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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 20, 1959)
PAGE 2A WEDNESDAY. MAY 20. 1959 HKRAI.D AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON "T On The Record KLAM4TH I ALLS KIRTHS TWINS DUGGAN Born to Mr. and Mn Charles C. Duggan May 18 in Klam ath Valley Hwpiul twins, a girl weigh- ing lbs.. 14 01.. and 11 minutes utter boy, weighing ft lbs., 4 on BOYS LOPER Born to Mr. and Mn. Mil ton . Loper May IS tn Klamath Valley Hospital a boy, weighing 4 lot.. 9 Of i. PETERSON Born to Mr. and Mrs Ildon D. Peterson May 18 In Klamath Valley Hospital a boy, weighing 8 lbs 4' i ozs. WESTHOl'SE Born to Mr. and Mrs Arthur L. Westhouse May 18 in Klam ath Valley Hospital a boy, weighing 4 JOS., u ou. filRI.S BAKER Born to Mr. and Mrs Cart E. Baker May 15 in Klamath Valley Hospital a girl, weighing 8 lbs., 8'i ezs. THOMPSON Born to Mr. and Mrs. Bobert Thompson May 16 In Klamath Valley Hospital a girl, weighing 8 lbs., 4 ou. WHITEM AN Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Whileman May lb in Klamath Valley Hospital a girl, weighing 8 lbs.. 11 nu. WOOD Born to Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wood May 16 in Klamath Valley Hoi. pltal a girl, woighing 6 lbs.. 13 ou. t5fl ROUNDUP Boys: 211 Girls: 15 J NOMINATED FOR PRESIDENT DUBLIN, Ireland iUPO -Prime Minister Eamon de Val era. Ireland's veteran political leader, has been nominated for mally as a candidate tor presi dent. His election in the June 17 balloting is regarded a near-certainty. LAST TWO DAYS Ohm M- Mistreatment Report Hit POPLARVILLE. Miss. AP- FBI agents apparently have con vinced Ally. Gen. Joe Patterson of Mississippi that they are not mistreating persons they question about the lynching of a Negro charged with raping a white woman. Unofficial reports of mistreat menl by FBI agents have grown nut of investigations of the lynch ing April 25 of Mack Charles Park cr. 23-year-olJ I.umberton truck driver who wns dragged from his jail cell by a hooded band. During the past three weeks, many persons in the area, have been questioned. No arrests have been reported. PatterSon conferred Tuesday with flalph W. Bachman of the r'Bl and later told newsmen: "Mr. Bachman, whom I have known for some time, told nie those things 'harassing and mis treating people) had not happened. I! those things have happened, 1 hope they stop; if they have not happened, so much the better. Several complaints had been made to newsmen by persons who had been questioned by FBI agents. The wives of several men ques tioned have expressed irritation over the persistency of the agents questioning. lana'turner! JOHN GAVIN SANDRA DEE DAN O'HERLIHY ROBERT ALDA OPEN DAILY 7:00 P. M ENDS TONIGHT ! hope -isssa FEATURE. 75 10:10 fciillliM.FA'i Sary & mm ut IMS! (IH.fl'Jt 0wt 1 ajMBijK GAHV MtfiKlLL NANCY DAVIS OPSNS 6.4S ffEai TODAY SHE-BEASTS of VENUS Fantastic man-destroying females of a forbidden planet! 2SA 2SA GABOR ERIC FLEMING LAURIE MITCHELL tISA DAVIS mm -'in stum milium linos u, cmis buumont n AtUrO ARTISTS Weturs COLOR The KING of MflNdTRC! III VllV BalSV yl CimVmaScopC iininr MAUI ML L I "fRflfJKEtlSTlll! V -Rfc " That Will vmm "DENNIS THE MENACE" Purity Of Elections Bill Sidetracked In Senate 'AteCOGLEy, I tWPPEO MV FWK. AH tfs 30t SOMg fcKAVy AN POTATOES ON IT. Court Records KLAMATH FAM.K MIiNH'irAI. COt RT George Hill Jr., disorderly conduct, hearing Wednesday. Adolph Halveraon. drunk, 129 or 12' days. Charles Erwin Shulmlre. aiiault and battery, released to county authorities. KLAM TII CO I' NT V DISTRICT COURT Willli Wftod. fail drive on right half highway, 7, su. Ronald Duane Peed, fall atop at stop sign, 3. Derrald Guy Wheeler, combination overload. JJ. Norman Dewayne Paup. driving while license suspended, dismissed mo. tlqn district attorney. William Ramon Arnold, violation bai. Ic rule. $12.10 William Michael Bfldorek, failure display license, J7.50. Alexander Lutt, combination overload. Wayne Allen Crawford, combination overload, Jcrald Dale Lee, violation baitc rule, $3. Larry Dean McCovern, violation bas- lc rule, 11150 PauT Levi Cole, no muffler, Eugene Belner. reck leu driving, re quest time until May 20 to enter plea: released on SJ3 bail. Robert Lee Cox, violation of baiic rule. no. Melvin Ronald Parli, violation of basic rule. $15. Perryn Perl Turner, violation of bas ic rule, $10. Helen Mc Ken lie MacLean, violation of basic rule. S12..W Dean Edward Stamper, violation Of basic rule. $7.50. Dona Elizabeth Miller, violation of basic rule, $12. .W, Archie Leonard Roes, fail display li cense, S.V Dale C. Morgan, fail flop at atop sign. $.v Wallace Galhrelh Brltton, violation basic rule. $LV George Bryant Ward, fail drive on right of highway. $-V Sammie Lou it Swanagan, violation of basic rule, $15. Richard Lee Govan, no operator i li cense, $5. James Troy Quails, inadequate braHRM, S.l. Billle Joe Mattox. no safety chains. Mable Marie Brown, no muffler. $7. W. William Henry Fields, no trailer li cense. 5. James Lee Haagie. violation baste rule. $10. Robert Stevens Ball, fail atop for school bus, KM. Albert Thomas Orne Jr., - fall stop at stop sign. $5. William J. Bray, violation basic rule, $10. Hou-Ard Dee Nlcke I. over length load. $2,1. Charles Thomas Carlson, fail stop at slop sign, dismissed. Florence Louise Lem. fall display license. $.V Louts Clifton Mitchell, fall display PUC permit, dismissed. Nancy Lou Gersten, violation basic rule. $12.50, Tom G. Zinn, fall stop at stop sign, $3, Ethel Bell Balin, violation basic rule. $10. Floyd Leslie Parrish, tandem axle overload. $.11. Judge Thomas Gary, nverlrngth. $20 Frank Clayton Griffith, fall stop at stop sign. $-V James Herbert Cooper Jr.. violation or has c ru e. $10. William Trouidell Reeves, drunk upon public highway, 30 days and JJWi or 22i days In lieu of line; committed Eli Mnrtiner.. driving while Intoxicat ed. ;h) days and $aon or 147 'i days in lieu of fine; commit led. Michael Byron Russell, fall display license. $.V Janifi Roy Fourtner, petll larceny. request time to enter plea: set May 2fl at 10 a m.; released upon posting $500 bail. Mary Ann Matt, drunk upon public highway, 30 days county jail; com mitted. Mary Ann Matt, revoked pronation, ;t0 days county jail; committed to run consecutively with above case. Thrcna Mall, drunk upon public highway, 30 days county Jail; commit ted Glenn Frank Stevens, driving while intoxicated, :i0 da county Jail and $200 fine and costs or 87 'i days in lieu of fine: committed. Jesse Allen Walters, drunk upon pub lic hiithwav, $xt. William Trotisdell Reeves, no opera tor's iictmite. $.i or 10 days in lieu of fine; committed. Laurence Lee Witt, drunk upon a public highway. $50. Charles Schulmlre. assault and bat tery, entered plea of not guilt: May 2a at 10 a.m.; released on $100 ball posted. Bard Festival Actors Listed By JAMES C. ANDERSON SACRAMENTO (UP1) What ever happened to the governor's "purity o( elections" bill? It's a good question to ask in the Legislature these days but it is a little difficult to get a straight answer. Gov. Edmund G. Brown, carry ing out pledges he made in his 'campaign last year and in his in augural address, caused to De in troduced in the Assembly Jan. 14 n bill its sponsors, at least, dubbed "purity of elections." What it sot out to do was to compel candidates for public of fice to make a complete account ing to the voters of all the money collected on their behalf for an election campaign and disclose all the money they spent and from whom it was received. Assemblyman Gordon H. Winton Jr. iD-Merced, the Democratic whip, handled the bill for the ad ministration. After lower house committee ac tion, the bill went before the As sembly and was passed to the Senate by a resounding vote of 72-4. Keeping in mind the fact that similar election reform bills died in 1055 and 1957 in the Senate, the script now becomes a little diffi cult to follow. Instead of being referred to the elections committee for hearing, the bill was sent to the Govern mental Elticicncy Committee, a sort of catch-?!! Senate committee which frequently is called upon to Hubby, Wife Get Together MIAMI, Kla. (API - "I don't know ainbody in the world who would take a woman hack alter she paid someone to kill him," said the judge. His words were spoken Tuesday to Beatrice Gurley, 41. who ot tered a detective $1,000 to kill her husband. At her side stood the husband, Dave, his arm around her waist. Judge Ben Willard freed her despite her p!ci of guilty to a charge of attempted murder. "You're not uneasy sleeping out there in the same house with her"" the judce asked Gurley. ot a hit, replied the husband "Well, I jurt hope you know what you're doing. If you can sleep out there without (car, it's all rieht with me." Mrs. Gurley made the deal for ner husband's death with Ralph Metcalf, a detective who posed as a killer lor hue. Key actors have been named to perform in the newly completed Elizabethan stage during the 1959 Uregon Shakespearean festival in Ashland, and the company will meet for the 19th consecutive year June 11 for auditions and casting. An especially glittering cast was made possible by $10,000 granted recently to the theater's founder and producer, Angus L. Bowmer, hy the ord Foundation for hi; studies of Shakespeare and for fi nancing an experienced company Performers will include Philio Hanson, William Oyler. Barbara Waide, Mary Jo Randall. George and Margaret Vafiadis. Nag Jackson, William Nye, Robert Tow ers, George Riddle. Dion Chesse, David o Bnen. Mark Rawson. Charles Whitman. Ezra Howard. Joel Riggs, Edward Poyourow, Ar thur Lewis and Aunol M. D. Smith. Rawson, Whitman. Howard. Riggs, Poyourow, Lewis and Smith will perform in the Ashland theater for the first time this year. Most are affiliated with universities and playhouses in the nation. Smith is of the University of Bristol, Eng land. The others all have performed in the theater at some time since 194!), some for two years. ine festival, as a result of the grant, has been expanded from a month to 4(1 days in length this year. Opening night banquet and me play Tweltth Night are scheduled for July 2R. "King Johns." "Measure for Measure," and "Anthony and Cleopatra" will ioiiow. A special production written to honor Oregon's Centennial, "The Masque of the New World." will be staged each night preceding the first play's run. CITY SELLS POWER PLANTS NEW YORK (UP1) - The citv's three transit power plants were sold, at auction Tuesday to the Consolidated Edison Company for si25.tj40.ooo. ine actual sale took only two minutes. Consolidated Edison was the only bidder. Weathe L'nlled Press Albuquerque Atlanta Bakersficld Boise Boston Brownsville Chicago Denver Detroit Fairbanks Fort Worth Fresno Helena Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York Oakland Oklahoma City Phoenix Pittsburgh Red Bluff Reno Sacramento Salt Lake City San Diego Snn Francisco Seattle Spokane Stockton Thermal Washington r Table International High Low Rain 81 55 67 .71 S3 40 B2 75 70 45 6S 39 73 50 28 58 75 56 71 68 54 73 ' 64 64 58 38 52 35 60 52 42 43 53 64 70 83 77 59 7.1 90 88 64 84 52 90 76 48 73 84 76 84 70 67 88 i 89 84 78 61 79 58 69 63 58 52 77 94 84 .02 20 .02 handle Ida "hot ones." Assemblyman Winton appeared before the committee May 6 to present his bill. The committee heard little evi dence for or against the bill and its chairman. Sen. Luther Gibson iD-Vallcjo, announced the meas ure had been rerelerred to a sub committee for further hearing. Winlon said he wrote Gibson asking that he be notified of the names of the members of the sub committee so he could ask for a hearing on his bill. He said he had not received a reply. Gibson said he did not recall receiving the letter, but he said he had appointed Sens. Randolph Collier iR-Yreka), James J. Mc Bride (D-Ventura) and Richard J. Dolwig iR-Redwood Cityl to give the hill a "full and complete hear ing." He said the appointments were made soon after Winton ap peared before the committee two weeks apo. Collier has-been in Washington all week and McBride and Dolwig said they were awaiting word from the subcommittee chairman when the trio would meet. Brown admitted to reporters re cently he had been told his elec tion reform bill "was going to run into trouble in the Senate." Right now, the Legislature and the governor seem to be concen trating on the "big issues" water, budget, taxes. You may have to wait until adjournment day, June 19. to read the final chapter on Other -developments: Taxes: Sen. George Miller Jr. 'D-Martinezi said he hoped to hold special hearings Ihis week on Brown's bills to levy a new cigar ette tax of 60 million dollars a year. Miller said he personally hoped a Senate finance subcom mittee would approve both the to bacco tax and another administra tion bill to increase personal in come taxes by $71,400,000. Water: The governor's top wa ter lawyer, Ralph Brody, said the administration's waler program is in "excellent shape" despite sev eral amendments by the Senatt Water Committee. He said the amendments, put into the bill at the insistence of northern sen ators, "generally are acceptable. " But one senator, George Miller Jr. ,'D-Martinezi said the bill in its present shape could lead to "day. Ii?ht robbery" of water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. Edmund E. Hass Vice-President- n CIF1C NORTHWEST COMPANY Sine. 1913 Mr. Hass will be at the Willard Hotel Thursday and Friday Telephone TU 4.4161 to coniulf with Mr. Hon on investment- and retirement program, using the . securities of utilities, banks, insurance, industrial. Investment Company shores. Dependable incomes of 5 to 6 can be obtoined. 302-3 Fluhrer Bldg., 5 So. Central, Mcdford, SPring 3-7319 'Other offices in Portland, Salem, Eugene, Seattle, Spokane, Tacoma, Aberdeen, Bellingham, Yakima, Wenatchee and Walla Walla. 1 .32 .02 FISHING FINES Two suburban area men were fined $20 each in district court yesterday for fishing in closed waters the Williamson River with in Collier State .Park on Satur day. Pleading guilty to charges brought by state police were Lylc Henry raast. 4i20 Anderson Ave nue, and Richard Lee Carpenter, 4331 Clinton Avenue. WALLET rTM-tnrsmTNO VM Mala ft. We knew we had the "HOTTEST" Sale in town but we didn't mean to get so burned up! HOWEVER... We're open for business as usual! New OLDSMOBiLES, CADILLACS, HILLMANS, and Safety-Tested used cars going at "RED HOT" PRICES! For the best deals, it's still the .. . OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN! Slightly Scorched Bur Operating! MUM. CO 7th and Klamath Phone TU 4-4154 mm - a ik Checked Arnel-collon costume leads a busy summer life 15 55 Th versaf iTity of the costume long a fashion favorite is dou bled, at least, when the costume' turns up in cool, wrinkle-free Arnel-cotton! You can tub it, let it drip-dry, wear it m no time at And up to ' 6 months to pay on e revolving charge account Gurley told the cort his wife "just jot mixed up." 0