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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1961)
. HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. Friday, October 13. 19fil PAGE ! Klamath Booffi Rfey liked T Au r n r r ... Accident Fraud Claims ror nock exposition Klamath County will be repre sented by an unmanned display booth at the Pacific International Livestock Exposition in Portland, : Caiendar :j FRIDAY RUMMAGE SALE, Sacred Heart Parish Hall. Eighth and High. St. Mary's Altar' and Rosary Society. SATURDAY NAOMI SHRINE I. Order of White Shrine. 6:30 p.m. dinner, Masonic Temple. Friendship night. AAUW RUMMAGE SALE. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Clyde's Towing Service. RUMMAGE SALE, B am Clyde's Towing Service. Ewauna Toastmistress Club. MERRY MIXERS SQUARE DANCE "surprise night," 8 p.m Pelican City Hall. Bill Mayhew, caller. Women bring cake. VFW BOX SOCIAL AND DANCE, 6:30 p.m. dinner. Danc- uig music by Ozzie. MIDLAND GRANGE. I p.m.. Grange Hall. JUVENILE Midland DO-SI-DO SQUARE DANCERS, 8 p.m., Chiloquin Junior High Building. Duane Rogers, caller. Refreshments potluck. RUMMAGE SALE, ' Sacred Heart Parish Hall, Eighth and High Street. St. Mary's Alter and Rosary Society. TEA-STYLE SHOW, 1 p.m., Wi nema Hotel Modoc Room. Beta Sigma Phi annual benefit. Res ervations, Mrs. James Tockey, TU 4-8709. KLAMATH COUNTY HOME EXTENSION ALUMNI. 12 noon polluck, home of Mi s. C. C. Hcid rich, 382 Washington. SUNDAY LEADERSHIP TRAINING WORKSHOP, Wesleyan Service Guild, 1:30 p.m., First Methodist Church. MONDAY KLAMATH CIVIC THEATER, 8 p.m. Spring Street entrance of Klamath Auditorium. Ex-Klamath . Woman Dies Word has been received in Klamath Falls of the death of Mrs. Myrtle E. Jackson, 71, for mer Klamath Falls woman, Sept. 24 following a lingering illness in Oakland. Calif. Funeral services were held Sept. 28 in Bandon, Ore. Mrs. 1 Jackson, who lived most of her life in Oregon, moved to Klam ath Falls in 1936. She was pre ceded in death by -her husband, Hayden Jackson, in 1951. At one time he owned the Union Oil Station at Eleventh and Main. Survivors include a daughter. T h e 1 m a R. Linville, Oakland, Calif.: sons. Warren D. Jackson. San Jose, and Jack K. Jackson, Klamath Falls. the chamber of 'commerce nounced Wednesday. Chuck Pederson, who was in charge of the display's construe' lion and transportation to the show, said the booth consists of two parts. The first, a flashing stop sign, warns the pedestrian traveler at the exposition to "Stop: Item of Interest, one-quarter yard ahead. The main display will be a ro tating series of eight plugs for the county which appear in a notch which is in the upper left hand corner of a map of Klam ath County. Pacific Northwest Bell, locally, loaned the chamber the rotating signs which were combined with the county map and pictures of Klamath County livestock production. Also on the map portion of the display, main roads in and out of the county are blacked-in as well as locations of the larger towns. The exposition begins Saturday in Portland. , Judge Sends Youth North To Hospital Circuit Judge David R. Vanden- berg Thursday ordered Ysmael C. (Smiley) Herrera, 19-year-old Klamath Falls youth, to the Ore gon State Hospital in Salem for a 30-day observation period prior to sentencing. Herrera, convicted Tuesday of burglary, was scheduled to be sen tenced Friday morning, but the defense attorney, the district at torney's office and Judge Vanden berg agreed on the advisability of a mental observation period. The youth had received head injuries on July 6 when the car in which he was riding smashed into a Ipaded log train on Washburn Way at the OC&E tracks. A circuit court jury convicted Herrera of burglary in a dwelling after a two-day trial. The youth was accused of breaking into the home of Albert E. Crank, 2130 Vine Street the night of Sept. 15. Herrera claimed that he only wanted to get information to mod ify his divorce decree and did not intend to beat Crank when he broke into the house. In another circuit court case Thursday. E. Gail Osborn, 40. former Klamath Falls civic lead er, was allowed to change his plea from guilty to not guilty. He is charged with obtaining money and property by false pretenses. His lawyer indicated that insanity will be the defense, based upon . a psychiatrist's findings. " Judge Vandenberg allowed the plea change and set Oct. 23 as trial date. PORTLAND (API A govern ment witness testified in a mail iraua trial lnursaay Mat car salesman Charles Harry Giegcrich and Phillip Weinstein, a roruana attorney, were con nected with an accident claim filed with his firm in 1958. Both Giegerich and Weinstein are defendants in the case. James H. Minor, testifying at the trial oi ten persons charged with staging automobile accidents to collect insurance claims, said Giegerich was the driver of an automobile involved in a collision Aug. 18, 1958. Minor was a claims manager for Firemen's Fund Insurance Co., the insurer of Giegerich's vehicle. He said the company received a demand from Weinstein, acting as attorney for three persons, for $30,000 to settle claims. The actual settlement, Minor said, was $16,000. Farmefr M Courtesy, itegecf Of Upland Bird Hunters Gerald Detering, president the Oregon Farm Bureau federa tion, today cautioned hunters who will be going alter tpland game birds this weekend to use cau tion and discretion' in their hunt ing pursuits. He said, the hunt ing season has gotten off to a bad start in Oregon with numer ous reports of property damage and trespass violation on private farm lands, and that he hoped that hunters would utilize both courtesy and common sense in their hunting habits. The Farm Bureau president said that most farmers would not ob-land farmer. simple matter of ject to hunters' seeking game on portions of their properly if they could be assured that property damage would not result from such hunting. However, he said that farmers have an economic stake in their entire farming op eration, and if hunters would rea lize this, it would create a better understanding between farmers and hunters. He said that punctured irriga tion pipe, shot-pierced (arm equip ment and destruction of fences build a barrier between hunter closing a gate once a hunter goes through it can mean the dif ference bojwoen hunting the next year or having another farm closed to hunting for the future, Detering said.' Unharvcstcd crops are another reason for posting property, according to Detering, and many crops such as apples and other fruits and vegetables that may still be in the field pre sent a practical reason for bar ring hunters from certain areas. There have also been numerous reports of farm animals being killed by gunshot wounds since for all hunters is to Inquire at the beginning of deer season, and 'be local farm for permission to upland game bird season alw.Os adds to this total, said Detering He cautioned city hunters that farm animals are naturally cur ious and that cattle will often times approach a stranger in a field simply in a curious manner and not in an attempt to be vi cious. He said each year hunters fire on animals which come in their direction thinking that the animal may be attempting to harm them. Detering said the best policy hunt on the property and to ask if there are any restricted areas where there may be unharvested crops or animals that could be in danger from the hunting. Deter ing suggested also that farmers explain the reasons why they do not allow hunting in certain areas of their farm and to be courteous to hunters asking permission to hunt on their (arms. Hawaii outlawed turtle shooting in 1959. Jury Visits Death Site NEWPORT, Ore. (API A jury of eight women and four men. selected Thursday after a Lincoln County Circuit Court had called 192 prospective jurors in 2'i days, visited the site near Otis Junction where the body of Linda Jean Stevens was found in August. Glen Dixon. 18, McMinnville. is charged with first degree murder in the 16-year-old girl's death. Dixon's companion, Larry West Shipley, 20, has been convicted of the slaying and sentenced to die. The girl, found near a (orest trail, had been shot several times. Many o( those called as pros pective jurors in Dixon's trial were dismissed after saying they had formed opinions on the case based on Shipley's trial. Dixon is expected to. take the stand in his own defense. Shipley, now awaiting the outcome of an automatic appeal to the Oregon Supreme Court, did not testify in his own defense. Newspaper SPOT ADS are inexpensive Now Is The Ideal Time To Put In Your Trees And Shrubs! AT BAKER'S You'll lind ono of tfit finest stkettons in South ern Oregon I ruit Trees Flowering Trees Shade Trees Flowering Shrubs Evergreens Make Your Selections NOW! lf Hyoeinth yiQSXff Daffodils Drive Out A Little Ways... SAVE A LOT! Landscape Nursery 4200 S. th TU 2-5SS3 V v s A' h2? -a, - 1 1' 1 How can it be secret? Every brewer knows. There are two different ways to make beer light. One way is to cut down on the amount of hops, grain, or malt. And instead, add a little more water. Tire Burgie way is to brew the beer to be light naturally. And to do this, Burtevmeister uses almost twice as much of the one chtjicc grain that makes tyer natumlly light. You can taste the difference, in today's Burgie. Light. But no watery. QB R E f E D FOR Refreshing". But not wishy-washy. It may cost us more money, but that's how it has to be. A beer that is brewed for refreshing people has to be brewed exactly rigkt. And Burgie is. Try one. 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