TUESDAY. I'KBKUARY 12. 10.12 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE ITVt I '4 7$ Dorris Trys Boys Club as Solution Of Youth Problem GRADY IS MOTHER AGAIN Grady the Cow who amused the nation three yearn nno when she leaped into the silo and couldn't gel out, is shown with her newest .calf, a 130 pound, week-old son, while owner Bill Math looks on. Rancher Math of Yukon, Okla., says Grady is the best sightseeing attraction in this part of the country. DOnniH-A Boy's Club, Intended bk ii n unswer to Home of Dorris' Kruwliig Juvenile delinquency prob lems, in to be cijDiivu ncre witnin ii lew clays. I'ollce Clilcl Tcnton Mahrt In or- Ity JEAN OWENS "United States Foreign Policy" In the discussion topic lor Uir Ore. Kou Willi School International Re lations League Mule convention thin Krltloy mid Saturday, Febru ary 16-10. Krh Memorial bulldlnit ol the University ol Oregon will be the site ol the student discus felon. Main topic will be broken down Into live separate topics and encli Mullen'. reprrnrntliiK KUIIft has chmien to serve on two panels. "US. Policy toward USSR." "U. U. Policy toward Chins and Japan," "U.S. Policy toward South east Asia." "U.B. Policy toward Western European Democracies" and "DR. Policy toward the Mid dle East" are Included In the topic breakdown. Mike Burke will lead the panel on "U.S. Policy toward USSR and riharnn Glenifer will lead the panel on "U.S. Policy toward Uie Mid dle East." Other participants are Ronnie TlershberRer, Joan Jurkeland. Clo King, Marian Meaner, Bruno More Mn, Torn Murdork, John Oliver, Dick Plescr. LeRoy Porter. Char lotte Beed, Dick Tracy and John Wlnkelman. Tom Murdock has been appoint ed to act on Uie State Credential committee which determines those who have the rluhl to vote In busi ness meet Hut nt the State conven tion. Paul Dellcr was chosen fac ulty advlwr lor two of Uie panels. The students will leave Thursday tioon for Eugene and they will stay t the dorms mid the various fra ternities and sororities. District wrestling match will be held a week from this Friday and baturday at Bend. Pelicans will make the trip with their coach, "Dutch" Simons. ExKlamath Man Promoted A former Klamath Falls resident, Robert E. Murphy, has been pro moted to executive vice president of the Cal-Western States Life In surance Co. with headquarters at Sacramento. Ills new duties In addition to those of manager of axencles will be to assist Uie president In the Itcneral supervision of the busi ness. Murphy has been with the compuny since 11)40 when he was made manager ol the Sacramento office. He Is a native of McCloud, Calif., a graduate of KUHH and ol Ore Kon Stale Collciie. Mrs. C. H. Foster. 1871 Portland, with whom he made his home while attending school here. Is a sister. Murphy Is married and Uie fa ther ol two children. Russ Gun Trials Too Noisy SAUSALITO. Calif. Wl Two veterans of some of the bloodiest lighting In Korea tested their war price a Russian machine-gun on tin cans. Some residents complained. But Deputy District Attorney William Welsslrh said he wouldn't prose cute Marine 8gt. Raymond Rais er, 19, nnd Cpl. OeorRe Tslgelatos, 10. "Anybody who brings home a Russian gun deserves a medal not a tail sentence," Welsslch com mented. But he confiscated the wespon to turn It over to federal authorities. KU Students To Eugene Fourteen Klninath Union h!nh Juniors and seniors are to go to Kugene Thursday to attend the state international Relations con vention. Paul Deller. local 1RL advisor and history teacher, will accom pany the urouti. About 300 students from all over Ihe stiite are expected to tuke part In the discussions ol U.S. forelRn policy on the University of Oregon campus. Two KU lunlors are to be nsnel lenders, Sharon Olenger lending the discussion of U.8. policy to ward Southeast Asia, and Mike Hurke, who Is to lend a two-hour panel on U.S. policy toward Soviet Russia. Tom Murdock, senior, has been appointed chairman of the state credentials committee. He Is presi dent of the IRL chapter at the high school. Others taking pnrt In the discus' slons from KU Include Ron Herstv beriier. Jonn Juckelnnd. Clo King, Marian Mesner. Bruno Morosln. John Oliver. Dick Plener. LeRoy Porter Chnrlotte Reed. Dick Tracy and John Wlnkelmun Drug Curbs Heart Ailment NEW YORK Wi A drug de signed to prevent attneks of an gina pectoris, a painful heart all incnt. was announced Tuesday. Fifty to 75 per cent of patients hnd fewer atuicks or less pnln when attacks did come, said three report In the Journal of Anglol ogy. Anglology Is the science of blood vessels. The drug. Perltrnte was devel' oped by Chllcott Laboratories Morris Plains, N. J., from a nitrate long used in explosives. Angina pectoris Is due to lack of blood or oxygen supply, usually from constriction of blood vessels. The new drug relaxes blood ves sels. Drs. Travis Wlrcior and Patrick Humphreys. University of Southern California, snld the drug had bene ficial elfccts In 78 per cent of 125 patients, and was especially useful In treating chest pains. Patients were able to step up dally activi ties while taking the drug. ganlzer and sponsor of the youth establishment. He has rented the old Pentecos lal Church building on Main street a basement known locally as Hole In the Ground and turned It Into clubrooms and a gymnasium music machine for the club and promised to supply It with records and repair service. Money taken In by the Juke box Is to go Into the club treasury. A second shuffleboard has been donated by a Ban Francisco man and Paul Robinson of the Macdoel Tavern offered to pay the freight on it irom nan rrancisco, so it will cost the club nothing. Mahrt' tentative plans are to have the clubhouse open each night until 10 o'clock, and prob ably have afternoon hours for boys of grade school age. He wants to eliminate the complaint of "no thing to do" for teenagers In Dorris. The club, he said, Is to be as near self-supporting as possible. Members are to pay 11 a month dues to admit them to use the fa cilities of the club, and once a week or so the club will be opened to the public so adults can make use of the games. They will be charged regular billiard, pool and shuffleboard fees, he said. LOW OVERHEAD Mahrt said the rent on the build there won't be much overhead to the operation of the clubrooms. He figures on an Income of about 8100 a month and on paying off the bank note In a year or less. Teenagers are keenly Interested in the club, the Police Chief said, and anxious to get It open. For the past several months Dorris has had a real delinquency About t200 was raised at a New Year's dance nnd half of It has gone to purchase bar bells, punch ing bags, boxing gloves and other equipment. Mahrt also arranged to borrow MK) from the Butte Val ley Stale Bank with 11 Dorris businessmen going on the note and bought two pool tables, a snooker i table, ping pong table and shuffle board In Klamath Falls. Last weekend he went to Leban-' on, and got another billiard table ; and pool table. ; All the tables are fully equipped and In good shape, he said. mimic ! W. C, Brannan of Yreka, Juke box distributor, has donated a ' LOGGER KILLED EUGENE if Otis- Leroy Wright, 23. was killed Monday In a logging accident. A log rolled off a truck which he was helping to load. The accident occurred near Wright's home In Chcslre which Is 27 miles northwest of here. By MARY EGAS "We're out to win, we won't give In. So off we go to ole Malln." Yes the Trojans and their boost ers maintain a firm belief that their luck will change tonight on the Mustang court in a non-conference Ult. This game and the Merrill contest Friday, will bring the '52 basketball season to a close lor SHA. aside, of course, from the all Important tournament next week I The new edition of the Chimes newspaper was not only distributed among the high school students, but will also be sent to the many people who supported the school magazine drive last year. This Is a token of appreciation and a way of showing subscribers what the staff has been able to do, have a printed paper six times a year. The students are eagerly looking forward to another successful drive at the llrst of next month. The Valentine's dance slated for tomorrow night Is under complete control with refreshment, decora tion and music committees all reody for this special dance. Funds j irum uie unnce win go lowaru ine tape recorder. The Madrigal Ensemble sang yesterday noon for the Lion's luncheon, and will sing again for the spring style show Feb. 27. LAST ACE SEOUL. Korea W) MaJ. Rich ard D. Crelghton, Baton Rouge, La., and Horseshoe Bend, Idaho, is the Inst American Jet ace still In the Korean war theater. He still Is flying regular combat missions unless orders have been changed In the past few hours. That could not be determined immediately. Beautiful Valentines . . . Volrht's Pioneer Office Supply Co. 629 Mala t Automatic Drive Ever Built ! PACKARD ULTRAMATIC Proved In Use...Fines CEiGHHID "A NO-Stlier DRIVE unlike any olbtr!" "Well x ahead o anything now available!" "Some thing to tend rival automakers hack to their drawing hoards!" These were comments of editors and experts who tested Packard Ultramatic, triumph of 16 years' research. Use by thousands of Packard owners proves Ultramatic outperforms all other automatic drives under all conditions! 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