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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1959)
PAGE 2 A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Kails, Ore. Fririav. October 23. 1959 "DENNIS THE MENACE" ' j Officer Hit For Failure To Give Help 'Guided Missile Sought To Minimize Heart Attack By KRA.VK CAREY Associated Press Science Writer PHILADELPHIA (API Sci entists are exploring possibilities MIAMI, Fla. APi A woman, o( developing a kind of guided who delivered her own baby in missile technique of preventing or the farrily car has complainedjminimiiing a major form of heart that a Miami motorcycle police- attack, it was reported today. J CANT REACH THE tkjHT' Requirement Eased By CG The Coast Guard has relaxed its vision requirements for recruits a little. Guard Commandant Vice Adm. Alfred C. Richmond said men with Glovt'ioft uppers with go anywhere cushion crepe soles. Worm fleece lined toft leather up p e r s with hard soles. 6 popular itylci in A FA tock itarting at .3U VanOrman's Klomoth'l Oldest HOME OWNED Family Shoe Stort 20-30 vision correctable to 20-20 in each eye will be acceptable. Pre viously, uncorrected 20-20 vision was the standard. Applicants must be high school seniors or graduates 17 year old or more who will not have reached his 22nd birthday by July 1 next year. They must have earned 15 high school units by June 30. in cluding three in English, two in algebra and one in plane geom etry. Information is available Irom the U.S. Coast Guard, 618 Second Ave nue, Seattle 4, Washington. man refused to escort her mad rush to the hospital. Officials are investigating. Her husband, Rudy Blakey. said "officer C. V. Smith "shrugged his shoulders and said 'I'm sorry. I can t escort you. I'll follow along behind.' " "I was in worse shape than my wife." said Blakey. "I was cry ing and shouting and screaming and honking the horn as loud as it would honk. "I was driving like crazy in the rush hour Wednesday and Pat had already had the baby. She was holding him in her hands." Mrs. Blakey. 25. spotted the motorcycle policeman and recog nized Smith as an old schoolmate. "I was biting on a handker chief." she said, "and, I said, Please. Billy, help us.' " "I told him we were having a baby and pleaded for an escort," said her husband. "When he said no, I was too excited to argue. He just followed .two or three blocks and turned off." Police Chief Walter Headley said the olficer should have of fered some help, but added: "We have a rule against escorting peo ple to hospitals because these highly excited persons cause too many accidents." The "missile" would be a chem ical enzyme that can dissolve blood clots of the type that occur in "coronary thrombosis" a con dilion wherein a clot plugs an art- cry feeding the heart, shutting off Property Pact Reached By Pair HOLLYWOOD lAP) Actor Glenn Ford and his estranged wile, Eleanor Powell, have agreed after a 13-hour conference with attorneys to a , property settle ment involving about $350,000. The actress' lawyer, Robert A Need Jr., said Thursday the agreement means her divorce suit will be uncontested. The lawyer said he could not disclose details of the settlement. In her suit Miss Powell asked custody of a son, division of com munity property including a $150. (KiO Beverly Hills house and $3,715 lor monthly expenses. The Fords separated last April after being J married 15 years. TOO DIFFICULT " LOS ANGF.LKS I API - Con venience Inc., a check-cashing concern, proved too difficult for a gunman Thursday. "This is a holdup." he an rounccd. Cashier Elsie Cornish punched an alarm. He fled without a cent. The Decorator TV That's All New! IB) h n H n .aw phlco Prcdicta SEVENTEENER 4 ' f "THE ULTIMATE IN FEATURES AND DECORATOR INSPIRED DESIGN." Pries of Model $) (5)95 Illustrated . . . f J INCLUDES STAND t AUTOMATIC "NIGHT WATCH" CLOCK Other "Predicta" Model Pticet ei low a $229.95 MERITS 609 So. 6th Ph. TU 2-3429 Court Records KLAMATH COI'NTY IUSTR1CT COURT Chester B. Davidson, combination overload, dismissed motion district attorney. George Eldon Higeins, combination overload, dismissed motion district attorney. Lawrence Alvin Wilson, tandem axle overload, dismissed motion district at torney. Herbert Victor Kubinzky. combina tion overload, dismissed motion dis trict attorney. Marian Dllworth Duffy, fail slop at stop sign, dismissed motion district attorney. Riley Jordan White, no muffler, dis missed "motion district attorney. Kenneth Norman Paradis, permit four in front seat, 17.50. Stanley William Bloxhaxn, combin tinn overload. 77. Earl Howard Srhiermeyer, c o m- bl nation overload. S77. Douglas Ray King, no operator's li cense. S7.50. Joe Morris Ortis, fall attach deer! tag properly. 2.V Marian Francis MrElmurray, fail attach deer tan properly. $2Y Orville L. Charley, combination over load, t:il. John Jefferson Hnllingsworth, no operator's license, S10. Shirley May Carnei, fail stop at stop ism. s.Y Vernon Ray Cihney, passing Insuf ficient clearance. S7..W. Norman Carl Hewitt, fail display li cense, 7 V. James Gosling, violation basic rule, 51(1. Kenneth Robert Weatherby, violation basic rule. 115. Buryle Ray Long, fail dim head-1 lights. S.V I Glenn Lacy Harbey and James Lynn Moreau, petit larceny, each given tsn fine and costs or nine days in lieu of: fine; committed. Ronald James Lenahan, fail attach deer lag properly. SIS. Lawrence Raymond Spencer, over height, S10. KLAMATH FALL .MUNICIPAL COl itr John E. Collins, drunk. $23 or five day. Oliver W. Johnson, drunk. $25 or five days Mark Kingbird, drunk. $23 or five diM Plas Rawlins, drunk, continued. Joahua J. Pappin, drunk in an auto, continued. Norma Jean Cleary, drunk in an auto, S25. Howard Adam Senkevech, drunk in an auto. $2,1. Leo Joseph Laporte. failure to leave name and address at scene of an' ac cident. MO. Dick Dvkstra. drunk. 2S. Alfred Butler, drunk, 25. Jrrry Wayne Anthous. petty larceny, continued. Leroy Byle Edward Hughes, petty larceny, continued. Major Crime Decreases SAX FRANCISCO lrPI- The incidence of ma.w crime in Cal ifornia has decreased 10.5 per cent during the first half of 1959. according to a report submitted today to Attorney General Stanlev Mosk. The report, by the Bureau of Criminal Statistics of the Califor nia Department of Justice, showed an actual decrease of more than 7 per cent from the major crime rale during the comparable months of 1958. But, on a per capita basis, con sidering population growth, the decrease amounted to 10.5 per cent, the report said. The only increase was noted in the assault category, up 1.8 per cent over last year. Decreases were reported in categories of willful homicide, 13.2 per cent; robbery, 23; burglary, 11.3: theft, except auto, 0.9; auto theft, 12.6. and forcible rape. 3.1. There were 10fi.l!8 major crimes reported during the first half of 1958 and ge.m during the first six months of W59, the report said. Los Angeles County, with a 1959 population of 5.899,000, accounted for more than 50 per cent of the major crimes, the report said. the blood supply and causing dam age to the heart's muscle. And it would, be guided directly to the clot by being shot through a plastic tube inserted into a blood channel and threaded along until it reached the area of the clot. Dr. A Carlton Ernstene of Cleveland, president-elect of the American Heart Association said promising, but experiments in Thief yses Ruse: m Faculty Attends Meet Valued At $450 VONKERS. N.Y. (API - Mat thew Sampieri found a stranger in his bathroom Tuesday. "Who are you?" he asked. "Plumber," replied the man, pressing his ear against the wall. "Is it still leaking. Joe?" the man shouted down the bath drain. No answer. "Tell you what," the man said Administration and faculty mem bers of Oregon Technical Institute attended a meeting at Southern Oregon College in Ashland, Mon day evening, October 19, to get a brieling of the OTI role as a new member of the state System of Higher Education. t'ntil July, lo, the school will have been under jurisdiction of the state System of Education. Dr. Elmo N. Stevenson. SOC nresident. outlined functions ana .tin i,!t0 Sampieri. "You turn on thei ' . ., , ,.omhinalion pro animals suggest i showcrnd .J'U check ,he aparl-fessional school and college of arts lilt ill utiun, Sampieri turned on the shower that eventually such a technique genVy treatment for humans I and listcned qui,e a whil 10 lhe stricken with coronary artery and science, stressing philosophy independent unit operating0 also n part of the state's higher education setup, The evening ended with a tour of the SOC campus directed bv Dr. Stevenson, for members 0 OTf general extension division classes taught by Dr. J. Kenneth Munford. Oregon State College di. rector of publications. Representing the extension div. sion was Raymond E. Pettey, re. gional director, with office head, quarters on the SOC campus. The tommy gun was named lor Siam Twins :0ut Of Peril PORTLAND lAPi-The Stubble- field Siamese twins, separated Oct. 6. no longer are in critical condition. "Their conditions are now satis factory and the outlook is favor able," said a spokesman at the University of Oregon Medical School Hospital, where a team of 17 surgeons, technicians and nurses separated the two girls. Jeanett and Denctt, who now are 3'4 months old. The girls had been joined from breastbone to navel before the op eration. For a week after the operation Jeanett's condition was precarious and her death was expected al mostly hourly. Finally she rallied, under constant care, and a week ago the hospital said without qual ification that the operation was a success. The threat of possible infection still hung over both however and they were too weak to offer much resistance should it strike. Marine Recruiter Staff Sgt. Stan Elbie, Marine re cruiter from Mcdford. will visit Klamath Falls Friday from 1 until 4 p.m. to interview young men and women Interested in enlisted and officer programs being olfercd by the corps. He will be at the Selective Serv ice office, Veteran's Memorial house. Indians of northern Idaho once used buffalo hide boats in river crossings. blockage. At a news conference prior to the opening of the association's 32nd scientific assembly he said that conceivably, if a patient were treated quickly enough, a clot might be dissolved before any heart damage had taken place. He said that clot-dissolving sub stances already are in limited use in the treatment of coronary heart disease but that present methods in' olve injection of the chemicals intc the general blood stream. Thus, there is a delay in reaching the area of the heart itself. A method whereby the chemi cal could be directly 'itubed" to the site of the clot would not only be faster but would require small er amounts of chemical, he told a reporter. At the same news conference. Dr. Ernstene predicted that within five years researchers would de velop improved artificial heart valves to cope with certain forms of rheumatic heart disease still beyond the powers of surgery or not completely handled by it. And Dr. Francis L. Chamber lain of San Francisco, current president of the association, de clared that in the surgery of con genital heart defects, 75 per cent of children having such defects can be given completely normal hearts today, whereas only a few years ago only 30 to 40 per cent could be so helped. He attributed the improvement to the advent of artificial heart-lung machines as an aid to surgery. running water. When the man didn't come back. Sampieri discovered that $450 in jewelry was missing from his apartment. Ex-Seaman Mishap Victim SAN FRANCISCO (API A Filipino ex-seaman, due to be de ported with his family today, in stead was recuperating from auto crash injuries. Felix Montalban, 36, who served on U.S. Army transports in World War II and also as a guerrilla in his native Philippines crashed his auto into a bridge ramp Thursday. He told officers he had blacked out. Hospital authorities said Mon talban had no broken bones, but many bruises and lacerations. His father. Ereneo.' a Stockton cannery worker, and uncle, Guel lermo, 57, who were with him, suf fered lacerations. The accident suspended plans to deport Montalban and his wife, Remedios, 30. Herbert Nice, San Francisco District director of immigration, said Montalban and his wife are in this country illegally and had ignored deportation orders. Their three children, Vivian, 6, Susan Anne, 3, and Deborah Lee, 10 months, have U.S. citizenship by birth but were to have gone with their parents. Phone Boost Appeal Set SALEM lAPl-Public Utilities Commissioner Jonel C. Hill said Wednesday he probably would ap peal to the state Supreme Court in the fight over the Pacific Tele phone & Telegraph Co.'s effort to increase its Oregon rates. Marion County Circuit Judge Val D. Sloper ruled Oct. 9 that the rate increase granted Jan. 12 by former Public Utilities Com missioner Howard Morgan, wasn't large enough. The company had been granted an increase of five million dollars a year, which was only half what it asked for. It filed the suit against the PUC. It is Sloper's ruling that Hill hopes to appeal. Judge Sloper held that the al location of costs of operation, in eluding plant and equipment, be tween intrastate and interstate operations wasn't properly done by the PUC. The judge said the system used by the PUC was con trary to a manual used by all states. Texas has 56,000 miles of oil pipeline. and purposes of the college as an 'its invpntor. Thompson. UHA Sib J j ENDS TONIGHT! 11 lil'l 'B '1,1 J ;l 1 ILI 'J II 'I J.lTil IPIMllVSBllf.llLI "I 11 v m J I T . 1 111 5 I Great The 1 1 Magnificent Lana TURNER Lloyd NOLAN Arthur KENNEDY Russ TAMBLYN Teny MOORE Hope LANGE Lee PHILIPS Diane YARSI Feature ot: 7:00 & 1 1:55 Co-Hit- Shown ot 10:10 only yuLiwra JS HELEN HAYB - ""' . i . r- b v r)- I i iy Closed Sundoy - Wednesday DINNER PARTY Mrs. Lorcna Ward, president of the local Retired Teachers Associ ation, was a recent dinner hostess at her home in honor ot Mrs Alice F. Willits of Ashland, slate recording secretary, Mrs. lva D. Murray of Medford, state member ship chairman, and Edna Russell. Klamath Falls, slate correspond ing secretary. Other guests were Ella Dickensen and Elsie Burton of the local group. Follwoing din ner stale business was discussed. Jfrrali) anb$ett;$ Klamath Falls, Oregon Serving Southern Oreion and Northern California Published daily except Saturday hy Southern Oregon Publishing Company Mam at tUplanade Phone TlWedo 4-dlll FRANK JENKINS. Edtlor PILL JENKINS. Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor Entered aa wcnd claw matter at the (mat office at Klamath Falls, Oregon, on August SO, 1900. under art of Congresa, March 1S?9 Second-fla postage, paid at Klamath Falls. Oregon, and at additional mailing office, SUBSCRIPTION HATES Carrier 1 Month - - S 1 Wi 5 Months -. - . S n 1 Year - - $ltoo Mat! In Advanc 1 Month 9 1 SO 6 Month . MM 1 Year 14 00 Carrter and Deaterfl WeeH day I copy , so Sunday, copy 10c CONTINUOUS A40WS SAT. 4 SUN. KOM 12:45 End! Toftit "TAMANGO" "ORDIIS TO KILL" OPENS TONITE 4:45 Starling SUNDAY! 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