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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 2, 1963)
PAGE : Hospital Happenings Monday, March 4 ' 13 Noon Special Glfli Re port, Molatore's Restaurant, .7:30 p.m. Henley Midland Instruction Meeting, Mt. Lakl Community Church. 7:30 p.m. Lorella Klck-Olf, Sportsman Hotel, Tulelake. Tuesday, March S 7:30 a.m. Tulelake Kk'k-Off Sportsman Hotel, Tulelake. 12:30 p.m. Merrill Instruc tion Meeting, Presbyterian Church Parlors. Merrill. 7:00 p.m. Chiloquin, Organ ization Meeting. Masonic Hall, Chiloquin. : Wednesday, March 6 l- II . Noon Memorial Gifts import, Molatore's Restaurant. ; 6:45 p.m. Dorrls Instruc tion Meeting, Lions Club Meet ing, Dorrls. l'. Thursday, March 7 -;i0:00 a.m. South Poe Valley Kick . Off, Wilbur Rciling's Home. :7:00 p.m. Dairy Kick-Off, Verne Ilaskin'S Home, ; Sunday, March 20 - .7:00 p.m. Kingsley AFB Va riety Show, Base Theatre. Monday, March 11 12 Noon Business 4 Pro fessional Kick-Off, Winema jlotel Ballroom. 7:30 p.m Algoma Kick-Off; ijcott Warren's Home. I ; Tuesday, March 12 '.'1:30 p.m. Employe-Kxecu-ljve Kick Off, Molatore's Res laurant. ; 7:30 p.m. Chemult, Cres cent, Gilchrist Klrk-Off, Che mult Community Club. Wednesday, March 13 6:30 p.m. Intercommunity Hospital Campaign Kick Off, Winema Hotel Ballroom. U.S. Continues Cuba 'Peeping' WASHINGTON (UPI) The Defense Department said today that aerial reconnaissance of Cuba isbelng maintained, but refused to discuss the methods used to keep tabs on activity in the island. OPENS 12:4 J THE GIANT STORY OF MODERN HAWAII! DIAMOND HEAD AtlNE MACMAHONflMBErH ALLEN hMkMltlltttf flPtlMS wvMh m MUM 4,.i,JliiTp'nifii.iwi.M, Giii Gum Rock Hudson I DoksDay ilONY nANDALL A riotous new twist In ths art of gentle persuasloni . EDIE ADAMS JACK ;- ;' ; PMwwoir . , tumia CotOII Rock Hudson Gina Lollobrigida ;i Sandra Dee Bobby Darin fl -4- r ' invasion of XMb i yfcJ f Wl nc keyhole. BSi T invented! . -VJ HERALD AND T K'A Kolt Named Budgeteer Jack Holt, 54, executive vice president of the Bank of Klamath Falls, has been appointed to the Klamath County Budget Commit tee to succeed Lester Officld, 61, manager of the local branch of the U.S. National Bank, who resigned from the committee post Jan. 21 because of the pressure of business, the county court an nounced Friday. The appointment of Holt became effective Friday, March 1 and will terminate Jan. 1. 1WS6. Offield, who has been on the committee since January, 1959. will continue to be a member of tlie city budget committee which he has served during recent years. Holt brings 32 years of Oregon and Kansas banking experience to the budget review post. He is a na live of Blue Rapids, Kan., and at tended Kansas Wesleyan Univer sity in (hat slate before coming to Oregon in 1928. He left four years later but returned to Oregon in 1943, and has since made this state his home. Holt came to Klamath Falls in November, I960, from Portland where he had served as a branch manager of the First National Bank of Oregon. He and his wife, Mary, reside at 920 Loma Linda Drive. Offield, a life-long resident of the county, lives with his wife, Paul ine, at 513 Eldorado. Youngster Crashes Car An 11-year-old youngster re ceived bruises when he darted from behind two parked cars and ran into the path of an oncoming vehicle at the 200 block of East Main Street Thursday. Young David Charles Cancady, 1411 Main Street, was taken to Klamath Valley Hospital by Peace Ambulance whore he was treated for hip bruises and released. Tlie boy ran in front of an auto driven by John A. Baker, 48, 2320 Orchard Avenue, city police re ported. Baker apparently Jammed on his brakes and skidded almost 20 feel. hut couldn't avoid hitting the boy. The damage to his car was mod erate. No citations were issued. Walker Killed PORTLAND (UPD - Mrs. John Sullivan, M, Portland, died Fri day after she was struck by a car. Police said the driver. Perry lack Stephens, 64, told them he did not see the woman cross tlie street. CONTINUOUS SHOWS TODAY f ROM 12:45 m OAKIE JACK KRUSCHEN mm- WAITER SIEZAK JACK HOLT A NtWS. Klamath Falli, Or. Country Singer Tracks, Kill's Jungle Panther THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. UPI Country singer Stuart Hamblen basked in glory today as an expert hunter. The 52-year-old gospel-singing cowboy, his friend and a red bone hound named Ginger did what scores of professional hunters, hounds, and armed authorities couldn't do: He brought down a 60-pound, wild black panther that had es caped from lis cage at Jungle land Zoo early Wednesday and kept this community in a state of terror for 36 hours. Hamblen told his wife, "shucks, I can get it," Friday morning when they heard a radio news broadcast about the search. He called his friend, Ronnie Page, 55, picked up Ginger and set off fur Jungleland, which is in the out- kirts of the heavily populated San Fernando Valley. Most of the searchers fanned out into the surrounding hills, but Ginger, once she picked up the scent of yie jungle-bred cat, re fused to leave the Jungleland compound and led Hamblen and Page to a warehouse. Zoo officials who believed the animal had gone into the hills re opened the compound to the pub lic Friday. It had bn closed Thursday. A number of spectators, includ ing children, were visiting the zoo and some were only a few feet away from the warehouse when Ginger guided Hamblin and Page into it. "I almost humped Into the Race'Vall' Torn Down ATLANTA (UPI) Street bar riers erected last December in an effort to prevent racial block busting were torn down by the city Friday night on court orders. The barriers were sometimes called "Atlanta's Berlin wall" by opponents of the measure en forced by tlie city s board ot aldermen. They weren't walls at all but road barriers of wood and steel that blocked two streets to through traffic for perhaps 200 yards. City workmen had little trouble in hauling them away. Superior Court Judge George P Whitman ruled late Friday in an injunction sought by 10 Negro and white residents that the bar riers were "illegal and unconsti tutional. Whitman gave tlie city until March 4 to comply with the di rective but Mayor Ivan Allen Jr instructed workmen to tear them down immediately. The mayor said he would ask the board of aldermen not to ap lieal Whitman's ruling. He also said he would ask for authority tu create a special real estate commission lo draw up a code of ethics covering sale and use of property in transitional areas. Allen said lie would also in struct the city planning depart ment to institute a complete and comprehensive study of available areas to find which of tlie areas 'could properly and adequately lie zoned for open housing." State Gets Radar Post WASHINGTON (UPI - Rep Al Dllmnn, D-Ore., announced Friday that Eastern Oregon will get an important new radar facil ity as a result of a nationwide' improvement program just an-, nounced by the Federal Aviation Agency. I lie tm.mo installation, ac cording to Ullman, will be located in Condon, in Gilliam County. It will be one of eight similar facil ities located throughout tlie coun try, designed lo help eliminate gaps in tlie air route traffic con trol system. The Condon installation will be part of the control center located at Seattle, and will provide ex panded coverage for efficient ra dar air traffic control. Ullman also announced that the Federal Aviation Agency has ap proved installation of two new air guidance systems (or the Klamath Falls. Ore., airport at a cost of $48,000. Klamath Fan. Oraoan Published daily (eiceat lat.) ed Sunday lervinf lowinern oreiM and Ktrtham C a literate y Klamath Pwbiiihine Company Main at Itoieiiede Phone tUKede IU1 W. . Iwoettand. Publisher ateiM at teeendaiait mettar at the reel oice el Klamath Falls, Oreaen, en Awfutt , 1H, wider act el Con-1 trail March 1 lit. Sec -class ate Mid el Klamelh Falls. Orejen, and at additional ma Hint ttiicet. I larmr 1 Month 171 I M IMS , Ill M I 1 Year )1.M Mell in Adeem Mooth !. f Vtl I Mentha Klta 1 Year Ill M Carrier and Daalort weokdey A I una ay, teer lac UNITID FSl INTIRNATIONAl AUDIT SURIAU OF CIRCULATION Subscribers mt receiving esiivery at their Nereid and News, please a Hon TUied e-etll feoftrt I P.M. Sunday. March 3. 1M3 thing." said Page. A flashlight re vealed the snarling cat under neath the warehouse. Hamblen fired four times with his 30-30 rifle and the animal lay still. When it was later brought out. the blank panther, or black leopard as it is correctly known. boie four shots, two in the head and two in the body. Animal handlers at Jungleland described the cat as potentially dangerous. Residents of the area were warned to keep the chil dren in the house," However, it was explained the panther was normally afraid of people unless were cornereq, The black 2-year-old cat was brought to this country from Thai land three weeks ago and was valued at $2,000. Hamblen and Page split $1,500 bounty for tlie kill. De Kaplany Given Life Prison Term SAN JOSE, Calif. (UPI) - A jury which lelt lie was a sick man" voted Friday night lo sen tence Dr. Gcza de Kaplany to life imprisonment for the acid torturel murder of his beautiful ex-show girl bride. The 10 men and two women jurors returned to tlie Superior Court room of Judge Raymond G. Callaghan afler deliberating for about 20 hours. They had the option of scntenc-l ing tlie 37-year-old former Hun garian freedom fighter to death or life imprisonment. "We feel he is a sick man at present," said jury foreman Rich ard K. Nelson on behalf of the jurors. De Kaplany, a delicate-featured aristocrat, pleaded guilty to mur der in the death of his bride of five weeks, Hajna. He admitted pouring nitric acid over her nude body in their honeymoon apart ment in San Jose last August Hajna, a blonde former showgirl and model, died in a San Fran cisco hospital five weeks later. The Hungarian-born physicianl look the jury's decision tlie same way he took almost every oilier lacet of tlie eight-week trial ex prcssionlcss, silent. Defense attorney E. F. De VII biss presented psychiatric testi mony in support of his theory thai De Kaplany was a Jckyll-and- Hydc combination of two personal ities. one good and one evil. The evil side of the personality. mythical French journalist; named Pierre La Roche, was blamed by tlie defer for the brutal attack on Hajna. Dr. Linclsey Beaton, a psychiat rist from Tucson, Ariz., testified Uiat De Kaplany was incapable of understanding what motivated him He said the defendant was "paranoid-schizophrenic with la tent homosexual tendencies." Die jury began deliberations on Iho penally phase of the trial Wednesday. The same panel had found Hie defendant sane last week. De Kaplany later will be for mally sentenced by Judge Calla ghan. He will be eligible for pa role m seven years, and at that time could be deported as an un desirable. In The.- Day's lews (Continued from Page 1) the world boldly and sav THIS I HAVE DONE." That isn't, he said, the formal creed of the Oregon Angus Asso ciation. So far as he knows, he added, it isn't tlie FORMAL creed of any cattleman's association. He doesn't even know the author of it. he told his liearers. But, he added, it is tlie INFORMAL creed of tlie rugged individualists who make up tlie cattle bu.Mite.ss of the United Stales. Those of us who know the cat tlemen of tins and other areas will agree that it is their IN- SPOKEN creed and that it ex plains why they are what they are. The Virgin Islands once were known as the Dutch West Indies. Heptachlor Lowest Cost Alfalfa Weevil Control GET IT NOW! Simplot Soil Builders TV .774 2052 W.ihburn Way "Dis will probably surprise you, Slue, but WE'RE part of the free world! PPL Aid Acknowledged By Health Department A special acknowledgement to Pacific Power & Light Company for its cooperation with the U.S. Department of Health's long-range study of water resources has been received by the power company as a result ot studies mat were cen tered on the Klamath River. The formal acknowledgement in the form of a certificate was ac companied by a letter from Gor don E. McCallum, Assistant Sur geon General and Chief of the Division of Water Supply and Pol- lution Control, U.S. Department of Health, EducaUon and Welfare. who said the help of Pacific Pow er was valuable in gathering data regarding tlie water quality in the rivers of tlie region. John C. Boyle, vice president for Pacific Power, reported the work had involved the loan of company personnel at the company's John Boyle hydroelectric plant, former ly the Big Bend plant, where the U.S. had installed measuring gear to sample the water. The sampling and measuring work was carried out over a period of several years, Boyle reported, and is continuing There is no liner example ot cooperaUve accomplishment be- t w e e n tlie tedcral government and state and local governments and industry than that demonstrat ed by your participation with us in the National Water Quality Net- Plane Crash Debris Seen MANILA (UPD-Search planes spotted debris 35 miles south of Davao City in the southern Philip pines today, and a constabulary patrol was dispatched to de termine whether It w as the wreck age of a missing airliner with 27 persons aboard. The Philippines Air Lines (PAD twin-engined DC-3 disappeared about midway between Cotabato and Davo on Mindanao Island on a flight that normally takes one hour. It was not known if there were any Americans among the 24 pas sengers and three crewmen. Miss Baby Raymondo. a PAL in formation officer, said the wreck age was sighted by PAL search planes. But she said the wreckage was off the route to be followed by the missing airliner, so tlie ground patrol was sent lo check it out. Obituaries WOLFF Jostohlnt Mlldrtd Wolff, 3. dtd ntar Oiloquil Ftb. I. Survivors: Hus- td. Hnry G.; son, Grid C. beth of Chiloquin; orolrrj, Andrew J. F'iry, Chiloquin, Theodfir Fturv. Eofll Pent. Oft . Frank Flury, MMord. Ort., "d Jump Flurv. Salem. Ore.; listers. Irene Donvns, Medferd, Myrtle Snoddy. Euoent, Ernestine Rulsvold. Bever (.reen, ure.. Elvlne Glenger, Chiloquin, and MbH Wiese, Central Point, Ore. Funeral serv ices Ward's Kiamaih Funeral Home Monday. March 4, at 10 a.m. lonciuams services Klamath Memorial Park. Funerals ftUGI Funerat services tor Lucille V. Huge will be held Monday. March i H 3 Dm. in O Hair's Memorial tnapti. in terment Klamath Memorial par. All Grot.ry Sp.cioli from lost Thurs. od Cod Thru Wtdntlday Coachella Vallty White Grapefruit $. 6th Start Op.n T.doy MARKET BASKET 9th nd Fin $ 6th and Shita W.y t I HI it Ml ' TU tH US M QW. work program," the U.S. official wrote in the letter accompanying the certificate. Here's Real Economy! Giant 22-Oz. Can ya araiMasqi easy-on STARCH NOW AT -THE PRICE YOU USED TO PAY FOR A 14-Oi. CAN! BUY NOW! SPRAY STARCH AT VAC PAY LESS THE FULL POUND CHOCOLATE PEANUT CLUSTERS AT PAC 59 PAY LESS EVERLASTING PLASTIC FLOWERS 2 FOR 19' vy Milk Class SEE 10 SQUARE YDS. CHEESE CLOTH r Dim! Inc. rnllfh Inc. tic. IOI tits. FULL BARREL I 2 OCc at tjett FOR 3 I PAY 4 mmmmmmC LESS TERRIFIC DISCOUNT! AT PAY LESS 87c PAY Thick, Thick Foam MOLDED RUBBER CHAIR Whit CUSHIONS REG. 1.89 SIZE JUST SUCARYL LIQUID N'Mn-l lrle ntr. Full P. 1.99 ONE BIG GROUP CHILDREN'S LONG PLAY RECORDS AT AAC PAY LESS Do u Si B ft RJBMM'' T-.- , PRICE PLUS F.I. TAX M M Contraceptive Ad Sparks Action By SALEM 'UPD The Oregon, Board of Pharmacy is seeking to move against an advertisement for a contraceptive that appeared in a nationally-circulated Protes tant magazine in January. Oregon prohibits the advertising of contraceptives except in trade publications for doctors or phar macists. Twenty-nine other states have similar laws. The ad appeared in the January issue ol tlie uirisuan neraia, an interdenominational rroies- tant monthly edited by Dr. Daniel Poling and circulated by sub scription. It has 45.000 subscribers nationally and 4,857 in Oregon. The ad is believed to be the first explicit advertisement of a hih cotA,vttf privet ewr yes)-' lished by a nationally circulated family magazine in this country. The ad was placed by the fcmko Co. of St. Louis, Mo., manufac turers of an aerosol vaginal foam which has been widely tested in Puerto Rico, and which has been reported in medical literature to be effective as a birth control device. A. 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Can AT PAY LESS Fharmacy Oregon Boaid of Pharmacy, said the attorney general's office has been asked for an opinion on whether a cease and desist order can be issued against the maga zine. He said the board also was con sidering a request to Emko, whose product is licensed by the board for sale in Oregon. A cease and desist order would apply to future issues of the magazine. McLain said the legal question centered on whether the board could move against an ad placed, accepted and published outside Oregon, and only distributed in Oregon. At the time the ad was ac--,riec(, CU-envi "'-?. ad vertising manager of Ihe Chris tian Herald, said acceptance of the Emko ad was a "considered SPECIAL! SPEED READING CLASSES Improve your reading ability and speed with these special speed reading lessons. The im portance of reoding is obvious to everyone. Plan to enroll now. Starts Mon. - March 4th 7:30 p.m., Spruce Room Willard Hotel 101 USES! 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A post office spokesman said he did not expect any legal action by the post office against t h e magazine. DENTAL PLATES Repaired, etc. Our convenient, handy, practical, and economical services NOW available. No appointment needed. No drUv - na nailing Kasy C'rtdlt Evrninftt by rtqueit OPEN 9:00 - 5:00 1033 Main St. TU 4-3284 OUST .SP 127 620 120 Kodocolor FILM AT PAY LESS 99c anno speed POLAROID FILM 10 Sec, Drvflnpliif 3 ROLLS. 25 ft. 2. PLY GARDEN HOSE .1 Vfr Gaarsntfr NOW AAC 98 JUST KAF'OK 12-ff. PILLOWS Sleep Bet- if 99 1 fcr, Feel Better (CHILDREN'S CORDUROY PLAY SHOES .L PAINT II W TV. Won't Drip, I WWWWWy , Beaulitul colon B J I I fl STEEL TINE I I PAY Y