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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1958)
PAGB 4 A HERAyi AND ttEWS KI AitATlf f .tJL. WrftGON WEDNESDAY. .TUNE 25, 1058 MARKETS and FINANCE Editor'i Note: The market re. porn listed below are yester day's markets, not today's, and are . carried as a service to those subscribers In early de livery nines which make publi cation of dally markets Impos sible within the rout schedule. STOCKS WALL STREET NEW YORK (API The stock market underwent its second straight decline Tuesday in mod erately active trading. Assorted issues advanced. Most key stocks showed losses of fractions to about a point. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks droppe dSO cents to $172 10 with the industrial sdown $1.20. the rails down $1.40 and the utilities unchanged. Volume was 2.5fi0.000 s h a r es compared with 2.340,000 Monday NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation 9 Allied Chemical 77 Allis Chalmers . 22 "4 Aluminum Co. America 69 4 American Airlines 19 H American Can 48 4 American Cyanamide 44 American Motors 12 4 American Tel. k Tel. 176 American Tobacco 88 Anaconda Copper 45 Bethlehem Steel 40 ' Boeing Airplane Co. 42 L' Borg Warner 30 j Burroughs Corp. 46 4 California Packing 64 Canadian Pacific 27 Caterpillar Tractor 62 Celanese Corporation 16 3a Chrysler Corporation 47 ', Cities Service 55 i Consolidated Edison 55 v Crown Zellerbach 43 H Curtiss Wright . 24 4 Douglas Aircraft 56 du Pont de Nemours 183 Eastman Kodak 108 ?i Emerson Radio 6 Ford Motor 41 V General Dynamics 57 Wi General Electric 58 V General Foods 62 Vi General Motors 39 Vi Goodyear Tire .. 80 ',1 International Harvester 34 Vi International Paper 97 ti Johns Manville 38 Kaiser Aluminum 26 Libby, McNeill 10 Vt Loew's Incorporated 16 Vi Montgomery Ward 36 New York Central 16 ', Northern Pacific 40 Pacific Gas & Electric 56 Pacific Tel. & Tel. 131 14 Penney (J.C.) Co. 93 Vi Pennsylvania R.R. 13 Pepsi Cola Co. 24 Philco Corp. 15 Vi Polaroid 58 V Rayonier Incorp. 16 Republic Steel 45 V4 Reynolds Metals 41 Richfield Oil 83 V. Safeway Stores Inc. 30 '. St. Regis ii Scott Paper Co. 66 ',1 Sears Roebuck & Co. v 29 W Shell Oil Co. 74 Socony Mobil Oil 50 T Southern Pacific 44 Standard Oil Calif. 51 Standard Oil N.J. 53 Studebaker Packard 5 Vi Sunshine Mining 8 Swift & Company 33 Thompson Products 48 Ti Transamerica Corp. 42 Vi Twentieth Century Fox 29 Vi Union Oil Company 54 Vi Union Pacific 28 United Air Lines 26 ?i United Aircraft 62 United Corporation 8 V4 United States Plywood 33 United States Steel 63 V Warner Pictures 18 ! Western Union Tel. 19 i Westinghouse Air Brake 22 Vi Westinghouse Electric 55 Vi Woolworth Company 47 GRAINS CHICAGO (API - A sudden burst of buying in the final few minutes of trading lifted all wheat contracts well over to the plus side on the Board of Trade Tues day. Wheat closed Vk-4 cent a bush el higher. July 184; corn l higher, July 1 33'4-'i: oats -H higher, July 63H: rye 'j-l cent higher. July 1 2Sli; soybeans lower to ' higher, July 2.24S: lard 7 cents a hundred pounds higher to 5 cenls lower, July 12.12. WHEAT Open lllsh Low Close Jly 1 8.1 4 1 84 i 1 82 1 84 Sep 1 B5 J4 1.86 ' 1 85 1 86 S Dec 1 Ml , 1 92 v, 1 90 4 1 92 Mar 1 94 4 1 94 4 1 93 4 1 94 May 1 12 1 93 1 91 1 92 Rain, Cool Air Give State Ease From Prolonged Heat By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rain and cool ocean air gave all of Oregon relief Tuesday from a prolonged heat wave. Western Oregon began to gel it during the day Monday. By night fall, the rain had swept across Oregon to the Idaho border. Before il reached there. Pendle ton had recorded another scorch ing day with a temperature of 94. Baker had a high ol 91 In contrast, Roseburg's high Monday was 65. Salem's was 67. Before Ihe rain came and brought at least a temporary end lo the series of range fires plaguiO: much of Eastern Oregon, a new blaze swept over the Hen Coombes ranch five miles west of Echo. It destroyed the ranch house and other buildings at a loss estimated by Coombes at $20,000 It burned 3uo acres of wheat and 140 Ions of baled hay. The fire, thought to have been started by a rigareile Hipped Irnm a car passing on old Highwny 30, leaped a 20-foot duch under Ihe pressure of a 47-mile an-hour wind in reaching Ihe ranch yard Fire men from Echo and Sianfield as LIVESTOCK KLAMATH FALLS . LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET June 23, 1958 Receipts: Cattle 431. Hogs 87. Compared last Monday market steady on all classes. Fed Steers: Good-Choice. 23.35- 27.60; std. 24.60-25.00. Fed Heifers: Choice. 26.50-27.25: good 25.50-26 00; std. 22.75-25.00. Cows: Std., 20.10-22.75; cnicl., 18 50-21.00; utility 17 00-19 6"; can- ners and cutters, 14.10-17.00. Bulls: Utility and Cmcl.. 22 50- 24 00. Veal Calves: Baby Calves 15.00- 38 00 per head. Stockers and Feeders: Steers, Medium-Good, 650-800 lbs.. 24.90 25.60; heifers, medium-good, over 650 lbs., 23.50-25.35 ; 550-650 lbs 24.70-26.30: steer calves, good, 27.00 28.00; heifer calves, medium-good 25.50-27.60; feeder cows, 15 30-17.00; stock cows, pairs 177. 5(1-255. 00. Hogs: U.S. 1 k 2 1160-220 lbs.) 23.60-24.50; sows 18.60: weaner pigs, 13.00-23.00. Reported by Ray Petersen, coun ty agent. PORTLAND 'API USDA) Cattle salable 200; includes about 85 head steers; trade active, fully steady; some cows strong: load average-choice 999 lb steers 29.00 load 1.163 lb 28.50; two truck lots low choice 954 lb 28 25, 1.216 lb 28 00; heifers scarce; canner and cutter cows mostly 15.00-17.00 with heavy cutters up to 17.50; light canners down to 13.00; few utility cows 11.50-1950; bulls scarce. Calves salable 50; trade rather slow; early sales about steady with Monday's weak-l.OO lower close; good and choice vealers 26.00-30.50; cull and utility 16.00 20.00; heavy calves scarce. Hogs salable 300; trade rather slow; early sales about steadv lew U.S. No. 1-2 butchers 180-235 lb 26.25-26.50; couple lots Monday 26.75; mixed U.S. No. 1-3 lots 25.00-26.00; heavier and lighter weights scarce; few No. 1-2 sows 270-330 lb 21.50-22.50. Sheep salable 800: trade rather slow; early trade weak to 50 cents lower but damp fleeces a faUor choice nearby spring lambs most ly 21.50, few 21.75; a 157-head lot choice 88 lb range lambs 22.50; mixed good and choice grades 20.00-20.50; good and choice feeder lambs fully steady at 18.00-18.50: cull to good slaughter ewes 3.50 7.50. CHICAGO (AP) Butcher hogs were steady to 25 cents lower Tuesday but 19 head of 200-225 lb No. 1 grade sold at $24.85. Cattle receipts of 9,500 head were the largest for a Tuesday this year. Steers were unevenly 25 cents higher to 25 lower. Top of $31.50 was paid for a part load of prime grade. The high choice and mixed choice offerings brought $28.75-30.50. Standard kin were $23.50-24.50. Vealers grading good and choice sold at $28-31. Slaughter lambs and ewes were steady. High choice and prime spring lambs were $28.25-27. Salable receipts 7,5lin hogs, 9,500 cattle, 200 calves, 1,500 sheep. STOCKTON (UPIFSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 200. Standard to good grass slaughter heifers 23.-50-24.50. Commercial cows 18.50- 19.50, utility 17.50-19, canners and cullers 14-17.50. Utility and com mercial bulls under 1,675 lbs 22 23. Calves salable 25. Good and low choice slaughter calves 300-500 lbs 26-27.50, standard 24. Good 200 Ih vealer 28. Good and choice stock steer calves 27-29. Good and choice stock calves 26-27. Hogs salable 200. Market not es tablished. Sheep salable 400. Good and choice wooled and shorn spring slaughter lambs 22-23. Good and choice shorn slaughter ewes 5-6 50. Cull and utility 3-5. POTATOES CHICAGO (AP) Potatoes ar rivals 140; on track 3:i6; total U.S. shipments 586. Old-steady; ld:iho Russets 4 25. New Long whiles slightly stronger: Round Reds firm: Arizona Hound Reds 4 15 55: California Long Whiles 4.00 75; California Round Reds 4 25 50. LOS ANGELES UTI-KSMNSi No Oregon potato sales or arrivals today. SAN FRANCISCO (LTI-KSMNS Potatoes: Long Whites V S. 1A 2-inch min imum 100 Ihs Kern County 3.50 3 75. well as neighboring ranchers (ought the fire. Mopping up on other fires both in the Hoardman area and east ward toward Baker was completed Monday. The rain which (ell in the fire areas was generally light but more showers were forecast lor Tuesday. There were some areas of heavy rainfall. North Bend iad 127 inches in the 24 hours to 4 30 a. .11. Tuesday. Koschurg's rainfall to taled 1.16. The Hosohiirg rain came in an early morning deluge, nearly an inch falling in two hours. At Klamath Falls, the sun began to break through Tuesday morn ing. The rain brought some damage lo hay still in Ihe fields. Douglas County Agent Wayne Mosher said additional rain could ruin the rest ol it. The Weather Bureau said that Ihe disturbance bringing the rain and cooling air is moving s'eadily eastward That means clearing weather Tuesday night and some warming Wednesday. Solon Blasts 1 Lumber Group WASHINGTON IAPI Sen. Richard L. Neuberger D-0re Wednesday accused Ihe National Lumber Manufacturers Assn. of reprehensible conduct in its oppo sition to his. bill aimed at halting early, forced sale ol Klamath Indian Reservation timberlands in Oregon. He said alio that the association is using an Oreson resident as leader in opposition to the legis lation "in an effort to embarrass me." Neuberger made his comments at a news conference in which he made public a letter he has writ ten Nils Hult, Junction City, Ore., lumberman who. as chairman of the associations forest manage ment committee, was author of a bill to the House committee, op posing the bill. The background of the contro versy, Neuberger said, is this: Congress has provided for termi nation of government trusteeship over the Klamath Indians in Ore gon, who have an 800,000-acre res ervation on which is located more than four billion feet of timber. Some 77 per cent of the Klamath Indians have asked for liquidation of their share of the assets so that they may receive cash. Under the present law, the lands must be sold at the end of this session of Congress. The Neuberger bill, passed by the Senate and pending before the House committee, requires that purchasers of the 7 per cent of thr land to be sold, pay the ap praised value and agree to prac tice sustained-yield forestry for 1O0 years. If private interests would not purchase the land, the government would. The bill also would provide authorization for 90 million dollars which Neuberger said would pay the 77 per cent of Indians desiring cash. Neuberger contended the associ alion waited until after the Senate hearings on this bill before sub mitting its views. He told Hult. "It Is disturbing to me that you have let your good name be used" by the association "in an effort to thwart reasonable solution to stern problems" posed by the Klamath Termination Act Neuberger said if the bill is not passed, 77 per cent of the timber- land must be sold and this will depress lumber prices. Lumber Rate Meet Sought SALEM (AP) Public Utilities Commissioner Howard Morgan Wednesday asked the Interstate Commerce Commission to hold hearings in Portland and San Francisco in the Southern Pacific railroad s lumber rate case. The railroad proposed to reduce its lumber rates from Oregon to California and Arizona, but the ICC suspended them. Morgan wrote Ihe commission that the SP's action is a belated clfort to eliminate maladjustments caused by "the constant applica tion of percentage increases on lumber and other commodities since the end of World War II.' Morgan said ho has received many letters on both sides of the controversy. Hearings, he added, should be held on the West Coast to give all interests a chance lo be heard. The percentage increases since 1946. Morgan said, has caused a diversion of lumber traffic from Ihe rails to other forms of trans porlation. "We can agree." Morgan wrote, "that Ihe reduced lumber rates suspended by ICC arc in lact a move, although a belated one, to correct the presently maladjusted rale situation existing between Oregon, California and Arizona points, and that shippers of lunv her located along Ihe SP lines have a real interest in ironing out Ihe inequities which have arisen. "Nevertheless, it is apparent that those very inequities have en couraged the investment of sub stantial sums in mills based upon other transportation arrange ments. 'Auto Buyer' Given 5 Years A man who "tried out" a used c.T from a local lot alter telling I salesman he might buv it got five years in the state penitenti ary for Ihe stunt yestcrd.iv. Ross L. Rlackwcll. had pled guilty June 16 to not returning the car. but driving it to Calitorn instead. Blackweoll told Circuit Court Judge David It. Vandcnherge he got out of Icxas Slate Prison onlv live months acn for "doing Ihe same thing " He also has been a guest at the Ohio Slate Peniten tiary. CM SE I NkvMIWN The city fire department joined the South Suburban Fire Depart ment in answering n call at .lutu South Sixth Slreet yesterday oiler noon, hul firemen armed too late to save the vacant hmisr. In-longing to Nick Brown, in which the hlae began. Cause oi the fire is not known. " Tho DO I. will be CLOSED Thursday Morning, June 26th OPEN 1 P.M. Thursday ftfrernoon MRS. MELVIN MILLER Miller Last Rites Slated Funeral services for Virginia Lee Howard Miller, wife of Melvin Mil ler of this city, who died June 22 in Portland, will be held from Sacred Heart Church at 9:30 a.m. Thursday. June 26. when a requiem mass will be celebrated. Monsig- nor 1. P. Casey will officiate. Concluding services and vault en tombment will be in Mt. Calvarv Cemetery. Active pallbearers will be Rob ert Kent. Dr. Harry Fredricks, George Flitcraft. Bill Nash, Elbert Stiles, all of this city, and Wesley Lorenz. Burney, Calilorma. Honoray pallbearers will be Glen J. Lorenz. Burnev, Eston Balsiger, Thomas E. Walters, Jack O'Neill, George Brosterhous and Robert Egge. Funeral arrangements are in charge of Ward s Klamath Funeral Home. Five Die In Car Accident YORK, Neb. (AP) A colli- sion between a station wagon and a semi-trailer truck near here Tuesday took the lives of five Peshastin, Wash., residents. Killed were Mrs. W. J. Smith- son. a2: William Zeidler, ? his wife. Barbara, 30, and their daughters Connie, 5. and Claire, Mrs. Smithson was Mrs. Zei- dlcr's mother. Slightly injured were Ginger Smithson, 13, daughter of Mrs. Smithson, and Cynthia Zeidler, 10. the truck driver, Duane York. 29, Barneslon. Neb., and h i s passenger, Frederick Ehlers. 25. Beatrice, Neb., escaped serious injury. Investigators said another truck ad just passed the semi-trailer ard Y'ork applied his brakes when Ihe other vehicle pulled in front of him. York's truck jack-knifed. Offi cers said the station wagon driver, who was not determined, pulled onto Ihe shoulder of the road to avoid the crash hut was unable to avoid the big truck. The Washinglonians were re turning home after a vacation trip to Herrington, Kan. Woman Jailed For Drunkenness Chorlcne Eggsman. who got out of the state penitentiary only four months ago. was arrested again yesterday, this time for drunken ness. The woman, also known as Char lene Hood, was sentenced lo 15 days in jail or a $.15 fine by Judge D. E. an Vaclor this morning. She served three years at Sa lem for assault with a dangerous weapon upon one Rowland Lalo in Lhiloquin. Porter Introduces Forest Measure WASHINGTON (API Rep. Porter ilMJrei introduced lues- day a bill to allow extension of Ihe Siskiyou National Forest in Southern Oregon to include banks of Ihe Rogue River. He said its purpose is to permit exchanges of land to safeguard scenic areas along the Rogue. CLASS KKIMON YREKA The l:mt class of Yrcka High School is planning on a class reunion on June 2li al Ihe Elks Hall in Yrcka. A smorsas bord. prepared by Charles O'Don- noll of rcka. will highlight Ihe allair. Hostesses will be Mis. Ber nii'p (Miller1 Burch, Mrs. Joanne 'Costelloi Johnson, bolh ol Mon tague. Mrs. Norma Joan 'John son' Mi-Murphy, Mrs. Dolores 'Sal vador' Clayton. Mrs Lucy 'Har ris' Moore. Mrs. Winnie Ueal1 Miller, all of Yrcka. There were 70 members in that year's class, and Ihe hostesses expect that a fair malnntv will hp at the rp. I union. MILLER CO. rr i mi A ! G&llftdzt fyheppearance WASHINGTON (AP) . con tinuing argument over the disap pearance of Jesus de Galindez has brought new charges that a miss ing American flyer manufactured evidence "as a cloak for other of his operations." New York attorney Morris Ernst did not specify the opera tions he attributed to Gerald L. Murphy. He referred-to evidence made public this week which Kep. Charles O. Porter (D-Orel said backed "up to the hilt" earlier reports of a connection between Murphy and Galindez. Murphy formerly lived at Eugene. Ore. Galindez. an outspoken critic of the Dominican Republic regime of dictator Rafael L. Trujillo, dis appeared in New York March 12, 1956. Opponents of Trujillo con tend Murphy spirited Galindez to the Dominican Republic and that he was assassinated there by Tru jillo agents. Murphy himself has been missing since December of that year. Porter made public this week some notes reportedly written by .uurpny along with a notebook and a pilot's logbook. It was on these that Ernst commented in a telegram to Porter Tuesday night. If you are interested in t h e UN Troops Again Face War On Anniversary Of Korea TOKYO (LTD Today is the eighth anniversary of the Com munist attack against the Repub lic of Korea. And on this anniversary of the surprise attack in the Far East. U.N. troops once again face the possibility of making another stand against aggression this time in Lebanon. The Korean War began at dawn. June 25. 1930. when North Korean Communist troops and tanks smashed their way south across the 38th Parallel. It ended July 27, 1953, when the armistice was signed after Communist "volunteers" had poured into the battle in much the same way Communists threaten to cnler the Middle East trouble zone today. To meet and turn back the Crater Camping Sites Available Sixty camp sites are available for use now at the new Mazama camp grounds in Crater Lake Na tional Park, according to Tom Wil liams, park superintendent. Anoth er 29 camp sites will be ready for use in a short time. Williams said, in anticipation of the biggest sea son the park has ever had. At Tuesday s bid opening for con struction of nine dwelling units. two comfort stations and a cov ered entranceway to the adminis tralion building, a bid of $296,600 submitted by Ausland Construction Company of Grants Pass was low, Williams announced. Other bidders were Salter and Klein of Grants Pass, bidding $371,566, and H. Barnharl Con- miction Company of Medford, S323.875. This construction is part of the Mission 66 program of the national park system. California Weather By United Press International San Francisco Bay Area: Fair and slightly warmer through Thursday except morning fog near coast: high today San Francisco 73. Oakland 78. San Mateo 80. San Rafael 82; low tonight 55-60: lighter than normal westerly winds. Northern California: Fair and warmer through Thursday; coast al winds northwesterly 12-25 m.p.h. today and 8-16 m.p.h Thursday; morning fog near coast. Ml. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Fair and warmer through Thursday Sacramento Valley: Fair and warmer through Thursday; high bolh days 85-95; low tonight 58-68: variable winds 7-14 m.p.h.; lower humidity. Northwestern California: Fair through Thursday except morning fog near coast: warmer inland: high today and low tonight I'kiah 89-56. Santa Rosa 86-53. Napa 86-55; northwest winds 12-24 m.p.h. near coast today becoming 8-16 m.p.h. Thursday. SMALL FIRES Three small forest fires were pu' out without trouble Tuesday atternoon. Ihe Klamath Forest Protective Association reports. One was located on the Geary Ranch, another on the north fork of the Sprague River and the third near Deep Creek in the Kings Cabin area .Ski yniitir-iia Lucas Furniture Will Be Closed All Day Thursday In Memory of Virginia Howard Miller Daughter, Sister, Niece and Cousin 1 EU, -a a H truth." Ernst told Porter, "you will admit that Murphy undoubt edly madt these notes and state ments as a cloak for other of his operations with which you are familiar." Ernst added that these "show that he received $25,000 about six months previous to the Galindez disappearance and that he also deposited an additional $10,000 in one of his three bank accounts around the date of Galindez' dis appeannse." Porter replied that he knew nothing of the operations Ernst mentioned, and called on the law yer to "demonstrate their rele vance. Murphy's parents reside in Eu gene, in Porter's home district. The congressmen has pushed ef forts to determine what became of the flyer. Ernst, on the other hand, was hired by Trujillo lo investigate the Galindez mystery and reported he found nothing to support Porter's charges of a link between Tru jillo and the disappearance of Galindez and Murphy. He accused Porter of an ap parently passionate desire to es tablish in the public mind that Murphy) was a kidnaper." Communist threat in Korea, the United Nations sent manpower and machines to bolster the brave but poorly trained and ill-equipped Kepubuc of Korea forces. The countries contributing armed forces to the U.N. army in Korea included the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Turkey, Australia. Thailand, Phil ippines. France, Greece, New Zea land, The Netherlands, Colombia. Belgium, Ethiopia, Union of South Africa and Luxembourg. U.N. troops, fighting with the Republic of Korea forces, sut fered 151,728 casualties. These in eluded 29,550 Americans. 717 Turks and 670 United Kingdom personnel killed, other U.N. un its also suffered many dead and wounded. U. S. . Defense Department sources estimated the North Kor ean and Chinese Communist dead and wounded amounted to more than 1.400,000. Property damage in both North and South Korea was great, with practically everything destroyed The U.N. - police action in Kor ea bought peace but not total vie tory. Korea remained divided with many in South Korea and else where bitter because the U. N army had not fought to complete the job of unifying the country under the Republic of Korea winch was created by U.N. -super vised elections in 1948. Oregon Weather Eastern Oregon Clear through Wednesday night and Thursday; warmer. Low Wednesday night 44 54; high Thursday 72-82. Western Oregon Fair Wednes day night and Thursday except night and morning cloudiness in north; warmer in afternoon. Low Wednesday night 52-58: high Thursday 75-85 except 65-70 along coast. Coastal winds westerly to northwesterly, 5-15 m.p.h. increas ing locally to 20-25 m.p.h. on south coast during afternoon. Northern C a 1 i f o r n i a Fair through Thursday; rising temper atures. Coastal winds northwest erly. 8-16 m.p.h. Morning fog near coast. Northern Oregon beaches Mostly cloudy through Thursday except morning cloudiness. Tern perature range 50-68. Northwest erly coastal winds. 5-15 m.p.h. Grants Pass and vicinity Fair and warmer through Thursday Low Wednesday night 55-60; high lhursday 8o-90. Tulelake area Fair through Thursday. Low Wednesday night 42-50: high Thursday about 80. Baker and vicinity P a r 1 1 y cloudy through Thursday. Low Wednesday night 44-50; high lhursday ,0-o. Fire Weather Increasing fire dancer Thursday Lowest humidity 40-45 per cent in north. 2-3a per cent in south Winds gentle and variable, becom ing light northerly Thursday. How To Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly in Place ! Do your fuls teeth innoy and em- bsrrtss bv slipplnz, dropping or wob bllnft whfn you est, Uuh or talk? , Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on , your plates. This alkaline inon-artd) ( powder holds ftlse teeth more firmly i nd more comlortablv. No Bummy. j gooey, pastv taste or feeling. Doe not i eoiir. Checks "nltte odor" (dentur brevh). Get FASTEETH today at I any a rug counter. i DON DEAL Record Star On Tonight Don Deal, who is one of the featured artists in the Johnny Cash unit that is appearing at the Old Armory tonight, has become quite popular through his recording of Diane. His current record ol Blind Date" is also getting a great number of spins, both by disc jockeys and on jukeboxes. Johnny Cash will also feature his Tennessee Two, Wally Lewis and Sunny Burgess, and "The Pac ers on tonight s show. Prior to Ihe show, Johnny is scheduled -for an afternoon appearance on KOTI-TV. with a number of the contestants who are running for queen of the Fourth of July Rodeo. At 6:30 this evening. Cash will host the junior queen, and the sen ior queen contestants with their chaperons at a dinner in their honor at the Chuck Wagon Cafe. Last Friday night, Johnny and his troupe set a new all time at tendance record at the Bostonia Ballroom in San Diego; they then set a new attendance record at the Town Hall Party in Los An geles on Saturday night. New list ings just received rate Johnny's current hit record "Guess Things Happen That Way." as No. 15 throughout the nation. Driver Collides With Police Car Claylon C. Voight. 50, was the most surprised motorist in town yesterday when he turned out of alley on Seventh Street and collided with another car not just any old car, but the police variety. Patrolman Victor P. Murdock whu doesn't always get to acci dent scenes so fast, climbed out of the squad car and observed sadly that its shiny front end was caved in to some extent. Another officer arrived to in vestigate the1 mishap and. noted Murdock had laid down over 35 feet of heavy skid marks. Voight was arrested for failing to yield the right of way. He ap pears in court Friday. The wreck occurred on Seventh between Main and Pine streets at 5:35 p.m. Rector's Art Work To Go On Sale , The paintings and etchings of the late Fred C. Wissenhach. onetime rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church this cilyand other items of his collection of antiques and minerals, are to be sold in Bend on July 1. Mrs. Wissenbach will be in Bend at that lime. The collection will include an tique furniture and other miscel laneous antiques, a large collec tion of agate cabachons, agatized and opalized slabs of wood, thun der eggs and many other speci mens ot the gem materials of Ore. gon and the West. The sale will he at 441 East Third Street in Bend, on High way 97. Does jobs ordinary vehicles can't handle ! The Universal 'Jeep' takes ordinary jobs in stride. Then, for the tough ones, with the extra traction of its 4-wheel drive, and a special low gear range when needed, it takes personnel or cargo through mud. snow, sand or soft earth on or of! the road, in all kinds of weather. For travel it highway speeds it shifts into conventional 2-wheel drhe. Thisversatile vehicle hauls hevily loidrd traile rs-and with power lake -off operates a wide variety of mobile equipment. 4WHEEL-DR1VE UNIVERSAL Jeep WILLYS . . . world's largest miters of (-wheel drive vehicles Come in for a demnnMration today, . Tune-In MAVERICK Sunday Afternoons 4:30 P.M. BASIN MOTORS' 424 So. fth St. Giant Squid under Probe CORAL GABLES. Fla. (UPD Scientists at the University o! Miami Marine Laboratory today sludied the battered body of a 43-foot giant squid found on the ocean surface in the Bahamas. Dr. Gilbert Voss. marine sci entist at the laboratory, said the 250-pound squid was partially mu tilated, apparently the result of ' a furious undersea battle with a sperm whale. He said the squid was probably attacked by sharks after surfacing. Voss pointed out that giant squids live deep in the seas, usually below 20 fathoms, and are rarely seen on the surface. A sperm whale, which feeds on squids, prohably drove it to th surface after the battle, he said. The giant squid, found Tuesday by a U. S. Fish and Wildlife Serv ice patrol boat, was the largest ever taken in this area. Voss said the find proved that the giant squids migrate to the Caribbean. Scientists and biologists placed the body in chemicals to preserve it for study. Fire Chiefs (Continued from page 1) concern. First, that the top Soviet scientists and engineers are equal to those of any nation. He said that such scientists can be produced only on the basis of solid experi ence. and that the United States must learn to grow and preserve teams, rather than turn research and development projects on and off at will. He said that more in ternational cooperation would be necessary for the Free World to produce sufficient scientists to meet Ihe Soviet challenge. Secondly, the Soviet use of con trolled education pays off, accord ing to Purvine, even though it is directed solely toward the aims of the rulers. He said that Ameri cans must recognize that freedom is not an absolute . concept, but relative "one man's freedom must not interfere with that o! others," and suggested that we re evaluate our education system, with an eye to Soviet emphasis on science and languages. thirdly, Soviet regimentation has the one long range advantage of singleness of purpose, as opposed to the irresponsibility to which Americans are subject. He men- tioned several instances of Ameri cans' "blowing hot and cold" es pecially on Ihe satellite question, and observed that we really should not be satisfied to have a 20-pound ball in orbit while the Russians have one weighing nearly a ton. Purvine concluded with a warn-' ing that, although in general, our science is as advanced as Soviet science, we are behind in the sci ence of weapons. According to the speaker, there are four reasons for this: we started too late; we didn't push hard enough; we did not know, or would not believe, that the Soviets were ahead; and it takes us too long to get any thing done twice as long to get a weapon in production as in Russia. He blamed the last fact on the proliferation of committees and bureaucrats, which keeps our sci entists busier answering ques tions than working. The banquet ended with films presented by P.ichard K. Willmore, Los Angeles, of the Crown Coach Corporation. Eddie Chiloquin Out, In Jail Edison Chiloquin must like be ing in the county jail better than being out of it. He was released yesterday at noon after doing 57 days with a fine of $100 for drunkenness. But just seven hours later, Ed ison was back in custody again, once more for being under the influence. He rejoined friends this morn ing, after receipting for 30 days and a $100 fine. CJ-S Vnictnl 'tp Klamath Ftfli, Or. qsy-trT,.1" " n