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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 24, 1961)
tAOM ft SKALD AND NEWS, Klaatatfc TtJH, Ot-efosj Tftaj, Jeaacry U. )M1 Dasin Briefs BON LIBBT, county poundmas ter. will be tn Malta Feb. 1, Mer- rUl Feb. 4, Bly Feb. 6, Lorella feb. 8. OiUoquin Feb. 10, Sprague River Feb. 14, Fort Klamath Feb. 16,Xbemutt Feb. 24 and Crescent FeS. 27 for convenience of those vhp wish to purchase dog licenses befbra the March 1 deadline. BLY. . BLY LITTLE LEAGUE Playeis are asked to turn in uniforms to Roberta McGee so that they may be processed and ready for Beit season. - BLY GRANGE will conduct a benefit food sale and rummage sale at the grange hall Friday, Jan. 27, at 1 p.m. BONANZA JOHN TOFELL is spending sev eral weeks at Purdue University in Illinois to attend a school for Farm Bureau Insurance Agents. MR. AND MRS. ERNEST PUD DY are visiting relatives in South ern California and San Francisco. MRS. MABEL MAXWELL and her daughter, Mrs. Carl Prough. and Carla Prouch of Klamath :vM-5i.57 72-76-78 STAR GAZER'V By CLAY K. POLLAN- jf TAUtUS Ok Aft 31 I MAY 21 MAY 22 JUNES no tn 11 ili CAMCai JUNE 23 152-7M1-M uo JULY 14 5. 7-1 3-W 31 Auat4 snf. jj 2- 427-401 43-53-77 JK Your Doir Activity GvioV ' According to th. Stan. To develop messoge tor Wednesday; reod words corresponding to numbers Of your zodiac birth sign. SEPT. ocf. UaAi-71 V- , lLolt 31 Social .lSuelar 2li 32AIn 2Moirt 3 Hours 33 Oloy A3 For 4 Time 34 Slonding 64 Art 6Som 3b On 5Ttnk 6 Discourage 36 You'S 66 In 7Boot 37 Your 67 Concerning 8 Fnffndt 36 Buiinm 68 Soma VNrw 39 01 69Morwy tOContocn 40 Form 70Gl tl Relatives 4IOon'r . 71 Favored 12 Act 42M,iloylrfl 72 Ar 13 In 43 Nrw 73Thingt 14 Glamour 44 B 74 li 15 Soma S That'll 75Streno 16 Improve A6 Plans 76 Today 1 17 Romance 47 Ba 77 Auociotiom 18 And 48 A 7BG.lt! 19 The 49Auaclotet 79 Your 20 Stool ' 50 Luck. 80 Improve 21 Your 51 And 81 Undnirobb 22 To 52Moy 8? Top. 23 Without S3 Perianal 83 Your ' 24 Optimttm 54 And 84 Oaooeitlon 25Chonca SS Attain SSGet-rich 26 Prtttiga 56 In 86 Valuable 27 Of 37 Iniolrotlon 87 Condition! 28 II 58UHI.re tSEflorlt 79 Cornel S9 0itont 89 Propotitlan 30 Or 60 Placet 90Contoct Good (Adverse Ncut'rj! SCOCflO OCT. 24 NOV. 22 8-I1-30-MJ1 in 6579-821 SAGITTARIUS NOV. DEC. 1- 3- 607, ha-20-55 CAPetCOIN DEC 23 JAN. 20 14 11 11 1.S AOUARAIS FEB. 19 JS; 12-23-33-35 J 1 162-67-69 . nscii AAAJt. 21 . 2J 11.44.48-61?? January Clearance Odds and ends of coats, dresses, robes and blouses ... ' ONE-HALF OFF Pedal pushers, sweaters, trousers, snow suits, and other clothes ... ONE-THIRD OFF Klamath's Only Iielusfv ChHeVen 's Shop 1t Main ' Falls recently spent several days ill Redding with relatives. JOHN SMELCER of Dunsmuir is visiting his brother and sister' in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Doug Smcl-cer. JAMES RAYMOND has re turned to his Navy base at San Francisco after visiting his sis ter, Mrs. Jack McFall, and fam- VIRGIL BOOMER of Lorella left Jan. 19 for the Veterans Hos pital at Vancouver, Wash. . BERTHA VINSON recently tpent several days in Langell Val ley with Mrs. Lula Pen'ner. MR. AND MRS. HUBERT MORLOCK of Malin were Sun day visitors at the home of Ray Vow ell and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Vowell. MRS. VERL HE8ELTINE has returned home after visiting her new granddaughter, Joan Ruth, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Chance, at Lincoln, Neb. MRS. DON CLARK Is home' aft er several days in Klamath Valley Hospital. , BOB SEATER took his moth-1 er. Mrs. Clara Sealer, to Los An geles. FORT ROCK FOREST 8TRATTON and his father, Roy Stratton, visited friends at Fort Rock and Silver Lake last week. SILVER LAKE MRS. VIRGIL LITTLE and son, 1 Gary of Prineville recently visited with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Iverson. MR. AND MRS. STANLEY EM ERY and son, Grey, have moved here recently to assist his father, Ted Emery, in. ranching opera. tions. EARL RICKE, teacher at Sil ver Lake last year, died last week at Mount Vemon. LANGELL VALLEY THE GUILD of St. Barnabas Episcopal Church will meet at the home of Mrs. Marion Lind say Thursday, Jan. 26. LAKEVIEW . MAURICE M. ICENHOYVER, Navy seaman apprentice, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee R. Icenhower, Lakeview, is scheduled to be graduated January 27 from the electronics - technician school at Treasure Island Naval Station, San Francisco. Plywood Firm Is High Bidder YREKA Carolina Plywood Cor poration ol Happy Camp was high bidder for 16,800,000 board feet of pine and fir timber in the Sandy Bar Unit, Ukonom District, Klamath National Forest, recently- An -estimated nominal volume of ponderosa and Jeffrey pine brought $9.55 per thousand board feet, 1,200,000 feet of sugar pine. $7.65 per thousand (Ml; a nomin al Volume of white and Shasta red fir, $3.85 per. M; 15,600,000 feet of Douglas fir, $5.05 per M and a nominal volume of incense cedar, $2.85 per M, for a total of $87,900 $60 over the minimum bid price. , i Slayer Faces Gas Chamber In California OAKLAND (UPI) - Mohammed Abdullah, convicted of the slaying of University of California student Sonja Hoff, today faced death in the gas chamber for his crime An Alameda County jury of six men and six women deliberated. only 91 minutes Monday before deciding he should die lor her murder. Abdullah, 21, a rejected suitor of Miss Hoff, took the news with a faint smile on his lips. Superior Judge Donald K. Quayle said he will hear motions for a new trial next Monday. Martin Horowitz, 34, Abdullah's roommate and the confessed sup plier of the murder gun, will be sentenced Feb. 16. He previously was convicted of involuntary man slaughter. . Abdullah, a convert to the Mos lem faith, shot Miss Hoff last July in the UC library. He still has a bullet in his brain from an un successful attempt to kill himself alter the girl's death. Labor Renews Demand For Wage Floor SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Labor renewed its demand today that the - legislature vote a statewide minimum wage of $1.25 an hour for both industry and agriculture. Minister Repudiates His Confession As 'Firebug' Wood Services Held On Monday DUNoMUIR-Services for Rob ' ert L. Wood, 64, were conducted Monday at the Mount Shasta Me morial Chapel by Dunsmuir Lodge, No. 297, Free and Accept ed Masons. Burial was in the Mount Shasta Memorial Park. Wood died unexpectedly at the local hospital following a heart attack on Jan. . 18. He was a vet eran railroad engineer for the Southern Pacific Company and a member of the , Brotherhood of Railroad Engineers. He was born Oct. 5, 1896, in Harrisberg, Ore. He leaves the widow, Goldie; two children, Robert L. Wood Jr.. and Evelyn Stephens, both of San Bernadino; two sisters, Georgie Gudmunson of Bend, and Hazel Allen of Pasadena: two brothers, Bud" Wood of Dunsmuir and Carl Wood of Portland; also five grandchildren. Wood was also a member of Ben Ali Temple, Sacramento. PALO ALTO (UPI)-A Baptist minister has repudiated a confes sion that he set fire to his church es here and in Fontana. The Rev. Leonard R. Rhoads Monday claimed the confession last week was the result of co ercion. He said he was threatened with prosecution that might send him to the gas chamber. In bis confession, Rhoads told police' he set the $100,000 fire which destroyed the First South ern Baptist cnurcn last montn and burned his church in Fontana in 1956. He was charged with arson in connection with the fire here and released on $5,250 bail. . Colin Peters, attorney for Rhoads, said Monday the pastor would plead innocent when ar raigned in MunicipalCourt Feb. 2. "He said the investigators for the fire department and the Na tional Board of Fire Underwriters convinced him that he was ill, and that he set the fire, even though he did not recall doing it," Peters said. The U.S. Post Office collects about 300 million dollars annually for delivering business mail. Patrol Officer To Address PTA MOUNT SHASTA - Lt. Thome Cummings of the California High way Patrol will address the Mount Shasta High School Parent Teach er Association meeting Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the school's home economics room. ' ' , ' His subject will be student own ership and pperation of automo biles: "i , ' ' , ' A - , t " I li 4 4 t I I V 4T-V ' f N - 1 Sly : j r r 1 ll I ! ' ' , ' ' ' I , lit .':'. 1 4 Boy Admits Stabbing SANTA CLARA (UPI) Bob Sichel, 14, told police Monday that he stabbed a neighbor woman to death with a bayonet after she caught him going through her purse. The 212-pound youth calmly led officers on a re-enactment of the bloody crime in the victim's home which he set afire in an attempt to cover up the slaying. "She said 'what are you doing here?' ", he recalled, "Then I did it." -, The victim of Sunday's killing was Mrs. Mane Rozas, 55, divorcee. , The boy told bow he stood over her bed and slashed Mrs. Rozas repeatedly. An autopsy showed she had been stabbed 20 times. He said he tried to take Mrs. Rozas' body outside in a wheel barrow, but could not manage it. He then set fire to the, house in an attempt to hide his crime. The body was found wrapped in burn ing draperies. The boy was arraigned Monday on a murder charge. CTC works both directions, guiding trains either way. By the automated signals and switches of CTC operation, traffic it guided across the West. Trains moving along the great stretches of track under Centralized Traffic Control, go more swiftly and surely. Whenever you ship or travel on Union Pacific, you have the benefits of over 2,000 miles of CTC. Trains move more effi ciently. Good arrive more dependably. Your travel is . atier, smoother, more relaxing. A. H. Clark. Oi$t Tret. Aol., Klsmeth Fills or ' IWof .Ptcific RJL, 1107 9th St., Sacramento, Calif. Whenever you ship or travel... be specific PACDPDC Assemblyman William Byron Rumford, D-Berkeley, introduced in the lower house the controver sial wage bill with the all-out backing of the AFL-CIO and the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee, a labor group current ly embroiled In an organizing bat tle with lettuce farmers in Im perial Valley. Two years ago, organized labor backed a similar bill with the sup port of Democratic Gov. Edmund Brown. The proposal, however. was killed by the Senate Labor Committee on a 4-3 vote. This time. Brown has not en dorsed the proposal. He has said he favors a minimum wage but prefers it to be on the federal level. A state minimum wage, he said, would hamper California growers in their efforts to compete against states, which pay substandard wages and therefore sell farm commodities in eastern markets at lower prices. Brown said he had urged the Kennedy admini stration to seek congressional ap proval of a federal minimum wage. Asks Overtime Pay Rumford introduced a second bill today which sets up a state Morse Leaving For Washington Office Tonight By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., was scheduled to return to the nation's capital tonight after a two-day speaking swing through Western Oregon. Monday Morse was told that Republican Gov. Mark O. Hatfield had announced he will run for a second term. Since there has been persistent speculation that Hatfield would seek the GOP nomination to op pose Morse's planned bid for re election next year, Morse laughed and said, Tve been kidded be fore."" Then he added: "All I can say is, I'm ready." Morse called President Ken nedy's cabinet a "great" one ex cept Secretary of the Navy John Connally. He said this was Ken nedy's "one big mistake." Speaking to facilic University students, Morse said the best hope for a more stable peace is a dis armament conference between the United States and Russia under United Nations auspices. , fair labor standards act catling for time and a half overtime pay for all hours xrked beyond 40 a week and double tune for hours worked in excess of 10 on any day or 48 hours a week. Rumford dubbed the bills anti recession measures. Farm groups were united two years ago in their opposition to a state minimum wage and undouot edly will be again. The new chairman of the Senate Labor Committee is Sen. John J. Hollister, D-Goleta, a man who voted against the minimum wage before. Other developments: Budget: Governor Brown put the finishing touches on his, pro- fully and lewdly" violate the scenity code Is guilty of a mav demeanor to read anyone whe "wilfully and knowingly" violates the law. Courts: Sen. Hugh M. Burns, Fresno, introduced bill to es tablish three new district courts of appeal one in Fresno, one in . Southern California and one in the north coastal counties. In another action affecting courts, Assembly man Gordon H. Winton Jr., D Merced, proposed to pay Superior ' Court judges in all 58 counties $21,000 a year, the same salary now being paid judges in Los Angeles. Housing: A plan for a state wide construction program for posed 1961-62 fiscal year spending; housing for the aged financed by program which will be submitted to the legislature Wednesday. The budget is expected to top $2.5 bil lion but Brown has promised it will be financed without new taxes. Obscenity: The California News papers Publishers Association in troduced in the Assembly through Glenn E. Coolidge, R-Felton, a proposal to tighten up on the law covering obscenity. The CNPA bill would change the present law which says that anyone who "wil- a $100 million bond issue was in traduced by Sen. Hugh M. Burns, D-Fresno. Gold: Sen. Randolph Collier, D- -Yreka, proposed a resolution ask ing Congress to raise the price of gold from $35 an ounce to $80 an ounce and revjtalize California's dormant gold mining industry. Narcotics: Sen. John J. Hollis ter, D-Goleta, introduced a bill creating narcotics clinics in which) confirmed addicts would be given a balanced dosage of drugs. . Home accidents are nearly 15 times as numerous as those oc curuie in Industrial places, in cluding mir.es -and quarries. Vandalism Hits Copco Property! Irtrn r;:..;l -r .i vti:r nia Oregon Power Company stat ed they recently discovered evi- dence of vandalism direct ed against company property here. They - said three insulators on a 6,000 volt power line were shot and broken. ' Authorities warned that convict- ed violators are subject to a pen alty of six months in jail or a $500 fine. U U LI ll I I e)BBllM iBBBBBe Man Is Jailed PORTLAND (AP) Paul Jones, 44, . Portland, collapsed and died Saturday night after a scuffle stemming froin a pinball game quarrel ai a tavern. An autopsy blamed a brain hem orrhage. , . Police jailed Lloyd Boyer, 32, Portland, on a manslaughter booking accusing him of scuffling with Jones. ' Bank Note Sale HONG KONG (AP)-A Hong Kong auction house today offered crates of bank notes for sale. Con tents of the crates, which attract ed many onlookers but no buyers, included German marks issued before World War II, Japanese military yen and Chinese Nation alist currency issued before the Communists conquered the main land 12 years ago. Lr-u J BRAKE INSPECTION How long since your last brake Inspection? ... Is your family's safety threatened by poor brakes? Find out fast with a FREE Brake Inspection. HERE'S WHAT WE OO- Check condition of brake lining Inspect brake drums Inspect oil seals for leaks Check hydraulic system Inspect brake line and con nections Frc. Adimtmtnr for tht life of the lining. We Give &fC Green Stamps! BEACON BRAKE SHOP 1201 E. M.in TU 4-8304 -I 111 INSURE TO VALUE AT A LOWER COST Why pay your present fire insurance premium for 3 or 3 years la advance? Insure with Fire Insurance t trhange and par ONE-THIRD of the 3 year term discount rale each year and reduce your ra.h outlay. , our rales are JWer, loaf JERRY L SHELLEY Oiltrkt AmhI 1U 1 1 UK Prion. TU 4-7101 Phone TUxedo 4-81.1 The Herald & News Let a trial demonstrate the fast action power of a Classified Want Ad in the Her ald and News. Per Day Per lino For tht minimum 2-lint ad. - PLUS - Pay cash for your ad or pay within fivt days when yen phone it in and receive 50' discount Note: Above is maximum rate. The rate is lower for larger size ads. 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