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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1959)
PAGE EIGHT ROGER WILIUR. a member el Klamath Union High School's tennis t a m lor three years, is among tha boys from this area attend ing tha American Legion or ganited Beaver Boys State in Corvellis. The two weeks session is designed to give the boys practice in t h e phases of -democracy through organiting and run ning their own government during the time they are at the school. Roqer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Wilbur, 2110 Orchard, is being sponsored at tha session by the Rotary Club. Nuclear Negotiations Resume Today In Geneva HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS OREGON' I MONDAY. JUNE 8. 1S5J GENEVA AP Tha three-pow er nuclear negotiations rcaunu today amid prospects mat a una decision on suspending the testins of atomic and hydrogen weapor tests will be taken at a lummii meeting. Sir David Ormsby-Gore, British representative (or the talks with In Accident ASHEVILLE. N.C. (API Two girls on a church assembly out ing fell M feet over a waterfall near here Saturday, one was killed and the other injured sen ously. The girls, members of a party of 10 from the Ridjecrest Baptist Assembly, hiked to the Upper Ca tawba Falls m McDowell County. Members of the party said one girl apparently slipped, and when the other attempted to grab her, both went over. Barbara Butler. Saluda. S.C., a high school student, died about four hours after she was brought out of the western North Carolina country by jeep. Her companion, Margaret Sue Morrow, 20, of Inman.. S.C., suf fered Irom a broken jaw, a brok en leg and exposure. he United States and the Soviet Union, said he considered it likely hat Prime Minister Harold Mac nillan. President Eisenhower and 'remier Nikita Khrushchev would leal with final aspects of a test ban treaty if they meet this sum mer. There were still two big quail lications. however. The Western powers want the Big Four foreign ministers con ference on Germany to make .some progress, particularly with regard to the Berlin crisis, before committing themselves to a sum mit session. Also, the negotiators in the atom talks must make more headway before the nuclear problem is in shape for a final decision at the top level. The talks began last Oct. 31. but so (ar have (ailed to produce Cleric Fired By Church For Race Harmony Story HEATHER HAMAKER. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chester H. Hameker, 1914 Lowell, is winner of this Cpl!,eJr"ly ?""' ship presented b? District . uaicio.iMJ . .L CM. Kl. no. o Mdmarn ran iwiav Association. Heather, a 1959 Klamath Union High School qraduate, will go to Sacred Heart Hospital, Eu gene for her training. The presentation was made by Mrs. Mary McNeel, presi dent of District 8. Heather member of the future COLUMBUS. Ga. fAP A Pres byterian minister ho wrote a national magazine article on ra cial harmony has been dismissea alter several years of disharmony and unrest among members ot nis conzresation. The Rev. Robert B. Mcem. pastor of the First Presbyterian church, was dismissed Sunday by judicial commission of the Southwest Georgia Presbytery. The eisht-man commission said the action was taken because "the interests of religion imperatively demand it." The decision was read by the Rev. Frank C. King ol aiaosia chairman of the group, to a stunned and subdued congregation. The announcement came witn out advance notice although the Old-Fashioned Triangle Comes To Light In Trial CINCINNATI (API A murder trial that is expected to mix, tech nical legal battles with the age eld love triangle opens today in Hamilton County Criminal Court. On trial is Edythe Klumpp, 41, blonde part-time home economics teacher and operator of a day boarding home lor children. Mrs. Klumpp, twice divorced and the mother of four, is ac cused of slaying Louise Bergen, J2. last Oct. 30. The state claims Mrs. Bergen was killed because she refused to divorce her hus band. - William, so he and Mrs. Klumpp could marry. Mrs. Bergen's badly burned body was found Nov. 1 on the shore of Lake Cowan in nearby Clinton County, The state claims Mrs. Klumpp made a statement admitting Mrs. Bcrgrn was shot to death and the body was kept in her automobile overnight be fore she took it to Lake Lowan and set It alire. Mrs. Klumpp has claimed the shooting was an accident as she and Mrs. Bergen grappled over a gun in Mrs. Klumpp s car. A special venire of 73 persons begins the tedious job of select ing a jury' today in Judge Frank Gusweilers court. Hamilton County Prosecutor C Watson Hover hopes that task can be completed in three days. De fense attorney William F. Hop kins isn't so optimistic. Hopkins is expected to make much of what he says Is the fail ure of the state to have a coro ner s report on the actual cause of death. Mrs. Bergen'a body was examined twice by a pathologist and Hopkms is expected to con tend there has been no definite word as to how Mrs. Bergen actu ally died. Hopkins is frankly hopeful of winning his case on the conten tion that the state cannot prove where the slaying actually oc curred in Hamilton or Clinton counties. His contention is that there must be further proof even though police say Mrs. Klumpp admitted the shooting occurred in this county. Hoover contends such proof is not necessary. because two major international conferences were one too many for the facilities of the U.N. Pal ace of Nations. The French are participating in the foreign ministers' talks on Germany but are taking no part in the nuclear negotiations. During an earlier stage of the Big Four talks, British Foreign Minister Selwyn Lloyd, U.S. Sec-! retary of State Christian A. Her ter and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko met privately to discuss nuclear problems without including French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville. But if the French explode their own atomic bomb between now and a summit meeting, they un doubtedly will have to be brought quickly into the nuclear negotia tions. Arriving from London, Ormsby- Gore told reporters this is "the last lap we hope. Ormsby-Gore assumed any treaty the negotiators might draft probably would still have holes that would have to be filled in by Eisenhower, Macmillan and Khrushchev. "Certain points might have to be dealt with at the summit, he said. Of the birthstones, only the dia mond, ruby, sapphire and emerald are considered precious. The other eight are semi-precious. Death Reported Of Ex-KF Man John E. Noud. 36, killed June 4 In a traffic accident near Oakland, Oregon, was a native of Klamath Falls and a long time resident of this city, born November 28, 1922. Noud was the driver of a flat bed truck loaded with chickens that went out of control and over an embankment at 2:30 p.m. Thurs day, June 4. on Highway 99. A passenger and owner of the truck, manager of the R'and R Trucking Company of Milwaukie. Oregon, was uninjured. Survivors include the widow, Mrs. Virginia Noud. a daughter. Katherine Noud. both of Portland; father, Barney Noud and a broth er, Richard Noud. both of Klam ath Falls. Funeral services will be held at t p.m. Juno t from the Mt. Scott J funeral nome. romanu luiiuwmg recitation of the Rosary on Mon day, June I. at p.m. Final serv ices and commitment will he in the Willamette National Cemetery. rm tef ML M I- ' e " w " "Stsrieo" Utchinj Junior to writ oureelvee! H only took a. little patience nd about $305 worth of wellpeperr Nurse's Club of KUHS. Widowed Mom Sees Graduation AMHERST. Mass. (AP Wid owed Sarah Plante of Fall River saw her twin sons graduate from colleges 70 miles apart Sunday be cause President Jean Paul Mather of the University of Massachusetts is understanding. He held a one-man commence ment for Dale Plante, landscape architecture major, at 10:30 a m Sunday, 5'i hours ahead of sched ule. That permitted Mrs. Plante to hurry to Wcsleyan University, Middletown, Conn., to see the otn- er twin, Dana, receive his degree at t p.m. 'Johnny Reb Given Award HOUSTON. Tex. (AT) To the distinction o( being the last sur vivor of the Confederate army 116-vear-oId Walter Williams has added still another. Now he holds higher rank than any ever achieved by his com rades at arms. In a weekend ceremony at his bedside, a group calling itself the Confederate High rommand pre sented the old soldier an honor ary commission as a five-star gen eral a rank which didn't exist in Civil War days. Donald A. Ramsey, a St. Pe tersburg. Fla., mining engineer, made the presentation as execu tive commissioner of the semi military order. Williams, fortified with a nip of whisky for what his doctor de scribed as a slight chill, dozed during most of the ceremony. commission statement was dated June 2. McNeill said he was in formed of - the impending action Wednesday. The 44-year-old gray-haired pas tor said be was surprised by the action but had not decided wheth er to submit the matter to a high er court. The dismissal could be appealed to the Presbyterian Synod of Georgia and even to the General Assembly ol the Presbyterian Church, U.S. Garrett Shackelford, a former elder, said he would appeal the decision "only with Mr. McNeill's permission. He is being sacriliced lor the sake of the commission having the easiest way out." King said the dismissal was "ir no sense a rebuke to Mr. McNeill. We are just trying to make prog ress and feel more can be accom- Illness Of Long Puzzles Doctors GALVESTON. Tex. (API "We still can't tell what's the matter with him." a psychiatrist attend ing Louisiana's Gov. Earl K Long said Sunday. The physician, who asked not to be named, said Long steadfastly refused to cooperate with doctors seeking to diagnose his illness. On petition of his wile, a court order for holding the 63-year-old governor in protective custody was issued iast week. A sanity hearing is set for next Saturday. Long is a patient in the psychi atric clinic at John Scaly Hospital. He was flown here May 30. they were unable to secure a Ne gro pastor the wnne cnurcn ou- ploved a retired wnne mraici.: McNeill said this burned some members of the congregation. Opposition to him came to a head alter Look maganne pub lished an article he wrote on May 28. 1937. in which he discussed wavs of bringing racial harmony to the South through "a creative contact between leaders of both races." Last June a commission was appointed by the presbytery to in vestigate reports of dissension among some of the 1.200 members of the church. In November that commission dissolved the church's session, governing body of the church, after i) reported findings of un rest and disharmony. The session's function of re ceiving new members was oe stowed on the pastor who was ham. Ala., is married and tha father of two cniiaren. He has been with the First Presbyterias church since November 1952. : SAFETY MEASURES TAKEN NEW YORK it'PH City offi cials took steps Friday to prevent additional suffocation of children from plastic bags. Health inspec tors visited more than 2.000 clean ing establishments urging that warning labels be placed on plas tic bags, which are commonly used to cover clothing. plished this way." He urged all church mincers to . (h rJ 0, evangeli5t. continue in their posts ana saia - McN-eiu a natjve 0f Birmrng- mis concerns mi uhc uui Neill." One tearful woman replied thai "it concerns all of us who love him and don't think he should leave." McNeill said that several years ago the church organized a Negro congregation in Columbus. When Summer Dancing Course STARTING JUNE 9 $1.00 Per Day Tap - Acrobatic Ballet ISA DO RAH MOIDOVAN Dancinf School ls M.i. TO -" DRIVE THE . H ILL-MAN HUSKY rn ii 5 ZM;..vt.".? ....: a... lb. .c "'' ,.t 1M m.r. p...t ' '! . II. si itlii.rr. r c. . . . nir ,1769oo DICK B. MILLER CO. 7h t Klemoth Ph. 4;4154 for- Former Officer Stroke Victim CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) James Joseph Maloney, 63 mer chief of the Secret Service, died at a veterans hospital Sun day after a stroke. Maloney began his law enforce ment career as a police patrol man at Binghamton. N Y. Later he was a New York state trooper. He entered the U.S. Treasury De partment's Secret Service in 1931. When he retired in 1950 he was coordinator of aU, the Treasury Department's agencies Secret Service, Intelligence. Customs, Narcotics and Alcohol Tax units. AIRLINER SETS RECORD LOS ANGELES tl'PIl An American Airlines Boeing 707 jet airliner flew here from Washing ton, DC. in four hours 36 min utes Sunday night to set a. new record for the westbound run. The plane, christened before its flight by Mrs. mcnara ji. .nixon at Friendship International Air port in Washington, broke by 10 minutes a record claimed only hours earlier by Trans World Airlines. BRITISH HERO ILL LONDON UP1 - A hero of the Battle of Britain, former RAF Group Capt. A. G. (Sailorl Malan. is in London to receive treatment for Parkinson's Disease. Malan. who had 32 enemy planes to his ' credit, now runs a farm in South Africa. Got Room For A Good Buy? "BOOK SHELF" 13 Cu. Ft. GENERAL ELECTRIC FOOD FREEZER 95 10.00 Dn.- 3.65 per Wk. Glide-Out basket slides to lock-stop position for easy loading. ' - ' Has 5 fait-freezing surfaces Door holds 83 pounds of froi- "Book-Shelf en foods. WE OFFER A PROTECTED BUYING PLAN APPLIANCE CO. 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