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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1959)
1 r WEDNESDAY,. MAY 13. 1959 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE 9 A G Q Br, V" : - i fan- i . . C-,S m,. ,'rilll ,iM THE CENTENNIAL ATMOSPHERE prevailed over the last meeting of the present school year for the Henley PTA held May 6 in the Henley High School. High school students put on a style show, "Past and Present." Retiring officers and members of the PTA in old fashioned gowns were, left to right, Mrs. Paul Whitlatch, membership chairman; Mrs. Paul Fairclo, Mrs. Harold Campbell, Mrs. Calvin Noble; Mrs. Aura Mitchell, treasurer; Mrs. Harold Sturgeon, secretary; Mrs. Garrett Hilyard, vice president; Mrs. Alfred Wooley, re freshment chairmen; Mrs. Jim Grimes, president. Oregon Firms Labled Unfair WASHINGTON1 AP The Na tional Labor Relations Board Mon day held that two Ontario. Ore., firms were guilty of unfair labor practices and it ordered them to slop threats against workers. They also were ordered to Quit trying to form their own labor organizations. The Amalgamalcd Meat Cutters end Butcher Workmen Union had brought the case against the Ore- Ida Potato Products, Inc., and Oregon Frozen Foods Co. The union had protested actions of the firms in a 1958 election to determine whether the workers wanted the union to represent them as bargaining agent. The board held that the personal manager lor the companies. Par ker Fillmore, had threatened to reclassify a worker when he al ready was at the lowest classifi cation. This, the board added was tantamount to threatening to lire mm. The board upheld the action of trial examiner Maurice M. Miller in finding the companies guilty of unfair labor practices. But the board said it did not believe contention that the companies had unlawfully solicited employes to work against the union. MALIN The city council has approved a S9.294.50 budget for the city for the coming year. A hearing on the budget, which was okayed by a recent council meeting, will be held June 2 at 8 p.m. in the fire hall during a regular council session. The budget committee present- Civic Leaders Of Malin Approve Budget Of $9,295 Nicaraguan Raps Porter MANAGUA, Nicaragua (API Hep. Charles 0. Porter (D-Orei was criticized by a Nicaraguan official Monday for making un just and impulsive statements about the government of the Cen tral American country. Vincentc Urcuyo, the presiden tial press secretary, made the statement in reply to a letter which Porter had sent to U.S. Sec retary of State Christian Herter. Porter said he had received an invitation to visit Nicaragua, but that he could not change his opin ion that the Somoza government was born of a fraud. Urcuyo said that a smear cam paign against Nicaragua follows Communist plans. He added that Porter's remarks are explained by false statements spread by snti-Somoza circles in Washington.. Beauty Queen Held As Thief LITTLETON, Colo. (API A 20-year-old girl was in a jail cell today, only 10 months after she was crowned a state beauty queen. Dixie Ann Gottfried has signed statements admitting two armed robberies last Monday, according to sheriff's investigator William Maraggos. No charges have been filed. "All I wanted was $30 for a room and some new clothes and a few dollars to get a new start,' said the 5-foot-U, 150-pound beau ty. "1 was flat' broke." Mrs. Gottfried won the Miss Colorado Jaycee title last July, as blonde Dixie Ann Dickes of Pueb lo. Colo. when two patrolmen arrested her late Monday night at nearby Aurora, her hair was long, un kempt and dyed black. She was dressed in slacks and a rough shirt. Records at her home town of Pueblo show she was fined $12.' last November for fighting and pouring beer on two policemen who attempted to arrest her in a tavern. i Mrs. Gottfried was arrested less lhan 15 minutes after an Aurora drugstore was robbed at gunpoint of $131 and narcotics. She admitted she had robbed a Denver hotel early Monday of SI7. The lithe beauty said her hus band. William D. Gottfried, 23, is the Illinois Prison for the Criminally Insane. He was con victed of kidnaping a policeman, Maraggos said. "He'd just raise can if he knew about this," she said. Fear 3 Dead In Jet Crash MYRTLE BEACH. S.C. (API- Three F100 Super-Sabre jet light er planes from Myrtle Beach Air Force Base crashed into the At lantic Ocean before dawn today, i All three pilots were presumed lost. The lets were on a night naviga tional and air refueling training mission. Apparently two planes collided and pulled a third one down with them. The position is about 10 miles offshore, southeast of this beach resort. I Spotter and helicopter planes worked the area for several hours without finding wreckage. The planes were equipped with ejection seats and the pilots car ried parachutes. The planes had gone out in mul tiple flights to meet the airplane tankers for the refueling exercis es. They carried no passengers. The.fets Bit the ocean about two hours before dawn. Names oj the pilots were with held, i SELF-STORING WINDOW NEF.NAH. Wis. (UPI Mr. and Mrs. Mose Bellangcr said a strong wind ripped a storm window from an attic window of their home. The window sailed around a cor ner of the house and came to rest In the garage, they said, on top of a pile of storm windows. Alibi Offered In Auto Case WESTFIELD. Mass. (APC A Springfield man offered a phobia about being hospitalized as an alibi in a District Court automo bile case Tuesday. Lloyd Casey. 48. told the court: "I was dazed and I heard some one say they were going lo put me in a hospital. I just left." Judge Andrew Anderson fined Casey $35 for operating to endan gcr and gave him a three-month suspended sentence for' leaving the scene of an accident. cd the 1959-60 budget as follows A. Salaries: city recorder, $300: city marshal, $3. BOO: city treasur er, $300; city attorney, $600; mam tenance, $840; total, $5,640. B. Materials and supplies: of fice supplies. $75: street lights $1200: fuel oil for heat, $250: tele phone, $50; irrigation, $600; total S2.175. C. Miscellaneous: State Indus trial Accident Commission, $150 prisoners board. $25: audit of city records. $200; League of Oregon Cities, $29.50; fire department $300: social security withholding $225; total, $929.50. D. Emergency: emergency fund $250; jail sinking fund, $300; total $550. Estimated revenues, cash on hand, $500; irrigation, $6011: utili ties, $1200; business tax. $900: li quor fees, $850; total estimated revenues. $4,350. . The difference between the ex penditures and the estimated reve nues leaves a balance of $4.944.oi with $2,000 for bond and tax ir tercst retirement fund added, mak ing a total of $6,944.50 to be raised by taxes. Those on the budget committee are John Reber. chairman, Louis Kalina, Ben Pickett, John Hinz and Phil Anderson. The council met at the fire hall with Mayor Leonard Petrik pre siding. Others present were City Recorder lval Taylor. City Attor ney Henry PerKins, Marshal A. L. Schmidt, and council members Dan McAuliffe, George Bauer, John Philips and Cecil Jackson. The week of June 8 through 12 was chosen ss city cleanup week. All residents nd property own ers are asked to cooperate in this campaign. City trucks will be available on the af.ernoons of the 11th and 12th to pic: up rubbish. the high school city council will take care of advertising the clean up week. A resolution was made concern ing Vacating and closing certain streets and alleys in the school property. There will be a hearing on this proposal at the July 7 meeting of the city council. The street program lor the com ing year was discussed and rec ommendations as to what street maintenance would be done were made. An occupational license was issued to Dee Story for her new cafe. Financial Necessity Not A Consideration In Hope Career Plans Bv VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD U PH As Boh Hope surveyed his future deter mining whether he will continue perlorm he also reviewed his past. Financial security will play no Dart in the comedian s decision on the possibility of retirement. He is many times over a Mill ionaire. In addition to the for une he amassed as an enter tainer, Hope owns oil properties, extensive real estate holdings and nterests in the Cleveland Indians baseball' team and the Los Anceles Rams football team. His home in the loluca Lake section of the San rernando Val ley is a sizeable investment in itself. Included on the seven-acre ess tate is the standard swimming pool, a well-manicured golf hole, a guest house and another build ing housing an office and trophy room. His home is a huge two- storyframe and stone mansion. It sounds like a lot, Bob quipped, "but if l m out of work three days I'm in the sheriff's office." Strolling through his business office, Hope paused in the trophy oom. Shiny glass cases bulged with awards, mementoes andj souvenirs dating back to his earliest days on the vaudeville circuit. Boh. an incessant gum-chewer. grinned with pride. There were plaques and stat uettes aplenty Oscar and Emmy awards citations lor his radio shows, medals and cups for his benefit performances and scores of World War II trophies, includ ing an oijt-sized Nazi flag cap tured from the Germans. Until the.war years of the early 40s. Hope was just another top flight comedian, but his punish ing schedule of entertaining American troops across the globe endeared him to millions of ser- ice men and their families. He became an institution. The free-booting funnyman is proudest of the Medal for Merit highest civilian honor in the nation bestowed on him by Gen. Dwight Eisenhower in 1946 for the two million miles he covered entertaining American fighting men. A faraway look comes into the comedian's eves when he talks about the past. He knows he no longer can call on his once bound less supnly of energy. Always in the past Hope was eager to drive nimseit naraer than his associates. He wasnt happy unless he had half a dozen proiects going at once. His friends believe Bob s ter rific vigor stems from his child hood. He was born the fifth of seven sons of an English stonemason, but was raised in Cleveland, Ohio where he had to hustle for a buck when he was still a youngster. There were lean times, too. when he svas an unsuccessful sone-and-dance man. Those were Ihe days." Bob reminisced. "If it weren't for vaudeville I wouldn't be in tele vision or pictures today. That's where I gained all my exper iencesuch as timing and duck ing. Everytime I heard someone say vaudeville is dead it makes ;ne sad. Among his memorabilia is Ihe original theater program Horn his first stage hit, "Roberta," produced 25 years ago. It reads: "Bob Hope, who is a hit in amateur shows around Ohio." "There is a lot of sentiment in my heart for that show," he said. met my wife Dolores during the run. Bob's marriage has been successful one. Dolores and their 'cur adopted children Linda. Tony, Nora and Kelly have man aged to avoid the glare of pub licity that surrounds Bob like a toga. . Mrs. Hope is active in Roman Catholic charity work and deot ed to her family. 1 hanks lo my frantic pace during the last ten years I haven t been able to spend as much time with Dolores and the kids as I'd have liked." the co median sighed. "But that's all in Office Space Available Inquire DREW'S Manttare 733 Main Ihe past, ed now. M whole life Is chang- "I'm entering a new phase of WALLET UC01TS ' CtKHSkV to Mate tl. living. But bother me. to it." the prospect dosen't I'm looking forward OSBORN HOTEL EUGENE, ORE. tin. 1. B. Eirlr lo Hrlr Jr. Proprietors Thoroughly Modern ON CARRIER Nolan D. Nelson, photographer's irate third class in the Navy, is serving aboard the attack aircraft carrier USS Independence oper ating wilh the Atlantic Fleet ir the Caribbean. The new carrier is on her maid en voyage. She left Norfolk, Vir cinia. April 24. Nelson is the son of Mrs. Agnes M. Nelson of 312 North .Eleventh Street, Klamath Falls. NAVAL GRADUATE Lloyd E. Harper, of Klamath Falls, graduated from Navy emit training May 1 at the Naval Training Center in San Diego. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur L. Harper of Klamath Falls. For Sale - Local Grown Variety FLOWER PLANTS Reasonably Prictdl 207 E. Main U .11IIVF ItltlllF W ig Pieces SAVE 50 7-Piece LIVING ROOM GROUP o Just Righi For The Newlyweds BUDGET PRICED FOR ALL! Here's What You Get Beautiful Daveno Matching Club Chair or Swing Rocker 7V 2 Matching End Tables Matching Coffee Table j 2 Table Lamps All 7 Pieces For Only . . . 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