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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1958)
PAGE FOUR "I'm afraid it's a waste of time teaching you all this! I know the boss's wife, and when she sets eyes on you oh; well!" Election Campaign Drags To Close In California By JAMES C. ANDERSON United Press International SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) A marathon election campaign dragged to a close today with most major candidates ccmccn trating on last-minute appeals in vote-heavy Los Angeles County. On Tuesday, more than 4,000,000 people are expected to go to the polls to select Republican and Democratic nominees for the Nov ember runoff election. A total of 0,280,176 are eligible to vote but only about 65-70 per cent are cx pected to turn out. Since Loi Angeles County has slightly moro than 40 per cent of all the voters, that's whore most of the candidates wpund up their campaigns. Both Republican William F. Knowland and Democrat Edmund O. (Pat) Brown, the two major contenders for governor, were speech-making find hand-shaking In Los Angeles. Knowland will vote in his home precinct in Pied mont Tuesday and fly back to Washington late on election night. More Gl Pay This Month WASHINGTON (UPI)-If you're one of the nations 2,500,000 ac tive and retired servicemen, chances are you'll get a fatter pay check from Uncle Sam, at the end of this month. A new law grants a $576,438,000 military pay hiko in an effort to attract and keep skilled men in uniform. It was passed by Con gress May 12, signed by Presi dent Eisenhower eight days later and took effect Sunday. All military personnel wilh more than two years service will get higher pay except for a hand ful who have spent years in low er grades without promotion. The act also awards a 0 per cent hike in pay of retired mili tary personnel. The law is an out growth of the so-called Cordiner Report which last year urged a sizeable step-up in military pay. it embodies fea tures designed to help keep valu able officers and men In uniform. ItKER STRIKE LOOMS NEW YORK (UPI) Negolia tinns were expected to continue today in an effort to head off a threatened strike of 7,000 team sters against five major local breweries. Teamsters officials met unlil earl today wilh repre sentatives of the Ituppert, Piel Bros., Schliti, Lirhmann and Schaefer bieweries in hopes of reacning a settlement. Oil Import Restrictions May Strangle Venezuela CARACAS. Venezuela (AP) The 602 million persons who live in this richest land in South America want it to slay that way. Many of them say this depends in part upon what happens in Washington. The nation's financial situation is healthy, because o the golden flow of hundreds of millions of dollars In pioiits that come out of American and British-Dutch de velopment oi oilfields. But Venezuela isn't making as much money as it did a year ago. Officials fear a continuation of V. N. S. restrictions in imports ol oil from this country will cause slow economic strangulation. This was one of the cardinal causes assigned here for the mob bing of Vice President and Mrs. Nixon upini their arrival here May 13. Americans have invested over three billion dollars in this land. They feel oday that on the whole they are liked and respected. But Americans often find themselves treated witn coolness or Indifter ence. Venezuela's businessmen, and its ruling military-civilian junta. would hk to see the United States: Adopt a more liberal economic policy in general toward Ihis and other Latin American countries 2 Brown will return to his San Fran cisco home late today after a busy weenena in the South. Republican Gov. Goodwin J. Knight, one of the three main can didates for the U.S. Senate nom ination, started campaigning way last August and was still going strong in Los Angeles on election eve. He and his wife will vote in Beverly Hills. Mayor George Christopher of San Francisco, Knight's principal opponent for the GOP senatorial nomination, actually moved from his hometown to Los Angeles to campaign during the closing weeks. He has scheduled speeches ill tnroiign -the day but will fly io san t rancisco to vote on Tues day. Rep. Clair Englc, favored to win the Democratic nomination for senator, was the lone maior candidate who wound up his cam paign in Northern Calilornia. He pians to be in San Francisco on election night. The four front-running 'candi dates for attorney general Re publicans Caspar W. Weinberg!' of San Francisco and Patrick J. Hillings of Arcadia and Demo crats Robert I. McCarthy of San- 1 rancisco and Judge Stanley Mosk of Los Angeles all were in the Southland for one last day of campaigning. While most primary election campaigns usually run not more lhan the months of April and May. I his one has been going full blast since August. Knight touched off the marathon campaign wilh his announcement on Aug. 19, 1957, he was a candi date for reelection as governor. But Knowlnnd's formal entrance into the gubernatorial race last Oct. 3 set the stage for Knight a month later to change his mind and run for the senatp. Brown jumped into the guber natorial race officially seven months ago and has been cam paigning at a whirlwind clip ever Ince. Both Knowland and Congress man Hillings were hampered by the fact Congress has been in ses sion tor the past several months. Rut they have managed In fly out for weekend sorties and Knowland has been helped by the campaign efforts of his wife, Helen, and two daughters who loured the stale in a bus. In addition to the key races for governor, senator and attorney general, the primary election bal lot features contests for lieuten ant governor, controller, secretary of state, treasurer, superintend ent of public instruction, 80 seats the house of representatives, 20 in the state senate and 80 berths in the stale assembly. Polls open al 7 a.m. PDT and slay open 12 hours except in San Francisco whom the closing hour is 8 p.m. Remove the restrictions on oil imports. Agree to Venezuelan restriction on some U. S. commodities which are sold here at prices less than they can ne produced by Vene zuelan farmers. II. W. Haighl Is president of Creole Petroleum Co., a Standard Oil (New Jersey) subsidiary which is the biggest producer in Venezuela. He says the restric tions may endanger U. S. rela tions wilh oil producing nations and "will nol solve the problem of the national lU. S.) industry." The military civilian junta which took over the government last Jan. 23 found big debts but a liscal surplus of over 766 mil lion dollars in the treasury. The government r foreign exchange reserves of gold and dollars in U. S. banks and on hand here amounted to 1.4 billion dollars. Venezuela owes no foreign debts. Venezuela's oil companies are scheduled to spend MBO.OOO.OOO Ihis year in new explorations and flcveiopmcr.ts The per capita income In Vene zuela is $700 per year, compared with $265 or most of Latin Amer ica. Wage scaies still fall far short of keeping pace with the costs of living. There is widespread unem ploymcnt in the interior. Holy Rosary Rites Held ALTURAS Holy Rosary service was held at Kerr Mortuary, Al turas. Tuesday night, May 27, for Mrs. Mary Arena who died Satur day, May 24, at an Alturas hospi tal. She never recovered from a stroke suffered in February. Funeral services were conducted from the Sacred Heart Catholic Church on Wednesday, May 28, the Rev. Father Michael Proulx and Father John Cedilot were as sisted in the solemn mass by the Itcv. Father James O'Connor of Lakeview. She was born May Barmetche in Suchcun, France on September 27, 1896. She came to America in 1021 and in April 1923 she was married to Peter Arena. They lived in Susanvilie before coming to Al turas in 1928. She was a member of the Altar Society and Alturas Business and Professional Women s Club. Besides the widower, she is sur vived by one daughter, Mrs. Al viria Hafford of Reno; one son Albert of Alturas, a grandson, Ar nold Hafford, a brother, Bermand Barmetche of Susanvule and sister, two brothers, two nieces and a nephew in France. Interment was in the Alturas Cemetery. Ex-Con Held In Rape Case District Attorney Arthur Beddoe said today a 32-year-old ex-convict will be charged for allegedly crim inally assaulting a 3-year-old girl Friday afternoon. In custody is Merrill R. Young resident of a local hotel. He has denied the charges. Young was arrested after the tot s mother identified him as a would-be suitor who hod previous ly called on her in efforts to take her out. The woman told police she left her Pine Street home for a few moments last Friday at about 4 p.m. Her daughter, she said, was asleep on a living room couch. The mother said as she was com ing back from a neighbor's mo ments later, she saw Young walk ing down a rear alley. Entering the house, the mother told police she saw her daughter crying and ohserved immediately that she al leacdlv been attacked. Young has steadfastly denied he hurt the child in any way. He told officers, upon being questioned, that he approached the Pine Street home, saw the infant crying in the front yard, and that he picked her up and carried her inside, then left. . Young had no objections to sub mitting to physical tests when asked to by police. Results of the tests are not yet known. Beddoe said Young had been in prison in Nevada for committing burglary. The clislricl attorney sairi the man would be charged either with attempted rape or criminal assault. House Grants Pay Raise WASHINGTON (AP) - The House unanimously voted retroac tive 10 per cent pay raises Mon day for a million classified fed eral employes at an estimated an nual cost oi 542 million dollars. It sent back to the Senate by voice vote a bill giving civil ser vice workers the same size pa hike recen"y voted for 530,000 pos tal employes. As in the case ol the postal taise. the civil service workers' increases would be retro active lo last January. In addition to the Classified Civ il Service, the raise applies to em ployes in the Foreign Service, the Veterans Administration depart ment of medicine and surgery. and the legislative and judicial branches. Local Couple Take Costly Fish Trip One of the weekend's most cost ly fishing trips was taken by Mr and Mrs. Jack Gaston of 234 Riv erside Drive. Gaston told local police Sunday that while he and his wife were fishing on Miller Creek north of here, some $247.93 of miscellan eous items were stolen from his car. Taken were Iwo sleeping bags, a pair of binoculars, a suitcase, fishing gear and other articles, Gaston said. California Weather By United Press Inlernatlonnl San Francisco Bay Area: Part I.; cloudy through Tuesday with chance of a few showers tonight or early Tuesday; little change in temperature; high today San Francisco 68, Oakland 72, San Mateo and San Rafael 73; low tonight 55-60; variable winds 8-16 m.p.h.; rain probability 30 per cent. Northern California: Cloudy with scattered showers from about San Francisco and Stockton north ward and partly cloudy elsewhere through Tuesday: little change in temperature: coastal winds varia ble 818 m.p.h. Mt. Shasta Siskiyou area: cloudy with scaltercd showers and possible thunderstorms through Tuesday; little change in tempera ture. , Sierra Nevada: Mostly cloudy! through Tuesday wilh scattered showers and possible thunder-! storm in northern ranges: little, change In temperature. ! Sacramento Valley: Considera ble cloudiness with scattered showers through Tuesday; little! change in temperature; high both1 days 72-82: low tonight 56-62: southerly winds 8-15 111 ph. HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Congress Must Pay Piper This Week For Slow Start WASHINGTON (API Congress starts paying the piper this week for its slow pace during the first five months of this session. If it's to meet the early August adjournment target set by its leaders, it will have to shift into high gear as it returns from a long Memorial Day weekend. , Leaders have mapped out a five- day-a-week work schedule which rules out any extended recesses in June and July, except for the Fourth of July weekend. This ween the House faces a program that its own leaders con cede may not be met. It calls for action on pay raises for federal Death Count Reaches 371 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Traffic 371 Drownings 130 Miscellaneous 88 Total 589 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tralfic fatalities across the na tion during the extended Memor ial Day holiday climbed to 371, breaking the record toll for the same three day holiday in 1955. The Washington State traffic toll was three seven under the fore cast made earlier in the week by the State Patrol. In Oregon three persons lost their lives on the highways and one was killed by a car in an odd accident. Late reports were expected to boost the Associated Press nation al tabulation to an even higher total. The traffic loll exceeded the Na tional Safety Council's pre-holiday estimate of 350. Ned H. Dearborn, council pres ident, said "disappointment over the size of the toll is all the more bitter because of the steady, de cline in traffic deaths for more than a year and special efforts of traffic officials to hold, down the holiday toll." Supervisor Race Interest High TULELAKE ' Local Interest in the Tuesday, June 3, primary elec tion centers around two Tulelake residents. Earl Ager and Mrs. Vic toria Thaler. Ager, incumbent Siskiyou Coun- ly supervisor in District No. 1, appointed by Gov. Goodwin J. Knight to fill out the unexpired term of the late Howard Dayton until the next election, is up for election. He will be opposed by a write-in candidate, Joe Allen, Macdoel. Mrs. Victoria Thaler, incumbent, is unopposed for the post of judge of the Tulelake Judicial District. There are no measures on the primary ballot. Voters in Ward 1 will vote at the Elmer Waits Plumbing Com pany office. Wards 2 and 3 will vote at the city hall. The West tulelake precinct voters will so to me nome of Mrs. Marguerite Dayton. In the Newell area. Tule lake "A" and "B" precinct vot ers will ballot at the Newell Ele mentary School. Weather Table By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Monday Max. Mln. Prep. . Baker 66 41 .07 Eugene 73 53 .16 Lakeview ... 61 45 .08 , Medford 69 54 .2 Newport 70 55 T North Bend 72 45 .28 Pendleton 74 50 .09 , Portland Airp't .. 74 58 '. Redmond 70 43 .23 Roseburg 76 56 .52 . Salem 77 53 T Basin Man Charged With Cattle Theft The District Attorney's office said today a Fort Klamath man will be charged with cattle rustling. Accused of stealing "at least two calves, said Arthur Beddoe, district attorney, is Eldon Shafer They allegedly were owned by rancher Adlai Johnson of Chilo quin and were reportedly stolen late last month in the Wocus Marsh area. HOME BURGLARIZED Roy Nichols. 444 Riverside Drive, reported to police that his home was burglarized over the weekend. The thieves apparently entered through an unlocked door and stole a 270 pump rifle and a .22 caliber pistol with (wo clips full of cartridges, Nichols told officers. ... rinesr major uasonne -5 FOR NEXT employes, legislation to create a space agency, appropriations for the Defense Department, exten sion of the reciprocal trade pro gram, and continuation of present corporate ir,come and excise tax rates. Little trouble is likely over the 38-billion-dollar defense money bill and a bill to continue for an other year corporate and excise tax rates due to drop July 1. The Senale has acted on only one of the major bills on this week's House docket. That is the measure to raise the pay of fed eral employes. The Senate probably will spend most of this week debating the $3,712,000,000 foreign aid authori zation bill already passed by the House. Another controversial issue in the Senate's lap is a bill to make Alaska the 49th state. The House passed this bill last week. Major bills still to be considered by both branches deal with gen eral labor law revision, foreign aid appropriations, federal schol arships, and reorganization of the Defense Department. All in all, congressional leaders are pessimistic about prospects for adjournment by Aug. 2. Most of them would settle now for go ing home m mid-August. Claim Filed By Atomic Worker LONDOM (UPD-Percy Dunn, of St. Annes, a 40-year-old atomic energy worker, has filed, the first private atomic damage suit against the' British govern ment and Atomic Energy Author ity- Dunn, married and the father of a 13-year-old girl, said he suf fered radioactive injury while working in the Springfield atomic station at Salwick in 1953. He claims it has practically ruined the vision of his right eye. Obituaries WELCH LAKEVIEW - Iva May Welch. 68, died in Portland Saturday, May 31, 1958, at St. Vincent's Hospital lollowing surgery on Thursday. Mrs. Welch was born September 27, 1689, at Carmi, Illinois. On March 28, 1911, she was married in Ken tucky to Hubert T. Welch, who is an attorney in Lakeview, and she and her husband came to Lake view in 1911 and have lived here ever since. Mrs. Welch was prom inent in Lakeview civic affairs and was one of the founders of the PTA as well as helping to start the Episcopal Church here. Sur vivors include her husband: one daughter, Mrs. Alice Johnson, Pen dleton: two sons, Robert L. Welch, Lakeview; and Herbert Welch Jr., Eugene; and five grandchil dren. There will be an Episcopal iuneral service on Wednesday, June 4, at 2 p.m. at the Lake- view Presbyterian Church with the Rev. David St. George officiating. Burial will be at Sunset Park Cemetery. Ousley - Osterman is in charge of arrangements. NEILL WEED - Samuel T. Neill, 81. of Weed, died Saturday morning, may 31, 1958, in tne Siskiyou coun ty General Hospital, Yreka, after a short illness. Mr. Neill was born July 9, 1876, in Arkansas. He was employed for several years at Long-Bell Lumber Company, Weed branch, prior to his retire ment. Survivors include one daugh ter, Mrs. Ethel Barron. Weed; two sons. Hubert Neill, Weed; and Les ter Neill, Portland; 11 grandchil dren and 27 great-grandchildren Holy Rosary will be recited at the Holy Family Catholic Church Tuesday, June 3, at 8 p.m. The liev. James Baugh will officiate at the mass, Wednesday morning, June 4, at 10 a.m. at the same church. Interment will be in the Mount Shasta Memorial Park. All arrangements by Upton's Mortu ary. Weed. Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Finds Healing Substance That Relieves Pain, stops Itching as it New York. N. Y. (SpmUD For th first time science hu found a new healing substance with the aston ishing ability to shrink hemor rhoids, stop itching, and relieve pain without surgery. In rase after ease, while gently relieving pain, actual redaction shrinkage) took place. Moat amazing of all results were so thorough that sufferers V'. JfflfflB. Aerois from Let's South 6th and la if Main Open 24 Hours CHECK TICKETS NW! FREE BOAT FREE FORD JUNE 25 Telegraphers Avert Strike WASHINGTON (AP) A na tionwide teiegraph strike has been averted by agreement in princi ple on a new contract between Western Union and the Commer cial Telegraphers Union (CTU). The agreement still must be drawn up formally and ratitiea by the union. It calls for a six pent hnnrlv waee increase, effec tive June 1, plus an additional five cents an hour effective Sept. 1. Workers involved now average $1.80 an hour. In addition. Western Union agreed to tet up a fund, equiva lent t0 a three cents an hour wage increase, lor the correction oi in eouities. F.L. Wilcox. Western Union vice president, announced the agreement late Saturday, a few hours before a midnight strike deadline. Last Rites Held For Pioneer ALTURAS Final rites for George Kelly, pioneer of Modoc County, who died Saturday, May 24, at an Alturas hospital, were held from Kerf Mortuary on Tues day afternoon. May 27, with in terment in the Alturas Cemetery. The Rev. Karl E. Olson, pastor of the Federated Church, officiated. Kelly, native of Berryessa, Napa County, was born to John and Louise Kelly on April 15, 186a. He came with his parents to Modoc County when a child and they set tled near Kelly Hot Springs. He operated large ranching in terests along Goose Lake with the late Frank McArthur for many years. Late in life he married Mrs. Sarah Kelly, widow of one of his brothers, who survives him. Besides three stepsons, Dexter, Arthur and Percy, he is also sur vived by many nieces and neph ews. Alturas Native Burial Reported ALTURAS Johnny Burrell, na tive of Alturas. was buried from Kerr Mortuary on Tuesday morn ing. May 27. Services were con ducted by the Rev. Karl E. Ol son of the Federated Church with interment in the family plot, Al turas Cemetery. He was killed in an auto acci dent near Reno, Nevada, on Satur day. May 24. The young man was born Octo ber 3, 1936. He attended the Al turas schools and later joined the Army. He is survived by the widow, Frances James Burrell and son, John. Alturas; his mother and step father, Mr. and Mrs. Chet Burrell of Keno; grandmother, Mrs. Ar ietta Bonham, stepsister and step brother, Karen and Mark Burrell all of Alturas. New Orleans Set For Integration NEW ORLEANS (UPI) In tegrated seating on city transit vehicles, which went into effect under court order here Saturday, was lo get its first real test today. During the weekend passen gers segregated themselves volun tarily and no incidents were re ported. But today workers were returning from the long Memorial Day weekend and officials planned to keep a close eye on the situation. Federal Judge J. Skelly Wright ordered integration of New Or leans' pubiic transit system at one minute past midnight, Satur day, following a U.S. Supreme Court decision. SUN CLAIMS VICTIMS NEW DELHI, India (UPI1 Sunstroke killed at least 65 per sons last week in the east Indian state of Bihar where tempera tures of up to 120 degrees were recorded,' it was reported today. shrinks Hemorrhoids made astonishing statement like 41 P iles have ceased to be a problem ! " The secret is a new healing sub stance (Bio-Dyne) discovery of a world-famous research institute. This substance is now available In suppository or eintmtnt form under tha name Preparation H. At your druggist. Money back guarantee. R. U.S. Pt. Off. Use Any Major Oil Credit Card Drawing 8:30 p.m. May 28th Reds Gain Valuable Info On French Police Tactics By ROBERT ML'SEL daris iirPD The Communists had'a lot of valuable information today on pouce tacucs m i they ever get the word to slug it out with the new regime of Gen. Charles de Gaulle. They amassed it Sunday at very small cost-a few dozen cracked heads and a few score expend able young proletarians in jail. This apparently was the pur pose of the small riots that erupt ed all over town so unpredict ably on the hot, sunny Sunday afternoon. Police rushed from me- Sugar Strike Hearing End HONOLULU UPI Union and industry negotiators met un til 3:20 a.m. today and were re ported near a settlement oi me 121-day strike of 13,000 workers on 26 sugar plantations throughout the territory. Industry stopped the clock at midnight Sunday to preserve the illusion that its negotiators were sticking to their threat not to ne gotiate after that time within terms of a settlement recommend ed by Gov. William Quinn. Agreement has been reacnea on pensions ana severance pay which had been the two main stumbling blocks. A meeting was set for 3:30 p.m. today to resume negotiations on a point neither in dustry nor the International Long shoremen s and warenousemen s Union would identify. Still unsettled were the length of the basic work week beyond 40 hours on certain plantations, and chances in vacation plans. Both sides already have agreed tentatively that the basic wage will be raised 16 cents an hour. About 4,000 field workers have been of fered work by the plantations, with union, approval, to get the fields in shape for settlement ex pected soon. Hells Canyon Bill Vetoed WASHINGTON (AP) - The House Interior Reclamation sub committee voted down Monday a controversial bill for federal con struction of dams in Hells Canyon, deepest river gorge on the conti nent. Rep. Wayne Aspinall (D-Colo), subcommittee chairman, said the adoption of an unfavorable report killed the Senate-passed measure. A 15-13 vote apparently ended a year long fight over whether the federal government or the Idaho Power Co. should build dams in the Hells Canyon stretch of the Snake River bordering Idaho and Oregon. The multi-million-d o 1 1 a r high federal dam . would have flooded the sites of three dams Idaho Pow er plans to build under a Federal Power Commission license which was granted during a bitter con troversy that was taken to the Supreme Court. The company has one dam nearly built, another under con struction. ' CITED Raymond F. Mulkcv. 605 Sorine Street, was cited by state police for failure to yield the right of way, after the car he was driving south on Washburn Way shortly after midnight Saturday, ran into a car driven by A.1C Marvin An drews, of Kingsley Field, which was going east on Sutton Road. Radar's a big comfort when you fly United! The flying's imooth, the service dependable on Uniteds all-radar fleet. You can relax in comfort because radar "X-rays" the sky, shows your pilots the short, calm path through the weather. Good reason to fly United when you travel. C4U TUxedo 2-2557 r your travl og.nl TUU Utr ITTB A fans- V AT mi RIGOUR M0N UNHID, THI RADAR UNI MONDAY, JUNE 2, m lee to melee like volunteer fir. brigades. ' Officially, the hands of the Com. munist Party were almost clean. It sent out handbills for an or. ganized protest against a Dj Gaulle "dictatorship." But i(j well-trained apparatus for street fighting was not sent to the firing line. The Communists instead counted on idealists from the district cowi. cils to carry placards and shom slogans. This gave the demonstrations a somewhat "unorganized" nature that forced the police hand. Po. lice never could be sure when a fight was not going to mushroom into a full scale riot and had to move in major reinforcements. These movements did not pass unnoticed. By the e.id of the day, 25 on. licemcn had been injured. Nearly 200 rioters were jailed. One lesson the Communist! learned: Police swing their rins. earl? and oiten these uneasy days. one lesson tne ponce learned: If the Communists, who make up the nation's biggest single politi cal party, ever decide to fight it will take an army to hold them. Elvis Catches Up On Sleep MEMPHIJ. Tenn. (UPI) Pvt. Elvis Presley, who spent a fur. lough weekend dodging overea. ger fans, caught up on his sleep today in his $100,000 suburban mansion. Swarms of teen-age devotees had made elaborate plans to wel. come the roc 'n' roll singer on his first v'sit home since his in duction in'o the Army. But Elvis for the most part played a game of hide-and-seek. And there was an incident. To' wit: K Theresa Powell, a 19-year-old waitress, accused one of Presley's estate guards Sunday of "pointing a pistol" at her when he found her inside the spacious grounds. Miss Powell, of New Orleans, said guard Barney Smith, a re-. tired policeman, aimed the gun after she climbed a seven-foot-wooden fence trying to see Pres ley. Smith denied pointed a pistol.' It's a lot of hocus-pocus," ha! said. "We don't even carry guns. I just lectured her as I would my own kids. What would a big man' like me cairy a gun for?" Basin Drivers Escape Injury Only slight injuries were suf fered Sunday evening when the ve. hide driven hy Fred C. Rolland, Keno, collided with a pickup driv-' en by Harry U. Nininger, Merrill, near the Tulelake Road Junction south of Klamath Falls. Investigaiing state police said that Rolland was moving north on Highway 39 and that the Nining er car was driving in an easterly direction. In another Sunday accident the teen-age occupants of a car es caped serious injury when the ve hicle in which they were riding failed to negotiate a turn. The machine was driven by Sarah D. West, 16. WISE CHOICE ALGEC1RAS. Spain (UPI) -Former President Harry Truman said Sunday he thought the French had made a wise choice in selecting Gen. Charles it Gaulle as premier. "I believe that France hal found in Gen. de Gaulle the man to save her," he said. XVyfT.FI.jaf.'li