Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 24, 1963, Page 2, Image 2

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    I'AGE i-A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Thursday, January 24, 1963
OUR ANCESTORS
II 1, JljUI'MSI' "
"Gee, all I have left Is blue paint, Mr. Gainsborough
. . . who were you going to paint this time?"
Delighted Danes Toast
Anne-Marie's Betrothal
To Prince Constantine
COPENHAGEN, Denmark
(UPD Delighted Danes today
toasted the engagement of their
.saucy Princess Anne-Marie, 16, to
handsome Crown Prince Constan
tine of Greece and prayed they
uould live happily ever after,
The Greek and Danish royal
families touched off national cele
brations with the surprise an
nouncement from Amalienborg
Castle Wednesday.
It was the signal for thousands
of Danes to crowd into the castle
square today to honor the young
couple and shout for an appear
ance.
In Greece, church bells rang
and 21 guns saluted the announce
ment from the Hill of Lycabitus.
Anne-Marie and her 22-ycar-old
prince will go to Athens Monday
to receive the accolades of his
countrymen.
Copenhagen was gay and bustl
ing today. Temperatures were in
the mid-30s. Flags were out and
people talked happily about the
(airy tale romance.
The young couple flew in the
face of tradition by getting en
gaped while Anne-Marie is only
li. King Frederick IX and Queen
Incnd of Denmark were reported
to have urged at first that they
wait until she was IB.
But Anne-Marie has a reputa
tion (or being her own boss and
she got her way. Court circles
said the wedding probably will
take place in one or two years.
The entile Greek royal family
flew in from Athens for the oc
casion. King Paul and Queen
Frederika were accompanied by
their daughters, Princess Irene
and Princess Sophie, and Sophie's
husband. Prince Don Juan Carlos,
son of the claimant to the Span
ish throne.
The tall, athletic Constantine,
who had been in Denmark for
several days, escorted his little
princess to the airport to greet
them.
Constantine fits the storybook
description of a prince. He is the
first member of European royally
to win an Olympic Gold Medal.
He captured first place in the
dragon class yacht races in the
1960 Olympiad.
Bonanza Club
Honors Rooter
EO.VAXZA-Roy Warfield, own
er of Warfield's Union Service
Station in Bonanza, was recently
presented a season basketball
ticket and an honor award from
the Bonanza Lctlcrmcn's Club.
Warfield, who has never missed
a Bonanza High School home
game in 12 years and attends
many out-of-town games, is 76
jrars old.
The award was presented by
.lames Brothcrton during the half
time ceremonies of the Merrill
lioruna game on Jan. 18.
Kiewatt Asks
Enforcement
No Meetings
The Loyal Order of the Moose,
No. 1106, will not hold the regu
lar Moose nights until further
notice because of remodeling.
One of the three people who
appeared at the city council
meeting last Monday to ask for
better enforcement of the do;
leash law was J. W. Kiewatt, 739
Roseway Drive, and not Claude
B. Kiltrell, 727 Roseway Drive,
as had been reporled. It was also
established that the request ap
proved by the council for one
way parking on Melrose Street
involved the portion of the street
between Kit Carson Way and Do.
lores Avenue.
Secretaries
Given Trip
By Norblad
WASHINGTON UPI - Two
Capitol Hill secretaries are count
ing the days until March 13 when
they start on the dream trip of
their lives thanks to Rep. and
Mrs. Walter Norblad of Oregon
Louise Carlson and Betty Fox
long-time secretaries to the Ore
gon Republican, told today of
iiow their boss called them into
his private office one day.
"We really didn't know what
he wanted he never called us in
together like that," said Louise.
who has spent 15 years on Nor-
blad's staff.
So they sat and listened as Nor
blad said he wanted them to do
him a "favor."
"On the afternoon of March 15
I'd like you to go to National Air
port and take a plane to New
York," he said. "Then I'd like for
you to catch a jet to London."
The secretaries sat open
mouthed as Norblad went on to
outline a 17-day trip covering
seven countries his gift for their
"faithful service" over the years.
"Words failed me," Betty said.
I just couldn t believe it. It s in
credible."
Had she ever heard of anyone
else "on the Hill" giving such a
gilt paid lor out of his own
pocket?
"Never!"
Betty said Mrs. Norblad had
helped plan the trip and had told
them to go to the Tower of Lon
don to see the crown jewels "all
those lovely, juicy diamonds."
She said Mrs. Norblad also had
told them the best places to shop
on their trip, which ends when
they fly back from Paris.
Neither Betty, whose home is
in Arlington, Va., nor Louise,
whose legal residence Is Salem,
Ore., has ever been to Europe.
'No, no, no!" Betty exclaimed
when asked. "Why I'd never been
west of Alexandria either until I
went to Oregon."
Ever since Louise and Betty
got the news, there has been in
creased interest in the possibility
of staff jobs opening up with the
Orcgonian.
Kelly Creek
PTA Meet Held
NEW PINE CREEK A regular
meeting of the Kelly Creek PTA
was held at the school Jan. 17.
Voters were reminded of the
special election which will be
held at the school on Monday, Jan.
28, to decide whether or not Kelly
Creek School District No. 1 should
merge with Lakeview District
No. 7.
A similar election to decide the
Issue w ill be held in Lakeview on
the same day. Lakeview residents
will vote, upon the appraisal of
their tax base in either in
stance, to accept or reject other
outside districts.
Cattlemen
Ask Change
) X j
ALL SMILES Singer Frankie Avalon and his bride,
Kay Diebel, are all smiles as they leave St. Charles
Church in Los Angeles Saturday following their wed
ding. UPI Telephoto
Income Questionnaires
Required Of Pensioners
Veterans and dependents on the
Veterans Administration nonscrv-
ice-connectcd pension rolls who
do not return their income ques
tionnaires by Jan. 31 will not
receive future checks, and may
even have to pay back the money
received in 1962.
R. J. Nnvolny, manager of the
Portland VA Regional Office, is
sued this warning to the 5,000
Oregon veterans and dependents
who have not yet returned their
income questionnaires although
they were mailed to them a month
earlier than usual. The forms
were enclosed with the Nov. 30,
checks, but the return deadline
remains Jan. 31.
Novotny pointed out that the
questionnaire carries a printed
warning which reads: "Important.
Failure to return this card be
fore Jan. 31, 19H3, will result in
discontinuance of payment. You
would also be required to pav
back all pension you received
last year."
Since these benefits are paid
only to Uiose veterans, their wid
ows, dependent parents or minor
children whose incomes are be
low certain limits, the VA is re
quired by law to receive an in
come report each year to support
the payments.
Novotny asked that all blanks
on the card be filled in wherever
applicable, and that the card be
signed before it is sent back to
the Portland VA Office.
Fine Levied
For Driving
DORR1S - A.2.C. Robert R.
Raught, 19, stationed at Kings-
Icy Field in Klamath Falls, was
fined $166 for reckless driving and
excessive speeding following a
jury trial held Tuesday, Jan.
22, in the Dorris Judicial District
Court before Judge Lcs Chase
Virgil Winkleman Jr., resident
California Highway patrolman at
Dorris, testified thai on Jan. 5
Baught was traveling north with
his wife, Linda, and Frank Tol-
cr. 20. also a Kingsley Field air-
SALEM (UPIl-Thc Oregon Cat-man, when he clocked Baught
pnun'i Aiuw-iatinn iaA Tunt.'ji..:-- -1 . -J f ,ne ...I.
Highway 97, approximately
llemen's Association said
day It would ask the legislature 0n
to continue for another two years one and one-half miles from Dor-
Hie authority for experimental ris.
change of ownership brand
pcction.
W. F. Marshall. Klamath Falls,
advisory group, chairman, made
the announcement.
Roy Nelson of the State De
partment of Agriculture told the
committee that stale brand in
spciiors are hired to inspect cat
tie, not people.
He made reference to n re
cent Grant County incident where
a rancher admitted stealing more
than 200 cattle from his neighbors
OCA President Walter Schrock.
Prmeville. said cattlemen want
study of brand age "that will
stand up in court."
Howard Otley. Diamond, urged
renew of refund procedures
under the Oregon
collections.
Beef Council
Starts TONIGHT!
DOORS OHM :4J
THE THRILLS OF OUTER SPACE...THE EXCITEMENT OF THE GREAT OUTDOORS
...ALL POWER-PACKED INTO ONE GIGANTIC ACTION ADVENTURE SHOW!
The Jury, composed of eight
men and four women, deliberat
ed for 40 minutes and returned
charges. Judge Chase set the $166
fine which was paid by the defendant.
Membership
Drive Opens
The Klamath Ait Association
opened its 1963 membership drive
Jan. 1 with pro - rated dues
through Aug. 31. Klamath Basin
residents who wish to support the
community art program may as
sist by participation in the activi
ties or financial aid.
Membership dues are $3. stu
dent and single; 5, joint or cou
ple; sio, donor; and $25, patron
membership. The money is used
for art instruction classes, paint
ing sessions, and to sponsor art
exhibits.
New memberships or tax deduc
tible contributions may be mailed
to the treasurer, Leo Molatore,
820 Pacific Terrace.
The Maple Park Gallery on Riv
erside Drive will be closed Sun
day, Jan. 27, in preparation for
new exhibit which will run for
three consecutive Sundays, begin
ning Feb. 3. Details of the Feb
ruary show will be announced at
a later date.
CALIFORNIA LEISilU.fe;";";
v -ji
H
D
Major Labor Bills Considered By Lawmakers
SACRAMENTO iUPI)-Organ-
ized labor's major bills on the un
employed and injured worker
were before the 1963 California
Legislature Wednesday.
They would set up two nearly
identical programs one paid by
the worker and the other by the
employer.
Assemblyman Robert W. Crow n,
D-Alameda, introduced a scries
of 20 bills, liberalizing disability
compensation payments with the
backing of the California Federa
tion of Labor, AFL-CIO.
Last week, Aseemblyman Ed-
Edward Elliott, D-Los Angeles.
proposed 33 bills making swecep-
ing revisions in unemployment
compensation.
Under both programs, it would
be possible for an injured or un
employed worker to collect as
much as $107 a week while off
the job.
The Crown measures would re
peal an obsolete section of the
law recently involved in action
by the state supreme court. The
high bench upheld a decision of
then-employment director, Irving
Perluss, that private insurance
Heavy Schedule Faces
California Legislators
By United Press International
The California Governor
Continues vacation in Hawaii.
His office announces appoint
ment of attorney Gerald Brown
of Riverside to 41 h District Court
of Appeal, notes he is not related
to governor.
The Assembly
Committee says no new anti-
subversive legislation needed now.
Assemblyman C. George Deuk-
mejian, It-Long Beacli, introduces
Clark Art
Exhibit Set
Roland Clark of 2838 Patterson
Street, who has great depth o
perception and an eye for line and
shadows, light and beauty, will
exhibit his work at the Sherwin
Williams Paint Store, 1229 East
Main Street, beginning this week
He works in opaque water colors,
casein, ink wash and pen and ink.
His variety exhibit will include
a human portrait, wildlife, a ro
deo scene and other views. The
public is invited. This is his
first show.
Clark, a former Oregon Stats
Police officer and now an investi
gator for a law firm, has had
few lessons in art which were tak
en by mail. He is a member of
the Klamath Art Association.
bill to extend death penalty to per
sons who commit robbery and
burglary while personally armed
with deadly weapon, who seriously
injure victim during robbery or
burglary, and who kidnap for the
purpose of rape or sex perver
sion.
Assemblyman Phillip Burton,
R-San Francisco, introduces bill
to liberalize medical care for the
aged, liberalize aid to the blind
and abolish remnants of relatives'
responsibility.
Assemblyman William Byron
Rumlord, D-Berkeley. introduces
bill to lower required voter ap
proval of school bonds from two
thirds to a simple majority.
Assemblyman John G. Vcnc
man, R-.Modcsto, introduces bill
to exempt newsprint and other
raw materials from property tax.
The Senate
Sen J. Eugene McAteor, D-San
Francisco, introduces bill to low
er school bond approval from two
thirds to 60 per cent. Applies also
to county, city and other local
elections.
Sen. Randolph Collier, D-Yreka,
asks $5 million in bill for state
wide system of roadside rests.
companies could not take the low
risk disability cases ana leave
the state with others.
"The private carriers were tak
ing the cream of the crop," said
Thomas Pitts, executive secreta
ry of the labor federation.
A disabled worker now can col
lect up to $75 a week paid for
by a one per cent deduction from
his pay check up to $4,600 a year
in disability benefits.
One of Crown's measures makes
it possible for the worker to col
lect an extra $7 for the first de
pendent and an additional $5 for
each dependent up to a total of
six.
Another measure would increase
the maximum amount of time a
worker can collect disability in
surance from 26 to 39 weeks
to put it in line with the proposed
maximum for unemployment com
pensation. The 1961 legislature passed an
escalator clause to increase the
benefits as wages increase and
labor did not propose an addi
tional increase in the current
session. But one of the Crown
bills asks an increase in hospital
ization benefits from $12 to $:o
daily.
To pay for the program, t h e
bills propose to increase the tax
base, now set at one per cent
of the first $4,600 in wages, by
$100 for each $2 increase in aver
age weekly total wage.
"We don't think we have asked
for anything that is not really
needed by the working man,"
said Pitts.
Meanwhile. Assemblyman Phil
ip Burton, D-San Francisco, in
troduced a bill to eliminate en
tirely provisions of slate law mak
ing children partly responsible (or
aid to their needy parents. The
1961 legislature virtually wiped
this law off the books by adopting
a schedule beginning at $40 a
month.
Death penalty Assemblyman
C. George Deukmejian, R-Long
Beach, introduced legislation to
extend the death penally to per
sons who commit armed robbery
or armed burglary and injure
their victim and to persons who
kidnap for the purpose of com
mitting forcible rape or forcible
sex perversion.
Complete
STEAM CLEAN
MOTORS . . . $5.00
Sparkle Car Wash
4023 S. 6th Ph. TU 4-1543
B S3 S
DIFFERENT
EACH WEEK!
OUR FRIDAY NIGHT
$
2.
Served
5:30-8 p.m.
TRY IT THIS FRIDAY
AT THE
722 Main
PELICAN CAFE
AND WING (Lounge)
Ph. TU 4-8855
JT yMbfllyouth-flQMIng..7tV W 4. X.
Jf J loving. ..titling m.w trll ol Cour.o.l yX J v kW
fm ALANA JOOY 1 KfV
, Texas IxM 1
II T J III II l U ISUM MVISIStE Stm NtHGY UNKSHtO . . . ltll.l
v .'Un li r i 1Vi i i i ."fen i. .iiii....-, J
V PUII I UMI I 0 I ,.. KM !10-WK-MH-:UIMM! y
I
Report Asked
On Conference
LAKEVIKW - Rev. Elwyn
Tesche. 1-akc County chairman of
the Children and outh Commit
tee, has scheduled a special meet
ing to hear reports on the re
cent Governor's Conference on
Children and Youth. According to
.lohn Kiesovv. Tesche is hniH-ful
that all interested persons will
attend.
One opportunity which is espec
lallv feasible is to set up a vouth
employment service to help young
people lind jobs, Kiesow points
out that the program could in-
hide some educational meetings
lo help youth learn their responsi
bilities to an employer prior to
summer or part-time employment.
This idea and others will be con
sidered.
The meeting will lie held Tucv
.lay, Jan. 2'.). ,u 8 p m. in the
counlv courtroom.
School Dinner
A turkey noodle dinner will be
rcd at the 1. mile tl'N'cill
School on Saturday evening from
i lo 7 o'clock. A vegetable. Iiot
oils. pie. ami Iwerace will lie in
cluded. Tlie cost will he $1 for
adults and i0 cents for children
under 12.
Information
Work Cited
Oregon State Higliwav Depart
ment's Travel Information Divi-1
slon has been cited for "outstand
ing achievement In travel adver
tising and promotion" during the
past year.
The division carried off the top
aw.un in its category in a na
tionwide contest sponsored by!
licdhook Magazine and the Na
tional Association of Travel Or
ganizations. Dennis Clarke, direc
tor of the Travel Information Div
ision, accepted the bronze plaque
lor me division.
The 1962 Rcdhook-NATO Travel
Awards Contest was orq.inizcd to
encourage and retard creative
thinking in advertising and pro-
moling all areas of the travel
induslrv.
In announcing (he innrrs. Red-
book publisher. John l ain, said
the entire travel inuiMry bene-
men ny recognition o the men
and women responsible lor trav
el's promotion.
From entries in this i.itegorv.
which covered states, territories.
and provinces in the I S. and
Canada. I ertnuates ol Merit were
awarded to the Puhhutv Division.
Department of Highwavs. Pierre.
S.C.: Department of Conservation
and Development, state of North
Carolina; and the stale of Min-1
nesola.
Klamith Orffl
Pvklilhwl eaily (octet SO t and Sim4if
Sarvlnf $ufhtr Or
and Nartharn California
v
Klamath Pufeltihiftf Camnany
Main at f tola tad
PfttM TUlMI 4HI1
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tetl 0fft at kiamatft MHt, OraOM,
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March i. tlT StKMf-claii ttt
at Kiamtth Fan. Orten,
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SUtlCftlPTlON RATES
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UNlTID PfMl tNTItTIONL
AUDIT lUUff 4U 0 CIRCULATION
bicnaart not rtcaivtua tfalivtrv t
tfttir Hrfct t(tw. pta HM
TUtatf Mill Nr IfM.
Tho first NVrnc Cotimil i..D,
!"' icxl LaMor as 1 10 first
Sunday aftrr tho f u t full moon
n nr .mrr M.nvh 21
GLASSES
ON CREDIT!
itV Green Stomps
n5 Sti
COLUMBIAN
OPTICAL CO.
730 Main St.
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I I l Saddle li Car ond Dit yfV I El
ill H O.tord. 11 r.. Dress Coots Pi
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rt" I )' Dresses $m SLIPS I iV W I
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if tr ! Mm "'":::r $11100
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wear V 'f'fj' V 0Mar I a
v,S' (l-hV m Subteeen Dresses
-V . Dollor Days S
UIJ ANKLETS rr-TTtWrn ,
Thcra'. Plant, of P.rkin9 t IjZ Surprise Spells
Th 500 Block on Moin Street 525 Mo,n Throughout the Store!
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