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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1958)
o PAGE 4 A HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON WEDNESDAY. JULY 2, 195 MARKETS and FINANCE ifliiPC fainht By Deputies Editor's Note: The market re. porli listed below are yeiter day'i market!, not today's, and are carried aa a service to those subscribers In early de livery tones which make publi cation of dally markets Impos sible within tho route schedule. LIVESTOCK STOCKS WALL STREET NEW YORK AP) Oils paced an irregular stock market advance Tuesday which came close to bringing the average back to its 1958 high. The Associated Press average of 61) stocks rose 40 cents to $175.20 with the industrials up 10 cents, the rails up 40 cents to a new high for the year and the utilities up 30 cents, also to a new '58 high. Volume was 2.600.000 shares compared with 2.820,000 Monday. NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation 10 Vi Allied Chemical 78 ' Allis Chalmers 23 ft Aluminum Co. America 69 American Airlines 20 American Can 4!l American Cyanamide 44 7 American Motors 12 American Tel. & Tel.- 1711 V, American Tobacco 88 V Anaconda Copper 45 Armco Steel 50 Atchison Railroad 22 Vs Bethlehem Steel 41 '-i Boeing Airplane Co. 43 Bnrg Warner 31 Burroughs Corp. 34 California Packing 48 'A Canadian Pacific 28 Caterpillar Tractor 63 V Celanese Corporation 16 Chrysler Corporalion 47 Hfc Cities Service 56 ' Consolidated Edison 55 Crown Zellcrbach 48 Curtiss Wright 25 K Douglas Aircraft 57 du Pont dc Nemours 186 Eastman Kodak 111 El Paso, NG 32 Emerson Radio 7 'm Ford Motor 41 General Dynamics 57 i General Electric 50 General Foods 63 " General Motors 39 Georgia Pac Co. 38 Goodyear Tire 82 V, International Harvester 34 International Paper 98 Johns Manville 39 Kaiser Aluminum 25 '4 Kennecott Copper 8 Libby, McNeill 10 Lockheed Aircraft 47 Loew's Incorporated 17 " Montgomery Ward 38 'a Pacific Gas & Electric 56 Pacific Tel. k Tel. 132 ',i Penney (J.C.) Co. 93 V4 Pennsylvania R.R. 13 v, Pepsi Cola Co. 24 Philco Corp. 16 Polaroid 57 Pugct Sound P 4 h 31 Radio Corporation 35 Rayonier Incorp. 16 Republic Steel 47 Vt Richfield Oil 88 Sears Roebuck & Co. 29 Shell Oil Co. 76 Sinclair Oil 58 Socony Mobil Oil 51 M Southern Pacific 46 Sperry Rand 18 Standard Oil Calif. 52 Standard Oil N.J. 55 Studcbaker Packard 5 V Swift & Company 34 Thompson Products 51 Transamcrica Corp. 42 Twentieth Century Fox 29 Union Oil Company 47 3 Union Pacific 29 United Air Lines 27 Vi United Corporation 8 l Western Union Tel. 20 Westinghouse Air Brake 22 Weslinghouse Electric 57 Woolworth Company 47 KLAMATH FALLS LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET June 30, 1958 Receipts: Cattle 361. Hogs 96. Compared last Monday slaughter cattle steady; stocker calves and light feeders 1.00-2.00 lower. Fed Steers: Choice 26.10-27.80; good 25.60-26.10; std. 22.50-24.28. Fed Heifers: Choice. 26.10-27.70; good 24.60-25.60; std. 22.60-24.20. Cows: Std., 19.85-2X00; cmcl., 18.- 50-20.50; utility 16.00-1910; cutters, 15.00-16.00. Bulls: Utility and cmcl., 22.50- 23.30. Veal Calves: Good 25.80-26.50; heavy killer calves 26.30-27.10; baby calves 32.-40. Stockers and Feeders: Steers, medium good 23.50-25.20; light, 24.- 90-25.90; heifers, medium, light, 22.60-24.50: steer calves, good 26.- IO-26.2.1; heifer calves, medium good 24.25-25.85; stock cows, pairs, 185.-241. Hogs: U.S. 1 & 2 '180-220 lbs.) 24.50-25.25: sows, 18.70; wcaner pigs, 7.50-17.50. Reported by Ray Petersen, coun ty agent. STOCKTON (UPI-FSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 150. Standard slaughter steers 950-1045 lbs 23.50- 24.50. Commercial cows 18.50-20, utility 18-19, canncrs and cutters 14-18. Good and choice stocker steers 26. Calves salable 25. Good and choice 300-485 lb slaughter calves 26-28. Standard 25-26. Hogs salable 400. No. 1 to 3 190 240 lb butchers 25.50. 240-260 lbs 24.50-25. No 1 to 3 350-600 lb SOWS 16.50-19. Good and choice 50-120 lb feeder pigs 24p36. Sheep salable 300. Good and choice woolcd and shorn spring slaughter lambs 22.23. Good and choice shorn slaughter ewes 5- 6.50. Good and choice woolcd and shorn spring feeder lambs 19-20.50. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI-FSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 350. Standard 980 1310 lb steers 22-24. Good to low- choice 24.50-27. Calves salable 75. Good to low- choice vcalers 27.25-28.75. Go o d and Choice 300-50O lb slaughter calves 27-28.75. PORTLAND (AP) (USDA) Cattle salable 250; includes couple loans iea steers; market about steady; choice grades Monday closed 25-50 lower; most sales 27.75-28.50; canner and cutter cows about steady at 15.00-17.00, heavy Holsteins to 17.50; utility grades 17.50 - 19.00; commercial 19.50-21.00; bulls weak: light cut ters 18.75-22.00; few utility bulls 23.50-25.00. Calves salable 50; early sales about steady with Monday's weak to 1. 00 lower close; good and choice vealers 26.00-30.00; stand ard 20.00-25.00. Hogs salable 300; trade rather slow, about steady, but extreme top 25 lower; U.S. No. 1-2 butchers 180-225 lb 26.00-26.25; mixed No. l-3s 25.50-26.00; sows scarce: sal able 18.50-22.00. Sheep salable 800; market active, steady to 50 higher; choice spring lambs 22.00-22.50: good 20.50-21.50: good and choice feed ers 18.00-19.00; one lot good and choice old crop lambs around nil lb 16.50: cull to good "slaughter ewes 3.50-7.50. PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (LTD Sherilf's deputies searched for clues today to a pair of thefts lhat may have netted a daring burglar more than Jlou.Oiio in jewelry. Gems valued at from $62,000 to S1O0.O0O disappeared from t h e swank Pebble Beach home of Ok lahoma oil millionaire George L. Coleman Jr. Coleman and his wife arc well known in San Francisco. New York and Palm Beach social circles. It is the biggest jewel theft to my memory every reported on the Monterey Peninsula," said Sher iff's Captain Eugene Trenner. In the second theft, more than $3,000 in jewelry was taken from a guest collage at Del Monte Lodge occupied by Mrs. Helen S. Hyman and Mrs. Matilda Salkow, both of Los Angeles. The lodge is only a block away from the Cole man home. Coleman, a golfing friend of Bing Crosby, was not at home when the theft was discovered Mrs. Coleman said she found the jewelry missing Monday night when she pulled open the drawer ul a dresser where the jewels were kept. She said the drawer had not been kept locked. She said the jewelry was in the drawer on Friday. Someone was in the house at all times, she said, cither herself, her daughters Sar ah, 21, and Debbit, 15; or a maid Trenner said there were nc signs of forcible entry into the house." Miss Indian To Partake In Rite KLAMATH AGENCY Miss In dian American of 1955" and 1956 will he part of the agency's entry in the Fourth of July parade in Klamath Falls. Mrs. Rita Filzpal rick, formerly of North Dakota where she is a member of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, was chosen Miss Indian American at the All-Indian celebration in Chcy enne in 1955 and ruled until Au gust, 1956. Barbara Kirk, basketball queen of the Klamalh Agency, will be in costume on horseback for the pa rade, as will her alternate, Jes sie Case, and Marlcne Dumont, last year's queen. Logging Mishap Injures Student time of the accident. GRAINS CHICAGO (API Most wheat futures prices hit new lows for the season on the Hoard of Trade Tuesday as harvest of the winter crop moved toward its peak and a strike shut down all but one oi Kansas City's grain elevators. Wheat finished -l cents a bushel lower, July 1.81-U; corn 2 cenls higher to li lower, July 1.3S-35'ii; oats 4-34 higher. July 6J'; rye 'j lower to higher. July I.2.V4: sovbeans unchanged to 34 higher. July 2.23; laid 28 cents a hundred pounds higher to 17 cents lower, July 12.35. WHEAT Open High Low Close 1 81 ' 1.81 ' 1.8(1 1.81 1.84 a4 1 84 1 83 'a 1.84 1.90 ( 1 '.HI n4 1 89 1.9(1 ' 1 94 'i 1.94 4 1.93 1.93 1.92 h 1 92 'j 1.92 1.92 CHICAGO (AP) Butcher hog receipts Tuesday were ahout 1.500 head less than expected. A tew head of 200 lb sorted No. 1. grades sold at $25.25, highest since July 19.H. Slaughter steers were steadv to 50 cents lower with a few high choice and mixed choice and prime selling at $28.75-30.50. Vealers were steady with the good and choice grades bringing S2B-31. Prices were steady on both old crop and spring slaughter lambs The 85-100 lb hich choice and prime woolcd springs brought $2 28. Salable receipts 5.500 hogs. 6,500 cattle, 101) calves, 1,000 sheep. POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO (UPI-FSMNS) Potatoes: Long Whites U.S. 1A 2-inch mi nimum 100 Ihs Kern County 3.50 3.75. Jly Sep Dec Mar May (AP) Coarse shipment, bulk. PORTLAND grains, 15-day coast delivery: Oats, No. 2. 38-lh while 51.00-52.50 Barley. No 2. 45-lb 11. W. 45.00-47.00 Corn, No.2. E.Y. sh'p't 62.50-63.00 Wheat: No transactions. Tuesday's car receipts: Wheat 79; barley 119: Hour 25; corn 6 oats 33; mill feed 13. Lodg New e To Install Members i nri I'M 11 Si T M Rn Ul ll O". 4 C 1HI l "l t. "I got mad and told Susan I'd never play at her house again so can I invite her -- here?" Darwinian Evolutionary Theory Recalled; Science To Fete 100th Birthday Police Report Knife Fight Police said today two women cut another woman ahout the face and neck with a pocketknife last night in a parked car near the carnival grounds on South Sixth Street. The victim, identified as Phyl lis Hill of Chiloquin, managed to escape her female attackers and was taken to the hospital in a car by "friends." However, before doctors could attend to her, she fled the hospi tal, attendants reported. The officers located the victim a short distance away. They returned her to the hospi tal where she was treated for a three-inch gash on the right cheek another on the left side of the neck, and bruises about the eyes and mouth. So far. the Hill woman has filed no complaint against the aggres sors and no arrests have been made. Officers said the argument in the car, parked in the Safeway South Sixth lot, was over the af fections of a man. The quarrel got started on the carnival grounds but officers put the principals off the grounds be fore violence broke out, they re ported. One of the women reportedly wielded the pocketknife while the other was armed with a souvenir tomahawk obtained at the carni val. There were four men com panions in the car or immediate vicinity at the time, it was re ported. Editors Note: One hundred years ago today the theory of evolution first burst on the scientiiic world. This year sci entists of both East and West will mark the centennial as a great milestone in the advance of human knowledge. In the fol lowing dispatch Darwin's grand son, himself a famoius theoreti cal physicist, discusses the the ory and warns that overpopula tion may drive the world back to the "ruthless processes of natural selection." By SIR CHARLES DARWIN Written for IT I v CAMBRIDGE, Eng. (UPI) It was on the night of July 1, 1858, that tho theory of evolution by natural selection was first made known. This theory now domi nates all biological thinking and its centenary is to be honored by an international congress of zool ogists which will be held in Lon don this year in mid-July. The theory was contained in two short papers given to the Linnae- an Society by my grandfather Charles Darwin, and Altrcd Rus- LAKEVIEW A Southern Ore gon College student was injured in a logging accident about 30 miles southwest of Dog Lake on Monday. fed Pauck, 19-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Pauck of Lakevicw. received a fractured right leg wilh badly mangled flesh Isell Wallace who had independ on the thigh, when a log trutklcntly arrived at the same con- slipped and rolled backwards pin-iclusions. ning him between the truck and! There were two central points the hoister. He is in the Lake-' in the new theory. view Hospital. One was that the whole animal Pauck had been workinff as aland vegetable kingdoms had hooker for the Lakeview Lumber I evolved gradually by modification Products Company for only three! from their ancestors. This theory days during his vacation fromiwas not new. It had been put school. This was the last load of forward by several previous think the day. iers, but the weakness of their No one was iri ti.e truck at thci")collos naa Deen lnat lne coula After this each of them was to be free to publish for himself and Darwin at once got to work to write up what he called an ab stract of a much greater work he was planning. ThoHgh he only called it an abstract, it was in tact that famous book "The Ori gin of the Species." It came out in November 1859, and it at once attracted world-wide interest to the subject. It has been said by some neo- pie mat such a great change in the world s thinking could not really have come about so sudden ly and that the theory must have Been in the air waiting to be ac cepted. It is easy to feel this when new theory has become estab lished, but I recently heard of a fact that rather points the other way. At the end of every year the president of the Linnaean Society used to make an address sum marizing what had happened to tne society during the past year, Prentiss Joins Weed Police Force DUNSMUIU James II. Pren tiss of Weed joined the Dunsmuir police force on Monday. Prentiss has served on Ihc Weed auxiliary police force during his 10 month 'residence there. He comes to Northern California from Orange County. lie replaces Chester Case who resigned last week announcing he was moving lo Oregon. Funerals CHICAGO (AP) Potatoes ar rivals 126; on track 3'.'8; total U.S. hipmcnts 460; supply moderate: demand good; market unsettled; car lot track sales: California long Whiles 3 85-4.40: California Round Reds 3.75: Alabama Round Reds 3.83; Arizona Round Reds 3 75-4.00. FORT luliilim of new irrmtrvr tVw Ota Kebrkah LV' at Fort Jknw a fir My 22, 4ariC tlw mining held wy lie rg:i" m Tuesday rvwinff. Jn 21 w Grainl Elhcl Q.awr.s .rending. riiri' the iiMU-ss m'ssiiw. I , members v.tc. H oetril-ytt :t,j baua da Rue. Theta B.o rl ft .' M I tVt Mi fcWTO tSZJSS' " ' tto :' aVi em ft ftrtjarrt ton ig t w 4-m 4o e..R . twtri.ll ud ln f eslffe by Pcitf Hammer a4 9 tv 1mjj T.fcJ Nita tvans lcrt. Hi Kingsley Field Paper Honored A certificate nf merit has been awarded lo the Kingsley Sentinel base newspaper at Kingsley Field. by the Department of Delense. Lt. Col. Raymond A. Thornton, com mander of the 408th Fighter Group, announces. The Kincsley Sentinel i.s an cich! page monthly newspaper contain mg news ul interest lo the nnli- t;n? and civilian personnel sta tioned at the air lield. lt is edited by M Sgl. Charles J. Henncll, a vetcrmi of 13 years' service with lh U.S. Air Force. The Department of Defense award was en.ute by deft a. r. itmn. ducctor 1 give no reasonable explanation why and how the changes had come about, and in 1858 most leading biologists believed in the fixity of species of animals and plants. The olher main point of the new theory was that it provided a mechanism to explain the changes. This was natural selection, the in tense competition of all living things in the struggle for life which was continually wiping out the less efficient members of any kind bf animal and leaving the stage for those belter equipped to survive. It was this part of the theory lhat could explain how such com plicated mechanisms as the hu man eye, or such elaborate in stincts as those of the bees in a hive, could have been gradually developed. The two authors had come to their conclusions quite independ cntly of one another. Darwin had started his theory more than 20 years before, while serving as a naluralist on the survey ship 11. M.S. Beagle, and for those 20 ROWE LAKEVIEW Mrs. Helena Rowe, 64. died on July 1 in Lakeview while visiting at the home of a brother, Lester (Jack) Hampton She was born at Summer Lake on February 28, 1894. th daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hampton. Her early life was spent in that area on a ranch. Four years auo she mm-pH In tviwrntv from nrfnlk Virginia, to live with a son. In rs '" ,ldu paucnuy ana id.lili.m In her hrnther. survivors OUICIiy worKing 11 Olll. 1 HIS re ini lude Iwn sons CeniL'e t:ril(nn iquircd mm 10 consider almost S. Navy. San Diego and h. J Howe. Eugene; one daughter, Mu riel Robinson, Norfolk, and seven grandchildren. She was a member of the Christian Science Church ,-nd Christian Science funeral serv ices will be held from the Ousley (isterman funeral chapel at 2 p.m. en Thursday, July 3. Interment will follow in Sunset Park. INVITATION TO IKE SITKA, Alaska (Al'i An in vitation has been sent to Presi dent Eisenhower to sign the Alas ka statehood bill in historic Sitka and to raise the (lag with 49 stars at Castle Hill, the site of the actual transler in 1867 oi Mask.i Irom Russia to the United States. The United States National Bank of Portland has marked up a 71 million dollar gain in deposits since June, 1957. Total deposits as of June 23 were $781,784,201 com pared with $710.721. 580"a year ago. During the same period, loans and discounts for the statewide system reached $356,388,971. a gain of better than 32 million dollars. This increase is an indication of U.S. National's .assistance in pro viding business and personal fi nancing, E. C. bammons, presi dent, pointed out. U.S. National Bank Marks Big Gain Since June 7957 Nickerson Reinstated WASHINGTON (AP)-Col. John C. Nickerson is being restored to a position of command authority but away from the Army mis sile program. - Nickerson, a decorated veteran of World War II, was convicted a year ago of leaking technically secret information in an effort to win support for the Army in a rivalry with the Air Force over missiles. The colonel, then in a major post at the Army Ballistic Missile Agency at Huntsvillc, Ala., was sentenced by a court-martial to pay a $1,500 fine and to forfeit command authority for one year. The Army said yesterday Nick erson will take over next Tuesday as ordnance officer of its Carib bean command with headquarters in the Panama Canal Zone. At the same time, Nickerson will get back full security clearance which was taken from him after his con- LasVeqas Hotel Opens LAS VEOAS. Nev. (UPI)-The Stardust Hotel, a 1,061-room ad dition to the "Strip" of luxury ho tels of this gambling resort, opened today, nearly three years alter Lady Luck ran out on gam bler Tony Corncro. Cornero, famous for his gamb ling boat exploits off the coast of Los Angeles, personally master minded creation of the Stardust, the largest resort hotel in Nevada. When he died of a heart attack July 31, 1955, the hotel was 70 per cent completed and more than $5 million had been spent on construction. The big spending habits of gam bler Cornero and the internal squabbles of Stardust Corporation stockholders after he died led to a tieup of funds in federal bankrupt cy court. After months of proposals and counter - propisals, U. S. District .luge John R. Ross approved sale of the Stardust to Mrs. Rella Fac tor, wife of John (Jake the Bar ber) Factor, brother of Hollywood cosmetics maker Max Factor. Mrs. Factor's offer was for $4,300,000 wilh $1,500,000 down and monthly payments of $75,00 starting July 19. The Klamath Falls and Town and Country branches reporU ed combined deposits of $13,987,091.. 10 as of June 23. Loans and dis counts on the same date totaled $7,663,144.75, according to Lester C. Offield, manager of the down town Klamath Falls branch. Total resources for the U.S. Na tional system, with its 65 banking offices ihroughout the state, stood at $863,579,154 compared with $790.-. 440.132 a year ago. - U.S. National plays an active part in the development of this, area," Offield commented. "Our bank sincerely believes in a tre mendous future for this region and will continue to work closely with the people of the area in the furth er development of commerce, ag riculture and industry. During the past 12 months, U.S. National has opened two new branches and announced plans for two others. A second branch was opened in Klamath Falls at 3720 South Sixlh in Town and Country Shopping Center and a new branch was established in the Menlo Park section of northeast Portland. A second branch for Eugene will be opened sometime in August. Late in the year, a new branch at S. E. Forty-eighth Avenue and wood- stock Boulevard will be ready lo serve that section of southeast Portland. A new Duilding was completed in May for the Hillsboro Commer cial branch with a major remodel ing and expansion program, in cluding a motor bank, now under way at the Citizens branch at Grand Avenue and S. E. Alder in Portland. ni mr rN VATICAN CITY i AP) -- Pope Pius Ul It it h known Tuesday that lit is I bycle racing Ian. The Pi nvciv'i4 Italian cycling champion I'.rcol H.iklini and members of his family in special amticm. Durit. the 10 minute interne. e pontilf said he knew all about Ualdim's victory las inn!. i. the bicycle tour of Italv everything known to natural his tory. lt was not enough lo look at the favorable things, but it was even more unnecessary to consid er (he unfavorable ones, because if anybody could cile one single case which could not possibly have come about by an accumu lation of small variations, it would have killed the whole theory. In those 20 years he patiently g.ilhercd a great deal of knowl edge, lt seems likely that for some time more he would have gone on doing so belore writing il all up. when he received a quite unexpected letter. This was from Wallace who had been working at the natural hislory of .LII.I..1 I'UI lll-ll, Hll IIIUll- III a paper for publication which was lo all intents exactly the sanse theory as the one he had been working on himself. This situation was met by their publishing their papers together uh an introduction by Charles I.yell. the leading geologist of the time, explaining what had happened. nd at the end of 1858 the nresi- viction and assignment to a minor dent recorded that. Ihev had haH iob. normal successful year un marked by any outstanding events at all! This was the start of the the ory, but after "The Origin of the Species" appeared things became very different. Soon afterwards the whole subject became an acute subject of controversy with attacks on the theory for the most part from laymen and from the churches, while most scien tists soon grew into accepting it. As time went on. with the in creased number of people now considering the subject, new points or difficulty began to emerge. No body really doubted the fact of in heritance but nobody knew what s laws were, and all suggestions about them seemed to be inade quate. But about the start of this century the matter was revolu tionized by what may be described as the discovery of a discovery. Forty years earlier Mendel had discovered a beautifully simple law governing biological inheri tance, but. though he did publish it, this discovery was for long overlooked. After that, when it had been rediscovered, it took a good many years to get it syste matized, but it explained the bas ic fact that was needed, the fact that each new variation of charac ter would not. so to speak, be im mediately smudged out by mixing it back with the characters of the unvaried members of the race. lt took many years to clear up even the outline of these matters, and still longer, with the help of mathematics, to be sure Ihey were adequate to explain the detailed characteristics of the evolution of life. But now nobody seriously doubts the validity of the whole theory, and the adequacy of Men del's law to explain at any rate nearly everything about inheri tance. lt is natural to ask then what are the prospects for the future? Nobody can ever give a clear an swer to this sort of question. From the nature of things it con cerns matters we do not yet know, in the meanwhile there is plenty of important work going on, and it is likely to go on for a long time. Among other matters it concerns such things as inheri tance among elementary forms of ife like bacteria, and also diffi cult questions connected wilh the qualities of the complicated chem ical substances in animals ad plants, and the iicritac of these substances. Finally there ic the re-tim of how the theory directly (lcts the human race e. tr coun tries have attained such hich degree of prosperity that to all intents they have managed to cet rid of the struggle for life. The less efficient among their popula tions are no longer prevented from multiplying in numbers by proc- Origin Of Bear Perplexing To Coast Citizens NEWPORT, 6re. (AP) Local residents had a 600-pound polar hear carcass on their beach Tues day and were wondering about its origin. The dead bear probably washed ashore sometime last weekend, along with the carcass of a cub. The tide later carried the cub back to sea, but the larger bear remained on the sadn, attracting spectators.- Jack Marks, director of the Portland Zoo, speculated that the hears were swept out to sea in a storm, probably on an ice cake that melted when it reached warmer waters. The the animals probably drowned and were car ried by currents to the Oregon shore. Polar bears are native to the Bering Sea area, more than 2,000 miles from the Oregon coast. "How far south does an iceberg flow?" Marks asked when told of the incident. "This is one for the oceanograDhers." Marks said he doubled that the bears ever had been in captivity. The carcasses first were noticed Sunday by a small boy. He re ported his discovery but no one paid any attention until Monday. when a motel owner. Mrs. Flora Lauritscn, saw the hears on the beach near her motel. Subway Will Take Coupons NEW YORK (UPf) - Hand three soap coupons to the fare collector and you're all set for a tree ride on New York's subway trains and buses. The plan was' put into effect Tuesday under terms of an agree ment between the New York Transit Authority and B. T. Bab bitt, Inc., soap manufacturers Coupons have been pasted on seven million containers of Bab bitt products in the metropolitan area. The transit authority remrted lhat 168 coupons were presented during the first two hours of od- eration Tuesday, representing 56 ares, ine lares are to be paid by Babbitt as a promotional venture. The authority was obviouslv so pleased at the prospect of being able to wash out some portion of its expected two - million dollar deficit, it also decided to clean up on another scheme. The authority, as an cxDcri- ment, plans to install lockers in a Brooklyn station for commuters to leave laundry and clothes. When riders return to the station on the way home they oan pick up their clean garments by drop- ine fignt number of coins in the lockers. If the test is successful, lockers will be installed in a number of the city s 487 subway stations. Peace Officers Seek Car Thief An auto that police chased at high speed Monday night through Mills Addition was found to have! been stolen off a local auto lot. Patroling policemen spotted the ear traveling in a "reckless man ner" at Sixlh Street and Washburn Way. They pursued the driver to the 2200 block of Union Street, where he leaped out and managed to es cape on foot. The car was reported stolen Tuesday morning by a local used car dealer. BARREL RACE The Klamath Kurbstone Kow- pokes announce that Thursday's noon events will begin with the neer Barrel race to be held Main Street between Fourth and Seventh streets beginning at 12 sharp. This will be followed at 12:30 by the woodcutting contest which will be held on Eighth Street in iront of the Pelican Theater. esses like those that would be acting in wild nature. Natural selection has been elim inated for the time being. -Man has immediately respond ed to this easing of his conditions by increasing in numbers, and those increases hold a most for midable threat for the not very distant future. Thus quite conservative esti mates say there will be twice as many people in the world in 50 years as there are now, and no body has any idea what is to stop the increases from going on even after that. Can our statesmen realize that this is by far the most important political problem of the near fu ture? Nohody knows any satisfac tory inswer, tut if on is not (mind soon, our over-populated world it ilnxwt certaia to rtlapu into hrd condition of life lite tlw. ihi: utd to prevail oatj . ft centimes no. when it iu ifa ruthless ftKTiui of ftaturai selectici that contrrtlrf tc. ton hers of mankind. EDITOR RESIGNS GENEVA (AP) Maurice Du commun. chief editor of Switzer land's ' leading Communist news paper Voix Ouvrier, resigned Tuesday to protest the execution of Imre Nagy and the olher lead ers of the 1956 Hungarian rebel lion. Thieves Loot . Bowling Alley Over $170 cash, plus a quantity of candy and cigarettes, was taken by burglars last night from the Luck Lanes bowling alley, 3319 South Sixth Street. The burglars broke open the coin boxes on the cigarette machine, the pinball machines, and coin operated bowling device. They also stripped the cigarette machine of its stock, and took the supply ot candy which is sold over the counter. The burglary was discovered this morning by the custodian. State police are investigating. WHO'S LUCKY? CHICAGO (UPI) - Burglars la- bored in vain all night to crack a safe at a Chicago loan agency. They left in disgust after scrib bling this note "You were lucky, man." But Agency Manager Rob ert Dreis says the unsuccessful safe crackers are the lucky ones. He told police if the thieves had opened the safe, they would have gotten a face full of tear gas. Free Boat Motor and Trailer Sat. -7 p.m.: - Ar- Town & Country ; Shopping Center There'i no obligation and you need not be present to win. The winning ticket MUST match up in both number and .color to the stub drown. Collect all the tickets you can end come out for the drawing Saturday evening. v'-m t.-m:ort F AiH'h'K TH. I yt ro-r. prinltlr.1 en II H- . - Wr hMcln W fuir- e t ft th- Irfl mor com- S trrhi. It rift.ihnt inon- TE 1 mfm) ftcirli. I n i"-ir rueok "rime Wr w y I ode;' ni' Th) ot FAS. L f R. V. V BURN I WM. jl USUAL Hour y fe? ii i I (HIMOWt.S) J), 1 mi.iitul rth in m. ,, IO. IWO.WTION. W ,, Z! 'M-sat'O-v. IT Open r add lo yowr Saving Account by JWIT 10 ir iftterett lm JVIY I 3720 South Six THE UNITED STATES NAjlONAL SANK Of K1UNO M-w f4