Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 03, 1963, Page 3, Image 3

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    !jiTll' I '
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YOUTH HONORED The Klamath Fall. Kiwanis Club honored two KUHS girls at Its
Thursday noon luncheon, naming them for "youth of the month" honors. Left to right,
Rev. Warren Pechman, Hope Lutheran Church, who introduced Mary Voss as "Church
Youth of the Month," and Vicki Lake was introduced by Frank Tomjc as "Youth of the
Month." Both are monthly awards by the dub, recognizing community youth for their
activities.
G. Milligan
Selected
"By Alumni
Gene Milligan ot Klamath
Falls has been elected president
of the Oregon Technical Insti
tute Alumni Association.
His election came during the
association's annual business
meeting in connection with the
OTI Homecoming.
All of the other officers are
also from Klamath Falls. They
are David Molatore, vice presi
dent; Mary Milligan, secretary
treasurer; and Ro;;er Thompson
and Pete Benham, directors.
Bill Glodowski of Klamath Falls
is the past president.
Don and Judy Prather of Palo
Alto, Calif., won the prize for
coming the longest distance to
the meeting. Mrs. Prather is the
former Judy Fcrrcll of Klamath
Falls.
Sen. Engle
Better Now
' WASHINGTON UPI) - Sen.
Clair Engle, D-Calif., under
treatment at the Bethdsda, Md.,
Navy medical center for a
. brain tumor, has recovered suf
ficiently to spend weekends at
, home.
Sen. Stephen M. Young, a per
sonal friend, said Engle had
spent last weekend at his Wash
ington home and also expected
him to go there this weekend.
At the Navy hospital, officials
declined cither to confirm or
deny that Engle had either been
' released or allowed to go home
for the weekend.
The Ohio Democrat said En
gle's doctors had been "ex
tremely pleased" w ith his progress.
onus Ontierestt
DEPOSIT
C DY THE
2 n
EARN
FROA THE
m
FIRST
540
ft -yr.v -A
Kiwanians Honor
Two KU Students
A freshman and a senior at
KUHS, both girls, were honored
Thursday noon by the Klamath
Falls Kiwanis Club.
Vicki Lake, a freshman and
fourth vice president of the
KUHS class, was named as
"Youth of the Month." Her fath
er, C. R. Lake, is an instructor
at OTI.
Guilty Plea
Entered
By Hoover
Raymond Hoover pleaded
guilty Friday morning in cir
cuit court to a charge of auto
theft and will be sentenced Mon
day. Hoover was ' apprehended in
Reno, Nev., last February on a
warrant from Klamath County:
He attempted to commit suicide
while being held in Reno, f
After his original arrest on
the auto theft charge he jumped
bail and wasn't apprehended
again until Reno.
Hoover, 30, is from Chiloquin.
Also to be sentenced Monday
is John Wesley Dean who was
convicted Thursday of second
degree murder in the stabbing
of his brother.
In other court action Friday,
Judge Donald A. W. Piper sen
tenced Clayton Spencer Schultz
to a term of not more than
three years in the slate peniten
tiary. He was convicted Tues
day of assault with a dangerous
weapon.
Home frozen asparagus will
keep as long as 12 months in a
freezer held at zero or below,
reports the North Dakota State
University College of Agriculture.
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Vicki was president of the
student body last year at Fre
mont Junior High School and a
member of the Honor Society.
She is active in affairs of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints.
' In introducing her, Frank To
mic, awards chairman, listed
her hobbies as reading, swim
ming and camping with the
family. She is one of a family
of six.
.Mary Kay Voss, a senior at
KU, was introduced by Rev.
Warren Pechman as "Church
Youth of the Month."
A member of Hope Lutheran
Church, iMary is secretary of
the Senior High Luther League,
is an assistant Sunday school
teacher, a member of the
church choir and assists in the
church office.
She maintains a 3.6 grade av
erage at KUHS and is planning
to enter iPacific Lutheran next
year to study medicine.
The club selects youth of the
community for these two honors
each month.
Benny's Wife
Loses Jewels
NEW YORK (UPI) A shab
bily dressed holdup man forced
Mary Livingston, wife of come
dian Jack Benny, to hand over
$200,000 worth of jewels in her
hotel suite Saturday, police re
ported. Police said Benny had just
left the couple's 14th floor suite
at the luxurious Hotel Pierre on
Fifth Avenue when the man
walked in and demanded her
jewels. She handed over a
f 150.000 diamond ring and other
jewelry, and he fled.
it a full
AX
.4
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath
Famed Party Hostess Elsa Maxwell
Dies Of Heart Ailment At Age Of 80
NEW YORK (UPI) Elsa
Maxwell, 80, one of the most
colorful figures in international
society and among the world's
best-known party givers for
four decades, died in a hospi
tal late Friday of an apparent
heart ailment.
Miss Maxwell, a short, ro
tund woman, made her last
public appearance a week ago
in a wheelchair at the April in
Paris Ball, an annual society
affair in Manhattan which she
founded in J951,
She was taken from her suite
in the Hotel Oelmonico to the
hospital on Thursday for treat
ment of heart disease. Death
came at 5:40 p.m. EST.
Miss Maxwell was born in
Keokuk, Iowa, on May 24, 1883,
to an insurance salesman of
moderate means and his wife.
Accidents
Kill Four
By United Press International
Accidents claimed four lives
in Oregon Friday. There were
two traffic deaths, a hunting
fatality and a logging death.
Madge Laney, 44, Klamath
Falls, was struck and killed by
a car on State Highway 39 about
10 miles south of Klamath Falls.
Slate police said she was
crossing the highway when she
was hit by a vehicle driven by
Elmer Frisvold, 52, Tulelake,
Calif.
Michael Lalendresse, 17, Med
ford, died in a one-car accident
in Mcdford. City police said the
St. Mary's High School student
was a passenger in a car driven
by Stephen Erb, 17, Mcdford,
which went out of control, hit
several mail boxes and struck a
utility pole. Erb was injured.
Sanford Nance, 51, Portland,
w as shot and killed w h i 1 e elk
hunting about 40 miles northeast
of John Day near the commun
ity of Granite. He was the
state's 18th hunting season fa
tality. State police were investigating
but have been unable to deter
mine who fired the fatal shot.
Floyd Ferguson of John Day,
an employe of the San. Juan
Lumber Co., died when a falling
tree struck the eab of a truck
he was operating about 20 miles
north of John Day near the
community of Tinker Creek.
In addition. Grayce A. Drump,
55, Grants Pass, died of a heart
attack Thursday after hunting
elk 35 miles cast of John Day.
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Falls, Oregon , - Sunday, November 3, 196J
She w as reared in San Francis
co, where she quit school at
age 14.
Her rise to society heights
was something of a mystery.
A spinster, Miss Maxwell be
came society's most prominent
chronicler who counted among
her friends and intimates roy
alty, statesmen and the famed
from many other walks of life.
In her autobiography, she
wrote: "I am recognized as the
arbiter of international society
and the most famous hostess in
the world. I have entertained
more royalty than any other
untitled hostess."
And she once said: "I have
more friends than any other
Unemployment Rate Here
Slightly Over State Mark
The unemployment rale in the
Klamath Falls area stood at 2.6
per cent for the week ending
Oct. 24, the state Department of
Employment has reported.
This was two-tenths of one per
cent over the state average
of 2.4 per cent. The state rate
was up compared to a month
previous, but down 26 per cent
over the same period fast year.
The 2.6 per cent rate in Klam
Bridge Winners Listed
Dorothy Schupp teamed up
with Gertrude Telle to place
first in the cast-west section
and Helen Schaeffcr and Emily
Yuen were the winners playing
north-south in a duplicate bridge
tournament held Saturday at
the Klamath Bridge Club. The
cast-west winners finished
ahead, second, Mr. and Mrs.
Art Beddoe and, third, Guy
Merrill and Ruth Palmer.
Those placing in the other
section were, second, Ethel Da-vis-B
o n n i e Vandenberg, and
third, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Got
shall. Other results last week:
Lakeshore Bridge Club.
This Year Send
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PAGE iJA
living person. They are my
riches."
Miss Maxwell, a controversi
al person whose social judg
ments won her as many ene
mies as friends, was not with
out rivals as "the" party
thrower for society.
But the rivals respected her,
and one of them, "the hostess
with the mostest," mourned her
death. In Washington, Perle
Mesta, the famous party giver,
said:
"I think she was a great
hostess. There won't be another
Elsa Maxwell in this era.. She
was a type of her own. She
was amusing and a good
friend."
ath Falls is down 30.2 per cent
over the same period last year.
The lowest rate in the state
was noted in Baker, with one
per cent, and the highest was
in The Dalles, with 6.3 per cent.
Lakevicw had one of the big
gest declines in unemployment
over the same period last year,
having dropped by 72.7 per cent.
This w as topped only by Ontar
io with a 74.7 per cent drop.
(Thursday), NS, 1, Dorothy
Rogers-Dick Briggs; 2, Father
Hal Fumo-Mrs. P. J. Nelson; 3,
Lena Smith-Mrs. William Grove.
EW, 1, Virginia Calhoun-Winnie
Stilwcll; 2, Mary Ramp-Mrs.
A. V. Moore; 3, Nell Killion
Tolly Merrill.
Lakeshore Bridge Club (Tues
day), 1, Pauline Offield-Lcooa
Robertson; 2, Claudine Van Bus-kirk-Winnie
Stilwcll; 3, Mrs.
A. V. Moore-Mrs. Margaret Ow
ens (Red Bluff).
New! Convenient!
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Between 7th i 8th on Pin
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