Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1963)
Tuesday, June 11, 13 PACE HKRALD AND NEWS, Klamath Fallt, Oregon "DENNIS THE MENACE" Editors Note: Much of the leg fslation passed, or rejected, by the 13 legislature touched par ticuluily upon one group or an other. Last of six. By ZA. STAKK and ANN II. PEARSON I'nited Press International SALEM tUPIi Truckers, workers, consumers, employers, the city dweller, the farmer all an officer. the groups that make u the pub-l It killed the other two of Gov. TATS WHAT I USED ID RIDE Irt PEfW 1 KNEW ANY BETTER. BASIN BRIEFS MALIN MR. AND MRS. JERRY DER RY are the parents of a girl born June 4 and named Kimberly Ann. The Derrys also have a 3-year-old son, Gary. Grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs. Ted Evans and Mr. and Mrs. Dick Derry. MR. AND MRS. FRANCIS KOLKOW and nephew, Gene Prank, were in Chico last week end for the graduation of their daughter, . Nancy, from Chico State College. MR. AND MRS. CHARLES MILLAR, Hemct, Calif., were re cent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Zeiders, The Millars are on their way to Canada where they will spend the summer. THE MUSTANG ROOM, a teen-age recreation center, is now open in Malin. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jackson are the proprietors and Mrs. Grant Anderson, Klam ath Falls, is assisting with the opening. MR. AND MRS. MORRIS KESSLER visited their son and familv. the Paul Kesslers, in Brookings last week. MR. AND MRS. OMAR SCHNEIDER. Portland, ' visited friends here Wednesday. They were en route to Redding to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Stumbaugh. MR. AND MRS. RAY KEMP and son, Jerry, of Tryon. Neb., were guests of Mr. and .Mrs. Har old Barney last week. MR. AND MRS. DL'ANE DA LEY and family spent several days in Medford visiting her moth er. Mrs. Norman Judy, and at tended the graduation of her broth er. Lewis Netf. at hi. .Marys. They also vacationed several days on the coast. MRS. TED EVANS returned af ter spending a week in Pendle ton with her sister ana nus band, the Clifford Browns. MRS. KEN, WILSON is home after visiting two months with her daughter and family, the Bob Shorts, in Portland. RICHARD LOUIS JR. is the name chosen for the new son o( Mr. and Mrs. Richard Angstrom, Astoria, who was born June 5. Mrs. Angstrom is tlie former Nan-t-y O'Rilcy. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold O liiley. They also have a 2-year-old daughter. Ma rie. PROSPERITY CHAPTER No im r.i.-c uiii hnM iis regular IW, yji-nl. "... - --r- meeting June 13 at 8 p.m. in the .. ... rr- l nfflc Malm .Masonic iimuht. vmii.i Three - Way Compensation Bill Created Greatest Pressure clampdown on sale of subdivi sions, and licensing of psycholo gists. Liquor Permits SUiy The legislature failed to abolish tlie liquor purchase permit. To make the highways safer,1 the legislature voted to require seat belts in new cars, permit an officer to cite a driver without seeing an accident, and set stiff penalties for a driver who flees the l'Jfil law they said would wipe. to a commerce department for a' out their informal ambulance! services. The biggest cities and their sub urbs got a chance to improve re lations through metropolitan study commissions. The agencies dealing with bank ing, corporations, real estate, insurance, planning and similar business activities got grouped in- four-year trial period. Tlie Sunday shopper kept his market, after business and reli gious groups split on a measure to limit Sunday sales and the House killed it. Boxers got new safely require ments. Minority groups gol stronger en forcement of Oregon's civil rights laws. Movies were brought under tlie law against obscenity. Harbor and river dwellers public and privategot a proce dure for acquiring "fill" lands. Tlie state got more ocean bottom to lease because the federal gov ernment changed its map. Hie law against air and water pollution was strengthened. Tlie state got new power to use in ac quiring remaining parcels of land to make up the Boardman indus trial site. Tlie Columbia River compact didn't get anywhere. Nor did pleas for bonds to improve "have-not" highways. Lobbyists again escaped a law to make them register and de clare their expenses. Even prisoners got something a state-level public defender, in line with a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that more attorneys must be supplied to accused persons who can't afford them. are to be present at 7 p.m. to practice lor installation. MRS. DICK DERRY. Mrs. Joe Halousek. Mrs. Charles Oubry and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kalina were in Portland last week to attend the Eastern Star meeting, Grand Chapter of Oregon. PROSPERITY CHAPTER No. lfiO, OES, will hold installation of I officers June 15 at 8 p.m. in the Malm Masonic Temple. Mildred Dobry, worthy matron elect, and Ivan Ottoman, worthy patron elect, will be installed. The public- is invited to attend. CIIILOQUIN MR. AND MRS. GORDON KL'IST and family left Friday night after tlie Eastern Star in stallation for Minot, N.D. Mrs. Kuist is attending Minot State Teachers' College until the middle of August. MR. AND MRS. MILT OGDEN and two sons left Saturday morn ing for a week's vacation with his family in Burlington, Wash, IHVIGHT KIRCHER and Frank Ohlund left Saturday morning lor Portland to attend a coin conven tion. MR. AND MRS. STEVE PE- TERS from Klamath Falls visited the Lloyd Peters Friday evening and attended tlie Eastern Star in tallation. lie were affected by the 1963 legislature. Much of the legislation dealt particularly with one segment ol society. As usual, labor and manage ment had many legislative inter ests. And one of these pieces of leg islation, as in 1961, was the sub ject of the hardest and heaviest pressures the legislature has seen in some years. That was tlie "three-way" work men s compensation bill. It in volved millions of dollars in insur ance business for private firms, and similar sums in benefits for injured workers. In the end. no body could agree and the House killed it, but not until after it had affected much other legislation. Labor won improvements in benefits for the jobless. Railroad brakemen kept Oregon's full crew law, a defeat for railroad man agemcnt that wanted to be able to reduce crews. But labor proposals for a mini mum wage, an anti-strikebreaker law, a shorter work week fo fie men, and cpeal of the 1961 labor elections law got nowhere. Consumers got some protec tions. They included a bill intend ed to clarify statement of inter est rates, a requirement that "balloon bread" be so labeled, a Mark Hatfield's traffic safety measures, speed limits, and "im-l plied consent" to chemical tests! for alcohol. Heavy trucks got lighter high way use taxes. For lighter trucks; and log trucks, the fees were slightly increased. Farmers got protection for their own bargaining groups, and pro tection against picketing by har vest workers. Dairymen got re newed state support in holding up the prices they get for milk. Commercial fishermen got an overhaul of their licensing laws, plus new fees that they agreed to. Timbcrmen got a permit sys tem to let them export raw logs from public lands when the logs aren't wanted by Oregon mills. They also got some tax revisions. Ranchers who lease state graz ing lands got a program underl which they can borrow from the stale to improve the range. The elderly with limited in comes got a broader program of! medical assistance and some tax relief on their homes. For the needy, tlie legislature gave a greener lighl on lood stamp and surplus food programs, but said the welfare commission! can cut off the aid to dependent children program if it wants. Ambulance Law Killed Small communities got rid of Immoral Charge Denied By Society Osteopath LONDON (L'PD Dr. Stephen; Ward, tlie society osteopath who introduced playgirl Christine Kccl er to resigned War Minister Jolin Profumo. was ordced held with out bail Monday on charges of liv ing wholly or in part off the earn ings of prostitutes. Ward did not enter a plea when lie appeared at Marlborough Mag istrate's Court on the vice charge. Chief Inspector Samuel Herbert told a crowded courtroom Throughout my inquiries tills man has been in constant touch with witnesses and I fear, if he is al lowed bail, lie will interfere with prosecution witnesses. The chief inspector said he also was objecting to bail because "there are likely to be a number of more serious charges. The preliminary liearing came while Prime Minister Harold Mac- millan met with his key ministers; to deal w ith the growing security1 and sex scandal that caused Pro- fumo's resignation last week. Dr. Ward, a 50-ycar-old osteo path whose clientele reads like a page out of Britain s Who s Who, fumo to Miss Kecler, described in court last week as a call girl. When Ward informed on Profumo, the cabinet minister resigned in I a scandal that shook the govern-1 ment. Councilman Leaves Post To Take Sanitation Job E.E. Lefever Ends Service DUNSMUIR E. E. Lefever is among the recent retirees from the Southern Pacific Company. Lefever went to work for the I Southern Pacific Company Dunsmuir in July, 1923, and was ; promoted from fireman to loco-; motive engineer on Oct. 6. 1941. All of his railroad service was on the Shasta division and he and Mrs. Lefever plan to continue liv-; ing in Dunsmuir. Charles Capafoni, another South ern Pacific employe, also retired recently. He was serving as yard clerk in the Dunsmuir yards and I had been employed by tlie rail- W EED Jesse Green, city coun cilman, resigned from the coun cil at the June meeting last Thursday in order to take the po sition of city sanitation fore man. Tlie city of Weed is setting up a garbage collection service and is expecting delivery within a week or two of a new garbage truck. The council adopted the 1963-64 budget at the meeting and Mayor J. I. Kersey announced uie ami cipated city costs could be met without an increase in property tax rates. The $146,197.35 budget is an in crease of $27,75.1 over last year's budget, but additional funds are expected through increases in as sessed valuation, sales tax reven ue, motor vehicle license revenue, and funds allocated under Senate Bill No. 344 which now seems assured of passage. Residents of Weed now pay a w u, -y road since April, 1943. an improper relationship between I Profumo, 48, and red-haired Miss1 Keeler. 21. He denied the charges against him. "Oh. my God," he said, "how dreadful. I shall deny it. Nobody will come forward to say it is true." The court ordered Ward held one week. The osteopath-artist, who num- general lax rate of 71 cents per hundred dollars assessed valua tion and a special fire protection tax of eight cents. Projects nearing completion, ac cording to the report of William Hansen, city manager, are street bercd such persons as Sir Winston patching and trenching f o r storm drainage lines; installation of mercury vapor lights in the Highway 99 business section and residential street lignling on col lege Avenue. An ordinance making rabies in oculations of dogs mandatory was passed as an emergency measure to conform to a similar county regulation. Churchill, and actress Elizabeth Taylor among his patients, is the man who introduced playboy Pro- FRIENDLY HELPFULNESS To Every Creed and Purse WARD"S Klamath Funeral Home Marguerite Ward and Sons 92$ Wi.n Ph. TU 2-4404 At laatj A pleasant, refreshing way to blip DreaK srooiunK name urai tane, genu? meaicaieu to help satisfy tobacco cTKvi nsf. At dm T aiorea Mm MONEY FOR VACATIONS! No nrrd In drain the family aavlng at va cation tlmr. Juat figure aul hw murh ymu w 111 nerd and bnrraw It from Suburban. Knjnv your trip know In you ran pay far It with convmlrnt monthly payments while keeping )nur aavlnga in the bank! . Bo row $100.00 $300.00 $500.00 No. of poymnti . 12 mo . 18 mo. . . 24 mo. Amount1 . $10.05 . $21.81 . $28.86 SUBURBAN FINANCE 3870 So. 6th Phon. TU 4-77S Town and Country Shopping Canter i' npmniiimiiiTtriirrin i i n J itAn - ii i r JUT l ond fl II JHH Vycron cotton (ztoiul-Sot PENGUIN GOLF SHIRT The golf shirt designed by golf pro now in exciting new knit 50 Vyeron polyester fibre-50 cotton blend cool me fabric, that keeps its "freihK)uofmebox, look wearing after wearing. Action free underarm e"e'- 2V longer shirt tail. Machine washable, ropld dry. Available irvoihion right colors. SliS,M.Utl- 00 and Charge Accounts and Gift Wrapping Gladly DKEWSAlSitore 733 Main and Town & Country When the phone rings, do you run . . . FREE DELIVERY SERVICE ON ANY ITEM IN THE STORE Phone Ui Yeur Need. Deliveries Each Day at 11:00.2;00.440 u- - - - ii- f rn i ri rrkir- "-""tt f --.rp.. I 1 O ! or reacn : ...... m I I I A bedroom extension phone save, lime and steps when you're doing the housework,' helps prevent within reach -doetor, police or fireman, too. Order your bedroom ension today. Just call your tele annoying dashes down the hall to talk to people who have hung up. At night, friends and family are phone business ofllcc and ask for Beverly, our Extension Cirl. () PACIFIC NORTHWEST BELL IM THE VILL-UI ivwnl I