PAQB t-A . ' Wednesday, Dec. tl, MM
eJUU) AND NEWI, Klamath Falls. Oregta
BASIN BRIEFS
KtIM '
ROBERTA MORRISON is stay,
ing with her grandparents,. Mr.
and Mrs. Cecil Young, in Keno.
MRS. HENRIETTA STEEP, of
Alaska, is visiting her- son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs,
Duane Henshaw, here.
DUANE ATKINSON, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ivan Atkinson, is recov
ering at his home here after
treatment in Klamath Valley
Hospital, Klamath Falls.
RONNIE PIERCE and Mike Mc-
Cormlck, students at the Univer
sity of Oregon, spent day re
cently with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
DeGrande here.
MRS. JACK BO ATW RIGHT of
Keno is in Klamath Valley Hos
pital undergoing medical observation.
MR. AND MRS. JOHN PIERCE
are parents of a boy born Dec.
14, weighing 8 lbs. Mrs. Pierce
is the former Sonya DeGrande.
MRS. GUY MOORE is recover
ing from injuries she received in
a fall near her home recently.
She is in Klamath Valley Hos
pital. ' ... ..
K. E. SMITH, Keno Copco
Ranch, has returned from the
hospital and is convalescing at
home.
Hanky
A REORGANIZATION meeting
of the Henley Sheep Club will be
held at the home of Dr. Joe
Riker, 6360 South Sixth, on Thurs
day, Dec. 22, at 7:30 p.m.' There
will be election of officers. Boys
and girls desiring to join should
plan to attend. '
Port KloHMffc
MRS. MYRTLE COPELAND Is
at-her Sun Mountain- ranch on
Wood River after having closed
the dining room and kitchen- of
Fsjt MamatlT Hotel. .
A COMMUNITY CHRISTMAS
TREE and entertainment will be
conducted in Fort Klamath Com
munity Methodist Church'.Thurs
day, Dec. 23, r at 7 p.nCTMrs.
Frank Strahan and Mrs. Hollis
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Kizer, local teachers, will present
a program featuring elementary
school children. Santa Claus will
distribute treats. Everyone is wel
come.
MR. AND MRS EMMETT Mc-
KEEVER and Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam Tucker moved this week to
Ashland where they will reside
until spring.
MR. AND MRS. FRANK STRA
HAN left Friday to spend the
weekend visiting relatives in
Medford and vicinity.
OBER BROWN stopped here
last week while en route home to
join his wife in Ashland. He has
been employed in logging opera
tions of warm Springs Lumber
Company. Another former resi
dent of Fort Klamath, Joe Mcln-
turff, is logging superintendent for
Jhe company.
Malin
MAUN CHAMBER OF COM
MERCE and California Oregon
Power Company will sponsor an
outdoor Christmas lighting con
test in the Malin vicinity. There
will be cash prizes in both adult
and junior divisions. Judging will
be Thursday evening, Dec. 22.
MR. AND MRS. LEO SOUZA
and their children, Kim and Eric,
Tiburon, Calif., plan to spend the
holidays with Mrs. Souza s par
ents, Mr, and Mrs. Perry Haley,
DONALD RAJNUS, Dugway.
Utah, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lad
die Rajnus, Is spending some time
visiting relatives.
MR8. ROBERT HOLL visited
friends in the Bay Area last week.
MR. AND MRS. KENNETH
HUFFMAN were hosts last week
to the Harold Hartftelds of Arling
ton.
MR. AND MRS. CHARLES
DOBRY JR. are reported improv
ing in Klamath Valley Hospital,
Klamath Falls, where they were
taken for treatment of injuries
following a recent auto accident.
Mrs. Dobry is receiving1 visitors,
but her. husband is not yet able
to receive them.
MR. AND MRS. RAY VAN
METER left1 for Pasco recently,
whertt they will . spend the holi
days iwlth their daughter and
her family, Mr; and Mrs. Charles
Spolektv ' ; ' i
OREGON NEWS ROUNDUP
Oregon Man Hurt In Alaskan Airplane Crash
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -
Six Air Force enlisted men Injured
in a plane crash on St. Lawrence
Island Sunday were reported in
satisfactory condition at the hi
mendorf Air Force Base hospital
Wednesday.
They included Steven F. Young,
19, son of Mr. and Mrs. George
M. Young, Portland, Ore. He was
the only one from the Pacific
Northwest. The hospital said he
had possible rib fractures.
Like the others, he was .an air.
man first class. He was on his
way home for the holidays after
completing a tour of duty at the
aircraft control and warning sta.
lion on the island in the Bering
Sea.
The twin-engine Wicn Alaska
Airlines plane on which the men
were passengers developed trouble
on takeoff and crashed near the
airstrip. The two-man crew and
two civilian passengers also es
caped injury.
gon Stale College, where she is a
student.
JOHNNY DERRA, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Derra, is home
from Augsburg, Germany. He will
report to Fort Myers, Virginia,
Jan. 11.
New Piiw Creek
MR. AND MRS. E. BOYS left
last week for California to spend
the holidays with relatives. Har
vey Porter is caring fdr their
rancn during meir aosence. liien
Smith recently completed logging
about 60,000 board feet of tun'
ber from the Boys ranch for sale
to a Lakeview mill.
ABOUT. ISO spectators watched
crews erect the big 'Humble Oil
and Refining Company oil derrick
at the Leavitt ranch on Highway
395 near here Tuesday morning.
THE STORM Friday and Satur
day deposited another 1.03 inches
of moisture here.
BAPTIST CHURCH YOUTH got
a good soaking Friday evening
during an untimely storm that
struck during their hay ride. They
were served cookies and hot choc
olate later in the church kitchen.
MR. 'AND MRS. MORRIS KES-
SLER plan to spend the holidays
with their' son, Paul, and his
family in Brookings. y .....
MR. AND MRS. JOE ' MICKA
were hosts last .weekend to Mr,
and Mrs. Louis Callcti and their
children of San Jose. .
KAREN RAJNUS, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Laddie Rajnus, has
been invited' to join the Euterpe
Music Honorary Society at Ore-
Ask Fare Hikes
SALEM (AP) - The Grey
hound Corp, and Continental Pa
cific Trailways, Oregon's two ma
jor bus lines, have asked for 10
per cent fare increases, Public
Utility Commissioner Jonel C.
Hill said Tuesday.
The Greyhound hearing will be
held Jan, S at the state office
building in Portland, and the Con
tinental hearing will be the follow
ing day at the same place.
The firms also ask for mini
mum fares of 30 cents for adults
and 25 cents for children. They
said increases are needed be
cause of higher operation costs in
the face of declining local pas
senger traffic.
Gets Gas Chamber
NEVADA CITY, Calif. (AP) -
A Nevada County jury Tuesday
sentenced Stanley William Fitz
gerald to death in the San Quen
tin gas chamber for murder of
George Bonn, near Truckee last
Aug. 3.
The same jury last Thursday
convicted Fitzgerald, 40, of first
degree murder.
Fitzgerald was captured near
Portland, Ore., last Sept. 22.
He testified in his trial that
Bonn, a San Francisco cook, and
another man made improper ad
vances to him in a drinking bout
in' which Fitzgerald had been
struck with a bottle. He said that
when he came' to he found Bonn
dead and the other man, Milton
Young, of Lewiston, Calif., with
a bullet in the leg. . .
Fitzgerald was convicted of
robbing both men.
Electricity Soles
SALEM (AP) - Private elec
tric companies sold 9.7 billion
kilowatt hours of electricity in
Oregon In the 12 months ended
Oct. 31, a gain of 8.6 per cent
over the similar period a year
earlier. Public Utility Commis
sioner Jonel C. Hill said Tuesday.
The average revenue per resi
dential customer was up 4 per
cent. t
Kennedy Picks Brains,
Governors And lawyers
Stores Held Up
PORTLAND (AP) - Two more
stores were held up here Monday
night, and police said there now
have been 16 armed robberies in
the city in the past three weeks.
Wonts To Visit
PORTLAND (AP) - Friends of
Hamish Scott MacKay ' said he
wrote them that he tried to re.
turn here for a Christmas visit
from' Canada, to where he was
deported last month after spend
ing his adult life in the United
States.
He told them he was stopped on
the border at Blaine, Wash., and
returned to New Westminster,
B. C, where he Is staying with
friends.
John L. Laponis, acting direct
or of the Immigration Service
office here, said a person who has
been deported can return only by
showing he is not subject to ex.
elusion.
MacKay was deported to his na-
tive Canada on ground that he
had belonged to Communist or
ganizations in the 1930s.
Named Chairman
PORTLAND (AP)-R. A. Work,
Oregon water forecast expert,
was named today as chairman of
the Columbia Basin Inter Agency
Committee.
, Work succeeds Ellis Hatt, Ag
riculture Department representa.
tive on the committee, who ac
cepted a position with the Ford
Foundation in India.
The Agriculture Department
named Work to succeed Hatt as
representative and as chairman.
The committee is scheduled
next to meet at Pocatello Jan. 11.
Plush' Club Planned
PORTLAND (AP) A real
estate and development firm
Tuesday . announced plans for a
million dollar private community
club that will include a big Ice
rink and swimming pool.
Robert H. : Jeacock, general
manager of a company that de
veloped Raleighwood, a housing
project that adjoins the club site,
said work will begin in 60 days.
ItMs southwest of Portland. '
The club also will have tennis
and badminton courts, meeting
rooms and areas for social
events, Jeacock said.
OMMI
LAST DAYS
JOHN
WAYNE
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SATURDAY . SUNDAY - MONDAY
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I a (lJ I I I I I I J I Mar Mt (ImI. Ta
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP) -The 15
men President-elect John F. Ken
nedy has already chosen for the
top and next-to-top spots in .his
administration are distinguished
for something else besides youth.
The accent is on brains, lawyers
and governors.
Unlike President Eisenhower,
Kennedy did not put the emphasis
on men with big business experience.
Kennedy put 10 of his 15 choices
in No. 1 jobs: his Cabinet. Its
average age of 47-rthe youngest
in this century compares with an
average age of 57 for Eisenhow
er's first Cabinet in 1953.
While only two of Eisenhower's
Cabinet were lawyers, there are
six in Kennedy s, .
They are J. Edward Day, post
master general; Orville L. Free
man, . secretary . of agriculture
Arthur J. Goldberg, secretary of
labor; Kennedy's brother, Robert,
attorney general; Abraham A,
Ribicoff, secretary of health, edu
cation and welfare; and Stewart
L. Udall, secretary of the inter
ior.
Add to them three lawyers
among the second-rank Kennedy
people: Adlai E. Stevenson, Amer
ican ambassador to the united Na
tions; Byron White, deputy at
torney general; and G. Mennen
Williams, assistant secretary of
state for African affairs.
Nine of the 15 had unusualfy
cood scholastic records, either
graduating with honors, being re
membered as brilliant, winning
Rhodes scholarships, or making
Phi Beta, Kappa.
In the Cabinet they are: Day;
Douglas Dillon, secretary of the
Treasury; Freeman; Goldberg;
Robert S. McNamara, secretary
of defense; Ribicoff; and Dean
Rusk, secretary of state.
The unusual students in the sec
ond rank are White and Williams.
McNamara, Rusk, Freeman and
Williams made Phi Beta Kappa.
Rusk and White were Rhodes
scholars.
Six of the 15 Kennedy choices
were governors. Three of them
are in the Cabinet, three in the
second rank. In the Cabinet: Free
man (Minnesota); Ribicoff (Con
necticut); and Luther H. Hodges
(North Carolina), secretary of
commerce.
The ex-governors among the
Kennedy second rankers: Steven
son (Illinois) and Chester Bowles
(Connecticut), undersecretary of
slate. Williams is governor of
Michigan.
Only four of the 10 Kennedy
Cabinet members were business
men, while five of Eisenhower's
nine-man Cabinet were. The Cab
inet became a 10-man affair in
1953, after Eisenhower took of
fice, when the Department, of
Health, Education and Welfare
was created.
These are the Kennedy Cabinet
businessmen: Day, a vice presi
dent of . the Prudential Insurance
Co.; Dillon, a former Wall Street
banker; McNamara, president of
the Ford Co.; and. Hodges, an im
portant figure in the textile in
dustry before he retired years ago
to devote himself to public serv
ice, most recently as governor of
North Carolina.
In the Kennedy second rank
Bowles was a successful business
man. He made a fortune in adver
tising and, like Hodges, retired to
go into public service as OPA ad
ministrator during the war, am
bassador to India, governor of
Connecticut and, most recently,
congressman from the same state.
Boy Gets Moil
PORTLAND (AP)-The 5-year-
old boy, identified by hospital au
thorities only as Patrick, said he
wanted to get some Christmas
cards in the mail.
When word of his dream got out,
the cards started coming. The
postman brought 425 cards Sat
urday, 700 Sunday and 620 Mon
day. 1
"He sure has enjoyed them,"
Patrick's mother said. "And he
has shared them with the other
boys in his room."
The child has leukemia.
: CUT OUT""""""""""
Dresses, Wigs, Shoes, j
; Parts for uoiis
! Lorna's Doll Hospital
! list L.k.vltw SI. TU 4-J
Sheep Eat Trees
PORTLAND (AP) Do sheep
cat Douglas fir seedlings?
Yes, said Bureau of Land
Management officials after look
ing over damage in a newly
planted area and noting a broken
fence beside a. sheep pasture in
Coos County.
Never heard of such a thing,
said sheepman Howard Leather
man. Their dispute wound up in fed
eral district court, but Judge
John F. Kilkenny said Tuesday
he did not want to jump into it.
He gave the federal agency and
the sheepman until spring to
work out a system for sheep to
graze on leased land that would
not be mingled with reforestation
plots.
Resources
Board Plan
To Be Drawn
PORTLAND (AP) - Sen: Mau-
rme Neuberger, D-Ore., said
Tuesday she and other western
senators will introduce legislation
to create a three-member Coun
cil of Resources and Conservation,
The council would formulate
national resources policy.
She said the proposed measure
also would set up a 16-member
Joint Committee on Resources
and Conservation, with member
ship equally divided among the
Senate and House of Representa
tives.
Mrs. Neuberger said:
"There must be better coordin
ation at high executive level on
programs dealing . with natural
resources. The council would be
in a position to advise the presl
dent on consistent and forward-
looking policy for the various de
partments and bureaus now par
ticipating in decisions which deal
with natural resources."
Dies In Crash
PORTLAND (AP) - A traffic
crash claimed the life Monday
night of Philip Pingo, 49, of Portland.
Authorities said Pingo's car
veered into a utility pole and then
slammed into a building. Pingo
died several hours later of a rup
tured liver, a hospital spokesman
said.
It was Oregon 451st traffic
fatality of the year, and the 23rd
in December, in the Associated
Press tabulation. ' '
Seek Jet i
In Waters
Off Coast
TILLAMOOK (AP) - Divers
resumed efforts Wednesday to
find an Air Force F102 Delta
Danger jet plane that plunged
into the ocean off the Nehalem
River near here last Thursday..
A helicopter from the Portland
Air Force Base rescued the
plane's pilot, Lt. Joseph P. Rios
He was unhurt.
As the plane crashed, Billie An
derson, a surveyor, lined up the
site with his transit and Mrs.
Terry Randolph of Manzanita
lined it up with a telephone pole
and a house chimney.
In a search directed Tuesday
by the Air Force and the . Coast
guard, divers went down to the
point where the lines intersected.
The water was murky although
only 35 to 40 feet deep there.
Five teams of divers from the
Tillamook County Sheriff's posse
are conducting the search. When
the plane is located, it will be
marked with a buoy and officials
will decide whether to attempt to
raise the plane, which weighs 12
tons.
Mill Damaged
ALBANY. Ore. (AP) - Fire
heavily damaged the boiler room
and knocked the big Plywood
Products Co. mill out of opera
lion Tuesday night.
The plant, which employed
about 250 men, recently was pur
chased by the Georgia-Pacific
Corp.
Firemen from Albany, Corvallis
and the Adair Air Station con
fined damage to the boiler room.
The origin of the blaze was not
determined at once.
The plant is located near the
Adair Air Station, north of Al
bany and Corvallis.
Squadron Selected For Alert'
SALEM (AP) - The 123rd,
Fighter Interceptor Squadron at
Portland is one of 21 Air National
Guard squadrons selected by the
Air Defense Command to perform
missions under its alert program
starting Jan. 1.
Maj. Gen. Alfred E. Hinlz, Ore
gon adjutant general, Tuesday
said five pilot-radar officer teams
will initiate the program under
control of the 25th Air Division
Air
Force
Base,
Crop Value Down
PORTLAND (AP) - The Ore
gon Crop and Livestock Report
ing Service said Tuesday the
state's field crop yield this year
was worth (157 million, a drop of
2 per cent from the previous
year.
Of the totals wheat accounted
for 31 per cent this year and 32
per cent last year. Close behind
in 1960 was hay at 30 per cent,
up 1 per cent.
The field crop volume was
4,327,000 tons, slightly less than
last year but 8 per cent above
the 1949-1959 average. Corn, oats,
rye and hajf all were above the
1959 tonnage figures but other
crops were less.
The harvest acreage was down
2 per cent at 2,692,000 acres. Hay,
was the biggest gainer. Oats and
barley had the sharpest decline.
at McChord
Wash.
The teams will operate tiglil
hours per day, jive days a week.
Each crew will run a practice
scramble daily.
The planes are capable of op
erating anywhere in the 25th D..
vision area during an alert. This
area extends from the California
border into Canada, and east into
Idaho.
The Oregon Air National Guard
recently operated a similar pro-:
gram. It lasted 15 months. '
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