PAGE 2 A
Reclamation Group Asks
Federal Projects Yearly
DENVER AP) The new
president of the National Recla
mation Assn. Saturday called (or
some new starts on federal recla
mation projects every year.
LaSelle E. Coles of Prinevillc,
Ore., said in an interview:
"Orderly development of recla
mation in the light of current day
conditions means some new starts
tach and every year.
"That does not mean a Iremen
dous pyramid of new obligations
In any one year out a constant: ,.,, ., . ,
' , , , . , . That illustrates the need for
ncreasc in re a ion to our nation-!,, ,., , ... . ,
' ,,, . , , i he NftA o consult with and work
a economic growth and the popu-l ........ . .
, , . .. twith the Eastern states,
lation increase.
The Eisenhower administration
has opposed new starts the last
Anitnta n( inrc hill Piirviriwc
vu" ' o
voted some nevertheless.
to
Coles was elected Kriday
jucceea uuy v,. jdcKsun u... ...
Anahuac, Texas, as the XRA
j - r l ....I.. I- .1
wound up us m.n annual conven
tion here.
St..... .I... U -II Kap.unc rnnit
tered to ".cnd ihi mUni; of'!.
the 17-stalc organization.
Retiring president Jackson said
the convention was one of the best
the NftA had ever held.
"I believe it marked a turning
point for recent years," Jackson
"The vision and vigor displayed
by the new reclamation commis-l
tioner, Klovd E. Dominy, will in-
.pile the NRA to greater efforts.
"Our board also met during the1
convention with the executive'
committee of the interstate cotf-
CLOSED TOHITE
OPEN THURSDAY!
TONY RftNDAU - -
fwn
, NICK ADAMS MARCEL DALIO JULIA MEADE
cnNTiNunus rnnM ii:5 p. u.
' " ' I I r Mill r II irirr-rritnn r f n n inniiMimimi
BOB CONSIDINE, noted correspondent, says:
"IF THEY EVER MAKE A MORE MEAN
INGFUL WAR PICTURE, THEY'LL HAVE
TO FIRE LIVE AMMO FROM THE SCREEN!"
mi "n-f -T r fn in ii m im i ii
t,rrin STANLEY BAKER GUY ROUE LEO McKERN
2nd Feature
ference on water problems, a
further evidence of Increasing
liaison with the 31 Eastern states
which have become increasingly
interested in irrigation in the last
10 years.
"We learned a most significant
thing Mississippi has already
changed its water laws to limit
riparian rights and make predom
inant the appropriation theory
which is the foundation of Wesl-
cr walt.r jaws-
coles sain ne rcgaras ontaining
congressional enactment of legis
lation to protect Western state'
,. :,ir riolilc oc tiio V., 1 nl.io,.
live of the NRA, with the need
f,,r- a onnO not tv ovnaoHinrt i-Ofla.
nia,jon pr0Kram just
rqual importance.
about of
The convention again put t h c
i water rights legislation as its No.
,"y declaring 'for it in the
first of 28 approved resolutions
Bakersfield, Calif., was voted
the 1!)60 convention site.
Log Truck, Car
ACCIdCnt ratal
MKDKOKD, Ore. (AP) - Mrs.
Lowella Russell, 71, Selah, Wash.,
was injured fatally Kriday when
a tar driven by her husband col-
1I(1N wltn a '"SS'ng irucK near
I here.
The impact hurled her to the
highway. She died in a hospital a
short time later.
Her husband, Harvey Allen Rus
sell, 74, suffered cuts.
The truck driver, Ted Melvin
Adams, 42, was not hurt.
,,krtZa, COLOR. ClNEMASCOPB
THEUMA RiTTER
Feature 1:15
5:28 7:30
3:20 '
9:40
-"ROBBERY UNDER ARMS"
HERALD AND
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
' Most people call it Hallowb'bh.
I call rr TKCK OftSAT DAY!'
Butane Gas
Enters City
Water Main
CRKSTVIEW, Fla. JAP) A
plumber's error plunged this town
of 10.000 persons into a night of
terror.
five persons were injured In
three explosions Friday night
alter butane gas gushed into the
city water system.
Mayor Harry Booth said the
plumber got his lines mixed while
working at a small Negro cafe and
hooked a gas line from a 250-gal-
h.n tank onto a water main. Bu
tane gas is used for heating.
The cafe was almost destroyed
and a 5-year-old Negro boy, Larry
Thompson, was injured.
A short while later Carolyn
Eiland Kennedy started to brush
her tcelli at her father's home.
When she turned on the water
spigot, gas fumes reached a pilot
light on a heater in the bathroom
and an explosion followed. She and
lur father, Arthur Eiland, were
slightly injured.
The third explosion occurred at
the home of Miss Elizabeth Den
nis, supervisor of lunchrooms for
the county school system. She and
a teacher, Miss Lillie Waldrnn
were injured. Those two and young
Larry were hospitalized.
After the trouble was found,
area television stations and
police oflicers with megaphones
warned residents not to turn on
their water.
The mayor said early Saturday
that many thousand of gallons of
water had been flushed from all
the mains.
TODAY!
GORDON JACKSON
NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore
Pfc. RICHARD DETROIT, a
National Guardsman of
Klamath Falls, recently com
pleted a six - month active
duty .training program at
Fort Ord. He was judged
trainee of the week once
and was top marksman in a
class of 200 shooting the
M-l rifle.
Anti-Gambling
Drive Urged
TENDLETON (AP)-Atty. Gen,
Robert Y. Thornton says that dis
trict attorneys and other law en
forcement officers should enforce
anti-gambling laws everywhere,
including in veterans' and fra
ternal clubs.
In an address prepared for de
livery at the convention of the
Oregon Assn. of Non-Profit Clubs,
Thornton said:
"There has been criticism in the
past of district attorneys and
county and city police officers
who enforced anti-gambling laws
in veterans' and fraternal clubs.
"I do not believe such criticism
is warranted. While 1 realize that
these organizations are private in
nature and that the machines are
played by members only, it is im
possible to justify a policy of
cracking down on slot machines
in public taverns, night clubs and
resorts, while allowing them to
operate freely in private clubs.
"Such a policy is both discrim
inatory and un-American, As long
as it is the law of the state that
these devices are Illegal, it is not
within the power of the attorney
general or the district attorney to
.exempt fraternal organizations."
Escape Hatch
BAKNSTAPLK. Knpjand (ITU
The town council Friday night
voted to provide garden sheds for
its municipal housing units to let
lathers escape their wives, chil
dren and pets. The units will-Rive
lathers a chance to smoke their
pipes and "recover their equili
brium," the coMncil said.
TKY ME NOW
CORBY, Knpjand (I'PH Mi
chael Sumpler, a judo club offi
cial, said Kriday that a woman
applied for judo training because
tier husband beats her. She
"seems very anxious to deal with
him herself," he added.
Klamath Falli. Oreion
Serving Southern Oregon
and Northern California
Published daily except Saturday
Southern Oregon Publishing Company
Main at Esplanade
Phone Tl'xedo 4-H111
PRANK J FN KINS. Editor
FUU. JFN'KINS. Managing Editor
FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor
Entered second elm matter at the
pol office at Klamath Fall. Oregon,
on August 30, lytW. under art of
Congress, March 3, 179. Second-claul
potage paid at Klamath Falli, Oregon,
and at additional mailtnp- offices.
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T"j gl iHTTii ! !
State Gairns
Cole Defense
'Convenience'
SAM FRANCISCO (UPD The
blackout defense by accused Cop-
Slayer George Cole was termed
a "convenience born of necessity
Friday by the prosecution, who
asked the jury for a first-degree
murder conviction.
Cole's case for the 1956 shoot
ing of Sergeant Joseph Lacey dur
ing a holdup attempt is expected
to go to the jury of seven women
and five men Monday.
Chief Assistant District Attor
ney Francis Mayer summed up
the prosecution's case in one hour
Friday, stating that the state
would rest on the evidence so far
presented. This evidence includes
positive identification by witness
es who said they saw Cole in the
tavern where the fatal shooting
took place.
Mayer emphasized that Cole
has admitted his alleged "black-,
out" caused by beer and barbitu
ates was "the only time in his
life" he was so affected. Cole tes
tified Thursday that he remem
bered nothing of the night of the
crime in San Francisco.
Mayer also discussed the death
weapon, which Cole admits having
had in his possession a few hours
before the shooting.
"The gun that was in Cole's
hand that night was found buried
in Oregon along the route of his
flight from San Francisco," the
prosecutor said.
I Cole's own attorney, Gregory
Stour, was to follow Mayer's pres
entation with a closing argument
of his own.
Tf lkA i..r.r rinc the, v.nMi.U
,i i,.. Ju.j ......o v vw.i..i
Cole guilty Of first-degree murder,)
the case will then eo into a second
Hie case Will incn go into a secona.
uiidsc lu ucciuc wiicLiici lie anuuiu
be sent to the gas chamber or be
given life imprisonment.
Cole, at one time on the FBI's
list of "10 most wanted" crimin
als, was captured last July in Des
Moines, la., where he was operat
ing a gas station.
'Fixed' Story
Put In Record
MADRAS (AP) Republican
Stale Chairman Peter M. Gunnar
said Saturday that Sen. Richard
L. Neuberger (D-Ore) "inserted
a doctored magazine article into
the official record of Senate pro
ceedings." .!
In an address prepared for de
livery at a meeting of the Jef
ferson County GOP Central Com
mittee, Gunnar said the article,
from Coronet Magazine, was put
in the Congressional Record Aug.
26.
The article was by Sen. Stephen
M. Young (D-Ohio).
Gunnar said Neuberger "doctor
ed and censored the Coronet ar
ticle so as to remove from it the
numerous references to activities
which would embarrass some of
his Democratic colleagues."
Gunnar added this was an ex
ample of Neuberger's "double
standard of political conduct."
He said the article was placed
in the record only six days after i Frhf,rl" c"rr October 29 in KUmath
. . , a a - u.f : Vallry Hospital a girl, weighing 7 lbs.,
Xeubcrgcr introduced a resolution 5 zs.
to prohibit Senators from making! , coffman Born to Mr. and Mr.
. r ... . , r, ;Jmts Coffman October 2ft in Klam-
enanges in me uiiuic&aiuiicu net
ord. i
Disease Perils
Valley Pears
CORVALLIS (AP) An unknown
plant disease Is threatening the
Mcdford area's 14 million dollar
pear industry and a legislative in
terim committee thinks the state
should provide some help to grow-
State Sen. Francis Ziegler (R
Corvallisi, chairman of the Inter
im Committee on Agriculture, said
the group will urge that the state
Emergency Roard provide funds
to help finance research on the
disease.
The Pear Growers League,
which said it has spent $28,000 on
research since the disease first
struck two years ago, is asking
the state for $17,000 to continue
research.
The plant disease study is being
made by Henry Hartman, Oregon
State College pear specialist.
The Conquistadores were the
leaders of the Spanish conquest
of America, especially Mexico and
Peru, in the 16th century.
IIIIIIIIIQ
YOU CAN FINISH
- HIGH SCHOOL Z
Z AT HOME Z
As fast as you con do
tm the work. If you are
bjb between the oges of
17 and 60 ond have
left school write for wm
free sample lesson
" and 55-page high
school booklet.
sjbj Amertran Srliael.rtf pi. RF-SS
N:IKI HeHvwAAd Hive. Ml
PJBj Hellvwaed tl, Cal.
Nsme .i
a" Address - - aaaa
II 1 1 1 1 III s
If - - -- -. S 2 I
HIS HONOR WAS FIRST to purchase a ducar good for ad
mission to the 31st annual Policemen's Ball at the Klamath
Auditorium Thanksgiving evening from 9 p.m. until I a.m.
Music will be provided by Baldy Evans and his band. His
Honor, of course, Is Lawrence Slater, mayor of Klamath
Falls, and the tickled officer who nailed him Is Patrolman
Carl Jennings.
Court
KLAMATH COI'NTV
DISTRICT rol'RT
Darrell James Wilson, driving with
out operator's license, $7.50.
Darrell James Wilson, violation of
basic rule. S7.50.
Emanuel Junior Kofford, fall to dis
play license plates. SIO.
Gerald Everett Ward, no PUC per
mit. $25.
Jessie John Ramirez, fail to drive on
1 riRht. S10.
cht(.r Bpck defective lights. $7 50.
Thomas Elmo Miller, prut larceny,
90 dyi1 county jail, committed.
mchard Clayton Anderson, petit lar-
L-en.v. wu a.ys coumy jail, commiuen.
Margaret Ray Prime, violation of
basic rule. $7.50.
James Lloyd Depew, void foreign
license. $7.50.
Donald Albert Gray, fail to atop at
stop sign, S5.
Samuel Victor Lively, fail to stop
at stop sign, $5.
Dan Scott, petit larceny, arraigned;
plea of guilty; 60 days county jail.
Norma Lee Harrington, violation of
basic - rule, dismissed by district at
torney. Forrest Hawlhorne Ferguson, mo
tor truck speeding, dismissed upon mo
tion of district attorney.
James Harry Eugene Taylor, no op
erator's license, dismissed upon mo
tion of district attorney.
K I.AM AT II FALLS
MI'NICIPAL COURT
Ransom Cowan, drunk, (25 or five
days.
Richard F. Munson, drunk, $23 or
five days.
Frank i m Hutchison, drunk, $25 or
five days.
At Burns, drunk, $25 or five days.
Oral Everett Moore, drunk, $25 or
five days.
Hazel E. Shelton, drunk and disor
derly conduct, continued,
Harold William Peden, drunk, $25
or live days.
TRAFFIC
Ralph Allen Shafer, no operator's
license, $5.
David Francis Baker, passing on
right, $5.
Joseph Brock Evans, excessive ex
haust noise. $5.
William Burband, excessivt exhaust
noise, $5.
On The Record
KLAMATH FALLS
BIRTHS
BOVS
GARRETT Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Donald K. Garrett October 29 in Klam
ath Valley Hospital a boy, weighing
ins.
i oz.
REDDING Born to Mr. and Mrs
Robert M. Redding October 29 in
Klamath Valley Hospital a boy. weirh
ing 8 lbs.. 11 oz.
GIRLS
CARR Born to Mr. and Mrs.
ath Valley Hospital
firl, weighing
7 IDS.. 10 ozs.
1B59 ROL'NDIT
Boys: 494 Girls: 390
KLAMATH COINTV
MARRtACE LICENSES
Lewis S. Kandra. Merrill, and Lois
M. Erickson.
DIVORCE PETITIONS
Elizabeth Golllher va. Darrell Golli
her, seeks separation.
MOTION TABLED
MON'ROE, Wisconsin tyPI)
A motion to rehire Green County
Auditor Alvin Moritz was tabled
at the Jasl minute Friday when
the county board learned Moritz
nad not submitted a written aud-i
it since he was hired in 1!)54. '
LOOK AT
PRICE TAG!
This Dynamic i
OLDS
with Standard Transmitsion hat heater, back-ua links, n i r.
Wheel, heavy-duty eir cleaner, tinted windshield 0J1 'i 'H" f"""
onti-freeic, 15 gallon, of 901 10.000 miCltt
don't hov. to "order" thi, one - it ready to 60! P ' "
(We have 2 other Olds with Standard T,anSmission in stock sim-
larly low pneed, and plenty other, with Hydromatie TJl?..LTi
DICK
7th & Klamath
s
J ft
8
Records
Monte MarU,
excessive exhaust
noise. 5.
James Patrirk Smith, excessive ex-;
haust noise. $5. j
William M. Benson, ran stop sign,
$5. '
Reuben G. Tena. ran red light. $5.,
Alden A. Vashaw, violation of basic'
rule, $10.
Durhl Elvin Adams, ran stop sign,1
$5.
Terry Lloyd Glhwright. ran stop
sign, $5.
Donald Covert. imDrODer left turn.
$5.
Ell. Louis. Schlegal, ran red light'
' ,3.
Frank Bernard Silva. ran red lieht.
$5.
Viola Darlene Mitchell, ran red light,
$5.
Richard Earl Clark, inadequate em
ergency brake, $5.
Donna Maurine Turner, violation
basic rule. $15.
Melvin W. Pearce, ran red light. $5.
Irvin Pay Ion Redfox, expired license1
plates, $5. i
Marvin Enos Gordon, ran red light,
$5.
Earl Valention King, following too
closely, $5. -
Danny Lee Johnston, failure to yield1
right of way to a vehicle. $5. j
Richard Cavet Humphreys, violation:
01 basic rule. $25; improper turn, $5.
Charles T. Campbell, ran red light,
$5.
Nevin Robert Haudenshield, viola
tion basic rule, $15.
Gerald Wilson Bryan, failure to
heed red light and siren, $5, suspended.
Harry David Miller, reckless driv
ing. $25.
MKTKK WARRANTS
Kenneth H. Pound, $3.
Edward T. Cornwall, $6.
Jack R. Leach. $24.
Carl E. Kent, $22.
Elizabeth Perkins. $8.
Mary Allgaier. $6.
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HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Hal Gray,
son, 51, whose once famous dance
band featured such performers as
Betty Grable and Stan Kenton, is
dead.
His body was found in his room
at a Hollywood hotel Friday.
Grayson toured the country with
his band from the early 30 to the
mid 4()s and appeared in several
movies.
He had a severe drinking prob-.
lem in recent years. At one time
he was earning his living washing
cars.
A coroner's deputy attributed,
death to natural causes.
Tobacco ranks fourth in cash re
ceipts among all field crops of thg
United States.
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: Oregon f
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