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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1963)
o .oo 2 The News-Review, Roieburg, Ore. Sat., Aug. 3, 1963 Bricks, Bottles Fly In Chicago As Race Demonstrations Continue By United Prtss International White youths, many of them wearing swastikas, roamed through a recently integrated neighborhood on Chicago's trou bled South Side Friday night, throwing bricks and bottles and taunting police. Forty-seven members of the group were arrested when they refused to move along, bringing Labor Secretary Calls Meeting In Rail Dispute WASHINGTON (UPI) Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz called union and management repre sentatives into weekend sessions today in an effort to solve the railroad work rules dispute by government "suggestion. Wirtz called representatives of management and the five rail road unions to his office Friday and advanced what he said were a number of suggestions that might be used as a basis for set tlement of the knotty work rules dispute, Wirtz, whose attempts to medi ate the dispute have been batted down, said he was purposely avoiding use of the word ' recom mendations." Wirtz was instru mental in formulating President Kennedy's proposal, turned down by the unions, that Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Goldberg arbitrate the impasse. He called both sides to meet with him through the weekend and again on Monday. He indi cated the prospect of further meetings would depend on how the weekend talks went. A spokesman said he would meet separately with the two sides and in joint sessions. Wirtz did not disclose what his suggestions were but said the two sides indicated they would give them "serious consideration." Ho said the suggestions were not dis cussed that he merely deliv ered them. 1 Auto Heavily Damaged In Crash With Truck Extensive damage was recorded to the right front end of a ve hicle driven by 27-ycar-old William Francis King of Giants I'nss when King struck the rear nf semi ' -ailer on Interstate Highway 5 io miles south of Curtin late Fri- ,v evening. tntc police said the accident oc rred when King tried to pass a . :iii owned by Los Angeles So Me Motor Express on the four ! ne highway at the point where I ic highway narrows down to three lanes. They said King was forced buck into the right-hand lane by oncoming traffic and hit the truck trying to get back into that lane. The truck was driven by Arthur Wilbur Choate, Mnunllnke Ter race, Wash. There were no injur ies. Larcena Wall Funeral services are scheduled Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at Long & Shukle Memorial Chapel for Lar cena M. Wall, 80, of 911 SH Lane Ave., Iloseburg. She died Thurs day at her home. Following services, the body will be shipped to Ozark, Mo., where interment will take place. Serv ices in lioscburg will bo directed by the Hcv. Donald Smith. She was born April 15, 1874. at Tiogersvillc, Mo. She had lived in Roseburg since 1951. She was a member of the First Christian Church. Her husband, Frank E., died in 1937. Survivors are a daughter, Ora Irwin of OreRon City; four grandchildren; 11 greatgrandchil dren; anil two groalgroal-grand-children. Delia Olinghouse Mrs. Delia Olinghouse, 69. well known resident of Canyonville, died suddenly at her home this morning. Although death reported ly was from natural causes, the county's medical examiner was called, reports Ganz Mortuary, Canyonville, which is in charge of arrangements for pending funeral services. NEW CHURCH PENDING - Bids .w ft, tar for con Fouls Lurneron Church -in Roseburg, Jwv C. Fremont0 Jui. bidder wos Todd Bunding, Co. to 180 the number of persons ar rested since racial disorders broke out in Chicago Monday. A Negro youth also was nabbed by police when a group of Negroes overturned a wnite man s car. Earlier Friday, a group of in tegrationists staged a "lay-down" in mud and driving rain at a South Side Chicago mobile school site to protest alleged classroom scgregauun. Massive civil rights demonstra tions also continued in New York City Friday where alleged job mi ink uiaui iiitiiiHuuii is neing pro tested at city construction proj ccts. Police arrested 34 persons on charges nf disorderly conduct or resisting arrest at Brooklyn's downstatc medical center con struction site, raising to nearly 700 the number of arrests at the site. In the South, the racial situa lion was relatively quiet, and Ne gro leaders hailed a major break through at Charleston, S.C., where 87 merchants gave in to Storms Roam Great Lakes By United Prats International Heavy thunderstorms roamed the Great Lakes region today with high winds and hail. The toll of dead and injured in two days of storms continued to rise. The rain storms, which trig gered accidents and fires across the Midwest Friday, were expect ed to diminish during the day. Winds nearly 100 miles an hour lashed Wisconsin Friday, shred ding county fair tents, downing trees and toppling utility poles. Scattered thunder showers soaked parts of the Southwest and Gulf Coast. A funnel cloud was spultetl near Jolit, III., and hailed piled an inch deep on the ground east of Rockford, III. An inch of rain hit Fort Myers, Fla., and observers at Key West reported several wa terspouts. Nearly an inch of ruin and hail fell at Memphis, Tcnn., during the night. Flagstaff, Ariz., was soaked with 1 inches of rain, Douglas, Ariz., had l'i inches and more than an inch fell at Grand Canyon. At least 20 persons were in jured when a city bus collided with another vehicle on rain slicked streets at storm-battered Chicago. Six persons were killed and another was seriously injured in the head-on collision of a pick' up truck and a station wagon on a mountain highway nenr Silver Plume, Colo., during a driving rainstorm. Storms along the mid-Atlantic Coast were blamed for two light ning deaths and two boating deaths Thursday. The first hurricane of the sea son, Arlcne, moved across the Caribbean at about 14 miles per hour during the night. The weath er bureau said winds were 100 m. ph. near the center of the storm, located about 1,000 miles southeast of San Juan, Puerto Itico. Vessels in the path of the hur ricane were warned to exercise extreme caution. Norman J. Hanson Funeral services arc to be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Metho dist Church in Canyonville for Norman Julius Hanson, 43, Can yonville postmaster, who died Fri day night from injuries suffered in an automobile accident. Ganz Mortuary, Canyonville, in charge of arrangements, announc es the final rites will be conducted by the Itev. Don Campbell, pastor of the Methodist church which Hanson had served as trustee for the past two years. He was horn June 13, 1920, In Grano. N.D., and was married Feb. 15, P.m. at Aitkin, Minn., to Geneva Margaret Stolnnd. Survivors include his widow, two daughters, Janet and Jeanine; three sous. Dennis, David and Richard, all of Canyonville; his mother, Mrs. Sophia Hanson. Can yonville; two brothers, Harlan and Waller, both of Fresno. Calif., and two sisters, Mrs. Godrey Dolzler, Choachilla. C a I i f., and Mrs. George Hannaford, Coquillc, Ore. ! Ho was a veteran of the Second World War. a member of the Can iyonville I.O.O.F. lodge, and for four years wos chief of the Can jyonville Fire Department. Interment is to be in the Can Iyonville I.O.O.F. Cemetery. with ofeNfe ft f $1 14,740. desegregation demands. Integra tionists also hinted that a similar agreement was near at Savan nah. Ga. Klsewhere in the nation: Farmville, Va. Prince Ed ward County. Va.. Negroes indi catcd Friday night they would stage their 10th consecutive ra cial demonstration here although they have been denied a city pa rade permit. Montgomery, Ala. A Mont eomerv Negro leader has ques tioned the merits of Negro plans for a mass march on the nation's eaoitn later this month to pros sure Congress into approving the Presidents civil rights legisia tion. The Rev. Solomon S. Seay, president of the Negro Montgom cry Improvement Association, said the march could backfire and cost civil rights proponents some loss of support among northern congressmen. New York Civil rights lead crs meet in Harlem today to complete plans for the massive Aug. 28 demonstration in Wash ington. The demonstration is ex pected to bring 100,000 persons to the nation s capital. Birmingham, Ala Four white men arrested for demonstrating against integration of lunch coun ters here were fined and sen tenced to jail Friday in Record er's Court. Clarksdale, Mils. Five Ne groes staged this Delta city's first "sit in" Friday as civil rights leaders made plans for further anti-segregation protests. Eighty-six Negroes have been ar rested since the scries of anti segregation protests started Tues day. Previous demonstrations here were marches and pickets. Arlington, Va. Republican candidate for the Virginia state Senate, Robert Corber of Arling ton, urged Gov. Albertis S. Har rison Friday to call out the Na tional Guard to protect northern Virginia against possible violence Aug. 28. Negro leaders have called for a full-scale civil lights march in Washington on that date. Greenwood, Miss. The Com mission on Race and Religion of the National Council of Churches provided cash bonds to have four Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) workers re leased from the state penitenti ary. SNCC workers said Friday. Thirteen of 23 Negroes arrested at the Leflore County Courthouse here June 25 and 26 during mass voter registration attempts still arc held nt the penitentiary. Washington Sen. James o. Eastland, D-Miss., asked Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara to revoke his directive banning on-base and off-base discrimina tion. He accused McNamara of "perverting the mission of the armed forces by the directive. William H. Duncan William Henry Duncan, former resident of Yoncalla. died July 30 at Hot Springs, South Dakota, at the age of 83 years. Born Sept. Hi, 1879. in Iowa, he was married there to Ella Ferdig, who died in 1946, following several years of residence in Northern Douglas County. Survivors include four sons, Hen ry. Springfield, Ore.; Richard, Drain; George, Hot Springs, S.I)., and William Jr., Elkton; three daughters, Mrs. Lottie Gosscll, Eu gene; Mrs. Eunice Plumb, Dram, and Susan Thorp. Hot Springs; three brothers, Lewis and Charles, both of Yankton, S.D., and Wil fred, Yakima. He also leaves 37 grandchildren and 26 great-grandchildren. Graveside services are to be held at 2 .p.m., Tuesday in t h c Yoncalla Cemetery with arrange ments in charge of Mills Mortu ary, Drain and Cottage Grove. Ralph Blaine Rogers Ralph Blaine Rogers, 69, 12160 Stafford St., Itavcna, Mich., died this morning at the Canyonville hospital from injuries suffered last Sunday in nn automobile ac cident on Canyon Mountain. Mrs. Rogers and their daughter were severely injured Mid are be ing treated at Canyonville. The body has been removed to Ganz Mortuary which is in charge of arrangements. Leota Ethel Sehlin Funeral services for Leota Ethel Sehlin were held today at 1 p.m. at the Yoncalla Methodist Church, with the Rev. Ren Hollister offici ating. Interment followed at the Yoncalla Cemetery. Sutherlin-Oaklaml Mortuary was in charge of arrangements. irtrucd f o new St. This inclutffcsteur olternotes 3 -4iiiiK- r.-.Vj.,i!Xv:.-5--'-..i .-J WHITE TEEN-AGERS ranged in hooting packs through a racially-tense southside neigh borhood in Chicago Friday in the fifth consecutive night of demonstrations against the move-in of three Negro families. At least 21 boys and young men who balked police or ders to move on were arrested. These orrests brought the total to 154 persons arrested in the adjoining white and Negro families since disorders broke out Monday. (UPI Tele-photo) Man Pleads Guilty Tc Assault Charge Robert Orville Farley, 31, Drain, pleaded guilty to assault and bat tery on arraignment before Jus tice of the Peace Ward Watson at Sutherlin Friday. He was fined $25 and $5 costs by the judge. LeRoy Oral Bridge, 25, Winston, has been arrested by a sheriff's deputy to face a grand larceny charge brought in a Linn County warrant. Ball is set at S2.000. The Douglas County Grand Jury Friday indicted James E. Lent on a charge of obtaining money by false pretenses. He is charged in the indictment with passing a worthless $175 check made on thej Myrtle Creek Branch of the United States National Bank, June 24. j The grand jurors also returned two secret indictments. Authorities Probe Charge Of Assault The sheriff's office is investiga ting an alleged assault on a 17-year-old Oakland boy, Bob Beck, at Oakland Thursday. The report stated Beck and two other boys had been swimming in the Calapooia Creek above the Oakland bridge. On their return they were accosted by a man who accused them of stealing his peach es. After a few words were ex changed, the boy claimed he lean ed over to pick up his clothes when he was struck on the back of the head, then chased when he ran, the report staled. Lucy M. Stierwalt Lucy M. Stierwalt, 97. well known resident of lioscburg and one of the oldest residents of the area, died this morning at a lo cal hospital following a prolonged illness. Mrs. Stierwalt was born April 7, 1866 in Hutchinson. Minn. She was a registered nurse and took her training at Battle Creek, Mich. Mrs. Stierwalt had lived in the Roseburg area since 1913 moving here from Colorado. Her husband Curtis proceeded her in death in 194.1. She was a life long member of the Seven! h day Advenlisl Church. Mrs. Slierwall is survived by I one daughter. Mrs. Mablo Warren I ..f C- .. .. ..I ...... en l.'.ll'l ill r. u f; i ii i .inn inn .-..II, ...... Stierwalt of McCleary, Wash. Funeral services will be held at Wilson's Chapel of the Roses Tues day at 1 n.ni. with Elder A. P. I Ritz of the Seventh-day Advcntist Church olficiating. Private com mittal service and vault inter ment will follow at the Civil Bend Cemetery in Winston. John Campbell John Campbell, 71. died at the Veterans Hospital in Roseburg Fri day after a long illness. Born May 9. 1892. at Boulder Creek. Calif., his usual address was 207 Terrace in Sutherlin. He resided there for the past 19 years. He was a veteran of World War Survivors include his wife. Lulu, of Sutherlin. and a stepson. Doan Noble of Long Beach. Calif. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 11 a.m. at Sutherlin Oakland Mortuary's Chapel of the Firs. The Rev. Richard Case of the First Methodist Church of Suth erlin will officiate. Interment will follow at the Yet-i-iens Hospital Cemetery in Rose burg. Elsie F. Kelley Elsie F. Kelley of Rt. 4. Box 370. Roseburg. died at a local hospital this morning. Funeral arrange ments are (lending at Long & Shu kle Memorial Chapel. US1 tOUK UCtftSt to otivir ROLF'S PREFERRED INSURANCE 'tr rut Ic'iM laitJllBtits iTi.utlf 939 S. E. Stephens 673-8146 President Refuses To Take A Stand On Coming Event HYANNIS PORT. Mass. (UPI) President Kennedy refused to day to take a public stand on one of the most important questions before him: Will his wife's baby this month be a boy or girl? In 1960, two months prior to the birth of their son John Jr., Kennedy boldly predicted they would have a boy. Newsmen had asked in Wash ington several days ago whether the. President was making any forecasts about their third child, and the query was repeated at the weekend While House where there was nothing much else to ask. While House Press Secretary. Pierre Salinger, smiling, said he had taken the matter up with the President, and the spokesman as serted: "lie is going to contine himself to such predictions in election years." "Docs this mean there is going to be another baby next year?" a reporter asked. "You can read anything into that you want." Salinger . replied. During a whisllb-stop train tour State Board Denies CD Budget Request SALEM (UPI) Oregon's Civil Defense agency is going lo have lo scrape along with only three people. By a six to three vole Friday afternoon the State Emergency Board turned down a request for $46,110 to double the three man staff. The decision came after two hours of discussion where Civil Defense officials argued that the trimmed agency couldn't perform the work which state law sets out for it to do. The recent legislature cut the civil defense staff from 18 mem bers to three. Voting against giving more mon ey to the agency were Sens. Harry Boivin, D-Klamath Falls. E. D. Potts, D-Grants Pass and Ward Cook. D-Porlland, House Speaker Clarence Barton. D-Coquille. and Reps. Ross Morgan, D - Portland and Beulah Hand, D-Milwaukie. More money was favored by Senate President Ben Musa. D Thc Dalles, and Reps. Shirley Field. If-Porlland, and Stafford Hansell. R-Ilorniiston. Hansell said that when the leg islature approved the present Civil Defense budget it was believed by many lawmakers that the federal government would match the state money to make a six person staff for the agency. He said he could support a six mnnilmr ulfifr h.il u-milri hi ! artaincf E..L-..,.t an.' farlm-al matching money to increase it further. Files For Bankruptcy Charles Richard Endicott, a Yon calla farm and mill worker, has filed for bankruptcy in U.S. Dist rict Court in Portland. He lists debts totaling $5.649 49. Music - Dancing ( at . trim A..,., nt MlIll. Kidt. 25c 'A from Northern to Southern Cali fornia in September, 1960, Ken nedy prcdictced his daughter Car oline would be getting a baby brother. Kennedy went yachting with some family and friends this af ternoon. It was an uneventful day at Cape Cod except for Salinger's news morsel. The Chief Executive arrived here late Friday afternoon, just after a heavy downpour splashed a half inch of rain on Otis Air Force Base, Mass., in less than 15 minutes. Kennedy flew by helicopter to the family's "compound" of homes at Hyannis Port, where he was met by his wife, Jacqueline, and their two children, Caroline, 5, and John Jr., 2. The President's convalescing j father, 74-year-old Joseph P. Ken nedy, was waiting as usual on the porch of his big" home which j faces Nantucket Sound and on whose lawn the helicopter landed. Kennedy kissed his wife and I children, then stepped over lo I grccl some byslandcrs. Among them was the 1959 Miss America, Mississippi's Mary Ann Mobley, appearing here in a music-tent ......I. ,.f "Hn.'e unrl Dolls. " The President motored the half mile to his home, and wilhin a shorl time wen! io the nearby Hyannis Port Club for five holes of golf on the rain-soaneo course Kennedy, spending his fifth con secutive weekend at Cape Cod plans to fly back to the White House Aionoay morions. Goldy Sees Possible New Market For Lumber I PORTLAND (Urn An Oregon i lumberman. Daniel L. Goldy, told members of the City Club here I Friday that the Northwest ply i wood and lumber industry may find a new market in the recent European trend towards individu al homes instead of masonary j apartments. I Goldy, deputy assistant secre tary of commerce for business development, spoke on the U.S. i Commerce Department's outlook on American business at home : and abroad. He said that if the country doesn't find a way of cracking i the common market barrier, it will face the loss of export busi I ness to a rapidly growing over : seas market. i The lumberman cited a need for accelerated economic growth and ' a need for more competitiveness ! with business abroad as the two basic problems hampering the U.S.'s business. GOOD MEMORY i BIRMINGHAM, England (UPI) i Letter from a vacationer who 'just returned home here reached : its destination with no difficulty .l....itn tl,n fnllntl-inO nHHrPSS "The Manager, double fronted shop. Halfway Down High-Street on Woolworth's side, selling tran sistors, etc., and with gas lighter, 12 shillings, 11 pence, in first win dow. High-Street, Burnham-on-Sea." - Entertainment RICKETTS REVUE & Talent Contest Each Evening at 8:00 . Free of Charge at fhe DOUGLAS AUGUST 14-18 ROSEBURG Demo Braintruster Awaits Sentence On Tax Violation NEW YORK (UPI) Jamis M. Landis, braintruster for three Democratic administrations and one-time dean of the Harvard Law School, was free today in his own custody pending sentenc ing for filing late federal income tax returns. Landis is scheduled to be sen tenced Aug. 30 on five counts of filing tardy returns. Each of the counts carries a maximum pen alty of one year in prison and a $10,000 fine. He appeared Friday before Federal Court Judge Edward Me Lain and pleaded guilty to the charges, all of which are misde meanors. Representing him was Dean William Warren of the Col umbia Law School. State Farm Barns Destroyed By Fire By United Press International Building fires at Portland and Salem Friday night and early to day caused extensive damage to a lumber firm and the state op erated Cottage Farm. Cause of a blaze that destroyed the crane shed of the Jones Lum ber Co. in Portland was under in vestigation today. The 250-foot long building was engulfed in flames when the fire alarm was turned in shortly before midnight. Firemen were aole to keep the fire from spreading to the mill and company offices. The shed was part of the saw mill and planing equipment which was to be sold at auction Aug. 20. Damage was not immediately estimated. The shed was used to store lumber stock, tut was near - j cn.,.1,. luxury yacht Freedom II. Firemen had he blaze under , Tht. Navv F jd d d j( nourTCndyerlypies -S ' Search fr T mcnt responded to the four 1 apparently sank about 600 miles alarms. : west Morro Bay, Calif. No lives A spectacular blaze near Salem wcrn ,los' "c mishap, caused more than $50,000 damage Retired Vice Adm. Gerald Bo to the state operated Cottage gan, skipper of the yacht owned Farm barns. by Frank G. Jameson, a vice Cause of the fire was being in- i president of Douglas Aircraft vcsti;jated. Corp. in Los Angeles, said the A barn valued at $40,000 was i04.foot long ship sprung a leak destroyed and roofs of a smaller on Wednesday, barn and silo were damaged. No' r., ,,, . ,, ... ,, , , livestock was in the barns. . i ,aBcogan ,t.old authorities (he eak Nine pieces of equipment from Wds 'he underwater planking the Salem and Four Corners fire j on, tn'! starboard side near the departments and the Oregon Cor- P'lot house. He said it allowed rectional Institution fought t h e I water lo flood into a comparl blaze. ft was under control after I ment. about two hours. "It was soon evident this flow Flames shot hundreds of . feet , could not be controlled and the into the air and were visible for galley compartment was soon mjles. ! flooded almost to the overhead," Ihe barns supplied dairy pro- i he said ducts to other state institutions, j The ,:ctil.cd adnljl.a, ordered thc 31 Pints Of Blood Given At Yoncalla The Red Cross Bloodmobile vis- it to Yoncalla Friday netted 31 pints ol Dood. Ihe ouota was 50. Most of the donors turned out to offer replacement blood for Mrs. Pat Duggan of the Drain area, who is to undergo open heart surgery Aug. 17 at the Uni versity of Oregon Hospital in Port land. Two units were donated for Gerald Johnston and eight for Sophie Miller. A total of six new donors show ed up for thc three-hour stop. Two donors receiving gallon pins were Frederick Applegate and Postmas ter Eldon Lee. The comparatively small turnout was blamed on vacations and late working hours for loggers. Eleven women donated their services for activities at the Blood mobile. Refreshments were served hy thc Business and Professional Women, Yoncalla Women's Study Club and several individuals. Young Girl Loses Hand After Mauling By Bear CANOGA PARK, Calif. (UPI) Lyn Seely. thc o-year old girl who was mangled by a circus bear when she petted it, was "resting quietly" today in Cano - ga Park Hospital following ampu - tation of her right hand, attend- ants said. Doctors amputated thc girl's hand Friday after a seven-day fight to save it. A blood clot de veloped, frustrating attempts to save the hand. Lyn of Simi. Calif., was injured last week when she reached in - side the cage of a 5-ycar-old Himalayan bear to pet it at the Ted Duane Circus in nearby San- ta Susana. The bear first licked her arm, then clamped its teeth into it. The girl's mother and a by - slander freed her from the bear's clutches. WDM EVERY ONE off'0 In a statement to the court, Warren pointed out that Land voluntarily paid all the taxes due the government, along with the maximum civil penalties, as soon as they had been calculated. U.S. Atty. Robert M. Morgen thau, who filed the charges, said Landis failed to file income tax returns on time for the years 1956 through 1960. The returns for the five years; Morgenthau said, "were filed at one lime recently." He added, "This does not meet the govern ment standard of voluntary dis closure." Warren said Landis, a New York attorney who lives in sub urban Harrison, sold inherited securities for which the tax base had not been determined, thus creating delays. More delays in figuring and filing the returns, Warren said, were due to Landis being busy in "public affairs and the affairs of clients." Two years ago Landis accepted a special assignment from Presi dent Kennedy to look over all the federal regulatory agencies and offer suggestions for improve ment. Earlier he worked in Ken nedy's presidential campaign as a consultant. He also served under former Presidents Harry S. Truman and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Stricken Yacht Survivors Due SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) The ! submarine Rnznrhark was nrhori. ! ni t,. 3ri.i..a (nn:u ...:iu 1 cight surviVors from the stricken i crew to abandon ship after send- ing distress signals. The crew i climbed into a 16-foot lifeboat. I Cmdr. W. G. Davis, skipper of I the Hazorback, said the survivors were in good condition when pickec' un' but that their lifeboat 1 was """'aged by high seas. Traffic, Drownings Claim Three Lives Traffic and drowning claimed three lives in the state Friday and ca.-ly today. Lee Wayne Clark, 48, Talenl. was killed when his car collided with a truck and trailer near Ash land early today. Truck driver 'Thomas Wvatt of Medford was not hurt. His son, Edward, riding in the truck, suf fered a slight head injury. Accidents claimed two lives in Oregon Friday. Dennis Montague, 19. Klamath Falls, was killed in a one-car ac cident on State Highway 39 cight miles south of Klamath' Falls. State police said he was a pas senger in a car driven bv Linda McDanicl. 15, Klamath" Falls, which ran off thc road and hit a utility pole. Thc girl and two other teen aire passengers were hospitalized at : Klamath Falls, I Glen Beith. 17. Hood Rivei i' 1 drowned in Bull Prairie Lake 40 ; miles south of Hcppner. His body was recovered. The youth was on a fishing trip with his father. William Beith of Hood River, and was attempting to retrieve, a drifting boat when the accident occurred. ' i LOST HIS SHORTS 1 BLACKPOOL. England (UPI) 1 As the tide rose Friday, a man lodged up the steps to the beach one-by-one until the water came to his neck. Investigating police said he had I gone for a swim in his under- 1 shorts, lost them, then found that ' the tide had washed away the I rest of his clothes. UDT MUST GO! BRANDS YOU KNOW SALES STARTS M0N. 9:30 A.M. yfu'u urt TO ww AT.-. 615 S.E. Jackson 06 73-50 15 luium-a jo.zuo. i ne ooora or OirectM.;q orfong tor more information on cost of mosonry oonnn cow;rin9 ,bc ' m'"9 decision. Other bidders Were Jomes & Stritzke, 5124,000, ond Jock Mothis Construction Co . 5924,650. Construction will start stn otter the contract is let. Todd offered a completion time of 150 davs ,a - o ' .ceo 0 O