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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1959)
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS OBF.GOV - . " ' ' WEDNESDAY. JUNE 3. r .GE 2 A CITY BRIEFS Meat WItm OTI Student Wivm will have tht last meeting f the currant year tonight at 7:30 in tha YMCA building on the cam pus. Tha program will be Inn ifht. All wives are encouraged to come. Nursery room will be available. For transportation please call TU 4-5M7. Meeting of Local 704, NKFE. on Thursday. June 4. at I p.m. in the county library. Altai Saelal Club will meet Friday, June S, at 1:45 p.m. in the Masonic Hall. NAACP Final meeting of the aummer season of the NAACP will be held on June ( at 7 o'clock at the county library. Discussion will be Internal Organization and tha local housing situation. A 1 1 those interested arc cordially wel coma. Stewart-leei Fire Belles will meet on Thursday evening, June 4. at 7:30 In tha fire station. Social hour following business meeting will be a joint shower honoring three members. Bethel 1 International Order of Job's Daughters, will hold an open installation for honored queen-elect Penny Preston, on Friday, June 5, at 7:3 p.m. in the Scottish Rite Temple. Dance will follow cere monies. Bethel Na. ( Job's Daughters will hold a regular meeting on Thursday, June 4, at 7:30 p m. ia the Masonic Temple. Initiation will be held. AU rituals are to be returned this meeting. BPWC incoming and outgoing board members will hold a Joint meeting at the home of President Gene Bricco, 534 Alva Street, on June t at 7:30 p.m. Family Night YMCA Family Night will be held Friday, either in the Y Building or in Wiard Park, depending upon the weather. A potluck dinner will be served at 5:30 and Doyla Clifton will show colored slides on Germany. Call TU 4-4149 for more information. Frieadly Circle will meet on Thursday at 12 30 n m. at the home of Louise O'Brien. 51 Hope Street, for potluck luncheon and business meeting. Regular Meeting of the Klam ath Falls Chapter Sportsmen Pi lots of Oregon has been postponed from Saturday night, June (, until Saturday night, June 20. National Guard Wives will meet ! at S p.m. Friday. June 3, at the National Guard Armory for the last meeting until fall. Missionary Meeting Bihle Bap tist Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday. June 4. in Fields Hall. Daughters will be special guests. Jack Wright, assistant superintendent of the Klamath Falls Gospel Mission, will speak. All women and their daugh ters from the first grade up are invited. Meeting of the Klamath Stamp and Com Club. I p.m. June 4. in the National Guard Armory. This will be the only meeting in June. Don't miss it. Available at face value at this meeting will be a few Centennial tokens from Milton Freewater, Redmond and possibly Madras. Also a few of the Bend leather dollars printed on deer skin. Eagles Auxiliary new and retir ing officers of the Eagles Lodge are urged to be present 7:30 p.m. Thursday, June 4, for joint in stallation practice. Thursday June 4 at 7 p.m. choir practice at Bible Baptist Church I I n m i r-i I i r"; T'---rained .yesterday" on. ' . r . . DENNIS THE MENACE" 'loo hungry j Pass it on. DEFENDS "BARE" RIGHTS MILAN, Italy (I'PD French dancer Rita Renoir said Monday she would contact attorneys to de- lend her "freedom of strip-teas ing" from critical Italian oificials. Rita was ordered to leave Italy after police halted her act at the Maschere Theater here. SUMMER Accordion School Openings Available Now ft Rentals ft Private Lessons ft Free Band Instruction LEONA ROBERTSON ACCORDION STUDIO 1912 Lewell St. Ph. TU 4-7380 Unionist Raps Employers WASHINGTON (API AFL-CIO President George Meany said to day employer organizations arc trying to weaken and perhaps abolish labor unions through re strictive legislation. In testimony prepared for a House Labor subcommittee. Meany contended that "grave and irreparable harm to the united States trade union movement would result from Srnate changes in the original bill introduced by Sen. John F. Kennedy tD-Massi. "We support legislation that will get at the crook V he said. "We oppose legislatioi that' wilh. do California Weather United Press International San Francisco Bay Area: Fair through Thursday except morning high log: high today San Francis co 59. Oakland 65. San Mateo 67, San Rafael 70: low tonight 48-54: normal westerly winds. Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: ran- ly cloudy and cooler, becoming fair tonight and Thursday. Sierra Nevada: Fair tnrougn Thursday except partly cloudy in afternoons; cooler in norm inurs dav. Sacramento valley: r a r 1 1 y cloudy today, fair tonight and Thursday: high both days 74-84 low tonight 48-58: southerly winds 8-18 rrvo.h. Northwestern California: rartiy cloudy becoming fair tonight and Thursday except morning fog near coast; slightly cooler norm inter ior; high today and low tonight Ukiah 74-47, Santa Rosa '70-46. Napa 70-50: coastal winds north west 12-24 m.p.h. except variable 8-18 m.p.h. north of Ft. Bragg. harm to the trade union movement." Without naming them, he said employer organizations are trying to convince Congress that the ben ate passed bill is "too weak,' even with the amendments his or ganization opposes. He added: "These employer or ganizations want this Congress to adopt restrictive, anti-union leg is lation. They want to make the unions weaker. They want, if pos sible, to abolish them." WASHABLE. WONDERFUL SUMMER SKIRTS USUALLY 5.91 . 10.9 StMi 4 Ve In when tWee, fceeslert. Skirt. WMewM. werdreVe when yen welcome H net. $kW ft lee yeu ceel wne Sheriff Slain By Gunman TAYLORSVILLE, N.C. (AP) -"The sheriff and I walked through the back door into the hall and started upstairs. A little more than halfway up 1 heard a shot. "The sheriff turned and fell into me. The only thing he said, was. 'Oh Lord, I'm shot'". That was the way Deputy Sher iff Joe James described the slay ing Tuesday of Sheriff Thomas K. Bebber, 53. The officers had gone to the home of Jones Ellis to investigate a family argument. They were starting upstairs to talk to Ellis' son, Willard, 38. when the sheriff was hit in the back by a .22 caliber bullet. Jones Ellis had complained that his son was throwing rocks at the house, and had telephoned the sheriff's office for help. Willard barricaded himself up stairs after the shooting. A neigh bor, K.6. Matheson, finally per suaded him to surrender. Willard first was jailed here. but later was whisked to a States ville jail when a crowd formed. Coroner L.M. Warren, who will act as sheriff until county com missioners appoint a successor, said Willard was being held with out charge. Bebber. who was starting his third four-year term as sheriff, is survived by his wid ow and five children. Ex-Teller Faces Charge SAN FRANCISCO 'PI - Jo seph F. Pearce faced a charge to day of faking a holdup at a bank where he worked as a teller and opening an account with half the loot reported missing. FBI agents said Pearce. 25. ad mined the holdup he reported March 31 was a hoax, but he de nied he had taken the $2050 mis sing from his cage. Pearce was fired from the job he held for two years and RECORDS BANNED BONN. Germany AP) The West German government has banned the sale of records 6f Hit ler's speeches. The records, imported recently by a branch of British firm apparently were made for the American market. PASSENGERS KILLED MANILA (AP) A band of armed men Tuesday ambushed and killed 10 bus passengers trav eling on a secluded road outside of Bongabon town, in central Min- doro province. The ambush ap parently stemmed from trouble on a local estate. Conservatives View Japan Win TOKYO 'API Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi's Conservatives were assured today of renewed control of the upper house of the Japanese Parliament and public endorsement of Japan s alliance with the United States. With 30 seats still undecided. Kishi's Liberal-Democratic party had won 57, the Socialists 25, and minor party and independent can didates, mostly Conservatives. had taken IS. Only 127 of the 250 seats In the House of Councilors were at stake in the election Tuesday. Oregon Weather By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hour to 4:30 a.m. Wednesday Mas. Mln. Prep. Baker 8 S3 T Bend 82 46 - Eugene 68 50 Lakeview 79 54 Medford 84 51 Newport 61 50 .10 North Bend 60 53 . .01 Pendleton ... 89 58 - Portland Airp't . 68 58 T Redmond 91 52 - Roseburg 72 48 - Salem 69 51 T Eastern Oregon Partly cloudv with isolated thundershowers over mountains of east portion this evening: considerable clearing to night: mostly sunny Thursday. Highs 74-80;. low tonight 46-58. Western Oregon Considerable cloudiness on coast and in north ern interior, but mostly clear in southern interior tonight: partly sunny and warmer Thursday. Low tonight 48-56: high Thursday 72-82 in interior. 85 on coast. Coastal winds southwesterly to westerly. iv-iii m.p.n. Northern Or e i o n beaches Mostly cloudy tonight and Thurs day with sunny periods Thursday afternoon. Temperature range 50- 62. Beach winds southwesterly to westerly. J-15 m.p.h. (rants I'ass and vicinity Partly cloudy and cooler with a few showers in mountains: mostlv sunny and slightly warmer Thurs day. Law tonight 45-50: high Thursday 7842. Baker-La Grande area Partlv cloudy through Thursday witn scattered showers and possible thundershowers. Highs 76-82; low QPCN DAILY 7:00 P. M LAST DAY! The Joker Is Wild FEATURE. 6 0010:15 CREAT vSwi OF $J federal complial'ilJjrjitTj'htm'with filing false Ihfblih'all dJ Withholding material facta from the FBI. A spokesman for the U. S. at torney's office said agent worked lor weeks on the assumption Pearce had been robbed of 20 hun dred dollar bills by a well-dressed man in his late .'40s. However, they became suspicious when none of the 25 persons in the bank at the time of the alleged holdup re membered seeing a man fitting the description given by the teller. When it was found that Tearce had quietly opened an account, de positing 11,000, agents questioned his story. At his arraignment P e I r c e steadfastly denied taking the mon ey. He said he had been saving money in a fruit jar at home andj decided to put it into the bank.1" PuB TIPSY SPACEMAN HL'CKNALL. England HTD-A policeman asked Ronald Rowlett, 18, why he was sitting on the sidewalk in tears. "I've been to the Moon." Rowlett sobbed. He was fined 81.40 Tuesday for drunkenness. "The Moon," it came out in court, is the name SbUdA OPENS :4S TODAY! RAW YOUTH IN A RAW LAND! A monumental adventure of wild loves, brawling passions and violent greeds! 00i: ' r n,. brawling passions j g . '" nd violent 9reedylS I " f color ' 3&v fvlw-.fl iiW-ffirfflEi'HW'PAmOfflS'Smiiii' COMPANION FEATURE JOHN IRELAND and GAIL RUSSELL "NO PLACE TO LAND" TODAY! HEY! HEY! Filmed where it happened! OPENS 6:45 V;rTHE HOWLARIOUS Ol NEW COMEDY HIT THAT GIVES YOU THE LOWDOWN ON LOVE AND TAXES.. AND HAYSTACKS! tl u nJV ; X, Feature Times 7:28-9:44 jOjjli- Debbie REYNOLDS ttm km Tonv RANDALL Paul DOUGLAS "TkeMdtmg Game" in co-starring FRED CLARK .. una merkel j tonight 42-48.