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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1948)
IM1 IMl IP Ml 0) J1U1 MS lii Tho ny riiANK jknkinh rilOM Seoul (III Dm Ainerlcuul occupied part of Korenl comrj Dili dispatch Uili morning: '"Hi United Hlalrs announced plana today Ui proceed Willi gen eral eleetlun Muy 9, under United Nations observation, lo name dele gates for establishing a Korean gov ernment." MOTE Uie slatemoul Hut our plans In Karen lire to proceed "under United Nations observation." It II significant. At Lake Bucccm (UN headquart ers) laat week, Uio Kurean quoAtlon came to a head. United Nations has a coiiiinlMlon on Korean af fairs. Tills commission has been tryiim for some time to call elections tor a now Korean government to bo HUN IIY KOHEANB. liuiuila hat balked. Laat week, slid reliued to liernilt rrpirncuLullvrs of the lom mlMlon to enter North Korea (Ilus-lan-occupled, WhereuiKin the "little assembly" of UN told the ooiiiiiiImIoii to 110 lirail anyway and carry out lu plana for an election In the AMK.lt IG'AN nine. If itussla rcfuned to allow North Koreans lo participate, l he "little assembly" ordered, HOLD THE KLKCTION ANYWAY 'Oil the American sone only). let the new Korea for Koroaiu iioveruinent auu-ted and let Uie North Koreans into It later If they can gel out from under Kuaala's thumb. There Uie matter stands at the moment. WHAT duet It mean: Here's a guess: Ruaaia look Uie bull by the horns In C'sechoalovakla. Wc re anawerlng by inking the bull by the honu In Korea. Remember that's only a guess. RT this point, question will prob ably arise III your mind: "What Is Uils LITTLE A8HKMIILY of United Natloiu7" Let's try to answer It akrtrluly and non-lerhnlcally. Tin "llllle as aembly" Is a device lo gel around the Russian veto. It Is new sub organisation WITHIN the organise lion of United Nations. The Idea arose when II became evident thai Itussla would veto everything ahe didn't like, thus hamstringing UN at every move, Will ll work? That remaliu lo be seen. pliOM Helsinki (Finnish capltali cuinea another dispatch that la liiteieettuv. It says: "Discussion begun within the Kin mh government today on I'rlme Mlnlaler rlulwi irottuMil lor a rilinisli-Iluaalail treaty ut friendship - and mutual aiul'tancr." The dispatch adda: "Well-informed aourres said the president Is In favor of signing such a treaty." FROM this safe distance. e might be Inclined to say he should RE rUHE to sign. Before going out on that limb, let's first put lo ouraelvea thla ques tion : "What would I do If a big, tough, hard-boiled guy had a gun In my stomach and there was no body around lo give me any help?" YESTERDAY a navy Jet fighter plane flew from Beattle to Lo Angeles (1 03 J mllesi In ONE HOUR, ta minutes and seven seconds. Its average speed was S3 1 niph. On the same general enterprise i de scribed as a "speed training mis sion"! another navy pilot flew the 104 miles from Seattle to Ban Kr au di sco at an average sieed of 632 mph and a third flew 11.16 miles from Beattle to Sun LMcgo at 611 miles per hour. UKRES a thought: A world In which pilots take off casually and fly long distances at an average speed well over 600 miles per hour Is obviously a new world. We can't solve all IU problems by the OLD rules. Ranch Hand Bags Silver i FoxWhileOn Sunday Walk Here's one Klnnmth county house wife who Is going to get a silver fox nrrk-wiiip for the price of only two XI calibre rifle shells and a little lcg-workl William L. DoVoss, an employe of the A. R. Campbell rnnrh seven miles east of Klamath Falls, bag ged a fully grown sliver fox yester day about 10:30, while out on a Hunday morning stroll with Ills small daughter. The two wore walking on the Campbell property when they spotted the nnlmal on the bank of Lost river, about a mile from the ranch house. DeVruu hurried back lo the ranch hniiMi for guns, and ho and Camp hell began a hunt for the fox. Do Voss again spotted the animal near the river, and two quick shots from the .32 rifle promptly dlspntched him. DeVoss told The Herald and News that Mrs. DeVoss will likely fall heir to Reynard, properly tanned and tailored Into a wrap. Campbell said he did not re nirmber hearing of any foxes of this lype being killed or trapped In this ami during his some 40-odd years of ranching hi the basin. The silver fox prlla were at one time worth several hundred dollars, but the value Is not unusually high at the present time. Campbell nnd DoVoss Judged the nnlmal to bo about five years old, and believed It to havo been do mestically bred. Tho fox measured just a little over 38 Inches from nose to tall, and the pelt was In excellent condition. ; The wealth nt fur and WEATHER Mat, b. 1IM IX Mln. 11 frgMlplUllun Ual 11 tiiiut mi N.rin Mr rial .. . ? I.ai yar . . ft.iltt Norms! . rrra llh -, MUCK HVK CKNTM Blaze LliF:t:T'tn, Thli plrture tn taken Ihli fllh and Whlinlnn Rlrrrlt, Tli into Hunday art tool riwmi, werr roomi, waa badly damaged In a fixture. Playful Bears Have Vacation MIAMI DEACII, Pitt., March 1 lA'l Down here In this land of sunshine and sophistication. Uie most popular story of the day Is that of the Uirce bears. The bears, night club performers, escaiMrd from Uieir cage yesterday while Trainer John Wclde was away. Happily the shaggy natives of Finland's forests, headed for nearby Illscayne bay and there they did whal any other tourist would do. Thry went swimming. Immediately a crowd collected, so did Uie police. Eventually Uie bears tired "of swimming and relumed to the vicinity of their rages where they playfully cliu.ied people. Joseph Ebner, the night club's pro perty manager, tried to shoo one of the bears Into thrcuge. Resentfully, the bear grabbrtHum by Uie seal of his pants. Welde finally coaxed his brnrs back Into the cuge. Kanott Log Sale Slated The Kanott lugging unit No. 6 on 111 Kliunath Indlnn reservation will be sold by sealed bid tomorrow afternoon at Klamath Agency. Bids will be taken until 2 p. m. The Kanott unit covers 1H00 acres of tribal holdings with an estimated 10.600.000 board feet of pondcrosa and sugar pine timber and possibly some Uottglos fir and other species. No allotment land is contained in the unit. Minimum bids which will be con sidered at f 16.40 a Uiousnnd for pine. 10 for Douglas fir and Incense cedar, and M-60 for other species of saw Umber. The buyer will have until April 1, 1B30, to complete the logging. fat Is due, Campbell believes, to a steady fare of domestic geese and chickens, which Reynard obtained at the expense of Mrs. T. D. Marsha, Campbell's neighbor. He said the animal had completely obliterated Mrs. Marsha's flock of Reese,, and was getting a good start on her chickens when he was shot. The blame had previously been placed on coyotrs, t r; William I,. DeVoss r j MsrfH L t f i r it . I, . A Hi S " AlV,-A'A KLAMATH FALLS, OKKKON, MONDAY. MARCH 1. 1M Telephone 8111 No. 1S77 . nil's Church Expansion it, IF '.;w."-ft .iaiiii-i i ia t - -- tnurnlnc fire burnrd an unromplrlrd wine of (He Pint Baptist church, rhurrh building proper, at Irft, and the houar at rfht brine converted not harmrd. Hut the connecting wln(. which alao Inrludrt Sunday achool blait which firemen aald tar ted from a newly 1m tailed electric heating Reds Mum On Number Of Arrests Made In Prague PRAGUE. March 1 iPiNcw cab inet ministers told foreign report er' today the events lost week glv uif communist control of the gov ernment were Uie will of Uie people. Vaclav Kopecky. communist min ister of Information, told a news conference questioner "no figure I Fire Sweeps Over Wing Of Baptist Unit An early morning fire todny dam aged an uncompleted wing of the Klrsl Baptist church at 8th and Washington streets. Firemen said the blaze started from a newly-Installed electric heat ing apparatus In the rear wall of Uie second story of a wing Uiat connects the main church structure with a residence building that Is oclng con verted Into Sunday school rooms. The damage was confined to the connecting wing, which was badly charred In the second story and water soaked In the first floor area. The blaze burned a small area on the roof of Uie Sunday school build ing, and took the roof of a garage building at the rear of the church. The damage of several thousand dollars was covered by Insurance.. Firemen received the call from an unidentified Informant at 6:60 a. m., and their quirk work prevented the blase from taking the entire comer. Rev. Cecil C. Brown, Uie pastor, said II had been planned to open Uie new Sunday school quarters March 14. The church will probably repair the damage and go ahead with plans for a later opening. Snake Ends Long Life Of Buster CLEARWATER, Pla., March 1 (PI Tho saga of Buster was ended by a s.iake In the grass. Tho eight-year-old German shep herd long had endeared himself to postmen by following them on their rounds nnd defending them ngnlnst attacks by other dogs. Flnnlly, Buster looked for another world to conquer. He came from the grass In a woods mortally wounded by a snake. Today the mailmen arc taking up a collection for Buster's funeral. They want to bury him on the lawn back of the post office. Over his gravo they want to put a stone ar.ylng he was the postmen's friend. All Officers Ain't Too Bad ATLANTA, March 1 (Pi Seaman 2 c, Seneca Bailey asked the per sonnel officer nl the nnvnl air sta tion here for five days' leave. "How come?" Lt, L. D. Morgan asked. "My wife had triplets, sir," the sailor replied. "Take IS days," exclaimed Mor gan. Late Spud Bulletin SAN FRANCISCO, March 1 (AD USDAi Potatoes: 6 broken, 21 un broken cars on Irack: arrivals California 1, Oregon 9, Idaho 5: market about, steady; Klamath Ru.i sel No. I Bakers 6.00; Idaho No. 1-A 5.20-26. LOS ANGELES, March 1 lAP USDAI Potatoes: 14 broken, 73 un broken cars on track; arrivals Maine 1, Florida 1, California 2, Ore gon 8, Idaho 41, UUh 10; 27 cars arrived by truck; Idaho Russets No. 1-A B.25-40; Oregon White Rose No. 1-A, washed, 6.00. Project M i;A - I available" on the number arrested or how many persons were expelled from their positions. He declined also to Identify the western powers Premier Klemcnt Gottwald assert ed were behind "reactionaries" In th former government. The cabinet will meet tomorrow toi the first time. The communist leaders already have made broad promises to farmers and workers. One minister told Uie reporters constitutional elections would be hrld In the prescribed time before parliament is due to adjourn In June. T ' . Vlado dementis, undersecretary of state for foreign affairs, told a communist youth audience yester day the foreign press "has started a campaign against us." He said it was the worst since thru of Paul Joseph Ooebbels, Hitler's propagan da minister. Communist premier, Klemcnt Oottwald. addressing a farmers' nlly. promised up to 120 acres for ejeh of those working the land. He uigcd the output of more food to help workers fulfill an Industrial two-year plan. A 'Prague movie , house named "Cinema Freedom" withdrew on Saturday an American film on underground resistance to German occupation. The movie, which had run only one day, starred Charles Laughton and was called "Crushed Country." (Laughton said in Lot Angeles the movie, shown In the United States as "This Land Is Mine," was a "strong picture against occupation f any kind.") Laurence A. Stclnhardt. United States ambassador, was asked about a story In Uie Sunday Times of Lon don that he and the British and French ambassadors would quit Prague. "I don't know anything about It." he said. Plane A plane crash Saturday afternoon in a flat graln-stubble field Just north of Mt Hebron in Northern Siskiyou county, Calif., Instantly killed Richard Lloyd Stevenson. 24, of Mt. Hebron and Clifford Klwtn (Tipl Humphrey, 35, of Dorris. The plane was piloted by the latter. Eye-wiUicsscs said that Uie rented low-wing craft fell to the ground from about 300 feet after It had passed low over the home of Steven son's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Stevenson, prominent Butte valley ranchers. It crushed half a mile from the house and within sight of the town of Mt. Hebron. The plane, a two-scut, 76-hp Er coupe (NO 3492 Hi was rented Irom Lakeland Flying service of Klamnth Falls to Humphrey at 3 p- m. Satur day. The crash occurred approxi mately 20 minutes later. Butsci House A witness, I'.i Boydstum of Mt Hebron, was standing outside Uie post office of that town watching the plane. He said it came down low over the Stevenson ranch house as If "buzzing" to attract attention of LScvrnson parents, continued on north for a short distance and be gan a strep "almost vertical" bank to tho led. Tho bank apparently was too abrupt, Boydstum said. The plane turned completely over, righted it self and dived Into the ground. It struck the ground In a belly landing position, bounced and fur rowed about 80 yards over the frosen field. Ripped parts of the cowling and windshield were scattered around Wallace Party New Target Of Administration In Move To Cover Up Party Rift WAHHINGTON, March 1 fVPf The Truman udmlnlalratlon tried Unlay to deflect mdic of the heat of the touthern democratic revolt by turning new fire on Henry Wal lace's third party. Tills utraUrtiy. Hit outlined by a party official who aked not to oe nnmcd publicly. U to try to mini mize lntra-party difference over the president's civil rlshta program. Many of the wutherncra are as opposed to Wallace and what he stitnds for as they are aratnst Mr. Truman's racial views. Thus on More Money For Navy To Be Demanded WASHINGTON, March 1 lP Rep. Sheppard iD-Callf.i contend ed today Uie American navy would be unable to cope wlty a major emergency if one should arise. Sheppard said the blame rests on both President Truman's budget bureau and on congress itself. As top democrat on a house ap pripriaUona committee considering Uie navy's 1949 budget, the Call fornlan said In an Interview he will lead a fight to give the, sea arm more money. "Because of cuts In the navy's budxet for this year (congress trim med it by 1245.000.000 to (3.800. 000,0001 Uie nary has been forced to lay up fighting ships that it wanted to keep in operation," Sheppard said. But Uie nary can't ask congress to give it more money next year, he cleamed, because of a budget bureau order that no department may seek more for 1949 than it had in 1948. "But there is nothing in Uie world to prevent the appropriations com- I mittee from overriding the budget bureau. 8heppard added. "I hope that after our hearings the com mittee will see fit to do Just that." As of today, the lawmaker said, "the navy's operating efficiency has been impaired and it would take at lease 90 days, possibly longer, to get ships back In commission and put a first class fleet in action." "That," he declared, "Is too much time In an emergency." Buyers Smash Glass In Rush ONTARIO. Ore., March 1 (Pr Housewives tried so hard to buy up cut priced meats at a chain store here Saturday they shattered a glass display counter cover. No one was hurt. The price slashes, as much as 20 cents a pound on choice cuts, came at mid-day. Sirloin steaks were selling at 39 cents a pound; choice T-bones at 49 cents and sausage at 35 cents. The store, a local unit of a chain, did not explain why prices were slashed. One competing chain unit met the competition on some higher price cuts. But independent mar kets held to their regular advertised week-end specials. Crash A? Dorris IFa fal the wreckage. The engine and fore part of the craft was almost torn ..oin Uie fuselage. Stevenson and Humphrey remain ed In Uie crumpled cockpit. Their bodies were badly broken. . Boydstum, the witness, called of ficers and Siskiyou County Coroner Lloyd C. Noble who arrived about an hour after the crash and super vised removal of the bodies. They were brought to Ward's Funeral home here. Proble Planned A CAA Investigation Into the acci dent is probable but will be con ducted out of the Los Angeles CAA district office. Stevenson, familiarly known as "Dick" Stevenson, was well known In the Klamath area as a rodeo rider. Ho participated last summer In the Klamath rodeo, one in Med ford and In several others. He re cently took first place for brone riding at Uie San Francisco Cow Palace. Saturday afternoon he was wearing a silver belt buckle given him for winning the saddle bronc event at the Mcdford rodeo May 11. 1947. He was a navy veteran and mem ber of the Dorris VFW and Amorl an Legion as well as the Klamath Falls Eagles lodge. He was born In Klamath Falls January 25, 1924, and lived all his life In this area. Stevenson la survived by a young son, Richard; a brother, George Stevenson of Mt. Hebron, and his parents. Funeral services will be held nt 2 p. m. Tuesday from the Dorris city hall with the Dorris VFW pa-. In charge, and Interment will be In Picard cemetery. the Wallace score, at least, they think alike with the national demo cratic organization leaders. Senator McOrath of Rhode Is land, the democratic national chair man, sounded tne new administra tion note in a week-end speech at Indianapolis. He said "a third pnrty has as much place in Ameri can politics as does a third party op a honeymoon." Waste Voles McOrath added that if Wallace goes on with his campaign he and his supporters "will either waste their votes or . . . give aid and com fort to reactionary candidates." Senator Connally of Texas, one of the few southerners who didn't boy cott the party dinner here last month which Mr, Truman ad- a eased, apparenUy changed his n.ind. On his way to a Jefferson Jackson dinner at Raleigh. N. C over the week-end he departed from bis advance text to take strong iwne with the president's call for arctl-lvnch. anti-poll tax and anu Job discrimlnaUon laws. Republicans left no doubt that tney plan to make political capital cf the democratic split Tart Blast Senator Taft, for instance, open lnt his home state campaign for the GOP presidential nomination, told a Cleveland rally that "President Truman Is riding a donkey without a head or a tail. Saying Wallace already has de parted and Uie southern wing is In revolt, Taft added- "Therefore, the party is not pro gressive because It is completely In etfecUve." In another Cleveland speech Taft predicted that Wallace may capture as much as 19 per cent of the demo cratic vote. The rebelling southerners went light ahead, meanwhile, with their plans to chop away Uie Dixie po litical props Mr. Truman may need J to win Jn Npvember. , . The South Carolina democraUc st?.te committee, meeting today, was expected to set in motion machinery which may result In Uie choice of independent Dresidential electors in that state, rather than those pledged to Uie party's nominee. Barton Makes It Thirteen Guy Barton, former Poe valley rancher who is now living near the Merrill-Lakeview junction, today be came Uie thirteenth candidate for the Job of sheriff of Klamath county. Barton, a republican, filed for that party's nomination by submitting petitions signed by several hundred registered voters of Uie county. He la the 10th aspirant for republican votes in the May 21 primary. The single filing for sheriff was the only apparent political activity of today. Saturday Otis Metzger, democrat, and Glenn Terrill. repub lican, officially became rival candi dates for Uie post of county as sessor. Since they are unopposed in their parties, the contest will come in the November general election rather than in Uie primary. Clifford Elwln Humphrey waa born In Coloma, Wise, December 21, 1912, and had been In Dorris lesa than a year. He operated a sign painting shop at 3rd and Main In Dorris and only Saturday had received a con tract to do the sign painUng on the Wreckage 5;..;f'W f aAtiiVl jlk'aS ,W'4c:-W iHimm .Xni Two young men died Saturday afternoon when this plane, two-seater Ercoupe from the Klamath Fella airport, crashed In a field near Mt Hebron, Calif. The dead were Richard Lloyd Stevenson, U, and Clifford E. Humphrey, Is. Humphrey, a licensed pilot, waa believed at the controls of the light plane. 'Civilization' Too Much For Gotham Trio NEW YORK, March 1 OT Continual playing of the tuna "Civilisation" an the Juke box In a Manhattan bar early today led Im the shooting of three persona. The vlcUms, police said, wera red-haired osephlne Ostoloeo, 20, who had fed nickels for the same song for an hour, a seaman who objected, and the bartender, Nemesio Calasen, 47. Police said Flllpe Torres, 20, the sailor, shot the woman and then the bartender when the lat ter tried to pek her up from the floor, Torres waa wounded and seised later In a gun duel with police on a subway platform. Bullets flew when the woman changed a St bill at the bar and walked toward the Juke box after she had played "Civilisation" over and over again. Police said the young woman had played the song which goes In part, "Bongo, Bongo, Bongo, I don't want lo leave the Congo," an estimated 20 times when the seaman shouted: "Stop playing that record." Jets Rack Up New Record LOS ANGELES. March 1 UP) A navy Jet fighter plane has whittled down the speed record between SeatUe and Los Angeles. The new mark for a 1025-mile course la one hour. 58 minutes, seven seconds, an average of 521 miles per hour. Comdr. E. P. Aitrand. flying North American PJ-I, eclipsed the old mark of Army Capt. Mack A. Mitchell, then stationed at March field, Calif. two hours, 14 minutes. It was made April S, 1946. Comdr. Aurand was one of three navy pilots who left SeatUe yester day on a speed training mission. Their objecUve was not to break records, but they reported their times to Uie plane manufacturers. Lt Comdr. Robert Elder flew 704 A miles to San Francisco in one hour, 21 minutes, 7 seconds, averaging 522.13 mph, and Lt Comdr. John Magda streaked to San Diego in to hours. 12 minutes. 54 seconds, an average of 511.8 mph. This is the fastest time ever made between SeatUe and San Diego, a distance of 1135 miles as reckoned by 13th naval district headquarters at SeatUe. Five Babies Born Here On Odd Calendar Day-Feb.29 February, 1948, was tucked Into Uie limbo of years yesterday but not until five babies, two girls and three boys, made their entrance Into Uie world on February 29, a day which will give them a birthday only once every four years unless something is done about Uie calendar. A few Klamath men and women celebrated their birthdays yester day but Uie only one The Herald and News could confirm as a Feb ruary 29th celebrant was Loy J. Barker, Klamath Fails insurance man and former Cruloquin school head. Death came to a beloved Klamath matron, Mrs. Pearly Ett West, on her 92nd birthday yesterday. Mrs. West's life began and ended on February 29. She passed away Sun day at Hillside hospital on her 23rd birthday anniversary. She was Uie mother of Mrs. G. C. Tatman of this city. Infants who arrived here Sunday were born to: Dr. and Mrs. Calvin Lawson Hunt, a boy, their first child, weighing 8 pounds 1 ounce. Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Tice, 343 Riverside, a boy, 7 pounds 91i ounces. new Klamath Falls baseball park fence. He was a licensed pilot, having received his certificate in April, 1946, at Spokane. Humphrey is survived by his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Warren N. Hum phrey of Madison, Wis.; his wife. of Light Plane in Grain Field 3s '' ' ''''' Rumor Says President Favors Plan HELSINKI, March 1' (AV-M euaalona began within the FlnnlaH government today on Prune Mia later Stalin's proposal for a Finnish-Russian treaty of friendship and mutual assistance. President Juho Paaaiklvl, It waa learned, will be told Wednesday of the final decisions of major poliUeal parties on the Idea, which is expected to be submitted 1m parliament Well informed sources said the president is in favor of signing: such a treaty. Over the week-end he received K. L. Kulo, head of Uie pro-Moscow socialist unity party. Text Published Press and radio here published yesterday the text of Stalin's letter to Paaslklvl, dated February 22 and closing, "with deep respect." The letter proposed negotiations In Moscow or Helsinki toward a "paot of friendship, cooperation and mu tual assistance" against "possible German aggression." Well informed sources aald now that the letter la published, getUng the pact haa become a point of presUge for the Soviet Union. They said they believe President Paaat kivi feels this way: To turn down the Soviet bid would aggravate Russian-Finnish relaUons to a dangerous degree. To accept lt could mean Finland might get as favorable conditions as possible toward keeping; naUonai Independence. (K. A. Fagerholrn, social demo cratic speaker of the Finnish par liament, said In Stockholm last night, "we do not want to sea xxx events of the kind now occurring in some other countries who have closed agreements with the Soviet Union." ("A ' change in the gorernraent is conceivable, however,1 he added "as a consequence of what has, happened.") Some politicians saw a good sign in Stalin's offer to send a Soviet delegation to Helsinki. They noted Uie Russians did not offer to to to Bucharest and Budapest before working out pacts with Romania and Hungary on Uie lines proposed to Finland. Unsigned leaflets turning ap hi Helsinki yesterday urged Finnish aeUon against communists. Mr. and Mrs. Joe A. Phillips. 482t Johns, a girl, 6 pounds 12 ounces. - Mr. and Mrs. Taft Slsco, route I box 790, a girl, 7 pounds. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wessels, OVi, a boy, 7 pounds 10 ounces. , The month of February was peculiar this year for another rea son there were not only 29 days but It also had five Sundays. The month began on a Sunday and end ed on a Sunday. This is one of only six Februarys in the 200-year period beginning with 1800 and ending with the year 2000, having five Sundays. The first February in this period having five Sundays was in 1824, the next in 1852, and the next in 1880; these three were Just 28 years apart. At the turn of Uie century lt was 40 years until Uie next February appeared with five Sundays. This was In 1920 and Uie next February with five Sundays was this year. For your information, Uie next and final February with five Sun days in this period will be 28 years hence, in 1976. This is something February 29th babies can keep in mind in case they want to have their celebration on a Sunday. To vo Maxine Rae, and a 11-year-old son, Phillip, both of Dorris, and a brother, Frank, of Madison. His funeral services will be held :rom Uie Dorris city hall at 11 a. m. tomorrow with the Rev. F. C. Wis senbach officiating. Burial will be in Uie Picard cemetery. ' '' : 'i '' ' '