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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1963)
f Dunsmuir PTA To Hear Panel Curfew Discussion DUNSMUIR-How late young, people should be out and who is responsible for the hours they keep will be discussed by a panel of both young people and adults at the meeting of the Dunsmuir Elementary School PTA on Oct. 10 at 3 p.m. In the school audi torium. Whether or not Dunsmuir's or dinance establishing a 10 p.m. cur few for those under 18 years old serves any constructive purpose will be taken up by high school and elementary school leaders, James Weldon, program chair man, has announced. Members of the Junior Traffic Patrol will be introduced at the meeting and Albert Kempton, principal, is arranging a short entertainment feature with school children participating. Refreshments will be served by the second grade mothers and a nursery will be conducted by Girl Scouts for pre-schoolers. Mrs. Juris Rites Held Funeral services for Mrs. Eliz abeth George Juris, 75, a long time resident of Chiloquin, were held at 1 p.m. Oct. 2 from Ward's Klamath Funeral Home. Final rites and interment were in Klamath Memorial Park. Rev. Harold Fumo officiated. Mrs. Juris died Sept. 30 in a local hos pital. Mrs. Juris was a native of Streator, III., born Sept. 29, 1888. She had been a resident of Chil oquin since 1926. Survivors include the widower George Juris of Chiloquin; a son, Larry Juris, Prineville; daughter, ler, Mrs. Emma Bednar, Joliet, III.; also one grandson. Books Tell Of Bonanza Since 1876 BONANZA The Bonanza His torical Society met in regular session at the Bonanza Library on Sunday afternoon, with Mrs. John Brown, president, presiding. Mrs. Billy Drew, secretary, read letters from old-timers who were unable to attend the Old- timers' Picnic held in July, and a paper on the history of the Bo nanza schools was read by Mrs. Elsa Rueck. Several "Bonanza History booklets were sold at the meet ing. The booklets, featuring a complete history of Bonanza since it was incorporated in 1876, are still available. Six guests from Klamath Falls were present, Mrs. Olive Fraley, Mrs. Ella Dickenson, Mrs. Min nie Grizzle, Miss Mildred Dres ler, Miss May Phinney, and Char lie Drew. At the November meeting of the Historical Society, stories on the history of the four valleys, Poe valley, Langell Valley, Swan Lake, and Hildcrbrand. will be presented. CONCRETE FORMS Forms have been built for the pouring of concrete for the ad dition to the Klamath Falls Post Office. Photo taken from roof of post office shows wooden framework. In about two weeks, post office personnel will be moving from the building to temporary quarters while the three-story structure is expanded and remodeled. Seven Killed In Ohio Highway Mishap EAST LIVERPOOL (UPI -May, 17. all of East Palestine' Seven persons were killed and and Louise Slagle, 15, Nagley. one critically injured Wednesday night when 58,000 pounds of steel (ell from a tractor trailer, crush ing one car, and the truck then hit another- auto near here. The Highway Patrol said three rolls of sheet stainless steel tum bled from the truck on a curve and one of them crushed a car operated by Judith Ann Lew is, 19. East Palestine, Ohio. She and her four passengers were killed. The truck, thrown out of con trol by the sudden weight shift on the trailer, then slammed into an auto operated by William G. White Jr., S3, East Liverpool. His mother, Lclia, 58, was killed in the crash and his father, William G. Sr., 64, died several hours later at East Liverpool City Hos pital. The younger White was in critical condition today. The victims in the Lewis car were identified as Nancy 'Knight, 12. Theodore Knight, 8. and Sally Ohio. The driver of the truck, Vernon Hatcher, 27. Quaker City, Ohio, by Humes Transfer Co. ( was not hurt. The tractor was Steubenville. owned by Brooke Inc., of Weirton, Traffic on busy Ohio 7 was tied W.Va., and the trailer was owned up for several hours by the crash. HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Thursday, October 3, 1963 PAGE 5A Ski. TS. C2 CONTACT LENSES ON 4 onrniTi W. give Green Stomps rt 5 t& .COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. 730 Main TU 4-7121 Dr. Omar J. NoIm and Robert Peters Portland Man Named To Post WASHINGTON lUPIl - Presi dent Kennedy Tuesday named Robert F. Dwyer of Portland, Ore., to succeed the late Ashley L. Totten as a director of the Virgin Islands Corp. until June 30, 1967. Dwyer is vice president and di rector of the Dwyer Lumber and Plywood Co., Portland. Members of the Virgin Islands Corp. board serve without compensation. COMPLETE TREE SERVICE BAKER'S LANDSCAPE NURSERY 6200 So. 6th TU 2-5553 Unit Plans Magazine Sale Again The American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 8 will again sponsor a magazine drive to raise money for the purchase of hospital equipment to be loaned free of charge in Klamath Falls and sur rounding community. This is the 14th year that the unit has spon sored the fund raising activity. The subscription drive is under the supervision of Frank Smith. Those taking part from out of town are registered at the sher iff's office, and at the chamber of commerce. They will carry letters of in troduction signed by auxiliary president, Pearl McMahan; secretary-treasurer, Mrs. Florence Fett; Lina Motschcnbacher, Elizabeth Petcrsteiner, Arlena Schubert and Leah Glubrecht, all past presidents, of Unit No. 8. Klamath Falls, Bessie West and Thelma Stukel of Unit No. 81), Merrill, and Elizabeth McCulley, Unit No. 84 of Malin. For further information call Mrs. J. F. Glubrecht, TU 4-7209, or Mrs. Carl Schubert, TU 4-6693, The sponsors express apprecia tion of past cooperation and seek continuing support in the pres ent drive. Montanans Prepare For Hunter Onslaught HELENA, Mont. (UPll-Whilc the rest of the country listens and watches the baseball World Series this weekend, Montanans are getting- ready for another in vasion of gun-toting tourists. The general opening of the hunting season in one of the last of the big game hunting areas is Oct. 20. Then the nimrods from all over the world come to stalk the game moose, mountain sheep, mountain goat, deer, elk, bear end antelope. INot to men tion pheasants and ducks. But the home state population is worried. Too many of the vis itors don't know what they are aiming at; they are prone to kill too many animals; or they get lost in the wilds. Hunting Laws Proposed Every year there is legislation introduced in the Montana Legis lature aimed at curtailing the ac tivities of the non-resident hunter. Some Montanans are proud to the point of jealousy of their Wildlife resources. They don't complain H the hunter hunts like a gentleman. For '64: the price is medium... the action maximum... the car is Mercury Instances of unsenlleman- ly hunting by out-of-state parties always result in squabbles. Some factions want to place close re strictions on visitors; make him hunt with a licensed guide; keep him under constant surveillance keep bis kill number low, etc. But visiting tourists are a big item in the stale's economy. They may still buy $20 permits to hunt mule and whitetail deer; and for $100 they can get a license which permits them to hunt deec, elk, bear and apply for permits to hunt the moose, mountain sheep, mountain goat and antelope. Holders of these licenses also may hunt upland game and fish in the streams in season. Ervin L. iMalnarich, a profes sional hunter from the Hamilton area in Western Montana, has an idea that may appeal to all the legislators in the state and al ready he has it in action. He has opened a school to train professional guides and outfitters. It is the Hirst of its kind in the United States. Forty men were graduated this summer and all but two have been placed in top jobs. Alaska, Idaho and Colorado swallowed up a good portion of them. Malnarich has been in his busi ness 22 years and knows the trade from pack saddle to rifle muzzle. "Good cowboys don't necessar ily make good guides," says -Mal narich. "So We decided to see if ue can train some." Guides In Demand He claims the demand for such skilled guides is great and is be coming greater. What's his rea son for the school? Malnarich says the modern hunter doesn't necessarily have to bag a Boone and Crockett moose or elk to be happy with a pack trip into the back country of Montana. What this modern hunter wants is "service." Malnarich says if the client feels at the end of a hunt that he has been made comfortable in the face of inhospitable mountain country, been fed good food, giv en good sleeping quarters and had "good talk" he's satisfied. The game, says Malnarich, is be coming secondary. And that's a good Hung. Be cause there are more hunters and less game to hunt every year. Morse Raps Picket Plan WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Wayne L. Morse, D-Ore., Wednes day criticized the Portland, Ore chapter of the National Associa tion for the Advancement of Col ored People (NAACP) for threat ening to picket President Kennedy at Portland. "It just isn't good manners to invite a guest to your home and then insult and embarrass him," Morse declared. He told the Senate that "I can not think of anything that would be more impolite" than to have the "President picketed after he had been invited to the city. Morse said the Oregon mem bers of Congress requested Ken nedy pass up the dedication of a Portland housing project to avoid possible embarrassment. The Portland Negro group contended that Negroes were being discrimi nated against by the housing au thority which operated the proj ect. The President did not stop at Portland on his recent western I trip. FASHIONS FOR FALL k- XrvTjSjk REDUCED TO li " ' CORDUROY vTWii JS' ' FLANNEL In black and fall colors." f grey w black wi,)l Sizes 410, elegant gold-tone clasp. Sizes 4-10. ' ' SVVU VStYOURS AGAIN By POPULAR DEMAND I X SFIRST QUALITY : V SHEER SEAMLESS -:UA NYLONS I . 1 ; , ' In the new Autumn shades. t i - . Huimr-wmit THtr iasti I ' 820 Main Si . PARK LAME WITH RAQV MARAUDER STYLING FICA Taxes The "action" is provided by the type of V-8 engines that May Be DllC have made Mercury the new performance champion of the medium-price field demonstrated in open com petition including the most recent Pikes Peak Climb. A 390 cu. in. V-8 is standard, a 427 V-8 optional. And only Mercury ! offers you two entirely different kgjr styling choices in one great car. L. :T7rWrtv MercwrT deliver mart than lh mutl in ill then wirtt more per formtncf, with the nKt mpmiwve ensmet in i field. Mtxt U rwwi, head room, and entry room. Sct trunk rtce II tuitcitet btf 17.1 n. it.). And t ttr greater rt?hnf choice: ncy M irmder itylirn U bore J or unique, RreeteviT Pes:gll (nght), vrth the only rear indo that open far venti. Ution.itayt dearer in rain ot ano. iincoln Mtcuar Owscn (Jfa 0iO COmmkt Fff64 EvUeirciuiiry No finer car in the medium-price field JOE FISHER 677 SOUTH 7TH STREET A. G. Erickson, director of In ternal lievenue for Oregon, to day had a word of tax advice for housewives and other employers of domestic workers don't over look possible liability for Social Security taxes. If you pay a household worker toO or more in any calendar quar ter, you and the employe become subject to the Federal Insurance Contributions Act, Erickson said. Thia lax finances retirement pay ments and other benefits to workers qualifying. The tax tor this year per cent for the employer and 3 per cent for the employe, or a to tal of 7'i per cent of the wages paid. The employer is required to report and pay the combined tax quarterly. Form 942 accompanied by pay ment of the tax for the quarter ended Sept. .10. 19R3 should be filed with the district director by Oct. 31, 1963. Erickson said hit office will be Elad to provide further information Aik obeut doily "BuiinMi Cord" SPOT ADS TU 4-1111 AT BON BAZAAR SHOW YOUR COLORS BE A PEL BOOSTER THEY'RE HERE! RED KLAMATH PELICAN Sweatshirts $3.98 VALUE i COUPON WORTH I taiS PERMANENT i COUPON EXPIRES SUNDAY, OCT. 6 jj ,f SPRAY I err err plus tax 50 COUNT BOTTLE ANACIN REG. 79c . 59' COLORED PLASTIC 11-01 TUMBLERS 5 FOR 49 MEN'S FLANNEL SHIRTS 1.9S VALUE WE SELL 'EM FOR 1 79 PLASTIC DECORATIVE FRUIT 19c AND UP 12" SMOKELESS, ODORLESS, DRIPLESS SPIRAL CANDLES ... 2 for 35e ea. 10c MEN'S SWEATERS $698 ONE GROUP VALUES TO $13.98 JUST DOLLS MARGIE & CAROL SUE DOLLS - 8" 1 C REG. 98c 76 UVi" CINDY TEE AGE DOLLS $1.98 VALUE N- 98 Low Prices PLUS Green Stamps "Tht Pick of rh. Smarttit FaiMoni for Home, Cmpu a Cart.r" 4480 South th Nont to Ortgon Food i