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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1963)
Spies, Secrets, Scribe Reports U.S. Espionage Activities EDITORS NOT.:: Fictional pies accomplish the impossible in the nick of time and usually win a beautiful girl. Real life spies for the I'nited Slatei op crate in secrecy and probably see little glamor. In the follow ing dispatch, the first of four, I'I'I national reporter Harry Ferguson begins a report on t'.S. espionage activities. By HARRY, FERGUSON I'nited Press International WASHINGTON (L'PI - Ameri ca's super-spy organization lists ils number in the telephone book and once issued a road map show "Spaceport U.S.A." Viewed As Hectic, Expanding Spot CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI - The men and women who chose Ihe glamor of exploring space for a living are facing some unglam orous problems just trying to live down here on earth. If this sprawling test center is "Spaceport U.S.A." the support ing area around it certainly is "Boomtown U.S.A." and like any good boomtown is has its pecu liar headaches and heart throbs. Cape Canaveral is a sandy spit of land almost in the center of long, slender Brevard County. In 1950, it was a sleepy little county of 23,653 people, mostly native oldtimers and outlanders who moved here to "get away from TUESDAY JOLLY NEIGHBORS, 8 p.m., St. Patrick's party, Mrs. Harry Wiard, 2705 Wiard. Wear green. ALOHA CHAPTER 61, OES, 8 p.m., stated meeting, Masonic Temple. GIRL SCOUTS SPLASH PAR TY, 7:15 p.m.v KUHS pool. BEGINNING SCULPTURE CLASS, 7 to 9:45 p.m., Klamath Art Gallery, Maple Park. OSU MOTHERS CLUB, 8 p.m., meeting, Mildred Binney, 721 Mitchell. WOTM. Chapter 467, 7:30 p.m., friendship, Moose Home. Betty Ketsdever committee. WEDNESDAY KLAMATH ART ASSOCIATION R p.m., .board meeting, home of Vic Overman. KLAMATH COUNTY C 0 W BELLES, 1 p.m., executives meet ing, Pelican Cafe. SOJOURNERS, 12:30 p.m., luncheon and cards, Willard Ho tel. Newcomers welcome. KENO HOME EXT. UNIT, 10 a.m., Facing Middle Years, pot luck, home of Nellie Smith. LUCILE O'NEILL PTA, 7 p.m., meeting and room visitation, school. GOLDEN AGE CLUB, 1 p.m., meeting, Klamath Auditorium. TOPS CLUB, 7:30 p.m., meet ing. Community Lounge. Group therapy for overweight women. THURSDAY MERRY MIXERS, 8 p.m.. be ginning round dance class, Mer ry Mixer Hall. MIDLAND HOME EXT. UNIT. 10:30 a.m., potluck. Joan's Kitch en, fairgrounds. Bring table serv ice. M E R R Y MIXERS. 8 p.m., square dance. Merry Mixer Hall. Bring sandwiches. Police Arrest Drunk Driver A Wilderville. Ore. (on Tonv Varca, 50 man. An- it Q fintA $300 and 30 days Monday on ;j (Community. ;! (Calendar charges of drunken driving. marne v Bom to Mr. ana Mrs. Ken- Vflrra was arrested Sunday atineth D. Marnev In Klmth Valley Has- 9:35 p.m. after a city patrolman10 0I1, observed the car he was driving; nP01MVj-n Mr Mrl. weaving on Main Street. ir, Vima'. rar A passenger in arga s car. Russell John Morgan. Grants Pass, was arrested for being drunk on a public highway and fined $25 or five or 10 days. Varga was unable to pass so briety tests Sunday and a blood test he agreed to take at Klam ath Valley Hospital indicated that he was intoxicated. Ask about daily "Business Cord" SPOT ADS TU 4-1111 CIA: ing how to get to its headquar ters. But frankness stops right there and no organization in Wash ington wraps itself in such a thick blanket of secrecy as the Central Intelligence Agency iCI.V. Congressmen frequently com plain the CIA is too secret. They are frustrated because they can not find out precisely what the organization does, how much mon. ey it spends and whether the charge is true that it sometimes exceeds its authority by dabbling in U.S. foreign policy even to the extent of helping overthrow gov ernments. Thus there were many quiet it all" and quietly settle down. ' In I960, the population had soared to 111,435. It was "boom ing Brevard" now, home of the free world's biggest space center. And by 1970. it will be the jump ing off place for astronauts bound for the moon and other stations in space. Down on earth, Bre vard's population will be, by one estimate, 250.000. Growing Nj)t Easy The growing has not been easy. The men and their families who came in with the space-age "new frontier" found, and are still find ing, the accent on the word "fron tier." They found the score of relaxed little communities such as Cocoa and Melbourne and Titus ville weren't ready. Everything carries a high price tag including housing. A man can find a place conveniently close to the Cape, but it comes at a price $100 per month or bet ter for a simple efficiency apart ment. $150 or better for two bed rooms. He can live further away and still he pays, with gasoline bills and strained nerves from joining thousands of fellow workers in winding toward the job over roads that have been hard-pressed to stay two years behind the times. Food, as one housewife put it, "is out of the world in cost." Many of the newcomers even found water a problem. The sul fur-flavored tap variety makes a wicked cup of coffee, and bottled water is a standby. Schools are lacking simply be cause it takes time to construct them. Churches have, on occa sion, held services in bowling al leys and theaters to house their expanding congregations. Income Soaring The per capita income is soar ing, but the average family still has trouble making ends meet. But with that unique spirit of adventure that the gold-rushers of a century ago must have felt, they Publishers Plan Dailies On Street By Weekend By WESLEY G. PIPPERT United Press International Publishers hoped to have all New York dailies back on the streets by the end of the week to end the city's biggest news blackout in history. An extension of the Newspaper Guild's contract expiration date to coincide with the one gained by the striking printers was the only thing standing in the way of com plete agreement in the 94-day dispute. Elsew here, the labor picture re mained troubled. The Southern Pacific Railway disagreement stretched into still another week despite a federal mediator's hopes for a settlement last week. Striking bus and trolley opera tors in suburban Philadelphia and stercotypers in Cleveland turned down management proposals in their long disputes. One of the settlement terms between the New York publishers On The Record KLAMATH FALLS BIRTHS BOYS ANDERSON Born to Mr. and Mrs Norman Anderson In Klamath Valley Hosp'tal March 7 a bey weighing ? lbs., 4'.) on REEVES Born to Mr. and Wr. Llnd Reeves in Kiamatn vane Hospital March S a boy weighing 7 lbs.. ? Olt HOCK Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jack O. Hock in Klamath Valtey Hospital March I boy weighing 4 lbs, 15 on Gidiev in Klamath Valley Hospital March jsviv.ner a B.rgjuom in Ki.m.th v.n.y Mowilil Mircn 1 rl Mining mi, (J m wcauuffe-bo'd to wr. ni f Jonn vcAuUffi In Ktamatn Valtey Hostt t.l Varch I a girl wtigrting 1 101.. V i ozs HANCOCK Born to Wf. and Vr Can Hancock In Kiamatn Valley Hoio'tel March 10 Qlrl weianina ft lb!.. I Oil. IHJ SUMMARY Boyi: 13 Girll: 16 N. J. Rosenbaum INCOME TAX CONSULTANT Commerce Bldg. 1111 Wolnut Ave. Ph. TU 4-5903 or TU 4-5863 smiles in Congress when Lytton II. Gibson, a lawyer representing some construction firms, told a story at a zoning commission hear ing in nearby Fairfax County, Va. The CIA was building its new headquarters at Langlcy, Va., and Gibson's clients planned an apartment project nearby They wanted to know how many persons would be employed at CIA headquarters. "I called several congressmen and senators,'" Gibson said, "and was told they couldn't get the in formation. On the spur of the moment I phoned the Russian Embassy, The second person I still come. By the end of 11)63, more than 2.000 new construction workers will move in just to help the space agency expand the limits of the huge "spaceport" by another 90.000 acres. "I am tremendously concerned . . . that we will be in a frightful position to care for these people," said Donn Searle, president of the Tilusville Chamber of Commerce. Even such a thing as trailer space for them is at a premium. The key words are "boom" and "expand," the drive seems one of near desperation. On Cocoa Beach, one luxury motel after another springs up. Crash programs are spreading two-laned roads into four lanes as fast as road-making machines can move. rVm To Keep Going The boom isn't going to die. There are too many things to keep it alive the race for the moon, the stepped-up drive to master space for communications and weather forecasting and a score of other purposes, the bil lions of dollars the federal gov ernment is pouring in. But the people themselves come for their own reasons. Donald Holt came here to open a res taurant, and now boasts a coast-to-coast reputation for good food. B. G. MacNabb came to spear head the development of the na tion's first intercontinental ballis tic missile, the Atlas. Henri Landwirth came to run a motel, and stayed because he made a fortune and because he likes the people the ones he has seen come and go, the thousands yet to arrive. A lot come ' just to see what this business of space is all about. There are hardships, and grum bling about them is simply a way of life. But there is a high spirit of adventure in the living, and perhaps they like the place be cause there's literally no other like it in the United States, per haps the world. and the printers was a common contract expiration date for all unions two years from now. The Guild, representing the editorial staffs, indicated it would ask for improvements if it extends its contract now scheduled to end Oct. 31, 19S4. The printers' contract calls for a $4 weekly wage increase the first year and another $4 in the second; job protection against automation; two additional sick leave days the second year; and a reduction in the work week in the second year from 36'. hours to 33. The printers still must go through the formality of ratifica tion. House Rejects Pamphlet Bill SALEM lUPH A bill to cut down on the number of voter pam phlets mailed by the secretary of state was killed 33-23 by the House Monday. The vote came after the ses sion's first "call ot the house" requiring all representatives but those excused by the speaker to cast their vote. Only two mem bers were excused. Under the defeated bill, one vo ter pamphlet would have been mailed to each house, rather than to each voter, for an estimated $51.00(1 saving. Opponents argued that the cut back would have lowered the sta tus of rc;iatcred voters. VFW ST. PATRICK'S NIGHT SATURDAY, MARCH 16 Slew Feed Served 6:30 P.M. Till 9 P.M. Dance 9 P.M. Till 2 A.M. with Don Phelps and Lynerre in big hall members and their guesfs invited $1.00 a person. tallied to told me his informa tion was that CIA had about 3,- 500 people at Langlcy and even tually would have 11.000." Has Ready Statement Reporters attempting to check such things are likely to be handed this statement by CIA: 'The Central Intelligence Agen cy does not confirm or deny stor ies of the press whether good or bad; never explains its organiza tion; never identifies ils person nel except for a few in the top echelons; and will not discuss its budget, its methods of operation or its sources of information." What the critics of CIA fail to consider is that if it didn't op crate in secrecy it would be out of business within a month. You cannot conduct espionage in the o)cnhanded way that the Agricul ture Department collects figures and issues crop reports. But the fact seems to be that congres sional irritation over the CIA re flects a distaste on the part of Americans for spying. It goes all the way back to the end of World War I when Secre tary of State Henry L.- Stimson ordered the disbandment of the "Black Chamber," a group of experts who had been cracking enemy codes. Noting that the war was over, Stimson explained: "Gentlemen don't read each oth er's mail.'" Until Pearl Harbor That philosophy prevailed until the Sunday morning w hen the Jap anese attacked Pearl Harbor. In formed persons are substantially in agreement that there was plen ty of little pieces of information iround Washington to warn of the attack. But no organization nor person was charged -with the duty of fitting the pieces together and making a picture of what was about to happen. That is now the function of the CIA. It is not the only intelligence agency in Washington. The Army, Navy and Air Force have intelli gence agencies, and recently an over-all group has been set up by the Defense Department. The federal Bureau of Investigation is charged with the duty ot fight ing Communist subversion and Collision Of Train, Auto Kills Six Returning Home TUNNEL CITY. Wis. (UPIt Alerted by the train whistle Mrs. Allan Lind glanced out of the win dow of her home then froze in horror. "I saw a car go under the tr ain and I wanted to scream. I saw bodies flying." Mrs. Lind was describing the accident Sunday which took six lives at a railroad crossing. Mrs. Helena Sherwood, 35, Ru ral Warrens, Wis., and her three children, Patricia. 9, Sharon, 11 and David, 13, and her two nieces Carol Woods, 16. also of Rural Warrens, and Edilh Paddock, 16, Wisconsin Rapids, died in the crash. Vistlng Relatives The six had been to nearby Tomah, Wis., to visit Mrs. Sher wood's hospitalized mother. Then they stopped here briefly to visit other relatives. Mrs. Sherwood telephoned her sister, Mrs. Addison Woods Edith's mother, to say they were leaving Tunnel City and would be home wilhin the hour. She and the children piled into the 1950 model car for the trip home. KP Police Jail Three On Weekend Check Acts Three persons were arrested by Klamath Falls police over the weekend, all on check counts. A local Klamath Falls man was apprehended after forging some one else's name on a $20 check and passing it at the House of Discount in the Town and Coun try Shopping Center, and two out-of-town persons were taken into custody alter city police received warrants for them from the Sis kiyou and Clatsop County sheriff departments. Lester Lee Plowman. 1R, 2211 White Street, is accused of forg ing the name of Richard Guy on a check he passed in the shop ping center. Plowman aroused suspicion when he tried to pass several checks at the shopping center. An alert cashier took down the li- cense number of the car Plow - sabotage inside the United States. The State Department and the Atomic Energy Commission have intelligence units Meet Often Representatives of all these or ganizations meet once a week, or more often if developments indi cate the necessity. They must be ready on short notice to come up with facts that will help the Na tional Security Council and the president formulate policy. It is the responsibility of the di rector of the CIA to assemble and evaluate the information collected by all these intelligence groups. He also must prepare a daily "in telligence bulletin" whic1- is placed on the desk of the presi dent every morning and contains the latest information from ali parts of the world. Remain Anonymous Except for Ihe men in the top jobs, agents of all these intelli gence units remain as anonymous as possible. Charles Corddry, UPI Defense Department correspond ent who knows his way around the Pentagon better than most major generals, had never seen nor heard of the young man who conducted the nationally televised briefing on the Russian weapons in Cuba on Feb. 6. He was John T. Hughes. 34, a special assistant in the Defense Department's intelligence unit. Apparently he is a specialist in briefing generals and admirals, but he never has been available to Pentagon reporters and now that his brief hour as a national television celebrity is over he has again retired into the shadows. One phrase that Hughes kept re peating I'the intelligence com munity puzzled many persons. He was referring to all the intel ligence groups that gather week ly with the CIA to trade and evaluate information. The CIA keeps "watch officers" on duty around the clock under orders to call the director if something significant comes in. The director decides which gov ernment officials must be notified immediately. Nobody can get the President of the United States on the phone so fast as the director of the CIA. A short distance away at a rail road crossing Mrs. Sherwood stopped the car while a Milwaukee train passed. Then she started to cross, not realizing that on a sec ond set of tracks the Chicago and North Western Railway's stream liner, the Dakota 400, was roaring through. Three Thrown Clear Three bodies were thrown clear of the wreckage. The train, bound for Mankalo, Minfi., from Chi cago, dragged the wreckage with Ihe other bodies inside before stopping short of the tunnel which gave this tiny crossroads com munity its name. The train, not seriously danv aged, was delayed about three hours while authorities questioned the engineer and wreckers from Sparta tried to pry the car from the train. The engineer, Al G. Harnisch. 63, Baraboo, Wis., said he was traveling about 50 miles an hour when the train struck the front of the Sherwood car. Mrs. Sherwood who was sepa rated from her husband, Warren. Pamona, Mo. has three older children living away from home. man was driving and he was picked up a short time later at Main and South Fourth streets by a city patrolman. City police arrested James t Peterson. 38, Portland, at 12:50 a.m. Saturday in the Wincma Mo tor Hotel after receiving a war rant for his arrest from the Clat sop County Sheriff's Department He was wanted for obtaining mon ey under false pretenses. Peter son is also accused ol leaving the Wincma without paying his bill. Patricia Dcmery, 36, Oakland, Calif., is being held in the city jail on a warrant from Siski you County for insufficient check funds. Her bail was se! at $2,100. Miss Dcmery, Monday morning, re fused to waive extradition back ,to California NEW LOCATION - KUHLMAN INSULATION 1721 MAIN Coll or stop by our "Houii of Alum inum" for frto ottimotti on aluminum tiding, roofing, car porti, potto, storm windowi and doors. NOW! DOWNTOWN BUSINESS CANOPIES! KUHLMAN Ph. TU 4-703 Tuesday, March 1!, 1I 1IKRALD AND NEWS. TWA I r - Ar: 1 l T-l "Bart is just a minor government employe, so wa won't be going on junkets right away!" BASIN MAI.IN ANDY OUVF.lt is a patient at Klamath Valley Hospital from a recent appendectomy. MRS. FRANK VICTOKIN re turned from Whittier, Calif., aft er a week's visit with her daugh ter and family, the Dick Donald sons. AIRS, IIE1NIF. COFELT recent ly spent a week in Sequel, Calif., with her mother, Urctla Allrcd. MR. AND MRS. LEWIS KAN- DRA had as recent guests, their daughter and family, the Hank Wilkins, of Olex, Ore. MR. AND MRS. GEORGE HINES and son of Red Bluff were visiting friends and relatives here last weekend. MR. AND MRS. DAVID Me- VAY and son, Shannon, are in Visalia this week visiting his aunt and family, the Dave Coopers. NORMAN V'NIS and Cy McCol- gin won first in the Double Class C in the Klamath Basin City Bowline Tournament Sunday alt crnoon. Unis won first in all events and fourth in singles, MR. AND MRS. JOE MEADOR recently visited their son and his wife, Lt. and Mrs. John Mcador, and baby daughter, Jamie, in Honolulu. Mcador returned home after spending two weeks there and Mrs. Mcador remained tor a month's visit. NEW PINE CREEK KELLY CREEK PTA met at the school Feb. 28 with President Shirley Thompson presiding. A Founders' Day reading was giv en by Mrytle Gentry and a sil ver offering was collected. Su perintendent Anne Sprague showed a film on achievement tests now being given in the county grade :hools. EVANGELIST HEN II. NOLES of Bend opened a two-week scries of evangelistic meetings at the Baptist Church on March 3. Ihe public Is invited to attend the special meetings each evening at 7; 30. MR. AM) MltS. "CHUCKY' IIISIIOP of Willow Ranch are the parents of a daughter born March 2 in the Lakevicw Hospital. She has been named Wiletta Lorcne GOOSE LAKE VALLEY SPORTSMEN'S CLL'lt sponsored a public pinochle party March 9. CHARLEY McLAIN of Rear don, Wash., arrived Tuesday for a three-day visit with his brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Homer McLain. OFFICE BUSINESS SPACE for LEASE In new builfin9 to ba (red id at 7th & Walnut. Prima location with parking. Ph. TU 4-6033. 7th & WALNUT (Across from Post Offico) Morvin Kuhlman INSULATION 1721 Mem PAGE S IMS I, Nf A. W T M l U 1 tv. ew. 3-2 BRIEFS MiJRRILL MERRILL GRANGE will meet Monday, March II, at the recre ation hall, hosting other granges on visitation. Shasta-View lectur er, Mary Lou Lindsay, will be in charge of the program. All grangers are welcome. MR. AND MRS. TOBY DURAN JR. are the parents of a boy born Feb. 25. Named Jose Tobias Duran III, he joins three sisters. Grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs. Ned Layman and Mr. and Mrs. Toby Duran Sr. of Tulelake. MR. AND MRS. JACK DEBOY and family had as recent guests her brother and family, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Weaver, of Redmond. While here they traveled to Bly to visit another sister. MR. AND MRS. NORMAN KING of Lake Tahoe visited Mrs. Kings' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Har- lm Green, last week before travel ing on to Mt. Hood for a vaca tion. Their children remained with their grandparents. MERRILL PRESBYTERIAN WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION after noon circle will meet at the home of Mrs. Paul Lewis on March 13 at 2 p.m. The evening circle wt meet at the home of Mrs. Bob Schmeicheal at 7:30 p.m. on March 14. All interested women arc invited. MERRILL HOME EXTENSION will meet at the recreation hall at 10:30 a.m. March 14. Lcona Hayes and Marjorie Newnham will present the lesson, Facing the Middle Years. Bring a sack lunch. MR. AND MRS. LLOYD LISK were honored by a housewarming on March 2 given by friends and relatives. Over 00 close friends ind relatives were present and various gills were presented. Klamath Falls, Ore. SELL-A -BRA fS TMIII'S "tOMlrHINO Hist" tlOUT OWN INS tN OtSSMOIItll VISIT TOUR DICK B. MILLER COMPANY, 710 Teary Women Defended By Dry-Eyed Worker By ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: I'm still burnir-i over tli.it letter signed "Damp Furniture from the per sonnel manager who complained about women who cry a 1 1 over his uphol stery. If this self- styled expert in the field of hu man relations knew beans about handling peo ple he'd get more work out of the women and fewer tears. Why do women cry? Occasion ally it's because Uicy are nervous and high strung. But usually it's because some ici'k with two years seniority is trying to make life unbearable. A lop-notch personnel director knows his people. He won't stand by and sec faithful, hardworking employes abused by vicious, mis erable tyrants who vent their hos tilities and anxieties on subordi nates. I've worked in offices for over 25 years and what I've seen in the line of organized back-biting could fill this newspaper. I've never cried but there were times when I could have died DRY EYED VETERAN Dear Vet: Thank you for a clear-eyed account (roin a dry eyed veteran. Judging Irom my mail no one is Indifferent to the personnel director. They love him or they hate him. Dear Ann Landers: I married too young. 1 realized early that the marriage was a mistake and since there were no children 1 insisted on a divorce. A few years later I met and married a marvelous man. We have two precious little girls 2 and 4 years old. We eouldn t be a happier family. The question is this: bhould we tell our daughters at an early age that their mother was married to another man before she married their father? Or shall we say Power Spokesman Says Udall View Political PORTLAND (UPD A spokes man for Pacilic Northwest Power Co. Monday termed Interior Secre tary Stewart Udall s position on the High Mountain Sheep Dam project "emotional and political." Udall has urged federal con struction of the Mountain Sheep Dam on the Snuke River. Pacific Northwest Power (PNP), composed of five private firms, has received a favorable recom mendation from a Federal Power Commission (FPO examiner that it build Ihe $257 million project. The Interior Department f i 1 ed exception to the recommenda tion. Hugh Smith, attorney for PNP, CANCEL YOUR MORTGAGE Thru KqulUhlr'f Mvlnr InoiiraiK'B John H. Houston I If! I NOW GOING ON AT YOUR OLDS DEALER'S OLDS MO BILE DEALERS CELEBRATE AN AUTOMOTIVE MILESTONE... THE B.OOO.OOOTH ROCKET V-8 ENOINEI nothing and hope they don't hear it from outsiders? I'm aware you advise parents of adopted children to tell the young sters at an ear ly age thai they are adopted so the knowledge will not come as a shock. A close friend of ours says this is the same thing. My husband and I can't decide if it is or if it isn't. We are ask ing you to help us. QUANDARY Dear Quandary: An adopted child should grow up with the knowledge that he is adopted be cause he is the central figure In the story. The news that mother had an unsuccessful marriage be fore she met Daddy can wait un til the child Is about 10. The divorce should U mentioned casually, but it's unwise to re main silent about such things in the hope that no one will men tion it. Old skeletons have a way of falling out of closets at the most unexpected moments and the clatter can be terribly em barrassing. Dear Ann Landers: This letter is for "Carbondate" the 21-year-old girl who wants to leave homo and make a career for herself in Chicago. Her mother and sisters say she is selfish and inconsid erate. They claim she has no right to burden them with worry. You gave her a good answer. but I'd like to make it even strong er, because many years ago I was in Carbondale's spot. Unfor tunately, I didn't have an Ann Landers to write to and I let my family talk me out of it. I've been sorry ever since. I'm not blaming them. I blame myself for not having the gump tion to leave, in spite of their whining. Other young people have had relatives who tried to keep them at home forever, but they left in spite of thorn. To any boy or girl ot legal ago who has a dream I say, "Don't let anything or anyone stop you. , Go while you are still vigorous and unafraid or you will never go."-NO STARS IN MY EYES Dear No Stars: Amen. in a filing placed before the I'PC in Washington, D.C., Monday. urged the commission to reject Udall's arguments for federal con struction. PNP reiterated that In all of the potential benefits of the proj ect development by the private firm would ".yield an equal or greater benefit than would de velopment by the secretary (in terior department)." FRIENDLY HELPFULNESS To Every Creed and Purse WARD'S Klamath Funeral Home Marguerite Ward and Sons 925 High Ph. TU 2-4404 TION When the firtl high-compression Hocket Kngine was introduced by Oldsmobile, it virtually rewrote the book on performance. And, today, the S-Millionlh Rockel adds a bril liant new chapter to Oldsmobile's continuing story of engineering leadership! New highs in smooth ness, unprecedented quietness, sparkling response the Rocket delivers them all! That's why mil lions of owners agree: Thert't ttill nothing like a Rockel! OLDSMOBILE lOCtl tUTHOIIIIlO OIMIITY tltllM KLAMATH AVE.