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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1958)
PAGE 8 B HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON SUNDAY. DECEMBER 21, 1958 Beck's. Heavy Cold,. Fever Cause Recess. Of Trial Council 28 In 1940 to buy a site for a gasoline station. They paid back the money from the station's profits, Brewster said. Once head of the 200,000-mem-ber Western Conference of. Team sters, Brewster now is union pres ident in this state only. Beck, now retired, was head of the Interna ference made provisions for audita but no audit was made, until 1934, when tax agents began investigat ing Beck's finances. The audit showed he owed the union $S7O,0oo. Judge Boldt said the trial would be recessed again Tuesday for the remainder of Christmas week. tional union. Brewster said he and Beck had complete control of all income and expenditures of the Western Conference, the Joint Council and the .Joint Council Building Assn. . Brewster said the Western Con TACO.MA, Wash. AP The In recess was ordered when the doc come tax evasion trial of Dave Beck has been recessed until Mon day because the former Team sters' union boss has a heavy cold and a fever. . tor reported Beck was ill. Brewster told the jury he had no knowledge that the union ever approved a loan for Beck, who is accused by the government of evading nearly a quarter of a mil lion dollars in taxes. Brewster said he and Beck loaned themselves $5,000 from STOP and REST! WHILE CHRISTMAS SHOPPING COMMUNITY LOUNGE 118 No. 7th St. TOY SALE ALL TOYS REDUCED FOR CHRIST f MAS CLEARANCE. Wheel Goods, Beck squirmed and occasionally dozed in his chair Friday . while Frank Brewster, president of the Joint Counoil of Teamsters, was testifying about Beck's borrow S ings from the union he once head ed. U. S. Dist. Judge 'George H. Boldt asked a physician to ex amine Beck at lunch time and the '"! 1. 41 -J - I AGAIN THIS YEAR, hundreds of gifts are going to the Fairview Home and State, Hos pital at Salem through the generosity of residents of Klamath County. Shown at the Klamath County TB and Health Association office, clearing house for the gifts, are, from left, Helen Majors, in charge of the TB and Health office; Mrs. E. A. Geary, mem ber of the board of the State Mental Health Association, and . Mrs. Hagen A. Moore, who has assisted Mrs. Geary and Mrs. Majors for the last three years in this program. -These three women volunteer their time and energy each year to the sorting and box ing of the gifts which are transported without charge by Dick Samples of Klamath Falls Fast Freight to their destination. Last year, for example, Mrs. Moore fastened 1,000 pairs of earrings to cards in addition to her other work in packing the gifts. Unwrapped gifts may be taken today and tomorrow to either the TB and Health Association of fice, 209 East Main, or to Mrs. Moore's home for last minute delivery to Salem. Woman Killed As Cars Collide CASCADE LOCKS (AP) Two cars collided near here Friday and killed Mrs. Ethel Zulauf of Cascade Locks. ' Police said one car was driven by her husband, George Zulauf, and the other by Robert H. Carey of La Grande Both men were hospitalized. It was Oregon's 429th traffic fa tality of 1958, and the J6th this month, in the Associated Press tabulation. HUNTING TRAILER SPACE? See TRAVOIS SEQUESTER MOBILE HOME SITES 4 Miles North of City Center on Highway 97 -6 Minute Drive From Town Spaces for largest trailers. 220 volt service can handle heating jobs. Shade trees on every lot, con crete patios and walks, lawns throughout.' Large ' modern utility.- - , See Us For Terms Phone TU 2-5773 Cnrinn Hfircac Drkllc fiflmec. Truck, .ft etc. ''''' I FINAL CLEARANCE ON HI-FI UNITS J. W. KERNS Wrists Cut By Teen-ager SEATTLE (AP) A teen-age Taooma youth, who last Tuesday confessed , a 1957 slaying,' Friday night cut his wrists with a ball point pen! in what King County sheriff's officers described as , an apparent attempt to gain attention. The youth, David O. McLain, . 16, was giyen first aid at the King County jail and did not require bospital attention. McLain .signed a confession he shot Norton 'Gregory, a suburban Houghton;, grocer, on Oct. 31,' 1957 during a $90 robbery of the store. HoweverTecords at Western State Hospital at Steilacoom, Wash., in dicate the boy was a patient there the day Gregory was slain. . , Judge Sets Bond In Timber Case Bond of $2,000 was set by Judge D. Van Vactor for Charles R Turner, 39, Murphy, who was held for the grand jury on a charge of larceny following a - preliminary hearing in district court Friday Turnor was arrested by state no lice on the afternoon of December 13, when .he was allegedly dis covered in possession of Christmas trees which did not belong to him Police say he was stopped while ne was Driving along the Poe Val icy Road with a load of trees. Some of those trees, they allege bore markings which the Weyerhaeuser Timber . Company was using to identify , trees cut fcy Its personnel on its holdings in the area. Sports Devotees Said frosted' By Lack Of Snow To the hordes of skferg, iobog-. saners, assorted winter sports lov ers and others who have been "frosted" by the absence of snow In the Klamath Basin and surround ing areas this winter can now be added the list of those who at tended ' the snow surveyor training school held In Klamath Falls Tues day and Wednesday. Despite the presence , of W. T. (Jack) Frost, Oregon snow survey supervisor for the U.S. Soil Con servation Service, under the spon sorship of which the school had been Organized, the best patch of snow the school could find was on the rim of Crater Lake, a just adequate 18 inches. Frost, who came from Portland to direct the school, was assisted ..by Manes Barton, his assistant su pervisor, and Maurice Benson, snow surveyor from the Bend soil conservation service office, and Ranger John Bowdler of the park service. The trainees were Gene Cox, Don Baldwin and Dave Ed wards of Klamath Falls;' Calvin Gregg, Cottage . Grove; Roger Rcid, Bonanza; Gerald George, Madras: and Myron Buswell, Lake- view. All but Buswell, who owns a flying service in Lakeview, are members of the soil conservation service staff. Except for the morning spent at the lako, the trainees had to use their imaginations whilo listening to lectures on such subjects as "tho snow survey party." "travel on skis or snowshoes" and "trav el by over-snow vehicle." The most appropriate item on the agenda was entitled "overdue snow survey party;" unfortunately Earl Jones, who was supposed to teach It, was not able to attend. Fred Gocller of Weyerhaeuser re portedly identified the marked trees after Turner had been stopped, and signed the complaint. In the heart of Paris there is a late-night place called The. Crazy Horse. It is a French version of an American Wild West saloon. Rummage Sale! All gift items ond merchon diso must tell, by Chriitmoi. i 2804 So. 6th St. I f I I DEAN'S STARK'S MERRY CHRISTMAS SPECIAL' VACUUM CLEANERS ' AND ' ' ; ;.! V CI HAD -A i Luun POLISHERS NEW LEWYT, model 88 ' . Regular 69.95 , GENERAL ELECTRIC, model R-l ' Regular 49.95. Special ..( GENERAL ELECTRIC, model C-3 Regular 49,95, now only 1 WESTINGHOUSE, Canister medal SCI Regular 49.95. Dean's low prlca NEW HOOVER, model 3 Upright. Was 99.95 ....... ELECTROLUX, Rebuilt by Stark's Modal 30. Spacial, only KIRBY, rebuilt, like new. Complete with attachments SHETLAND floor Polisher I Scrubber With Attachments. Regular 49.95 TERMS - FREE HOME TRIAL For Appointment . Coll TODAY TU 4-7193 DEAN'S 39.95 I 38.88 I 38.88 69.95 19.95 $ 49.95 $ 29.95 I TRADES ft I 1"'"M 122 South 9th : 734 S. 6th Ph. TU 4-4197 si i twmm A Lasting Gift Make It A Musical Gift For Your Child Accordion - Guitar iRy vRvffi? a n n i r-iu7d:im- $M A Large Variety Of Top Line Instruments MUSIC LESSONS By Capable Teacher With 12-Yrs. Experience ' Open Evenings Till 9 Mon. thru Sat. KLAMATH MUSIC CENTER 513 E. Main Ellis Parker, Prop, and Teacher ROCKERS and OCCASIONAL CHAIRS Plastic covert, plastic and tweed coven, frieze covers. Wide choice of colors. Hurry for thesa. 1 Thay'll ga fasti . Reg. to 39.95 NOW (?) 88 3 Wing-Back Period Chairs Foam Rubber Club Chairs Occasional Chairs Swing Rockers Wool Frieze covers, plastic covars, plastic and tweed covers. Any color you could wont. Soma with foam rubber padding. Re9 olfoISS 59.95 yt NOW TRUE FACTS! A carload of high quality eastern hardwood chairs rockers, recliners, occasional chairs b o u g h t for Christmas selling has' just arrived! On? 3 Days to Unload You'll find prices at our cost, plus freight . . . and some chairs below cost! Hurry for best selection. These "at cost" sale prices effective only on merchandise in stock. Sorry, no sales to other furniture stores! mMMmmm Recliners With Vibrators Swing Rockers Occasional Chairs Swivel Rockers Foam rubber padding. Wool friaia, plastic and plas tic and tweed covert. Most chain hava reversible cushions. Hurry! These won't last long! (9)88 NOW RECLINERS OCCASIONAL CHAIRS SWIVEL ROCKERS Foam rubber backs and seats. Reversible cushions. Combination plastic and fibre cavers, plus many trleies and tapestries. Hurry! , Reg. to 159.95 W8 RECLINERS SWING ROCKERS SWIVEL ROCKERS CLUB CHAIRS OCCASIONAL CHAIRS 5H" foom rubber ' reversible , cushions.. ', Wool friezes and plastic covers. Some . of' the finest choirs wa hava ever seen at this price! '; Rt9, ylol88 79.88 (J NOW 3 RECLINERS LOUNGE CHAIRS SWIVEL ROCKERS OCCASIONAL CHAIRS Widt choice of colors. Friezes, Naugahydes, plas tics ond combination covers. Foam rubber pad ding. Hurry for thesef Re3,nS(ol88 8,95 nlri now VnJ, RECLINERS Nougahyda and fabric covers and all Naugahyda covers. A few velvet club choirs included! Reg. to 149.95 RECLINERS All Naugahydeor wool frieit cover. A few na tionally famous Berk Liners added to this group. They're really quality chairs for people who want the best! " (5188 Reg. to 169.88 3 OPEN 9 to 9 MON. AND TUES. EASY TERMS FREE DELIVERY Phone TU 4-3360 Phone TU 4-4878 . 9th and Klamath Ave.