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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 10, 1959)
T AGE 2 A HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH' FAILS,' OREGON" SUNDAY, MAY 10, 1959 - w.'f - STATUE MODERNIZED OUTDATED MARYSVILLE, Ohio W-Justice the statue of Justice atop the courthouse here has a modern touch. The antenna lor the sher iff's Department radio perches FINDALY, Ohio W-!nvestlfiai. ing a break-in at a storage build ing, police found a piece of paper with the signatures. Jesse James, Billy the Kid, and Black Jack Wil above the statue. son. The late comedian W. C. Fields was an accomplished juggler. Said it took him seven years of prac Bolivia has two capitals. One is La Paz, the working seat of the republic. The other is Sucre, the y. s. a Fpjct V- " c r tice before he. could include jug gling In his comedy vaudeville official capital and headquarter of the country's supreme court. act. TODAY! ' . ..... , THI F-St SCORPION it an Air Fore interceptor which carries a crew of two. Powered by an Alljien J-35-3 turbojet engine, 'the plane it capable of flying in excess of 1,000 miles at speed of 600 miles per hour. Built by the Northrop Aviation Corp., in California, the Scorpion Is equipped with an, afterburner, and has a wingspan of 57' 10" and is 53' 4" long. This aircraft will be on display at Kingsley Field on Armed Forces Day, Saturday, May 16, 1959. THIS PICTURE, taken about 1920, shows a feed wagon on the A. L. Marshall ranch in Poe Valley. On the wagon are Mr. and Mrs. Marshall, parents of Bill and Jack Marshall who have continued to operate the property which was homesteaded about Iff 12. The snapshot was taken by V. E. IVic) O'Neill of Klamath Falls. Ex-Football Star Settled Here In 1912 Local Air Base To Observe Armed Forces Day, May 16 The 408th Fighter Group at Kingsley Field will observe the 10th anniversary of Armed Forces Day on Saturday, May IB, with an open house, parade, static displays, and other events according to Col. Jack W. Williams, Kingsley Field Base commander. Open house -will prevail during the day giving the people of neigh boring Klamath Falls and other towns the opportunity to see for themselves how an Air Force in stallation operates. The open house will also give military and civilian personnel a chance to show their working areas to families and friends. AU facilities and activities, consistent with security and work achedules, will be open to the gen eral public. "Power for Peace," which has been used since 1953, will again be the slogan in the annual invitation to the public to become better acquainted with the nation's de fense structure. Highlights of the day's activities will include: a parade in downtown Klamath rails by the military static displays of the Air Force's century series aircraft, the F-104 Starfighter.- F-102 Delta Dagger, F-101 Voodoo, and the F-100 Super Sabre: as well as the F-89 Scor pion and the F-86 Sabre Jet. There will also be huge transport air craft on display, and a B-47, the Air Force's first line bomber. On Saturday, Armed Forces Day aircraft will make flyovers over the cities of Klamath Falls, Ash land, Medford and Grants Pass. An Armed Forces Day dinner at the Willard Hotel in Klamath Falls Beach Murder Jury Reports CHICAGO (AP) A jury which deliberated nearly eight hours Fri day acquitted 25-year-old Barry Cook of murdering a sunbathing spinster three years ago in a North Side lakefront park. Although the acquittal cleared Cook of the spyglass murder of Miss Margaret Gallagher, a 50 -year-old beauty operator, he is not a free man. He will be returned to prison Monday to serve the re mainder of a 1 to 14-year sentence for admitted assaults and robber ies of women. The state had sought the death penalty. It based its case largely upon alleged admissions by Cook tn police and a lie detector ex pert. His lawyer contended that Cook was brainwashed into mak ing the statements. The bludgeon slaying of Miss Gallagher was witnessed by an apartment dweller scanning Lake Michigan through opera glasses July 22, 1056. However, he was too far away to prevent the slay ing or identify the assailant. For Sale - Local Grown Variety FLOWER PLANTS RMionably Pilctdl 207 E. Main in the evening, will climax, the day s activities. Invite your friends to Kingsley Field on Armed forces Day, Sat urday, May 16, 105J, and see how your Air Force operates. Lie Detector Clears Man In Murder Plot WASHINGTON (AP)- A quick lie detector test has cleared a Texas union leader of a n y part in an alleged murder plot, the Senate rackets probers say. A lei low unionist accused him; The charge against Joseph P McCoIlum, vice president of the: Boilermakers Union, was made Friday before the probers by Ice land Head, a member of the union". McCoIlum said the accusation was completely false and com plained that perjury had been committed. In the face of the flatly contra dictory' testimony, both men agreed to a lie detector lest given by Naval intelligence oftlcers. Committee counsel Robert F. Kennedy announced the two-hour test showed "there is no question" but that McCoIlum told the truth in denying Head's story. The test on Head, Kennedy said, was in conclusive. Told of tho result, Head said he was sticking by his story that he had heard McCoIlum propose rais ing a fund to hire an assassin to kill Clarence Wilkin, a Galveston, Tex., union member. At the time in 1'.I56. Wilkins had just been acquitted of murdering James R. Huff, business manag cr of the union's Galveston local Kennedy said he had no plans to recall cither man before the committee. The case now will go to the Justice Department, he said, "and they may make fur thcr Investigation of the matter.' Agencies Seek Guard Duty PORTLAND (AP)-The squab ble over who will guard the. 100- day Oregon Centennial Exposition here this summer was aired Fri day at a meeting before Centen nial Commission representatives. Two agencies, William J. Burns International Detective Agency and Pinkerton National Detective Agency, presented their proposals and qualifications. Centennial representatives were Chairman Anthony Brandcnthaler. John Snider and Mrs. Janet Baumhover. Pinkerton offered services at Jt.M a guard hour and Burns of fered similar services at $1.87'4 VALUABLE FIND STERLING. Colo. Ml Sterling Police Chief Hugh O'Neal found a real collector s item while clean ing out his desk a U.S. penny made in 1839. n."l iJW aW ; Orlng Mother mi ERE for, . D R OPEN 1:00 p.m. to 9 p.m. Member of The Diners Club . . . . SOUP Creamed Chicken A la Princess . . . SALAD . . . Fruit Compote or Tossed Green Salod Bowl ICED RELISHES Fried Spring Chicken to Order Hot Biscuits Chicken Cream Gravy Baked Sugar Cured Ham Virginia Style Fruit Sauce . Veal Birds" Jumbo Prowns, French Fries,' Hot Sauce Prime Rib Au Jus, Yorkshire Pudding, Baked Potato Char-Broiled Dinner Steak, Baked Potato French Fried Onion Rings Whipped Snow Flaked Potatoes, Rolls Choice of Desserts, Coffee or Tea . . . DESSERTS ... v' Home Made Red Devils Food Coke Lemon Chiffon Pie Wild Blackberry Sundae Ice Cream or Sherbet . . . Children's Plotes ... Driftwood Char-House 124 So. 7th TU 4-5267 OKW i' In llMiliil IIIIW , The late, A. L. Marshall, an All America football player and later a football coach, came to Oregon from Indiana in 1907. After five years at Medford, he moved his family Into the Poe Val ey of Klamath County. PASTOR HARVEY COOVERT of the Zion Lutheran Church in Medford will install the Rev. A. C. Neubauer as pas tor of the Hope Lutheran Church, Homedale and South Sixth streets, tonight at 7:30. All those interested are invited to attend. PATRICIA OAKLEY; 17, has filed candidacy for queen of the Lake County Round up contest. She is a senior at Lalceview High School and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Oakley of the Westside. She is an expert rider and helped round up and brand cattle on the Jess Roberts Ranch for several years. She belongs to a 4-H Horsemanship Club. Her sponsor is the Thomas Creek Grange. Military Asks More Money For Missiles WASHINGTON (AP)- Several military leaders, in secret testi mony made public Saturday, com plain that their missile develop ment programs are not getting enough money In the adminislra lion s proposed dclenso budget. None of them dissented formal ly from President Eisenhower's budget recommendations, detend cd by the administration as an adequate mixture of deterrence and defense. But high officers of each of the services voiced their missile wor ries to the House Appropriations subcommittee that holds the purse strings on defense spending. The testimony given in March and April was published Saturday, though shredded by the censors' shears. The officers said there was not enough money budgeted for: 1. The Nike Zeus program, the Army's hope for destroying ene my intercontinental ballistic mis- siles. 2. The Air Force's program of building more U.S. intercontinen tal missiles. 3. The Navy's Polaris missile- submarine combination, which the Navy views as a more effective retaliatory threat for the next few years than anything the Air Force has now. , NEW LOCATION RICHMOND, Va. (-The South ern Baptist Foreign Mission Board nas moed into a new million dot lar building of Its own. It Is the eighth location since the board was formed 113 years ago. Utah produces 19 per cent of ha nation's copper. Mechanization of farm and ranch operation had barely started in those days as is shown by the picture of the horse-drawn feed wagon. The snapshot was borrowed from a family scrapbook at t h e Bill Marshall home and was taken DENNIS THE MENACE? ITS 4 BICYCLE CHAW. fM S0NNA M4K6 rWSBVF A 8ICVCLE.' Cleanup Week On Today; Final Sweep Due May 23 about 1920 by V. E. (Vie) O'Neill who had persuaded Mrs. Marshall to pose on the hayrack with her nusoand. In addition to the old homestead. Bill and Jack Marshall maintain a livestock operation at Swan Lake and have added to their Foe Val ley holdings. The Marshall men and their wives are active in Klam ath County Cattlemen's Association and Cow Belle activities and other phases of beef promotion. This picture is published as part ot a scries of oldtimc pictures of early day cattle operations in the Klamath Basin. The project is un-1 tier tne chairmanship of Mrs. Lee Holliday, vice president of Klam ath County Cow Belles. The series is presented to show 'a little of the background of the cattle indus try in this area and as a prelude to the Beef for Fathers Day pro motion of the Cow Belles. "flOADRACERS" mM Silly Fitsu All Diiuhart. Jr. Skip Wird Joel llwnnct "OAOOV.'O' ' STARRING DICK C0NTINO -SANDRA GILES BRUNO VE SOTO Starts CONTINUOUS TODAY FROM 12:45 TODAY! asm vm&mmmsrm mwmmm Klamath Falls Cleanup Week be gins tomorrow. In theory, it be gins today, but who is going to tackle such a moumcntal project on Sunday? There Is altogether too much trash lying around the city, officials who instituted the cleanup cam paign are convinced. So they have tied-in with a national Institution the Clean-up, Paint-up, Fire Pre vention Month of May. In that way, they hope towns-peo ple will help spruce up the town to make it cleaner, healthier and less combustible. Minister Dies In Road Crash GRANTS PASS (AP)-A young minister was killed and his wife and child were injured in the headon collision of their station wagon with a lumber truck-and- trailer just north of here Friday. The Rev. Aubry Ashburn, pas tor of an Assembly of God Church nt San Diego,, died shortly after his arrival at a hospital. His wife, Betty, 20. and their child, Daniel, 11 months, were hurt. Hospital attendants said their injuries were serious but not critical. The officals, chiefs of the various fire departments in and near the city, and chamber of commerce personnel, have set May 23 as Clean-up Day. On that day people who want to get rid of trash they have accumu latcd and piled this week can call the chamber of commerce, which will dispatch trucks with Boy Scouts to pick up debris. Sometime during the week a team of fire chiefs will inspect -various trouble spots in the city. Then they will reinspect the area after Clean up Day to see how the campaign worked. In a sort of contest, greater Klamath Falls, Including the sub urban area, will be broken into competing units using boundaries of all the school sub-districts in town. Children of the area which does the best clean-up job will get free ice cream. If residents want to burn trash they may receive free fire permits by calling the Klamath Falls, Sub urban or Stewart-Lenox Fire De part menls. If they want, to burn trash piled dangerusly near buildings, a call to one of the departments will bring men and equipment to t e n d the iires. GATES OPEN f:45 P.M. ONI COMPLITI SHOW ONLY iAT 7:0 P.M. IATUM AT l:2S ONLY- 1959 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! lrl Ivtt ted Suppertlna Acrof GREGORY CARROLL CHARLTON peck awpjyaiBiLjitBni im ' X "EPIC IN ACTION!" ' 1 1 Nl"A DIP tlflTU. THC -BIG" COUNTRY In TECHNICOLOR n4 TECHNIRAMA' I s3r- $TATS TUISOAY Hl,lltfllll!l)tMBiia,HIflinmi I tK. t fed J I vv'ssss-. m f Academy Award Winner YUL BRYNNER "Anybody can make you feel like a woman!.. '. Anybody!" m&.z.s- '1.41 ' I 1 vf:g"Sj 1 I Academy Award Winner '- JOANNE WOODWARD -it i mow, ftaj , it 8 became he ' makes me bad!" i if i L 4 New Star L I 0 x. r i Ah h - ill f " Ta internationally Acclaimed MARGARET LEIGHTON You disappeared and left an , illegitimate STUART WHITMAN "You Southern ' women... you eat up a man in little bites!" II , I America's Favnrila ETHEL WATERS "You're tryina to U!Jm ..... --! t r tor mat Qiriry m 4 V A i f m