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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1959)
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. U'ednesdav. .lulv 22. 1959 PAGE 3 A -B ? m T.M. U.S. Pat. OM, 7-.? 2 mTV BDICCC 1 I I UIMLI O "Father! How can they say the Russians are ahead of us in science? Did you see Eddie's hot rod?" ; Candidates Names' Told . HONOLULU APt Candidates : Of Japanese and Chinese ancestry ;running in Hawaii's first state .election Tuesday seem to have a fondness tor American nicknames Lnder Hawaii law, a can j didate's nickname may appear on the ballot. : The ballot shows these ,Iap ; anese - Americans among political hopefuls for the State House of ' Representatives: Democrats George iScotty) j'Koga and Walter i Mils' Harada; ! Republicans Yoshiichi rBig Micel '. Voshida and Katsugo IKats) Miho. Republican Lawrence (Peanuts) Kunisha is running for the state Senate. J Among Chinese-Americans seek- Ing office are Republican Wing I Kong (Winkie) Chong for the slate Senate and Democrat Frank W.C. (Honolulu Loo' Loo for the : state House. Oregon Weather By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Wednesday Max Min Prep Astoria 67 55 T Baker 96 49 Bend M M M Brookings 62 56 .01 Burns 99 64 Eugene 95 55 Lakcview 94 62 Medford lnfi 66 Newport 61 50 .03 Pendleton 99 68 Portland 92 64 Redmond 101 62 Roseburg 100 58 Salem 97 48 The Dallas 103 66 WW! Veterans will picnic at Memorial Park Thursday, July 23. 6 p.m. Dinner will be potluck. with watermelon, ice cream and ollee furnished by the barracks and auxiliary. Any World War 1 veteran or widow is invited to bring a covered dish and join the party. Canceled A field trip to the Hart Mountain area, scheduled for July 25 and 26 by the Klamath Gem and Mineral Club, has been postponed until lurther notice be cause of hot weather. Short Visit Pfc. Larry Reyn olds, with the 44th Field Artillery fort Lewis, stopped .Monday, en route to New Mexico and Call lornia, for an overnight visit with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Carter, 2200 Reclamation. Annual Picnic Klamath Salon .15, 8 et 40, will hold its annual picnic Sunday, July 26, at Veter ans' Memorial Park at 1 p.m. Meat and beverages will be fur nished. Bring own table service For information call Arlena Schu bert, TU 4-6693. Pinochle Party The Shasta View Building Association is sponsoring a public pinochle party Saturday, July 25. at 8 p.m. in the Com munity Hall at the corner of Shas ta Way and Madison. Eagles Auxiliary members are reminded of the regular meeting Friday, July 24, at 8 p.m. in the Eagles Hall. Memorial Fund Friends wishing to contribute to the Elizabeth Tice Memorial Fund m a y send their gifts to the Rev. Wilbur E. Brum baugh, 4273 Bristol Avenue. Wagon Train Rolling West After Crossing Into State NVSSA. Ore. (AP) The Ore gon Centennial Wagon Train rolls on today witn its goat ot ine Willamette Valley three weeks off. The seven wagons crossed into Oregon here Tuesday on the 2,200- mile journey from Independence. Mo., to Independence. Oregon, to ceiebrate Oregon's 100th year of statehood. Some 3,500 persons turned out to welcome the Mors to Oregon as they crossed the Snake River from Idaho. A carnival atmos phere prevailed in this border town. The temperature was past 100 when the 59ers arrived in Oregon, but this failed to lessen the en thusiasm. Centennial costumes ap peared and children climbed over the wagons. A ceremony at the bridge heralded the arrival of the wagon train. A logger's chain stretched across the bridge between the two states. Wagonmaster Tex Serpa of Ashland was handed a key to Oregon to unlock the chain by four-year-old Deborah Ann Kel ler of Nyssa. Mounted posses and an Oregon National Guard jeep led the wa son party its last few miles in Idaho. Secretary of State Howell Ap pling told the gathering at t h e bridge that the wagon train "is a great credit to the slate." He said Oregon now must do better in welcoming the train than the other states. "We've seen the wagon train receive a tremendous reception in exery staie," he said The journey to Vale today will be marked by a new experience. The wagons will lord the Malheur River. , From Vale, the pioneers will travel to Jamieson for a slop Thursday, Huntington tor a Fri day stop and will spend the week end near Durkee. They plan to arrive at The Dalles Aug. 8, leaving there Aug 10 for a barge trip down the Co lumbia. They will disembark near Portland and take to land for the final trip down the Willamette Valley to Independence for a celebration Aug. 15. The wagons are now three days ahead of schedule but plan to arrive on schedule at Independence. BOY STABS FATHER NEW YORK (UPH-A 12-year-old boy stabbed his father to death Tuesday night when he found him choking the boy's mo ther. Police said Raymond Wierz bicki was playing in the street with his younger sister and broth er when he heard screams from their apartment and ran inside. Finding his father and mother struggling, he grabbed a knife and plunged it in the back of his 34 year-old father. Crews Rescue jExolorer, 16 ; NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) A ' young cave explorer who tumbled 70 feet into a subterranean pit was rescued Tuesday night, ser iously hurt and delirious, after . being trapped more than two hours. I "Oh my God! Oh my God:" ; cried Tom Wainman, 16, of Nash J ville, as he was hoisted from the ; pit by Jerry Allen, 17, a friend . who joined scores of rescue work- ers. ' '. Wainman lapsed into uncon- - sciousness before arriving at a - hospital in an ambulance. Atten' ' dants said he suffered a brain con . cussion, broken leg and cuts and bruises. . Don Tavalin, 16, oe of three ; boys-who were exploring the cave : with Wainman, said Wainman lost '; his grip on a rope, tumbled about . 40 feet and then fell into the 30' '.foot pit. ! ' Rescurers lowered Allen on s ' rope sling. He tied Wainman to a stretcher. The injured youth was ' then hoisted by ropes up a cliff inside the cave and lowered down a sheer bluff outside the cave to : the ambulance. ! "I was the only one down there and he fought me," Allen said l "I couldn't get him tied on the . stretcher. He was out of his head fighting." Annual Picnic will be held by the Odd Fellows and Rebckahs on Sunday. July 26, at Malin Park. All Odd Fellows and Rehekahs of Klamath and Lake counties are invited to the event which will start at 12:30 p.m. Coffee, ice cream and pop will be furnished. There will be games and enter tainment. Campout will be held by the men of the Peace Memorial Pres byterian Church from July 25 to 26 at Spencer Creek. They will leave from the church Saturday afternoon. Bring $1 and a sleeping bag. Make advance arrangements Eastern Oregon Fair tonight except partly cloudy in extreme south with isolated thundershow- ers in vicinity of mountains. Part ly cloudy Thursday with chance of scattered thundershowers over mountains during afternoon. Con tinued warm. Low tonight 58-68 degrees; high Thursday in 90s. Western Oregon Fair through Thursday except mostly cloudy on coast with morning drizzle. Early morning cloudiness in northern valleys Thursday. Some cloudi in the south with thundershowers over mountains during afternoon with chance of a few spreading to the northern Cascades. Low tonight 52-62 degrees; not quite with Floyd Buck, TU 4-9404 or Bob so warm Thursday with high 86-'Davies, TU 4-5195, Test Enters Second Round PORTLAND (AP) Young car penters and cabinetmakers today start the second go-round of com petition in an apprenticeship con test sponsored by both union and management. Among the sponsors of the six state competition are the United Carpenters and Joiners of Amer ica and the - Associated General Contractors. George Rosemeyer of Eugene, Ore., and Robert Martin ot Davis, Calif., started the contest Tues day with a building competi tion. Winners will receive their awards Saturday night after the final competition is held. The contest is designed to "em phasize the need for continuing planned programs of apprentice ship to prepare young men or their life's work in the trades," a contest spokesman said. Entrants are from Washington. Idaho, Oregon. Montana, Califor nia and Nevada. " LOADINGS UP " PORTLAND (AP) Pacific Northwest railroad freight car .'loadings were up 6.3 per cent ;during the first six. months of the year over 1958. " In June, they increased 5.1 per .cent over June, 1958. The total for Oregon, Washington and .northern Idaho was 109.887, com pared with 104.579 a year ago. 96. Highs on coast about 65. South westerly coastal winds 10-20 miles an hour. I Northern Oregon Beaches Fair Friday except morning cloudi ness. Temperature range 50-70 de grees. Westerly to northwesterly beach winds. 8-18 miles an hour. Ex-Showgirl, Asks Divorce JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) Joyce Mathews, former New York shpw; girl, was scheduled to appear in a Juarez court today for a divorce from Broadway producer Billy Rose. Juarez court sources indicated the decree, which is uncontested, should be granted Thursday. Miss Mathews was to appear in person before Judge Ignacio Mar tinez Aguayo of the First Civil Court to ask for the separation on the ground of incompatabilily of characters. Miss Mathews and Rose were married three years ago in New York when she was 36 and he was, 56, but their romance- had come to light in 1951 when she slashed her wrist and tried to jump out of a window of Rose's New Y'ork apartment. Rose previously had been mar ried to comedienne Fanny Brice and swimmer Eleanor Holm. Miss Mathews had been married on two different occasions to comedian Milton Berle. Her first marriage was to Gonzalo Gomez, son of a Venezuelan political leader. Picnic The Friday circles of the Women's Association of the Peace Memorial Church,' MacKenzie and Forsythe. will hold a picnic in Wiard Park on Friday, July 24 at 10 a.m. At Sea Tom M. Sayers, Navy fireman, 1921 Fargo Street, is serving aboard the destroyer es cort Damato on a midshipman training cruise from June 24 through August 7, in the Northern Atlantic. Sewer Collapses Killing Worker ELLISVILLE, Mo. (AP) - The walls of a 16-foot sewer ditch col lapsed and buried a 26-year-old Pacific, Mo., laborer alive Tues day. Two i fellow workers est'aped. Edward D. Heaston was killed. Authorities estimated two tons of dirt cascaded down on him. Res cue workers dug through to lleas ton in an hour, but Ihey were too late. Clem Garner of St. Louis saw the walls start to collapse. He scrambled out of the ditch, grab bed the arm of Marvin E. Rickard of Glencoe, Mo., and pulled Rick ard to safety. Girl Assists In Capture SACRAMENTO (UP1) A teen age girl saw her father shot to death Tuesday night in an at tempted robbery, then chased the alleged killer for five blocks to aid in his capture. Henry M. Nakatoml, 45, was killed by a shotgun charge in the chest from a range of about two feet. Police booked Roy Delaney, 36, Sacramento, into city jail as a re sult of the shooting. He was found hiding in the bathroom of a small hotel near where Lynn Nakatomi, 16, had chased him. The shooting occurred in Naka- tomi's neighborhood grocery store here. One man, still at large, en gaged Nakatomi in conversation at the rear of the store while a sec ond, believed to be Delaney, opened the cash register at the front. Nakatomi captured Delaney with a butcher knife and held him while Lynn got a shotgun. The store owner was shot when he grappled with Delaney for the weapon. People Read SPOT ADS you are Chesapeake Bay, headed by Bal timore, is 180 miles long. ROUND-UP DANCE SATURDAY . 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