"TUESDAY. APRIL 21. 1959
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE FTVR
CITY BRIEFS
Shaita PTA will hold a regu
lar meeting on Wednesday, April
22. at 2:30 p.m. Capt. William J
,.JiiU of Kingsley Field will pre-
tent the program. A nursery will
. -be provided.
,. N'orthslde Garden Club will
meet on Wednesday it 1 p.m at
we clubhouse. 1215 Bismarck
Street. J. D. Vertrees will speak
" en local insect control. Visitors
welcome.
v: Sojourners will hold a regular
no-host luncheon meeting on Wed
"'Jiesday, April 22. Luncheon will
- Be served at 12:30 m the Pon-
derosa Room at the Willard Ho-
tel ; business meeting and cards
,j8t 1:30 in the Spruce Room. For
further information please call
;,Mrs. Al Sigea, TU 4-4248.
. Nurses Oregon State Nurses
'Association District No. 8 will hold
..a regular meeting at 7:30 p.m.
on Thursday. AdhI 23. at the nub
".lic health building. All registered
t nurses are lnvitea to attena.
Field Trip The first major
. overnight field trip of the Klam
" eth Mineral Club will be held
.. April 25 and 26 at Bear Creek.
i All members or interested per
sons who plan to go are asked
to contact J. W. Vemon, at TU
-2-1477, or Clarence Cornett at TU
2-0089 before Thursday evening
Rummage Sale will be given
by Naomi SHrine No. 5. WSOJ
on April 24 and 25 at the Ma
sonic Temple, 418 Klamath Ave
nue. Please bring rummage Thurs-
Winter Blasts
Rip Rockies
: By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
s. v Chilly air spread across broad
"areas in the eastern half of, the
country today as wintry weather
- continued in parts of the Rockies.
Stormy weather erupted in south-
-em and central sections during the
'"'Bight as cold air moving south
ward from Canada clashed with
n-.warm breezes.
Texas reported a variety of
...weather, mostly stormy, Monday
. night. Hail and heavy rain pelted
' central and southern areas. Snow
fell in the upper Panhandle.
rv.Heavy fog kept 12 cargo ships off
Galveston Bay. A tornado was
.. sighted between Del Rio and Eagle
.r Pass but was not believed to have
-.. touched ground.
More light snow fell along the
k -eastern slopes of the Rockies in
f .Wyoming, Colorado and New
n'jjlexico and in parts of the high
u. plains region.
Paper Claims
Stork Due
" PARIS (UPI) Princess Grace
v -el Monaco is expecting a third
'' child, a Paris newspaper claimed
:' today.
The daily "Paris Journal" said
''the former Grace Kelly of Holly
"wood and Philadelphia "broke the
"news confidentially and very tim
idly to a lady friend in Paris."
There was no official confirma
tion of the report. Grace and her
i- husband. Prince Rainier, are cur-
rently visiting his mother, Prin-
J cass Charlotte, here,
i Grace and Rainier arrived here
Saturday from Switzerland with
their first born, Princess Caro-
t line, who is two years and three
months old. Little Prince Albert,
' born March 14, 1958, had stayed
behind in Monaco.
day evening or call TU 4-4353
o nave n picxea up.
Card Party Stewart-Lenox
Fire Belles will hold a public card
party on Saturday, April 25, at
7:30 p.m. at the Fairhaven School.
Prizes and refreshments. Fifty
cents per person.
Friendship Court No. 11 will
sew on Wednesday, April 22, at
10:30 a.m. at the home of Mrs
Elmer Vincent, 2525 Reclamation.
Potluck luncheon. ,
Meeting Women of Moose ChaP'
ter 467 will conduct a business
meeting and academy of friend
ship tonight at 8 in the Moose
Hall.
Birthday Dinner Loyal Order
of Moose 1106 and Women of
Moose 467 will hold a birthday
dinner at 6:30 p.m. Saturday in
Moose Hall. All members and
guests are invited.
State Convention for women's
library clubs will be held in Rose-
burg, May 4, 5, 6. Members are
invited to attend. For transporta
tion call Mrs. Claude Davis.
Ronald R. Harper will conduct
a study class, Wednesday, April
22, one of a series, starting at
12:45 p.m. at the Methodist Church
on Understanding Other Cul
tures." The study period is open
to all persons. There will be one
more stuuy period, Wednesday,
April 29. ,
Auxiliary of the American Le
gion Post, No. 8, will meet at 8
tonight at the Legion Hall on North
Eighth. Auxiliary members will
serve refreshments.
Speaker "Mental Health and
the Church's Ministry" is to be
the topic of a talk to be given
at the annual dinner of the Klam
ath Council of Churches, 6:30 p.m
Tuesday, April 28. at the First
Presbyterian Church. Speaker will
be John M. Humphreys, director
of Chaplaincy Services, Oregon
State Hospital, Salem. Those who
do not wish to attend the dinner
may arrive at 7:45 p.m. in the
church fireplace room for the ad
dress. The public is welcome.
Falrvfew School visitation day
is planned for Wednesday, April
22, from 9:30 to 11 a.m. for all
children who will enter the first
grade next fall. Children will visit
classes and parents will be greet
ed by the principal, school nurse
and members of the PTA.
Fairvlew PTA will meet Thurs
day, April 23 at 2:15 p.m. in the
school auditorium. Youth groups
of the school, including the Fair-
view band directed by Dale Hal
lack, will be on the' program. Ev
eryone welcome.
Coffee Hour at Orson Stearns
School gymnasium Saturday,
April 25, for Intermediate Teach
ers Association for Childhood Edu
cation, Primary Division. Hostess
es will be intermediate and pri
mary teachers of Klamath Coun
ty Schools. An intermediate teach
ers meeting 'will follow.
Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Bert
(Gailya) Morgan, Detroit, Michi
gan, have been guests of Mrs.
Morgan's mother, Mrs. ' Michael
Foley at Route 3. Box 111. Mor
gan, a 1949 graduate of Oregon
Technical Institute, is supervisor
of training for Cadillac Motor Car
Division, General Motors Corp.
Mrs. Morgan, graduate of Klam
ath Union High School the same
year, was editor of the Krater.
She is presently secretary for a
Detroit insurance agency.
Q l i
DEEP APPRECIATION was expressed to the Klamath Coun
ty Chapter, National Infantile Paralysis Foundation for this
new wheel chair, by Mrs. Jennett Schiffman, polio victim
who has been unable to walk since being stricken several
years ago., Mrs. Schiffman owns -and operates a grocery
on Altamont Drive. The chair she used for some time de
veloped axle trouble and caused a near disaster while oc
cupied. With her is Jack Insley, Klamath County Chapter
chairman.
Star Slated
For Surgery
NEW YORK (UPI) Arthur
Godfrey will leave his CBS radio
and television programs at the
end of this week for an indefinite
period to submit to further exam
ination and treatment of a sus
pected chest tumor, it was an
nounced Monday.
He told his television audience
This old Irish ruin has got some
ivy growing in the chest. Next
weekend i n going to a hospital
and maybe get it. trimmed out."
He said doctors had not yet de
termined whether the growth was
malignant or benign. A spokes
man said his physicians have not
determined whether surgery will
be necessary.
Godfrey flew his private plane
to his Vireinia home Mondav
night and will continue his broad
casts from there for the rest of
the week. He will also film there
his television show for next Tues
day, his last for an unpredictable
time, tne network said.
Godfrey, 55, said the growth
had been discovered in X-rays
after he complained of pains in
nis cnest.
SETS DEATH PENALTY
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI)
The Florida House of Representa
tives passed unanimously Monaay
a bill calling for a maximum pen
alty of death for terrorist bomb
ings.
RALLY FOR CASTRO
NEW YORK (UPI) Thp mall
in Central Park will be turned
over to suDnorters nf Firfoi Hie.
tro Friday night for a giant rally
or me i-uoan prime minister
Mayor Robert F. Wagner an
nounced Monday.
23 Ve&id Ap
Monday, April 19, 1936 Mrs. Dno Backes was hostess
to members of the TNT bridge club Friday evening" at her
home on Pacific Terrace. Three tobies of contract were in
play during the evening. High score went to Miss May Tolle,
second high to Mrs. Lee Porker and low to Miss Ethelwyn
O'Flaherty.
! TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1934 A square-tail Rainbow trout
) weighing 10 Vi pounds end measuring 29 inches was landed
, Sunday at Rocky Point by -Wilbur Telford. George Steven-
son, Floyd Henroit, Nelson Reed and Telford all caught two
fish each. The average weight was two pounds.
1 Wednesday, April 21, 1936 James Norman Hall, famous
j co-author of Mutiny on the Bounty, is arriving in Klomath
' Falls this evening tor a short visit with Mr.' and Mrs. A. B.
Epperson. Mr. Hall and Mr. Epperson were classmates at
Grtnnelt college, in Iowa, and have maintained their friend
ship ever since.
' Thursday, April 22, 1936 Martin Swonson was elected
' president of ithe Klomath County Junior chomber of com-
merce at o dinner meeting of the organization at the Wil-
lard Mondoy night. Rudy Jacobs made a talk at the meet
ing on the haberdashery business. Dave Shirk reported on the
progress of clean-up week.
Friday, April 23, 1936 Andrew M. Collier consented Wed
' nesday to be choirmon of the onnUal meeting ef the Klom-
eth county chamber of commerce, to be held at the Willard
with Dr. Frederick M. Hunter, chancellor of higher educa
tion in Oregon, as tha principal speaker. Collier is o promi
nent olumnus of the University of Oregon.
Saturday, April 24, 1936 Seven new directors of the cham
ber of commerce were selected Thursdoy ofternoon when the
onnual election ballots were counted. The new directors in
cluded H. P. Bosworth, Marshall Cornett, E. A. Geary, John
Houston, Fronk Jenkins, J. W. Kerns end Henry Semon.
Deportation Order Issued For Former Communist
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The
Immigration and Naturalization
Service has issued a deportation
order for William Heikkila, 53.
old former Communist who was
forcibly deported in 1958.
He was returned to this coun
try as the result of public indig
nation over the way he was seized
a downtown street here and
flown to Finland without even
being permitted to inform his
wife.
The late U.S. District Judge Ed
ward P. Murphy said the depor
tation "smacked of the Gestapo,
the rack and the thumbscrew'
and ordered Heikkila's return on
parole, pending a hearing.
The new deportation order .was
signed Monday by Monroe Kroll,
a special hearing officer who con
ducted a series of hearings on the
case.
Among other things, the order
held that the one-armed Finnish
born draftsman left the U.S. un
der an alias in 1930 to attend the
International Lenin School in the
Soviet Union.
Heikkila denied the charge in
the face of testimony by an ex
Communist who said they attend
ed classes together in Russia.
Lloyd McMurray, Heikkila's at
torney, said he would appeal Mon
day's deportation 'order "all the
way" if necessary, so it was
doubtful that Heikkila could be
deported for at least two or three
years.
RECEIVED SWORD
General Cornwallis did not sur
render his sword to General Wash
ington. Washington appointed Gen
eral Benjamin Lincoln to accept
the terms of surrender, including
the laying down of arms. As Lord
Cornwallis did no appear, pleading
illness, Lincoln received the sword
from the subordinate who repre
sented him.
OSBORN HOTEL
EUGENE, ORE.
Mra. J. B. Eorly Joo Eorly Jr.
Proprietor
Thoroughly Modem
?!
44
U
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ft
sk-a
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MATERNITY
FASHIONS
LINGERIE
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TOPS
SKIRTS
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CAPRI PANTS
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Cash, 30-Day Charge,
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Heikkila came to the country
as an infant and has an American-born
wife. Phyllis. 39. He ad
milted he belonged to the Com
munist party in Minnesota during
1329-39. but claimed he was only
a "depression Communist."
His case has been pending sine
1949 and was in the courts when
he was forcibly deported in 1958.
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