Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, September 13, 1961, Image 4

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    PAGE -A V Wednesday, September 13, 1961
HERALD AND ffiWS, Klamath Falll, Oreijoi
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
'' Because at a later cloilag
1 1 time (or iht New Yark Stock
Exchange the market lilt In
vsi eluded today it yeaterday'i
: 'dosing quotation list.
By THE ASSOCIATED PHESS
AJ Indust 4 V4
Alco Prod . 18 Mi
Allied Ch i 61 Vt
AllisChal j 23
Alcoa 74 Vt
Alum Ltd 29
Amerada "ft
Am Airline 21
Am Can 44
Am Cyan 41
Am M&Fdy 43 V4
Am Motors 18 ?4
Am Smelt 66 Vi
Am Tel & Tel 120
Am Tob 95
Am Viscose 60
Aoaconda i 54
Armco SU ... ' j' 75 V4
' Atchison 27
Aveo 23
Bendlx ' 65
Beth Steel . ,4
Borden 62
Brunswick ; 58
Burroughs , ! 29
Cal Pack 56
Cdn Pac 24
Cater Trac ... . . 39 V4
Celanese . I 36 'A
Chrysler ;,') 55
Cities Svc ; 52 V4
Colum Gas ' 1 27 Vi
Con Edls 76
Cont Can " 43 Vt
Corn Pd ,. 57
- Crown Zell 59 Vt
: Ciirtiss Wr ' 17 Vt
Decca Hec 34 'A
Doug Aire 36 'h
' Dow Chem 81
duPont , 231 Mi
East Kod 1 104
ElPasoNG 26 Mil
Evans Pd 13
Firestone ' , 48
; Ford Mot " 98
Forem Dairy 13
Gen Dynam 28
Gen Elec - 73
: Gen Fds . 04 14
i Gen Mtors , 47 'A
: GTel&El , 25 Vt
" Gen Tire 80
: Ga Pac Cp . 62 'A
". Goodyear 46
Gt No Ry '45
Gt West S 34
Gulf Oil 37
Idaho Pw 35 V4
111 Cent 45
! Int Bus Mch 545 'A
Int Harv 53
Int Nick 3
Unt Paper 35 Vi
tint TelJtTel 57
; Johns Man 67
Kaiser A 40
' Kennecolt 84
' LibMcN&L 12 'A
SLoch Aire 47
; : Lorillard 57
; ! Martin Co 34
.' Merck . 86
: Minn M&M 75 Vt
;Monsan Ch' " 57
Mont Ward ' 28
Nat Cash R . 107 'A
NY Central 17
Nor Pac 41
Olin Math 49
Outb Mar 19
' Owens 111 Gl ' . 93 'A
Pac Am Cp 21
PacG&El 86
Pac T&T 44
Pan AW Air 17 Vt
Parke Da 34
Penn Dix 28
. Penney JC 48
:. Pa RR ' 14
Pepsi Cola 52
-Pfizer 40
Philco . '23
Phill Pet , 59
Polaroid 200
Proct&G 98
Pug SdP&L " 40
RCA 57
Rayonler 22
Raytheon V . 39
Rcpub SU 61
Reyn Mot . 43
Rey Toh . . 147
St Reg Pap 37
Schenley v 31
' Scott Pap 116
Sears Rocb 70
; Shell Oil 39
; Sinclair 38
. Socony - 43
Sou Pac 26
Sperry Rd ' 26
StdOil Cal , 51
SldOil NJ ' 44
Stud Pack 11
Sunray 27
Sunsh Mir 12
Swift & Co 4
Textfco 55
Thiokol . 44
. ThompRW 59
TidewatOil 19
. TlmkRBear ' 57
. Transamcr 41
Twen Cent 33
Un Carbide 139 V
Un Oil Cal 53
Un Pac 34
Unit Air Lin .43
Unit Aire 50
United Cp O 7
US Plywood 4B
US Smelt 34
US Steel 83
Varlan As 46
Vendo Co . 48
Walgreen O .60
Warn B. Pic ' ' 92
WashWat Pow 49
Wn Bancorp 42
West Auto S . : 48
. Went UnTel 45
Weslg El 45
Whfeal SU ' Hlti
WoJI Street
NEW YORK (API Motors and
other industrial issues led the
stock mket higher in fairly qui
et trading late this afternoon.
Volume tor the day was esti
mated at 2.9 million shares com
pared with 2.79 million Monday,
Gains among key Issues ran
from fractions to a point or more
generally, although the automo
bile group had Ford ahead nearly
3 points and Chrysler up cround 2
By United Press International
Dow Jones 2 p.m. stock aver
ages: 30 industrials 722.28, up
7.92; 20 railroads 143.25, up 1.31
15 utilities 121.45, up 0.71, and 65
stocks 240.10, up 2.24.
Livestock
KLAMATH FALLS
LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET
Sept. 11, 1961
Receipt: Cattle 518. Hogs 36.
Sheep 4.
Compared last Tuesday, Markcl
about steady.
Fed Steers: Good, 21.50-22.00
Std., 19.30-21.60.
Fed Heifers: Choice, 22.10-23.
60; Good, 20.20-22.10; Std., 18.90-1
21.40.
Cows: Std., 17.10-18.10; Cmcl.
15.20-16.25; Utility, 13.60 . 15.60
Cannera and Cutters, 10.10-13.60.
Bulls: Utility 4 Cmcl., 18.90-
21.10. - '
Veal Calves: Hvy. Killer Calves
19.25-p3.10; Baby Calves, Beef, 25-
58 per head.
' Stackers and Feeders: Steers,
Good-Choice, 550 600 lbs., 22.85-
24.60; 635 800 lbs., 21.00-23.00;
Medium-Common, 16.60-21.60; Hoi
stein, 18.10-19.50.
Heifers, Good-Choice. 525. - 700
lbs., 19.25-22.10; Medium-Common,
16.00-20.25.
Steer Calves, Good-Choice, 350-
475 lbs., 25.00-27.00; Lightweight,
56.00-96.00 per head.
Heifer Calves, Good-Choice, 350-
450 lbs., 21.75-23.50; Lightweight,
57.0044.00 per head.
Stock Cows, 140.00-175.00 per
head; Pairs, 157.50-216.00; Spring
er Heifers, 142.50.
Hogs: U.S. 142 (180-220 lbs.),
19.60-20.70; Weaner Pigs, 9.00.
Reported by F. A. Skinner,
county extension agent.
STOCKTON (UPI-FSMNS) -
Livestock:
Cattle salable 100. Slaughter
cows utility range type 16.00-16.50
icutier 14.00-15.50, canner 12.50
14.50. Stnadard Heifer 1,100 lbs
18.50. Slaughter bulls utility range
type 1,250-1,555 lbs 19.50-21.00,
Stocker and feeder steers good
and choice 600-765 lbs 23.00-24.00,
medium. 550-700 lbs 21.00-22.00.
Calves salable 25. Not enough
to test prices. '
Hogs salable 200. Barrows and
gilts No 1-3 190-240 lbs 19.50, No
1, 1975, No 1-3, 240-260 lbs 19.00.
Sows No 1-3 300-400 lbs 14.00-
15.50. 400-600 lbs 12.50-14.. Feed
er pigs good and choice 5-80 lbs
Sheep salable 50. Not enough
sales to quote.
PORTLAND (API - (USDA)
Cattle salable 250; small supply
slaughter steers and heifers about
steady; bulk of receipts slaughter
cows, steady with Monday s ad
vance; few sales bulls steady;
stackers and feeders steady; good
and choice slaughter steers 20.00-
23.00; couple lots and short loads
lb slaughter heifers 21.00-23.00
utility and slaughter cows 13.00-
full spread of good grade 850-980
15.00; canner and cutter 10.00-
14.00; those above 14.00 usually
Holsteins or beef breeds; cutter
and utility slaughter bulls 17.00
21.00; individual 21.50; scattered
lots medium to mostly good 650-
950 lb stackers and feeders 18.00-
21.50.
Calves salable 75; trade slow
scattered early sales steady.- few
good and choice vealers 23.00
26.00; standard 18.00-22.00; no
stock calves sold early.
Hogs salable 300; early sales
butchers steady with Monday's de
cline; sows not established; U. S.
1 and 2, 190-220 lb barrows and
gilts mostly 20.50; No. 2 and 3.
200-250 lb 19.50-20.00.
, Sheep salable 500: trade slow
scattered sales all classes steady
few lots good to mostly choice
85-90 lb spring slaughter lambs
15.00-15.50; cull to good slaughter
ewes 2.50-3.50; small lot choice 70
lb feeder lambs 12.00.
CHICAGO (API-
Prev,
High Low
Close close
Wheat
Sep
Dec
Mar
May
1.99 1.98 1.99 1.99
2.05 2.04 2.05 2.054
2.11 2.09 2.11 2.101,
2.13 2.12 2.13 2.12
Jul
2.14 2.13 2.14 2.14
Corn
Sep
1.08 1.08 108'i 1.08
1.13 1.12 1.13 1.13
1.18 1.17 1.18 1.18
1.22 1.21 1.22 1.22
1.25 1.24 1.2514 1.25
Dec
Mar
May
Jul
Oats
Sep
.71
.76
.79
.80
.76
.71
.75
.78
.79
.78 .
.72
.78
.79
.BO
.76
Dec
Mar
ma
.75
.78
.79
76
Jul
Rye
Sep
Dec
Mar
1.27 1.24 1.27 1.25
1.31 1.29 1.31 1.30
1.35 1.33 1.35 1.33
1.35 1.33 1.35 1.34
1.34 1.31 1.33 1.31
May
Jul
Si-'
NEW TEACHER Joseph
M. Turbovslcy, school psy
chologist and guidance,
with the Siskiyou County
School Department, who
guided a recent special
session of selected aca
demically, talented high
school students.
Teachers'
Duties Set
YREKA Paul Fisher, county
superintendent of schools, has re
leased the following outline of as
signed professional staff duties in
cluding changes brought about by
his appointment to the superinten
dencv, the resignation of Dr, Ken
cth Young, and the addition of new
staff members.
Bob Dais, who has been in the
county office for several years,
has been made assistant coun
ty superintendent. New and old
duties of Dais arc: Teacher inserv.l
ice training and orientation, build
ing programs, tax elections and
notices, school district reorganize
tion, budget consultations, retire
ment consultation, county institute,
liaison for professional organiza
tions such as C.T.A., C.A.S.A,
N.E.A., and others and general
consultation in the schools as time
permits.
Hartsel Gray, administrative as
sistant, will be in charge of teach
'cr placement service, teacher ere-
dentialing, building programs,
bond elections, boundary line and
annexation elections, trustee elec
tions, Public Law 874 consultation,
visitation of foreign students and
supervision in elementary schools.
Stanley Balfrcy will be in
charge of the audio-visual office,
hieh school administrators associ
ation, high school library. National
Defense Art project, future teach
ers clubs, American Field Serv
ices and high .school library im
provemcnt programs.
Jewel Behnke w ill be in charge
of elementary curriculum and
course of study); summer sessions
and extension . courses, and gen
eral supervision in the elementary
schools.
Jerry Edwards will be in charge
of child welfare and attendance,
the Siskiyou County Science Fairs,
school exhibits at the county
fair, monthly enrollments and
ADA reports, annual audit con
tacts, civil defense, work permits
small school district associations
and elementary consultant service.
Joseph Turbovsky will be
charge of the county wide testing
program, screening and testing ol
mentally retarded and guidance
services.
Elsio DeAvilla will be in charge
of the professional library, Califor
nia Education Clubs, county school
bulletins and consultant services in
the elementary schools.
Elaine McClcllan will be pri
mary and elementary consultant
for tho entire county and library
and elementary book adoptions ad
viser.
Weather Table
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
High Low Pr.
Albany, cloudy 87
64 ..
(10 ..
07 ..
68 ..
Wi .Of
Albuquerque, clear ... 85
Atlanta, cloudy 85
Boston, cloudy ........93
Buffalo, clear -...76
Chicago, cloudy 83
71 2.58
70 .03
6!) .25
Cleveland, cloudy 84
Detroit, cloudy ... -...73
Fairbanks, cloudy 68
Fort Worth, cloudy ... .76
Helena, clear -...54
Indianapolis, cloudy ...90
Juneau, clear 61
Kansas City, rain 77
Los Angeles, clear --..81
Louisville, clear 92
39 ..
71 1.81
m m
69
40
62 4.52
61
m
Memphis, clear . 83 74
Miami, clear 83 77
Milwaukee, rain 69
Mpls.-St. Paul, cloudy57
New Orleans, cloudy .86
New York, clear !M
Oklahoma City, rnin ...73
Phoenix, cloudy ...... .98
Portland, Ore., clear ,.Cl
Richmond, cloudy 91
San Diego, cloudy . . .78
San Francisco, cloudy .58
62 1.68
50 .35
80
74
61 3.61
78
til)
Oi
68
54
Nt
72
Seattle, clear 85
Tampa, clear .91
Washington, clear ..-..91
(M-Missingl
KLAMATH
Obituffries
HILLY
JENNIFER KELLY. 43. nttlvt 0 Cltvt
Und, Ohio, rtudtnf of Klmtti Falls for
U VMrt. Ji hr Sot. 1J, mi. Sur
vivor Inclutft huttund, Ernttt Of IMs
cttyi slsttr. Mrt. Ctrl Rtod. CWvtlJind.
Furwral urvkn wtrt htM in ft rtwl
ol Ward'i K'Anlh Funtrl Homo Wed
nwdy. Stot.", it 3 30 p.m. Rev. toy
Rowland of ft Flnt Bootltl Church offi
ciating. Concluding Mrvkri nd lnttr
morn wilt tali plat In HCJ Com
ttrr, HaftiMburg, MUi., alT lattr data.
fteRa CAP 0
Holds Meef
YREKA An orientation meeting
of Yreka Squadron No. 116, Civil
Air Patrol, was held Tuesday
night, Sept. 5, at the Siskiyou
County Sheriff's Office.
The meeting was conducted by
Acting Commander Hal Chaney
and Executive Officer Howard Cra
mer.
Cramer explained the many
phases of CAP, outlining the duties
performed for a good working pro
gram, and how, in addition to light
airplane flying during search and
rescue missions, the services ol
people to work as observers dur
ing flights, airplane mechanics,
auto mechanics, radio operators
and office staff were all required
to form a unit into a functioning
organization.
Cramer also explained that while
pilots and observers are out on a
search and rescue mission, a good
functioning communications crew
is the backbone of a successful
crew. He also pointed out that
when men are out on a mission,
they do not have time to worry
about paper work entailed in re
porting the amount of gasoline and
lubricants used. Therefore a good
staff of office workers are need
cd.
The CAP, it was further pointed
out by the executive officer,
strictly a volunteer service, but
it is also an auxiliary of the Air
Force, and as such, is provided
with surplus equipment including
equipment, and office furnishings.
The squadron will hold meetings
on Monday each week, until they
are more firmly established.
Cowan Trial
Nears Jury
The first degree murder trial;
of Ransom Cowan, 65-year-old
Chiloquin man, moved slowly into
its seventh day Wednesday with
a slight chance of getting to the
jury by the end of the day.
The defense, which is attempt
ing to show that Cowan shot By-
bee Butler, 56, Chiloquin, in self
defense, concluded its case in chief
Tuesday afternoon. Rebuttal tes
timony, final arguments and in
structions by Judge David R. Van-
berg remained before the jury of
seven men and five women could
begin deliberations.
Four character witnesses agreed I
Tuesday that Cowan's reputation
in the community as a peaceable
aw-abiding citizen was generally1
good. The witnesses were Walter
Zimmerman, Chiloquin, Wood
River District justice of the peace;
Fred G. (KriU) Markwardt, Chil
oquin; Waller Aloert, Wocus, and
Deputy Mienff Alvie O. Young-
blood. Youngblood, one of the in
vestigating officers, testified earli
er for the state.
District Attorney Dale T. Crab-
tree cross-examined Cowan Tues
day morning. Cowan stuck to his
story that he was in fear of his
life when he shot Butler with a
22 caliber rifle on the night ol
May 26. He said Butler had
threatened to kill him.
Crabtrce attempted to get Cow
an's record of drunkenness into
the record but failed when Judge
Vandcnbcrg upheld an objection
by Cowan s co-defense attorneys,
J. C. O'Neill and R. F. McLaren.
A motion by Crabtrce to strike the
testimony of Dr. Hugh Currin was!
also overruled by the judge.
Howe Names
Successors
Klamath County State Rcprcsen
tative Carrol Howe Tuesday
named emergency successors who
would take over his office if he
were to be killed in an enemy at
tack.
Howe's first alternate is W. J
(Bill) Faught, Klamath Falls of
fice supply salesman. Second and
third in line of succession are Glen
Kercher, Chiloquin hardware deal
cr, and T. A. (Ted) DeMcrritt
Mai in oil distributor. Howe filed
I lie list of successors with the of
fice of the secretary of state.
the deadline lor naming sue
cessors was Monday at 5 p.m. but
most legislators missed the dead
line. Klamath County's otltcr law
makers. State Sen. Harry D
Boivin and Rep. George Flitcratl
were also delinquent. District At
torney Dale T. Crabtrce named
his successors last week.
Ftmeral H4
DUNSMUIR-Serviees (or Peggy
Solheid. 12. were held Saturday at
the Methodist Church with Rev.
Wayne Long officiating. Burial
was in the Mount Shasta Memorial
Park.
Peggy died Sept. in Moflitt
Hospital In San Francisco after an
illness of 2 years. She was born
April 2. 1949. in St. Louis. Mo.
Survivors Oi'ludc her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Solheid of
Dunsmuir. and a sister, Bobbie.
Her grandparents live in MO
souri and Minnesota.
Relatives who came for
the funeral included Ted Ratliff
and Ray Ratliff of St. Louis and
Mr. and Mrs. Harvard Reed of
Riverside, Calif. Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Holbo of Santa Monica
were also preVnt for the services.
m ii mi a tfc i n ';inMa VMiwiaaM
-v v Ski vte-
I
PRIZE WINNER Relics of the past in the days of min
inq in Siskiyou County and the overall booth represent
ing a goneral store in a California gold mining camp won
a first prize in the mining category for the Siskiyou County
Booth at the California State Fair at Sacramento. The
booth also won nine blue ribbons on sheaves of grain and
two on potatoes plus many others on individual exhibits.
Automated "miners," antiques loaned by the Siskiyou
California
Briefs
ETNA
MR. AND MRS. LELAND
STANLEY YOUNG JB. and Dav
id and Sally recently spent their
vacation visiting his parents, Mr,
and Mrs. Leland Young Sr.
MR. AND -MRS. JAMES MOX-
LEY of Monterey, Calif., and
Mrs. Mable Marx of Yreka called
on old friends in Etna over the
weekend.
MR. AND MRS. ROY HAMMER
and daughter, Debbie, recently vis
ited Mrs. Hammer's parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Borba Jr., at Cen
tral Valley. '
MR. AND MRS. ALBERT IN-
LOW and son of Napa recently
visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Inlow. They also visited Mrs.
Inlow's mother in Fort Jones.
MR. AND MRS. COUNCILLE
RICHARDSON and their grand
son, William Richardson, of Fair
field, Calif., recently visited Mrs
Richardson's sister, Mrs. Claire
M. Potter.
DORICE YOUNG recently re
turned home from a summer va
cation in Europe.
ETNA CITY COUNCILMEN met
recently as a board of equalization
and placed the tax for Etna at
$1.20 per hundred valuation.
LIKELY
NORTHERN COUNTIES QUAR
TER HORSE ASSOCIATION will
hold a two-day playday Sept. 16
and 17 at Likely in conjunction
with the Likely Roping Club. For
further information contact Lee
Warner, at Ficldbrook 7-3051, Cot
tonwood. AI.TURAS
MRS. THOMAS A. BARROWS
of Adin has recently been appoint
ed to the State Public Relations
Committee for California Branch
of American Association of Uni
versity Women.
DORK IS
DORRIS VOLUNTEER FIRE
DEPARTMENT will hold a dance
Saturday, Sept. 16, at the city hall
auditorium. Pete Collcy's orches
tra will provide the music. Pro
ceeds will be used lo purchase
additional fire fighting equipment.
Mrs. Owings
Death Told
Mrs. Maude Owings, in her ear
ly 70s, and a longtime business
woman of Klamath Falls, died
Aug. 24 in Spokane. Word of her
death reached Mrs. Arthur Sisson
a friend, through an unclaimed
letter. Mrs. Owings had made her
home for a year with Mrs. Sisson
before moving to Spokane to be
near a son. John Sisson. He
later was transferred to the east
coast and she remained in Wash-I
ington.
Mrs. Ow ings will be remembered
here as an early day accountant
She also was employed in the
courthouse, owned a beautv par-
'Or and the Earl Hotel in her long
yeifti of business association. She
left here about three years ago
Mrs. Owings was the victim of
crippling arthritis. w
FOR READERS ONLY
"MINNEAPOLIS UPl - The
Minnesota-North Dakota Commu
nist party held its 11th annual
freedom ot the Press picnic
this week J readers of the party
newspaper. The Worker.
Newsmen and photographers
were forcibly ejected. 0
Box Canyon
DUNSMUIR Box Canyon Dam,
if constructed, would represent a
tremendous economic asset to all
of Siskiyou County, Pauline Davis,
Assemblywoman, D.-Portola, told
Mrs. Briles
Rites Held
alivkas f uneral services
were I. eld from Kerr Mortuary
Tuesdp.y afternoon for Mrs. Rosa
B. Briles who died in a Cedarvillc
hospital on Sunday where she had
been hospitalized for a few days.
Mrs. Briles, mother of Milan
Briles of Cedarville, was a retired
courthouse employe of the Agricul
tural Agent's office where she be
gan her career under her late hus
band, Thomas, and where she re
mained under the supervision of
Loring White until she was strick
en with a heart attack.
Mrs. Briles is also survived by
a sister, Mrs. Mellie Miller of Al
turas. She was a member of the Davis
Creek Grange, Pythian Sisters of
Alturas, and a charter member of
the Modoc County Historical So
ciety. Thompson
Rites Held
Services were held Monday
from Ward's Klamath Funeral
Home (or Mrs. Thelma Mae
Thompson, victim of a traffic ac
cident near Weed on U.S. Highway
97. The Salvation Army was in
charge.
She was a. native of Trinidad
Colo., born Dec. 31, 1923, and was
married in Oct. 1940.
Mrs. Thompson, who left here
only three months before her
death, was en route to Klamath
Falls at the time of the accident
The family still owns the home
in which they lived in Klamath
Falls.
Survivors include the widower,
Claude J. Thompson, Yuba City
Calif.; two daughters, Shcryl Lu-
anne, 14, and Vickie Rae, 11
Yuba Cily: mother, Mrs. Nora
Brown of Klamath Falls; sisters,
Mrs. Donald 'Smith. Mrs. Betty
Arant, Mrs. Joan Regan and Kar
en Brown, all of Klamath Falls
brothers, Billy Dick. George Don
aid, Arthur Brown, Earl A. Brown
Jr., all of Marysville, and Allen
Brown of Klamath rails.
Square Dane
Class Begins
The fall beginners' square dance
class, sponsored by the Merry
Mixers Square Dance Clubwill
begin Wednesday, Sept. 13, at 8
p.m. at the Merry Mixers Hall
3S22 Lakeport Blvd. in Pelican
City. Tho hall is acss from the
Cnr-Ad-Co mill site.
Bill Mavbew, longtime caller
in tne Klamatn nasin, win
struct. The first lesson will be
free. For information call TU
9967.
Stearns School
Gets Students
Deadline limitation prevented in-
cludina a recent shift in county
suburban school populatuOs to be
listed in Tuesday's jirald and
News. A last minute shift took
29 fourth and fifth grade pupil:
from Peterson School to Orson
Stearns. Tabulations for those tWi
schools should now be: Peterson: I
this year 453. I960. 462; Orson
Stearns, this year 411, 10, 329.
County Museum and the John's Museum of Dorris and a
clock from the old Ager store at Ager, Calif., helped
win first place for the entry. The clock was loaned by
Earl Agar, Tulelake, for whose family the town was
named many years ago. The Milne collection of gold,
shown for the first time this year, was added to the im
pressive display of county gold. Forty six of California's
58 counties had exhibits at the fair.
Photo by McCurry, Sacramento
Dam Economic Asset
the Dunsmuir Lions Club at its
luncheon jMonday.
Its construction depends on an
informed, enthusiastic and vocif
erous citizenry, she told the Lions
in outlining legislative measures
that can be undertaken to bring
about its construction.
Mrs. Davis advised the passage
of legislation asking that Box Can
yon Dam be financed by the Davis
Grunsky Act and that this recom
mendation be made to the Cali
fornia Water Commission.
She strongly urged that Siskiyou
County have an active and in
formed delegation whose responsi
bility will be to see that the neces
sary steps are taken in the state
legislature and senate to finance
Box Canyon Dam.
Even though recreational facili
ties are now being constructed
elsewhere in the state, Mrs. Davis
made it clear that she in no way
could assure the construction of
Box Canyon Dam without county-
wide support. She described the
Davis-Grunsky Act as a measure
setting aside funds for local proj
ects and said that as long as the
money is available in a special
fund and no demand is made on
the general fund, it is apt to re
ceive more favorable considera
tion. Cost of Box Canyon Dam is
estimated at two million dollars.
Box Canyon, located four miles
southwest of Mount Shasta,
wonderful natural site for a dam
from an engineering and recre-
my wagon goes where the
wild goose goes!
ing and fishing are good! Their 'Jeep' Utility
roads over rocky creeks and salty marshes...
at all! Isn't this the kind of vehicle you need for
hunting and fishing? Be
ine t-wneei arive -jeep utility wagon toaayi utility Wagon J
I
677 So. 7th St.
ational standpoint, Mrs. Davis
said. She said everyone in the
county must recognize that recre
ation is now a major industry and
that all profit from the recreation
dollar.
Mrs. Davis also brought a warn
ing to Siskiyou County that forest
reserve funds now returned to the
counties by the National Forest
Service are again in jeopardy. She
said these funds are vital to the
mountain counties as they repre
sent in lieu taxes for the vast
national forest areas within these
counties. Mrs. Davis said the
mountain counties must defend
these funds now facing legislation
to appropriate them for state wide
use or else face increased burdens
upon these persons paying proper
ty taxes in the mountain counties.
She told those present that fish
and game pamphlets are now be
ing revised and simplified and an
outline of the responsibilities of
various governmental agencies for
the formulation of fish and game
laws will soon be available. She
said this outline will enable
criticisms and suggestions on fish
and game matters to reach the
proper body for appropriate action.
Masonry Contractor
Homes Patios Fireplaces
Fall-Out Shelters
Free Eillmatn
BOB L. MITCHELL
ftlfW Simmer Ave. Pb. J -01 HI
J
our guest. Drive and test
Tune In MAVERICK Sunday Evenings 6:30 p.m.
JOE FISHER
Mrs. Hessig
Named Boy
Scout Herf
MONTAGUE Mrs. Louis V.
Hessig of Montue. - active in
many civic organizations, clubs
and fraternal orders, added anoth
er to her list when she was ap
pointed as Montague and Shasta
Valley Chairman of the Boy Scout
finance campaign in the Siskiyo'i
Silvertip District.
Mrs. Hessig is president of the
Shasta Valley Community Club of
Montague, a member of the 10th
District Agricultural Association
Fair Board, past president of the
Siskiyou County Cow Belles, East
ern Star and Daughters of t h e
Nile.
Mrs. Hessig covers Montague,
Grenada. Big Springs, Bogus. Wil
low Creek and Little Shasta.
In order to cover this large area,
Mrs. Hessig has obtained volunteer
help located in the various areas,
and those who will aid in the can
vassing are Wilson Grazer, Mon
tague Rotary Club; Mrs. Ray Cal
lahan. Mrs. Ruth Dutra, Mrs.
Mrs. Claude Morton. Mrs. Pearl
Conroy. Walter Bray. Mrs. Jean
nette Flower, Mrs. Paul Dineen.
Mrs. Orlo Davis, Mrs. Del Rey
nolds, Mrs. Ward Foster, Mrs. Joe
Burch Jr., Mrs. James Young.
Mrs. Roland Dexter, Mrs. Keith
Severns, Mrs. Sylvia Guardia and
Mrs. Marchia Houdeshell.
Air Disturbed
TOKYO (AP) The Japanese
meteorological agency said today
the Soviet Union's seventh nuclear
test in its current series caused
air disturbances in Japan lasting
an hour.
Convenient
Drive-in
Banking
Or Use Our Big Free
"On -the-Premises"
Parking Lot!
The Bank With Your
Interest at Heart!
BHQK
on
KinmnTH falls
So. 6th & Klamath
Member F.D.I.C.
'Jeep' owners are free to
roam wherever the hunt- '
Wagon makes its own :
takes them anywhere
aes inem anywnere
V JOB-PROVED 0
tUtility WajonU
Klamath Falls, Ore.
8'
v.