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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1958)
PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON TUESDAY, AUGUST 12. 1958 MARKETS and FINANCE STOCKS WALL STREET NEW YORK AP) A late pickup In steel shares was a fea lure Monday as the stock market pushed into new high ground (or 1958. 0 1,184 issues traded, 506 closed higher, 414 lower and 264 chanced. There were 137 new highs for l'JSH and nine lows. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks advanced 70 cents to $186.50, a new peak for the year. The previous high was set last Monday and equaled Friday. Industrials rose $1.30 and rails were up 60 cents, both at new highs for the year, utilities were unchanged. Turnover amounted to 2.870,000 shares, compared with Friday's 3,650,000 shares. NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation Allied Chemical Allis Chalmers Aluminum Co. America American Airlines American Can American Cyanamide American Motors American Tel. & Tel. American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Armco Steel Atchison Railroad ' ' Bethlehem Steel Boeing Airplane Co. Borg Warner Burroughs Corp. California Packing Canadian Pacific Caterpillar Tractor Celanese Corporation Chrysler Corporation Cities Service Consolidated Edison Crown Zellcrbach Curtiss Wright Douglas Aircraft du Pont de Nemours Eastman Kodak El Paso NG Emerson Radio , Ford Motor General Dynamics General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pac Cp. Goodyear Tire International Harvester International Paper Johns Manville Kaiser Aluminum Kennecott Copper Libby, McNeill Lockheed Aircraft Loew's Incorporated Montgomery Ward New York Central Northern Pacific Pacific American Fish Pacific Gas A Electric Pacific Tel. & Tel. Penney (J. C.) Co. Pennsylvania Railroad Pepsi Cola Co. Philco Corp. Polaroid Pugct Sound P It L Radio Corporation Rayonier Incorporated Republic Steel Reynolds Metals Richfield Oil Safeway Stores Inc. St. Regia Scott Paper Company Sears Roebuck & Co. Shell Oil Co. Sinclair Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Pacific Sperry Rand Standard Oil California Standard Oil N. J. Studebaker Packard Sunshine Mining Swift & Company Transamorica Corp. Transamerica Corporation Twentieth Century Fox Union Oil Company Union Pacific United Air Lines United Aircraft United Corporation United States Plywood United States Steel Warner Pictures Western Union Tel. Westinghouse Air Brake Westinghouse Electric Woolworth Company 10 Vi 90 27 81 22 47 V 49 15 182 Vt 87 52 57 23 45 46 33 36 47 28 79 14 18 54 Va 63 54 V4 52 61 197 119 32 6 43 62 64 66 44 42 91 37 104 46 34 . 97 10 53 17 38 19 43 9 56 134 96 14 24 .18 61 29 35 20 54 54 91 32 38 70 31 84 V, 63 49 52 21 52 56 5 8 35 26 26 33 48 31 V4 3t 69 8 37 71 20 23 25 ij 61 a 47 I Eugene Buses Stop Running EUGENE (AP) - The Citv Transit Lines has discontinued service on municipal bus systems it operates in Eugene and Salem. Employes told firm officials they would remain on the job, pending the possible creation of a cooperative ownership. Regular service was discontin ued Saturday. Louis Soukup. president of the firm, said he did not know how soon plans could he worked out for a cooperative operation. He told the Eugene City Council the future of the systems both in Eugene and Salem depended on HlP rivinjirilinn nt tltn rx-n.-in,, 1 . .. - . ' L employes oi tne city Transit'" J , . . Lines Soukup several times said the firm was losing money The company has 38 drivers and a number of mechanics. Salem patronage was said to average 2,500 riders a day. The company spokesman said no fi gures were available for Eugene. NEVER LEARNS! INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Philip L Hartmeyer, 26, Kent Village. Md., was practicing whipping his .22 caliber pistol from a new holster when he shot himself in the right thigh. Here visiting a friend, he was taken to Community Hospital and reported in fair condition. He told his friend he had a sim ilar accident recently while prac ticing the fast draw back In Mary land. That time he shot himself In the foot. LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) Butcher hog prices were steady to 25 cents lower Monday. A few lots of No. 1 grade in the 210-225 lb range sold at $23 23.25. The 195-225 lb mixed 2s and 3s brought $22.50-22.85 and heav ier weights $22 and up. The cattle run was 3,000 head. Slaughter steers were strong to 50 cents higher with a few loads of mostly prime grade bringing $27 28. the top, and mixed choice and prime $26-26.75. Good and choice grades were $24-26 and choice up ward from $25. Vealers were steady at $29.50 32 for good and choice and $19 29 utility and standard. The sheep market was steady at $23.50-25.50 for 91-96 lb choice and prime spring slaughter lambs and $17-22 for cull to low good kinds. Slaughter ewes were $5-7. PORTLAND (AP) (USDA) Cattle salable 1,650; includes about 30 loads fed steers; seven loads Canadian, also nine loads heifers, five Canadian; trade rather slow, early sales mostly steady; truck lot choice 995 lb steers and load average choice 1,136 lb 26.75; load average choice around 1,060 lb fed steers 26.75, led steers 26.75. lightly sorted: few low to average choice under 1,050 pound steers 26.25-26.50; few good steers 25.00-26.00; standard 22.50-24.50; few loads mixed good and choice heifers 24.50-25.00; few good heifers 23.50-24.00; utility cows mostly 15.50-18.00; commer cial cows 19.00-20.00: canncrs and cutters mostly 14.00-15.00, heavy cutters to 15.50, llolsteins to 16.50 light canners down to 13.00; few utility bulls 23.00-24.00; load good and choice 870 lb feeder steers 23.50. Calves salable 200; trade slow developing, few early sales about steady; good and choice 26.00 28.00; standard 20.00-25,00; few good stock steer calves 27.00-28.00. Hogs salable 850; trade rather slow, few early sales about 25 lower than early last week; U.S. No. 1-2 butchers 180-235 lb 25.00 25.25; mixed No. l-3s 24.25-24.75; few 400-500 lb sows 18.50-20.50; few under 350 lb sows 2.00-22.50. Sheep salable 1,500; trade rather slow; early sales averaging about steady with late last week; quality continues rather poor: few lots choice spring lambs 20.50-21.00, in eludes sorted load range lambs at 21.00; good spring lambs 19.50 20.00; several lots good and choice feeder lambs 18.00-19.00; cull to good slaughter ewes 3.50-7.00. GRAINS CHICAGO (AP) - The entire list of grain futures was weak most of the time Monday with dealings on the Board of Trade again slow. Wheat showed some steadiness occasionally on deferred contracts but demand was light and scat tered. Wheat finished cent a bushel lower to higher, September 1.84 ; corn - lower, September 1.26-; oats - lower, Sep tember 63; rye - lower. Sen temoer i.24-'); soybeans low er to higher, .September 2.24 '.-; lard 2 to 8 cents a hundred pounds higher, September 12.77 80. WHEAT 'Open High Low Close Sep Dec 1.84 1.84 1.83 1.84 1.90 1.90 1.90 1.90 1.95 1.95 1.95 1.95 1.94 1.94 1.94 1.94 1.87 1.87 1.86 1.87 Yt Mar May Jly PORTLAND (AP) Coarse grains, 15-day shipment, bulk, coast delivery: Oals, No. 2, 38-lb while 48.50; Barley, No. 2. 45-lb western 48.00-48.50: Corn, No. 2, yellow, eastern shipment, 61.25- 61.75. Wheat (bid) to arrive market. basis No. 1 milk delivered coast Soft while 1.96; Soft White (hard appll 1.H6; White Club 1.96. Monday's car receipts: Wheat lni: narley 4; flour 2; corn 5 mill feed 3. POTATOES CHICAGO (AP) - Potatoes ar rivals 136; on track 268: total U.S shipments for Friday 200; Satur day 108; Sunday 8; about steady: car lot track sales: Washington Long whites 2.25-2. SO; Idaho Ore gon long whites 2.4ii; Idaho Oregon Russets 3.55-3.69; Washington Rus sets 3.60-3.70; Nebraska round red 2.50. Accident Victims Out Of Hospital Two victims of a Saturday night automobile accident east of Beatty were discharged from Klamath Valley Hospital over the weekend. Hospital attendants said Walter M. Thorne Jr., 19, 1770 Siskivou Street, and Melvin D. Hunt. 28, Merrill, were discharged Sunday. A third person admitted after the accident, Franklin Long Jr., 22, Route 2, was reported "doing tint, " lli Iniiii-iAC u-.m MntinnJ to multiple lacerations, the hospi tal said State Police said Thorne and Long were in a pickup truck that collided with a flatbed truck driv en by Hunt on Highway 66 Also reported "doing fine" was George Clubb. 36, of 924 Jefferson Street, who city police said was injured when he attempted to break up a tight. Hospital attend ants said Cook had a fractured vertebrae. FLIP IS SLIP SACRAMENTO lAPl-Bartend er Dale L. Davenport emptied the cash register while the gunman nervously waved his revolver. The gun fell open. Davenport leaped across the bar and. with the help of a patron, subdued the bandit Davenport explained that when the gun flipped open, he saw onlv a cap compartment where the but- Water Suit Nears End SAN FRANCISCO (UPD -Tes timony about another disputed piece of land along the Colorado River was to be presented today in the final stages of the Colorado River water suit. The land in question was 2.000 acres of the Fort Hohave Indian Reservation. The dispute arose over a misplaced stone marker. The trial resumed Monday af ter a three-week recess with .tes timony about 6,000 acres held along the river by California. Walter Jiechel Jr.. a Depart ment of Justice lawyer, explained me boundary of the Colorado Riv er inaian neservation was set in 1876 as being the west bank of the river. However, the river has changed us course several times since then and now is east of the old position. The federal government claims the difterence. But Californians have been farming this land in the belief that they had clear title. The larg est stockyard west of Kansas City, Mo., Is located in the disput ed portion. Jerome Muys, California attor ney, objected to the government's testimony. He said special Mas ter Simon H. Kitkind would have no right to decide the ownership of the land when its supposed owners were not parties to the litigation. "Very well, I'll take note of the objection, Unkind said. The boundary question was in troduccd because it affects the number of acres for which the government can claim water. It asks about 20.000 ' acre feet for the disputed portion of the Colo rado Reservation. .The water suit was filed by Arizona in an attempt to clarify rights to 2,800,000 acre feet of the river's main flow, plus the water of the Gila River system. If Arizona wins the suit, Cali fornia stands to lose from a mil lion to 1,500,000 annual acre feet of its share of the water. Desertion Hearings Set TULSA, Okla. (AP)-A prelim-' inary hearing has been scheduled for Auk. 21 for three persons held on child desertion charges in the swapping of a 5-month -old boy. Held in lieu of $5,000 bond each are Richard Readdy, 26, S ha mo kin. Pa., and his wife Helen Mar garet, 20. They pleaded innocent yesterday to charges of child de sertion. Jesse L. Burger, 41, El Dorado Springs, Mo., is held on a $2,500 bond after pleading innocent to a charge of aiding and abetting the Readdys in their alleged offense. ram Andrew, 5-montn-old son of the Readdys, is at the Tulsa Juvenile Shelter, his future still undetermined. The Pennsylvania couple is ac cused of trading rthe infant .to Burger for the man's 1957 pickup truck. The swap allegedly occurred after Burger, en route to Tulsa, picked up the young, jobless, al most broke couple as they hitch hiked to California. In Shnmokin the woman's fa ther, William Murphy, said he wants the child if granted cus tody. He added: "I will be glad to make a home for my daugh ter, her husband and the baby if they want to come home. I think they are confused and mixed up and need someone to look out aft er them." Small Damage In Lumber Fire The lucky chance that last night's fire at the plant of Klam ath Hardwoods, Incorporated, on the Weed Highway, broke out dur ing a change of shifts, resulted in small damage from what might otherwise have been a terrific blaze. The fire started with a careless ly lit match, in the oil house sit uated between the two mills. The match caused some acetone to ex plode, setting fire to the oil. The oil house was soon burning mer rily about 12:15. The mills would have been threatened, except for the fact that the small graveyard shift had just reported (or work, and not all the swing shift had yet gone home. Thanks to this circum stance, it was possible to muster about 30 men to handle the fire hoses. One was brought to play on the burning building from each of the mills, and by the time the Stewart Lenox Fire Department arrived at 12:40 the fire was un der conlrol with Klamath Hard woods short one oil house. Youth Arraigned In Dorris Court DORRIS Norman Dale Cox of Klamath Kalis was arraigned in justice court here Monday on a charge of failing to stop and render aid at the scene of an accident. Judge Les Chase placed Cox un der $1,000 bond and ordered him sent to the Siskiyou County Juil in Yreka in lieu of bond. Chase said Cnj had requested the serv ices oi a county oeiender. The charge against Cox grew out of an automobile accident north of Weed on U.S. 97 on June 15. i!57. At a hearing in Klamath County District Court last week. Cox con tested the legality of an extradi tion warrant from Oregon. How ever, authorities said. Cox later agreed to accept extradition, and was returned here Monday from the Klamath County Jail. On The Record KLAMATH FALLS U1RTHS BOVS COOPER Born to Mr. and Mra. Melvin Cooper Auguit 8 In Klamath Valley Hotpital a boy, weighing 7 . 1Q ox. COX - Born to Mr. and Mn Her bert Cox Auguat 8 In Klamath Valley noipuai a Doy, weighing o IDa., uta oza. DENNY Born to Mr. and Mr Lawrence Denny Auguit '8 In Klamath vauey rioipital .a boy. weighing 7 Ibi . I'i oza. HAYES Born tn Mr. and Un Monroe Hayes Auguat S In Klamath Valley Hotpital a boy weighing 7 Ibi.. MKEK Born to Mr. and Mn Kenneth L. Meek Aueust 8 In Klam. ath Valley Hoapltal a boy, weighing d ii-4 oza. WILSON Born to Mr. and Mn Ellia Wilfon August 8 In Klamath Val ley Hospital a boy. weighing 7 lbs. 9t on. t CilKI.S BOYD Born to Mr. and Mrs William D. Boyd August 8 in Klamath vauey riospital a girl, weighing 8 lbs. IMS BOI'NDLP Girls 288; Boya 306. Court Records KLAMATH COI'NTY DISTRICT COURT George Gordon Givan, fall drive Hunt hall, 110 forfeited. Dan Harlan Cox. fail atop at ttop tin. dismissed upon motion of district attorney. Gene Martinez, larceny by embezzle ment, requeit preliminary hearing; set August 14, 1958 at 10 a.m.; bond set at $2,300; remanded to custody of her- iii- Walter Martin Scott, tandem axle overload. $74 forfeited. Mark Reasoner, tandem axle over load, mj forfeited. Douglas Dean Newman, excessive width. CIO forfeited. Douglas Dean Newman, no safety cnains, iw lonenea. Clyde Filmore Butler, fall drive on right half, $7.50. Joseph John Mick, excessive over hang, S7.SO. Calvin Perry Roe, fail transfer title, $5. Douglas Dean Newman, improper safety chains, $25 forfeited. Gilbert Berne Jellum, overlength, dismissed. KI.AMATH FALLS MUNICIPAL COURT Glen John Scott, drunk, $23 or 12Va days. Clifford Deloss Joplin, disorderly conauct, szs forfeited. iroy Elmer Meyer, disorderly con duct. $25 forfeited. John Henry Edwards, drunk, $25 or 12'a days. Robert Sanford Manning, drunk. $25 or 124 days. Kenneth Don Cameron, drunk, $25 iorieuea. Hawley Harvey Hood, drunk, $29 or 12'a days. Paul Phillies, violation of gambline ordinance, Otis Elmer Miner, violation of a am bling ordinance, $25. ' Wallace Cohen Jr., violation of gam bling ordinance. $25 or 12 'i days. uiarenre Edward Mosley, violation ' gambling ordinance. $25 or 12',a aays. Mhko Williams, violation of Bam. bllng ordinance. $100 forfeited. ' James Kenneth Morris, drunk. $25 or it' a aays. Llndsey Pomnev. drunk. $25 or la". aays. William Paul Morgan, drunk in automobile. $2.1 forfeited. Charles junior Gaymon. drunk. $25 or la.1.? aays. Francis G en R due. drunk. $25 or in- a aays. Calvin Hutchinson, drunk. $25 or iz'a aays. William M. David, disorderly eon- duct, $25 or 12'a days. uenrge Crain. disorderly conduct? $23 or 1Z' days. Tokyo Blasts Atom Policy TOKYO (AP) Socialist Parly Chairman Mosaburo Suzuki ac cused the United States today of trying to dominate the world with nuclear weapons. The loader of the opposition to Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi's government addressed the open ing session of the fourth National Conference Against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs. Some 6.000 Jap anese delegates and . representa tives from 22 foreign countries at tended. ' Suzuki charged the United States with stationing nuclear weapons in Europe and other parts of the world and with ag gression in the Middle East. The predominantly leftist audience ap plauded trequently. Queen, DiMag Just Pals' SM1TI1FIELD. Va. (AP) Beau ty queen Marian McKnight of Manning. S.C., says ex-New York Yankee slugger Joe DiMaggio- is "a very charming and a very wonderful man" but "we are not thinking of marriage." This was Miss America of 1957's reply to reporters' queries after she saw the former baseball fereat off at Norfolk s Municipal Airport last night. The pair were in a group spend ing the weekend at the farm near here of V. G. Monette. owner of a food supply firm. Blonde Miss McKnight said her arrival with DiMnggio at Norfolk on a plane from New York Satur day was a coincidence. She said there is no romance between her and DiMaggio, an ex-husband of movie queen Marilyn Monroe. She insisted most of her attention is for her studies at UCLA and that 'I'm not interested in latching on to anyone right now." She said she and DiMacgio met in 1056 .ind that, they had not seen each other again until their en counter in Now "ork. Miss McKnight said she will work in public relations for the Monette firm, which supplies food to the armed forces, when she graduates from I'CLA. IMPROVED Improvement in the conditions of both -Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Con rady, 2139 Orchard Avenue, was reported by Klamath Vallev Hos pital authorities Tuesday morning. They were hospitalized Sunday eve ning after the motorcycle they were riding struck the side of an oncoming car. Both were severely cut; lonrady had a broken collar bone, and his wife a broken leg. Hotter was the word used to describe their conditions this morn ing. O People Read SPOT ADS - you are - - , v . . v f sty ' jt "" ' i Ll SAM RITCHEY Ritchey Joins UF-RCCrew Another prominent Klamath Falls businessman joined the ranks of United Fund-Red Cross volunteer workers, when Sam Ritchev. local California Oregon Power Company manager, agreed to Head the spe cial services division for this year's drive. The drive's selection committee felt that Ritchey's experienced leadership would assure a bang up job in the special services di vision, one of the smallest, yet most important, divisions of the campaign. Ritchey came to Klamath Falls in 1927 and immediately went to work for Copco. During the inter vening 31 years he has been very active in community activities, serving for over 12 years on the advisory board of the Salvation Army, of which he is a former chairman. He has also devoted many years of service to the Boy Scouts, in which he is now Klam ath District commissioner within the Modoc Area Council. He is a past vice president of the Commun ity Chest, past president of the Ro tary Club, and a member of the chamber of commerce. Demos Pick Candidates BOISE, Idaho (AP) Idaho Democrats chose a candidate to day to run against Republican Gov. Robert E. Smylie in November. Smylie, 43, who is completing his first term, was unopposed in the GOP column. The four-way race for the Dem ocratic gubernatorial nomination has been highlighted by the con troversial gambling proposal of A. M. Derr, a state senator and lumberman from Clark Fork. Derr, 55, wants Idaho to license. on a local-option basis, gambling casinos sucn as those in neighbor ing Nevada. He says this would bring in needed money through taxes on the gambling and through increased tourist trade. Derr's two principal opponents are John Glasby. 43, a former state Democratic chairman from Moun tain Home, and State Sen. Max Hanson. 38. a wheat farmer from Fairfield. Both denounced the gam bling proposal. So did Smylie. Too Hot Here, . Judge Wants More Sufferers CARTHAGE. N. C. (AP)-As Judge W. H. S. Burgwyn sat per spiring in the Moore County court room s !lS-dcgree heat yesterday. he decided there should be a few more fellow sufferers, He ordered the county commis sioners summoned for jury duty today. This place needs air con ditioning and they ought to know it, snapped the judge. "They can come and suffer the heat and noise and gnats right along with the rest of us." nAmMi4mAM TaIIc Uepartment IdlS Grass Fire Hike The grass fire frequency stepped up Monday, after a weekend lull. with local ire departments put ting out four such blazes during the course of the day The first two were handled by the city fire department: One in the morning at 227 Lowell Street, and another in the early afternoon in the 2500 block on Berkeley Street, The county fire department took care of the other two, both in the alternoon. One was located on property of the Bedfield Cemetery at Seven Springs Ranch in south Foe Valley; the other was at the Klamath Gun Club. Route 3, Wo- cus. The county truck was assisted by two from Oregon Technical Institute, at the latter fire No damage resulted from any of these fires, RANCH FIRE A barn, a shed, 70 tons of ha and 75 sacks of fertilizer .'.ice were the losses of R. N. Brett in a fire at his Langell Valley ranch early Monday afternoon. The coun ty fire department went to Brett's address. Route 1. Box 88. Bonanza, to put out a barn fire of unde termined origin. Ry the time the blaze was brought under control the barn and the hay and ferti lizer it contained, as well as a small shed, had been destroyed. B U H A C H Best For Insect Pests Aott, Roicbes, Betfbujt er Mosquirota around ih house FltJi oo cat or dot uce oa (HUMS Of Duat. B Sur You Get BUHACH t i Weather Table By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Tuesday Max. Mln. Prep, Baker 93 55 T Eugene 86 49 - Lakeview 86 56 Medford I 91 58 Newport 68 49 North Bend 71 ' 53 Pendleton 97 66 Portland Airp't .. 80 57 Redmond 88 47 - - Roseburg .. 87 48 - Salem 84 51 United Press International Temperatures and rainfall for 24 hours ending at 4 a m High Low Rain 92 69 .26 92 70 97 72 97 66 .02 81 65 96 77 79 69 88 62 85 64 105 85 72 50 99 79 98 68 91 54 92 77 87 66 87 76' .62 93 72 92 77 84 71 .01 83 64 94 78 101 85 80 67 103 70 96 57 95 64 98 65 80 67 77 58 79 52 95 65 94 66 105 83 96 73 83 71 Albuquerque Atlanta Bakersfield Boise Boston Brownsville Chicago Denver Detroit El Centro Fairbanks Fort Worth Fresno Helena Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York Oakland Oklahoma City Phoenix Pittsburgh Red Bluff Reno Sacramento Salt Lake City San Diego San Francisco Seattle Spokane Stockton Thermal Tucson Washington 4-H Fair Plans Told Klamath Falls Rotarians viewing nearly 300 head of livestock and committees inspecting flower and vegetable gardens raised by Klam ath County 4-H and Future Farm ers of America members, predict that the 1958. 23rd annual Klamath Junior Fall Fair will bring in some of the finest exhibits to go under tne eyes ol judges in many years. Dates of this year's event to be neid in the Klamath County Fair grounds are August 17. 18 and 19. Some 200 stops were made by two teams of Rotarians to farms where boys and girls are grooming 100 head of beef animals, dairy animals, 110 sheep and 75 hogs. The garden tour this week was conducted by 4-H agents, Lillian Hoflman and Francis Skinner. Following receipt of livestock on Saturday, August 16, at the fair. grounds, procedure will coritinue in the routine of previous yean, through livestock judging, show manship and herdsmanship con' tests, flower arranging, food pres ervation, vegetable judging, flow er judging, contests, vegetable and tood preservation contests and oth er features of the fair. Final day of the show will con- elude with the grand entry of ex. hibitors and livestock before the grandstand during serving of the invitational barbecue, announce ment of winners in all divisions, crowning of the garden king and queen and the livestock sale in the livestock arena. Admittance to the grandstand for the barbecue is by ticket onlv with 4-H, and FFA exhibitors, their parents, club leaders, buyers and invited guests. Beef for the barbe cue is to be furnished by a group of Fort Klamath cattlemen. Fib Fleet will supervise the barbecue detail. Bob Rhodes. Klamath Falls auc tioneer, will cry the sale. 'Girl Scouters' At Wrong Place Times have changed in Klamath Falls' tw0 youn men Earned early Tuesday morning. -uy police saia me men ap proached a hotel clerk at about 4 a.m. "looking for girls." The clerk insisted that they were look ing in the wrong pla'ce, and in the wrong town, for that matter. Not entirely satisfied, the frus trated visitors "beat up" the clerk, police said. The victim's injuries were not serious, officers said, and their investigation is continuing. Tired of parking a H Rambler is Belling more because it gives handling ease. Save every mile you drive II people more of what they want big car save when you trade, Rambler is first mum mm comiort, sro.au car ECCLES RAMBLER SALES, U S; Needs Spectacular Argument Presentation - By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Foreign Newt Analyst A spectacular and even daring presentation is needed if the Unit ed States is to drive home its ar guments in the critical U.N. As sembly debate opening tomorrow, The message which the West can hope to impress on the Arab East, the most important audi ence for this Assembly session, is this: the primary objective of the Soviet Union is to prevent peace from breaking out in the Middle East and to keep the area off balance. American and British troops in Lebanon and Jordan provide Mos cow with an easy target. But the presence of the troops inhibits direct, violent assault by extrem ists upon those two governments. The Soviets want the troops out Funerals ELLIOT Funeral services for Christopher Sidney Elliot, 59, who died in Med ford August 9, will be held in the First Methodist Church Wednesday, August 13, at 2 p.m. Interment will be made in Klamath Memorial Park. Pallbearers are to be Paul Matthews, Hans Norland, Paul Landry, Harold Brandenburg, Mar ion Grant, Ray F. Baker; hono rary pallbearers will be Lowell Paup, Brice Elliott, Harold Buck, Lou Langworthy, Roger Gilbert and Bob Harvey. Friends wishing to see Mr. Elliot may call at O'Hair's Memorial Chapel until 12 o'clock Wednesday. MITCHELL Funeral services for John Lester Mitchell, 65, who died in this'city August 10, will be held in O'Hair's Memorial Chapel Thursday, August 14, at 2:30 p.m. Crater Lake Lodge No. 211-A.F.&A.M. officiating.. In terment will be made in Klamath Memorial Park. Obituaries CONE Mary Jane (Jennie) Cone, 76, a native of Jasper County, Missouri, and a resident of this city for 18 years, died here August 11. She is survived by three children: Charles H. Cone of Redding, Mrs. Jim Steppe of Craig, Alaska and Mrs. Clarence Davis of Pasco. Washinp- ton; a brother, John Ward of La Grande, Oregon; also 13 grandchil dren and 16 g r e a t-grandchildren. O'Hair's Memorial Chapel is in charge of the funeral arrange ments. HOGLE William Daniel Hogle, 77, a native of White Oak, Michigan, and a resident of this city since 1944, died here August 11. He is survived by a son, Lawrence Hogle of Kala mazoo, Michigan; a stepson, Sam Thompson of Kennewick, Washing ton; a stepdaughter, Mrs. James B. Doyle, of Glendale, Oregon. O'Hair's Memorial Chapel is in charge of. the funeral arrange ments. Oregon Weather Western .Oregon Fair through Wednesday with little temperature change. Highs 80-85 in north, 90-95 in south, 66-78 on coast; low Tues day night 48-56. Light variable winds along coast, becoming west erly to northwesterly, 10-20 m.p.h. in afternoon. Eastern Oregon Fair through Wednesday except isolated thun- dershowers in southeast; little change in temperatures. Highs 85-96; low Tuesday night 55-65. Northern Oregon beaches Mostly fair through' Wednesday, with patchy morning fog or low clouds. Beach winds westerly, 5-15 m.p.h. Temperature range 50-70. Baker-La Grande area Fair through Wednesday. Highs 88-93; low Tnesday night 45-50. Fire Weather Fire danger moderate in Coast Range and high elsewhere in Ore gon through Wednesday. Humidity in afternoon near or below 30 per cent in Cascades and adjacent valleys of Northwest Oregon. INJURED IN FALL Nina Crawford, 66, was taken by Peace Ambulance to Klamath Valley Hospital Tuesday morning, after she injured her back in a fall in the front room of her home at 143 Pine Street. The extent of her injuries was not immediately de termined. "battlewagon"? Rambler NOW 7TH IN SALES Easy to Park, So Economical! economy ana in resale value, at once and want to claim credit lor torcing uiem to leave. i.euauun prooaDiy coma survive withdrawal of American troops. Afforded a breathing spell by the election of Gen. Fuad Chehab as president, the little country might work out its internal difficulties in time to ward off either dismem berment or domination by Presi. dent Nasser's United Arab Repub lic. Jordan is another matter. Young King Hussein's life already is in danger. The peril would ba multiplied many times if the Brit ish were to withdraw suddenly. And in Jordan there is little of the sentiment one finds in Leban on for neutrality in Arab quarrels. Jordan s nationalist extremists seek to push the country directly imo Nassers arms. Then the pressure on Saudi Arabia and Kuwaitt would be enormous. And Israel, ringed by Nasser, might be moved to force ful, if desperate, measures which could touch off a new Middle East war. Jordan seems a dying nation now. Perhaps the only thing the West can do is to insure a decent burial. Possibly the best that can be hoped for is to keep the patient alive until a safe legatee turns up. The West pick Iraq as the bene ficiary, if that country's new rev. olutionary government does not muij iiacn iii we u.A.n. wnue such a union is still possible, both tne Iraqis and Nasser seem to have been dragging their feet in the matter of prospective merger. With their combined resources and far sounder economies, Iraq and Syria could overbalance the Egyptians in the U.A.R. Nasser likely has considered this. And Iraq might hesitate to sur render control over her resources to Egypt. Loose federation, with no loss of sovereignty, may be the ultimate answer. Many an Arab nationalist. aDart from the violent extremists, is interested in keeping the door to the West ajar. Nasser himself cannot be considered an ally tha Soviets can triet. The United States' primary in terests in the Middle East are stability, political security and sound economic development. The moderate nationalists' door might be opened wider if President Ei senhower demonstrates dramatic ally that the U.S. objective is far different from that of the Soviet Union. WAC Induction Rite Televised Ft, McClellan, Alabama, is tha immediate destination of Grace Lemore Sparks 1st Lt. Grace L. Sparks who was sworn in as a Women's Army Corps officer here Monday. Lt. Sparks, a teacher at Alta- mont for the last thr years, was sworn in by Capt. Lillian Baker of Portland in a ceremony televised over KOTI-TV. It is believed to be the first such ceremony tele vised in this area, Recruiting Sgt. M. W. Buess said. Opportunities for travel, and. a change are the reasons Lt. Sparks chose the WAC, she said. She will report to Ft. McClellan Septem ber 8 for basic training. She will be assigned after training, and won't, be a bit disappointed if her duties take her overseas, she said. Lt. Sparks, daughter of Mrs. Sarah McMillan of Bly, taught at Bonanza for nine years before moving to Altamont. Her WAC en listment is for two years. 'AT-0-RAMA Win a S3.50O Swlmminr Pool, S2.00 molor boat and 91 other prlici. ARROW FUEL CO. BALSIGER OIL CO. CLIFF YADEN'S FRANKFORD FUEL CO. GENERAL PETROLEUM JAY HAWK PETROLEUM PEYTON & CO. RICHFIELD OIL CO. SIGNAL OIL CO. WESTERN OIL AND BURNER CO. GO bee your Rambler dealer! 401 So. 6th St. I let a should have been. I