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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1963)
; PAGE 4A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falli. Oregon Thursday. September II, 1963 Chamber Schedules Stary Gauge As Speaker At Annual Banquet A retired businessman of VI : salia, Calif., who travels nearly 100,000 miles while delivering some 160 talks on Americanism each year will be the principal .guest speaker at the annual busi ! ness meeting of the K 1 a m a t h ; County Chamber of Commerce, : 8:3(1 p.m., Wednesday, Oct. 9. at the: Reamcs Golf and Country iCIub. He is Stary Gange, 54, a noted after-dinner speaker whose busi-, ness experience includes 12 years .of banking and more than 40 years as a grower of oranges and olives. ' , The announcement of Gange ' as the leading speaker was made by , George Callison, chamber manager, at the weekly meeting of the chamber yesterday, auer the ' group heard two committee reports and welcomed Miss 99 a lithesome, dusty blonde in the form ol Judy Homing of Fort-land. Police File Worthless Check Count A Eugene man who police say has passed or attempted to pass five worlhless checks in Kiamatn Falls this month was arrested in a downtown store Wednesday afternoon. Theodore Albert-Julius Drum mond, 57, was charged with passing bad checks and also was held on Eugene warrants (or the same charge and for violation of probation. Police said Drummond was ar rested in a downtown store Wed nesday afternoon as be attempted to cash a check for $10. : Officers said he had been re fused only a few minutes before when be attempted to casn anotn er $10 check at Columbian Opti cal He also Is charged with pass ing .a $10 check at Payless Drugs Tuesday and at Montgomery Ward Sept, 9. Police are investi gating the possibility that he cashed at least one more check locally. Police 6aid all the checks were signed with Drummond's real name, but were drawn upon ac counts either non-existent or closed. ft ' : v.. STARY GANGE Miss Fleming arrived here from Portland yesterday in the com pany of Musty RosLad, sales man ager of West Coast Airlines, to extend a personal invitation Mayor Robert Vcatch and wel- come others to attend the Flight Safety Aviation Weather Semi nar in Portland Sept. 21 through 22. The pair traveled south via West Coast Airlines and extended similar invitations to mayors and other civic officials at stopping points along the airline s itiner ary. Miss Fleming, representing the Ninety-Nines, Inc., an interna tional organization of women pi' lots which is presenting the sem- lnar, was introduced by Rostad, who commented briefly on the two-day program. The sessions will feature offi cials of the Federal Aviation Agency and the U.S. Weather Bureau, among others as speak ers, he said, in addition to a number of addresses, the pro gram also will include motion pictures and color slide presen tations. The seminar is designed for airplane pilots or others in volved in aviation, but tlie pun lie is invited to attend, Rostad added. Miss Fleming captured the fan- cv of the chamber and elicited a lew chuckles from Us members when she remarked, "It's unfor- Donego. There was no damage. I innate tbat 9! has a different Fire Put Out :-Countv lircmer. 'Wednesday aft ernoon extinguished a email grasa Ike ul Skyline Drive and JFK Vill Pass Portland Due To NAACP Protests PORTLAND (UPI) President Kennedy today called off a sched uled soeech In Portland next week In the face of threatened picketing by the National Association for the Advancement ot wiorea reopie, The White House In Washington D.C. announced a revised schedule today which calls for the Presi dent to make only a briet, i&-min-ute visit in Oregon to the for mer Tongue Point Navy base near Astoria. The earlier schedule had Ken nedy visiting both the Astoria and Portland area with a tpeecn list ed. Local officials said the speech had b a n scheduled to dedicate the new senior citizens housing protect, the Northwest Towers, Sept. 27. But Wednesday the Port land Housing Autnority, in a teie aram to Rr. Edith Green, D-Ore, recommended Kennedy cancel the dedication because of the picket ing possibility. - Today's announcement from the White House eliminated the Port land stop. The new schedule calls for Ken nedy to travel by helicopter from Tacoma to Tongue Point, arriving next Friday at 1:05 p.m. PUT. He will inspect the former base there and meet with a citizen s commit- ee interested in making other use of the site. He is scheduled to leave at 1:20 p.m. PDT for a heli copter flight to the Scattle-Tacoma International Airport, from where he will fly to Redding, Calif. Ln route to Redding, he will fly over the Dunes area between Florence and Coos Bay. the White House said. connotation in this area than it does in mine. "But I assure you that we have nothing at all to do with the highway bearing a similar num ber, she said. Miss Fleming alluded to .High way 99. which competes with Highway 97 for tourist traffic traveling north and south through the state. Later, in other comments on Gange, Callison reminded t h e chamber that its key speaker had addressed the local Kiwanis Club about three years ago and had twice delivered talks at the annual meeting of the U.S. Cham ber of Commerce. In addition to his business rec ord, Gange has a Jong slate of service in civic activities. Among those are past president and for many years a director on1 the Lindsay, Calif., Chamber of! Commerce; director of the Visa lia Chamber of Commerce and currently its national councillor; member 'of two active committees of the California State Chamber! of Commerce; a member of the United States Chamber of Com merce and one-time participant in its Government Operations Committee. In 1954 he was named Visalia's Man. of the Year by that city's chamber of commerce. Since 1950, Gange has delivered more than 2,300 talks on Ameri canism in the 50 United States. in other activities his experi ence includes nine years as a di rector and vice president of the Pacific Olive Company of Visalia: and past experience as director and president of the Orange Belt Supply Company, director of the National Canners Association and a member of their legislative committee. In addition, he has served for many years as a director of the California Olive Association and as a member of several of its state committees. In one of two reports, Callison stated that the Upper Klamath Lake and Recreation Committee had met with resort owners of Agency Lake and the Holiday Lakes to discuss plans for the long-range development of t h e area. Callison. who was report ing for Dick Green, chairman ot the committee, said the talks had been constructive and would rc- sumo al a date to be deter mined later. ' In the oilier report, Keith Cnbo, director of the Tourist and Con vention Committee, urged mem bers of the chamber to attend a rally and no host dinner being held by the chamber for the members of Okanogan Cariboo Trail Association, 7 p.m., Oct. 5, at the Winoma Hotel. Following the rally which will include a social hour, singing, and dancing, the members of the association will depart or Reno, where they will conduct I h e I r 31st annual convention, Oct, and 7. Guests at yesterday's meeting included Joe Sawyer, manager ol the municipal airport; Bob Moore, West Coast Airlines; Mayor Rob ert Vcati-h; County Commission er Frank Ganong, and Bill Hone, Modford Investment Company Weather Roundup Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PDT today. Astoria Baker Brookings Medford Newport N. Bend Pendleton Portland Redmond Salem The Dalles Chicago Los Angeles New York Phoenix San Fran. . Washington Northern California: Mostly lair. The Dalles and Hood River: Fair through Friday; highs 80-85; low 42-48; gorge winds east 7-12 Bend: Fair through Friday; nigtlS 76-82; low 36-42. Baker and La Grande: Chance few showers; highs 65 - 70; low 35-15. Portland - Vancouver: Fair through Friday with patchy morn ing fog; highs near 80; low tonight1 50. Western Oregon: Mostly fair with morning fog or low clouds: highs 73-B3 and 65-70 on coast low tonight 42-52. Eastern Oregon: Variable clouds with some chance showers or thundershowers through Fri day: highs 65-75; low 35-50. Tatoosh to Blanco: Winds van able 6-16; morning fog or low clouds. High Low ' 72 47 69 53 86 52 84 SO 68 .. 69 51 73 49 80 49 71 40 81 49 82 48 91 72 74 65 70 63 91 69 74 61 76 60 Porumbeanu Seeks Wife ZURICH, Switzerland (UPI) Andrei Porumbeanu, "shaken up" by the news his heiress-wife wants to divorce him, today was reported seeking a meeting with her somewhere in Europe. Friends of the couple said the 37-year-old Romanian-born play boy arrived in Zurich Wednesday night to search for his 22-year-old wile, the former Gamble Bene dict. He flew in from New York. Gamble is one of the heirs to the huge Remington typewriter fortune. '--she and her sons, Georghe, 2, and Grigore, 10 months, dropped out of sight a week ago. On Tuesday, Gamble's attorney, Eugen Curti, announced that the former New York debutante had filed for divorce from Porumbea nu on the grounds of misconduct. He also said she stripped Por umbeanu, 37, of his power of at torney to administer the income from a $20 million trust fund set up for her. FAT OVERWEIGHT AvalUhl to you .vllhoiil r doclor'm prescription, our p rod mil calUo ( mx on. toil mutt Inna ukiv Il in . cUyi or your money buck. f alas on It liny tablet and ctitly iwallowed, (let rid af txrfM fat and live longer, (iaiaxan mala :i.oa and la Bold or Ihla cuarantee: If not aattifltd fi any reason, Jusl return lha parkatt to yoor drugciil and iet loll manry hark. No queMlona aikrd. Galaaon li old with thla guarantee hy: Woad Drur Mare, 391 Main Mall Order Filled. Quintuplets Doing Fine; Family Given $100,000 Home ABERDEEN, S.D. (UPI) The riyhls to pictures and stories of Mary Magdalene) turned over onl Pieplow said he has had offerslfurnishings for the new house. It thriving Fischer quintuplets add ed a $100,000 home today to their bonanza that already is worth nearly $200,000. And in South Dakota, that's really a lot of house. The quintuplets themselves were "getting along good" in the fifth day of their lives. Their doc tor paid them a midnight visit! and said he had increased their milk formula again. The promise nf a new home was the biggtst item on a grow ing gift list for Andrew Fischer,! 38, a $76-a-weck grocery clerk, and his wife, Mary Ann, 30. The Curtis Publishing Co. an nounced it had bought publication Members Sue Union Leaders PORTLAND (UPI) -Six mem bers of Portland Local 1885 of the International Association of Ma chinists Wednesday sued eight union officials for $360,000. The suit charges the union al legedly wrongfully called them scabs in a written sheet dis tributed to other members. The men claim the union made the charges when they worked over time for United Air Lines here after other union members asked them not to do so. The complainants are Anthony P. Farley, Salvatore Bondi, Arth ur D. Dennis. Adrian D. Newton. T. Michael Metcalf and Michael A. Morctz. L- the Fischer family. Live On Outskirts The Fischers and their other five children have been living in a five-bedroom two-story stuccoi house two miles out of Aberdeen. Fischer also has rented some: barns and a few acres so he could keep two milk cows. Dr. James N. Berbos, the gen- leral practitioner who delivered the quints, told newsmen after. his midnieht visit that he has not decided when Mrs. Fischer will return home. He said earlier that she was being held in the hospi tal because of the excitement and hectic activities that surely will surround her when she docs leave. The quints are all getting along good," he said. Their milk formula has been increased. The boy (James Andrew) is very hun gry and is getting nearly two teaspoons of formula and some sucar water. "Mary Catherine and Marv Margaret also are very hungry," he said. "They get a little less than a teaspoon." Boy Most Active E. C. Pieplow, president nf the Aberdeen Chamber of Commerce and a family spokesman, said in a news conference Wednesday night that James Andrew was the most active of the five. 'He really lets you know he's a boy," Pieplow said. "He got! his foot caught over a plastic partition In his isolette. It was! nothing serious. 'Baby 'B' (the second-born, i her stomach on her own accord, of land, blueprints, work, lumber will be built to the Fischers This was a muscular feat." land other materials and interiorlspecifications. very stereo separates sound.TWestinghouse 4-speaker sterec X separates high-fidelity sound! O With this new Westinghouse 4-speaker stereo, you enjoy sound at its finest, Separate speaker units can be placed up to 28 feet apart for wider separation of sound. Custom Garrard 4-speed changer plays all your stereo or monaural records ...in brilliant true fidelity sound. 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