Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 08, 1959, Page 4, Image 4

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    MONDAY, JUNE 8. IPS
PAGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
Authorities
Investigate
Nazi Club
UGnlMTl
ANDREA SCHNEBERGER. left. qavo the valedictory at the
commencement exercises or the Weed High School on
Friday night. Andrea also won a Bank of America award.
Sha it the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Sehneberqer.
Jeanne Anderson, right, th daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glea
Anderson, was talutatorian of tha class of 1959. Sha was
awarded tha John Philip Souia award in music recently.
State Income Tax Boost
Signed Into Law By Pat
SACRAMENTO 'UPH - Gov
Edmund G. Brows today signed
inio law a bill that will boost the
late Income taxes of middle and
upper income California families
starting July 1.
The governor's first major vie
tory in his budget balancing tax
program lollowed closely on his
iirsl Dig tax oeieat.
The Assembly, alter locking its
doors six hours in a parliamentary
maneuver and after scouring the
stale for absent Republicans, killed
Brown's oil and gas severance tax
oroposal Saturday-
Twelve Democrats joined all the
Republicans on the 43-29 vote.
The proposal to put a 2 per cent
tax on oil and natural gas taken
from the ground, with an equal
levy on imports, died after a tech
nical knockout.
Administration lorces Friday
had maneuvered to revive the bill
by switching it from a hostile AS'
sembly committee to a friendly
committee.
The vote Saturday was on
motion by Assemblyman Charles
J. Conrad U( -Sherman Oaks) to
erase the transler.
On the first roll call. Conrad
raised 40 votes one short of the
majorily needed.
While the Assembly was kept
in session, the Highway Patrol
sent out officers to round up four
missing Republicans.
Assemblymen Harold K. Lever
ing, Los Angeles, and Bruce F.
lleagan, Pasadena, flew back to
Sacramento from a fishing trip
near Quincy. Assemblyman Alan
G. Pattee, Salinas, left his son's
graduation ceremonies in Santa
Barbara, and Assemblyman
James L. Holmes returned by air
from Santa Maria.
Assemblyman Joseph Shell (R
Los Angeles), Republican floor
leader and an oilman in private
life, led the fight on the tax plan
and charged the governor with ap
plying pretty tough pressure.
In addition, he said, the drafters
of the legislation "don't know any
thing about the nil business.
Castro Remains Key
To Cuba's Uncertainty
By LEON DENNEN
HAVANA NEAI Solve the rid
dle of Fidel Castro and Cuba's fu
ture will stand revealed. But the
inner key to this perhaps mys
tical idealist has so far eluded
all who have searched.
A former Cuban prime minister,
who knows him well, said:
"The trouble with Fidel is that
he is a lawyer who never prac
ticed law, a champion of labor
who never worked in his life."
Others might add: A leader of
a government who knowi little
of governing.
The his question may be wheth
er Castro is more or less per
manently denied by his dramatic,
exciting, inspiring role as the rev
olutionary who led a ragged, hill
country army to triumph over an
ugly dictator.
It is a part he has played, one
way or another, since his student
days at the University of Havana.
Son of a Spaniard who came to
Cuba and gained wealth as a su
gar planter, Castro spurned the
comfortable life.
He took his degree as a profes
sional revolutionist In 1952, when
he and a tew fellow students tried
to kill Fulgencio Batista, then
seizing power as a dictator from
the legitimate Prio government.
The young firebrand was arrest
ed, sentenced to a long prison
term, and then freed three years
later in a general amnesty. He
went Into self-imposed exile, and
began building an expeditionary
force against Batista.
On December 2, 195. he landed
on Cuba's coast with 82 men. He
was among just 12 who survived
the Initial fighting, but slowly his
force gained recruits In Cuba and
Ihe provincial mountain cam-
fiaigns began. No one doubts he
oves the role of revolutionary
hero, acclaimed by all Cnha since
he came out of the hills the vic
tor. A close associate (eels he will
not easily he able to lay aside
Ihe garb of rebellion. "He still
has a romantic, almost childish
attachment to revolution any rev
olution. Even the Communist?
have stature In his eyes because
they always call for revolution."
In his- moments of self-styled
grandeur. Castro liku to com
pare himself with South Amer
ica s fabled liberator. Simon Boli
var. A good many doubt the apt
An administration stalwart in
the Legislature, Assemblyman
Jesse M I'nruh DLos Angeles)
reminded his colleagues that they
had previously approved all of
Browns 236 million dollar tax
package.
"How in God's name can you go
home and tell the people that you
have voted a cigarette tax and
beer tax and then refused to
put a tax on the- richest industry
in the slate?" I'nruh demanded.
"This house has never had any
guts when it comes to bucking the
oil industry, ne said.
Unruh said he would urge the
state's voters to place the oil
tax on next year's general election
ballot as an initiative measure
Brown's aides estimated that the
nil tax, if passed, would have
brought 128.500,000 a year into the
slate treasury.
The income tax signed into law
today Is expected to yield an ad
ditional 171.400.000 a year.
The governor said two-thirds of
he revenue would come from tax
payers with incomes of more than
$25,000 a year. He noted that the
proposed consumer taxes on cig
arcttcs and beer are relatively
harder on low income groups
Brown said the head of a family
of four receiving less than $10,000
annually would pay no increases
under his income tax plan.
At 115.000 a year, the increase
would be about $44; at $20.ono.
about $92: at $40,000, about $580:
at $100,000. about $1,380; and it
$500,000. about $5,3C0.
Defending the increased income
laxes, the governor said, "This
state has been on deficit financing
more often than not in recent
years.
"I have proposed a tight,
balanced budget, and the revenues
from this and the' other taxes the
administration has proposed are
absolutely necessary to achieve
such a budget."
Brown said legislative action on
his oil and g.is severance tax had
been "ruthlessly blocked by the
oil company lobbyists."
ness of the parallel.
Others leave open the matter
whether he may be one of those
rare men who appear as a lib
erator at a crucial point in his
tory. Observers whose views com
mand respect think the time is
coming when Castro will take a
firm stand against the Cuban Com
munists and steer his country
away from chaos.
President Manuel Urrutia is one
who thinks Castro is master ol
Ihe situation. Himself calm and
serene, an important element in
Cuba's stability and democratic
continuity, Urrutia said:
"The Communists are trying to
take advantage of a revolutionary
situation. But Dr. Castro is Ihe
real chief of the Cuban revolu
tion."
But another Cuban who is not
so sure, a widely regarded leader
versed In every twist and turn
of world communism, likened him
to Alexander Kerensky. democrat
ic premier of Russia who deposed
the Czar 42 years ago and then
iet the Communists outmaneuvr
him and grasp power.
Said he: "Castro is prohablv
not a Communist, but he is being
groomed by the Reds as Cuba's
Alexander Kerensky.
Still another parallel some think
valid is with Premier Abdul Kar-
im Kassim of Iraq. The Iraqui
leader Is no Communist, but
each passing day he finds it more
dillicult to extricate himself from
Ihe stranglehold of his Sov'iet sup
porters. Right now. it is argued, the
Reds need Castro as the man
who commands the loyalty of the
Cuban people, as one. who is will
ing to let them operate freely.
Some feel they will eventually
ditch him, as they have ditched
others, when he has outlived his
usefulness.
Is Castro a Communist, or Is
he the freedom-loving man of stern
stuff that I'rnilia paints, who can
rise to the test when It comes?
Or is he neither of these things,
but simply a professional revolu
tionary who has not learned and
may never learn to be a profes
sional anything ele?
The Cuban who droe me from
the airnort to downtown Havana
said with simple dignity: "We ate
bread een under Dalista. hut Fi
del gave us liberty."
VISALIA. Calif. UPI 1 Author
ities today delved further into the
activities of a Nan youth club
consisting of admirers of Nazism
and headed by a 17-year-old "fu
ehrer" assertedly "distressed with
modern day society."
Existence of the 25 . member
group came to light Saturday
when the leader and three others.
including a young Navy veteran.
were arrested for the May 23 rob
bery of a private museum. Police
said they stole Nazi flags, Lugers,
dangers and medals.
The quartet was to appear in
juvenile court Wednesday. Each
was released in custody of his
parents, pending further action.
Chief Probation Officer Merlin
Winter said initial talks with the
leader of the gang showed that
the youth, described by his teach
ers as intelligent, was "distressed
with modern day society and way
of living and would like to change
it."
The ringleader said the club
was formed in January hy a
group of boys who admired Naz
ism. We wanted to 'sig heil' togeth
er, not alone, he said.
The club includes an SS groun.
whose members cut the initials
into the flesh of their wrists as
part of their initiation, police said.
inn was lust in case some
storekeeper got rough with a
member," the boy was quoted as
saying. "Then we'd send the SS
alter him."
Average Red's Attitude
Termed In Opposition
To Kremlin Bosses' Views
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The tel.
lowing dispatch by Frank H.
Bartholomew, president of Unit
ed Press International, reports
m prevailing and contrasting'
attitudes of Geneva, East Ber
lin, West Berlin and Moscow oa
the German crisis In Interna
tional affairs. The writer visit
ed each city I sequence.)
By FRANK H. BARTHOLOMEW
MOSCOW (I 'PI) - The present
adamant position of the Soviet
negotiators in Geneva, the peri
odic threats of Premier Nikita
Khrushchev at Moscow' and else
where, and the continuously pro
vocative acts of the Communist
satellites in China, Ihe Near East
and Germany, are in stark con
trast with the attitude of the peo
ple themselves In Communism's
world capital.
Soviet diplomacy and the Soviet
people themselves seem to be of
dissimilar patterns.
In busy Moscow the man in the
street talks earnestly of world
peace and the desire to be left
undisturbed to complete the na
tion's seven-year-plan for his per
sonal welfare. This theme is so
wide-spread and so frequently re
peated as to negate any thought
of a conspiracy of six million peo
ple to hide actual warlike intent
from the foreign visitor.
The Russians are an air-minded
oeople and more recently Khrush
chev has made them rocket-conscious.
He has repeatedly staled
lhat the decisive modern weapon
is tne rocket. Nevertheless, to all
superficial appearances the peo
ple are not being prepared for
rocket warfare. There are no air
raid shelters, no dress rehearsals
of the civilian population for
atomic warfare, no apparent fear
that war is imminent.
Inversely, popular interest cen
ters on Ihe miles of new apart
ments undor 'construction on a
scale perhaps not equalled any
where else in the world. Street
work goes on day and night. In
dustries appear to be operating to
capacitv. The theaters are
jammed, by poorly dressed peo
ple obviously hungry lor a touch
of beauty.
The people are well-fed. An im
mediate result of the end of ra
tioning is lhat most of them are
too fat.
Now the yearning lor a few of
the finer things of lile is mani
festing itself, possibly as a sub
stitute for religious worship which
has been made politically unpopu
lar to a point where attendance
at the surviving churches is con
fined to the older generation and
principally to old women.
The infrequent new Western
cars on the streets are immedi
ately surrounded by silently ad
miring throngs. A routine recep
tion at a Western embassy will
draw a crowd across the street
equal in number to a major Hol
lywood premiere, despite the fact
that none of the embassies is in
the public directories or listings
Slowly some of the better things
are coming within view of the
common man. He still usually
dresses in an unmatched coat,
baggy pants and tieless shirt, and
his wife still occasionally wears
a bandana to the Rolshoi Theater,
but he does go to work in the
cleanest and most beautiful sub
way svstem in the world, or on
foot down boulevards lined with
newly planted and luxuriating
green trees
People living several to a room
in present apartments, or arriv
ing from Fast Berlin four to a
compartment In every train, tell
ou that the difficulties are less
than they were, lhat they are
worth enduring because the seven-year-plan
will deliver them to
a better world.
"If." they sav, "the warlike
capitalistic world does not take
matters out of our hands."
It is certain that the people of
Mocow have h-en c-""lr( r'v
sold on the seven-year-plan, to
I
... - J-'1 iii.nrii.ii-iVL-f
ARSON probably was committed with this "fusee" or railroad flare at a garage belonging
to Keith Walker at 504 North Tenth Street Sunday morning. Two other fire's over the week
end, one touched off with a fusee, were listed as probably caused by arson. The Klam
ath Falls Department firemen are Gino Gheller, left, and Harold Uglun.
Funeral
PASILLAS
Funeral services for John Clyde
A. Pasillas took place at the grave
side in Klamath Memorial Park
on Monday. June 8, at 4 p.m.,
Ward's Klamath Funeral Home in
charge of the arrangements.
the extent that the Khrushchev
regime has bet its very existence
upon its ability to deliver the
goods by the deadline Six years
nence.
Completion of the seven-vear
plan would become an immediate
impossibility in event of World
War III. Obvious even to the
most casual observer among the
west s approximately 40.000 tour
ists in tne soviet union this year
is the fact that the people do not
want war and have not been emo
tionally conditioned for war.
An impression gained in talking
ivnh Communist boss Walter LI
bncht in East Germany is that
the East German government.
while under the complete control
ol the Kremlin, nevertheless, to
Ihe best of its ability keeps the
Kremlin under pressure lo force
a showdown, with arms if neces
sary, in Germany.
Russia would appear to have
everything to lose and nothing to
pain Dy precipitating a war. The
same is not true from the stand
point of the East German Com
munists and their present precar
ious political - situation.
Strong indication that Ihe East
German" government feels it does
not have popular, support and
could not survive a plebiscite ap
pears in its refusal to consider
free elections. The feeling in West
Germany is that East Berlin at
least cannot continuously survive
with its gloom-encompassed low
living standards and slow recov
ery immediately adjacent to the
igorous, lively and spectacularly
successful city of West Berlin.
The situation in Communism's
Oriental perimeter is believed, in
some Western diplomatic circles
here, to he basically diflerent
from the relationship between the
Kremlin and East Berlin which it
completely controls. The Chinese
Communists, like their Caucasian
brothers in East Berlin, are
garded as definitely warlike. The
added danger to world peace here
is believed to lie in the fact that
Moscow is not sure of its influ
ence over Peiping, and in the fur
ther fact that tace-saving is so
important in the Orient that Com
munist hina cannot acenmmo
date itself to zig-zags in foreign
policy such as that involving the
recent abortive deadline for West'
ern evacuation of Berlin.
World War III, stemming from
a showdown over East Germany,
may result from miscalculation
or accident. But it seems certain
at the moment that it will not re
sult from the wishes of the peo
ple themselves in Ihe t S S R. as
expressed in Ihe capital city.
In perspective, the weight at
tached hy the West to the present
unyielding position of Ihe Commu
nist negotiators at Geneva might
he regarded as a tribute to
strong case oasea more upon
threat than fact.
The warlike threats of the
U.SS.R. which brought the for
eign ministers conlercnce into
being at Geneva scorn, as viewed
from the interior of Russia, to
have been based on bluff, insofar
as any visirae, warlike prepara
tion ot the Soviet people them
selves is concerned. West Berlin
believes that if the conference
fails to produce Ihe desired sum
mi! meeting, the city will be sub
ject to immediate Communist
harassments. Some Western env
hassies here feel certain, how
ever, that any excursions Into!
brinksmanship permitted East
German leader Walter I'lbricht
will be under tight Kremlin rein
and control and not permitted to
lead to a military showdown.
V MILLIONAIRES
new uhk a PI '-There are
an estimated 270 Americans with
an annual pre-tax income of $1
million or more. Approximately
M0 are in the troono, to $l mil
lion bracket: 23.000 tn the $100 000
to ivw ooo set and (B ono in the
$30,000 to $100,000 class.
Two Garages,
Battered By Arson Blazes
Arson-caused fires battered two
private garages and a heavy
earth loader in Klamath Falls and
in the suburban area over the
weekend.
The Klamath Falls Fire Depart
ment was called to a04 North
Tenth Street early Sunday morn
ing to battle a fire started by a
railroad signal flare in a garage
belongmg to Keith Walker. The
flames so badly damaged the
frame structure that a portion of
it will have to be rebuilt.
While firemen were battling that
fire another started in a garage
at 915 Jefferson Street,' at a home
occupied by Mrs. Bernard W. Zoll-
man. around a corner from the
Walker home. The fire apparently
was started with a match. A neigh
bor reported it immediately and
firemen held damage to scorched
walls.
Firemen said Mrs. Zallman s ga
rage is located in a heavily popu
lated area and could have torched
Authors1 Kin
Disappears
DAVIS. Calif, f API California I
and Nevada police are hunting the
19-ycar-old daughter of mystery
writers Kenneth and Margaret
Millar.
Her father uses the pen name
John Ross McDonald."
The girl, Linda J. Millar, dis-
anoeared after leaving a Nevada
gambling casino, saying she had
to get back to school. Miss Miliar,
a sophomore at the University of
California branch in Davis, was
last seen leaving the casino at
Lake Tahoe the night of May 30-31.
Millar told reporters his daugh
ter was a bnlliart student, She
may have snapped under the
strain, he said.
He said three years ago she was
driving a car which struck and
killed a 13-year-old boy in Santa
Barbara.
"She was haunted by a feeling
of guilt, I think." continued Mil
lar. He said she may nave oeen
worried about final examinations
"not that she would fail, but that
she might not get all A s."
Wound Said
Self-Inflicted
NEWELL Leonard Edward Ly
nam, 52. a native of Hoxie. Kan
sas. and a resident of Newell, Mo
doc County. Calilornia for 11 years,
died of a gunshot wound at h i s
home near Newell about 7 a.m.
June 7.
Modoc County Sheriff E. R. Ser
ver. whose office investigated, said
the wound was self-inflicted with
a .32 Special rifle in the yard of
the family home. Mr. Lynam had
been in failing health.
He was a member of Portneuf
No. 120. 1O0F of Pocatello, Idaho.
He had been employed as a car
penter. Survivors include his mother,
Mrs. Nellie Lynam and a sister.
Mrs. Berneta Ackley. both of New
ell.
Funeral services will he held
from the chapel of Ward's Klam
ath Funeral Home. Klamath iFalls.
June at i p.m. with concluding
services and commitment in Klam'
ath Memorial Park.
California Weather
United Press International
San Francisco Bay Area: Fair
tb-ough Tuesday except low over-
east near ocean Tuesday morning:
1 gh today San Francisco. S3. Oak
land 87, San Mateo 70. San Ra
faei 74: low tonight 48-52: wester
ly above normal becoming normal
trmgnt.
Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Part
ly cloudy through Tuesday: little
change in temperature.
Sierra Nevada: Fair through
Tuesday: little change in temper
ature.
Northwestern California: Fair
through Tuesday except fog and
low clouds on coast from Cape
Mendocino northward and partly
cloudy extreme northern interior
little change in temperature: high
today and low tonight Napa 79-48.
Ikiah 75-48. Santa Rosa 77-4
cnlal winds northwest and west
12-2$ m p h.
Earth Loader
a disastrous fire in the neighbor
hood if control had not been
prompt.
Men of the Suburban Fire
Department put out a fire, also
started with a railroad flare, on
a huge, expensive rubber tire on a
giant earth loader belonging to the
Kenneth Nelson Construction Com
pany Monday morning at the cor
ner of Homedale Road and Harlan
Drive.
The tire was not ruined, but Nel
son told firemen it was weakened
and will not last long.
The Stewart-Lenox Fire Depart-
ment confined damage in a frame
storage shed belonging to George
Davis of 2203 Autumn Avenue to
about 100 dollars worth when it
caught fire of unknown origin Sat
urday afternoon.
Neighbors armed with garden
hoses kept flames down until fire
men arrived. Some lumber in the
building was damaged slightly.
The county fire department was
called to put out a fire in a box
car amid a Southern Pacific tram
near the California line on High
way 97 Saturday. Firemen said
flame started from overheated
brakes.
The lumber loaded car was cut
from the train and isolated on a
siding at Worden. One end of the
car was badly damaged and the
cargo received moderate damage.
COLD TRAIL
BUFFALO. N.Y. (UPH Two nn-
licemen picked up a very cold trail
and lollowed it about a mile be
fore they nabbed Lee James. 18,
for stealing two overcoats. They
arrested the youth after following
his footprints .in the snow.
The bends we mean are brought on
by those Z-shaped door openings on
many of the '59s the kind of door you
have to fall, crawl or back into! Mercury
ends the bends with the most generous
doors in its field up to 6 inches
wider, with windshield" posts 2H inches
forward, out of knee-knocking range.
Secret of Mercury's easy access is the
only body shell in the medium price
YREKA The Shasta Valley Gar
den Club held its regular meeting
at the home of Mrs. nenneuo
Terwilliger, club president, who
was assisted with hostess duties
by her daughter, Mrs. Larry
Walters.
During the business session. Mrs.
Terwilliger appointed her standing
committee chairmen for 1939-60 as
follows: Mrs. Charlotte Robinson,
hnsnitalitv: Betty Dow, publicity:
Ellen Walters, historian: Alta Coat,
ney and Mary Lilly, garden ther
apy; Rae Sylva,
wild flower: and
Ed Board
Holds Meet
YREKA At a recent meeting
of the Siskiyou County Board of
Educafion held at .reka. audio
visual department contracts for all
school districts were signed.
Applications for lit- diplomas
were also approved by the board
for Dorothy W. Johns, health and
development: Jack M. Murtha of
Mount Shasta, general elementary:
Harley J. Zeller of Tuielake. gen
eral elementary; James B. Meek.
Yreka. special secondary in in
dustrial arts; Arthur E. Fish of
Weed, general elementary; Dor
othy Ann Newton. Yreka, general
elementary: and Nicholas Floratos
ol Mount Shasta, general elemen
tary. Board members also approved
the purchase of eight new films for
the audio-visual department: voted
to cooperate with the California
Highway Patrol suggestion that
school bus drivers file a daily re
port on the mechanical condition
of the vehicle they drive. They
also gave instruc'on to the Siski
you County superintendent of
schools to submit all credentials
to board members at least four
days prior to approval requests.
A temporary certificate form
was also approved by the board.
authorizing the holder of each not
more than 60 days of teaching
from the first day prior to receiv
ing regular certificate approved
credentials for. Sarah J. Gibson.
Yreka, special secondary to teach
exceptional children: Robert B.
Manley of Mount Shasta, general
pupil personnel services: Edward
Moris, junior college: and Bessie
Waters, general elementary.
BASIC ENGLISH
HARTFORD. Conn. iUPI
State Rep. John Shostak wants to
establish a commission to make
sure highway signs are written in
plain English. He thinks such
signs as "crossing medium divider
prohibited'' should be changed to
"don t cross center strip.
A bear hunt is staged annually
in Northern Ontario. Canada, to
provide bearskin hats to be worn
hy the Queen of England's Brigad;
of Guards.
BENDS
ami x -
field not designed for a smaller car.
Big-car shell puts Mercury's transmis
sion under the hood instead of under-foot-Mercury's
power tunnel is half as
big as competition's. Lower tunnel
means extra leg room, extra-padded
seats. No more bucket-seat ride for
the man the middle. Come in for a
treatment-and a turn at the wheeil
Be MERCURY
BASIN MOTORS
424 So. 6th St.
Mrs. Terwilliger will work wita
Rita Prather as program chair,
man.
AJso during the business session,
Mrs. Terwilliger distributed the
ribbon awards won by the vari
ous members at the recent flower
show held at Yreka.
Mrs. Terwilliger reported on ihe
Medford Garden Club flower show,
which she and several members
and guests attended.
Mrs. Ellen Walters gave a talk
on classification of flowers, plants
and arrangements as used by f.
ficials in judging and arranging
for flower shows. Mrs. Walters
had served as a judge's aide at
the Yreka Flower show.
An announcement was received
from the Siskiyou County Library,
informing members mat the li
brary has several books on gar
dening, flowers and plants, avail
able for use by garden cluo mem
bers or other gardeners.
It was also announced that the
district meeting of the California
Garden Clubs incorporated, was
to be held on June 8 at Paradise,
California, and Mrs. Terwilliger.
as president left Thursday. June 4
to attend the event.
Refreshments were served after
members had viewed a series of
colored slides which were scenes
taken of numerous gardens in
Shasta Valley, shown by Mrs.
Walters.
Others present in addition lo
those mentioned included Mrs.
Alta Allen. Pearl Conroy, Mar
garet lAldec) Davis, Ada John
stone, Edith Williams, Hilda Coo-
ley, Alta Coatney, Mable French,
Orpha Kouts, Grace Leavers, Mary
Sylva. Evelyn Hansen. Marie Lenz,
and three guests Di Raver, Vera
Dietrich and Mrs. Josephine Aus
tin, guest of Mrs. Ada Johnstone
from San Fernando Valley.
Women's Society
Holds Potluck
YREKA The home of Mrs.
John Brazie. south of Yreka on
Highway 99, was recently the set
ting for a potluck dinner for tha
Yreka Women's Society of Chris
tian Service, with members of the
Mary Martha Circle sharing host
ess duties.
!'rs. James Sullivan, new presi
dent of the Yreka WSCS. present
ed p: to Mrs. Harold Evett and
Mrs. Carrie LeMay. each of whom
has served as president of t R e
WSCS for two years, and to Mrs.
A. H. Henig. who served the WSCS
as treasurer for eight years. .
CENTRAL AIR - CONDITIONING
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPII-With-
in a decade, air conditioning will
be pumped into homes from.
central - source just as gas and
electricity are today, according to
Charles V. Fenn. a vice presi
dent of the Carrier Corporation.
He says underground pipes and
wires from a central power plant
will supply healing, hot water and
air conditioning.