Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 21, 1959, Image 20

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RMALft AKB MEWi, KLAMATH FALLS. ORewu
PAGE 9 C
TJ,
There go the Ransoms! We're very close friends!
They don't even use their company dishes when they
have us to dinned'
Bridge, Road Construction
May Be Halted By Strike
PORTLAND (AP Bridge and
related road construction through-:
out nearly all of Oregon and part,
of Washington may shut down.
Members of the Associated Gen-
eral Contractors at a special
meeting here Wednesday agreed
to the shutdown unless striking
Portland and Astoria pile drivers
return to work.
The stoppage now idling 500
workers in the Portland area and
others in various parts of Oregon
sporadically would blanket 95
per cent of Oregon and 5'j coun
ties of Southwestern Washington.
The Astoria and Portian area
pile drivers rejected a three-year
contract settlement accepted by
pile drivers elsewhere in the area
and carpenters throughout the
rea.
The pile drivers are asking a
hiring hall clause and more trav
el pay. They are members of the
tame union as the carpenters,
and when not employed as pile
drivers work as carpenters.
The AGC also telegraphed the
state Highway Department asking
a halt to runner contract awards
until the work stoppage is settled.
The department was scheduled to
open bias Tuesday tor 23 high
way, bridge and other construc
tion protects with a value esti
mated at $5,480,000.
The AGC said the striking pile
drivers sporadically picketed jobs
scattered in eastern, central and
southern Oregon,
Bill Harding, AGC manager,
said the fewer than 100 striking
pile drivers is throwing hundreds
of allied carpenters and other
construction employes out of work
despite the settlement. j
Harding said the AGC "has kept!
faith with the other crafts ,and;
with the publie in attempting toj
continue employment, but the!
picketing endangers a general j
shutdown of all construction.
"The bridge tie-ups, after a!
time, make it uneconomical for
related construction to operate
4-H NEWS
MONTAGUE At the recent
monthly meeting of the Delphic
4-H club, plans were made to en
ter a float m the torthcomm
Montague Junior Rodeo parade on
Sunday, June 21, at Montague.
Reports were also given during ;
the meeting by the safety com-1
mittee on the results of last;
month's hazard hunt. Also read,:
were the scores of each .mem-:
ber's livestock judging at the proj-:
ect tour.
One of the two demonstrations
given at the meeting will repre
sent isiskiyou County at the 4-H
Regional Field Bay at Red Bluff.
It was given by Sandy Holloway,
and the other demonstration was
presented by Shirley Brooks, Con
nie RiZiardo and Nancy Rooustei-
imm.
Sandy Holloway,
News Reporter
MOTHERS TEA
BLY The 4-H Mothers tea re
cently was sponsored by the Hum
ming Birds and Good Cooks
groups. This tea climaxed the 4-H
year.
The tea table was set with a
white damask cloth which set off
the centerpiece ol spring flowers
and tapers. The silver tea and cof
fee service and crystal punch bowl
added to the splendor of the set
ting.
Several of the 4-H members were
dressed in Centennial fashion and
the boys wore white shirts and
black Centennial ties.
Assisting the girls and boys were
their leaders, Mrs. Bell Cobb. Mrs.
Elizabeth Campbell, Mrs, jaunita
Nelson and Mrs. Versa Larsea,
Members putting on the tea were
Shannon Brilcy, Janet Harter, Dor
othy Nelson, Janice Hague, Mickey
Zittle, Susan Tikkanen, Dale
Pratt, Larry Cobb, David Bran-
ham, freddie Franklin ana Terry
Ward, Valerie Little, Cathy Brady,
Judy Hague, Linda Murphy, Glen-
da Ashiord and Barbara Gross,
LAKEV1KW Forty Lake Coun
ty 4-H Club members were recent
ly selected as delegates to the
4-H summer school, which will be
held in Corvallis from June 20 to
27, Seven were named as alter
lorcing highway jobs to stop pend
ing completion of the structures,"
he continued.
"As a result, in the immediate
future we are faced with a com
plete stoppage of the highway and
structural programs throughout
he state which will force thou
sands of employes and material
suppliers out of work.
nates. The trip will be made by
bus.
Each delegate has won or will
receive a $25 scholarship to cover
expenses while at the school. In;
addition each delegate must pay;
SS for transportation and insur-i
ance costs. Delegates are remind-1
ed that this summer school fee!
must be in by June 1, ,
Delegates are Doug Dameron,
James preiner, joe Kaley, Ken-j
Beth Kudrna, Larry Maxwell, John
Moran, BiH Parks, Mike Patrick,:
Maurice Odegaard, Wayne Sipp,
Lsraiy Schadicr, Dwaiae Taylor,
Dale- Vandergaw, Marvin Wells,
Fred Williams,
Karen Anderson, Bonnie Bcil,
Judith Brunner, Judy Chaffm,
Mary Lynn Fenimore, Sharon
Geersdorf. Mary Gicse, Ruth Goss,
Alice Green, Dclorp Hcavilin,
Donna Hcrgert, Marilyn Howard,
Joyce Icenhowcr, Gloria Imsiand,
Helen Iverson, Sherrill Leehman,
Connie Nelson, Cheryl Petty, Joan
Parry, Merilee Pike, Mary Lee
Scovilie, Judi Setert, Marilyn
Ward, Teresa Ward, Mary Ann
Williams'
Alternates are Dell Swearingen,
Dave Noble, Karen Kimsey, Mary
Alice Stephens, Susan Brattam,
Janet Taylor and Marcia Metien.
LAKEV1EW All 4-H'ers who are
enrolled in spring fair projects
must turn m a completion card to
the 4-H office in th courthouse
hy June 1, according to Al Hasle
baeher, 4-H county extension
agent.
This is the state deadline (or
completing spring projects and a
member cannot receive credit for
completing a project or receive a
pin at the end of the year, unless
lie or she has turned in a com
pletion card. These cards are blue
and are the same size as the en
rollment card.
Four-H club leaders wiUi spring
fair projects have been sent enough
completion cards tor an the mem
bers in their clubs. Club mem
bers should go to their club lead
ers for. these cards, as the com
plction card must be signed by
both the member and the leader.
Individual members have their
parents sign in place $f the lead
er.
Analysis Set
On Clothing
PGRT1W1 Pi Clothing
from the bodies of two daughters
of the Ken Martin family will he
sent to FBI laboratories in Wasn
iogton, B.C., for analysis,
Capt. Howard Kelly of the
Multnomah County sheriffs ofiite
said this is to determine whether
the family car is in the Coiumoa
River near the Harvey Aluminum
Co. plant at The Dalles.
If it is, he said, the clothes )
should show traces of wastes from
the plant,
Mr, and Mrs, Ken Martin ard
their three daughters vanished
Dec. 7 while on a drive, tt !
nrlieved the family car plunged!
iiff the highway into the river, 1
Jl'ST IN CASE
NEW YORK UIPD-A store of
fered air conditioners for sale to-;
day with "no payments until tem
perature hits 95 degrees.
Last summer it never did. But
the ,store had some fine print la
latse care os mat , . . or July
IS, 1959," i
King Dines
With Debby
HOLLYWOOD (OTIS Bachelor
King Baudouin of Belgium met an
array of glamorous movie stars
Tuesday hut he seemed to have
eyes only for Hollywood's newest
bachelor girl, Debbie Reynolds.
The 28-ycar-eid ruler twice had
the petite film beauty as his tabic
partner, and both times he had
little conversation with anyone
else.
He and Miss Reynolds danced:
into the early morning hours at s
dinner party Tuesday night held:
in nis ' nsusr.
Earlier, at a luncheon in the
MGM commissary, the King also
met such beauties as Mamie Van
Dorcn, but his attention was fully
taken up with 27-year-old Miss
Reynolds.
Only last week she was di
vorced by Eddie Fisher in Ne
vada so he could marry Elizabeth
Taylor.
Miss Reynolds was one of the
few unescorted women to attend
ilie privale dinner party for the
King at producer Mervyn Leroy's
secluded home in nearby Bel Air
r 5? A, flt -17 S
CANT QUESTION IT
SOUTH BEND, Ind. 1UPI)
Judge Elmer Peak dismissed a
speeding charge against Benjamin
Charlier, 31, Tuesday on the
ground he was denied his basic
right to face and cross-examine
ms accuser.
The "accuser" as an electric
speed-timing device.
RE AMES &OLF AND COUNTRY CLUB ha) bsen ssbstsd as ihe iia si iha 1959 Orgen
Professions) SoKsrs AsiociaWon asalch play fournarssenf la b Wd Ju S3 fhreagfc. ii,
Shown hre h jjari si the large cemmiHa appeWed by Chrk Sssd, slab pre, is mmkm
piam for the PSA fourney. From isff, Sood, Sarnsy Csvanaygh, Clairs &ih, Wss MsNss,
advertising and J5ublis5ty; jack Myers, Iransporiatien; Clyde 8ittr, seclal; Den Rebin,
guesf ieckars and Jim Walls, recepiicn. Top pros hsm Oregon, Washington, Sdaho and Mon
tana have been mvilad fo participate, Klamath Saslss residents ar invited te view say
or all cf the machs. A complete schedule of all matches will be published later.
FBI Enters
Vicefrobe
PORTLAND AP1 The Federal;
Bureau of Investigation is check-1
ins mto the call girl situation;
here. The Grcgonian reported;
Wednesday,
Police already arrested several:
persons as a result f their inves-l
ligations. They "sise studied sev-:
eral notebooks in which, they:
said, call girls listed Ilia names:
of their clicnls and llic sums paid.
The newspaper said the FBI:
Altered the case 'la see whether;
there have been violations of the
federal law against taking a wom
an across a state line for immoral
pnrposes.
Meanwhile the Multnomah
County grand jury suhpenaed Ihc
notehooxs and financial' records
seized hy police in the proslitu
tion arrests.
It obtained Ihem from the city
police vice squad and the district
attorney's office. The juiy began
studying Hie notebooks, causing
siieoilalion lhat it might call as
witnesses some sf the men whose
names are listed. Police have said
some of them are prominent.
Correction!
The Coupon In Last Night's
Town & Country Ad,
AM1DON BUSINESS MACHINE
Portion Should Hove Read:t
This is a
$10 GIFT CERTIFICATE
Far eny tivieni if used ss he Reyal
May 21 H at
AMIWN'S BUSINESS MAQilHiS
I
AUTOMATIC
Electric-Eye
r.ioviE
CAMERA
MODEL
JlW elite A tt M.t tr v teiAjetew. mm
KA-1C
IE
Most Complete Eleetrk-Eye Turret
Camera under $100
Lent tttt Hieff automatically the in
stant you press the trigger. Simple
drop-in film leading, f 2.3 standard
lens plus 9mm wide angle and 25mm
teiephoto conversion lenses.
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