SUNDAY, JUNE 8,. 1958
HERALD AND NEWS. KIAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE 5 A
Vast Group Of Tourists To See Europe
By ELMER C. WALZER
UPI Financial Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) Foreign
travel this year is expected to
reach two billion dollars and in-!
volve 700,000 Americans.
That's a big city going to Eu
rope which is what most of us
toll foreign travel. And it isn't
fiie rich people cither.
The people who eep statistics
on. such things aver that tu
ropean traveler from-the U.S. is
young with a moderate income
18 per cent earning less than
$5,000 a year but it all counts up
to big business.
Back in the old fays it was
only the wealthy who traveled
abroad. It was a part of the rich
young persor.'s education. There
were the fledgling architexts, the
cloctors-to-be, and the future col
lege professors.
Then came the big bust in busi
ness in the lale 1920 s and that
put college students in Europe on
Dicycies alter a banana boat
J fVy
TOP STUDENTS of the 1958 graduating class of the Weed
High School are two girls, Nancy Fruzza, valedictorian,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Fruzza, and Mary Rey
nolds, salutatorian, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, C, C, Rey
nolds. Both girls are California Scholarship Federation life
members and Mary was president of the Weed chapter
this year. Nancy placed first at the Siskiyou County Sci
ence Fair and second in the entire Chico Science Fair with
her entry. Both Nancy and Mary have held numerous offi
ces during their high school years. Graduation exercises
were held on We'dnesday, June 4.
Shasta View Studio Photos
Turnpike Officials Feel
On Safe Financial Ground
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)
Pennsylvania Turnpike officials
iel they are at last on safe fi
' mcial ground free from the
1 1 agmire of scandal which a year
e. in threatened to swallow up
V 440-million-dollar toll road od-
Jtion.
commissioners of the 471-mile
:i irmgnway saia roaay Dona-
lore- hava almnel fnrantton tha
million - dollar conspiracy
I Scribed as "one of the greatest
nki;n t nil
Yesterday five men two of
them former turnpike commis-l
sioners and another a top turn
pike employe were sentenced to
jail terms ranging from 10 months
to five years for their part in the
conspiracy. All are free pending
appeals to the State Superior
Court.
"We now are about ready to
complete our reorganization which
Will make it impossible for sucr
a thing to happen again," said
Acting Commission Chairman Jo
seph J. Lawler.
"Our securities are as good as
government securities now. . . .
We don't have to worry any
more."
Three years ago national pub
lications and trade magazines
were telling the story of a 40-year-
eld Reading, Pa., engineer
Charles W. Stickler Jr.
He boasted that his Manu-Mine
Research and Development Co
had parlayed a $4,500 capital
stock investment into a multimillion-dollar
enterprise in a few
years.
Stickler s uncle Thomas J. Ev
ans then was chairman ot the
Turnpike Commission. Manu
Mine had a big contract to fill
abandoned mines under the road
bed of the turnpike extension be
ing built into northeastern Penn
sylvania, near Scranton.
Then state officials received an
anonymous letter. Its author iden
tified himself only as a truck
driver and told how he had been
instructed to dump material os
tensibly intended for the mine
filling project.
cruise, no more lazy trips of the
nternational set.
Things aren't much different
low in the wav monev is snent.
rlut instead of the banana boat
ir peeling potatoes on a liner, the
student or other traveler goes in
class at a low rate.
That is, he will starting next
Wednesday when the steamship
Atlantic sets off on its first trip
'.o Europe.
The S.S. Atlantic is America's
first tourist-class luxury liner. It
has been completed in the Ingalls
hipyards in Pascagoula, Miss
and is in New York ready to sail
to Zeebrugge, Belgium, and Am
sterdam, the Netherlands on Wed
nesday.
It will carry 900 passengers and
all but 40 of them will be tourist-
class. The ship is an 18.100 gross
ton. 564-foot vessel with a speed
of 20 knots, making the crossing
lo Europe in seven days. It will
be on a year-round schedule and
later will be supplemented by two
more ships of the same size.
Talk about accommodation:
Ihis tourist class ship has all the
high-toned glamor of the first
class accommodations of the big
liners now plying between New
York and Europe.
Each stateroom contains a pri
vate bathroom, is air-conditioned,
has wall-to-wall carpeting, and is
located toward the center of the
ship for comfort.
Every tourist class passenger,
according to the ship's schedule,
will enjoy the freedom of sports
and sun decks, lounges, night club
and bar. There'll be a 600-foot
promenade deck, glassed in and
heated when necessary, a library,
smoking room, card room, gym
nasium, wide-screen movie thea
ter, children's play room, beauty
salon, and gift shop.
And if you need a baby sitter,
the ship will provide an electronic
one for you. A nurse monitors a
switchboard connected with your
stateroom where the baby or
babies are quartered while you
are playing bingo or horse races
on deck. The least sign of baby
discomfort is registered and
trained stewardess is dispatched
to your cabin to look after the
youngsters.
This 20 million dollar ship and
its two sisters to come are going
to plv the European route with
full quotas ot passengers it pres
ent bookings are a criterion. The
Atlantic is going to do a big
Belsian Fair business since it has
a debarkation point practically at
Ihe doorstep of the fair.
The ship is owned by American
Banner Lines of -which Arnold
Bernstein, formerly of the Bern
stein-Red-Star Lines, is president,
and Vice Admiral Roscoe H. Hill
enkoetter (U.S.N, retired) is ex
ecutive vice-president.
-11,1 1 rLfXJ"T -. jT - . : I
County Boy Clair Engle
Dofs Well In Primaries
THESE THREE PRETTY misses are among ot.ien entered in the Miss Siskiyou Contest to
be held June 7 at Yreka. Winner from the county contestants will represent Siskiyou at
the California State Fair, Sacramento, in September. Left is Susan Sura, Tulelake, I9S7
barley queen of the Tulelake-Butte Valley Fair. Center is Norma Struble, Dorris, and
right is Edie Muma, McCloud. Susan is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Sura; Nor
ma is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Struble, and Edie ii the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. George Muma. The winner will receive three expense-paid days at the fair, a
$100 cash prize and four modeling lessons.
Printed Pattern
9197 VtT
! SIZES J 1
10-18
SCOUT NEWS
TROOP 4
Boy Scouts of Troop 4 have fin
ished a busy and active month,
the highlight being a swimming
party for their last meeting.
There was a second class troop
hike to Moss Creek. The scouts
receiving their second 'class rank
were Ben Tomlin, Robert Parks,
Don Plowman, Charles Galllway,
Terry Eccles, Richard Eastburn,
Robert Ground, Dennis Galloway,
Robert Scholl, Mark Wilbur, John
Detroit. Lester Plowman received
star rank. The following merit
badges were- awarded: Music,
Dean Guyer: cooking, Dennis
Cornwall; scholarship and dog
care, Kenneth Galloway: reading
and cooking, Lester Plowman;
stamp, personal fitness and schol
arship, Don Aschenbacn: stamp,
safety, home repair, scholarship,
pets and citizenship in the com
munity, Jerry Gospodnetech.
Other boys active during May
were Herbert Amos, nooen
Haynes, Douglas Leech, Bill Mills
Ronald Melhase. D o n n l e bpicner
and John Tinker. These scouts
participated with the troop in
hikes.
Scoutmaster Bill Green wel
corned three new boys to Troop
John Haldiman, Don Bose and
Timothy Poole. June will start the
troop's summer program. Scout
master Green was accompanied to
Sheepy Creek on the overnight by
dads Emmer Plowman, Wayne
Galloway and Ray Aschenbacn.
Meet Slated
On Spud Laws
TULELAKE M Mercker, ex
ecutive director bf the National
NO SPEEDERS
GOLDSBORO. N.C. '(UPD Puz-
zled why their radar check wasn't
netting any speeders, police in
vestigated and found a sign a
block away reading: "Whammy
one block ahead. Look out! Zor
ro." When the sign came down
police soon nabbed 17 speeders
Potato Council, Washington, D.C.,
spokesman for the potato industry
at the national level, will be pres
ent in Tulelake on Tuesday, June
24, to confer with local potato grow
ers and shippers on legislation af
fectina the potato industry, the na
tional crop outlook and problems
of growers. He is expected to ar
rive in mid-afternoon and the meet
ins will follow in the evening.
Mercker's appearance here is in
cluded in an itinerary that will
take him to other potato growing
areas in Oregon, California and
Colorado.
Clifford Jenkins, Tulelake Grow
ers Association manager, in an
nouncing plans for this meeting that
is being arranged by tne potato
committee ot TGA, stated that the
association has agreed to raise
Northern California s share of Na
tional Potato Council dues mat
will he s eht V n excess of $800.
Dues set up on a statewide ba
sis, depending on production in
respective areas would be pro-l
rated on a voluntary basis of $10
annually for growers with 50
acres of potatoes or less; $25 for
growers with 50 or more acres
ami ISO for brokers.
Oreeon has a per-sack tax paid
through the Oregon Potato com
mission for national dues.
TGA directors will begin con
struction in the near future on 25
cement tent floors and half walls of
pumice brick at the TGA trailer
camp to provide housing for tran
sient harvest laborers that will
meet Calfiornia state and county
specifications of housing and health
departments. Cost is estimated at
$2O0 Dor unit. Jenkins said that con
tributions of labor and donations
of cement, rocks, and lumber will
be welcome.
Girl Wins
PTA Trophy
CHILOOUIN Janet Wilson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Wilson, Fort Klamath, was named
1958 winner of the PTA trophy
which is awarded annually to the
outstanding senior based on an
accumulation of points over a four
vear period. Scholarship, citizen
ship and activities all count. The
presentation was made at the
graduation exercises in inuoquin,
at which time 18 young people
were awarded diplomas.
For the first time in the history
of the Robert Muskrat Trophy,
given to the outstanding lower
classman, there was a tie so the
names of both Lyle Hall, son oi
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hall, and Dar
la Brewer, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Brewer, Fort Klamath,
have been engraved and each re
ceived a government bond from
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Muskrat,
Wapato, Washington, parents of
Robert Muskrat, who lost nis nie
in World War II.
Michael Ravizza, local scholar
ship winner, son of Mrs. Harry
Ravizza and tne late Harry na-
vizza, gave the valedictory, and
Janet Wilson was salutatorian.
Other seniors honored during
graduation week were Bruce Par
azoo. who received the annual bas
ketball award; Lester Barnes, the
track award; Richard Ochoa and
Junior Munson Sandoval, co-win
ners of the football award; and
Steve Pope, Jaycee award for 'all
round athlete.
The Rev. David Schneider gave
the invocation and benediction,
John Mathis, principal, was mas
ter of ceremonies: Lester Hoback,
school board member, awarded
the diplomas, and the president ot
Southern Oregon College of Edu
cation, Dr. Elmo Stevenson, was
speaker.
Girls of Mrs. Frank Bell's glee
club sang three numbers accom
nnnipri bv Aeatha DiUlio.
Seniors were Anna Barney Hur-
tado, Janet Clark, Lester Barnes,
Wvnn Hescock. Janet Wilson, Ste
phen Pope, Barbara Adamo, Bruce
Parazoo, Richard Ochoa, Donald
Gentry. Douglas Shuey, Louise
Heglund, Dorothy Shadley Harris,
Gail Mannering. Ruth Ann Adams,
Lou Ellen Cook, Michael Ravizza
and Eleanor McNamer.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-For a
country boy, Clair Engle did
right well in the California pri
mary. A lot of people shook their
heads when the veteran Demo
cratic congressman decided to
shoot for the U.S. Senate. Voters
might know him in places like
Rough 'n Ready. but "who ever
heard of him in Southern Cali
fornia?"
Engle's congressional domain
a mountainous chunk of old Cali
fornia larger than 23 of the states
is as far as you can get geo
graphically and politically from
California s populous southland
Returns of Tuesday s primary
election disproved any fears about
Engle s big city appeal. unop
posed within his own party, ne
outpolled Gov. Goodwin Knight,
the Republican nominee, in ine
total popular vote in both par-
tics. Each ran on both tickets,
as permitted by the slate cross
filing svstem.
The short, peppery fcngie hkcs
to give the impression that he
just rode in off the range. The
rustic air is sugntiy synineuc. ni
23, he was district attorney ol
Tehama County, where cattle is
big business. He was a state sen
ator too, before beginning his
eight-term career in Congress.
In Washington, the colorful, ci-gar-chawin'
Democrat has the
reputation of being a shrewd and
effective parliamentarian and a
powerful voice on issues affecting
the West. He has become an in
fluential ficure on watcrpower
matters, especially, in his role asj
chairman of the Interior and ln-
Isular Affairs Committee.
He has been a leading oppon,
er.t pf the Eisenhower power part
nership program, preferring all-
federal construction.
The 47 year old congressman
represents 19 northern . counties
which extend from the rolling
farmland of the upper Sacramen
to Valley to the decaying '49er
mining camps of the Mother Lode.
Hopping about the district's 53.400
square miles in his own plane, he
is on a iirst-name basis with a
good many of his 230,000 voters.
'Whenever I see three people
together," he says, "I adjust my
tie and clear my throat."
Engle mixes folksy campaign
ing with serious talk. He directed
his Engleisms at President Eisen
hower ( golf house leadership )
and Knight ("a balloon with a
slow leak ).
. "-F
mwmm
WINNER of the new portable typewriter in the recent
promotion put on by Amidon's Business Machines, 3870
South Sixth Street in the Town and Country Shopping
Center, was Mrs. Lawrence Mousseau, 1655 Portland.
Shown presenting the typewriter is Bill Gjodowski, partner
with Howard Amidon in the firm. Three-year-old Paul
Mousseau was an interested observer as stal'f photographer
Otto Ellis took the picture.
Reverend, Wife
Set For Trip
CHILOQUIN The Rev. and
Mrs- David Schneider, who have
served the pastorates of the Chil
oouin and Fort Klamath Metho
dist churches for the last two
vears will leave June 9 for Green-
castle. Indiana, where they will at
tend the annual National Mission
Congress convening June 16-23.
From there they go to r-van-
ston, Illinois, where they will en
roll at uarreit- BiDie insiiiuie,
Northwestern University, in prep
aration for further missionary
work. Thev will return to the
West Coast next March, visiting
Chiloquin and Seattle before leav
ing for a missionary neia in kaun
America. Their previous 15 years
ot mission work was in Guate
mala and Honduras.
They will be honored with a pot-
luck luncheon lollowing tne morn
ing Sunday services at Chiloquin
and at a dinner in the community
hall, Fort Klamath, in the evening.
Reg. 55o
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GRANGE NEWS
TASV! SEE DIAGRAM
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and ityle number.
OPEN SEASON jl
Summer School
Attendance Set
CHILOQUIN The majority of
the Chiloauin school faculty is
planning to attend summer school
this vear. Traveling the farthest
will be Mrs. Harry Whiting, wno
with her husband, will take a
course based on this air age at
the University of Hawaii. They
leave June 14.
Leaving June 9 will be Mrs.
David Schneider, who with her
husband, the Rev. Schneider, will
attend three terms on the North
western campus, Evanston, Illi
nois, at Garctt Biblical Institute
beginning the last of June.
At Missoula, Montana, m r s.
Frank Bell will continue her stud
ies during the summer months.
All the other teachers have chos
en Oregon Schools. Mrs. Marva
Sanders has scheduled classes a
both Port and University and Port
land State College; Donald Harris
will take workshops at Portland
State; George Hobbs will be at
Oregon State College. At the Uni
versity of Oregon will be Mr. ana
Mrs. Gordon Kuist and Ruth Ha-
cclstein.
Ashland will draw tne largest
number as Mr. and Mrs. John
Heilbronner. James Rockholt,
Mrs. Friedman Kirk will be there
most of the summer, and Frank
Hale, Mrs. Lester Hoback, and
Mr Rnhlin Pfeiffer nlan to be
there part time. Mrs. Gail Hide-
nour has planned an art course ai
OTI for the month of August
KLAMATH COUNTY
POMONA GRANGE
By Mayme Cammock
Publicity Chairman
One of the highlights of the sea
son was presented Tuesday, June
3, at 8 p.m. at the Midland Grange
Hall, when Jackson county orange
exemnlified the fifth degree.
The Klamath county j-omona oi-
ficers opened grange, with Master
Francis Flowers and his officers
presiding. The flag was presented
by Rosa Meeker and Bill and Mil
dred Novotny. Alter tnis. luamam
County turned the meeting over to
the visiting degree team, and the
work was beautiful and imprcs
The following Jackson officers
presided: Master Bob Bittering,
Cora Bittering, Lesbic Lottie, Mel
Lottie, Dee Hendrickson, Hattie
Hendrickson, Herman Kamping,
Orie Moore, Mabel Wertz, Herb
Carlton, Meryle Carlton, Wilfred
Davies, Ralph James, Chet Wendt,
Grace Buck and Pearl Byrna.
The stage and hall were dec
orated with crepe paper and spring
flowers.
INSPIRED SIGN
WASHINGTON (UPI I Reces
sion-inspired sign 'of the times at
a gasoline service station nere:
"Customers wanted. No expert
ence necessary.
Summer Schedule
Told By College
Summer session at Southern Ore
gon College will begin with reg
istration Monday, June 18, witn
classes beginning the following day.
The session will end August 8, with
a post session, August 11 to 22.
An overlapping series of work
shops will run from June 9 to
August 22. Subjects covered include
language arts, and methods and
research procedure in arithmetic,
art, science, social studies and mu
sic. Also on the workshop program
are a music clinic and camp, and
seminars in curriculum materials.
classroom psychology, and diagnos
tic and remedial instruction in
reading. "Shakespeare in the
schools" is a new seminar in
the regular summer session pro
gram.
The ladies in the court were
May Dalton, Iris Ritchie, Marie
Pfnoister, Velda Mang, Emma
Conger and Ann Wendt. Musicians
were Frieda Smith and Kathryn
Smith, and Ken Noble, vocalist,
sang two numbers, "The Welcome
Song," and "My Faith Looks Up
to Thee."
Visitors, besides the officers
from Jackson County, were Henry
Conger, Mr. and Mrs. Al Sims
and Mrs. Orrie Moore, from Roxy
Ann Grange; Mrs. Otis Jones, ha
gle Point Grange; Mr. Dclmar
Smith, Central Point Grange; and
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Youngren, Riv-
ersdale Grange of Douglas County,
Bonifay Yancey, the Klamath
County deputy, was also a guest.
There were 16 candidates who
received the fifth degree. They
were Clarence and Evelyn Wil
liams, of Jackson County; Edith
Dyer, Bob Washburn, Mattic
Green. Dela Carter, Eva Brack-
man, Ray Brackman, Blanch Pc-
troff. Betty O'Leary. Nadine Pen
dcrgraft, Herman Pendcrgraft and
Bill Kaser, ol Shasta view orange
and David Saks. Francis Flowers
Jr., and Ruth Andrieu, of Mid
and Grange.
A no host potluck luncheon was
served by Alice Hoover, Chloe
Prydc, Gertie Huff and their as
sistants.
lai) I
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"Meet the
'Music Man'"
by Jerry Klein
Broadway's biggest musical
smash in years is a one-man
show, and that man is Mer
edith Willson whose Iowa
childhood was the inspira
tion for the story, words, and
music of "The Music Man."
Read the inside story of how
Willson's first attempt at a
musical comedy became an
overnight hit.
June 8
Family
Weekly
IN THE
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