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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1963)
They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy jfadb SSSSSJZ mmSif : I Sfi&PW 1VON6 JUST LIKE WREOFTHISONE.'O EtfSSFft 1 JT VWttOW VtfWffT" 2"$ Z Wt S VWCHEHIS tmctda P liL ' XMaV 7'lllliX OH70ASW0ODq fwHV WASN'T)11" ' il f BECAUSE I DONT THISIK I '' I F HUSBANDS A i" I I " - tM- BLiiJ 1 k LA"PS5TMeJ MADS A MAJOR) HVJV, HYTHEBILLOkJjil I If - 77 M rv. . , rr u-r-r-TI I i . , &-K TODAY -r- like THArr-.6 LIKE-S'i4 Xi. V ' -'t 7 Suppose the '-V l That's the ) rTT ""'AND THEN.S - ' - t ? ir2 ithat JT" vJx .sga r'xS&s' rrrA folks i should move) 1 1 gratitude IS HH- (FOR NO REASON ) (S Vs rftM ' y-A ( v A7 fi B!aeki's H$ht!) I'd be ruined! ftet for J NlT at all, Z S fif2 -e- IPM : ttft. C SHfiJ ; ImW l WTVtti VfflX&m W II Sf&$?fes - ITTS I lTL0OSJUST "I BUT IT DOESNT N I 1 WJM ' ftSSSKt- AMIWK) UKATER ( FOOUe. - J 0 ' T - Oukii' fifemtYK .. ; t5cj oC3 viL jjT- I L!!1 ) HJ" I I wBa,irs...R ,ah... ) oh, it 1 I ..why, voure hardly ) just I I tell me about well, N , M M PS cif V IS 7 HAT? LONG TIME AGO A SO LONG... 1L J ABOUT THIS BUTVOu' 50 ALL MY T THAT EWCTAMT MOTHER ACT WHEM HB AKEP WHY WB HAPWT SET UP THe 'COPTER Witt GEf AOHiMI?. McKEE-. L4TyT-7-- kll l " J )J MOO PLACE ( UOM-TflE- THAT M0rH6K Ikl V SMH "WR.KOTNK"NP THOWHr Wi IN PRISON, I REALIZEP TKEV'P POUSie- BRINS THE CAR LATER yARE PAS5IN' THRU, J" 'fiS " fff& A '"4U J-TV f a FROM.' Z j " .nBP ; ffiC ff Twil ffliMni-Sil WEPUNOS'M KbUSIMESS 15 1 I T l I 0 I 'Ml ivllu' c:3 "N. I - UV-lCaJrJIJ Vy"' W,;HJ,llh.l.iniMilJ f 1 Kk-fl ' ' ... , TIT.. AUSTS:D. SO I WEAP THE BUSINESS 1 ITS TOO TWO weirs SO iESOTH?Nas ) 1- ,, , ,, ,, V T KNVnV v" J S C0NV LA.TETOWEMTIT h; QUIET ASOLIND HESEr-Zi. . u!v BACK MY DOUSM! f( IT50t'VW I i L . CrTT1 I r f R 1 s k1.Ck vi -il Ji) r .4 B rR tM M3Sef- cf4 ms ! . ' I- . i ' ' t ) II.. ' I I ' , fm-JrSTiaulSr, TNLVWKl k J . ' L' 1 ' ' ' i 1 ! ' i -Jz sly WLfffi 'A 1WI ivd i. N r .' Li y-w- oy. w ' "'rL"-J l JTb.tt ; X 5,NS" y -J I rr i i 3 1 11 1 . . . .... ff-S.vV- r:'L.LJT J.rrri Jf v. vjuj TTazcl .a -'IW U I I " i' v iXvc.'. j r,, . .yiT. : rr: yi v tnkwi.txi.muH. Cy5;fI-y J JL&?&x ' I 1 C, S7ZTT ariyeuTe(pnaYrle notstupti What's the iratter. Clevia-V No. tut f-e;'-;' 1 1 "1 : i4""4 1 ' ; -ihere uant n aW wanted heip to hep that big tup a I aid he didn't oo I Are uu tore hp-aw Jbi Cusv h i 7 r- , 3LA " nTX ft yto gou, Chipper? i like him get WatL rT' towcclj rar ii. otnnnvs at ths I be takins on a nhv and 6neral srisp ooctor J 1 p rmzm m ' 11 11 i . 1 1 jh -m.- i 11 ' m si i hi"": :.mLi,L. V. :. 1 T STEADY pilot-steady. M 1 tmab I ooj't tpi i- mp 1 r mio i ffti e nfiMH 1 --.,, , -,,v I . . RKOMf) mu9 1 OLD SLINCSuOT MOUNTAIN 1. SHE IS. NOU WAS BORN WAS CLEAN DOWN P F vJ: f- 7 w--- CAOfie : spiaga ssssssiigj ylajsas., Lrj&SKnss, bifida?. Cr s&sej.'ss, ("S.. im$Sn& iijr SjrfX If7 Awv SSfe lilS ). lMlhp L .1 - iLz-LwA u. miia.a-v iaj;a;.,iiM, i ill UPI Scribe Now Fills Solon Post SALEM. Ore. (UPI I A man who shared a Pulitzer prize (or news reporting now is helping make news in the Oregon State Senate. Glen, M. SLadler, of Eugene, Ore.,' who served in the Oregon House of Representatives 1957-58. is beginning a four-year term as a State Senator. In additiou to his dutie: as Sen ator, Stadler, a Democrat, helps supply his three Oregon radio sta tions with news of the Legisla ture. He is owner and president of radio station KEED AM & FM. Springfield-Eugene; and executive vice president of KGAY, Salem, and KGAL, Lebanon. A native of Woodburn, Ind., 51- year-old Stadler joined United Press in Lansing, Mich., to cover the legislature. He later was transferred to New York, and then to Europe. He was United Press bureau manager in Paris when the Germans took over in 1940. A year later he was transferred to Berlin, and covered the Fin nish army in Russia before being interned by the Germans after , Pearl Harbor. While interned, Stadler and four other United Press newsmen wrote "This is The Enemy," which they smuggled out of Ger many when released in a prisoner exchange. Stadler shared a Pulitzer award for foreign reporting in 1941. After release from. Germany, he returned to the United States, joined the Columbia Broadcasting System and went to Madrid and, in 1944, to London. He married a Minneapolis girl, Helene Nielsen, in 1947, and moved to Oregon in 1949 to enter the University of Oregon where he received a masters degree in journalism in 1950. He then taught radio journalism at Oregon for two terms. Golf Balls To Mimic Space Ships NEW YORK (UPli-GoK balls and space ships now have at least one thing in common as they soar through the air. It s electronics. A revolutionary golf ball, pro duced with an assist from some of the space age techniques that go into the testing of interplane tary vehicles, is ready for blastoff after a six-year development pro gram, according to Its manufac turer. , The ball also has a one-piece cover, first of its kind on hich- compression golf balls, said A. G. Spalding & Bros. When the technique of manufac turing this cover had been de veloped, the company said, it was decided that a testing system should be set up to guarantee I that each of the new golf balls would meet the standard set by the United States Golf Association for maximum initial velocity. The USGA rule on distance for tournament golf balls is that "the velocity of the hall on Impact shall not be greater than 250 feet per second . . . when the temperature !nf the ball is 75 degrees Fahren heit . . . and a minimum tolerance of 2 per cent will be allowed on any ball in such velocity test." thus establishing a distinct limit to maintain Rolfs competitive standard. Scientists at Spalding's Research and Development staff at Chico pee. Mass.. assembled an elec tronic device that propels the new i.! unts through a miniatuv indoor driving ranee, measurine the initial velocity of each ball and automatically rejecting those which fail to meet the maximum distance potential. Tile machine "tees off every two seconds on a simulated 280-yard drive. After the balls have gone through the Ivelocity trial, they are electroni cally scrutinized for size, weight and compression to meet addition al USGA requirements. In thc "torture tests." the balls are sub jected to 50 batterings with a 115 pound weight, placed in water for 1 hours, pounded another 50 jtimes by the weight and individ ually shot 50 times into an oc. itapina! shaped drum at 97 miles j'an hour. The "Dot's" one-piece cover i. made of an exclusive chemical compound called Polyunidync which the company said introduc es unprecedented durability. This replaces the balata rubber com pound used in previous balls, which were of two-piece construc tion with a seam. GET HOT RECEPTION LONDON il'PIi Prirva Alexandra and her husband. An gus Ogilvy, got a hot reception nn their return home Thursday from their honeymoon In Spain A fire in a refrigerator brought firemen and police on ih mn In the Osilvy residence. Authorities said there was little damage.