I'UIDAV. ADCil'ST II, 1052
PACE FOlfR
llKRAI.n AND NKWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OKKGON
FRANK JENKINS
Editor
Entered second class matter at the post office of Klamath Fall. Ore.,
on August 20, 1906, under act of Congress, March (, 1879
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Presi Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication
of all the local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news.
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BILL-BOARD
By BILL
Every once in a while you run
across one of those wonderful peo
ple who nave a lot ol lun out of
life. Rive a lot of pleasure to others
and in general make tins drab old
world a better place to live in.
And a guy who ranks wav up
there in mv estimation is Jimmy
lualoney. the smiling, happy Irisii
man with the touch fists and the
lender heart.
Jimmy blew Into town a handful
of years ago and made himself
known to the people around here
and there as a bartender. Strict
Iv a sideline with Jimmy, who Is
an ex-pug and a damn good one
Anvwav Jimmv drifted around
from here to there, working the
clubs mostly, and well liked in all
of 'em.
Then recently he got an urge to
drink in a bil of the great out
doors, get his feet out on Cod's
Rood clean dirt and leave the
smoke filled rooms. So now he's
with Puckett and Scherer. the
Keno millmen and doing well as
an apprentice scaler.
But, before all this started, way
back when, Jimmv was going
around the East and South proving
his worth and talents in the rope
square. And he did pretty well
at It. He got started fighting back
in the davs when be was going to
Boston Prep and needed a little
pocket monev. And what with one
thing and another, which included
a year at the University of Miami
where he studied law. he put In 30
years at the fight game, winding
up his fistic career in 1933. Back
at the beginning he met the "kid
referred to in the poem he passed
along to us. Today that young
ster is a Catholic priest, but Jim
my has lost track of him. But he
never forgot his young admirer and
sat down several years ago and
wrote this poem about It. It's got
the lilt of the city sidewalks and
the work and the bright lights In
It. And a strong touch of the hu
maness of the world, too. But. read
It for yourself and see. Just wish 1
died Soijk
By RF.LMAN MORIN
(For HAL BOYLE) '
r
NEW YORK t How would
you feel If you were In a crowded
bus with soma loose cobras?
That happened to some people
in India the other day. The Bom
bay office of the Associated Press
reported that a snake - charmer
came aboard, carrying the cobras
in baskets. The bus jolted over a
pothole in the road. The baskets
sprung open.
When one 'of the cobras reached
the driver's compartment, the
driver panicked and lost control.
So he said, afterward. There was
a serious accident.
In a way, this is the other half
of a Kiplingesque story . . .
One night in India, a British of
ficer and his wife gave a small
dinner party.
It was during the war. and so
there was some talk of the fight
ing and the bombing of British
cities, and what-not.
And then one of the ladies
tripped the trigger on a lovely
argument.
"This war has proved one
JOE LA CLAIR
LaClair Leaves
CD Position
Joe LaClair, for nearly a vear
director of Klamath County's Civil
Defense organization, announced to
day he is resigning from the po
sition effective Aug. 18.
LaClair said the position has be
come a full-time chore since he
took it over last year, and he is to
return to his duties as head of the
Klamath Union High School In
structional Materials Department
on the date of his resignation,
He said (he county's Civil De
fense organization has grown from
30 persons when he took it over,
to 1CO0 persons today. He said he
could not do a proper Job on a
part-time basis.
He took over the directorship af
ter the resignation last year of L.
Orth Slsemore. He plans to remain
as defense boss until the comple
tion of a dry-run alert later this
month.
Sm Calhoun' a
MIRRORS
ft any rssm
In iht finmtl
9T C. Mla.
-w' 77
in.
BILL JENKINS
Manas tlx Editor
JENKINS
we could find the priest today and
let him know that Jimmy is still
in there swinging.
The glamor is over,
'lne glory is gone;
Mv last cheers have died awav
And the hero seekers have all
moved on
To another camp today.
But yet there's a certain 10-year-old.
A newsboy whose name Is Bill,
Who hasn't grown
The least bit cold.
And thinks me a hero still.
I used to finish
Mv road work every day
At a block near the open sea.
And out of one of the alleyways
He'd always rush to me.
I'd always stop a little while
And look right down at bun;
He'd fumble his pnpers
And blush and smile
And say, "I'm praying again"
And some of those nights In the
dressing room
With the roaring crowds outside
In the midst of the thrills
And the nerves and gloom
That work 'neath a fighter's bide
I'd think of that kid
Who was tucked In bed.
With his soul so pure and free.
And I'd think of the prayers he
always said
For a worthless cuss like me.
As long as vou stay in the game
With half a chance to win.
There are crowds to bask
1 your passing fame.
And crowds to help you grin.
Yet it's nice to know.
As I really do.
That kid like Bill would sav.
I didn't know you were through
Jim.
But I'll just pray anyway.
thing." she said "women are Just
as brave as men In an emergency,
and perhaps braver." 1 '
The men were indulgent. They
conceded that women in the serv
ices had often displayed extraordi
nary courage. But they pointed out
also that women will jump on a
chair and scream in the presence
of a mouse.
The argument was swirling, and
nobody noticed when th sn,i..
quietly signalled one of the Indi-
11 oci vanis.
He bent over her shoulder. She
whispered something. He hurried
out of the room.
A moment later, he reappeared,
holding a bowl of milk. He set
the bowl on the floor in a far
coraer of the room.
Suddenly, a cobra slithered out
from beneath the table, heading
for the milk.
There were screams, quick ex
its, and the confusion was im
mense when the other guests saw
it. The servant quickly destroyed
the snake.
Later, they asked the hostess
how she knew the cobra was in
the room. Did she see it? When?
Where?
"I didn't see it," she replied,
but I felt it . . .It was coiled
around my ankle."
This tended to chill the argu
ment about men and women and
what thev do in th
danger.
But about the cobras , , , there
are almost as manv tnlo r
st!2n,!e..T"ly5 ,s there re snakes.
The king cobra is Bggressive,
and presumably, will always at-
,.., uie omer types only defend
themselves.
Yet. Some nf tho Tnrllan, -.li
that not even the big king will
harm a small child. They believe
a snake reacts, through some sixth
sense, to the loathing and dread
wai arises, on signt, to most
adults.
And thev think thi t ac
quired feeling, something you have
to leam. Since a baby does not
know enough to be afraid, he may
be perfectly safe even with a
cobra.
Preston Grover. who headed the
AP office In India for a number
of years, was a witness to one
of these Incidents.
He was visiting an Indian fam
lly. Their child, in a high chair
on the lawn, was eating a bowl
of bread and milk. Cnhms lit,,,
milk, and apparently they can
smell it from considerable dis
tances. Grover. horrified, saw the snake -
just as it was crawling up the
side of the chair. It crossed the
baby's lap, and came onto the
apron of the high chair. Then it
began drinking the milk.
With a clumsy gesture, the baby
banged it over the head with the
spoon.
'We expected the cobra to
strike," he said, "but the baby
upset the bowl, and the snake
simply dropped onto the grass and
went on looking for milk down
mere. '
It was only when thev ap
proached to kill It, he said, that
the hood went up and It colled
to strike.
So. In case vou are ever on a
crowded bus with a loose cobra,
either open a bottle of th best
homogenized, or pretend not to
notice.
OFFICE SPACE
For rnt In Stewart-Drew
building. , Inquire Drews
Minttor. '
yll Do It Every
TO THE SECURITY OF A NICE, RAT
PENSlOKl""
Representative Gore Beats McKellar
In Tennessee Democratic Primaries
By The Associated Presa
Eishiy-three-ycar old Sen. Ken
neth D. McKellar of Tennessee has
lost his bitter battle for an un
precedented seventh term.
Rep. Albert Gore. 44. had a
lead of more than 63.000 votes
over dean of the U.S. Senate as
returns' poured In from Thursday's
red-hot Tennessee Democratic pri
ma ry.
Frank Clement, former FBI
p.cent. ousted incumbent Gordou
Browing in the governor's race.
Browning sought a third two-year
term.
Victory in the primary Is tanta
mount to election in strongly-Dem
ocratic Tennessee.
The outcome was 50-50 for
Memphis political leader E. H
Crump, making his first bid for a
Veterans Group Scores
UNESCO School Planning
LOS ANGELES Ml -,- The 53rd
'National Encampment of the Vet-
terans oi i-oregn wars has ap
proved a resolution condemning
use of the United Nations educa
tional, social and cultural organ
ization's study program in public
schools.
Protesting what thev called
"planned corruption of American
children's minds and of the school
system." the delegates Thursday
passed a resolution saying In Dart:
"The Veterans of Foreign
Wars believes that a teacher's
highest duty Is to inspire in chil
dren an unquestionable loyalty to
their own country: a deep under
standing of Its Ideals, a staunch
faith in Its Institutions; a deep re
spect for the leaders who made
the world."
James W. Cothran. Bishopville,
s.u.. incoming commander-in-chief,
said:
"The Veterans of Foreign
Navy Tells Heroism of Men
On Board Burning Carrier
By GEORGE Mc ARTHUR
TOKYO I U.S. Far East
Naval headquarters described Fri
day now heroic crewmen saved the
aircraft carrier Boxer from flam
ing explosions which killed nine
shipmates.
Minutes after flames broke out
below decks at dawn Wednesday,
crewmen braved smoke and inferno-like
heat to unload bombs
and ammunition from planes read
ied for strikes against the Commu
nis In North Korea.
Other seamen donned oxygen
masks and rescued comrades
trapped by smoke and flames.
Their skipper called It an "inspir
ing performance."
The Navy here said the fire and
explosions Injured 32. .
The Injury toll reported In Wash
ington was 75, but a Navy spokes
man here said that probably in
cluded those temporarily overcome
by smoke but not Injured.
The Washington account differed
in other respects. The Navy De-
Young Robber
Gets Sentence
DUCHESNE, Utah I An 18-year-old
youth questioned In the
slaying of two men In Crater Lake
National Park, Thursday was sen
tenced to five years to life In the
Utah prison.
The youth, William K. Russell,
Ponca City, Okla., pleaded guilty
to robbing a Vernal, Utah, busi
nessman who gave him a ride from
Salt Lake City to Vernal. He was
sentenced by Judge William S.
Dunford of the Fourth District
Court.
8herlff Arzie Mitchell Bald Rus
sell also confessed the robbery of
John Lovelace of Sparks, Nev., of
a wrislwatch. Lovelace gave Rus
sell a ride near Lake Tahoe, Nov.,
July 26. '
Arrested here July 31, he was
questioned about the fatal shoot
ing of A. M. Jones, 66, Concord,
Calif., and C. P. Culhane, 65, De
troit, Mich., in Crater Lake Park
last month. He denied knowledge
of the alayings.
People DO TOO
read small space
ads - you are!
Time
Hi
statewide comeback after his or
ganisation was beaten lour years
ago by Browning and Sen. Estes
Kefauver.
Crump had supported McKellar
and Clement.
Returns from 2.101 of the state's
2.300 precincts gave:
Core 238,867: McKellar 175.273.
Returns from 2.029 precincts
guve:
Clement 193.812: Browning 165.
547; Chllord Allen. Jr. 49.962.
McKellar. chairman of Ihe pow
erful Appropriations Committee.
Dpsnn ms senatorial career in lyio
after serving three terms In thelhowcr will strike out against the
Ri-HiiiTnir-Tivr foreign Policy of the Truman ad-
HUllsTRUTlM. ministration a policy he helped
Gore, whose Congressional Dls-( carry out as European defense
trict was eliminated when the state 'commander.
'was redlstrlcted last vear. contend-
Wars stand four-sauare for the
scrapping of anvthlng that involves
surrender of American sovereignty
throughout the world. And that In
cludes the UNESCO program sec
tion or the United Nations setup."
Universal military training was
called for in a resolution which de
clared, "no nation can use strong
talk at the peace table without mil
itary might to back It up. and a
large trained -reserve will iorm
part of that might."
Delegates also demanded an in
creased Merchant Marine, cessa
tion of trade with Czechoslovakia
and release of William Oalls, As
sociated Press correspondent now
held prisoner bv the Czechs.
Closing business Friday Includes
election of officers. None of the
nominees are from the Pacific
Northwest.
Mrs. George L. Holm. Chicago.
was nominated for national presl-
dent of the Ladles' Auxiliary.
partment said one exploding Jet
plane touched off the disaster and
12 other planes were destroyed.
Headquarters said the cause was
undetermined and did not reveal
extent of the damage.
The fire and explosions scared
the 27,000-ton flattop s hangar deck
the level Immediately below the
flight deck.
The Navy here said merely that
the flames broke out In a cluster
of Jet planes on the hangar deck.
A Naval court of Inquiry was
ordered to Investigate. Rear Adm.
Herbert C. Regan, commander ol
Carrier Division One, was appoint
ed Its senior officer.
Although Capt. Marshall B. Our
ney, the skipper, said the Boxer
was able to carry on its mission,
the carrier was sent to Japan for
repairs.
The explosions occurred while
the Boxer was SO miles east of
Wonsan, Korean East Coast port.
The nine dead Included a Navy
doctor and two hospitamen who
braved nearby flames to care for
wounded shipmates.
An exploding shell got them. One
man was lost overboard. Helicopt
ers and small boats rescued 62
others who were forced Into the
sea by the choking smoke and
flames.
Airline Plans
More Service
WASHINGTON Wl United Air
lines notified the Civil Aeronautics
Board Friday It plans to start
dally DC-4 coach service Sept. 28
between the Pacific Northwest and
Chicago.
United asked the board to re
move a certificate restriction which
prohibits non-stop service between
Seattle, Tacoma and Portland and
Chicago.
United now operates coach serv
ices between the east and west
seaboards, and between Los Angel
es and Ban Francisco.
It said the new service would
use Denver as a re-fuellng stop
only with no passenger pickup
there.
The company Indicated the tare
would be 20 per cent below the
standard fare between those cities.
HOTELS
OSBURN HOLLAND
EUGENE, ORE MEDFORD
Thoroughly Modern
Mr, and Mrs. J. E. Earlejr
and Joe Earley
Proprietors
By Jimmy llatlo
eS RtmirFO idou .Akin that chx.
FAT PENSION HE DREAMED OF IS '
COVMMQ IKl. HOWEVER.
JRE X3UR CHECK 19 U
BI6 cMOUGH TO U) Q
C IT, C LANCE? ii I
cd during his hard-hitting cum
palgn for the Senate seat that Mc
Kellar was too old to serve an
other six-year term.
There was major activity In the
Denver headuuarlers ol Republi
can presidential candidate Dwight
D. Elsenhower:
The general, his running mate
Sen. Richard M. Nixon, and John
Foster Dulles, the parly's Interna
tional allairs expert, met to map
campaign strategy on loreign
policy Issues.
uui oi tne session mav come a
ifiecis nn nn inct hn. i... --,
TROOPS TO KOHKA
Elsenhower has not anid nuhlu-iv
how he feels about President Tru
man s derision to seuj troops to
Korea without prior Congressional
approval, but he has Indicated he
mav let flv against Truman's Far
East policy In general.
twennower began Frldnv's
meetings cheered bv reports from
two partv leaders who backed Sen.
Robert A. Tall tor the nomina
tion. They said thev would civ. ih.i-
full support to the present ticket.
Gov. Len B. Jordon of Idaho
and George T. Hansen, national
coinmltleeman from Utah, passed
this word along to him. adding
that prospects looked bright for the
GOP In their states.
svll.K Or r
In Springfield. III., the Democrat
ic presidential nominee. Oov. Ad
In! Stevenson, was reported ready
to kick off his campaign with a
Labor Day speech In Detroit, fol
lowed by a swing Into the South
to hold the Dixie vote In line
there.
The governor put aside his work
temporarily to attend the formal
opening of the annual Illinois State
Fair, where he and Vice Presi
dent Barkley will speak next
Thursday.
High on his list of musts In the
davs ahead Is the naming of a
new Democratic national chairman
to succeed Frank E. McKlnney, re
portedly on his way out.
Those considered for the past,
according to speculation, arc John
Bailey of Connecticut. Democratic
state chairman; Jim Dovle of Wis
consin, a too state leader: and
Ren. John M. McCormlck. Mas
sachusetts. House ma lor It v leader.
Cow Crashes
On Automobile
DENVER 11 Mllo H. Ewlng.
25, and his wife. Geraldlnc, 20. of
Denver, suffered head and back
Injuries Friday when a 1,300 pound
cow tumbled off an overpass and
landed on their moving car.
Officers said Ewlng was driving
up to an underpass at East 46th
ave., .and Lafayette St., when the
cow fell onto the car, crushing the
the entire top on the couple.
Ewlng stopped the car within a
few feet.
The cow flopped off the roof,
staggered about 60 feet and
dropped dead.
Gabin
Still
Everyone Knows
Soar Main
Bourbon
Made
Kentucky
Bourbon
Famous
ALL
KENTUCKY STRAIGHT
BOURBON WHISKEY
i
J
(Dh. . (p.
Ml.ii B. writes: "I have been
doctoring for secondary ano
mla lor thrro vcara and can't un
derstand why mv blood count
never shows any Improvement."
Miss H. raise the Important
problem of a condition which Ire
uuctuly pilules tint uuly tho pa
tient but tho plivslclan.
When there are too few red
blood tell ur not enouuh hemo
globin, the condition la called
anemia." For example, If a isrr-
sun loses more blood than the
system can replace, anemia de
velops. If the blood loss occurs
suddcnlv, the dllflcullv can be
remedied promptly by stopping
the hrmorrhugo and giving a blood
transfusion.
It the loss 1 slow, It Is neces
sary to find where the bleeding
cornea from and to atop 11 If pos
sible. II this kind ol anemia la
sever. It mav be necessary to Hive
transluslon or take other step,
Including the use ol Iron prepara
tions lion bring an Important
part of hemoglobin or coloring
matter of blood.
Other anemias are caused bv
poison- am! Iv dlsras-. "n each
case It Is necessary to find out
not only that nnrmla Is present
Wayne Long Executed On
Schedule In New Chamber
SALEM 1ft Wayne LcRuy
Long. 28, died In the state's gas
chamber Friday morning.
He had killed a mull In cold
blood, stolen his truck, then failed
lo get avtiiy ai,cr loooiiig a uatia.
Frldav morning he sat calmly In
the chair jf the gas chamber, the
strong movement ol his lawa as he
chewed gum the only outward evi
dence of emotion-.
He dialled cusuallv with his
i guards as ho was strapped In the
chair. Prison bupt. George Alex
ander spoke to him bilrllv. Ihe
! Catholic chaplain. Father William
McClory. was the last lo leave and
through the gas chamber windows
witnesses could see Long smile
illghilv as ho and Ihe chaplain
talked.'
He never admitted his guilt and
did not do so lo reporters before
the drath-tukllig cyanide pellets
were dropped at 7:04 a.m stand
ard time. Within two minutes ol the
lime the whlto gas vapor began lo
rise about his chair. Long was
dead.
Long was executed for the mur
der of Walter Rucker near Oregon
Cltv June 15. 1950. Within 25 hours
after Long was released from pri
son on a robberv assault term,
these things happened: The kid-nap-slaying
of llucker. the robberv
of a Portland bank and a gun bat
tle with the FBI In which an FBI
agent was seriously wounded and
Long was felled by a police bullet
In his arm.
Long had completed an elghl
vear sentence for assault wllh In
tent to rob. Before thai he had ac
cumulated a tuvemle crime record
which Included a trrm at Ihe bovs
training school al Woodburn.
Long Is the 14th criminal to die
11S1L? 'Y 'Bis
Wamatk unnitune Co.
221 Main
fyohdnn
but what the disease or loxlo con
dition Is which la responsible loi
the trouble.
Ollen the cause can be remedied
and the anemia l then llkolv to
clear up. II It conies f mill a loi
diet, eating belter food alone mav
b enough.
One, kind of anemia collies par
ticularly, but not excluMNrly. In
women between 30 and 60 vearu
of age. '1 tie cause of this anemia
Ii a drllcletiov of Iron due lu sev
eral things, probnblv Including de
fective diet and poor abMirptlon
due to disturbance ol tho atumacn
and Intestines. ,
This reaitlis In a feeling ol
weakness, shortness of brrolh.
nervous disturbance, dry Pair,
sore tongue and paleness. For
tunately, once II 1ms been Identi
fied It responds well to Iron.
Failure of tho organs which
make the blood may produce
nnemln. In this kind of anemia
Ihe difficulty Ilea principally In the
bone marrow and Is like that
which comes from certain poisons.
Anemia Is usually the rellecllon
of something seriously wrong wllh
the body. No one with severe
anemia can leel well or can be
(normally energetic. II Is ollen a
'Irving and discouraging symptom.
In the gas chamber and the first
since the chamber had been moved
outside the prison wall.
There have been 80 persons arn-
ilenced to dealh In Oregon since
axecuuong were moveti iioin gal
lows In county courthouse squares
In the penitentiary In 1003. Of those
80, the sentence ol 15 were com
muted to llle Imprisonment, two
committed suicide. 61 have been
executed and two are awaiting exe
cution. Long's years In prison embitter
ed him to the point of desperation.
He and niuiilereis John Omar Vin
son and Dupree Poe have been
the center ol numerous escape
plots at the prion- During the last
two years, thev have sought In buv
Ihelr way out ol prison, walk out
with groups of visitors. Thrv have
awed Ihelr way through their cell
doors wtih hacksaw blades,
grabbed kevs from guards and un
locked the'r cells, and uisnii one oc
casion Long even managed lo
scale Ihe prison wall before cap
ture. But the first time during lha
two vears that Long was free ol
the shadow of the prison wnll he
haled so much was earlv Frldnv
morning w-hen he was Inken lo the
small, bleak, concrete building
which houses the slate's execution
chamber.
l .MO.N HCIIOOL
PORTLAND I Some 75 mem
bers of Oregon and Washington
CIO unions will attend a leader-
Ishlp training course starling Sun
jday at Reed College. It will be
jOiie of a series lo be held In the
area, Ben Sega, aaaortale educa
tion director of the CIO. aald.
69"
Double the charm of your room with on of
fries faicinotinq living room chain. Our
Auquir tale fcoturci everythinq from small
modern styles to luxurious comfortable choirs
ond ottomans ... all at important savinqs.
They r honestly constructed . . . beautifully
upholstered in tapestries, tweods, brocatellos.
Buy now and take advantaq of the Sal
prices.
Usual
"Four Floon of Fin Furniture and Floor
Fishing
Report
PORTLAND l, Tho Oregon
Hlale Hume Commission reported
! Friday Una there In sonic good
liinulinu lu be had tills week end
but that trout II-lung In coastal
lakes and streams likely will be
disappointing.
The highlights:
Nnilhwest 'Hie McKcnil liaa
hri'ii fair In good and so have most
Ml. Hood area streams, duly Ilia
Clackamas llivrr. though, has been
excellent. Manv reports have told
ol poor luck and among these have
hern some limn II Ik Lake and Do
lemi Reservoir.
Moulhwrsl Trout fishing In the
lliigue from Prospect lo Mulr
Creek hns been good; from Hold
Hill lo MrC'loud It haa been fair.
In Ihe Lower lingua salmon fish
ing hits been lair lo good. Steel
head raliiies have bent lair and
are Improving from Hold Hill to
Itouue r.'lk rltiluv rav fishing Is
good In the coastal hikes. Good
troul catches have been reported
on the North Umpqiia from Win
chester In Fugle Itm k and on the
Houih Umpqua Irom Mllo to Camp
Comlort.
Central llcnorta suggest die
wulrrs ol this airs are nearly all
good week-end nrosiiecls. About Ilia
worst comment have ranged Irom
lair to good and many lakes and
streams have been giving excel
lent ICMlll-S.
Niirlhrast In this region .loo.
retail Is are almost unllormlv good
wllh the Wallowa llivrr giving up
limit t-altiies ol Rainbow on buek
talls ami spinning lures anil Anlli
onv and liranile llonde lakes lite
saiiie on spinning and trolling
lures. Tlie Mtnam river has bean
yielding limits ol large Rainbows
on (lies.
Southeast The outlook la var
lrd line with tills tho general out
line: lioot! rriMirts in llarnev Coun
jtv Irom Dcllnlmrnl Lake and Hilt
iirn Klver and lllg Indian Creek:
Igood reporta In Lake County from
Ictiewatu-aii River. Dairy Creek
IDeadhorse Lakn. Oilier streams
have been Ulr lo pool , In Malheur
county oulv fair luck Is likely, and
some waters have been poor.
AWOL Sailors
Arrested
SAN JOSK. CAIIf. IP A pair
ol sailors, listed as AWOL, were
held hero Friday In connection
wllh a series ol burtlarles.
Tlie two. Idrntllied by police as
James Wheeler, 24. Eugene. Ore.,
and Delberl Gllslrap, 21. Fresno,
Calif., were arrested early Thurs
day in a drug store when a burglar
alarm went oil.
Patrolmen Robert Emerson and
Art IlilUcher said the pair admit-
I led burglarizing a restaurant of
1150. Loot mm a 1400 claanlnt
I plant burglary was found In ihelr
I room.
Luxurious
CHAIRS
Regularly 99,50 to 249.50
t.189
95
TERMS if desired
Dolivcry Service
Coverings"
Phon S353 or 3339