the
Bonanza Library, starting at 8
o'clock. Prizes and refreshments.
Everyone invited.
Home Mrs. Christine McCor
mick has returned to her home
In Bonanza after several days at
Eugene.
Ill Mr. and Mrs. Bob Schmor
nd family spent the weekend at
Eugene, where her mother, Mrs.
Robert Brockway, is ill in the hos
pital. Mrs. Schmor will stay for a
week with her parents.
Fair Chieftain j
To Attend Meet
YREKA Ed Mathews, manager
of the Siskiyou County Fair, an
nounced last week that he and his
wife and Mr. and Mrs. John Caw
ley will attend the annual conven
tion of Western Fairs Association
in Los Angeles December 2 through
December 4.
Mathews also announced that
more than 500 delegates, represent
ing 11 Western states and Canada,
are expected to attend the meet
ing. On the last day of the con
vention. December 4. the Califor
nia Legislature Interim Commit
tee of Fairs and Expositions will
meet.
Sacramento visitors for a few
Hays were Mr. and Mrs. Don Ross,
David. Bill and LaRue House. They
took their father, J. E. House,
of Langell Valley, home with them
for the winter. The W. t. Houses
of Mcdford were also visitors.
North Bend visitors are Mr.
nd Mrs. Haley Shaw and Johnnie
of Langell Valley.
ANNOUNCE SCIENCE GRANTS
WASHINGTON (UP I) The
Atomic Energy Commission an
tirtunmri InHnv lhat "life science"
12 trrants tota ine S32H.MU nave Decn
warded to 30 colleges ana uni
versities to enable them to ex
eand their laboratories for train
ing students in peaceful nuclear
technology.
The yellow color of pure gold
can be changed. Copper gives it a
red shade: silver a green shade;
and there are other minerals
which can whiten this precious
metal.
Nile Club Slates
Christmas Party
TULELAKE Zuleima Nile Club,
meeting for a November 13 lunch
eon at the Sportsman's Hotel
planned for the group's annual
Christmas party, December 11.
when husbands of the members
will be guests. The time and place
will be announced.
Hostesses for the Christmas af
fair will be Mrs. W. W. Hard-
man, Mrs. Carl Olney, Mrs. Earl
Ager. Mrs. C. C. Spears will be
chairman of this year's Christmas
Box Committee which will prepare
gifts to be sent to a children's
home.
Helen Olney, president, con
ducted the meeting.
Young Actor's Body Found;
Killed In Auto Accident
HOLLYWOOD (AP Like teen
agers' idol James Dean. Tom Pitt
man was considered one o( Holly
wood s most promising young
actors.
Like Dean, he was moody, a
habitue of coffee houses. He never
owned a suit I never go any
place where you have to wear
suits."
Like Dean, he had one love-
speed. Both owned 17&m. p. h. Por
sche Spyder sports cars.
Dean died in his when it crashed
on a highway near San Luis Obis
po, Calif., three years ago.
Pittman's career was just be
ginning to roll. Friends say he
earned at least $0.00 this year
in radio, television and film roles.
He appeared in "The Proud Reb
el" with Alan Ladd and on TV's
"Wagon Train," "Cimarron" and
"Zane Grey Theater."
Court Records
KLAMATH FA1.LA
MI NICIPAL COL'RT !
Marlyn Charles, drunk, $25 or 12'i
days. I
Evelyn Mabel Larson, drunk, $25 or
12' days. j
Alexander Pratt, drunk, 25 or 12'i
days.
Brnnie Ewenson, drunk, (25 or 12'
days.
Erwln Davis, drunk. $25 or 12'i days.
Michael Musial, drunk. 525 forfeited.
Florian Whitey Musial, drunk. $25
forfeited.
Pete John Martinez, drunk. $25 or
12'i days.
Simeon Buchanan Riddle, drunk, $23
or 12'a days.
Thelma Marie Hamilton, drunk, $25
forfeited.
Ginn Carnlni, meter ticket warrant.
$6 forfeited.
Francis David Barnsey. meter tick
et warrant. $23 forfeited.
Russell Saunders, meter ticket war
rant, $6 forfeited.
KI.AMATH COUNTY
DISTRICT COIRT
Lcnnrd Levon Smith, no PUC per
mit, dismissed motion of district at
torney. Leonard Eugene Sturgeon, combina
tion overload. $113 forfeited.
Spencer Ivan Rhody, truck speed
inff. $7.50 forfeited.
Robert H. Sonde rm an, combination
overload. $30 forfeited.
Robert Daniel Scherer, tandem axle
overload. $37 forfeited.
Carl Albert Kollmar, axle overload.
$92 forfeited.
Patricia O. B runner and Phillip- B
Brunner, burglary, each requested pre
liminary hcarinn: set November 24 at
11 a.m.: bond set at $2,300 on each
defendant; each remanded to custody
of sheriff.
Lawrence Scnccal, Insufficient bind
ers, dismissed.
Harold Shtlder, trespassing, request
ed additional time enter plea; set No
vember 26 at 10 a.m.; posted 35 bail;
released.
Richard Arnold Schieferstein, viola-
tlnn hANlr rule. $15.
Roy Willis Bogus, driving; suspended
period, entered plea of not guilty; posi
fit si 50 bail.
Alfred Floyd Btwcr, being intoxicat
ed in public place. 30 days and 50
or 22i days In lieu of fine; com-
Paul Wampler. fail yield right of
way, $5 forfeited.
EAGLES
Past Presidents Init.
and
Birthday Dinner
Sun., Nov. 23
Meeting 2:00 p.m.
Social Hour 4:00-6:00 p.m.
Dinner 6:00 p.m.
Please Plan To Attend
On The Record
KLAMATH COfNTT
MARRIAGE I.ICF.NSFS
George M. French Jr.. 19, .nd Joyce
i ay uoway. i.
Mllbern K. Bte, 19, and Sylvia
Deane Miller, Id.
KI.AMATH TOI'NTY
DIVORC'K PETITIONS
Wanda J. Fennlng vi. John Fanning
Jr.. seeks divorce.
Mary A. Ensor vs. Preston C. Eli
sor, seeks divorce.
Danl Metcalf vs. Louis Edward Met-
calf. seeks divorce.
Shirley J. Kilt vs. Gary L. Kill.
seeks divorce.
Fayma Jean Braly vs. Robert E.
Beaty. seeks divorce.
KLAMATH FALI.S
BIRTHS
BOVS
D1LLSTROM Born lo Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Carl Dillstrom Novem-l
ber 19 in Klamath Valley Hospital a
boy, weighing 7 Ins.. 6 ozs.
niHi.ii
ALMEIDA Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Anthony Almeida November lfl In
Klamath Valley Hospital a girl, weigh
ing 6 lbs., 7 or.
IDS, ROUNDUP
Boys: 448 Girls: 431
The 25-ycar-old actor wasn't ex
actly handsome. But his boyish
charm and acting ability in the
Tony Perkins-Dcan-Marlon Bran
do tradition earned him good
parts. Critics liked him.
Then last Halloween Pittman
disappeared.
He never showed up at his
apartment after leaving a party
at the home of Iwma btuart
former wife of actor Keefe Bras
selle.
Pittman's father. TV-radio act'
or Frank Alien, filed a missing
persons report with the sheriff s
ottice. Allen said his son, whose
real name was Jerry Allen, liked
to drive fast around mountain
grades and might have gone off
a road.
Officer Roy Kerton decided to
check the grades in the Hollywood
Hills yesterday. At a sharp curve
he lound the broken railing. In
the 150-foot ravine was the nearly
niaaen wreckage of Pittman's
sports car.
Pittman, lying half in and half
out of the car. had been crushed
between steering post and door.
Eight feet of guard rail stuck
through the windshield to the
rear of the car.
Police said an autopsy will have
to determine whether Pittman
may have lived for hours, even
days, after the crash.
Pittman had just completed his
most important movie role in a
forthcoming picture called "Ver
boten." Its producer, Sam Fuller, said:
"We lost a great talent with the
death of Tom."
In the picture, loo, Pittman
meets a violent dealh.
Groups Hear
Science Talks
LAKEVIKW Science classes in
the Lakeview High School: local
organizations such as Ihe Parent-
Teachers Association, Ihe Rotary
tltiD, Lions tlub and Soroptimists
arc all taking advantage this week
of the visit of Albert G. Henne.
who is presenting special lectures
and demonstrations under the
sponsorship of the Atomic Energy
Lommission and the National Sc
once Foundation.
lleppe is one of seven traveling
teachers touring schools in several
states. His mission is to stimulate
student interest in science and sci
entific careers, but, as he staled,
not to the exclusion of other phases
of education.
In the classrooms at the high
school this week he is demonstrat
ing the "Use of Radio Isotopes in
the Classroom." He is working with
the science instructors to show ap
paratus which can be inexpensive
ly duplicated for school work. Ap
proximately 90 persons attended
the PTA meeting Tuesday evening
to view Ihe demonstrations. The
general public had advantage of
his program at a meeting in the
high school auditorium Wednesday
evening.
This is the sixth in a series of
2ft high schools that the traveling
teacher is scheduled to visit. His
home teaching position is in Sono
ma, California, where he is in
structor in chemistry and physics.
ASKS TAX CUT
IPSWICH, England (UPI)-Cily
officials Wednesday rejected Wil
liam Morley's hula age applica
tion for a cut In tax rates. Mor
ley complained his home no long
er Is the "nice and quiet" place
it once was because a horde of
boys and girls daily hula-hooped
it up outside.
Housing Aide
Gives Talk
DUNSMUIR-Steps toward nual
ifying for an urban redevelopment
grant were outlined for Dunsmuir's
Redevelopment Committee and
members of the planning commis
sion and city council by Dick
Mitchell, representative of the
Federal Housing Home Finance
Agency on Monday evening.
Age and obsolescence account
for most blight problems, Mitchell
told the. group assembled for a
dinner meeting at the Mt. Shasta
Ski Bowl Lodge.
Following a survey of the com
munity needs on the basis of up
grading neighborhoods and the
adoption and enforcement of build
ing and housing codes, Dunsmuir
should outline a program and set
deadlines for certain goals, he sug
gested. Federal assistance with fi
nancing will then be available,
Mitchell told the group.
Mitchell was introduced by Fran
cis MacEncrney, chairman of the
Dunsmuir urban redevelopment
committee.
District was given recently by the
Vreka Parent Teachers Associa
tion. Adair Wilson, former mayor of
Vreka and a p a s t president of
PI A. related the history of the
present district from 1919, when
the Yrcka High School was de
stroyed by fire and Fort Jones
joined Vreka to construct n e w
schools. He said that the "situa
tion has changed from early days
when taxes from each area paid
for its own schools."
He stated that Sen. Randolph
Collier was author of a bill to
make Yrcka's secession from the
district possible.
In accordance with Collier's bill,
an attendance area with 17 mil
lion dollars or more in assessed
valuation may request an election
for withdrawal, after 10 per cent
of the voters in the elementary
district in which the high school
s situated petition for an election.
Following this, the approval by 51
per cent of the registered voters in
Ihe entire attendance area must
be secured.
Robert Reynolds, superintendent
of the Vreka Union Elementary
School District, outlined the finan
cial side of the secession, indicat-
ng that, had the Vreka area been
separate last year, it would have
had $34.3id more for school opera
lion than it did as a part of the
hKkiyou district.
Dr. Jcre Hurley. Siskiyou Dis
trict superintendent, had present
ed to Reynolds, cost of opera
tion figures, disclosing that $313.
103.48 was expended for Yreka
High School in 1957-58. whereas,
willi a $1.25 tax rate in Ihe Yreka
area. Vreka High School could
have been benefited with an ex
penditure of $347,479 had it been
separate at the time. The latter
figure, according lo Reynolds, in
eluded about $li9.875 in state aid
which the. hypothetical district
could have been entitled to. As
sessed valuation at present of the
entire Siskiyou District is about 45
million dollars.
Stanley Balfrey, principal of t h e
Yreka High School slated that
the enrollment has been expanding
at a rate of 50 a year, which at
that rate would create the need
for one and a half rooms more
per year.
According to Balfrey. Ihe atten
dance currently at Vreka High
School stands at ti23 students, and
he expects an increase to 687 in
1959-60. Also by the 19b5-66 school
year, Ihe attendance will be up to
a total of 914. Elementary attend
ance in the 14 school district in
the proposed area for secession
stands at 1,738 in 1957-58.
At the present time, in spite of
the new high school. Yrcka High
School students arc using the old
building, and Balfrey expects that
it wilt be used more in the near
future. He took no definite stand
for or against the secession.
GUARANTEED
Vacuum Cleaner
REPAIRS
Specialized Service
on all Makeil
No Matter How Old
Part.. Bag., PHtcra In Stack
Fraa Pick Up and OaNvanr
Dean's Stark's
T22 So. 9th TU 4-713
Al lebbe of Yreka, p
Ihe Siskiyou Union Di
of Trustees, issued a
nancea ny local oonas ana a cut T
apportionmcnt.
lAnoMonqstd ':
POMPON ;
Spsudai
All Colors
$lc25 caih Carry
SUBURBAN FLOWER
SHOP
3614 So. 6th Ph. 4-8188
HKD STRIKES COSTLY
LONDON (UPI) - Conservative
F. W. Faircy-Jones told Parlia
ment Wednesday night that Com
munist labor leaders cost Britain
about 14 million dollars in strikes
this year.
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