Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 28, 1963, Page 2, Image 2

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V
JANNY 6URK
Jenny Burk
; Named Queen
BONANZA .Janny Burk. a
I junior at Bonanza High School,
vwas crowned basketball queen
: during the half-time cremonies of
the Bonanza-Matin game Feb. 22.
I She was escorted in to the gym
I bv Eddie Simmons, captain of
. the basketball team, and crowned
vby last year's queen, Judy Ter-
. . pening.
-. Other attendants and their es-i
:corts were Glenda Albert with
. Wayne LaHoda, Virginia Harris
.'with Fred Dearborn, Linda Mc
?;Fall with Billy Newlun, and
Kathy Angel with Tommy Seater.
Participating in many school
activities, Janny is presently a
varsity cheerleader, junior leader
of the 4-H Sheep Club, and chair
man of the junior-senior banquet.
Past positions she has hold in
clude class vice president, news
reporter, and junior varsity cheer
leader. .
Woman Safe
After Fall
Into Well
SANGER. Calif. (UP!) - Mrs.
Inez Hiscock. a 50-year-old house
'wife, walked out into her back
yard Tuesday morning to turn off
a leaking pump. Suddenly the
earth collapsed under her.
Speechless with surprise, she
tumbled 20 feet into a dank, slimy
well. She had the presence of
mind to reach out and grab a
projecting board at that level.
Armpit-deep m mud, she found
her voice and yelled.
But her husband was away on
a business trip and no neighbors
were within earshot. For 32 hours.
she clung to the slippery board
in tlie backyard well, half im
mersed in mud.
Help came when her employers
became concerned; site had
missed two days of work. As
constable Val Vallez and others
approached the house, they saw
Mrs. Hiscock's three Siamese cats
sitting around the crude hole in
the earth.
'I'm fine, I'm okay," the plucky
housewife calmly told her res
cuers as she was lifted from the
well with a rope. A physician at,
Sanger Hospital, where she was
treated for shock and exposure,
said she was in "surprisingly
good condition.
Vallez found her survival "sim
ply amazing."
I"""" " w ' "
""ft fl
II V J ' 1
ALFRED A. MONNER
Photo Art
Show Slated
tltOM' ti (WtlUU HirVtlt l
' BIGGER THAN
KING KONG I
mm
Vt OIII IT1VIITII
I tjl I N.V. OAIIV NVt
Cotoramo aturtt- litvv f-
i.r lAi
Book Given
To Schools
The American Legion's educa-
tion and scholarship handbook.
Need A Lift?" containing in
formation about hundreds of col
lege and vocational School scholar
ships for qualified high school stu
dents of this area, has been pre
sented to high school libraries in
the city and county by Klamath
Falls Post No. 8, American Legion.
This annually revised publica
tion for the 1962-1U63 school year
is recognized as one of the most
complete and up-to-date sources of
career and scholarship informs
Uon in the United Stales.
Charles Poteet, post command
cr, stated that thousands of young
people have not taken advantage
of the generous educational aids
which are available due to failure
to plan early for their future education.
He mentioned In particular the
Junior GI Bill which provides up
to $110 per month for four years
of educational help for sons and
daughters of veterans who lost
their lives as the result of mlli
tary service. Over half the young
people eligible for this help have
tailed to apply.
Parents and students are urged
to make use of the copies of
"Need A Lift?" provided at a
service to the community.
M lulOICOff 4 J
UMMANC
STEVE REEVES
Photographic works by Alfred
A. Monner will be displayed at
the March exhibit of the Klamath
Art Association which opens Sun
day, March 3, at the Maple Park
Gallery.
Entitled "Images from the
Earth," the show will be open to
the public without charge from 2
to 5 p.m. and will continue at the
same time each Sunday through
March 31.
Alfred Monner was born in Port
land in 1909 and spent his early
years on a nomestead and cattle
ranch in Central Oregon near
South Junction. He returned to
Portland with his family In 1023,
and after graduation from Wash
ington High School in 1027, he
worked at the Portland Public LI
brary. In 1930 he enrolled at Lin-
field College and the following
three years he attended Universi
ty of Oregon night classes, begin
ning the serious study of pho
tography.
Monner has been a staif pho
tographer for the Oregon Journal
since 1939. In addition to his news
paper work, his photographs have
appeared in numerous national
and professional magazines includ
ing National Geographic, Time,
Look, Life, Sunset, and Aperture.
Exhibiting in many juried and
invitational exhibitions, Monner
has had entries in the United
States Information Exhibition,
1957, shown in Europe and Asia;
"Photography at Mid-Century,
the loth anniversary at George
Eastman House, 1959; Boston Art
Festival, 1961; national invitation
al photography exhibition, Lin
coin. Mass., 1962; and in several
Oregon photography exhibitions
as well as a one man snow
Visits Teacher
Mrs. May Sullivan of Spring
Lake Road is spending a few days
in Red Bluff with daughter Mau
reen (Sister Mary Tcrencine) a
teacher at Mercy Academy, where
she graduated some time ago.
The young teacher graduated
from Sacred Heart High School
Open Court
Bill Rapped
By Justices
SALEM lUPli Former Ore
gon Supreme Court Justice Jamcsi
T. Brand said Wednesday a bill
to open courtrooms to telecast and
broadcasts would violate the con
stitution as well as disrupt court
room procedure. '
Tlie bill, sponsored by Hep. Kes
slcr Cannon, R-Bend, would per
mit television cameras and micro
phones in courtrooms subject to
rules and regulations issued by
the presiding judge.
Cannon, a raJio station ex
ecutive, said such coverage now
is permitted in Colorado and J
Texas. ,
He said modern-day equipment
would make coverage scarcely
noticable. He said telecasting and
broadcasting would be at the dis
cretion of the judge, giving ample
protection to tlie dignity of tlie
courtroom and to witnesses or
jurors unwilling to be photo
graphed.
Would Violate Spirit
Brand said coverage in Texas
and Colorado was permitted by
judicial regulation, not legislative
act. He said the proposed Oregon
law would amount to "the legis
lative department trying to control
the conditions of the judicial in
clear violation of the spirit, if not
the letter, of constitutional scpara
tion of powers.
Brand told the House Judiciary
Committee tlie American Bar As
soclation has reaffirmed Canon 35,
which opposes cameras in court
rooms and which is respected in
43 states.
Brand denied the Cannon bill
as now written would leave cover
age up to a judge. v
The former justice also said
courtroom coverage would "tend
to dramatize" the behavior o f
judge, jurors, witnesses and attorneys."
Is there anyone who makes
the same talk to 12 men as
100,000?" he asked.
He said newsmen would cover
only tlie "racy" cases, jurorsi
would be conscious of the fact
all the folks back home" were
watching, judges would handle the
gavel with an extra flourish, and
attorneys would lean toward ora
tory.
ft ':"::t "r l
Benefit Lunch
Set At Store
A benefit spaghetti luncheon
with the proceeds to go to tlie
American Cancer Society will be
held at the new Oregon Food
Store on Shasta Way, during
the hours of 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
.Saturday, according to Dorothy
Dlckcrson, publicity chairman of
the Klamath County chapter of
the cancer society.
In addition to spaghetti, the bill
of fare will include garlic bread,
cottage cheese salad, coffee and
soft drinks and will be sold for
23 cents per plate. Salesmen of
the various products will cook and
serve the luncheon.
WILBUR WOMER
Talks Dated
On Security .
Information on Social Security
status will be given to tlie public
at four meetings to be held in
Klamath County during March, by
Wilbur Womer, manager of the
local Social Security District.
The talks will be of especial in
terest to those eligible for retie-
ment, survivors and disability ben-;
efits, with emphasis on farm
families.
Meetings are scheduled for
March S in the Bonanza High
School Gymnasium, March 7 and
11, Klamath County Fairgrounds
and March 14 at the Gilchrist
First Methodist Church. The same
subject will be presented at each
meeting. Time is 8 p.m.
All present Social Security laws
are two years old; Tlie last chang
es were in 1961.
The meetings arc sponsored by
the Oregon State Extension Serv
ice.
Womer began his work with
Social Security in the accounting
office in 1939 in Baltimore, trans
ferred to Olympia, Wash., in 1941,
to Seattle in 1945 and to Klamath
Falls.
Social Security is now serving
4,050 persons in Klamath County
with a total of $287,000 per month.
Starts
it .
mWih-iiiv, mi -w "if ir'
HEFIALD AVD NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore.
Thursday. February 18, 1961
High Sugar Price Blamed On Kennedy
Control Program By Democrat Leader
WASHINGTON IL'PI'-A Demo
cratic congressional farm leader
said today the American house
wife could blame the Kennedy ad
ministration for the recent boost
in sugar prices.
Chairman Harold D. Cooley, D
N.C., of the House Agriculture
Committee said the United States
faces a long period of high sugar
prices unless Congress revamps
the sugar control program pushed
through Congress by the adminis
tration last summer.
He said the prices American re
finers must pay for raw sugar
had risen one-half cent a pound
since the program was adopted
reaching a 24-year high- of 6.9
cents on the New York market
Tuesday.
Cooley said he and his commit
tee were subjected to "a barrage
of propaganda, criticism, slanted
newspaper articles, cartoons and
pressure because they fought
against passage of the adminis
tration bill.
Therefore, he said, he would
sponsor legislation to junk the ad
ministration's program and pro
tect the American consumer "only
when those who got us into this
mess indicate clearly that they
now see the error of their ayt."
Under the administration-spon
sored program, the U.S. Treasury
benefits when world sugar prices
are below U.S. prices. The new
program permits the government
to take advantage of the lower
price in the. purchase of a part
of the foreign sugar this country
needs. The Treasury pockets the
price differential.
Under the old system, which
Cooley favors and to which he
wants to return, U.S. sugar pur
chases were parceled out among
foreign suppliers through a sys
tem of marketing quotas. Under
this system, the foreign producer
enjoyed a "price premium" when
the U.S. price was higher than
the world market price.
However, and this was Cooley'sl
Weather
Temperatures during the 2-1
Gifts Okayed
By Society
The Oregon Genealogical Soci
ety has incorporated in Eugene for
the purpose of establishing a gene
alogical research library in the
Eugene area. The action now
permits the receiving of gilts and
property.
The society s membership, now
totaling 112 researchers through
out the state, is actively engaged
in giving mutual assistance in
research by way of workshop
meetings, beginner's courses, and
in providing a correspondence
course for interested persons and
members hi more rcmate areas.
The research library will be
open to the public. Officers all
of Eugene will be headed by Mrs.
A. A. York as president.
hours ending at 4 a.m. PST today.
High Low
Astoria 52 44
Baker 47 29
Brookings 61 43
Medford 55 35
Newport 52 37
North Bend 58 46
Pendleton 53 41
Portland ' 53 44
Redmond 54 33
Salem 51 43
Tlie Dalles 58 45
Chicago 26 22
Los Angeles 78 57
New York 31 22
San Francisco 69 53
Washington 31 28
Northern California: Cloudy
througn Friday.
BOB'S
Self-Service Laundry
1711 Mela TU 4-234
Da It Yeumlf r W.'ll
De It for Yeu!
Wash-Dry
Dry Clean
W. Glt SIH Gram Stimpi
central point, the old system pro
vided that when wcWd market
prices were higher than the U.S.
market price the foreign supplier
was required to deliver sugar at
the lower U.S. price or eb-e suffer
loss of part or all of his usually
lucrative marketing quota.
When the administration-sponsored
law was enacted last July,
the price of sugar on tlie world
market was 2.5 cents a pound be
low the U.S. price. Since then, the
world price has skyrocketed
largely because of poor harvests
in Europe, Cuba and elsewhere.
The world price now is slightly
higher than the U.S. price.
Cooley said the new law already
has cost American consumers $17
million in higher sugar prices. He
said the cost will amount to $110ljgg
million if prices remain at cur
rent levels for the rest of the
year. The price differential which
tlie Treasury collected before the
world price soared above the U.S.
price totaled $9 5 million. .
LARGE
EL0CKW00D
Quality Stove ond
DIESEL OIL
7 DAYS A WEEK!
CRATER FUEL CO.
Ph. 4-9757
How to tell a Tempest
from just any low-priced car
Does it have Wide-Track?
Does it have a lively 4?
Does it offer a phenomenal V-8?
Does it look like this?
Optional at extra cost
Now there are two kinds of Wide -Track cars Pontiac and Tempest
SEE Y0U AUTHORISED PONTIAC DEALER F0 A WIDE CHOICE OF WIDE-TRACKS AND GOOD USED CAS, TOO
ECCLES MOTOR CO.
606 So. 6th Sf.
Klamath Falls, Ore.
JIM TAYLOR
MM UHMKLIUN m mm 1VRIIE
Heston Mimieux
CUMINS fuUYEM DARREN
w
YVBTTE
T0NITE !
MCI CHIN
Dmn Open 4tS
JAMES
iV'WnO'Howland U'yJtS-- V Sloan I Dean
vV ...who ffr .1 g ,..th ilittr I 1 '...the
, challenged - . 1 who daftad I .Sjj f hlf.cat
S hl "Jt ht WndJ - ..- l wheat love
i '.. .fckVi lt, " III; Utanl ",nmm -Jf ,urn,d
jfmT. ratw . 1 I love-netl
i V- , ""Sly K 'f
I jL,JWJ!J l ..the native
' ' , tfV'sfl reached f--
V fl ')! I W 'd'
i- . ..
ustmm Color ht'f"
r4
Taylor Wins
Essay Prize
LAKKVIEW-Jim Taylor, Lake-
view High School senior, was the
winner of first place in the Ameri
canism essay contest sponsored
by the American LcRion and will
receive a prize of $3. His essay
will also be entered in state com
petition which offers $35 for first
place and $20 for second.
Jim is the ward of .Mr. and
Mrs. Burt .:nos of Lakeview, and
is a brother of Mrs. Amos. He
has made his home with the fam
ily since the death of his parents
when he was a sm-vLrhild.
A second place pri.e of $3 went
lo Nancy Lantz, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Lantz, Route 1,
Lakeview. Lnnuic Schadlcr, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Schadler
of Adel, was the third place win
ner, with a jirize of !.
The title of the ssay was
Americanism TNT Today Not
Tomorrow" and was open to both
senior and junior divisions o
the high school. There were no en
tries in the junior division here,
and 2 papers were judged in fin
als of the senior section, all o(
whom were from members ol
the senior class.
Aune MacMahonElizabeth Allen
wwMARGUERrrt Roberts..-", kinjumm
n Jerry Bresler txt Guy Green
Klamafh Futti, Onnn
Publltft4 dtily (aiopl Sil t and lundaf
Sfrviftfl leuiMrti Ora
and N Drift rn California
V
Klamath PublnMnf Company
Main at Bipianada
PKona TUttM 4-S1M
W. twtaltom). PttMivKar
tflttrad ai aacaiMj-ciaH maHtf at ft
potl aMtca at Klamath Pill, Ortsn.
tn Awtuil tl, IfM. vndar act f Con
artii Marth X Sacm)-iai pl
at paid at Klamotn Fuv Oron,
and at addottnal maiiif aifKtt.
carrttr
Mam t f
I Mnm Ill U
1 Vtaf UI.M
Mill In Advanct t
1 Manth MM
WantKt KIM
I Yaar ... lM
Carrttr and Dairt
WMhriar a $undav repy 19c
UNITBO PRIU INT t (NATIONAL
AUDIT UIIAU OP ClItrUl.ATION
IwftKnban nl rtcalvlna tMHvtfV
Micir Htrald and Nw. pHutd pftpM
fUiad a-IMl trt P.M.
rU4WC tA "'vVX&ri lrtinn.ntnininP
BATH MATS
Fluffy & soft, machine washable
x 30 Oval. Lots of colors $
ro choose from.
$4.98 value
TOOTH PASTE
Gleem, Reg. $9c size. C
Has 5c coupon for your H j
next tube "
TROUBLE LIGHT
20 feet of cord, two tool
outlets. U. L. Approved.
$2.98 value
1
98
Lady Miniver
BLANKETS
72" x 90", 90 Rovon,
10ao Nylon. Machine
washable. Reg. $10.98
value
SJ77
GLAZED CHINTZ
YARDAGE
Solids & Prints
79c & 89c per yard
Vi PRICE!
Rea
1
Plqstic Lined
DRAPES
Approximately S4 x 88"
New colors, New patterns
Reg. 98e
87'
BUBBLE
BATH
Reg. 39c box
25'
Boys' Knitted
Sweaters
Long sleeve pullover.
4-12. Reg. $1.49
sues
87'
100 count box, 6V4 Plain
Envelopes
3 y
Some scented, some not, some large, some small. Take
your pick. Val. to 1.98.
Stationery
box99c
Boys' Healthknit A A 1
SWEAT SHIRTS 99
Mi'ro-Motic
Mod. M-0404
4 Qt., 9.98 Val.
PRESSURE PAN
6
97
Low, Low Prices Plus "S&H" Green Stamps
4480 South 6th
Bazaar
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