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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1963)
Board Favors Foster Homes For Infants PORTLAND (UPD-The board of directors of United Good Neigh bors (UGN) in the Portland area Jias voted for a resolution favor ;feig foster home care rather than ;mstitution care for normal in fants. The resolution affects, In vary. ing degrees, the Albertina Ken Nursery, Waverly Baby Home and Our Lady of Providence Nursery. These are said to ne the only "baby homes" in the 11 western states which care for normal children. The UGN resolution means that eventually the placing of normal children in a baby home for any length of lime will be eliminated, .with the children to be placed in .foster homes Instead. PAGE 2-A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Wednesday, June 19, 13 u VJ-w - x-4a ' ; PRETTY COURSE ' - Fresh snap beans with tomato mayonnaise make a picture-pretty vegetable course. Cook 1 pound of whole fresh snap beans in 1 inch of boiling water with 1 teaspoon of salt for 10 to 12 minutes, or until crisp-tender. Drain and ar range in small bundles on indi vidual plates. Place a ribbon of tomato may onnaise around center of each -bundle, the mayonnaise made by -mixing 2 tablespoons of finely . diced iresn tomato, y teaspoon oi I salt, a dash of ground black pep- ; per and 1 teaspoon of fresh lem ;on juice into Vi cup of mayon naise. Serves 8. CARDINALS MEET On fhe eve of the fecref conclave starting Wednesday which will choose a successor to Pope John XXIII as spiritual leader of the world's 500 million Catholics are top, left to right, Alfonso Cardinal Castaldo of Naples, Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston, and Carlo Cardinal Confalonieri of Italy. At bottom are Biovanni Cardinal Montini of Milan, Valerian Cardinal Grades of Bombay, and Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal. UPI Telephoto 39 States Permit School Religion - Most Afghans speak Pashto or Pushtu, now the national lan guage. Persian was the official court language until recently. a it mi J I n iu TRAVEL... ajutom railway WASHINGTON (UPII-Religious exercises are permitted as part of the school program in 39 states according to a survey presented to the Supreme Court. The usual pattern in those cases is to open each school day with a homeroom devotional service which includes the reading of a passage from the Bible, and reci tation of the Lord's Prayer. This custom is much more prevalent in the South and East, Bankers Elect Portland Man PORTLAND (UPI)-S. J. Gjerde of Portland was elected president of the Oregon Bankers Association at the close of its 50th annual convention Tuesday. Gjerde, senior vice president of the Oregon Bank in Portland, succeeds M. L. Walden of Taft. Also elected were Guy Ilea, Portland, first vice president; R. F. McNeill, Portland, second vice president, and R. 1. Hadland, Shedd, treasurer. Named to the association's ex ecutive council were D. H. Fin ley, Corvallis; V. E. Garrison. Koseburg; Lcland Johnson, Port land; L. C. Pfeilfer, Salem; Gene Pierce,' Arlington; Charles Tre- sidder, Coos Bay, and Walden. where it has existed since the early days of the Republic, than it is in the more recently settled sections, such as the Far West. According to a survey given the court by Maryland, opening devo tions are forbidden by law, state constitution or judicial decision in seven states. They are Alaska, California, Illinois, Nebraska, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyo ming. Missouri Law Silent Missouri law is silent but the practice is not adhered to there The Arizona constitution bars sec tarian instructions and religious exercises are rarely held there or in Montana. The survey produced no infor mation from Nevada, nor did it show what New York has done since the court's decision, of last June. The most comprehensive study of actual practices in U.S. public schools was publislicd last year by Dr. Richard B. Dicrenfield, associate professor of education at MacAlester College, bt. Paul, Minn. He polled school superin tendents in a nationwide sample of 4,000 communities. School Officials Reply Thirty-three per cent of the superintendents said that home room devotional services were hold in all schools ol their sys tem. An additional 17 per cent said such services were held in some schools of their community, Regional variations were strik ing. In the South, 88 per cent of the superintendents reported home-room devotional exercises in all or some of the schools under their jurisdiction. In the East, 80 per cent reported such exercises, But only 25 per cent of the super intendents in the Midwest and 9 per cent of those in the Far West did so. In reply to a specific question 42 per cent of the school superin tcndcnt5 said Bible reading was conducted in their schools. There was a high correlation between these replies and those concerning home-room exercises, suggesting that Bible reading normally is part of an opening "religious pro gram" which usually includes prayer and possibly the singing of a nymn. Hearing Set On Road Tax UNION PACIFIC MARCHA nrrN i:sn - htart .na 1 jAMr mason - Hinu r.v I 1 WINTERS . SUE LYON I V LOLITA Thar.. - Frl. M rIUw Tha Boy Tomorrow Only, Scalp Specialists M LU.lL Cll Cobo City Center Lodge in mania i ii iaii) u Mam sr. tu 2-4494 Will hnuf Haw fa ave Hair and Prevent Baldness Soil Tested Electrically For Moisture SALEM IUPI1-A hearing has been set for July 2-3 in Salem to settle a dispute between Pacific Motor Trucking Co. and the pub lic utility commissioner over payment of $30,000 in road use. taxes. The hearing was called to de termine the intent of the legisla ture in 1I when It amended the road-use tax law to exempt cer tain mail - carrying routes from taxation. The PUC claims the trucking1 firm owes the taxes for non-mail freight it carried. The tracking firm says the law exempted it On Thursday, June 50, at the Cobos City Center Lodge In Klamath Falls, Staff Director, Mr. K. C. Conner, will give free hair and scalp consultations be tween 1:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. to hair-worried men and women. Phone TU 2-4434. Erlckson Hair and Scalp Spe cialists, the oldest and largest organization of Its kind makes regular visits to Klamath Kalis throughout the year to assure you of success In a minimum i r .Asaw l 7 !C:; Dying Film Star Takes Own Life LOS ANGELES (UPH - Film star Pedro Armendariz. knowing he would die of cancer within a year, shot and killed himscil Tuesday in his hospital room at the UCLA Medical Center. He was found by his wife, Car men, when she returned from lunch. The bullet of a .357 Colt Magnum from his personal gun collection had gone through his chest and spent itself against a door. Mrs. Armendariz said her 51-j year-old husband had appeared to be in good spirits although he had been in considerable pain the night before. She said she knew the gun was in his luggage but had thought nothing of it because he usually carried one with him when he traveled. Armendariz, . who appeared in such films as "St. Francis of As- sisi." "The Littlest Outlaw" and Tulsa," was suffering from can cer of the lymph gland. He had been told earlier he "probably onlv had about a year to live," a medical center spokesman said. In the past few years, Armen dariz divided his time between Europe and North America al though he achieved his greatest fame in Mexico where he won the equivalent to the Academy Award for "Border River" in 1952.' He made 42 films in Mexico from 1935 to 1944 before coming to the United States for his first film, "The Fugitive," directed by John Ford and also starring Henry Fonda. Armendariz was a close friend of actor John Wayne and ap peared with him in many of the 135 motion pictures he made dur ing his career. If- V i If v ' '3 AL SAMPLES Japan In Fish Conservation Pact Of Pacific With US And Canada WASHINGTON iUI'P Japangation, proposed at Tuesday's ses-i Tuesday stuck by its insistence " Pr0m 0 T?' mm -iu "ling mg o species De soiveu uy on rewriting a 10-year-old North . u.....i n,.nH. 3 Changes In County Schools Made 'Liz, Burton Reveal Plans Three administrative changes in the county school system have been announced by Cliff Robin son, county school superintendent. Al Samples, principal at Chiloquin High, will go to Malm to replace Jim Conroy, former principal who has taken the post as secondary school supervisor in the county school district. William Pohll, Bly High School principal, will move to Chiloquin to replace Samples and Melvin Brooks, who has been teaching science at Merrill High, will re place Pohll as principal at Bly. j Samples has lived in Klamath County since 1930 and taught in the county school system since 1951. He is a graduate of Herflcyl High and took his B.S. and M.S.! degrees at the University of Ore gon, j Before starting to teach at Alia- mnnt Junior High Samples had a! 3'j year stint in the Air Force. He taught at Altamont four years and at Bly four years, and has been principal at Chiloquin for four years. Pohll also started teaching in the countv in 1951. He took his B.S. and M.S. degrees at Oregon State University, and taught at Bly and Merrill high schools be fore taking the pnncipalship at Bly in 1937. Brooks, a native of Idaho, took his B.S. and M.S. degrees at the University of Idaho. He taught in Idaho high schools and has been Pacific fisheries conservation, pact, despite Canadian and U.S. opposition to Japan's proposal for a substitute. The chief issue was Japan's op position to continuing the "absten tion principle" under which Japan docs not fish for certain species in areas of the eastern North Pa cific Ocean so long as U.S. and Canadian fishermen are taking the maximum allowable catch. It was understood the confer ence would have to wind up or al least recess at the end of this week because several of the nego tiators have commitments elsewhere. Japanese abstention from ground- fishing operations where halibut! constitute a substantial portion of the catch. Needier also said that all hali but netted, in operations seeking other species should be tossed back into the sea, according to a joint communique. The Canadian delegation chair-: man said his country believed the problem of intermingling species could be solved by interpretation ot the articles of the existing pad. The Japanese delegation said the abstention formula raised a imber of difficulties in solving the problem of intermingling. Ja- Dr. A. W. H. Needier, Canadian pan emphasized the necessity for deputy fisheries minister and writing a new pact, the corn chairman of the Canadian dele-lmunique said. I OPENS TONITE 6:45- MWSllWWIw BOB HOPE dOD nd bags HOPn species... LAKEVIEW - A number of rnncliers in the northern section of Lake County are taking part in a newly developed soil moisture measuring program, according to John Kicsow, county extension agent. The new program involves nut ting electrical resistance gypsumlTrurkinx. subsidiary of South blocks in the soil which can be-crn Pacific, then took over the trom all road-use taxes over the to accommodate the lady.") roniana-Asniana naui wnicn was handled by Southern Pacific Rail road until 1955 when rail service was suspended. Pacific M n t o LONDON (UPI) - Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton have said they plan to get married as soon as they can, the LondoiJ Daily Sketch reported today. Neither Miss Taylor, 31, nor the 37-year-old Welsh actor she met while filming "Cleopatra" were immediately available to com-,oat.hing at B,y for m monlhs. mt-iii un lite MUly. rergus Cashin, the Sketch s en tertainment writer, said Burton Unmnn Pla4- bild him- wwwmwil lwi 'M want to marry Elizabeth and I will marry her. There have been all kinds of rumors, hut this is what is going to happen. "No ifs. No buts. She wants to marry me. I want to marry her." "I'm so happy Richard has told you," Miss Taylor was quoted as saying. (The actress' husband, crooner Eddie Fisher, said when informed of the story in New York: "I wish them all the happiness. My plans are. and always have been, Before After Mrs. Virginia Baron Written Guarantee Erickton Hair end Scalp Spo- ciaitsit accept only thona n-hos period of time. Erlckson Is now hair will respond. Individuals c in its seventh year. Last yearpted nr. given written irunr nlone, over one-ouarter milllonientM that they must h. satijtied Ei ickson home scalp treatments T JJ.-1! """l'" .ht -, 1 , tunned on m pro-rated basis. So, were used. hv ,,, -. k.:. .m. ny lonfrer? Hopol.it Cotes Refund Erifkion SpurinliilK will ne etpt on elifntt u-Acf. antr will rnponii to trrntmfnt. They fan not aWn ifiifinduat who art flick-bald or rA mnjortty of mwi of baldnmi and j-peti'. 1... !,.J l. ,Li J bnlttntm, whrrt no treatment i- any iuiu. Therefore, Urtrkeon M-trf F ' -.'.V t. f- A,Vl Li'Ci Lis-- A .''-.J.J, LeUt Before After Mr. K. Freyer read by an electrical meter throughout the summer to deter mine when to irrigate. Under a sprinkler irrigation. Kicsow stated, a rancher can even determine the exact number of hours the sprin kler needs to be operating to bring the soil back to its full moisture holding capacitv. Cost for the gypsum blocks is $1 ciirh and lor a meter, from $ii0 to !K). Tile meter will last for many years and the same one could be used by several ranchers. In some areas, districts have been set up and a farm w ile or a high school student takes the reading and plots the chart. Kicsow points out that interest was generated in the program as a result of the soils and irriga tion workshops held in the county last year with Marvin Shearer, Oregon Stale University irrigation specialist, conducting A new bulletin, "i'.fectrical Re sistance (iypsum Block for Sched uling Irrigations," Extension Bul letin mo. can be obtained from the countv extension office. mail haul. Treasured by Gloria Winters. Penny on "Sky King." is a gag cheek for $1 from comedian Jack Benny for an appearance on his show. Fugitive Taken WALLA WALLA (UPD - Rex Don Stamps, who escaped from the state penitentiary here in May, was returned from Kansas City late Tuesday. He was cap tured there June 5. Stamps, convicted of robbery in Seattle about three years ago. was due for parole in August. Shirl Conway, head nurse Lizi Thorpe on "The Nurses" on lhe CBS Television Network, is a great-niece of the late actress TV -A I eon tin u thir tWiw tit r. luting nil AnncJrtt 1r UnMtiMi ii stow and grarfwiL fr'V' ond Mr. Bnmtn Hid not Henrietta Crosman vn in th moat common for mi.' nav i0 pn'wni baldnttt. If you now hnvt, or hv tn the lirtjt noticed dandruff, itchy trnlp, excejpive olhncM or dry n?M, excess. v hair fall or thin tiinjr at the temples or crown, you nhnuld nee Mr. Conner tomorrow. He will recommend an Ericknon program bent milted to unking vmir hair and araln nrohltma. how lone you will Krtckiion treatment, and how much the cot will be, which is usually leai than imitator. fret Coniuttatlen There fa absolutely no eharfre or obltRation for your fr hair and scalp eonnuttation. You can earily follow thit new modem method in th privacy of your home. Actually, there, are thou, (ados with hair and icalp proh lrm who can be helped by the new F.nckjon Uair and Scalp Spectal-J lata home treatment methods. ( This man wd refunedf or treatment by Krfckson Hair and Scalp Spe cialists because he hat male pattern bald-nei. ave to Fret Hair Clinic Tomorrow Only For vour froe hair and ncalp n ... . l t .i x . Of!. V'Ch 1. IK" consultation, po to llio Colw's Kltmfttli ealtt, OrA PuttTlhr OXtv (t'rt lit) "(! tundsfi lfvlr nwlrirft Or j n Nrthrn Cilltornta KlamatA Pvtiliintn Cihwwi? W. S. IwrMtlarM). PvMMMr t nttrtd at (tone- lati mitttr If fH (, vmtr ad w Cm S Scr"-1 das iwr ; aa Pl al Klamat p.m. and fl 00 pm.. on Thurs day, June 20. and ask the room clerk for Mr. Conner s room number. You may phono for an flpjwlntmcnt or jut come In at your convenience. Consultation are phon in private. You will I Mont . 1 171 4 MonlM l II I Var in m Mall tn k&rmt 1 MSAtH 1 mmim vtm I Vaar HI M ; Carrltr t4 tHalr i I Wakftay, Cov. 10 lufiday. tw lit mn i- rni(iiir;iru or onu-.jwniT auau of cmcunTioN Kflted in anv wav itnrari ri f'wfl v i 1 r ' thir Haralrl mini Mu Blaau bIum . CATES OPEN TONITE AT 8:30 P I "HHH OSCAR WINNER BEST ACTRESS BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS! AJ ' 'San i ni-ti f V -1 IxriiVtfimlJiH miracle worKer ANNE' BANCROFT PATTY DUKE VICTOR J0RY AND ON THE SAME PROGRAM! BURTlAiWIER THE STORY OF ROBERT STROUD Who tpent mora than SO ytrt In prison and It still unbeaten, V, unbow.d, lu unconqutrtd ! -Jv rMl wALuAIKAZ KARL WALDEN THELMA RITTER NEVILLE BRAND New President PORTLAND (UPD A Corvallis woman, Mrs. J. T. Longfellow, was named president of the Ore gon PEO women Tuesday after noon. She had served as vice president of the group during the past year. The Rroup. a women's social and philanthropic organization, is holding its annual state conven tion this week on the Lewis and Clark College campus. SAT. June 22 3 BIG SHOWS! ; MAT. - 2:30 - 8PM-11PM I TOWER SPECIAL MAT. 2:30 "TONED DOWN tor) "LITTLE GHOULS" Plu "TRIPPLE SCARY" ; P.M. & LATE 11 P.M. for BIG GHOULS! Gen. Adm. 1.00 Kidi Under 12 50c 3 Big Shows Combined! GIANT HORROR & TWIST SHOWS! r 'A3 EXTRA! ON STAGE! GIANT ' mmansshter TWIST CONTEST STAGEFUL TWISTERS EVERY SHOW PRIZES! YOU CAN COME UP FROM THE AUDIENCE AND COMPETE! WONDERFUL i, 'Oi- V" V. I THRILLS! ittpiSC '9 riV ADVENTURE! 'RlfSR'C &fSs&Hk ROMANCE! DWfe' BOEHM'SLEAK mVMU ' Y OSCAR P4?WA I I h2W?TH if f 1 I I "V XS fJS& u& TERRy THOMAS -tBaaa- m - - Kill arM DOORS OPEN 4:30 TAKE YOUR ""HACKEIT' tAMlLY TO THE MOVIES,