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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1959)
MONDAY, JUNE 8. 1959 HERALT AW NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE FIVE Youths Drown At Oceanlake OCEANLAKE (AP) Two vouths cavorting in the urf were Carried to their deaths in the Pa ifie Ocean by an outgoing tide here Saturday. The victims were Allen Leroy Gedde and James Frederick Wii , liamson, both 20 and both of Port land, state police said. Neither body was recovered im mediately. The Coast Guard end- gravel Plant Will Reopen CORVALLIS (APS A sand and i-rravel plant here, closed by a v Teamsters Union strike, said it would reopen today with law of- 'Micers on patrol. John Gallagher Jr., president '--f the Corvallis Sand k Gravel "Co.. said he asked Sheriff C. N, ' Lilly for deputies "just in case.' Lilly agreed to assign two dep ties, but said he doubted il there ' would be any trouble. Ward Greham, head of the ' Teamsters Union Local 324 on strike at the plant, said he too doubted if there would be trouble ' The pickets. laid Graham would be at the plant as usual i- and he predicted no union men would report for work. v Gallagher said he believed tome union men would cross the picket lines, established at the ' plant May 11. 1 The dispute began at the firm nd spread throughout the mid- Willamette Valley when the Cas- cade Employers Assn. ruled a strike against one a strike against "r all. Eight plants at Salem, one at Independence and two others . here closed. T The sand, gravel and ready-mix 'concrete shutdown has halted much construction in the area. The dispute stems from a union demand for an immediate 35-cent an hour wage increase, and man agement's insistance that the 33 cents be spread over a three-year v" period. The union contract ex pired Dec. 31. ed its search Saturday night. Rel atives of the victims, and the fire department here, looked Sunday without success. Police said one youth was float ing on a rubber air mattress in the surf, and the other was swim ming nearby, when they were caught by a vicious outgoing tide several persons on the beach saw the two far out in the surf. but by the time aid could be call ed the men had vanished. The mattress .later washed ashore. The Coast Guard sent boats out to search but found nothing. An airplane, too, was pressed into the search. Its pilot said he thought be saw a body far out in the sea shortly before darkness forced him to land. : New Plane : Ends Test EDWARDS AFB. Calif. fVPU The Doak 16, a new plane capable of hovering, going straight up or ." flying like a conventional craft. has competed successfully its first "flight test, the Army announced today. . The craft, designated the CZ4DA ' by the Army, was hailed as more adaptable than the helicopter be cause of its unique barrel-shaped 'power plants located on the tips "of its wings. The power plants. ' which look like large encased fans, can swivel into positions h'which make the craft act like a c conventional plane or a helicopt- er. The Army said the Doak 16 was !. designed for longer ranges and higher speeds than helicopters and ' would be used as a liaison plane. It was built by Doak Aircraft, -Torrance, Calif. 11 Honored By Scouts SAX FRANCISCO (UPO-Come-i dian Bob Hope, Restaurateur George Mardikian and nine other men have been honored by the Boy Scouts for "distinguished ser vice to boyhood. The awards were presented Sat urday at the closing luncheon session of the scouts' National Council convention here. They received the Silver Buffalo! Award given for noteworthy ser vice to youth either through activ ities with the Boy Scouts or inde pendent of the organization. Hope was honored for his "Ex ploring with Hope" telecast which helped launch the new Explorer Scout program for the 14-16 age group. Mardikian. San Francisco res taurateur and author, was cited for being "one of scouting ! great est and most enthusiastic ambass adors here and abroad." Other honored included Milo W. Benins, Los Angeles. GLAMOR GIRLS ii i ii .t "On the contrary, I find water skiing and anow ski ing quite similar." Meet Ended By WWI Vets Woman Saves Fire Victim CORVALLIS, Ore. fAP Mrs. Alene Brittain, about 40. Monroe, was visiting at nearby Kings Val ley Saturday when she saw a neighboring house on fire. She hurried to the house and saw on the floor Gene Woods, 45. He was unconscious and his clothes were aflame. Mrs. Brittain removed her blouse, tied it about her head and pulled Woods outside. Then she tore off his burning clothing. He was taken to a Corvallis hospital, unconscious and in critical con dition. The fire, of undetermined ori gin, destroyed the house. ALBANY. Ore. (AP) The Ore gon Veterans oi vtona war t closed its annual convention here over the weekend after naming Kay Carnathan of Portland de partment commander. Raleh J. Baldwin of Salem, the outgoing president, was elected a trustee. He also was assignee to manage a booth for World War I veterans at tne uregon tenienmai Exposition at Portland. Other officers are Ralph Ayles worth of Roseburg, senior vice commander: Dan Reed Jr., Ba ker, junior vice commander: Or va! Karaey. Mulino, quartermas ter; Stewart Arnold. Taft, judge advocate; Melvin James, Hslis- boro, chaplain; and Montoe C Walton. Portland, adjutant. Mrs. Muriel Jardine of Salem was elected department auxiliary president. Other auxiliary officers: Canada had an estimated popu lation of 17,048.000 on June 1, ItoS. Montreal is the largest city with a population of 1.109.43S. MONKEYING WITH DIET ' BERLIN (UPIi Visitors are no longer permitted to 'feed the monkeys at the West Berlin zoo. Officials said the visitors had been providing such tasty snacks that the monkeys were shunning their regular meals, and snubbing the keepers too. WE MOVE YOU FOR LESS! House to Home City to City State to Stat EAD'S TRANSFER & STORAGE tended 4 Licensed Irekers 5J1 Market TU 3-407 Graham Raps West World For Overemphasis On Seic LONDON tT! Overemphasis on sex is one the greatest dang ers faced by the western world. American evangelist Bsily Graham said today. Graham, in London for a rest after three months of crusades is Australia and Sew Zealand, point ed- to London's parks as an ex ample of hai he meant. He said the great parks of Lon don were so much like bedrooms that he was forced to cut short a walk he was takmg with his wife Sunday. "It was about dusk, he said, "and I could hardly believe it. The! parks looked as it they had been turned into bedrooms, with people lying ait oter the place in all sorts of conditions." The 40-year.eSd North Carolina evangelist added, "Where once we could walk (hroush the London parks and enjoy the birds, the ducks and the water, it was so embarrassing os Sunday that 1 finally took nsy wife out.' Graham added; We have made idols of people He told a press conference that (who pi their emphasis oa awe. I he and Mrs. Graham had strolled through parts of three s the big gest parks in London Hyde Park, Green Park and S T. James. V.A.R. . LEBANON PACT CAIHO (IW-The I'sited Arab Republic and Lebanon signed an economic agreement S a s d a y. U.A.R. Finance Minister Abdel Moneim Kaysount said it would "promote our aim of establishing Arab economic unity and an Arab common market." The agreement slashed customs duties and re duced by halt the fees ea the movement of persons between the two countries. think the sew generation coming along is far better acquainted with Jajne Mansfield s statistics than it is with the Second Commandment which orders that thou shall not :1 f tie Idaho has more than JO million acres in national forests. Mrs. Ethel Reed, Baker, senior vice president; Mrs. Ethel Hens- ley, Portland, junior vice presi dent; Mrs. Ptiryva Lewis, ren dieton. chaplain: Mrs. Dorothy Leuty, Centra! Point, conductor; Mrs. Gertrude McFadden, Bend, guard: and Mrs. Vera McKraney, Coos Bay, historian. ( HAVE YOU HEARD J TJhertJ!aB the ThriH e4 CantentmfRt New PIANO or ORGAN IN YOUR HOME for Ysr ttl LOUIS R. MANN PIANO COMPANY m. y Til 4-7112 take tints thee any Image . . . . "This a i danger to our culture. "It is a terrible thins and one! ot ute tartars which destroyed Rome aad other cities, "It a going to bring the Si meat of God on any city that fa the way ef Sodom and Gomorrah, MATERNITY FASHIONS LINGERIE DRESSES TOPS SKIRTS PEDAL PUSHERS CAPRt PANTS '4- weys tft buy; CaiH, 33-Dv Cktift, KeveMftf CHerfe . a.s m..mm.l i - s - ll'Ireat Whiskebf the .Old West ; in A WINNINS THE WIST fcj I fY THIS GREAT KENTUCKY WHISKEY COMES IN TWO BOTTLING S! There arc two great tastes in American whiskey. Some people prefer blends. Others like straight bourbon. With the quality assur ance of Sunn; Brook you can buy eithef. la Sunny Brook's round bottle is aa unusual blend of Kfnlucky whiskies and the lightest grain neutral spirits. In the square bottle if Sunny Brook's straight Kentucky bourbon, deliciously mild nd sunny. Round bottle blend or square bot tle straight every drop it Kentucky r m . a . .. a. whiskey. S4 0 45 Ot.lrt-l-J , ou ' Wf' its $uny toooi co . toutsvau. rt.. csntiwrTto rf nmm twmuw wosocntonT. nnww iTRUOMI I0USBOK miW, 90 WOOF ttNTUCW IllhOtO WHtSKW, U MOOT . 8Mi Wm $!) I' ITS.'- BHOOI 2 ' - - I t,ewDi Mew ! 'r rr ' I whiki W0M 1UNI 10 FOR 100 DAY (f Till A A ITI ...the show of your lifetime! You'll ee IlIO I I acres of thrilling exhibits ... voull be enter tained by the top stars in show business . . , you'll forever remember this vast spread of entertainment, Invitt your f riends and relatives . to have the tithe or their lives at America bkj event r for '59! ADVENTURELAND ... ride nearly a mile of miniature railroad through a completely retreated Frontier Village, Sawmill Boom Town and In dian Village, where natives live in the manner of their ancestors. INTERNATIONAL TRADE FAIR , , , thousands of products act dhpity frara 2J nttiooj,,, fain ton dupiiyi . , , free film in the International Theatre. ... rides, thowt, games for the furi-Bttnded ... the na rjon't largest ferrii wheel . , . Kiddieijnd. Inttrriatisnal Garden ef Tmrrw , , brilliant floral festival of blooms and shttbt from the world over , , an attrhenae Jap anese techoeae . . . a 22-foot case die ... the miking Hall of Re ligiout History. ATOMIC ENERGY EXHiBET.newe and largest Aiomk Energy Commiision eshibit , , , a working mode! of an atomic power plant. NATIVE WILDLIFE ...Oregon Fish end Game exhibit shows live fish and animals ef the state's vast woods and waters in their natural habitats . . tea iioes will perform for visitors. CAMEO HOME OP IDEAS , , , a fascinating collection of new ideas in living , , , home features of the furor. WATER WONDERS ... the 7,000 seat Aqua Center offers series of water spectacles, including the National Outboard Championships, August 20-2J. FOREST PRODUCTS PAVILION , ,.a bold architectural wonder, displaying the latest developments in the Northwest's mighty lum ber industry. ACRES OP THRILLING ATTRACTIONS I Helicopter Hides , . . Horticultural Hall , , , Katlroad Exhibit ... Foreign Restaurants. RESERVE YOUR TICKETS NOWI On Mom Stage! EXPOSITION ARENA 'he KE-CAPADES WtWaCrM' &itif Spttivd JUNE 11-24 tttftaeMeK f-&t WNel SVftvrieVpS MRfeff i JH ftfefledf flaV $4efeaT iiQ pm. Iwrfa it ftfaeet lieNitMt. il K tmt St M, tnwoft, J3J0, S!JC, $t Jfc Country Aittarka fW iMtov Nrt lf, mc S kSM Jun 26-ju!y i Roy Rogers Shew Mr 10-1 Harry Belafont Jut 23-25 Art Unklffrs Heus Party JiHy 26-30 Water Foil i Avgtist 114 Takerszuks Ballot Aimt 24-29 Tha Orgn Story Ketf ef Mit f unm WtOTi September 1 I 1 I 1 I Tei CewtemtM txecttt tkmmt, ill i. W, IreeJwey, rtieet MAU SEND Mb m tie.ee tvi w en mt w m rev I CiwttJ (Mo? Orft tar t- e Seek Stnser' tl.JC laemt tee "w "Kl CAMSit" .t seK to -i;r atMstr s. .Omni MniMiea KI tit" Drive Ml Highway 99 West to the E pssiHsn parking area, tide Hii leeket larsif frem the oarkinf drew tm Nte laaeiitian. )ttnis 1 I Bet ewfri tar "1 CAM&tJ" TwUte I 0t m O lwt O ee !fer, I I 1 1 I I I I J