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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1959)
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS- OREGON Air-Sea Probe Terminated PANAMA (AP)-The Organiza tion of American Stales ended its four-nation air-sea watch lor new invasion attempts against Pana ma' coast Monday night. OAS military observers pre pared to pull out as Panamanian officials said reports of new mys tery landings on Panama's Pacific coast appeared false. A government spokesman said that some 30 men who reportedly landed in small boats Saturday night at Bahia' Hondo, ISO miles from Panama City, may have been fishermen. Air observers spotted the land ings while scanning the shores for any further invasion attempt by forces opposing President Ernesto de la Guardia's government. The United States, Colombia, Ecuador and Guatemala partici pated In the OAS patrol, which was ordered after about 90 Cu bans enlisted by Panamanian op ponents of De la Guardia landed Isst week on the Caribbean coast. The popular uprising they expect ed didn't materialize, and the in vaders surrendered last Friday. The patrol force included 21 U.S. planes, most of them based in the Canal Zone, the U.S. minesweeper Falcon, destroyer Robinson and a U.S. Army boat. '. - - , mfaj&w Hp J . H . 4 PATTY BURLEIGH, left, Merrill, was awarded $25 4-H summer school scholarship for her winning 4-H Club livestock breeding project, completed in 1958. The award, being presented by George Kirkpa trick, manager of the South Sixth Street Safeway Store, was from Safeway Stores Inc. Patty, 15, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Burleigh. Summer school will be held on the Oregon State College campus, Corvallis. 1 Injured Red Tar Able To Talk ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)-A Soviet seaman, unconscious when rushed here in an international air-sea mercy mission nearly a month ago, is now talking both Russian and English, EvgcnIJ Ivanovich Gneushcv, 211, Vladivostok, "has completely re tained his ability . to sneak." a bulletin from Elinendorf Air Force Base Hospital said Monday. Gncushev was transferred to the hospital here Aoril 9 by U.Si Const Guard cutter and amphibian, four days after he was injured in a fall Into a hold of a Soviet re frigerator ship. LONG TOSS DENVER (API - Youngsters playing baseball at Manual High School watched In admiration as postman Warren A. Adams re trieved a loose ball and threw it in their direction. The ball soared ever the diamond and smashed a 4x6 foot window in a drugstore. r -----------i i i HEIE'S SOMETHING I I ! HAY FEVER ! . SUFFERERS Fight back aftainsc hay I fever symptoms with . I entirely new Breath easy I Tablets. Get the bene- a J fit of 3 active ingredients, J I including an antihista- I mine, without taking any I habit-forming drugs. Satisfaction guaranteed! New.Breatheasy Tablets must relieve the miser- ! ies of runny nose, sneez ing and other symptoms or you get a full refund. a Breath easy Tablets also relieve asthma spasms. Rreatheasy ! TABLETS j AT YOUR ORUO STORE SAVE 50! LAUNDROMAT STORE US U. th Acreii fram lank el Klamath Falls COIN OPERATED SELF SERVICE ' WASH 20c A RUMMAGE SALE sponsored by the Women's Association of the First Presbyterian Church will be held May 8 and May 9 in the Pelican Theater Building at the corner of South Eighth Street and Klamath Avenue, A wide assortment of articles including clothing, shoes and housewares will be offered. Working on the sale are, left to right, Mrs, Fred Stem-, lor, Mrs. G. A, Nichol and Mrs. Adam Miller. Rainwater Danger Told By DONALD SHANOR LONDON (UPI) Discovery of radioactive rainwater on a Danish island caused new concern today in Britain wnere Prime Minister Harold Macmillan was to tell Par liament about the dangers ol atomic lauout. Danish health authorities Mon day ordered- Saltholm Island in habitants not to drink their rain water because it was polluted with radioactivity "beyond the danger limit." They started im porting drinking water today. The pollution was attributed to lailout from Russian nuclear ex plosions in Siberia. A new report by an official Brit ish medical commission said, meanwhile, that the benefits from X-rays far outweighed the risks of radiation from them. The report was based on examination of 5,000 cases in 140 hospitals. Macmillan told Parliament last week lhat man-made radioactivity was not aangerous at (he mo ment. Eight Labor members of Par liament and Iwo Conservatives immediately filed questions ask ing clarificalion. Danish authorities Indicated the ban on drinking water for Salt holm Island inhabitants was only temporary. Resident of the is land, situated in the Oeresund Strait belween Denmark and Swe den, depend on rnin water for drinking purposes. Wells bring In sail water. MEETING PLANNED BLY The last mceline of the Bly Parents and Patrons will be held on Thursday evening. May 7. in the school gymnasium. Their will be a potluck supper at 6:30 and evervone is requested to bring own table service. New officers lor the "year will be announced (luring the program following the supper, everyone is invited to at- Unri. Do your wash any hour of the day or night Open 24 hours a day! WESTINGHOUSE DRY 10' "DENNIS THE MENACE' 'KM,3om I'M WATCm'YA UK A HAWK! Special Session Called; Jury To Ponder Rape Case TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) The Leon County grand jury has been summoned into special ses sion Wednesday to consider the case of four white men charged with the mass rape of a Negro co-ed. The jury had been scheduled to lake up the case June 1, but the date was shoved up by Circuit Court Judge W. May Walker at Ihe request of State Atty. William D. Hopkins because of "the great public interest. The four are in the county jail They have made no request lor arraignment or bond. We would resist any request for bond between now and Wednesday," Hopkins said. Florida A. & M. University stu dents who boycotted classes Mon day as part of a demonstration to locus attention on the case said Space Trip Set For Ape MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (API-The United Stales will fire a live ani mal, probably an ape, into space within the next 60 days, says the chief of the Army's space pro gram. Mai. Gen. John B. Mcdaris. commander of the Army Ord nance Missile Command, did not say what type of animal would ride in the nose cone of a Jupiter missile, but he indicated the best guess wculd be a monkey. He told of Ihe coming venture at a news conference Monday. The launching will be another step in the program aimed to put a man in space. An effort will be made lo recover the nose cone alter It plunges earthward through the atmosphere. Medaris was asked to comment i the True Magnzine article which said the Soviet claim of firing its Lunik probe past the moon was a "big Red lie." 'I have enough positive intor mation." Medaris said, "to state hat there was an instrumented object out there in space where the Russians said it was. MKMHKRS ENTERTAINED FTNA AMmitia AiUint nlr. tained 19 members of lite Ladies iAia tocieiy oi tne longresational Church al a whist party Wednes day. April 29. Variation of whist games were played with Amy Der ham winning first prize and Lottie Bell second prize. Members pres ent were Minerva Matleson. Mary W. Young, Augusta Rotan. Frieda t'.reen. Maud Short. Bernice Smith. Agnes Calloway, Lottie Ball. Es ther Skillrn, Berlha Grimes. Eliz abeth Bigham, Holly Palmerlon, ?sadiit Rnt'hnpr. Amv nrhsim Gladys Haydrn. Margaret Big- nam, uiaus uimnucK ana uuc Kreuger. they would return to school today Another mass meeting was called tor tonight. The 19-year-old Tallahassee girl was taken from her escort at gun point early Saturday following a college dance. A sheriff's deputy captured the four men after a 9a- mile an hour chase. The girl, bound and gagged, was still in their car. Florida forbids publica tion of a rape victim s name. Those arrested were Patrick G Scarborough. 20, Tallahassee, an Air Force man on leave from a change in station from Alaska; William Collinsworth. 24. a tele phone lineman; David Ervin Bag- lei, 18, a high school student; and Oilie Stoutamire, 16. Florida's maximum penalty for a rape conviction is death. No white man has gone to the state's electric chair for raping a Negro ESWEDNESDAY! LIFE AND CRIMES OF THE N0.1 UNDERWORLD KING OF ALL TIME! frVijMi Open 6:45 p.m WASHINC'TTTSFT- X .ehti- mental journey has brought Sir Winston Churchill to Washington once again ""to see some of my comrades of wartime days." Sir Winston, now 84. stepped slowly and carefully from Presi dent Eisenhower's personal plane Monday as Eisenhower ana a crowd of about 500 persons wel comed him at Washington's Na tional Airport. But his voice was clear and vig orous. The Churchill wit was there too. f always love coming to Amer ica, but I shall not say as most people who are traveling nowa days about the world seem to do everything I think," he, re marked. Eisenhower grinned, and the Mystery Pains; Hoops Blamed TORONTO (API If your young ster develops mysterious pains, it may be too much hula hooping. Dr. Z. H. Zaidi, chief of pedia trics at Ottawa General Hospital, cites several case histories in the Canadian Medical Assn. Journal to illustrate "some hazards of this unusual form of exercise. A girl, 7, had such sharp pains in the chest, legs and neck her mother thought she had rheumatic fever. An 11-year-old developed fever, sore throat and dizzy spells A boy the same age had excruci ating leg pains. OPEN 6:45 P.M. r TODAY! i ITE3EATS with the rhythm of America's STAItINO PAT TOMMY BOONE -SANDS SHEREE NORTH GARY CROSBY CHRISTINE CARERE Feature At 7:35 t 10:03 Plus "Papaya" Cartoon tni Cinemascope Short "Colourful Courtship" Storta Thursday WHITE WILDERNESS jy r ' (V 'J iVJZiiA POKIN' ALON8 Vfep'V J i tff I t? in The Footsteps A m&- Op"Hish Noon" 'XT'iSvrS - ANO-SHANE" y TfiTS? - 1 color". 4Li x vllfJ ! L... "" 'Vl Villi'"' ' crowd laughed, at this apparent reference to another wartime fig ure. Lord Montgomery, retired British field marshal, criticized American leadership in a televi sion program just before a recent trip to Moscow for conferences with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, i Churchill's last visit to this country was in June 1954, when prime minister he came for a series of official conferences with Eisenhower. This visit is described FLY-UP HELD CRESCENT A Council Fire and Fly-Up for Camp Fire Girls and Bluebirds- was held Friday, May 1, at the Snack at 7:30 in Gil christ. Five girls flew-up to Camp Fire Girls. They are Kathy De Bruin, Sandra DePue, N o r r i e Green, Dawn Huff and Connie Ya ger. Patty DeBruin and Susan Wil liams received their trailseekers rank while Sherri Collister, Mar garet Edgar, Lana Green and Rosaleen Pickens took the wood- gatherers rank. A number of girls received honor beads. i !: KY I f "III"! V III I Vl I i 1 I i l I - ''NPfXaT SPY n : II 1 J I 1 I See Old Wartime Pals - as purely personal. He will be a guest at the White House for three nights, spend another night at the British embassy, and go to New Slimy Slope Takes Toll LOS ANGELES (AP)-rA slip pery, slimy slope slew 'em in Eiysian Park Monday. First viclim was Tracy Smith, 12. He skidded into a steep ravine. There was no climbing out. Wit nesses called an ambulance. Ambulance attendant Sidney Kruegcr leaned over the edge. Oops, he slipped. Down he went, on top of Tracy. Two down. Ambulance driver Ray Barry peered over the brink. His feet went out from under him and there Ihey were, the three of them. The heavy grass was too slick to climb. A fireman's rope got 'em out-unhurt. DOORS OPEN 6:45 ' m ft () York for several days before re turning -to England. British Embassy officials said Sir Winston's remarks at the air. port are the only public state ments he plans to make during his visit. - Eisenhower greeted Churchill as "my dear friend of wartime days'! and, recalling that Sir Winston's mother was an American, said "We claim at least the maternal side of him," ! Churchill agreed that the United States is "my mother country, ae I always figure it and fee it."; A White House limousine' car. ried the President and his guest to the White House for a quiet visit which started with a family dinner. Eisenhower has arranged stag, dinners tonight and Wednesday, night. The British Embassy will' entertain at a similar dinned Thursday. Sir Winston will spend a week end in New York visiting another longtime friend, financier Bernard) Baruch, before flying back to Eng