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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 20, 1960)
Meeting Slated "DENNIS THE MENACE" Teen Wives Need Spanking, WIN'S PAROLE WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (UPP An internationally known jewel thief, who won himself a reduc '. tion of his jail sentence with le gal knowledge acquired In prison, was eligible for parole today. Gerard Graham "Raffles" Den nit had his sentence reduced Tuesday from 18 years to life down to 15 to 20 years after gain ing dismissal of three felony convictions. ETNA The annual Congrega tional Church dinner and meeting will be held In the church Wednes day, January 20, at 8:30 p.m. Fol lowing dinner, annual reports of organizations will be received. New otliccrs will be installed and the JUDO budget will be adopted. Guest speaker will be the Rev. Ray L. Wells of the Redding Congrega tional Church. ' ' Doors Optn 4:45 r.M, Specially Selected Return En gagement Of Two Greet Eptcit TODAY AND TOMORROW One Complete Show at 7:15 P.M. . , lotting jUM SMq Robert TAYLOR Ava GARDNER Mel FERRER CRAWFORD BAKER lirlfiril iMiliMlMllliffllillil iUXXAWDM DUMAS' pe Three Mu5ters I i count r Technicoiorg ft A. HOLLYWOOD Calif. AP) -Teen-age wives? "You have to spank them once in a while," says Glynn Wolfe, "but after they're tamed they made wonderful wives." Wolfe, 46, a Hollywood hotel owner, should know. He has been married 12 times. Each marriage has been to a teen-ager, he said Tuesday "because they're happy that they don't have to work, and they don't make demands." The break-up comes, the India na native added, when the girls et "fidgety" and want to "run loose." "And you can't hold anybody if they don't want to stay." The girls, however, often return after the divorce, Wolfe said, be cause: 'They know if they get in a jam, they can come home. I feel obligated to furnish them a place to live and eat." Four former Wolfe wives reside Birthdays Bore Philly Woman PHILADELPHIA (AP) Mary Middleton has become so bored with birthdays she watched tele vision Tuesday. She was 104. Mrs. Middleton, who still cljmbs the stairs and does light house work said television is more fun than reminiscing about the day Lincoln was shot. Mrs Middleton was 9 then, still living in her native Chester, Pa. She came to Philadelphia wnen she was 15. Her husband died in 1890 and her two children in infancy. in his hotel. When one of them went to get a divorce from her second husband Monday, the other three and Wolfe went along to volunteer as corroborating wit nesses. Only Wolfe was called to testify, however, and Shirley Lou Espy, 23, was free by default from her radio executive husband, William D. Espy. Another ex living In the hotel is Peggy Lou Spencer Wrol(e, 29. He gave her half interest in the hntoi wnlfe said, and she is going to manage it when he moves to Las Vegas. Thp Npvada gambling spot has less traffic and smog, Wolfe ex plained, and it might be an easier spot in which to find his 13th mate. His parade of wives began in 1932 in Vincennes, Indiana. By 1936 he had been married and di. vorced four times and jurlg asked him not to turn Vincennei into a Hollywood, Wolfe said. "So I went to Hollywood." Wolfe said he considers each trip before a justice of the peaca to recite marriage vows his last. "But it's awful easy to get a divorce," he added, "and they'ri a bad habit, believe me." BEHIND BARS SESSION MENARD, 111. (UPI)-Menard State Penitentiary offers the lat est thing in convention sites. Pris on officials invited the Southern Illinois Editorial Assn. to hold it s annual winter meeting behind bars. The editors accepted. ..AMD PLEASE KIP COWOMe HOWE SET OVER THE HEAVES; Altamont Junior High News On Friday, January 8, the Alta mont Junior High Student Coun cil held the fourth meeting of the school year. The library and room No. are being used as game rooms during the noon hour. The expen ment looks as if it will be success ful. It is supervised by members of the student council. All student council room representatives were told to make posters about the picture taking contest. These were judged by Alan Rathmaker, Diane Crawford, Mrs. Maxine Burnt, IV. 1 If A T A I II If A I A I A lllk'l Tivl 6 AMAZING I NEWI EXCITING! )XLUSIVENSAT I $mmYI POWERFUL he took tk iiimmm . a, f f PICTURES' the uw t? ctuiitiiir cmtMBU X A RUSSIAN -bj Vtlf WN HNDS '"'"l" f Mrs. Isabelle Brixner, and lioxie Bennington. The winner from the seventh grade was Nada Daglas and Sally Bratton received honor able mention. In the eighth grade Pally Bratton received first prize with Davy Davis and Dar yl Mitchell both receiving hon orable mention. January 14 was the date of Alta mont's first basketball game of the season. Our eighth grade team, coached by Jim Mc Gown, played Merrill's eighth grade team. The game was played at Altamont. The score was 21 to 27 in favor of Altamont Junior High. Don Workman and Vernon Petrick each made three baskets. Bill Smith and Roy Denham both scored once. Marvin Yunck made two baskets. Roger Rogers and Duane Singleton both scored once. Don Workman made two free throws and Vernon Petrick made one. Following this game our sev enth graders played Merrill sev enth graders, the first string, coached by Doyle Whipple, lost to the Merrill team with a score of to 10. j Friday, January 15, marked the date of a talent assembly. Some of the students participated. Deb- bra Kennedy did a piano solo. Twila Hunter played three num bers on her accordion. Daryl Mit chell, Dennis Rogers, Marvin Cun ningham, George Webber, and Curt Coleman did the beatnik, ver sion of "Paul Revere's Ride." Mike Schlagel did the English version of the same poem. Our talent as sembly ended with Gerald Arget- singcr doing some magic tricks. On January 15 all of the Alta mont Junior High students re ceived tickets to sell for the PTA carnival. This will be on January 29. The high boy and girl sales man will each receive $5. The room selling the most tickets will elect a carnival king and queen. The high boy and girl salesman will crown them during the carni val. Altamont Elementary is also participating. By Roxie Bennington, News Reporter. A:-f J Y- I "Portroit A in Cinemascope and B I In Color" kW. umoCOLOR i I co"l J Tom HELMORE M j SHE WAS A BEWILDERED BRIDE HER HUBBY A FRENCHMAN WITH IDEAS . . . And the most delayed honeymoon in history! M-G-M presents DM KERR ii il:Lji.l ii.-.. et- . 5, Ti di-touring French hubby iM.u;,, CHEVALIER Amazing ifar of "GGC . IN COUN! Youi Woman Loses Last Son PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) A tragic message and her last son was dead. It had happened to Luda Best before. This time the message told of the death of her middle son, Marion R. Best. 36, in a fiery airplane crash at Holdcroft, Va. The death, like those of her oth er two sons, was sudden. The Navy lieutenant commander was killed Monday night in the crash of a Capital Airlines flight The plane, in which 50 persons perished. wa"s en route to Norfolk, Va.. from Washington, D.C. Mrs. Best's oldest son, Marvin, died on a merchant ship in 1M3 from a head injury. In 1955. her youngest son. Malcolm, was killed with three other men in an auto mobile collision. Mrs. Best's son-in-law, John Smith was killed in an automobile-bus collision. Klamath Falli. Oregon Strvlng Southern Oregon and Northern California Published daily excpt Saturday by Southtrn Oregon Publishing Company Main at Esplanade Phone HJxedo 4-4111 FRANK JENKINS. Editor BILL JENKINS. 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