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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1959)
SUNDAY. JUNE 2!. HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALIA OREGON PAGE 7 A Water Board Executive Will Speak DUNSMt'lR - Col. Joseoh S Gorlinski. executive director of the J Central Valley Water Pollution 'Control Board, will be the guest lapeaker at a ipecial chamber ol I commerce dinner meeting at the .Travelers Hotel Monday at 6:30. j In addition to "chamber mem- ,bers, all concerned with pollution ; ri riven ana streams and its ef fects upon the area are invited, Chapman Wentworth, chamber president, announced. With the dangers of pollution heightened by the extensive high way construction work now in progress in the Upper Sacra mento Canyon, an effort should be. made to control unnecessary pol lution, Reginato warned the cham ber. Fishing in the Sacramento and ill. tributaries will be affected- unless precautions are taken, he said. . Bazaar-Style Sales Planned Downtown Merchants are plan ting to add color to the Fourth of July Weekend festivities in Klamath Falls in an original way. They are going to trundle their 1 wares in front' of their respective establishments and hawk them in the fashion of Omar Khayyam's day. , Plans for the street bazaar will be touched up at a meeting of the Downtown Merchants Associa 1 tion Tuesday, June 2.1, at 7:30 ; a m. in the Chuck Wagon Cafe, f Leo Morstad, association presi i dent, and Noel Flynn, manager of I Payless Drugstore, said they ! hope the entire Main Street busi I ness district and many other mer ' chants will participate. ! The idea has never been tried In Klamath Falls, but it has been successful in other towns. I "Customers get a big kick out t of. it," Flynn said, "and so do the merchants." Roping Club Plans Rodeo , LIKELY Likely Roping Cluh. which has been recognized this year by the Oregon Rodeo Asso ciation, will hold its 14th annual ro deo Saturday and Sunday, June 20 and .21. Cash awards and special prizes exceeding $3,000 will be awarded to the tp amateur riders in Cali fornia and the Northwest. Attractions this year will include the return of the Brahma bulls, the traditional playing of the In dia . stick game with IS teams in competition composed of Indians j from four states, stock scramble 1 of animals from turtles to sheep : to be turned loose Saturday after f noon for the youngsters of ele- mentary age. i IOOF Lodge 'Holds Meeting j FORT JONES-Independent Or der of Odd Fellows, Lodge Its. members were served a buffet (upper and entertainment at a meeting June 11 in Fort Jones. Forty four members and guests iwere present. Forrest Gray pro- jvided vocal numbers. ; Charlie Hammond served as master of ceremonies during the program. Bob Reynolds read a poem. Tommy Petrich played pi ano. Gus Rirhman. Bill Smith and Basil Wild delivered short talks. rupAnann Taiii Includes Plants J ETNA Ramond Hjerlager, son i of; Mr. and Mrs. Erling Hjertager, Callahan, accompanied Edwin Preston to Los Angeles recently. Raymond will visit with friends there prior to his departure by plane for Copenhagen, Denmark. I anr continuing to Norway where j he ill visit relatives. While there j he plans to make a tour of a ; helicopter company in Oslo and . visit the Sud Aviation factory, j manufacturer of the Alouette helicopter, near Paris. ' Before returning to the United Slates, he plans to take three , weeka summer course in German beginning July 6, at the univer- tty In Salvburg. Austria. BUCKHORN MINERAL SPRINGS A Hi la i4. r a. la keattk. rait, earn (art. a4 hiMaiUlltv antlta! flea. Mil tarr-klietnta. HOT MINSKAI. HTH far RhFaajiimm. Arthritis, rltia aatf Nrvaaita, rsannn nioxina vro RaTHS far fllfh an4 19 RliMte Pra.aare, Slkaa, aB4 Skra Iraactaai. totia' as 1 1 out nrsiKapiN raiN t Raaamafcla Rates. Wrant Sat Raaemtleajf MOVR LONG DISTAfcrt Irarkk) Mineral kartnaa ML mut) WRKLn, BC fHraakat mm tarkMn Sarkari Raa4 Aaaa rfaa Klamath Falls ror nay 5 jmy remoe rcuie Barbara Blanchard, who studiet drama under Mrs. B. B. Blomquist at Klamath Union High School, will play the only female role in a pro fessional stage version of "No Time For Sergeants." a comedy due at Mills School Auditorium Tuesday, June 23, at 8 30 p.m She will appear with an all-male touring cast headed by James Hoi- BARBARA BLANCHARD, Wes Guderian Photo den who played the lead role in the Broadway rocd group that toured the country recently. Miss Blanchard was born in Klamath Falls and was graduated last year from KUHS. She studied ballet for seven years under tutor- 4-H NEWS Eight businesses and organiza tions are providing the scholar ships for 38 4-H Club members of Klamath County to attend 4-H Club Summer School at Corval- lis, June 20-27. Those providing scholarships are the U.S. National Bank of Port land and the First National Bank of Oregon, Klamath, Falls branch es Klamath Lumber and Box Company; Safeway Stores, Inc.; Sears, Roebuck Foundation; Klam ath 4-H Leaders' ' Association; Claudette Shuck Memorial and the fair board. The Klamath County delegation will help make up the 1,800 4-H Club members assembled on the Oregon State College campus dur ing 4-H Club Summer School. There will be classes in home economics and agriculture as well as camp counseling and leadership opportunities. Couple Joins 'Y Convention Mr. and Mrs. Samuel W. Ray mond, 2052 Lavey Street, attended the 35th annual convention of the International Association of Men's Clubs, an affiliate of the YMCA. at, Portland last week. They represented the Klamath Falls Y's Men's Club. Raymond is . mernher and nffirer of Ih. Wal cluh and of the YMCA Board of1 Directors here. Members of the local club raised money for the trip by processing foreign postage stamps for phila telic collection and through dona tion. I AfJnA Inctnllc e installs wja. ----- New Officers FORT JONES Ora Rehekah I - .-..um. Lodge 40 met for installation of , " n'"mc .flepu,y ana of Viola Stone as right supporter! of the noble grand. Ruth Hammond delivered a com prehensive report on the state con vention held in Long Beach in May. Other business included discussion of a supper for local Odd Fellows members, and a re port on presentation of a. 45-year jewel to Mrs. Martin Larsen. HE HIT SOUR NOTE KENOSHA, Wis. ijPh-A nursery rhyme led to the downfall of Er-; vin Ehnow. He was fined $10 and ! costs (or continuously tooting his auto horn, which played the tune, I "Marv Had a Little t.amh." i f7f , FREE! A Lovely Stainless Steel Gift for You! There it no obligation in filling out this coupon or receiving your gift. J Nome j Address I City Sroto ' Phono Sett dott and time to J deliver your gift ; I By rilling out this coupon you will receive a Lovely Gift and will bo eligible to be entered in our GRAND DRAWING for ever $2000 in WESTINGHOUSE APPLIANCES i You may win on of these prize - Laundromat, Am. bo isa dor Kongo Upright Freeier, 21" Dtluxo TV Sot Fidelity Rodio-Phonograph. A RENA WARE DISTRIBUTORS, Inc. World's Uetnt DiatrifcatMt a Stemana treat Ceatwaro MAIL TO BOX 12-D HERALD-NEWS ' ' Girl Chosen hip of Edna Howell of the Norma dean Dance Studio here. Last year she began studying hallet and drama at the Univer sity of Utah. She starred in the .Nutcracker suite, a Christmas production staged by the Utah University Theater Ballet. She has also studied pantomime at the university. The local appearance of the fa mous play is one segment of a 12-stop tour the company is mak ing through the state as a portion of the Centennial celebration. It is under direction of the Port land Civic Theat -. The plot con cerns two backwoods boys who have such trouble adjusting to mil itary life that they are smuggled from the Air Force into the infan try in a full-scale martial opera tion called "Nightmare." Tickets Vill be on sale at the boxoffice. Six Charged With Rape Of Girl, 14 NEW YORK AP) - Six Negro youths, aged 14 to 17 have been arrested in the Corona, Queens, school yard rape of a 14-year-old white girl. She was attacked three times. The victim, a pretty blonde eighth grader in the junior high school, was assaulted ' Thursaay night after attending a recreation program at the school. Her name was withheld by police. The girl identilied as her as sailants John Rich, 16. 'Edward Jacobs, 17, and Jacob Belhea and Henry Stokes, both 16. All four going to be attacked. I was morele whealgrass and Iadak and no were charged with rape. surprised than scared." Imad alfalfa that were planted in rouce saia Kicn ana ttetnea ad- mitted assaulting the girl, but that Jacobs denied it. They said Stokes admitted holding the girl down while the others attacked her. Rich is employed as a mes senger boy. The others were stu dents "St the Brooklyn Automotive School. All four were arraigned Satur day in Ridgewood Felony Court. Arraigned Friday and charged with juvenile delinquency were a 14- year-old and 15-year-old boy. Their names were not made pub lic. The 14-year-old, accused of be ing the lookout, was a student in a school for problem children. The 15- year-old was a student at Flush ing, Queens, High School. Police said Bethea was the youth who first grabbed the girl, hit her with his fist, and raped her the first time. The victim's girl companions fled in panic. Police said the girl who was assaulted had been gagged, but that ahe managed to work the gag free and screamed. Her screams were heard by Mrs. Louis Clifford, director of the recreation program, who rushed yt!into the school yard. The youths tied. The Corona section's 'population is about equally divided between white and Negroes. An umdenti- ! OCieCUVe lOld newsmen: "There was nothint racial about the attack. It was just a punk kid trying to prove himself in front of his friends." RESERVE DUTY Army Reserve Sgt. Edwin G. West, 26, son of Mrs. Emily B. Norman, 2834 Altamont Drive, is scheduled to complete two weeks! r actjve dllty training June 20 at For Leonard, Mi ouri. Sergeant West was graduated from Klam ath Union High School In 1951 and i,he University of Louisville in 1955 He is a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. DRIVE-IN Highway 97 North OPENING SOON! Tdilaunner lyf gf g Rgyy Crack At Reds YOKOSl'KA. Japan (AP) - A s ,.. ,,,.., wounded hv Soviet-tvoe Buns off the North Korean coast wants "another Foster will take place from the chance" at the Communist plane Realty Methodist Church on Tues that blasted him out of his turret, day, June 23, 1959. with services ..:..;. .ti.:i.. n r, u Corder also said he thought he could have gotten the Communist ,rvic" nd ;au" "tombment in 'pending plane of unidentified nationality if'h ' V r ' Ll . U E-,lu,. Uitm (m ihara Snrlnnfl it hadn't hit his turret. Corder of Jacksonville and Farmer City, 111., was the first I crewman to spot the MIG that shot and crippled the Navy P4M1 Mercator some 45 miles off North Korea last Tuesday. Speaking from a stretcher a few minutes after doctors gave him an iniertinn tn mm tha nain u . u .h,.nn.i ani a broken knee, Corder told newS ; Di,,rict sPnsor 1 gras,'ield,OrderS DOWI1. men the MIG was about son ferf'day " Tuesday. June 23. All farm-1" ' directly behind him when it opened fire. "There was quite a bit of con fusion. Everybody was talking at once. I was asking the pilot's per mission to return fire. I called several times. Either the second or third time, he heard me and answered, 'Tail turret open fire. ........... The order came as the MIGsl rrPO "m"Mn' """" per.ausi jand 80.123.000 feet the correspond .k.:. .;..k ifrom the Bend area office of the , .b i... M ck;.m.i. r.r " . i (uniting uini BIAUI Ua9S,l Corder said. . oroppea uw rnicropnone ana oettinff a line nn th learl air. plane, I got hit. It blew me out of the turret. I saw sparks and hot lead." Asked if h' considered the plane adequately armed, Corder said he thought so, but "Nobody who flies those missions ever thinks he is CITY BRIEFS On Aircraft Carrier Daryl R. Jameson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jameson of Route 3, Box 376, is serving aboard the attack aircraft carrier Shangri-La opera ting in the Far East. Initiation Rainbow Girls will hold initiation Monday at 7 o'clock in the Scottish Rite Temple. Par ents' night will follow. All picture money must be in. Promoted Jack R. Friberg. interior communications electrici an second class, USN, son of Mrs. Aileene Angus of Route 3, Box 67, was promoted to the present rate June 16 while serving aboard the attack aircraft carrier Midway, operating out of Alameda. New Law Aimed At Integration TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)-Flo- rida now has a law which prevents! a child from being forced to t - tend an integrated school. Gov. Leroy Collins allowed the legislative act to become law Fri day. The law permits the trans fer of a pupil objecting to integra tion and if a local school board refuses, the child cannot be com pelled under the state's compul sory attendance law to attend ra cially mixed classes. Collins did not sign the bill, but allowed it to become law without his signature. Funeral SOLVASON Funeral services for Sigrud Sol ason, TO. who died in this city June 18. will be held in O'Hair Memorial Chapel Monday, June 22. at 10 30 a fn. Interment will be nude in Klamath Memorial Park. FOSTER Funeral services for Andrew ai 11 a.m. ana l p.m Rev. Har- .z""r officiating. Concluding j Klamath Funeral Home in charge of the arrangements. Grass Tour To Be Held Poe Valley Soil Conservation ers and ranchers interested in grass and range management are invited to attend. . i The field day will he held on the old Crawtord ranch on upper ni,.lr PrnaL- nAuf nufnnH hv T arm r-k,,- Th. .viii .i Dairy Caie at 1:30 and drive from u.. . .k. rk... -I,... there to the Chapman place. . , t . ., .,, so" -onservaiion service win con - duct discussions, assisted ny,,.,, oi s-mnnn feet and S7.59R ooo ; Gene C(H( of ,he KIamalh Falls', office. Key forage plants such . . . . ... . ........... .v.. ...v..... cue, western needlegra.ss and others will be pointed out to the group. Growth habits and produc Hon of these grasses will bei discussed and other forage plants identified. The group will also see fields of pubescent and intermedi 1957 and 1958 on soil bank land Since range management is such an important part of the conser vation job in Poe Valley SCD Uie district supervisors urge all ranch ers to take advantage of this oppor tunity to become better acquaint ed with their grasslands. KLRB Ousts Boycott Claim PORTLAND (AP) Secondary boycott charges against the Team sters Union over its dispute with the Tillamook County Creamery Assn. have been dismissed by the Seattle National Labor Relations Board office, teamsters official William O'Connell said Thursday. O'Connell, state representative of the Teamsters Joint Council, said the company has 10 days in which to appeal dismissal of the charge filed by the Tillamook- Portland Auto Freight Co. The charge was one of nine which have ernnled in the disnute. si. filed .in.t the team. .ten. , .kre. aonin.t the asso- lcjajon Teamster drivers in the cream ery's fluid milk department walk ed off the job last April after turning down a contract providing a 5 cent an hour pay boost. Pick ets in 11 western states are now protesting the sale of Tillamook Cheese, the union said. Tillamook Mayor Loren D. Mac Kinley has asked Rep. Walter Norblad IR-Ore) to press for a Senate labor rackets committee 'investigation of the situation. It's the dog-gonedest thing but since our little friend passed the word, weVe had steady stream of happy Ford prospects in our showroom. Thinking for themselves, of course. And buying the beautifully proportioned '59 Ford, the car thaf s built for people (real people), built for savings. We think everyone should bay a new car 23 Main Suit DelaYS u:n cu .mm jqic Kl'GENE. Ore. (APi-A suit is;hv hundreds of news- holding up an o million 'dollar jPP 'heir prices in re- transaction involving two western ;c'nt yri- m the first four Oregon lumber firms, although the sale was approved tentatively earlier last week. Springfield Plywood Corp.. which eaiiier withdrew its request for an injunction to halt the sale of Booth-Kelly Lumber Co. to U.S. Plywood Corp.. still has. suU naiunt iiuuiii-iiij ill circuit court. Springfield Plywood is seeking a court order directing Booth Kelly to turn over all its logs suitable for plywood manufacture. Two of the nation's biggest ply- wood producers I,, s. Plywood ;and 170 at 10 cents. Forty-nine and Georgia-Pacific Corp., which !COst six cents and eight of them owns 8t per cent of the Spring-i eight cents. field stock, have a stake in the! The increases have diminished outcome of the transaction. Production Up PORTLAND (API Orders and shipments of pine dropped slight ly last week from the preceding week, but Western Pine produc- tion was up slightly the Western pi"Assn' ay' , , Orders were 76.727.000 feet last .k. .....l. h.f. Oii.irHi.mii i iitj ncc rjcivii c " 1 1 ...... .... .... !ll)e ,hrpe p,riK5 were M.M4.000reeve me tensions - ., and nroduction 89.S92.000l board "Mru feet. 88.920.000 feet and i h2 ?h immi reel. Fir. Hemlock , PriCCS DlOD PORTLAND (AP) A sharp, slowdown in trading for the fourth! straight week has. dropped the price of green fir and hemlock lumber dimension prices 4 per cent. Crow's Lumber Market News Service said Friday the drop was due largely to a slowdown in the start of new housing construction. Fir and hemlock were down (2 to $3 per thousand board feet from a week ago. with green fir figures below $75, compared to too four weeks ago. Obituories HURLEY Harley Edgar Hurley, 68, native of Danville, Indiana, resident of Klamath Falls for 13 years, died here June 19, 1959. Survivors in clude: the widow, Rebecca of this city: sons, Everett and Gene and a daughter, Mrs. Dora Hess, all of Lafayette, Indiana: a brother. Otis and a sister, Mrs. Beulah Corwin of Harvey, Illinois: step sons, W. E. Dexter of Estacada, Oregon, Walter K , Don and Quen tin Dexter of this city, Marshall F. Dexter of Eureka, California: step-daughters, Mrs. Harry Har per, Mrs. Louis Hawkins and Mrs Dale Cunningham of this city, Mrs, O. B. Michaelis of Portland, Ore gnn, and Mrs. D. J, Vega of Fresno. California. Funeral serv ices will take place from the chapel of Ward's Klamath Funeral Home on Monday, June 22 at 2:30 p.m., concluding services in Klam ath Memorial Park. JUNIOR RODEO ' QUEEN'S CONTEST SUNDAY JUNE 21 TULELAKf FAIRGROUNDS this year especially a Ford! BALSIGER MOTOR CO. 4 Etplonodo Rising Costs into aeries ut NF.W YORK (AP) Rising costs .momns ot tnis year aione. Some 400 increased prices in one or more circulation categories in 195. In. announcing the new prices, the newspapers have cited in creased cosls of newsprint, wages. fringe benefits and various mater : ibis anu ininrj, The trend is to more 7-cent and 10-cent papers ) A survey of more than 1.700 , newspapers hy the Ameri can Newspaper Publishers Assn. shows 4K3 now selling at 7 cents the number still selling for five Groom Claims He Set Fires To Cut Tension ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI Po lice Saturday investigated a bride groom's story that he set 11 fires causing $227,000 damage to of honey mooning. The groom. Jerome Winczewski. 21, told police tha' when the rigors of young love got to the point of lovers' spats, he and his wife of three months wander ed through the city looking for fires. finally, he said, he started a fire and his wife got such a kick out of watching it he set JO more within the next three weeks. "I guess it was just to relieve the nervous tension," Palmquist said. "I felt better afterward For his wife, Delores, 20, watch ing the fires was "like a great pressure was being taken nlf me," she told police. The couple was arrested at lumber yard Friday, the bride groom with a roll of tarpaper and newspapers under his arm, and the bride with a gleam in her eyes. Winczewski said his wife al ways stood nearby and watched as he touched off the blazes be cause she "enjoyed them." Police Lt. John Schroeder said there was "no doubt" that Winc zewski started the fires, but he said a thorough investigation would be made before the couple was charged. They were held on suspicion. HE SLIDES TO SAFETY TOLEDO, Ohio iin Seeing an automobile skidding toward him on icy pavement, 9-year-old Robert Butler flung himself down, grabbed the front bumper and slid along 100 feet beneath the Car until It stopped in a shallow ditch. He suffered only bruises. HOUSE MOVING By William Chambsri, Jr. The Chambart House Meving Co. now headed fcr lillie Cham, bars, will canringa In kaiineu it has far the M 14 yean. Fully Bonded and Insured CALL TU MOMa-S Phon. TU Force Papers mce nines cents to 991 and 4a the whole United States only 13 still sell for less than a nickel. The day of the two-cent paper of childhood memory is gone. The last to sell at that price was the Hanover. Pa., Sun which went to five cents last September. Fiv sell for three cents and eight for four cents. The rtewspapers, ' in raising prices, have stressed particularly their highc. costs fir newsprint One newspaper, in advancing its price last year, noted: "Today, just the paper on which your newspaper is printed costs us more than the revenue we re ceive from our subscribers." Another specified that 'Since 1937 the cost of newsprint has in creased from 143.50 a ton to $135." Higher wages and general bus iness costs, telephones and wires are among other factors cited. The ANPA figures show that 115 newspapers have increased their price, to 10 cents and 471 to T cents in the past 10 years while the number selling for 5 cents has dropped by 527. The following chart, showing prices and number of newspapera charging them, reflects the change in the past decade: 1959 1949 10 cents 170 I 1 cents 8 7 cents 483 12 cents 49 0 Scents' 991 1,518 4 cents I 119 3 cents 4 81 3 cents 0 18 Additionally, three dallies sell for 15 rents two in Alaska and the Journal of Commerce in New York. Weekly subscription ratei have increased in a ratio similar to tha single copy prices. Sunday newspaper prices sharp ly reflect the increased cost sit uation. Twelve are now 25 cents and 100 are 20 cents, compared with none in either price range in 1949. Also, 173 are 15 cents compared with 93 in 1949, and 1R8 still are 10 cents compared with 211 ten years ago. Guaranteed 7 Years! Carlson's Mattrats . end Upholstery Coma"y 240S Se. h TU 4-4510 4-3121 Ton the"sv REST f OF YOUR I A LIFE' A Cordon l,,rtr Mattress, wta's $39.95 W-ya Yiir ! Guaranteed 7 Years! I I irWr) tt il i N I " nl it it & S a ,1 mt l 1 1