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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1958)
1 PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON TUESDAY. JUNE 24. 1958 MARKETS and FINANCE STOCKS WALL STREET NEW YORK (API Indus trials oaced the stock market ir a moderate decline .Monday. Se lected issues posted gains. Key stocks fell from fractions to around a point. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks fell 90 cents to S172.90 with the industrials down SI.60, the rails down 30 cents and the utilities down 20 cents. Volume totaled 2.340,000 shares compared with 2.590.000 on Fri day. NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation 10 Allied Chemical 77 H Allis Chalmers 2J Aluminum Co. America 70 American Airlines IS V American Can 4fl American Cyanamide 43 4 American Motors 11 American Tel. & Tel. 177 American Tobacco 88 Anaconda Copper 45 V Armco Steel 49 i Atchison Railroad 21 Bethlehem Steel 40 i Boeing Airplane Co. 42 Borg Warner 30 Buroughs Corp. 35 Canadian Pacific 27 Caterpillar Tractor 42 Celanese Corporation 16 Vi Chrysler Corporation 47 Cities Service 55 V Consolidated Edison 55 Crown Zellerbach 49 Curtiss Wright 24 Douglas Aircraft 56 du Pont de Nemours 183 Eastman Kodak 104 El Paso NG 33 V, Emerson Radio 6 Ford Motor 41 V, General Dynamics 57 W General Electric 58 Vi General Foods 62 General r 'otors 39 Vi Georgia Pac Cp. 37 Goodyear Tire 80 International Harvester 34 Vi International Paper 97 Vt Johns Manville 38 Kaiser Aluminum 26 Kennecott Copper 884 tibby, McNeill 9 Lockheed Aicraft 47 Vi Loew's Incorporated 16 Vi Montgomery Ward 36 VI New York Central 17 Northern Pacific 40 Vi Pacific Gas & Electric 57 Pacific Tel & Tel. 131 Vi Pennsylvania R.R. 13 Vi Pepsi Cola Co. 24 Philcd Corp. 15 Vi Polaroid 59 Vi Puget Sound P & L 31 Vi Radio Corporation ' 3 Vi Rayonier Incorp. 16 Republic Steel 45 Vt Reynolds Metals 41 Richfield Oil 80. Safeway Stores Inc. . 31 St. Regis 34 Vi Scott Paper Co. 67 Sears Roebuck & Co. 29 Shell Oil Co. 73 Vi i Sinclair- Oil 57 VI VSocony Mobile Oil 50 Vi liouthern Pacific 44 Vi Standard Oil Calif. 52 Vi Standard Oil N.J. 53 Vi Studebaker Packard 5 Vi . Sunshine Mining 8 Swift It Company 34 Vi Transameriei Corporation 42 Vi Twentieth Century Fox 28 Vi Union Oil Company 52 Union Pacific 29 Vi United Air Lines 26 Vi United Aircraft 61 Vi United Corporation 7 Vi United States Plywood 33 United Slates Steel 64 Warner Pictures 64 Western Union Tel. 19 Vi Wcstinghouse Air Brake 22 Vi Westinghouse Electric 56 Vi Woolworth Company 47 Smokers Anger Cancer Speaker DALLAS (AP)-While cigarette smoke wafted up from the audi- encc, the American Cancer Socie ty's Dallas unit was chided yes terday "for flaunting the million dollars spent on the study of lung cancer." "Nothing makes me angrier than to watch a person take a puff." said Dr. Robert J. Samp of the cancer research staff at tlu University of Wisconsin Medi cal Center, "and smile and say, 'Well, if I'm gonna go, it's a won derful way to go."' "He will go. all right, and there's an excellent possibility the way will not be wonderful," he aid. Pa-Hu-Ska Finds Fresh 'Tribe' MANNHEIM. Germany (AP) -Pa Hu-Ska, the last princess of the Osei!e tribe of Oklahoma,- has found a hand of happy followers in this industrial town on the Rhine. On her way to the Brussels World Fair she stopped off to show her Indian relics and cos tumes to the boys of the Mann heim Indian club. She also brought long tape recordings of Indian chants and songs. The (;-rman "Indians" were so delighted that they promptly called a rxiw-vrow and changed the organiration's lame from Ogalalla club to Osage club. In exchange, the Princess al lowed the club leader, Chief Graur Wolke i Grey Cloud I, to adopt the name "Paw Hu-Ska." Indian folklore has long had alrong appeal for German youths nd Indian clubs are scattered throughout the country. TOO Mini SAN ANTONIO. Tex. (AP) Deputy Sherilf Tony l.obello lis tened as the woman complainant pointed out red crosses on her neighbors' yard and said it was oodoo powder. As proof she held BP a dead rooster. Lobello ginger ly tasted some of the powder. His verdict: The rooster died ol eating , loo much red pepper. LIVESTOCK PORTLAND (AP) (USD A) Cattle salable 1,150; includes equivalent of 18 loads fed steers. only load or so heifers, about 40 per cent cows; trading moderately active on reduced supply; early sales on fed steers about steady; heifers steady; cows strong; about four loads choice under 1.100 lb steers sold at 29.00; few loads low to average choice 28.00-28.50; good Z7.00-27.50; load good and choice 760 lb fed heifers 27.50; few good heifers 25 50-27.00; canner and cut ler cows largely 15.00-17.00, heavy cutters including Holstein 17.60; light canners down to 17.00; utility! cows I7.oo-I9.oo- few commercial 19.50-21.00: utility bulls mostly 23.w-Z4.50; some held higher; light cutter bulls 19.00-22.00. Calves salable 200: trade slow: few early sales steady-1.00 down: early sales choice vealers 29.00 31.00; good 26.00-28.00; culls down ward to 15.00: trade on heavy caives not tuny established. nogs salable 600: trade active: butchers and sows 50-1.00 higher; sows less than 3 per cent: U.S. No. 1-2 butchers 180-235 lb 26.25 26.50, one lot 26.75; mixed No. l-3s 25.00-26.00, mostly 25.50 and up 240-270 lb mostly No. 2-3s 23.50 25.00; U.S. No. 1-2 sows 270-330 lb 22.00-22.50, one lot 22.75. Sheep salable 2.000; trade active with spring lambs stead v-strone: other classes steady; choice 85-105 ID spring lambs 21.75-22.00; mixed good and choice 21.00-21.50; good springers 20.50-21.50; good and choice feeders 18.00-19.00; several lots mixed old crop and yearlings i5.uu-is.75; cull-good slaughter ewes 3.00-7.50. STOCKTON (UPI-FSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 2.000. Good 825 lb grass heifers 25.50, standard and good 23-24.50, utility 21. Com mercial cows 18.50-20, utility 17.50- 19, canners and cutters 14-17.50 Utility and commercial bulls 22- 23. Good and choice 590-627 lb stock steers 28. Good and choice 750 lb feeder heifers 24. Calves salable 250. Good and choice 300-500 lb slaughter calves 26-28. Good velcrs 28. Good and choice stock steer calves 27-29. Gocalves 26-27. Hogs salable 600. No. 1 to 3 300-650 lb sows 16.50-19. Good and choice 40-120 lb feeder pigs 25 37, feeders around 140 lbs 24. Sheep salable 600. Sales confined to feeder lambs, mostly good of ferings 20. CHICAGO (AP) - Butcher hogs were active Monday and prices were strong to as much as 50 cents higher. The $25 top was paid for 136 head of 215 lb No. 1 grade. Lattle receipts of 17.000 were well below expectations and slaueh ler steer prices were strong to 75 cents higher. A few loads of prime brought $30.50-32. Most of the high choice and mixed choice and prime Drougnt $28.75-30. vealer prices were steady at s-'n-Jl tor good and choice kinds Slaughter lambs were strong to 50 cents higher and one lot of 24 head brought $27. Salable receipts 7.000 hogs. 17.- 000 cattle, 200 calves, 1,000 sheep. GRAINS CHICAGO (AP) There was some support from time to time for wheat on the Board of Trade Monday but profit-taking worked against the small advances. Commercial and export business was slow but Austria was reported to have requested offers on 700.- OOO bushels of spring wheat. Wheat finished V-lli lower. July 1.83Vi-Vi; corn unchanged to lower, July 1.32VH: oats un changed to i lower. July 2.24Mi- 4; lard 10 to 22 cents a hundred pounds lower, July 12.05. WHEAT Open High Low Close 1.84 i 1.85 Vi 1.83 1 83 1.87 Vi 1.87 4 1.85 Vi 1 86 V 1.92 Vt 1.92 i 191 H 1.91 1 94 'i 1.95 Vi 1.94 V4 1.94 Vi 1.92 Vi 1.93 Vi 1.92 1.92 iiy Sep Dec Mar May PORTLAND (AP) Coarse grains, la-day shipment, bulk. coast delivery: Oats No. 2. 38 lh white 51.00-53.00. Barley No. 2, 45 lb B. W. 45.00-47 00. Corn No. 2. , Y. shipment 62.75-63.25. Wheat: No bids or offers. Car receipts:' Wheat 100: barley 1; flour 43; corn 8; oats 34: mill leed 26. POTATOES CHICAGO (AP) Potatoes ar rivals 306; on track 405: total U S shipments for Friday 679; Sattir day 451: Sunday 38. Old: Firm; Idaho Russets 3.75-4 25: New Stronger: Arizona Round Reds 4.00-40; California Long Whites 4 00 35; California Round Reds 4.35 50. Not Burglars, Just 'Hot' Bird TUCSON. Ariz. (AP) Police feared burglars were at work when a loud explosion was heard in the downtown area near two banks yesterday. Tho police surrounded the banks, but found nothing. Sum moned officials of the two banks found nothing amiss. Then a patrolman spotted an open circuit-breaker fuse on an overhead power line at the rear of the banks. Bert Mills, an elec tric company employe, gave this explanation: Some birds used light strands of copper wire to build a nest in the circuit-breaker. A breeze ap parently blew the loose ends of the copper wires against the high tension wires, setting off a 14.400 volt blast. The birds and the nest couldn't be found after the explosion. . tJ t;S -a-5r- 'aft'' ay 'Mr " y ' I 1 YL FUNERAL SERVICES Dr. John Gordon Patterson, 86, who died in this city June 23, will be held Wednesday, June 25, at 3 p.m. in O'Hair's. Memorial Chapel. Final rites and in terment will be in Klam ath Memorial Parle. New Needs Of Press Cited BEAR MOUNTAIN. N.Y. (AP) Presidcntial press secretary James C. Hagerty says news paper editors and reporters will have to have more .knowledge of science and economics in the fu ture. "We're going into a complelely new world." he told the annual summer meeting of the New York State Society of Newspaper Edi tors at a dinner Monday night. "This means a shrinking of the world. Our president will be able to talk to any part of the world, and more important, the rest of the world can talk to us." Hagerty said newsmen and per sons in other fields of communi cation will "need to understand the language of science better to translate it for their readers." Clark .Morrison III of the Oswego Palladium-Times asked Hagerty during a question and answer period if, in discussing future press secretaries and presidents. he meant that Vice President Nixon would not hire him if he was elected. "No," Hagerty replied. "I would be out of my mind if I took an other job in government." Blaze Said In Control VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) - A 50,000-acre forest fire near the British Columbia-Yukon border was reported under control Tues day. It was the first fire In years in the province and had been rag ing since Sunday on a 10-m i 1 e front near the tiny village of Low cr Post, 450 miles northwest of Prince George. The entire male population of the area, about 120 men. joined 25 official fire fighters Monday in lighting the blaze. W. C. Phillips, district forester at Prince George, reported Tues day the firefighters were "hold ing their own. Another major fire was burning Monday night in a heavy spruce stand east of Whitehorse, Y.T. Smoke from the 40-square-mile blaze covered the town. The temperature Monday at Lyt- ton, in the Fraser Canyon, rose to 103 degrees. At Osoyoos, in the Okanogan Valley, school classes were dismissed when the thermo meter registered 110 degrees. Appeals For Alaska Made WASHINGTON (API - The Senate heard new bipartisan ap peals Tuesday for acceptance without change of the House passed bill to make Alaska the 49th state. Sen. Henry M. Jackson H Washl, chairman of the Senate Territories Subcommittee, led off the day's debate with this plea: "If the Senate truly wants state hood for Alaska, we must make certain that the will cf the Senate shared by a strong majority of the other body shall not be overturned by a small committee of the other body." Sen. Thomas II. Kuchcl R Calif), ranking Republican on the subcommittee, cautioned against "legislative tampering" with the House bill in a speech prepared for the debate. And Sen. Mike Mansfield (Monti acting Senate Democratic leader, expressed hope in a pre-session news conference that the House bill would be accepted by the Sen ate without chance. Mansfield pre dicted at least 30 Democrats would hack Alaska's admission to the Union. Kuchel said ti:e United States has "a moral and legal obliga tion" to grant Alaska statehood. "There is no doubt in my mind." he said, "that Alaska can and will support statehood adequately Irom her own revenues. "There can he little doubt that the legislative preparation for statehood is piofound and com plete. There Is also excellent evi dence that the people of Alaska have prepared and are per pared to assume the obligations of slalehood." AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH Mll teom. Allimtnl ir. Rift tM !) ilk Sunday Service 1 1 .m. (or School Boards To Urge Voters To Okay Budgets Klamath Falls Elementary and High School boards met Monday night and authorized letters be sent to newspapers and radio sta tions urging voters to approve re vised budgets on June 27 and July 7. The fate of a new elementary budget the first was turned down by voters May 5 will be decided this Friday. Approved by the ele mentary board at $1,189,000, it is some $26,500 less than the first On July 7. balloting will take place on a proposed $7.8. 000 budget approved by the high school board, which is some $31,000 less than the figure voters refused on May 5. In other business Monday night, high school trustees authorized Ar chitect Howard Perrin's plans for remodeling of the old cafeteria be sent to Salem for state approval. Contemplated are the installation of four new classrooms, including one large physical education room for girls an infirmary and nurses quarters. No estimated cost of the work has yet been made. The high school board also okayed a $3,600 progress payment to Morrison and Howard for com pleting preliminary plans for new swim pool dressing rooms. The board discussed possible fu ture submission to the State De partment of Education of a "dec laration" that Kl'HS would con tinue its driver education program under a new set-up. The last Legislature approved a law that would provide a $20 per driving pupil reimbursement to Censorship Hit By Czar. PHILADELPHIA (AP) Eric Johnston, president of the Motion Picture Assn. of America. Tues day singled out his own industry as he warned against conformity and bigness in American life. The former public official, once President Eisenhower's personal representative to the Middle Last, also said there is too much censor ship of books, movies and teach ing. In a speech prepared for the opening of the 49th annual meet ing of the American Home Eco nomics Assn. at Convention Hall, Johnston said conformity and "the accelerating trend toward concen tration in American economic and political life" are alarming. Discussing the symptoms of con formity, Johnston said: "Take the stage, the screen. From many places, we hear the strident cry that 'you can't say that you can't show that.' In my own industry, the motion picture, this cry resounds today in many states and it is growing increas ingly shrill. Nor are the films alone in hearing this voice of the censor." Doctors To Hear Report SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The American Medical Assn. will re ceive a committee report Thurs day on an Oregon resolution ask ing Congress to tighten restric tions on admitting ailing Korean orphans. The resolution named no names hut the Oregon delegation secre tary said it was prompted by the Korean orphan adoption program of Harry Holt, Creswell, Ore., rancher. The Lane County Medical Soci ety originated th e resolution. Creswell is in Lane County. The resolution asked the AMA to urge Congress to amend Public Law 85-316. under which, it said. Korean children suspected of be ing infected with severe commu nicable diseases had been allowed to enter the country. Some of the diseases, it said, included pulmon ary tuberculosis and some of the children died en route. U.S. Public Health Service offi cials here said only one group of children brought to this country by Holt for adoption included some with tuberculosis. ' Those were admitted, the officials said. because they were going to hos pitals tor treatment. The Oregon resolution was re ferred to a committee for study and report back to the floor Tues day. The Holts have adopted eight Korean orphans themselves and have brought to this country more than 900 others for adoption. The orphans were fathered by Ameri can servicemen and abandoned by their Korean mothers. Mrs. Holt at her home said in response to the resolution that an American doctor with the U.S. Public Health Service examines tho children before a visa is is- ued. Of 34 suspected of having tuberculosis, all but 12 have been released from hospitals either be cause it was determined they did not have the disease or because they were cured, she said. Only five of the 904 orphans brought to this country have died of disease, she said, four from pneumonia and one from enteritis. bowel disease. "It we leit these children in Korea they would die." she said. Dependable Covcraqe MAYFLOWER AUTO INSURANCE Reasonable Ratet VERN W. EMLEY ntrir- phn. t-ir rtMi ft tk districts. In the school year just closed, it cost the local district about $45 per pupil for 225 stu dents taking the driving course High school board members also: Heard that baseball, football, etc.. admission receipts were J, 9U1.04 short in oi- 58 of paying Ihe way for the various programs. and authorized a fund transfer to make up the difference. Receipts were "definitely stronger" in the year just closed than in the prev ious one. however. Superintendent A. L. Gralapp said. Heard the superintendent report there will be an unspent carry over from the '57-'58 high school budget of between $8,000 to $10.- 000. This will go into the general fund in the '58-'59 budget, he add ed. Heard Gralapp report he will have a list of new teacher candi dates for consideration at the next meeting. Ten vacancies have aris en in the high school. Accepted resignations from Leonard Surles. gym and math teacher, and from James Thorn ton, math instructor and counsel or. Surles will go to Orange. Cali fornia, and Thornton to Lafayette in the Bay Area, both to continue teaching. Elementary trustees heard a re port that work is progressing sat isfactorily on installing acoustical tile ceilings in six Mills class rooms and modernizing four cloak rooms there at an estimated $1,900 in budgeted funds. The tile will replace worn-out plaster ceilings iney also: Heard the superintendent report there will be $35,000 to $40,000 of carry-over in unspent funds from the '57-'58 budget, due primarily to not having to use a $20,000 emergency fund. The carry-over win De placed into the '58- 59 budg et's general fund. Heard a report that pipe-lavine lor a sprinkler system on the Pon- derosa site is now under wav. Accepted the resignations of teacners Ruth E. Huffaker. Pon derosa, who is moving to Salem: Kobleigh .Marr, Conger, who is go ing to uaiuornia: ana Walter Jlun- nan, fremont, who is going to Denmark for a year under a schol arship. Heard Superintendent Gralapp report he will have a list of teach er candidates for consideration at the next meeting. There will be 13 vacancies in the elementary dis trict to fill. Government Saves Ferry VICTORIA. B.C. (AP) The British Columbia government stepped in at 12:01 a m. Tuesday to keep the Black Ball Ferries running and save Vancouver Is land from virtual isolation from the rest of the province. The Black Ball fleet has been ihe island's only sea connection with the B.C. mainland since the Canadian Pacific Railway's coast service was struck five weeks ago. Black Ball was scheduled to cease operations midnight Mon day in the face of a strike set for Tuesday noon over a wage dispute. The government acted under the B.C. Civil Defense Act Monday afternoon. The unions involved in the wage dispute with the company agreed to keep the service going until an agreement is reached. The unions, the National Assn of Marine Engineers and the Ca nadian Merchant Service Guild, have asked a 19 per cent wage increase over two years. The com pany has offered eight per cent. Inventor Given Honor Medal BUFFALO. N.Y. (AP) Dr. Harold S. Black, inventor of doz ens of electronic devices, has been awarded the Lamme Medal, one of the nation's top engineering honors. Dr. Black, a research engineer for Ihe Bell Telephone Laborator ies in New York, received t h e award Monday from the Ameri can Institute of Electrical Engi neers, which opened a five-day summer meeting. WED PING PONG ESTFS PARK, Colo. (AP)-Of- fice and factory workers should ubstiiute table tennis for the cof fee break, says anthropologist. Dr. Margaret Lantis of the U.S. Public Health Service told a phy sical education conference that women workers particularly need more exercise during their work day. CANNED WHITF.VII.l.E. N.C. (API A public drunk was "canned" twice here, fust, police said, when he tried to sil on tlie edge of a 60 gallon trash can and fell in. It look four men to pull him out. Then he was "canned" again on public drunkenness charges at the Cohimhus County -jail. RUGS CLEANED IN YOUR HOME Alt Hand Work. No Shrinkage Guaranteed HOME RUG AND UPHOLSTER SERVICE Th. TV mt Nltht fr vi'A W, S V ... i, rtW- t;.M JUNIOR RODEO QUEEN Delores Cotton receives her prizes from Mrs. Warren Parr of the Jay-C-ettes at the conclusion of Sunday's Queens' Tryoufs. Warren Woodard, presi. dent of the Junior Rodeo Committee, stands at left, with the bouquet of red roses presented to Queen Oelores. Living Costs Hit Record WASHINGTON (AP) The na tion's living costs hit another new record in May but registered the smallest monthly rise since De cember. The latest government reading on living costs, released Tuesday, held '.ut hope that the two-year inflationary spiral has leveled out for the summer. Food items as a whole failed to increase in May for the first time since Novem ber. The Labor Department index rose one-tenth of 1 per cent to 123.6 per cent of the 1947-49 base This is 3.3 per cent higher than May last year. It represents the 19th straight rise in the index in the past 21 months. The index has not declined any month since August 1956. The living cost rise means an automatic pay boost for an esti mated 850,000 workers mainly in the steel, aluminum, can manu facturing and meat-packing indus tries. About 750.000 workers in these industries are to get a 4 cent hour ly pay increase effective July 1 under labor contract clauses gear ing pay rates to the government index. Increases in medical care costs and transportation prices were largely responsible lor the mod erate hike in May for the over all index. The medical care increase was attributed primarily to higher pre miums lor Blue cross hospitaliza tion plans in several cities, in cluding San Francisco and Kan sas City. Rates for physicians' services and hospitals also were higher. Medical care costs as a whole rose seven-tenths of 1 per cent. The increase in transportation reflected higher prices for gaso line following the end of price wars in several cities, and for used cars. Prices of new cars and tires were lower. Horsey E. Riley, chief of t h e labor Department's price and cost of living division, told re porters food prices likely will de cline in the months ahead as more plentiful supplies of fruits and vegetables hit market. Search For Cole Stalls KURKKA. Calif. fAP)-GeorRP Cole, one of the FBI's 10 most wanted men was slitl free Tues day, whereabouts unknown, and the 100-man. two-county search for him was at a standstill. Cole. 31. sought for the killing of a San Francisco policeman in Decern her, Ift.ifi. was reported seen near Kureka Sunday, touch inc off a manhunt alonn a 225 mile stretch of Northern Califor nia. While searchers in the north combed the Dtihakella Mountain area, those in the southern area, near l.akeport, set up roadblocks and closed in on a site where Cole was reported seen. But when a Laytonville gas sta tion was robbed of $125 Monday, most searchers in the south left their posts to seek the thieves. They captured the suspected robbers two men and a girl but may have lost Cole in th,e process. About 50 deputies chased t h e suspects car over an 80-m i 1 e route, puns blazing. Finally, near Lakeport. the auto overturned and the men fled into the hills. Arrested at the crash was Joy Woolcott. 18, of Scotia, Calif. Lawrence Kmerson Alfred. 22, of Rio Dell, and James J. Showers, 2:1, of Fortuna. who had fled into the hills, were trapped near an isolated cabin. Another Goliath Sold o Our Trade In: 1956 Ford Customline 2-Dr. Sedan $1595.00 Black & Ivom Eitra Sharp W.W. Fordomatic DRIVE MORE MOTORS 302 East Main Ph. TU 4-357 ' i I' . swS v S-'j, J" -.,..-ita Good Crowd Sees Queen Tryouis Ai Fairgrounds A record crowd of some 1,500 spectators gathered Sunday after noon at the county fairgrounds to witness the Queens' Tryouts, at which Delores Cotton won the jun ior rodeo queen title as reported .Monday. The afternoon began with a grand entry. Mary Drace and San dra Woodward of the Junior Rid ing Club carried the colors, and members of the Saddle Club es corted the junior and senior queen contestants into the stadium. Oth er participants in the colorful event were members of the Sher iff's Posse and the 4-H Wranglers and Junior Broncs. In the musical chair event which followed, Fred Stilwell took the first place ribbon, followed by Bill Stevenson, second place, and Billy Sunday, inira. First place in the stallion class 'Under saddle) event was taken by Allen Forman. Don Colwell was runnerup, and Bob Moisio, third Next on the program were the Yreka Girl, 7, Drowning Victim YREKA Rose Marie Patterson 7-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Patterson, Yreka, was drowned Sunday about 2:45 p.m. in the Shasta River near the Dry Gulch bridge. Rose Marie and her parents had gone swimming at a popular swim ming hole on the river. It was thought she stepped into a deen hole. Efforts to recover the body bv nearby fishermen were futile and it wasnt until 4 p.m. that David Walker. 17-year-old boy Irom Yre ka, rocoverd the body on his first dive. Ike Names New Post Director WASHINGTON (AP) Presi. dent Eisenhower picked Leo A. Hoegh, now Civil Defense admin istrator, to head the new office of Defense and Civilian Mobilization Tuesday. The new agency will oDen for business July 1 under terms of a presidential reorganization pro gram merging the Office of De fense Mobilization and the Fed eral Civil Defense Administration. The merger became legally ef fective Monday midnight. ii- J J,...' -ieuw Ii.MtiiMIliaHuaL. 1 SILVER DOLLAR SPECIALS World's Most Powerful Home VACUUM CLEANERS The moit emoting cleaner ever developed cleam deeper, faster, easier! Apex spent more than $100,000.00 In re search to develop thi a ma ling, more efficient type motor. APEX World'i Most Powerful Home Vacuum Cleaner Model 5502 Reg. 169.95 13995 Good Housekeeper Mada by Apes Regular 139.95 Apei Model 5561 Regular 89.95 Now Only . . . 89" 69 95 TERMS TRADES r - j --.1 fcwTyrTI .DEAN'S 1 . ; V "VST I ' fit ,,1, Junior Queen tryouts. These were followed by an exhibition bucking event which featured Darretl Har rington on Big Enough, Golbert Robels on Little Boy, Lonnie Han over on Goldie, and Billy Steven son on Long Ears. Then it was the turn of the senior queen candidates to show what they could do with their horses. The results of these tryouts are not yet known as, unlike the junior queen, the senior queen and her princesses are not chosen sole ly on the basis of horsemanship. Poise and personality aocount for 40 per cent of their scores, these factors being judged at Saturday night's Queen's Ball. Allen Forman. Starla Beymer and Sandra Woodward were win ners of the pleasure class event which followed, in that order. Then came the announcement of the judges' decision in the junior queen race. Dolores dismounted and in front of an honor euard of the other candidates received a, bouquet of red roses from Warren" Woodard. president of the Junior Hodeo Committee. Mrs. Warren Parr of the Jay-C-ettes presented the prizes which included a saddle donated by the Town and Country Merchants, a leather jacket donat ed by various Klamath Falls mer chants, a silver tray offered by Beach's Jewelers, a Western shirt given by The Town Shop, and a Stetson hat and pair of moccasins presented by the Klamath Saddle Club and the Jay-C-ettes. Queen Delores will make her next public appearance at the Johnny Cash dance on Wednesday night, and she will lead the Kid dies Parade on Saturday morning. The afternoon ended with a trail ride event won by Rosemary Ray mond. Pat Harket took second place, and third was split five ways, between David Trapp, Jer ry Woody, Wayne McFadden, Ha zel Jo DeLamater and Debbie Harkey. Friendly Helpfulness T Ivtry Craed and Purs Ward's Klamath Funeral Home Marguerite M. Ward and Sent 925 Hiqh TU 2-4404 """Si APEX Model 5539-SAVE NOW Coma in To4ov Or Call TU 4-7191 122 South 9th 81