Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 8, 1960)
o e PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Tuesday, March 8. 19B0 Water Chief Gives Talk On Measure LAKEVIKW The Lake County area In Southern Oregon has a better water supply this year than last, farmers were told at a meeting hero Monday However, forecaster W. T. Frost said the situation still will lie no better than fair unless storms this month continue to produce nbovo normal snow and rain. Frost, snow survey supervisor for the Soil Conservation Service and the Oregon Agricultural Ex perimcnt Station, said last month brought a good increase in the mountain snow pack's water con tent. It now is 83 per cent of the , W43-47 average. But. he continued, soils under the remaining snow pack at higher elevations still are not fully primed and will soak up some of the snowmelt runoff. Stored water in Drews and Cot tonwood reservoirs is only 26 per cent of average and 20 per cent of last year March 1. Forecasts ol stream flow for the area are below average and vary irom 84 per cent on Deep Creek to a low of 55 per cent for inflow to Drews Reservoir. Twenty -Mile Creek is forecast at 70 per cent and Honey Creek at 80 per cent of average. The Chewaucan River is forecast at 66 per cent of its 15-year average. 'DENNIS THE MEKlACE" Defense Begins In Murder Case DOWNtEVILLE, Calif, (UPI). The defense opened its case to day in the trial of Larry Lord Motherwell, charged with the mur der of a 72 -year-old widow Loin Washington, D.C. Defense attorney Jack Regcs said he would need about three days to present the case of the 43 year old defendant. Regcs moved for dismissal of the case Monday, but his motion was dc nied by Superior Judge Warren Steele. Potluck Supper ETNA The Scott Valley Farm Bureau preceded their regular monthly meeting with a potluck upper February - 25 at the high school. Ulrich Preiss, German for eign exchange student, was guest speaker. He gave a talk on his home land. rr r : ' " 6EE, OIO YA EVER SEE SUCH SJMV GRAVY? Conversion Plans Told MACDOEL Plans for converting the old Mount Hebron School build ing into a residence for teachers were announced by Principal Jer ry Ross of Macdocl Grade School The county board of educa tion Thursday night allocated $3, .)00 in forest money for the pur pose. Principal Ross said no local property tax money will be used The Macdocl district acquired the Mount Hebron School building ast year when the two districts were merged. The students were moved to the new Macdoel school, mile away. The old building has been used only for the Mount He bron branch of the county free li brary. Ross said the library 1s now being closed out and will be open Monday to receive books out on loan. The Macdocl trustees maintain small tcacherage on the grade school grounds, now occupied by the Itoss family, who will prob ably move to the new and larger quarter's when finished. Lack of housing in the Macdoel area is the reason for the district providing tcachcragcs. T Ends Tonife "Crime & Punishment U.S.A." "Justice & Caryl Chessman" mm Starts enn Jamfic Natalip. Garner Wood Come and have j; WARNER BROS. ! I U jQk TECHNICOLOR" "H KINA FOGH-DEAN JAGGCR-E G MARSHALL- HLNRY JONES California Weather United Press International San Francisco Bay Area: Part ly cloudy today. Fair tonight and Wednesday. High today 58. Low tonight 40-48. Northwesterly winds 12-22 knots. Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Con sidcrable cloudiness today with a few snow showers. Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Colder to day and tonight. Sierra Nevada: Partly cloudy today with scattered snow flurries northern ranges. Fair tonight and Wednesday. Colder today and tonight. Sacramento Valley: Partly cloudy today with a few showers likely northern portion this morn ing. Fair tonight and Wednesday, Cooler today and tonight. High both days 54-60, low tonight 34- 42. Vanaoie winus a-u in. p h. Northwestern California: Partly cloudy today with a few showers Ft. Bragg and Ukiah northward. Cooler today and tonight. High to day and low tonight Napa 58 and 37, Ukiah 55 and 35, Santa Rosa 60 and 34. Coastal winds south westerly 15-20 knots Cape Mendo cino northward today, otherwise northwest or west 12-25 knots. HONOR MASARYK WASHINGTON (UPD-The Post Office issued a new stamp Mon day honoring Thomas G. Masa- ryk, founder of the Czech republic after World War 1, as a cham pion of liberty." The stamp was issued in four and eight-cent dc nominations. Cooperative Slates Meet FORT ROCK The annual meet ing of the Miristate Electric Co operative will be held in LaPine on Monday, March 21, In the high school gymnasium. North Lake County, as well as portions of Deschutes, and Klamath counties, is served by the cooperative. uucsi speaker at tins years meeting will be John H. Myhre of Washington, D.C. head of REA operations, according to George M. Larimer, manager. Also on the program will be Henry Alder man, editor and publisher of "Ru ralifc." Stewart Hamilton and William J. Hauck, both REA field repre sentatives, will be among guests present. Larimer has announced that a special program including enter tainment, talks and distribution of prizes has been arranged. Progress during the past year will be noted and 1IHS0 plans out' lined by the manager in his an nual report. Larimer pointed out that 1.030 consumers are now served by Mid slate facilities. In 1953, when the line was first energized with Bon neville power, there were 164 consumers. Three directors will be named to serve on the hoard. These will be from Fort Rock, Crescent Lake and Chemult. A luncheon will be served at noon, with the Lal'ine Home Ex tension Club in charge. Anonymous Donor Told CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) A West Virginian who attended Har vard with scholarship aid is re cipi ocdiiiig with a pledge of two million dollars to the university's scholarship program. William J. Maier Jr., Charles ton lawyer and businessman, class of '23, was disclosed. Monday as the benefactor who made the pledge anonymously a year ago. Maicr said he would have pre ferred to remain anonymous but President Nathan Puscy thought publicity would attract more ap plicants for scholarships. The fund now stands at $332,550. It will be increased annually through a foundation set up by Maicr. Maicr said he established the fund "only in partial payment for the value of those (college) years. h.')A H. TAYLOR MRS. JAMES Missionary To Give Talk Mrs. James II. Taylor, mis sionary to Formosa, will be guest speaker at the Free Methodist Church, on March 10 at 7:30 p.m Mrs. Taylor served for 20 years as a missionary to China. Since 1953 she has served in the newest Free Methodist mission field, Formosa. She assists in both educational and evangelistic work, teaching at the Holy Light Bible Institute at Kaohsiung and helping supervise churches recently established among the mountain tribes pco pic. She has also held Laubach literacy classes for non-readers and recently prepared a Greek grammar for Chinese students at the Bible Institute. As a missionary to China, Mrs Taylor taught in the Kaifeng Bible School, Honan Province, and sistcd her husband during World War II in the opening of the North west Bible Institute at Fengsiang, Shensi Province, At the close of the war, the Taylors were reunit ed with their children, who had been interned in a concentration camp in Honan Province. The public is invited to hear Mrs. Taylor. Doom Open 6 A5 P.M. ENDS TONIGHT ! On CompUrt Shew a 7:15 tony cum jiatmai Shown er 9:35 Only -t-MMeaaaih A Hole J TEHE1D Shewn ar 7:30 Only Starts TOMORROW! r ji jit J J It ii f w iiiii km ii ;mn um wlv, mm The unforgettable ffjpfSBPt Wf personal itoriei pit 4 I 30 behind the greateit Elf' JTI ;"C Jj sea hunt of all lime! P' jfc Vj WWwy 1 KENNETH MOREDANA WYNTER Plus Action FiKed Co-Hit rf'V"'fcrl Affico does ttrengs thine h a woman... wf. T , I Appointments Made By Pat MACDOEL Gov. Edmund G. Brown has appointed Carroll W. Robison, Red Rock Valley, to the newly created ninth membership on the board of directors of the 10A district agricultural associa tion, the Tulclake-Butte Valley Fair. ; - The governor named Marion F. Palmer of Tulelake to fill the post left vacant by the resignation of Paul E. Christy. The term expires January 15, 1963. Robison's term will end one year earlier. Two of the present board mem bers were reappointed for regu lar four-year terms, Peter C. Bergman and Russell P. Smith, both of Tulelake. Bergman is a Democrat, Smith a Republican. Robison, 42, a Democrat, has been a cattle and gram rancher in the Red Rock area since 1942. He is a leader in the 4-H club work, a school board member, and a director of the PMA agricultural extension service. He is married and Is the father of three children. Palmer, 33, is a farmer and businessman, dealing with regis tered Angus cattle. He has been chairman of his school board the past four years, is a 4-H leader and a member of the beef club.Hc is married and has four children. Family Friend Saves Girl, 2 EUGENE (AP) Artificial res piration applied by a family friend revived Laura Adams, 2'i, after she had been found floating face down in a wading pond Monday. The child is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Adams of Burns. Adams is a University of Oregon sophomore. Mrs. Adams pulled her daughter from the water. The artificial res piration was applied by Mrs. Wil liam Plumlee of Myrtle Creek, who was visiting the Adams fanv ily. She was credited by police with saving the child's life. 'Colossal' Battle Looming As Film Strike In 2nd Day HOLLYWOOD fAP) - A star- studded actors' strike went into a second day today with both sides predicting a long, cofily and as they say in Hollywood colossal battle. At the heart of the dispute was an old movieland bogeyman: tele vision. The 14.000 - member Screen Actors Guild wants extra pay for television showings of post-1948 films. The strike has shut down pro duction at seven studios, ttnong the 5,000 workers idled: Marilyn Monroe, Fred Astaire, Bing Cros by, Elizabeth Tayls and Alan Ladd. Like this tinsel town itself, the strike had its uncommon aspects no picket lines, no demonstrations and some production continued Some, like Frank Sinatra and Tony Curtis, wore two hats pro ducer and actor and backed the strikers. Their independent com panies have signed contracts with the SAG. Other actors, Debbie Reynolds and Glenn Ford among them, op- Youth Jailed; 5-15 Years FLINT, Mich. (AP) Circuit Judge Louis D. McGregor asked 16-year-old Richard T. Roude bush: "What would you do if you were the judge in this case?" order me to get a job, pay back the money," the youth re plied. "Is that all?" asked the judge "Put me on probation, not to get in any more trouble," said the boy. Instead the youth was sentenced to prison for five to 15 years. He has been involved in 79 bur glaries. He went on a crime spree while facing sentencing for one burglary. MINISTER ARRIVES VIENNA ( UPI ) Edward Page Jr., first U.S. minister to Commu nist Bulgaria since the United States broke off relations with Bulgaria in 1950, arrived at Sofia Monday night aboard a U.S. Air Force plane. OSBURN HOTEL EUGENE, ORE. I. B. Carter Jot E.rlar Proprietor! Thoroughly Modern pose the strike. One dissenter, German actress I.ili Palmer, voiced the strike bound studios' position: "I don't think we deserve to get paid twice for what we got paid well for in the first place." A Guild spokesman said the rel issue is not double payment for services but the not o' cold called pay TV. The actors want to set r contract precedent to share in some of the expected wealth. J he guild predicts that a film 'made exclusively for a pay tele vision snowing could return 10 times its cost in a single evening. They want to lay the eroundwork now to have actors' pay scaled to tne fantastic profits if and when pay TV comes. Another Quake FLORENCE, Italy (AP) - An earthquake felt early today In this central Italian area caused some panic among residents, but no damage or injuries. ; i) wmn ton mriTKna: 8INO A OHO 0 PRING AVIWG2! There's just no argument ... You get more for your money with 0LDSM0BILE! "" 1 iiiiiiiiimi ' y We have 88'$ Su per 88'$, 98'$ in stock for immed iate delivery! Most all body styles and color combinations available. For example - This Oldt Dynamic '88' 2-Door Sedan 3204 48 Arriving In our next shipment. Palmetto mist color, with ra dio, heater, deluxe steering wheel, H.D. air cleaner, etc Get Our Spring Deal . . . It's Special! Don't miss the Kiwanis Suit Sale - March 11 & 12 DICK B. MILLER CO: OLDS CADILLAC 7th & Klamath Ph. 4-4154 Ijeral&anbJeUrj Klamath Falla. Oregon Serving Southern Orefon and Northern California Published dally except Saturday by Southern Oregon Ptibiuhing Company Main at Esplanade Phone TUxedo 4-JJ111 FRANK JENKINS. Editor BILL JENKINS, Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor Entered at second class matter at the pott office at Klamath Falls. Oregon, on August 30. 1906. under act of Congress. March B, 1S79. Second-Clase pottage paid at Klamath Falls. Oregon, and at additional malllno offices. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier 1 Month 6 Months 1 Year Mail in Advance 1 Month Months , 1 Year . I w . no . S18M . IK . I SO . 115 00 fee ise Carrier and Dealers Week days cop , Sundays, copy ITNITKD PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Subscribers not receiving delivery of their Herald and News, please phone TUxedo 4-8111 before T P M. After 7 P.M.. phone Mauiico Miller. Clr- eulattoa Manager at TUxedo 44TSS. before you're frozen stiff, order STANDARD HEATING OILS 7 Don't freeze up warm-up with Standard Heating Oils their high- a quality never varies. They burn cleaner and put out more useable heat. And with Detergent-Action Thermisol, your furnace stays so clean it works at top efficiency day-in, day-out. Added bonus: Your House warmer's helpful tips can stop heat waste and save money. Call him today. Ted DeMerritt Jake Clough Oly Rigo Bob Clark e J. L. Hoback Dunn's Heating Oil Peyton & Co. STANDARD Merrill Tulelake, Calif. Dorris, Calif. Bly Chiloquin Klamath Falls Klamath Falls OIL COMPANY OF 4492 7-2062 EX 7-2551 EL 3-2244 111 TU 2-2029 TO 4-5149 CALIFORNIA o