o
PAGE 2-A
mrfALD and news, klamath falls, orehon
Presbyterian
Club Planned
United Prsbyterian Men, a
croup of Preshvtcrian men who
work in conjunction with the Pros
bylerian Men's Council of clubs
for: Southern Oregon Preshytery.
lias organized a club among the
men member of Peace Memorial
Church.
Another club will get underway
at First Presbyterian Church and
Malin has petitioned for a chapter.
Tulelake is expected to follow suit.
A meeting was held at 2 p.m.
at the Malm Community Presby
terian Church for tne purpose o(
establishing a Lower Klamath Ba
sin group of Presbyterian men.
comprised of members from Mer
rill. Malm, Tulelake and Mt. Laki
churches.
Keynote address was by the Ilev.
Hob Groves of the First Presby
terian Church of Klamath Kalis.
A. C. Olsen. president of the Pres
byterian Men's Council of Klam
ath Falls, discussed the purpose of
the men's groups as being one to
give the ordinary man an oppor
I unity to build his spiritual growth,
fellowship, mutual confidence in his
church as well as aiding and as
sisting to further the Christian pro
gram. ftalph Wood, president of the
Presbyterian Men's Council of
clubs. Ashland, conducted a "talk
il over" session along organization
al lines.
Plans were made for the nexl
meeling to he held at the Merrill
Presbyterian Church, with the Mer
rill men as hosts, on December 14
at 2 p m. All Presbyterian men of
the Klamath Basin are invited to
attend.
Many Cinema Celebrities
To Vie In Golf Tourney
Cleric Addresses
Soroptimist Club
Snroptimist Club members, gath
ered for the annual Thanksgiving
program and luncheon, heard the
Pcv. Hubert droves ol the Mrs!
Presbyterian Church speak on the
blessings of 20lh century moderns
and a glimpse of future blessings.
lie spoke of world use of elec
tronic and nuclear advancements
as blessings !to years hence, and
sought the sharing of the present
surpluses in this country with the
less forlunaie.
Rev. droves was introduced by
Mrs. William DePew, program
chairman.-'Mrs. Kugene Favell
s?ang two -Thanksgiving numbers.
Vapacily! attendance was record
ed. .
By VKRNON SCOTT
I'PI Hollywood Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD l'PI i A cloud
of divots will engulf movieland
this week when a pack of stars
slorm the golf course lor the title
of "world entertainment goli
champion.
Duffers and one-handicappers
ill belt it out at Los Coyotes
Country Club with comedians,
leading men, character actors
and cowpokes vying for honors.
uoll rales highest with Holly
wood celebrities, many of whom
devote more time to curing a
slice than perfecting their acting
techniques.
And some of them are mighty
good.
But because they re a part of
show biz only a few private clubs
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Actress Gets
Child Custody
LOS A.N'GELKS AP-A bitter
court fight has ended with a
judge's decision that actress Lynn
Ban should have custody of her
son.
A Superior Court judge ruled in
favor of Miss Bari Friday after
an interview earlier in the week
wilh John Luft, 1(1, the actress'
son by her former husband, Sid
Luft.
Luft, now married to Judy (Jar
land, won custody ol John six
weeks ago on grounds the hoy
had been placed in a boarding
school and was not receiving
proper home life and parental
supervision.
Miss Bari then filed suit to re
gain custody, charging the Luft
household was an improper place
lo rear tne noy.
John will spend his weekend:
alternately between Luft and Miss
Ban.
Airline Firms
Pay Damages
LOS ANCKLKS (AP) Two
families of victims in Ihe in.ili
Grand Canyon air collision get
$:I20,(KX) in damages.
The jury verdicts, returned Fri
day, were against Trans World
Airlines. Inc., and United Air
Lines, Inc., whose plants collided
with a loss of I2R lives.
Three children of Mr. and Mrs
wmiam Wallace Hatcher were
awarded $2110.1X10 for Ihe loss of
their father and $20,000 for the
loss of their mother.
Mrs. Nadine Nasalroad and her
I wo sons, who had asked $5(10,000
in the death of her husband, An
drew, were given $100,000.
allow them membership. The
great bulk of movie and TV stars
belong to one of three clubs Bel
Air, Lakeside and Hillcrest. Some
belong to all three.
Los Angeles Country Club has
strict ban on the greasepaint
set. Anyone faintly connected
with the movies hasn't a chance.
Bing Crosby once said, "Il'd he
all right if a distant cousin of
mine applied. But I live a short
par four Irom the LA club and
1 can't join."
Crosby and Bob Hope, tinsel
town's most famous golfers, are
foregoing the tournament because
of work. But most of the other
hackers are having a go at it.
Favored is Boh Sterling lot
TV's "Topper" scries i who shoots
lo a "1" handicap. Also in con
tention are crooner Don Cherry
'a scratch player), Gordon Mac
Hae i5i and Dean Martin ' 7 .
A pair of dancers, Hay Bolger
'101 and Fred Astaire i7i will be
Mailing away against such cow
boy stars as Jim Garner a
0-handicapper who claims he
can't allord to join a private club
Richard 'the Calilorniansi Coo
gan ifli, Ty 1 Cheyenne i Hardin
'121, Guy Madison 191, Gene
Autry '. 1 2 ' .
Two former screen "Tarzans."
Johnny Wcissmuller mi and Lex
Barker (71 will he bunching their
muscles in a private duel for
tourney honors.
Jack Benny, a magnificent
scrambler wilh a IB handicap,
withdrew from competition after
checking Ihe opposition.
But liltle George Gobel, sport
ing a 10 handicap, Phil Harris
'Oi and Mickey Hooney (!)i will
he on hand lo provide laughs
aloqg with some better-lhan-aver-
age goll.
Two of golfdom s zaniesl adher
ents will he missing Jerry
Lewis 'who is ill) and Victor Ma
ture (who limits himself to two-
men tournaments). Jerry and Vic
play one another frequently in
rigged tourneys.
The winner buys the loser a
huge loving cup for second place,
and the loser presents the winner
h an impressive plaque. Both
Mature and Lewis have lined
heir den walls with eye-popping
trophies.
All told some 120 golfer-enter
tainers will compete at Los Coy-
olcs (located in Bcllchurst) to
raise money (or the Motion Pic
ture Belief Fund.
And for the first lime in his
tory a champion will be named
among moviclown goll addicts, an
accolade many would prefer to
an Academy Award.
THAT SKTT1.KS IT
SALI.NA. Kan. iAP)-Sitling in
their bedroom, George McDowell
and his wife were trying In de
cide whether lo buy new dining
room or bedroom I m nil ui e for
their family Christmas gilt.
While they talked. McDowell
cleaned his shot gun. II fired.
A gaping hole in the bed made
Ihe choice of gifls easy.
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Pregnant Widow Sees Ty
For Last Time At Rites
Prisoner
Flees Jail
LA GflANDK. Ore. (API A
I'nion County jail prisoner. Pauli
Brown, knocked down a jail jani
tor Friday night and fled. Sheriff
H. A. Klingluimmor said.
Brown jumped the janitor. Jay
Connley, when he was putting a
trusty in the cell, thrust the trusty
:iside and floored Connley when
he hit him on the hc.id, Kling-
hammer said.
A posse of local law enforce
ment officers was formed to
search' for Brown. Residents of
the area were warned to lock
cars.
Brown. 22, was jailed about
three weeks ago on charges of
robbing a I'nion. Ore., tavern. He
formerly served a sentence in the
Oregon Slate Penitentiary.
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By JAMKS BACON
AP Motion Picture Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) A young
widow, only six months ago the
happy bride of one of the movies'
most handsome heros, sat by her
self in front of the open coffin,
her hand atop that of Tyrone Power.
There were 125 other' mourners
in Ihe tiny Chapel of the Psalms
Friday. Among them Gregory
Peck, .lames Stewart, Loretta
Young, Yul Brynner and Henry
Fonda.
But Deborah Ann Power had her
back toward them. It was her
last hour with the husband she
loved. Scmimilitary rites, con
ducted by a Presbyterian Navy
Chaplain, ended in 34 minutes.
The other mourners marched,
out.
But for nearly 20 minutes, the
26-year-old widow was alone with
her husband. A Hollywood ceme
tary attendant came in to close
the coffin.
As he did so. Mrs. Power gave
Ty a farewell kiss. Then she
walked out sadly but composed to
a waiting limousine.
She si ill was composed as she
walked from the limousine to her
husband's grave. There, the chap
lain delivered the brief committal
service,' for the actor whose heart
attack death a week aco in Ma
drid stunned movie fans everywhere.
A crowd of 2.000, fans and cur
ious, swarmed over other graves
from (he chapel to the burial site.
The crowd, in its hurry, gave a
circus or Hollywood Premiere
touch that marred the dignity of
the funeral.
Karlier, the widow herel( inad
vertently helped create the circus
atmosphere when she barred mic
rophones that would have carried
Ihe riles lo those lathered mil-
side the chapel.
A friend explained that Mrs.
Power feared the microphones
would have given an undignified
tone to the services.
The widow, however, is new to
Hollywood funerals and the deci
sion worked just the opposite.
As Cesar Romero, an old-time
friend, eulogized Power, the bab
ble of the crowd disturbed the
mourners inside. Once Romero
raised his voirp in nivinr Ihnl hie
words could be heard above the
snouts, laughter and other noises
outside.
The crowd nilinlprt hmuai-Ai.
when cemetery guards told the on
lookers that their noise was heard
msiao.
Then Romero's eulocv pnripH
thus:
'He was a hpniiiifnl man u
was beautiful nutsidp anH hoaiit;.
ful inside."
Linda Christian PrtU'nt-'c cnnnnA
wife, and their two children did
not attend the rites by express
request of the widow.
instead, Miss Christian and the
two young girls attended a regu
larly scheduled mass at a near
by Catholic church.
Then some three hours after
Power's funeral had ended, Linda
and Homina, 8, and Taryn, 6, vis
ited the actor's grave and placed
thereon a huge cross of carna
tions and gardenias. Linda knelt
silently in prayer.
Miss Christian (old a reporter
that she had arranged for special
masses to be said in churches
throughout the world during the
rites.
"F.vcry city Rome, Madrid.
Paris where Ty and I were
once so happy. I wanted him to
be remembered," she said.
Power, son of (hp famntic Tt-ich
actor of Ihe same name, was born
catholic but since left that church.
He married the former Mrs. De
borah Montgomery Minardos' in
Presbyterian rites last May 7 in
Tunica, Miss.
It Was a marrinpn Hiut clnnnna
Hollywood, most of which did not
even Know ol a romance. At the
lime, she stated: "I have no act
inc ambitions. I iusl want in h
a wife to Ty."
She was with him in Madrid
when the 44-year-old aclor died
after a strenuous dueling scene
for the movie "Solomon and She-ha."
Former Showgirl Testifies
Police Matrons Mauled Her
LOS ANGF.LKS (UPD-Defcnse
testimony in the drunk and bat
tery trial of former showgirl
Gregg Sherwood ended Friday
with Ihe attractive blonde defend
ant telling the jury two jail ma
trons fondled her breasts while
she was being booked last Aug
2(i.
The 34-year-old wife of aulo
heir Horace Dndrp II akn ln.-ti
fieri the matrons dragged her to
a cell, stood her against a wall
and then "raised my skirt and
removed my stockings, even
though a policeman was standing
there and witnessing it."
Miss Sherwood denied she shout
ed insults at oflicers Lawrence K.
Brown and Kenneth Bernard when
she and Chicago columnist Irv
Kupcinet drove past their halted
police car.
The officers said Miss Sherwood
U.S. Court
Sets Hearing
PORTLAND (AP' A federal
court hearing was scheduled Nov.
2H for the International Long
I'nion lo show cause why they
should not he ordered to slop sec
ondary boycotting and picketing
at the Harvey Aluminum Co. nt
The Dalles, Ore.
General Ore Inc., an affiliate
of Harvey, charged the union and
two of its locals with Ihe boycott
and picketing.
"After an investigation there is
reason to believe the charges are
true." Thomas P. Graham. Seat
tle regional director of the Nation
al Labor Relations Board, said
Friday. -
He asked the injunction against
Ihe union in a hearing before U.S.
District .ludge William G. East.
General Ore refused a demand
by the union July 25 that union
stevedores he used to unload al
uminum ore boats from Japan.
spat at them and called them
"Napoleonic Idiots" while they
were questioning her in the car.
The battery charges stemmed
from the accusation she attacked
the matrons and a policeman fol
lowing her arrest.
When she was brought to city
jail, Miss Sherwood said, "one of
Ihe officers told the matrons
Here you are girls. I brought you
a piaymate.
Then, she testified, one of the
matrons "did something behind
my hack that brought me to my
knees on Ihe floor. Then they
grabbed hold of me and dragged
me over to the booking desk by
my hair."
"They searched me right after
that," she said. ,
At this point defense counsel
Rexford D. Kagan asked the de
fendant, "were your breasts fond
led?"
"Yes," she answered. "
Miss Sherwood told the jury of
five men and seven women she
refused to sign a receipt for her
jewelry because one earring was
missing. When she told officers
she would not sign the receipt she
testified someone grahbed her by
the hair and said, "if you want to
get smart we can get smarter,"
and then dragged her to the de
tention cell.
Actress Has Own Formula
For Rearing Her Children
Bv BOB THOMAS
AP Motion Picture Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) Joanne
Woodward has her own formula
for rearing the child she expects
in April: apartness.
She loves children, and she plans
to give the tyke plenty of loving
care. But she doesn't put in with
the folksy hucksters of together
ness. She doesn't want her child
to be overparenled.
"I remember," she said, "how
my father would sometimes say,
'Well, today we're going to spend
some time together." So we'd take
a walk or something and we d
Birth Rate
Dip Noted
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oregon had fewer births in the
first nine months of this year than
in any such period since 194D.
The State Board of Health's vi
tal statistics department said Fri
day only 26,997 babies were born
between January and September,
3 per cent less than the total for
the same period of 1957. During
the same months the national birth
rale declined 1.4 per cent.
Infant mortality dropped 3 per
cent. This, along with the de
creasing birth rate amounted to a
10.6 per cent jump in the infant
death rate from 20.7 per live
births in 1957 to 22.9 per thou
sand this year.
During the first eight months
the infant mortality rate was up
from 26.3 to 26.7.
Heart diseases caused only 4,120
deaths during the first nine
months of 1958, compared with
4.322 last year. There was an in
crease of 7.7 per cent in early
infancy diseases, which took 362
lives. Suicides went up 7.4 per
cent to 159.
Deaths from work accidents fell
from 107 last year to 99 in 1958.
Automobile accidents claimed the
same number, 340. Altogether, 815
deaths were attributed to accidents.
Tuberculosis claimed 41 lives.
the same as in 1957. But only
437 cases of the diseases were
reported, compared to 451 in 1957.
Charges Filed
In Beat Case
RATON, N.M. (AP) Murder
charges have been filed in Raton
against two men held in Idaho
They are to be brought to New
Mexico for trial in the fatal beat
ing of a 50-year-old Pennsyl-vanian.
The two, David R. Peterson. 26,
Spokane, Wash., and Woodrow
Hmes, 32, Bowling Green, Ky.,
are held in Payette, Idaho, on car
theft charges.
Dist. Atty. George Reynolds and
Asst. Dist. Atty. John Hobhs filed
the murder charges late Friday.
They also had warrants issued
for the men.
Peterson and Hines are to be
returned to New Mexico for trial
hi npiu in ine latai neaung oi
l'cier ueaaue ol Kiairsvuie, Pa.
His body, badly beaten on the
head, was found near Springer,
south of Raton on U.S. Highway
85, Thursday.
Hobbs said an autopsy showed
DeSalle, a salesman who left his
family in Pennsylvania while he
came West looking for work, died
of a fractured skull caused by re
peated blows on the head. A blood
stained rock was found on a coun
try road at the start of a trail
made when DeSalle's body was
dragged from a car into an open
field.
both be glad when ft was over.
"It's silly for parents and chil
dren to spend all their time to
gether. Can you imagine anything
duller than listening to the con
versation of a 7-year-old all day?
Or how dull he must find it to lis
ten to his parents talk all day.
Let each side have their own lives.
They'll both be happier that way."
Joanne and husband Paul New
man plan to make their perma
nent home in New York City and
come here only lo make films.
"People arc always telling me
how great it is out here for chil
dren," she said. "Well, I was
brought up in the South where we
had a warm climate and large
yards to play in, and I found I
had little to do. There's plenty to
do in New ork.
"I especially don't want to bring
up my children in an atmosphere
where they're judged hy the size
ol the car their parents drive.
"As for California being a
neaitnier place lor children, Ira
not convinced."
The Newmans will be heading
Fast as soon as he finishes "The
Philadelphian." She has wound up
her role in "The Sound And The
Fury and will sit out her preg
nancy in New Y'ork while he's in
the new Tennessee Williams play.
Group Votes
To Fight Law
HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) The
National Reclamation Assn. voted
Friday to fight for a federal law
to protect state water rights
which is so clear that it cannot
be evaded.
And the 17-state Western organ
ization made it plain it wants sup
port from other parts of the na
tion for that proposal as well as
one opposing creation of any new
wilderness areas without consent
of affected states.
An unanimously adopted rcsolu
tion said:
"Congress should, at once, en
act a law so clear and unambi
guous as to be incapable of eva
sion by either executive order or
judicial interpretation and requir
ing every agency ... of the fed
eral government, as a condition
precedent to the taking or use of
any water, to acquire a right to
the use thereof in conformity
with slate laws . . .
Another resolution asked Con
gress to make it clear that state
water laws also apply to federal
claims for use and control of
water arising on or flowing over
or under withdrawn or reserved
public lands. This would be de
signed to offset a Supreme Court
decision in the Pel'on (Ore.) Dam
case.
Check Given
To Treasurer
WASHINGTON (AP)-A multl.
million dollar check, receipts for
the third quarter of 1958 from the
Portland. Ore., regional forest
service headquarters,' was handed
to Secretary of Treasury Ander
son rriday.
Secretary of Agriculture Ben
son presented the $4,631,345.79
check, which included revenues
from limber sales, grazing and
other national forest sources.
The special cabinet level cere
mony was set up because the
check pushed the amount turned
over to the treasury by Ihe forest
service in the past 53 years to
one billion dollars.
Benson predicted the sum would
reach two billion dollars in the
next ten years "because the for
est service is improving and
managing these lands for a con
tinuous yield of resources."
SLIT FILED
PORTLAND (AP) A $100,000
suit filed Friday in the Multno
mah County Circuit Court
charged Laurence-D avid, Inc.,
fraudulently appropriated trade
secrets for manufacturing wood
plastic patch material.
CONTINUOUS FROM 12:45 P.M.
NOW SHOWING!
West Railroads
Seek Fare Hike
WASHINGTON ( AP) Several
Western railroads, including the
Southern Pacific, asked Ihe Inter
state Commerce Commission Fri
day for- permission to increase
coach fares 5 per cent.
The petition said there would
he no increase in round-trip for
military personnel on leave
Present coach fares range from
2.7.W.1 to 3 0318 cents a mile and
round-trip fares are 180 per cent
of the one-way (arcs.
Talk Planned
By Army Chief
PORTLAND (API Secretary
of the Army Wilbur Bruckcr will
be the main speaker at the 25th
annual convention of the Inland
Kmpire Waterways Assn. conven
tion here Dec. 11-1!.
William A Pear, Bonneville
Power Administration chief, and
Harold T. Nelson, Bureau of Re
clamation regional director, also
are slated to talk.
The revised report on the com
prehensive development of the
Columbia River basin will be pre
sented at a joint meeting of the
association and the Columbia Ba
sin Inter-Agency Committee on
Ihe opening day.
Trade Tour
Nearina End
PORTLAND (API - Thirteen
Japanese business men will con
tinue a Portland visit Saturday
before leaving for Vancouver.
B.C.. on the last leg of a trade
tour of North American cities.
The chairman q( the mission,
lleilaro Inagaki, addressed the
Portland Chamber of Commerce
at a luncheon Friday.
He said Jartan last year im
ported 1.2 billion dollars worth of
U.S. goods and exported 600 mil
lion dollars worth of its own pro
ducts to the United States.
Inagaki expressed belief that
the American people want more
and better Japanese goods.
PUBLIC RENT RATES IP
NKW YORK (UPD-The City
Housing Authority announced Fri
day that it will raise Ihe rents
f 86.000- families in public hous
ing developments hy SI to $10 a
month Jan. 1. Rising operating
costs made the $6,760.00O-a-year
rent boosts necessary, the author
ity sanf.
Hollywood Star
Named In Suit
LOS ANGELES (AP)-A writer
has sued actor Audie Murphy for
$130,750.
Paul Kazcars complaint, filed
Friday, asks the sum for his work
in preparing a script for a pro
jected movie, "Skin Diver With A
Heart." Kazear said Murphy,
most decorated U.S. soldier of
World War II, employed him June
1 but that he has received no com
pensation. '
Mill
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