Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 13, 1959, Page 1, Image 1

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In The-
Day's lews
By FRANK JENKINS
As this is writlcn, Mr. Nelson
Rockefeller, governor ot New York,
scion ei one of America's wealth
iest families, ex-holder of many
positions of trust and responsibility
in the federal government, is head
ing West in his first major politi
cal foray to assess his chances of
winning the I960 Republican Presi
dential nomination.
His tour will take him first to
California, where his opposition
lies. It will bring him on to Ore
gorf, Washington and Idaho and
probably other Western states, lhc
political pundits indicate that what
he finds out in the course ot this
swing through the West will go
lar in determining whether or not
he will be a candidate for the
highest, the most glamorous and
the MOST RESPONSIBLE politi
cal position in the world.
Mr. Nixon, the man Mr.. Rocke
feller will have to beat if he is
to' become the GOP nominee, is
n Westerner. He has been here
olten, and is certain to be here
oiten again. If he is to get the
nomination, he will have to have
the solid support of the West.
We of Hie West have been visited
by Mr. Kennedy, who is often re
tcricd to as the most likely candi
date for the Democratic nomination
for President. We have been visited
by Mr. Humphrey, who is certainly
up to now, the busiest of the Demo
cratic candidates. We have been
visited ortcn by Mr. Stephenson,
and it may be taken for granted
that unless he counts himself out
of the race he will come out to
tec us again. It is not improbable
that Mr. Lyndon Johnson, of Texas,
a Southerner, will find an occasion
to visit us.
As of this writing, the Republican
nomination seems to lie between
Mr. Nixon and Mr. Rockefeller
It is quite otherwise in the case
of the Democratic aspirants. Their
number is legion. One sometimes
wonders, reading the political prog
nostications, if ANY Democrat of
prominence ISN'T an aspirant.
All this is quite in order and
as it should be.
IF THE TIME EVER COMES
WHEN GOOD MEN DON'T WANT
TO BE PRESIDENT, IT WILL BE
A SAD DAY FOR THE U.S.A.
In the past, it has been our
rot-too-admirable custom to regard
Presidential campaigns as three
ring circuses FAR SURPASSING
the best offerings of Mr. Barnum
or Mr. Bailey or Mr. Ringling
or any of our other wizards of the
sawdust circle. We have more or
less taken it for granted that the
best showman will win.
Here's a thought:
Why not abandon that ancient
and never very praiseworthy con
cent?
Why not in this admittedly
critical period of our history
say to ourselves in this campaign
that gets nearer with each day
that passes that our whole future
and the future of our children and
the future of our grandchildren and
of THEIR children and their
children's children rests upon our
getting, in this Presidential term
that is approaching, the BEST
LEADERSHIP THAT IS OBTAIN
ABLE? Why not forget all the purely
.political hogwash of the past and
' concentrate on getting leadership
of the highest quality available?
Why not judge ALL aspirants
for the Presidency in that light
and that light only?
It is at least an intriguing
thought.
4
of-
WOODS ROADS in this entire area are being patrolled between now and Chriitmai for
signs of illegal Christmas tree cutting. Government agencies and private owners of tim
berlands are determined to stamp out thievery. Shown are Linton Cunningham, left, and
Bill Badker, right, patrolmen from the Klamath Forest Protective Association headquar
tars. The poster in Badker's hand offers a $250 reward for information leading to the
arrest and conviction of Christmas tree thieves. The reward posters are up in wooded
areas where Shasta and red silvertip fir trees are growing. Citiiens are urged to tele
phone KFPA, TU 4-3282, to report any indications of illegal cutting or trespass in this
drive to stop depredation of young trees.
Price Five Cents 28 Pages
If
irv
JAGGED CASTLE CRAGS tower abpy
muir. A tieer or car-drawn scrapers, e
new road 40 feet above the
ramento River Canyon between Red
for this portion of the road,
ber 18.
BULLETIN
-MEDFORD (AP 1 A witness
testified in court here today that
Donald M. Thompson, 36, Klam.
nlh Falls, was the man who hel
up a supermarket here early m.
September.
John Franklin Barger, nianagi
of a Safeway store here, Irslifii
that Thompson came into ti
supermarket, displayed a piM
ordered money put into a pal
sack and then fled with $2,700.
The testimony conic at a pi
liminary hearing for Thompson
district court.
At the end of the hearing
Thompson was hound over to the
county grand jury on a charge of
armed robbery.
Judge Roy Bashaw continued
Thompson's bail at $15,0(10.
Actor Chosen
To Lead Parade
. HOLLYWOOD (AP) Actor
Charlton Heston will be the grand
marshal for this year's Santa
Claus lane parade of stars.
Each year the parade is start
ed by the lighting of Christmas
trees along Hollywood Boulevard.
Some 150 movie and television per
sonalities will take part in the
Nov. 25 parade.
m ,rtr w m t. mm i tc . i - .ah mm m b
i
1 -4i
"FT
J? yr
is four mile stretch
hauling 20 yards
prese
r I, s
: hi I
jr
ft -i X
Ighway where it threads its
and Dunsmuir. Gibbons and
first
i ii i
iance Man
tees 'Juice'
iring Stump
A The town was still
today about how Jack
used six sticks of dyna
mite to blast a stump from
his back yard Wednesday.
Lichens, an appliance dealer,
said he used that much dynamite
on the advice of a friend whom
he refused to identify.
The -fall-out over the tract area
ivhcre Lichens lives included
of. wood and earth up to 15
over a 600-yard radius. No
hurt, but one homeowner
d a 7-pound piece of wood
called police, who are
investig
Lichens haCrVuiiiP. and no
comment.
HORRORS!
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Actor
Darryl Hickman, 1, and actress
Pamela Lincoln, 22, took out a
marriage license Thursday and
said they would be married Nov.
2i.
The couple said they met and
became engaged during the fum
ing of a horror movie "The Tin-gler."
3
rot wnicn win oe open to
i
0 W UL
I
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1959
i ,71 't4fVt4l
V' j ,0 r . , Klamath A
w N. y - . day by the
Nvl '?v ,V v - fairs.
of free
:y oth
of Dd
of eartn
1 1 y nttind
i.r., 1
U the
t.e3Vfr.cto
irDi
YREKA
was kill
when his
by a train
Grenada Cutoff
Siskiyou County Sherilf Al Cot
tar identified the victim as Ernest
H. Bend. A witness, rancher S
Uruinsma, said Bend was en
ing Southern Pacific tracks a.
ceni 10 nis larm wnen nit at
1:15 p.m.
Cottar said the truck was
broadside and was carried 15
feet before it fell from the .1
motive. Druinsir.a said Bend's dSl
leaped Irom the pickup and was
not hurt.
Bend is survived by the widow.
urhte
er. Mrs. Mar-
I.
body was takenTSXIfftfi1
el: funeral arrangements were in
complete.
POLAND GETS WHEAT
WASHINGTON UPH - The
United States agreed Tuesday to
sell Communist Poland 200,000
tons of surplus feed grain to
meet urgent livestock needs.
AC
ea; ...1 nwsBnj-ncmooiHjmiBj,
fcffle m M the np-oiiate JT
2jr anyone ofVfi
Jersey Central's 1 1 706'
Nabbed After
JERSEY CITY, N.J. (UPD-
-If
locomotives have hearts, Little
1706 of the Jersey1 Central Rail
road must have pined to escape
the sidetrack drudgery of a switch
engine and follow its big brothers
onto the main line.
That's just what diesel switcher
No. 1706 did last night, with near
disastrous results.
It was about 10:28 p.m. and the
123-ton diesel was parked on a
sidetrack here, its engines idling
and the hand brake on.
No one knows exactly what
stirred the throbbing machinery.
But a few moments later a tower-
man in the Communipaw Avenue
freight yards gazed out to sec No.
1706 breezing onto the main line,
600 horsepower of impatient en
gine. He was horrified to discover
no one was in the cab.
Word was flashed ahead, clear
the tracks. All along Ihe heavily-
populated north New Jersey coast
the "runaway alarm was spread.
Trains and trackmen sped to
saTcty at Bayonne, across Newark
Bay, Elizabeth, Woodbridgc, Perth
Amboy and South Amboy. ,
Then began the battle to corral
No. 1706.
The Jersey Central dispatched
one engine in pursuit from Jersey
City, another Irom the other direction.
Montana Mercury
Dips To 34 Below
HELENA. Mont. (I'PP-A bitter
cold wave hit Montana today on
the heels of a blizzard and tem
peratures plummeted as low as
34 degrees below zero.
The numbing cold froze a hard
crust on the two foot layer of
snow, threatening starvation for
10.000 to 15.000 head of cattle and!
sheep unable to break the crust j
to forage. j
A rescue party set out at dawn,"1 wim a stovc-
Timber Firm
Low Bidder
Modoc Lumber
Klamath Falls was listed
bidder for salvage timber
killc
yon
Dins were opei
gency at 2 p.m. Thurs-
Bureau of Indian Af-
Timber being sold ,was killed in
le recent fire which swept por-
sustaincd
which are presently being adver
tised for sale.
Modoc Lumber Company bid
$30.80 per thousand on ponderosa
and -jjHSIir pine and $2.50 per thous
and Btjjlodgcpole pine and. other
speciMj
Othiriiiidders were 1Uciett and
Scheiff,
Klamath Fall: and M
Loggiilc
Company, Cljloauin, and
Lorn
Halmerton, KlihtfLh Falls.
Thnf u)it sold conUanetl approxi
mate tsypTBTJiBOji ffetfof ponder
osa . and u9rnin Wj 150.000
feet of lodgcpole pinana'fthe
specifcs."
No bids were received on anoth-
larger-unit-listed as the.Cave
unlain unit Which contained ap
oximaldly 11 million feet
ggj) and sugar pini
MnF nlal the bureau
readveftia' this unit for sale.
eejtherc were no bids
pay the mini-
Thesc
ted as
-sa and
iiisand
November 14
OPEN
fi:55
November
najt, m, i.j' WWn' ' juJJt JVM
CALIFORNIA
' November 14
OPEN CLOSE
6:54 4:41!
November IS
OPEN CLOSE
6:."4 4:46
Tough Chase
Engineer Chester Gudmunson,
58, of Roselle Park, N.J., was the
first to spot his quarry. He, Fire
man Harold Johns and Brakcman
Leo Barry had been yanked off
a local freight run to take after
1706 in a brother-diesel of the
1700 class.
Gudmunson said little 1706 was
doing about 40 miles per hour,
dangerous collision speed, when
he decided that the only way to
halt Ihe runaway was to couple
onto it.
By then 1706 had dashed 22
miles through some of the densest
railroading on the East Coast, and
was gaining speed.
Instead of crashing head-on into
1706, Gudmunson reversed - and
took olf ahead of the maverick,
letting 1706 gradually catch up
with him.. Through Woodbridgc,
Perth Amboy and South Amboy
the runaway "chased" Gudmun
son until they reached Morgan on
Raritan Bay. There Gudmunson
stood his ground.
"We were prepared to take the
shock however much it was to be,"
he said. "It gave us quite a jar.
she. coupled right into my
coupling. Alter she stopped, my
brakes held her down." ,
Fireman, Harold Johns jumped
lo the track and hopped aboard
1700's empty cab and shut olf the
runaway's throttle.
rniHnK.
iecr"aTrwtttMi.
on it. mw-ona
icgotiate AgewKTl
inyonc ofiVH;j5'to
iu28 per tMTiMRja an ponncro
(W&8 pet ttwSt
sugaip!n
I oiuWogfeoo!
m j' t. . "tiii r ts .i
alUflimiiftV I P'UriTl. l
Wijnsugaipmernmi . pern
U oipojlNiidlBPii. I
:t r
4:" Ui1
li" T
lb J
Telephone TU 4-8111
No. 6550
into the cold and waist-deep snow
drifts in search of two Montana
State University students trapped
high in the Rocky Mountains while
elk hunting.
The sheriff's office at Missoula
said chances were "very ' slim"
they would find Hob Amick Jr.. of
Billings, and Richard Maxwell, of
Warmspring.f, alive unless the
youths had found a mountain cab-
"We'll find them, but we don't
know in what direction," a deputy
sheriff said grimly.
Amick and Maxwell were lhc
only two hunters still unaccounted
for. Other hunters stumbled down
from the mountains last night
after a .frightening battle through
the worst blizzard in Montana
history.
The cold wave dropped Montana
temperatures to 34 degrees below
at Drummond, 33 below at
below at West Yel-
lowslunoi4C slate's high tcm-
PflSWij was a frigid six
above arBnaw
Montana raiibhen. caught with
a 15 per cent jfttrplks in livestock
due to sjjrtiiarla'ts, bcean a
battle I to reach their
apped herds ain Kicks.
The ranchers midlthe "fatality
rate for strays utoulo! probably be
severe, but saut past experience
had taught then tojlie prepared
by laying in plen jr ofifeed.
At least 17 dea ;h i ere blamed
on the storm, wl ch jiad reached
its icy, snow-covtffed -lingers, deep
into the Middle Wcst,
tigitL were MltjclWn snow-
slickci
)is liihtviiVsi six died
iwr tvcrl Uled in
i x r. .1.
oncffalalilfri was re-
it m'twHewt to dc
htj niches Vf snbw
the If exa-OlAahomS,ianhan
die, NfMas&fc$Kfinsas,Mjssouri
and lot
fi-if I
The Wuttltci' jB-au suiB
from two to ao1
JilcJ rage throjtgh
PennsMtta'
all higfiwlyfrom tfi
the Appajffchians
nraJJMis.
coia wave was
cause local frosting
California.
Helena was a. cripri
Huge snow drifts hid ha
buried cars abandoned!-
snow-packed business disl
Weallu
Klamath Falls and
''air and cold thrnii
ov tonight 0-lJU"ili
pesiertlliy
fast night i
Prcclp. last 2l
Since Oct. 1
.Same period
Low in area,
Northern (I
through Suturl
coast before
Frost in the '
northeasterly
B Tmsd
in AWieraoaJ
Iowa?'f andy
m saia fJiows
Inchel locp
fte OhVal-
Ttia ami turn
tf ttockicl to
intpi poitnial
la i,einri
Haft
1" I'
M fl 4:00 p.m.
vtfnit- 5:00 ,,,
lUfiatiipfi.v. 5:30 n.ni.'
Satiitiay 6:30 p.m.
If 7U 20 ' 7:45 p.m.
SSours ....fl 0 !" n'm- -
II H. :
jail year S3 0.46 .'
JUiiloquin i'J . 13
iHlornia -ff'alr
jfy but fnglli the
Mm. Sliehllfi inlder.
and fresh nmherly winds fc kally. I
2 1 .HI II 3.UU Uillli IIILaiviaaii
H 7
. . m ,t.. r :- 1 n
an a a t ' -
i yd .ftp--' br i
Jmjr- 'ft iS-.. .1..?.. . VV.v - 1 r
W r& n
i t i (snV 'O- vY v ; V
TICKET SALES for the Central Labor Council-sponsored dance td be held on November :
21 will get a real boost on Saturday when members of the Future Nurses Club of KUHS
will sell tickets in the downtown area. Shown seated, from left, arc Barbara Herman; :
and Darlyne Brown, president of the club; standing, Jan. Menningor, secretary treasurer, .
and Sandy Nash, vice president. The group is sponsored by the auxiliary of Klamath Coun.;
ty Medical Society with Mrs. Hugh Currin as adviser. Mrs. Howard Strode i school ad
viser and the picture was taken in her offieo at KUHS as final plans wara made. The girls
will sell tickets in pairs -while Shrine festivitiesoiake place in the business section of Klam
ath Falls, Money from the dance goes (to the Hospital Survey Fund.
ifiis
Top Cattleman
JACK MARSHALL
Top honors went to two Klamath
County cattlemen today at the 47th
annual Oregon Cattlemen's Associ
ation convention in Portland when
the Marshall brothers of Poe Val
ley received the H15D Oregon Cat
tleman of the Year award.
The naming of Jack and Bill
Marshall as top cattlemen in the
stale marked Ihe ninth successive
year lhat an Oregon Cattleman of
the Year award has been made.
Sponsor of the award, Herman
Oliver of John Day. made the pres
entation Ibis afternoon during the
linal sessions of the 47th annual
Oregon Cattlemen's Association
convention.
This is the second time the
award has gone to brothers, as the
Morrow brothers of Madras were
similarly honored last year.
Twice in nine years the award
has come to Klamath County. Law
rence J. Horton of KlamaUt Falls
was 19.")5 Oregon Cattleman of the
Year.
In September, judges at the
county level chose the Marshall
brothers' tor the county honor.
Their chief competitors for the ti
tle at the state level were Verne
Hanna of Maupin and Don Nichols
of Ashland.
CEREMONIAL PROGRAM
Saturday, Nov,
5:00 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
Leave Willard
:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
2:45 p.m.
10:00 a.m. to
it if : z
QUI a., -
Si 7:00 p.m.-
fj 8:40 p.m.-
Pair
Inlonoir;
1 1
BILL MARSHALL
The brothers arc sons of the late
Mr. and Mis. Albert Marshall who
moved to Oregon from the Midwest
and settled in the Mtdford area
in 1907, before Jack Marshall was
a year old. In 11112, the family
moved lo Klamath County and pur
chased property in the Poe Valley
area which is still operated as part
of the 5.100-acre Marshall Broth
ers cattle ranch. In addition to the
owned properly, they have approx
imately 8,000 acres under lease in
Poe Valley and the Swan Lake
area.
Their cow, calf and yearling op
eration stands as an excellent illus
tration of a happy combination of
the old and the new methods in
converting feed into beef. It is ef
ficient and representative of Klam
ath County.
Both have served as president ot
Klamath County Cattlemen's Asso
ciation and their wives are active
in Klamath County Cow Belles.
The brothers have given generous
ly of their time and efforts to
the industry's betterment at the
county, state and national level.
They have supported and in many
instances led the way in programs
designed to improve beef produc
tion and -increase beef consump
tion. Hotel for duck hunting party.
. .t imw . if
Candidates and Nobles register at recorder's desk.
Business session Willard Hotel. '
Willard Hotel. All candidates will be laken in low
from hotel by Temple Guard.
Potentate hospitality.
3:00 p.m. Uniformed units will put on stunts
and demonstrations on Main Street. Special
Events Committee will be on hand to direct same.
Potentate and Divan will visit candidates.,
Parade forms at Second Street and Klamath Ave.
Parade moves nut promptly. Parade chairman
will assign positions. ,
Hospitality hour Balsigcr Building for nobility
and uniformed groups.
Dinner for candidates at Klamath Auditorium.
Dinner for nobility and uniformed units.
Concert, etc.
Reception of Ilillah Potentate, Divan, Past Po
tentates and distinguished guests.
Presentation of Colors. '
Ilillah Drum Corps.
Hlllnh Temple Patrol.
Honor paid departed brothers.
First section Ilillah Ritualistic team, Oriental
Band, Chanters.
Second section.
After second section: Nobles Oasis, Balsigcr
Building. Dutch lunch on Hillah Temple. Entertainment.
' ''t
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