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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 22, 1958)
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON SUNDAY, JUNE 22, 1058 Business News By FLORENCE JENKINS warn, t ."'j i,. --v CADA Ballou & Wright's sales man a Her, W. J. Flnke, at Portland an nounces two promotions affecting the Klamath f alls set-up, Phil Lee, who has been in charge of the Klamath Falls operation Bince 1944, will turn over his du ties here to the present store man ager, Dick Cada, and will return to Portland to be assistant sales manager ... his duties will con list of sales promotion woilc, in cluding assistance to the firm's alesmen and branc stores in Ore gon. . . . Lee joined the firm in April, 193!, at Portland . . . when he Klamath Falls branch was opened in 1939, he was promoted to store manager here and 1944 he became a regional man ger In charce of Klamath, Lake, Josephine and Jackson counties in Oregon and Modoc and Siskiyou counties In Northern California . . , the promotion is effective tomor row. . . . Lee Is a past presi dent of the Klamath Council of Camp Fire Girls and has been camping chairman for them for (even years ... is a past pres ident of the local Jaycees and ac ' tive in United Fund and Boy Scouts. Cada has been with Ballot & Wright for six years as a counter man and store manager here . . . he steps up to the position of re gional manager and will he suc ceeded as store manager by Re z oung woo nas ueen wan ine iirm for five years. . . . Cada will con tinue to make his home in Klam ath Falls . . . both he and Young are married and each has two small sons. C. L. (Chet) Irving, executive head of Pine Industrial Delations Committee, summarized the tax portions of several of his speeches and put the summary in written form ... it was picked up by Ralph T. Moore and made the bas is of an interesting and thought ful editorial in the June 7 issue of Oregon Voter. . . . Irving is quoted as saying that taxation "is al ready in the controlled income stage and is thus confiscatory" . . . and that the path back tn economy in government is blocked because taxpayers no longer have real control over taxation ... so much of the annual cost of gov ernment at all levels is of a fixed nature that there is little or no room left for taxpayer discretion. 0 A contract has been negotiated by Andrew M. Collier, owner ot the properly, with Hiirkhnrd Con struction Co., general contractor, for construction of an office build ing and doctor's clinic and offices at 11th and Pine streets to provide office quarters for the U.S. Social Security Service and an office and clhnc for Dr. Hugh M. Swaney, local physician and surgeon. . . . Morrison & Howard, architects . . . the building will he 48x611 feet in size ... the offices will be en tered from street level on Pine St. . . . because of the downward slope of lllh St., there will be parking for cars at street level from 11th St., with the pumice tile building supported by steel beams above the parking area ... it represents an innovation in architectural design in Klnmnlh Kails and will provide needed off-street parking facilities in addition to a modern, up-to-date office building. Central Oregon Park Train of Redmond has appointed Mrlntyrr Travel Service as representative in the Mnmnth Falls area . . proving pack trips into the Cos cade mountains for fishing at the many lakes in the high country . . . everything is furnished ex cept sleeping bags, fishing rods and camera . . . the featured trip is from Lake of the Woods to Odell Lake, which will take a week, and groups may start from Lake of the Woods. Hend or Redmond . . . many smaller trips avail able . . . a new service this year. . . . Wall Mrlnlyre, 716 Main St.. niet John ZumHtetn, operator of Central Oregon Pack Train, at the Los Angeles sports show iZimistoin took a reindeer down to promote the Klamath-Deschutes country . . ." Zumslein has a string of 10,1 horses and is promoting the famous Skyline Trail ... he puis on Operation Reindeer annually at Redmond. o Klamath Moving Storage (flrage J. Ilnhart) Is owning of fifes at 2626 Laverne. Local retailers who have hoi! to furniture and gilt market week this year report a greater than usual assortment of sconces, Uiom' ornamental wall backings for clocks and cnwV' holders . . . tty sell from Sl.iNt up high as you vOit to Oi and come singly or in pairs as wall decorative items in metal or motaland-wood combinations, sometimes with mirror tor light rellection to pro mote the illusion ot a larger room. On The Record in. am On rAi.i.s mum tilKI.S VASOV' Bnrn to Mr nf1 Mrf D?an Mann Junp 19 In KlanuHh V4I Irv HnpiUI Klrl wrlgrnim S lh . Oil. novs TEHVU'Nn Oorn lo Mr. nrl Mrs (iorte T. Friwinrl June 1" in Klamath V!!y !trOi! a boy wrlfh ing a Ihi . 14 or it.ui nin-Nnrr Glrll. 172, Bni. 42. M SMATH r.l.l. MARRMtlE MrFNSI John 8 laih Jr., 21. and Porli Purl Oolden, II. LEE T. J. (Tom) Mct'arry has been named as general agent for South ern Pacific Co. at Seattle in charge of freight and passenger traffic. according to E. C. Ordwav. freight traffic manager and Rernal S. Quayle, passenger traffic, public relations manager, both of Port land. . . . McCarry's promotion is effective July 1 and his head quarters wail be Xnom 813, Josh ua Green LJg 1425 fourth Ave., Seattle 1 ... he preceded Al Kusler as freight and passenger general agent in Klamath f alls Tom Williams, superintendent of Crater Lake National Park, indi cates there is considerable interest in the bid invitation for construc tion of apartment buildings, com fort stations and covered entrance- way to the admii'stration building in the park . . . bit1 will be opened at .107 Federal Bldg., Med: lord, at 2 p.m., June 24 . . planholvrs include Farr Heating r Sheet Metal, Mux 1010, Klam ath Falls. . . . Joe Swearingen, Jas per, Ore. . . . Hush Electric, 1023 S. Riverside Ave., Medford. . . , D. M. Blickenstaff, 21 S. Orange Medford. . . . Soulhern Oregon Construction Co., 925 SW Green wood Drive, Grants Pass. , . Cummings Construction Co., 1050 SE Belle Aire Drive, Grants Pass, . , . John Kovtynovich. 395 Skyline Loop, Eugene. . . . II. llarnhart, Box 68, Medford. . . . Ausland Con struction Co., 1116 Airport Drive, Grants Pass. . . . Myers D Jones, Box 161, Medford. . . , Wiley Co., Box 414, Ashland. . . , Hampton C. Piatt, Box 27, Salem . . . John C. Porter, 6014 SW 18th Drive, Portland 19. Kingsley Field bid openings . two bids received on June 13 by George R. Meyers, purchasing and contracting officer, 408th Fight er Group, lor constructing two mo bile control hardstand, Bid No. 58 23. . . . Trqwhrlrfce & Flynn Elec tric, 214 W. Main. Medford, $15, 9.12. . . . Asphalt raving Co., Box 547, Klamath Falls, $17,870. . . . USAF estimate, $15,000 . . . award pending. One bid received on June in, Bid No. 58-25. for improving ac cess road to GCA mobile and power check pad. . . . Asphalt Paving Co., $23,314.75 . . . award expected as amount within esti mate. Two bids received on June 18 for replacing deteriorated portions of existing underground steam lines. Bid No. 58-24. . . . John Kovtynovich. 395 Skyline Loop, Eu gene. $110,299.24. . . . Olt-Atwater Construction Co., Box 368, Klam ath Falls, $144,739.90. Three bids received June 19, Bid No. 58-27, for constructing two dor mitories, dining hall, exterior util ises for USAF al Kcno. . . . Plnniger & Wntklns, 1430 Klam ath Ave., $67,988. , . . Vlk Con struction Co., 160 Madison, Eu gene. $85,557. . . . Otl-Atwaler Construction Co., $86,963. o Bid opening will be 10 a.m., June 29, at Kingsley Field, for modifying heating syslems in Bldg 205, 206, 208 and 209. . . . Bid No. 58-31 . . . work lor each build ing consists of installing 510 lin ear feet of pipe and required pipe lutings lor 84 radiators, accord ing to (ieorge K. Meyers, pur posing and contracting officer. o Bid opening will he 2 p.m., July 7, by Klamath Falls Police Judge Frank A. Riackmrr, city hall. Klamath Falls, for constructing the secondary units of Klamath Fall's sewage treatment plant. . . . John W. Cunningham & Associates, 1112 Portland Trust Bldg., Portland, en gineers . . . plans with engineers, $25 deposit . J . work includes construction of a trickling filter, secondary pumping station and final settling tank with connecting piping to tie in with primary treat incut plant now under construc tion by II. G. Carl Construction Co., Salem, to provide complete sewage treatment for a population trom 25.000 to 30.000. Scholar Says Most People Read Bible Wrong; Claims Starting At Back Best Way By LOUIS CASSF.I.S United Press International One reason why many people have difficulty in reading the Bible is that they begin at the beginning. That's the wrong place to start, according lo Or. J. Carter Swaim. a noted biblical scholar who heads the English Bible department of the National Council of Churches. Swaim has composed a little handbook on Bible reading. His suggestions on understanding the scriptures include a sort ot road map to enable the reader to get through the whole book without "bogging dowo) in the begats." "Since the Bible is supremely a hook about Christ, it is import- ant to begin with those sections which ti whal he did when he was here among men," says Swaim. That means beginning with the Vow TeOanir-nl (InKnttl Itnl Swaim would not have you read t.iem in order Matthew, Mark. Luke and "Mark, curliest aQ shortest of the Gospels, ought to be read hist and at a single sitting." he says. "Here we are confronted at once by 'The Gospel of Jesus tQist. the Son ot lied." "Luke's account should be read next, noting Jesus' concern for all sorls of people, and how. by teach ing and example, he 'went about doing good.' " Next, Swaim recommends, read John, the most "theological" of the Gospels. Then you are ready lor Matthew, a book which con- lx:;1 I --k J47 : Ml FLAG DAY CEREMONY was held t the Elks Lodge by Troop 78. Boy Scouts of Amer ica, which is sponsored by the Suburban Fire Department. , Scouts shown are, left to right, Eugene Russell, George Webber, Daryl Mitchell, Earl Jones, Terry Galbreath, Douglas Walker, David Lindland, Larry Hager, Jimmy Floron and Lewis Glinkman. Scoutmaster Pete Colvin stands behind. Stocks Move Through Wide Arc, End Up In About Same Spot As Recorded Previously NEW YORK (UPI) Stocks moved through wide arcs during the past week and closed with only a slight change from the previous week. Trading picked up to the most active pace since the week ended May 9 with daily average turn over at 2,746.429. That compared with 2.641,076 shares a week be fore and 2.120,599 shares in the corresponding week of last year, The week's volume of 13.732,147 shares brought the year's volume lo date to 281,605,146, well above the 255,275,725 shares of this time last year, and within touching distance of the 1956 total of 286.039,791 shares. The market rose on Monday and Tuesday in the industrials, declined moderately on Wednes day and sharply on Thursday with a rally Friday. Rails were up Monday and Friday and down the other three days. The drop on Thursday induced mainly by fears railroad transportation taxes would be maintained, was the most severe of any decline since Dec. 16. After the Thursday close the Senate voted to kill the rail ex cises and on Friday the carriers more than made up the Thurs day loss. At the close of the week, the rail average stood at 119.17 off The Red Cross Reports By VIRGINIA DIXON Executive Secretary Red Cross activity chairmen made the following report. for May to headquarters of the Klamath Basin Chapter, American Red Cross. For the blood program, Mrs. Madelyn Swaney, blood chairman. says 107 pints of blood were sup plied to local hospitals for patients from hlamath Falls, Malin, Ore- tech, Biy, Dairy, Tulelake, Chilo 04iin, Keno. Sprague River, Beatty and Merrill. Meetings were held with Mason ic groups and Merrill and Tulelake community leaders to plan donor recruitment for the June visit of the bloodmohilc which collected blood needed for the next three months. Mrs. Alma Sweetman, home service,, states 64 cases were served last month, including as sistance with emergency leaves, reporting, obtaining compensa- tains the sermon on the mount and many familiar parables. In Swaim's sequence, as in the Bible's, the Gospels are followed oy the Book ol Acts, which re cords the early history of the Christian Community, and by the letters, or "Epistles," which Paul and other Aposlles wrote to the young churches that sprang up in Asia .Minor during the first cen tury A.I). "We are ready now to explore ine out testament which . looks forward to the Messiahs coming. But Swain says, it is best not lo begin at the Book of Genesis and read straight throiifi (he Old Testament. Start with the Proph ets whose writings are referred - in the New Testament: Isaiah, Micah. llosea. Jeremiah, Malachi, Hahakkuk, Zephaniah. Ezckiel, Zachariah. Kings, SamOl, Alter the Prophets, rea-9 the books in which the law of Moses is set forlh Kxodus, Leviticus. Numbers and DetiteronoQ-'- Con sult Bible commentaries tor the footnotes in a good edition of tO Bible) to see how tht books are dealt with in the New Testament. Now go on to the miscellaneous "wntincs" pQ-erved in the Old Testament the poetry ot the Psalms. I he moving stories of Job and With, the wisdom of Proverbs. Next to last in Swaim's list is the hook which comes first in the Bible Genesis. The last hook of the Bible, Rev elations, also comes last in Swaim's list. 0.04 point on the week and within 0.40 point of the high since Oct. 9 set Monday. Industrials made their 1958 high on Tuesday and closed more than five points under it at 473.60 off 1.17 on the week. Utilities on Tuesday set a new high since Oct. 3. 1930, and closed the week at 78.59 off 0.11 point. Measured by the Standard & Poor's index of 500 stocks, the average loss per share for the market as a whole amounted to 17 cents. But there were more losses than gains. Of the 1,420 Issues traded, most since June 6, 548 ad vanced, 715 declined and 157 held unchanged. There were 289 new highs for the year set and only 14 new lows. Business statistics brought out many highly favorable develop ments and some less favorable. There was another rise in steel output to a new high for the year. A new high for 1958 in car loadings and another gain in automobile production. Construction held well above a year ago and the total for heavy construction for the year to date grossed the 1957 total, lhe oil industry nad put Us inventory in order and was step ping up production slowly. Retail trade held well and was only slightly under a year ago. tinns, pensions and allotments, counseling, and financial a i d. Loans and grants to servicemen and veterans totaled $338. Volun teer social welfare aides, Mrs. Howard Pernell and Mrs. S e t h Kerron staffed the office May 18-22 while the executive secretary was cut of town. The water safety program. chairmanned by Mrs. George Myers, concluded classes for be ginners, intermediate, swimmers, water safety and senior lifesav- ing, with 125 students successfully finishing courses. Instructors were fc.Ha Henkey, Mane Johnson, Don nella Plowman and Walter Mun hall. Volunteer instructors, Mrs. Arlie Mae Johnson of Malin, and Mrs True Hoyle, Tulelake, finished community classes in first aid. Mrs. Naomi Miller. PUN. taught a group of young prospective par ents the mother and baby care course. Recruitment plans were made for enrolling volunteer reg istered nurses tor the blood pro gram, wilh cooperation from the local nurses' association, nurse's registry and public information media. Nineteen registered nurses were enrolled for the training course held June 3. Mrs. Merle Swansen is enrollment chairman. Mrs. C. R. Canine, Junior Red Cross chairman, arranged a social hour honoring teachers in Klnm alh Falls schools who volunteer liftie in the program. The party was held May 12 in the lecture room of the Klamath County Li brary. Art sketches of local scenes from students at Fremont Junior High School and Klamath Union High School were on display. Out standing ones chosen were entered in competition for sending abroad for viewing by other children. Jun ior Red Cross Committee mem bers provided refreshments. The National Red Cross conven tion held in San Francisco was attended by R. H. Gallagher, chap ter chairman; Mrs E. A. Geary, Mrs. Richard Maxwell. Mrs Charles Dakin, Mrs. Hugh Swaney. M.Sgt. Robert Long, representing Kingsiey Field and Virginia Dixon. chapter executive. Delegates came home with many new idi: on how to improve Red Cross services for Klamath Coun ty, plus a new vision of what Red Cross can mean in a trounl world. The money accruing from the fall United Fund-Bo Cross cam paign, continues to support Red Cross activities. A check for $1.0W was received May 8. Campaign receipts from the Tulelake Branch fund campaign totaled $1,512. Paul Rogers chair manned the drive. Branch hoard members met May 13 to Om for the Learn to Swim campaign, j A record number of young swim mers Is anticipated. The Tulelake branch provides drivers, chaper ons and gasoline for school buses Iransporting Tulelake and Newel' children to the Malin pool. v K 9 r.vv.i mm DOTTY RIKER, 15, is a can didate for Junior Queen of the Klamath Basin Rodeo, tryouts for which will be held Sunday afternoon at the fairgrounds. A student at Henley High School, Dotty belongs to the 4-H, and has been riding for 12 years. She is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph T. Riker, 6360 South Sixth Street. Dotty will be riding Midnight Moon, her black Arabian mare. CINDY DEHLINGER, 14, is another candidate for the Junior Rodeo Queen title who has been riding ever since she was big enough to do so. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dehlinger, Route I, Cindy is a stu dent at Henley High School and a member of the 4-H Club and Job's Daughters. She'll be riding her Arab ian gelding, Allah Khan, at Sunday afternoon's tryouts. Four-Year-Old Girl Found Penned Up 'Like Dog' In Filthy, Sealed NOWATA. Okla. (UPI) "Penned up like a dog." a Mind and mute 14-pound, four-year-old girl lived in a bare, sealed room, its floors covered oy human ex crement. Outside the house, a pack of hound dogs were kept well-fed while the little girl starved. A doctor prescribed "loving care and nourishing food" for the emaciated girl, Laura Jane Irons, after sheriff's deputies and Coun ty Attorney Lloyd Colter found her in a ragged T-shirt, lying on a cold concrete floor Friday after noon. The child's mother, Mrs. Jack Irons, 24, told United Press Inter national she had "a big story to tell" today about how and why she and Raymond Murphy, with whum she has been 'living, kept little Laura imprisoned. Mrs. Irons divorced her husband in 1955. taking their four children with her. One eight-year-old son is in the state hospital tor mentally retarded children at Enid. Laura and the other two have been liv :ng with Mrs. Irons and Murphy. Authorities were not able to de termine whether Murphy and the attractive black eyed brunette MELBA'S Salon of Beauty NOW OPEN MONDAYS Ph. Tt' 4-s?SH 114 rin St The $ Loquacious Portable Editor'! Note: Waltraud Eriks dun. the former Waltraud Diet sche, is on her way to Europe to join her husband. Her impres sions of the trip and life in Europe today will be carried in a series. By WALTRAUD ERIKSDl'N At Sea. June 6. The M.S. "Ber lin" plows through salt spray to wards Bremernaven, day and night across the Atlantic. Sea and sky offer a panorama of primeval de sertion. But the boat is a float ing carnival. Besides the pickled. smoked and roasted meals, there is an endless round of Nights on the Rhine, Bavarian Beer Festi vals, and all the old waltzes and polkas from a hundred years back. I ve done more living this week than all my drab twenty - eight years," says Albert Devereux, an Orange, New Jersey, carpenter who has come 3.000 miles to see a girl from Berlin. Until the M S. "Bremen leaves the docks next year, the "Ber lin" will he the only post-war German transatlantic steamer. Many of the 760 passengers in tourist class are the usual pre war German Americans, some over 80. But it is Tourist Class 1958. An East Zone refugee from Detroit or a Bavarian grandmoth er with children in New York- may be on the passenger list. Now-mature war brides are ac companied by strapping all-Ameri- can sons. They tell about little houses with lawns and the goodby party the office gave. Mechanics, farmers, nurses aides, maids. Some worked months, others decades, to pay for the trip They saved to eat German straw berries, walk in German forests and sit in beer gardens full of lies. Not the lonely sea is their god, but perpetual song and laugh ter. They have a word for it. They call it Gemuetlichkcit. Beautiful Lisa Marie Niemeyer, a high school sophomore from South Bend, Indiana, is visiting arandparents by herself. Her blu: eyes light up about her first trip abroad.. I love it, she says. I used to kid the folks about all these waltzes, but they're as good as rock and roll. Everything is so free and easy. Anybody can ask you to dance. But I wish they wouldn t all try to take care of me. Niki Habsburg, 21, wears horn rimmed glasses and studies indus trial design in Providence. H l s family ruled Austria for 600 years- but he tells you in Oxford English that he's just an ordinary fellow. In New England there s a wall between boy and girl," he says. I miss fun in groups. Everybody pairs off. If you want a girl to go to a movie, you have to make a date a week in advance. Niki is visiting royal relatives and European castles with Bob Troie, also 21, Boston School of Fine Arts student and son of Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Troie, 157 Lincoln Street, Newton Highlands, Boston. rheir mutual friend about ship is Drsulla Buller, a German girl who once filled jellyrolls with jelly while working at Central Bak ery in Lorain, Ohio. The three some dances, plays the harmonica, and turns summersaults on upper deck. In art school we are individu alists," Bob explains, "outside peo ple are afraid to let themselves go. This boat is like art school. 1 could stay on it forever." Fog enfolds Ihe "Berlin when. after 10 days a., sea, it reaches the channel. Foghorns groan, engineers are alerted, and the cap tain holds watch, as the boat pokes through treacherous gray velvet, behind which collision may lurk. But, in the ballroom, vio lins, cellos and human voices con tinue the jingle: "Drink, drink, Bruederlein drink. Leave all your sorrows at home." Solitary vigils are for seamen and writers of columns. The mer rymakers are confident that to morrow they will reach Bremer haven, with new friends, a few temporarily broken hearts, and many, many silver-haired memo ries. Blind and abiding is their faith in Gemuetlichkcit. - ln Room were married. irons said fnday the woman "threw food on the floor" of Laura's cell at irregular moments. Irons, who cannot file criminal charges until Monday, said he also hopes to gain custody of the other two children. Laura responded to treatment for malnutrition in a Nowata hos pital Saturday. Dr. Lynn Barnes, who treated Laura at the hospital, said the weak girl probably has the ability to talk "but she never had been taught." Barnes said "three years ago. this baby was brought to me and I diagnosed it then as malnutri tion. She's gained only four poi,is since then." "The child was unbelievably filthy," deputy Arthur Johnson said. "She didn't look as if she had been beaten. For Mora i Living lira Per Gallon ' See tlfj New M0RRIS , Arr II 'iooo XZtymx Robin & Myers Vjy , -prr', '' VJ IE? V I' I V. I V - V & MRS. LUCILE GRAY Lucile Gray, Tulelake' s Librarian, Keeping Busy And Interested In Life By RUTH KING The years perch lightly on Lu cile Mooney Gray, who has put her shoulder to the wheel at tasks from Missouri to the Philippines and back around the globe to Tule lake. Today, at 83, she is major domo of Tulelake's library, guard ian of more than 6.000 volumes and stacks and stacks of maga zines that are read until they are dogeared. Lucile Gray is just as enthu siastic about her present task as wnen she stood behind a school desk in her girlhood and looked across a roomful of eager boys and girls sizing up "teacher." She followed a brother and two sisters from her Missouri home to Wyoming in the days when U.S. Army supplies were still crossing the country by mule team. Pump ing reauiug, wining unu aruu metic into small fry in the West palled on the young teacher after a couple of years and she applied for a government teaching job in the Philippines, took off for Ma nila by way of the Mediterranean alone, a pretty brown-eyed girl in tent on seeing the world . . . looked in on ports in other climes and found a civil engineer to love and cherish, almost before she set' foot on foreign soil. He was from Montana. The birth of her first child, a daughter, now Mrs. Lucille (E. L.) Coyner, Tulelake, found the young bride in Iligan, Mindanao. She Green Hornet At Rest, Chicago Without Trams CHICAGO (AP) Old N. 238 lumbered into its terminal, emit ted a final clang, and Chicago was without streetcar service Sat urday for the first time since the turn of the century. The old Green Hornet buzzed to a stop after an early morning run and joined scores of other ob solete trolleys in the terminal. It s the end of an era, and 1 m glad tha I. too, am retiring," commented motorman William Armstrong. It s time to quit anyway, said the 64-year-old Armstrong. "Traf fic is getting too heavy and too fast." In 1618, two years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock the French explorer Eticnne Brule reached Michigan. save on BEDDING PUNTS Petunias Aqeratum Snapdragons Pansies Dwarf Zingios Moss Rose Salvia Deljrbiaiaa Rissell Lisa Ties are Rstdy t Ibafti e Tra ill A I Esther Rfted aisi l.M satr W This is k ffaaofcy Urn aWtMag) Pl,t Ui vi te Oft Pfcone TU 418.1 criss-crossed the Pacific three times, saw Japan in cherry blos som time before returning to Wyo ming where she went oack to the school room after the death of her husband. "I liked variety, so after teach ing in Wyoming, Oregon and the Orient, I decided I'd like to try my hand at something else. I wasn't a girl any more but I went back to school, to learn how to make women beautiful." She ran her own shop for a time, then instructed student beau ty operators in a beauty school. She came to Southern Oregon when her son-in-law came to Bo nanza to teach. Later when he went to Tulelake as principal of the high school, Mrs. Gray was eager to try her wings at some thing new, said "yes" to then city councilman Richard Moore of Tule lake, when he sought her help in keeping the small library open. She had clerked a bit in a fam ily-owned five 'n dime and the new job was another challenge to the lady. That was more than 11 years ago. The library, monitored by the Siskiyou County Library, had for many years been shunted from pil lar to post wherever there was room and someone interested to serve as librarian. "That library," said Mrs. Gray, "really needed someone to fix it up." The books needed cleaning and repairing so she rolled up her sleeves and went at it. She is proud of the neat shelves! the comfortable reading space . . . welcomes those who come seek ing information and books. "Transients," she says, '-'can't get a library card when they come to help harvest the crops here in the fall, so I collect these small paper-backed books, mostly West erns for them. When they get shab by I send them back to the coun ty librarian and they go to tha boys who are in jail over some trouble.'" Children flocked about her, the day the Herald and News camera man asked for a picture, and she is eager to put good reading ma terial into the hands of the young. She thinks the sack dresses of today are for the young, but she likes color, was chic in a scarlet knitted suit, a stunning choice to complement her snow white hair. Lucile Gray is still slender and lithe as when she raced horses over the Montana flatland, jumped fences, ice skated and danced the night away . . . still eager to conquer new fields. aid mm : t ttrtet) nm& ' ere!