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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1960)
; .; PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Tuesday, OctofcerfcS, 1960 I' Anti-Jack Vote Urged PORTLAND (AP) - A Masonic Lodge Scottish Rite leader has urged Oregon members of that group to vote against Sen. John F. Kennedy (or president because Kennedy is a Roman Catholic. Leslie M. Scott confirmed Mon day he was the signer of a letter on Scottish Rite stationery sent to 6.500 Oregon members. He said the same kind of letter had been mailed to lodge members else where in the country. Scott, a former Oregon state treasurer, is "sovereign grand inspector general In Oregon" and "grand chancellor of the supreme council in Washington, D.C." This Is a high office in that part of the Masonic fraternal organization. . The letter is headed, "Election Call to Citizens," and begins, "The Roman Catholic priesthood seeks political power in America." It continues, in part, "Wherever they gain power, they restrict and persecute. Kennedy is a loyal sub ject of the Vatican, bound to its mandates; to its designs of annull ing American freedoms." , With the letter was other liter ature containing arguments against election of any Roman Catholic to the presidency. WASHERS & DRYERS ALL OUR WORK IS GUARANTEED Factory authorized parts and guaranteed work on all makes and models of large and small appliances! And, free pickup, delivery! CALL TU 4-4197 J. V. KERNS 734 Se. 6th SHE OF COURSE Don't authorize the state to build ugly information boards with YOUR tax dollars The proposed billboard measure is a BAD bill that would authorize the state to build expensive off highway information boards each containing 21 advertisements. They would be far off the highway on sideroads. Inconvenient , , . unattractive . . . and t night a dangerous place for violence and rob bery. Vote NO on No. IS. Don't cripple hundreds of roadside businesses and destroy jobs Hundreds oX roadside and off-highway businesses such as motels, restaurants, service stations, re. sorts, etc, rely on good billboards to trll people where they are and what they offer. This measure would take away many of their most important signs. Would cripple their business and cause un employment. Vote NO on No. 15. Don't be misled by the bad and deceitful billboard measure COUNCIL ON HIGHWAY REGULATION . 111! T. HollHHill. It., tUmu. J7J7 !. UfMf Or. POMU'vJ, Olt. Cowan HtMirtaru W llm An, rwiiint, 0'. Hot loin Squeezer Haps Ann's Heply By ANN LANDKRS Dear Ann: Your advice to the guy whose wife and daughter squeezed the tube of toothpaste from the mid dle was not only flippant, but lousy as well. I am also a motivation ex pert and I don't agree with the quack you consulted. You should have consulted a toothpaste manufacturer. He would have told you that a tubed product should be squeezed from the bottom at all times, and rolled up. Otherwise a void will develop. This leaves no pressure for the next fellow who uses it. For your enlightenment, Ann Landers, psychiatrically speaking improper tube-squeezing repre- sents open defiance of parental authority.-BOTTOM SQUEEZER Dear Bottom: Look, Buster, I'm bored with you characters who Interpret every departure from perfection as a rebellion against Mom or Dad. As a middle-squeezer, I'd like to tell you that I learned this habit at home. My parents were middle-squeezers. Had I wanted to defv them I would have squeezed from the bottom. And lust because my motlva Hon authority didn't agree with you doesn't mean he's a quack. Your vindictive altitude indi cates enormous hostility. Accord ing to your theory you probably Identify me with your mother whom you undoubtedly hated. Squeeze that one from the bot tom. Bub! Dear Ann Landers: Your ad vice to "Completely Lost" clearly came from a happily married who has never had the horrible experience of learning that her LoPointe't Maternity Shop HI SflrocI swTien MOTH uss; I SUA V g sl It's easy to tell someone else to "for give and forget." But, believe me, Ann, when it happens to you, it's a different story. I thought our marriage was wonderful then the nightmare hit. I actually caught him with a woman I thought was my good friend. I offered to set him free to marry her. He didn't want that. For weeks I walked around in a daze. If I'd had courage I would have turned on the gas or driven off the bridge. I thought of a dozen ways to end my life but I couldn't go through with anything. Although you are terrific in your field, Ann, this is one situa tion that makes a veteran the best expert of all. This is the ad vice I would have given: When it happens to you, Sister, go to a doctor and get something to keep you from flying into a million pieces. Tranquilizers are excellent. Some shots are very good. Don't discuss the problem with your relatives or friends. And never tell your children. Talk to your doctor or your clergyman. Get busy with people who need help. Crippled children were my salvation. Veterans hospitals, old folks, the blind there are many places that-can use all the time you can give. Try with all your heart to for give him. In time the wound will be less painful. After a while. you will get over it. No one can be weaker than I was and I made it. You can, too.-RECOV-ERED Dear Recovered: Your letter was excellent ana oniy a "vei- eran" could have written it. But I don't agree that one must ex perlence a problem in order to give advice. If this were true, I'd be In no shape to advise any body. I'd be a basket-case my self. Does almost everyone have a good time but you? If so, send for Ann Landers' booklet, "How To Be Well-Liked," enclosing with your request 20 cents in coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope. Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care ot this newspaper enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Delay Asked On Decision WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Charles O. Porter, D-Ore., said today he had asked the Small Business Administration to delay for one month the effective date of its proposed amendments to regulations on set-aside timber sales. He said he made the request because there Is "confusion in the minds of many lumbermen in the Pacific Northwest" over the effect of the amendments to go into effect next month. Under present law,, certain tinv ber sales on federal land may be set aside by the SBA so that only firms qualifying as small busi nesses may bid on them. Among other things, Porter said, the new regulations would change the definition of small business with respect to logging contrac tors. Such a firm could not qualify unless it were selling logs to a firm which also qualifies as a small business. Under the original regulations the qualification re' quired that a firm employ less than 250 persons and not be fi nanced by a large concern. Porter asked SBA Administrator Philip McCallum to send an ex pert to the third annual Federal Timber Policies Conference at Eugene, Ore., Nov. 10, to explain the proposed amendments. If this could be done, then would hope that the operators could have 20 or 30 days from that date to make their comments to you before 'your final decision Is made." Porter said in a letter to McCallum. laslos good Time I husband has been unfaithful. SuHiHHiaBKaj i mm ii si as ai urn asm Earth, Stars CHARLES LYELL(i79i-7s) "NO CAUSES HAVE CHANGED THE EARTH EXCEPT THOSE THAT STILL DO SO? Geology flourished in Britain early in the 1 19th century. James Hutton had tried to give men a glimpse of a world infinitely older than they dreamed (but just how old no one yet knew) and had substituted slow, tremendous , change for the chaos of a universal deluge. ' William Smith had taught how to read the age and history of rock formations by the fossils they contained. Then in 1830 the great Charles Lyell brought out the first volume of his Principles of Geol ogy, generalizing and amplifying the work that had gone before. Building upon Hutton, Lyell forced men to see that great changes in the past occurred through the normal working Dismissal Motion Denied A motion to dismiss the trial of Carl O. Murphy, accused of concealing stolen property, was denied Monday by Circuit Judge David R. Vandcnberg. Murphy's attorney J. C. O'Neill I made the appeal on the grounds that his client had been tried in district court on July 7 on the same set of facts and had been found innocent. Murphy, 2449 White Street, is accused of possessing 95 pounds of hamburger, plus fish cakes, Coffee Hour Set Wednesday A political coffee hour, spon sored by the Klamath Reserva tion Jaycecs and designed to en able voters of the reservation area to become better acquainted with candidates for political of fice in the November 8 election, will be held at the Masonic Hall in Chiloquin on Wednesday, Oc tober 26, starling at 7:30 p.m. Candidates and their representa tives from both the Democratic and Republican parties will be present, as well as the Klamath County Central Committee chair men of the two parties. The Reservation Jaycecs are sponsoring I he coffee hour as an informational service to voters in the area, and all registered vot ers and other interested persons are urged to attend. Lost Hunter Found Safe A 16-year-old Jacksonville hunt-! er, Grant Bailey, was found Sat urday night alter having strayed away from his hunting party ear lier that afternoon. The youlh had gone hunting with M. H. Hall of Medford near Jack Flats, at Gilbert Springs, one mile south of the Finley Cor ral on the Drews Creek Road. Several parties searched t h e area and the boy was located about 7 p.m. State police assist ed in the search. Ends Tcnit T r A JOSEPH HARRIS SIC L J I I 1 1 1 R A w I I"" 1 1,1 '"i Minn vii"ii -t 'it l ' "'" "" I' i Iff Wiv v iliiSiii 1 Alio Exciting Action Co-Hit! and Man (4) i vns Ik WBl. .Tk I W clams, shrimp meat, crab meat, rabbits, chickens and packages of beef from Klamath Lockers on April 30. The state contends that Murphy concealed these goods in a locker. After Murphy entered a plea of not guilty by reason of former jeopardy, and O'Neill's motion was denied, Deputy District At torney Robert M. Redding called his first witness, Donald L Stroud, president of the Klamath Packing Company. O Netll then produced a certi fied copy of an assumed name certificate showing that Stroud and J. Dean Lowell are doing business . as Klamath Lockers. O'Neill then theorized that the state's indictment of Murphy is invalid because the complaint charges Murphy with transgres sions against Klamath Packing Company, a corporation. The court adjourned to consider this question. Members of the jury are Nan J. Brady, Malin, and Earl Sloan, John L. Kerbow, Violet E. Phil lips, John W. Van Doron, Marcel la Johnson, Paul 0. Caster, Arch G. Proctor, James E. Friesen, Virginia A. Knowles, Alta F. Thompson and Edgar D. Isensee, all of Klamath Falls. Sheriff Cited In Legal Suit A man presently lodged in the county jail on a charge of steal ing livestock, has filed a suit against Sheriff J. M. Britton in circuit court demanding a writ of habeas corpus. ' Women Eggsman, 27, claims he is being held without proper pro cess of law in the suit filed through his attorney, Glenn D. Ramirez. The suit alleges that Eggsman was bound over lo the grand jury October 20. The jury met October 21 and no indictment or legal process took place, the suit states. A hearing before Circuit Judge David R. Vandcnberg has been scheduled for Thursday morning at 10 o'clock. i.iir.yjiiitJi:vji :J Starh Doer Opan 6:45 t: tJi'V ' 1 1 M CAST EVtR USfO ANY MOTION PICTURE ! and the SHORE Presentation A VALIANT Ages and THE FROZEN WORLD OF THE ICE AGES. .A 13 1 13 of forces operating in the present He traced the slow 'uprising of land in certain places and its sinking into the sea in others; the growth of mountains and carving of valleys all in language and with examples both layman and scientist could understand. Ten years later, a young Swiss, Louis Agassjz, published evidence that a great ice age had once enveloped most of Europe. He set off a discussion that lasted 30 years. Later he came to America and found the same traces of glacial invasion. While science has not yet satisfactorily ex plained their cause, it is now believed there were not one but four great ice ages during Innocent Plea Entered By Man In Shoot Case A plea of not guilty by reason f i I i u. UIMUIV ds e,u,leu , wr cuit court Monday by George j .Washington Krohn when he was arraigned before Judge" David R. Vandenberg. Krohn, 33, was indicted by a grand jury last Friday in connec tion with the shooting of Carl B. Young, 59, a bartender at the Klamath Falls Elks Club. Krohn was charged with assault with intent to kill. His trial was set for November 3 by Judge Vandenberg. Five other men were arraigned in circuit court Monday. They will enter their pleas Thursday at 10 a.m. The men, and charges against them, are: Ensley Studdard, burglary in a dwelling; William and Leroy Kirk, assault with a dangerous weapon Billy Joe Hodges, larceny, and Ralph Huiit, concealing stolen property. Stray Shot Hits Worker Mark Cummings, about 25, a Malin potato picker, was shot Sunday while he was working in field near Malin. Ronald McVey, owner of the field, said 20 people were working on the potato harvest when two pheasant hunters inadvertently fired into the group of pickers. A piece of shot lodged in the back of Cummings' thigh. Tie shot was removed by Dr. Craig Pearson of Malin and Cummings retumedl to work. I don't understand why the hunters didn't see all of those a collection to purchase some people." McVey, said. "It's a thing to be placed in Bonanza clear field and there was equip- Big Springs Park in her memory, ment all over the place." McVey Mrs. McCall, 78, died recently, said there have been other simi-Mrs. Mabel Maxwell of Bold's lar incidents since the beginning, Store here will take donations at of pheasant season. I Also "KENTUCKY RIFLE" WEDNESDAY! Release lo Full Color Wide Screen UMKMtB FURf lk i Witt' by Don the past million years, and possibly others hun dreds of millions of years earlier. One of the most exciting adventures of ge ology took place in 1869 when John Wesley Powell and a small party, conducting a survey of the Grand Canyon, ran the rapids of the then unknown Colorado River for 900 miles in small, open boats. Powell was later director of the U.S. Geological Survey. To him, mountains and canyons were but temporary features, carved by water out of great, uplifted blocks 'of strata, then slowly reduced to rolling hills and lowlands, then level plains uplifted, eroded and uplifted again. It was history meas ured in eons. NEXT: Shaping of the Earth Con Killed In Escape Try KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Clarence Leon Raby, who became one of the FBI's 10 most wanted criminals after he shot and killedl ilu'n men U'ac chnt In rloalh Mnn. - "-ro 7V dinton on charges he killed Frank trled t0 shoot "V. Keith, an Andersonville. Tenn.. uui ui jail. A deputy, Kenneth Milligan was wounded as he shot it out with Raby in the jail's corridor. Police were holding two women for investigation in connection with the break attempt. Raby, 27, was being held in ir ... : inox ioumy jau peuuuig inai ti nearoy unnton, lenn., on two murder charges and two robbery charges. Officers said Raby called of ficers to his fourth floor cell on the pretense he wanted to make a statement in connection witn another death in his case. He pulled a gun on them and said: "I'm getting out of here." He forced Tennessee Bureau of Identification agent Walter Beard- en and hgt. uarence Brown ot the highway 'patrol to get on an elevator the only way out of the building with jailer Dave Humphreys. On the first floor, .Raby got off the elevator, fired at other of ficers through the glass-partitioned jailer's office and ran to ward the front of the building. Raby was felled by two bullets on the front lawn. No charges were placed against the women immediately. They were held for questioning after a detective reported he heard them say they had helped Raby. They were standing in the corridor when Raby made his futile dash for freedom. Officers had no idea how Raby In Memoriam BONANZA - Friends of Mrs. Elizabeth McCall are conducting the store at any time. vBSBsjasaari b4BaaUaXAJ iVlTAMOTioM Oakley and John Lane got possession of the pistol other than it apparently was smuggled in to him. Raby faced trial on Nov. T at1 . llieillldlll, Id&l UUI UUMIIg B IUU- bery. ; ) Sheriff's deputy Ben DeVault was killed Aug. I as he tried to arrest the fugitive on the murder charge. On Aug. 28, the fugitive, beard ed and dirty from living in the L:n turned himself in to former Knox County Sheriff E. B. Bowles and was lodged in the Knox Coun ty jail for safekeeping. ENDS TONIGHT! CUKKGABIS SOPOkimiBti Hlu!llll!llllul!l!illtr f-1 IS- mm ft r rr f j (r .WMNMM0fc.nWNK;0L0aPNAVlIOMM mm JUublbnUrwiTM.s Youths Nabbed For Drinking Two Merrill boys, ages 16 and 17, were turned over to juvenile authorities Saturday night alter, they were apprehended while' drinking beer in a local theater. City Juvenile Officer Ray How. ard said the boys claimed a tran sient had purchased the beer for them at a local tavern. Two min or girls sitting with the boys we 1 I I 1 , LH iL-fTn ITnTI731WJllllll.El-l MIGHTIEST OF MOTION PICTURES! Cecil B.DeMilles Grants' OuEARtH jj color b TECHNICOLOR tarring MTTY HUTTON ; WILDE I CHUON ; HESTON OOHOIHY : LABOUR IGRAHAME'1 j STEWART I ki " i t IbS You wouldn't call it a gang. Just Danny Ocean and his 11 pals the night they blew all the lights in Las Vegas t... '1 1 1,11 1 '"