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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1959)
?AE FOUR ADMIRING a fiw of the mora then 500 autographed photo graphs of motion picture start which iha hat collected during her lifetime, is Mrs. Clarice Franberg, Mount Shasta. This hobby, which she began at the age of 10, cafsed her to come in contact with such famous silent screen actors s Rudolph Valentino and Mary Piekford. Minnesotan Lists Stars Among Chums By J. O. MrKINNEY MOUNT SHASTA - A personal Sift from the actress Mary Pick ford is an annual occurrence for Mrs. Clarice Franberg, who numbers among her friends many Hollywood stars, mostly of the silent screen era. Mrs. Franberg, a recent arrival from Minneapolis, has brought with her more than 500 autographed photographs of stars, ranging from Mary Piekford, Shirley Temple and Zasu Pitts to Bull Montana, William S. Hart and Rudolph Val entino. Her interest in actors and her collection of pictures began when she was 10 years old. A friend of her parents ' owned the two largest moving picture showhous- es in Minneapolis, and many of the leading personalities of that day would come to them on per sonal tour and on location. She would arrange to meet them and thus beRan a lifetime hobby. Mrs. Franberg says thai she is still a fan of the first magnitude, but deplores a falling-off of quality pictures. The cause of this is un certain, however her idea is that It is temporary, for she thinks there will be others who attain great heights as directors and they will bring out pictures on a level of other years. This will re sult in the creation of stars who will also scale the heights to por tray characters in keeping with the pictures in which they are east. . PTA Historian Takes Course ALTURAS A workshop, Ihe first of its kind in the nation to deal with (he problems of the aged, was sponsored recently at the College of (he Pacific, in Stockton, in cooperation with the California Congress of Parents and Teachers and the Citizen's Advi sory Committee on Aging. Mrs. Charles F. Dcmick, histor ian of the Modoc Council of Parent-Teacher Associations and a resident here, attended this con ference. While there she learned such pertinent facts as. 65 per cent of all old people live with or. near Ihcir children, and since old age is something that faces all people from their youth, it should not he disguised, hut made more pleasant. Mrs. Margaret Jcnson, Berkeley. assistant executive secretary of the CACA. reported on a recent National Leadership Training In ilitule for the White House Con ference on Aging, which she had attended. It stressed family re lation with elderly people. Air Victims Bodies Found SAN RAFAEL (UPI) - The bodies of two Sonoma men missing since last November have been found in Ihe wreckage of a light plane In (he hills near Nicaslo. 15 miles north of here They were Identified as Paul An-' drews, 52, and Henry Kime, about SO. They were last seen when they took off from Ihe Sonoma Airport Nov. 9. Thr badly smashed plane was discovered by hikers Sunday night. Only (he (ail of (he single-engine craft was visible in Ihe dense fo liage, which apparently had pre vented search planes from light ing Ihe wreckage from the air Marin County Coroner Frank Keaton said a rescue parly Irom, Hamilton Air Force base would be ! eluding service In Klamath Me sent to recover the bodies today. 1 morn! Park. - rnoto by McMnniy 4-H NEWS COMMUNITY CLUB ETNA The 10th monthly meet ing of the Ktna 4-H Community Club was called to order by Presi dent Lorena Dillman. Alan lloven- don reported on the regional dem onstration and talent field day, Red Bluff, which he. Steven Dill- man and Mike and Wendy Cassady attended. Wes Sorenson gave the members points to remember when judging dairy cattle and sheep. In dairy cattle good gen eral appearance, large mammary system and much body capacity arc important. Sheep should be square in shape with tine, curly wool. They should be fattened evenly and one must feel them to judge them accurately. ETNA The monthly meeting of!Vde- JSe McAdams suspended Ihe Etna 4-H Community Club wasllh,f hs' hunting licenses until held al Ihe Clnren.o DnHlnv rnnnh June 22. Before the meeting, mem bers practice judging beef, sheep and hogs. For a community prof eel the club decided to make signs to put at various crossroads in Scott Valley, giving names of lanes' and ranches. The next community meeting is to be a wiener roast at Ihe Etna Pleasure Park, with George McMullen, speaker. Sharon Young News Reporter BurneyMen Oppose Hike BURNEY Burney business men will, appear before the Shas ta County Board of Supervisors, Redding, on July 20 when that board sits as a board of equaliza tion. They will protest a recent increase of assessments on t h e main street properties. , The increase under protest ranges from Jin to $40 and $30 to $80 per front fool in true value. A petition of 44 signers protesting Ihe increase was backed by the appearance of 10 Burney business men last Monday afternoon, dur ing a meeting of the board. They claimed that businesses are just beginning to recover from a heavy financial loss inflicted by a (hree-month strike at the Scotl Lumber Company mill, three yars ago, and lhat if any adjust ment should be made, it should be downward. Oepiily Assessor Henry N. Keim said he had used recent sales to establish properly values in Bur ney but the town's represenla- lives contended he used figures which were misleading on the main street of the tow n, which is U.h. Highway 299 E. route (o (he Mount .Shasta Hos- Dr. J. R. Lcibee warned lhat.pilal Saturday, July 11. She hadj any attempts to hall i n f I a 1 1 o n - been living temporarily at Grass. would have to De done on a local level ana (hat an Increase in as sessments would encourage infla tion. Assessor Myron R. Harrison ex plained Ihe county was readjusting and equalizing assessments after completing (he firs( accurate and complete properly holdings map of (he entire county. The adjustment would bring most properly up (o 25 per cent of assessed valua tion, he said. Property was formerly assessed at about 17 per cenl ot assessed valuation. Funerals PENCE Funeral services for Geneva, Alice rencc win lake place from Ihe Calvary Baptist Church on Tuesday, July 14. al 1:30 p.m.. with the Rev. Grady Estes oflici- aung. concluding services andWw0 years' nrnbation for beating entombment in Klamath Memorial Park. ('HAMMERS Funeral services for Sarah Eliz abeth Chambers will take place from Ihe chapel nf Ward's Klam ath Funeral Home on Tuesday. July 14. at 10:30 a.m.. with Ihe Rev. W. D. Bigby officiating. Con- HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Weather Table L'niltd Press International High Low Rain A.'buquerque 95 67 Atlanta 87 M .37 Rakersfield 108 76 Boise 99 66 Brownsville 92 73 Chicago 73 v 63 Denver 85 60 Detroit 8(1 59 i Fairbanks 57 40 Fort Worth 95 7.1 Fresno 105 68 Helena 92 57 Kansas Cily A3 70 Los Angeles 91 fifi Miami 88 77 Minneapolis 80 fi.1 .07 New Orleans 92 73 New York 76 69 Oakland 62 55 Oklahoma City 87 68 Phoenix 106 84 Pittsburgh 80 58 Red Bluff 103 71 Reno 98 55 Sacramento 92 59 Salt Lake City 98 67 San Diego 80 68 San Francisco 62 53 Seattle 71 Spokane 91 57 Stockton 93 60 Thermal 112 87 Washington 78 68 1.04 Cases Heard In Courts MONTAGUE .Judge James B. McAdams of Montague Justice Court, heard several cases during the week in Montague and Yreka Justice courts. Ken Cavin of. Yreka was brought in on charges of failure to pro vide for his wife. Gloria Cavin, Montague, and their four children. Judge McAdams sentenced Cavin to six months in jail, suspended to serving 20 days in the county jail. and placed Cavin on two years probation. Two minors were arrested by olficers of the fish and game de partment on charges of having loaded firearms in a motor ve- ,,um,l,K vduii. Also appearing before Judge Mc Adams, was Loren Boyd Ham blen, Grenada, who was arrested last weekend on a charge of drunken driving. He was sen- lenced,. to five days in jail and a $368 fine, and had his driver's license suspended for one year. Hamblin has had three prior con victions on similar charges since 1937. , Presiding over the Yreka Jus lice Court, Judge McAdams fined James Albert Gray, 46, Ashland $315 or BO days in jail. Gray was arrested by Yreka police on charg es of driving while drunk. After pleading guilty to (wo of three charges, Junior Edward Flynn, 37, Medford, was fined $315 by Judge McAdams for drunk driving; $25 for driving on wrong side of center line, or 65 days in jail. A third charge, driving with a suspended driver's, license, was dismissed. Obituaries ' COCIIENOUR DUNSMUIR Francis T. Coche nour, 57, a native of Canada and resident ot this city, died Mon day, July 13, at 4:29 a.m. ap parently from self-inflicted wounds according to the Siskiyou County sheriff's office. He had been off work as a Southern Pacific con ductor since October recovering from an ankle injury, and friends report that he was acutely de pressed. He is survived by the widow. Helen, Dunsmuir; a son, William. Del Paso Heights, and a sister, Kathy Collier. Canada. He was a member or the Dunsmuir Lodge AF&AM. Nobel's Chapel is in charge of the arrangements. MYEIS DUNSMUIR Louise F. Mycis, 1 54, resident of this city, died em i Lake. She is survived by her husband, Joseph W. FORD Mary Anna Ford. 54. a native of Ludlow. Illinois, and a resident of Klamalh Falls for eight years, died here Sunday, July 12. Sur vivors include the widower. Mar vin K; sons, Rodger and Richard of this cily: daughters. Mrs. Wil liam Thornton, Brooklicld, Wiscon sin, and Mrs.' Elaine Jensen of Escanaba. Michigan; brothers. Herman Brinker. Scotia. Califor nia, Wesley Blinker. Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Edward Brinker, Es canaba. Michigan, and Ray Brin ker, Flint, Michigan; also three grandchildren. Funeral arrange ments will he announced by Ward's Klamath Funeral Home. CAKE BATTF.RKn WIFE APPLETON. Wis. U'PI Wil liam V an Linn. 23. sentenced to j his wife, (old the court he did it necause she wouldn't bake him a cake. "Bakery cakes aren t as ood as my wile's homemade ones, he said. Pottery Is Rumania's oldest cralt. and some elements of its design can he (raced back (o Greco- Roman times. Some pottery is made for decorative ceramics. omt lor useful utensils. Legal Chief Raps Position On Water LOS ANGELES ((.'Pit - Cali- fornia State Attorney General j Stanley Mosk said today that the! and cooler through Tuesday. I planned to put a giant crane and federal government's position inl Sierra Nevada: Fair and cooler i divers into action today in an at the 8-year-old Colorado River wa-j through Tuesday except local af-jtempt to raise three diesel loco ter suit could "have a serious im-!ternoon cloudiness in south. motives which plunged into the pact on water rights in every state in the union." Mosk disclosed that he lias writ ten to the president of the National Assn. of Attorney Generals, Rich ard Lrvm of Florida, warning uut the government s stand in the) case might lead to federal control ' of most water rights. j "The United States makes two arguments which, if accepted. I would very largely take control of water rights away from the states," Mosk's letter staled. A copy of the letter along with an other letter was sent to Rep. Glenard P. Lipscomb (R-Calif.l in Washington. Mosk said the government ar gued that waters appurtenant to the Lower Colorado Basin passed to federal control when the United States took over the area from .Mexico. The second argument that could hinder states' water rights, Mosk said, was that this nation never turned over control of the Colorado to the lower basin states. mere should Be no serious federal-state problem in the water rights field. Congress in a whole series of statutes beginning with 1866 has evidenced a consistent in tention to leave the water rights to state law," Mosk wrote "The position of the United Slates in Arizona vs. California is capable of seriously retarding water resources develop ment throughout the country if it should be sustained. Unfortunalely, the United Stales has no water law to re place the laws enacted by the states if stale law should be de stroyed or rendered inoperative," Mosk added. He said he believes most of the state attorneys general would agree with him, and that some would want to express their op position to the government's stand. Mosk said (hat if the association had no objections he would like lo tell all the attorneys general about the government's stand on the case. Navy Plans Nike Shot POINT A R G U E L L O, Calif.' (UPI i A two-stage Nike-Asp solid propellant rocket packing a 50- pound payload is scheduled to be fired tonigh( by Navy scientists studying Ihe nature of explosions uii uie sun. The rocket, Sun Flare II, is de signed to streak about 150 miles into the heavens in an eight-min ute trip to gather readings of cos mic radiation during a normal period when there is relatively little solar flare activity. Another shot will be made during one of the large solar explosions so sci entists can learn the amount of radiation increase. Cosmic and X-rays spewed from the sun during solar flares, some times called sun spots, disrupt radio communications on earth. Firing of Ihe 12-foot 1,760-pound rocket will be the first launching of a high-performance ballistic missile from this naval base about 150 miles north of Los Angeles. The first piohe fired in Ihe sun flare series was made July 1, 1957, al San Nicholas Island. Calif. Autopsy Set In Mystery RENO (UPI) An autopsy was scheduled for today In determine what caused Ihe death of Mrs. Dorothy Grossman. 41, a wealthy Bakersfield woman whose nearly nude body was found near Lake Tahoe. The body, clad only in panlies and brassiere, was found Saturday in brush one mile west of High way 50 at Kingsburg Grade. The body showed no visible marks of violence, but the tattered remains of her playsuit was scat tered within a 40-foot area ot the body. She was last seen ThursHay, when she left her husband at a Bi jou motel lo go shopping. 'Authorities indicated Sunday lhat another person, probably a man, was with Mrs. Grossman when she died. Douglas County Deputy Sheriff Bob Pospichal said he fotind footprints near the body and Ihe victim's, car nearby. "I'm sure there was someone else with her." Pospichal said j "And it looks as though there might have been a slrugle." GHANA RECOGNIZES EXILES ACCRA. Ghana tl'PI The government announced Thursday lers. Mrs. Joseph Vieira, Mrs. lhat It had decided lo grant dcjR. M "Busi Cavin and Mrs. faclo recognition (o the Algerian government in .exile. The action vas expected to result in France's severing diplomatic relations with inn young Airican naie. Monday. .Ttilv 13. 1959 California Weather United Press International San Francisco Bay Area: Fair through Tuesday except high fog near ocean extending inland in morning; high today San Francis co 63, Oakland 70, San Mateo 74, San Rafael 77; low tonight 50-55; westerly winds 15-30 m.p.h. after- noons and evenings. I Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Fair Sacramento Valley: FairiNapa River six miles south of through Tuesday; high both days 86-96; low tonight 56-66; variable winds 7-15 mp.h. Northwestern California; Fair through Tuesday except coastal ov- ercast; slightly cooler inland; hign today and low tonight Napa 81-50, Santa Rosa 81-49, Ukiah 90-51; northwesterly winds la-30 m.p.n. near coast. 'Saucer' Club Ends Meeting LOS ANGELES (UPI) Two- thousand flying saucer believers returned to their homes and earth today following the first annual convention of the Amalgamated Flying Saucers Club of America (AFSCAi. Most of the final session of the two-day convention turned to the more practical business of run ning the earth, but the speakers said they were receiving their ad vice on how this should be done from "space people." The recent sighting of unidenti fied lighted objects over the Pa- cjjc by veteran airlines pilots did not come as surprise to the con ventioning delegates, they claimed. "We had been told by the space people that they would make themselves known on earth during our convention," said AFSCA director Gabriel Green of Los An geles. "They have expressed in terest in our work and said they would do this to draw attention to our gathering. They did not say in advance just how or when (hey would demonstrate their ex istence." George King, chairman of the Aelherius Society of London, relat ed to the delegates a transmission he said he received from space people described as "Mars, Sec tion Six." He said the transmission lasted 25 minutes and contained advice on how carthlings should change their ways of life. He said the space people told him the earth was capable of pro ducing everything needed to make lile ideal but that it would be neces sary to do away with the various ney systems. He said (ha( with no money system and under an economy of plenty for everyone wars would cease to be even thought, of and atom-ic weapons would fall by the wayside Murder Trial Opens Today SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) - Plump, plain Wanda Brogdon, 33, and her lover, Kenneth Archie Mcrriam, 36, go on trial today on charges of strangling her two small sons because they were a "bother." The bodies of 5-year-old Virgil Jr., and . 3-ycar-old David were found May 5 in the back seal of the couple's car. parked at the Spring Valley, Calif., home of Merriam's sister, Mrs. Margaret Schniitter. "They were always getting in to trouble." said Merriam, a job less house painter Irom Rockford. III. "They were noisy and out of control." The couple, described by psy chiatrists as persons of border line intelligence, were indicted by the grand jury and found sane May 26 after a four day civil sanity hearing. On June 1. Mrs. Brogdon and her short, bushy-haired boyfriend pleaded innocent and innocent by reason of insanity to murder charges. Rites Held For Voman HORNBROOK Funeral services for Mrs. Ella Rose. 82-year-old Hornbrook resident, were held Saturday. July 11, in Ihe Horn brook Methodist Church, with Ihe Rev. Wilbur Small officiating. In terment was in the Hcnley-Horn- brook Cemetery beside the grave of her husband. Charles E. Rose who died in 1952. Mrs. Rose died Tuesday, July 1 at her home. She had been under Ihe care of a physician. She was born on May 21, 1877 in Oregon. and resided at Hill for 33 years until she moved with her husband In Hornbrook in 1940. following his retirement from Fruit Grow crs Supply Company. Survivors include three daugh- Gma Trinca. all of Hilt: three sons. Ted. Grenada. Courtland Ashland and Cecil Rose. Areata: 13 grandchildren and several great-grandchildren. Work Slated To Lift Locomotives NAPA. Calif. (UPI) - Southern Pacific and Navy authorities here. The locomotives, each of which weigh 185 tons, vnd a caboose hurtled off the open end of a swing bridge Sunday, grazing a small power cruiser passing be neath the bridge. The five-man train crew and the occupants of the boat escaped serious injury, although two members of the crew were treated for minor in juries. Bridge tender Gabe Clark. 36, Napa, said the train roared by his control booth just after he had opened the span to let the cruiser through. The first locomotive hit the bridge's pivotal center, then plummeted into 35 feet of water, taking the other diesel sections with it. Only Ihe caboose re mained above water, standing on end from the bridge head.; Four members ot the crew leaped to safety from the cab of Ihe lead locomotive before it left ihe rails. The fifth crewman, J. H. Traughber, 47, Sacramento, climbed to safety from the ca boose. The occupants of (he boat, R. D Pittsley, and his wife, Hazel, both 38. Napa, were shaken by the ac cident but uninjured. Pittsley said the impact drove the boat under water bow first, but it immed iately popped back to Ihe surface. Traughber and the fireman, Birthel Farmer, 56, Tracy, Calif, were treated for neck, back and head injuries. The other crew men, engineer C. H. Panelli. Oak land, conductor M. N. McCoy, Roseville, and brakeman R. E. Adams, also of Roseville, all es caped injury. Donald Miller, assistant super intendent of SP's western division gave no immediate explanation for the accident. "All we know is lhat the train failed to stop," he said. Marines Off On Long Trek BARSTOW, Calif. (UPI) - Two hundred and fifty Marines armed with 20,000 salt tablets set out to night on a 175-mile hike which will take them from the terrific heat of Death Valley to snow capped Mt.' Whitney. The 14-day march tabbed' "Op eration Hi-Lo will be undertaken by members of the crack 1st Re connaissance Battalion of the 1st Marine Division from Camp Pen dleton, Calif., as a toughening up and training mission. Setting out at night to spare themselves from the blazing sun, the group will leave bivouac here at 9 p.m. and start the march from a point 10 miles south of the Death Valley National Monument. They will encounter 130-degree heat at 252 feet below sea level and then wend their way up rug ged mountains to the 14,496-foot peak of Mt. Whitney, where tem peratures will be about 30 de grees. They will march during days after passing Death Valley. Air drops of supplies will be made daily to Ihe Marines during their march from the lowest to (he highes( points in the continen tal United Stales. The Marine Corps said that as far as was known the march was the first of its kind by an -organized group. Cattle Prices , Show Increase PORTLAND (AP) The Ore- SOn Statl? CnWfiOH ovlancinn car. vjce reported Friday (here was g general upward movement in cat- lie prices at the North Portland! stockyards this week. It said Ihe biggest increase was in led cattle, with prices advanc ing 50 cents on choice steers. Fed heifers jumped 25 to 50 cents. Cows were strong (o 50 cents higher. Although fat spring lambs dropped 50 cents, the report said feeder sheep finished steady to 50 cents higher. Hog prices were 50 cents nighcr (han last week's clos mg figure. UNDERWATER MOUNTAINS LONDON (UPD-Soviet scien tist on the m a r i n e exploration ship "Mikhail Lomonosov" have discovered several mountains un der the Atlantic, Radio Moscow reported Friday. The ship ex plored Ihe waters between Iceland and Greenland and then moved south to Ihe latitude of Rio de .la- j neiro. Ihe broadcast said. One of (he mountain neaks rne 9 ta rt Irom Ihe ocean floor, , it was re ported. Newspapor SPOT ADS art intxpensivi repeated daily 94e Coast Governors Agree To Launch Power Study SACRAMENTO, Calif. AP The three Pacific Coast governors have agreed to launch a joint study of i proposed three-state power hookup. Govs. Edmund G. Brown of Cal ifornia, Mark Hatfield of Oregon and Albert D. Rosellini of Wash ington, meeting ere, adopted a three-point policy guide for work ing toward the proposed Bonne ville power inter-tie. Under the draft, the three states agree to work together on a con tinuing study, but each reserves the right to make independent stu dies and evaluations. The second point assigns top importance to separate legal stu dies, on such mailers as the meth od achieving the hookup whether by federal law or interstate com pact. Point three invites Montana and Idaho to join in the conferences, since they would be affected by any final agreement. Ralph M. Brody, Brown s waler adviser, told reporters after the j meeting that the three governors agree surplus power is available! from the Bonneville Power Ad-1 ministration,, I They agree, loo, that all could benefit from the proposed inter-1 tie Ihe Northwest through sale of j surplus power, California because' of its expanding need for power. He said Brown allayed fears expressed by Ihe Northwest in previous inter-tie discussions with assurances lhat California would not claim status as a preferred Poet Thief Lands In Jail LOS ANGELES AP Iain! Anthony Hemensley, self-styled gentleman burglar who reaped a fantastic haul working in daylight, knew all along he'd eventually wind up where he is today in jail. But the dapper visitor from Southern Rhodesia credited with making off wiih be(ween $50,000 and $100,000 in loot in six months says his fling at crime "was fascinating while it lasted." Hemensley, in the United States on a visitor's visa, told police he committed at least 50 burglaries during his stay, striking at the homes of the rich while they were away. Actresses Zsa Zsa Gabor and Rosemary Lane are listed among his victims. "I got away with it for a long time," he said, "because of a Japanese philosophy which I applied to crime. You take the obvious and reverse it, and then do the obvious and it remains unobvious." One of the obvious things about Hemensley's routine outside the fact he worked in daylight was the way he went to work. He drove to and from his jobs in a flashy white convertible. Trouble is. the car was stolen and a pa trolman, Don Ferguson, spotted Hemensley driving it Sunday. That's how he landed in jail. At the home of one of his vic tims. Hemensley wrote a verse in lipstick on a mirror before leav ing. It read: "It is with regret your goods I beget, but for over a week I ain't wdh a bet. "I should be imprisoned just for writing a thing like that, he said Bridge Measure Signed By Brown SACRAMENTO (UPD - Gov Edmund G. Brown has signed a bill which authorizes construction to double the capacity of the San Mateo-Hayward Bridge. The bill provides that the con struction work can be financed either by revenue bonds secured by San Mateo-Hayward and Dum barton Bridge tolls or by use of surplus funds of the San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge. If the San Francisco-Oakland revenues are used, Ihey will be replenished from tolls collected on the two southern bay crossings The bill signed this weekend takes effect immediately. The Welcome Wagon Hostess Will Knock on Your Door with Gifts & Greetings from Friendly Business, Neighbors and Your Civic and Social Welfare Leaders Oh the occasion of: Arrival of Newcomers to Klamath Falls No cost or obligation Phono TU 2-0834 customer under federal law and seek to deprive the Northwest nfi power to meet its own needs. This' probably would be written into any final agreement. f "It's (heir power," Brody said.S He set the end of Ihe year as' the target date for a preliminary! report on the inter-tie proposal by the BPA and state delegates. ; j: The study will cover such things' as how much power is available,! the cost and routes for the trans-jj mission lines. One proposal is to a lie ine Duinieviiie powci iihu ,ai"(. ifornia's Central Valley project atP Shasta Dam. The governors didn't discuss de tails. Brody said. "That would have been premature," he added. Brown did state his preference, i however, for a common carrier! transmission line, probably public-; ly owned, which would serve both! public and private agencies. The Interior Department has held up action on a Pacific Gas and Electric Co. request to import surplus Bonneville power pending a study of the common carrier proposal. Brown appoinled Brody to rep- resent him in the continuing BPA studies. Rosellini named Earl jpe, Washington director of conserva- (ion and development, and Hat- fie'd picked Jonel Hill, Oregon public utilities commissioner. Speedway Tues., July 14th 8:30 P.M. Tournament of Thrills loflun chattel r Kniahla i uiting o uniHa hi . Ktg Anl.ur' Court TttifiMHMrrf Indian oitnck en WY' Cotd Wooon brothefi lh BATTLE OF Escod al Joaquin O. K. CO A I Murfitia, tcmoui Cali'. ouili Slag Coach hoW-g W,ld Wr Aeh Trick roping, ridinf . it Hanging iht Thiel Calking OutoirtabilM, tOfCTCll 4 lrood,unifting mw Fo'di ovr olhtr COM Cast of 50 Cowboyt, Indian., Stuntm.n IRFORMINO IIVI IVIr STUNT FV! PONI FOR MOVKS OR TV CAMIKI 1 20 centuries of man's most Irilling fets tvrf Eifffaat loc aTt fW f;SS. ItHolo Ml', FlgM sjgjByftjt H'"dl"'"', ' V Thj DeltoM tobtung two bonh of Thi fxtravafonM I fJny' nntvry A Tin II