vtMnesda.v. June 12, 19M PACE 7 A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon
Leading Cutting Horses
Enter In Alturas Event
ALTURAS-Rex Cauble of Tex
as, owner of the world's champion
cutting horse, "Cutter Bill," re
ported to the World's Series of
Cutting Horse Headquarters in Al
turas that his trainer, Sonny
Perry, will bring two cutting
horses to the Alturas contest July
5.
Chairman Bill Diekroeger also
reported there are now 15 horses
entered from the Fort Worth and
Dallas, Tex., areas and two from
Ohio. Don Dodge of Sacramento
will be at the show with four of
his horses to show.
The cutting contest is now tcn
tatviely scheduled to be televised
for the Wide World of Sports show.
It will feature the world's most
famous cutting horses such as
"Hoppin," one of the top 10 last
year. The contest has been ap
proved by the National Cutting
Horse Association as a champion
ship contest with points toward
the world championship. The
show is also approved by t h e
Pacific Coast Cutting Horse As
socition. Two of the judges will be John
Lilly, Newhall, Calif., who judged
the cutting events at the cow pal
ace, and Bill Williams of Boon-
ville, Mo. Williams was the cut
ting horse judge at the American
Hnval show last year.
The show boasts the largest
purse to be put up in the cutting
field in 1963, a $3,000 guaranteed
purse plus the added entry fees.
The entry fee will be $100 a horse
plus $10 or office charges. En
tries are being received at the
Model Quarter Horse Headqua-
ters in Alturas.
The cutting horse contest will
begin at 9 a.m. on July S and
continue throughout the day. Fi
nals will be at the showground at
1 p.m. on July 6.
Tax Payment
Due Saturday
Taxpayers paying estimated in
come tax are, according to A. G
Erickson, director of internal rev-
enus for Oregon, required to
pay their second installment of
tax due on 1963 estimated income
by June 15.
If the income expected to be
earned during 196.1 has changed,
taxpayers should file an amended
declaration of estimated tax. A
blank form for use as an amend
ed return is printed on the back of
the bill which taxpayers receive
for an installment of estimated
tax, Erickson pointed out.
Questions on estimated tax can
be obtained at' local internal rev
enue offices.
French Art
Hits Record
LONDON (UPI 1 Free-spending
bidders paid a world record of
nearly $3 million Tuesday night
for a collection of French im
pressionist paintings kept out of
sight by their recluse owner dur
ing the past 40 years.
Scottish chanties will receive
the proceeds after taxes of the
$2,912,052 auction sales of 471
paintings and one bust from the
collection of the late William A
Cargill, a Scottish oil and ship
ping magnate.
Cargill, who died last year
without heirs, lived as a recluse
and permitted few persons to see
the collection he had put together
at bargain prices in the early
1920s.
Solheby s Galleries were
jammed for the record auction,
which exceeded the previous high
total of $2.2 million for a mod
ern art collection. That price also
was paid at Sotheby's, for. seven
impressionist paintings of the tr
win Goldschmidt collection auc
tioned in 1958.
"Danseuse Basculant," a pastel
ballet scene by Degas, brought
the top price of $294,000. The 26-
by-14 inch work had been exhib
ited only three times since it was
painted in about 1B79.
Some of the collection's highly
touted paintings failed to arouse
the expected interest among the
choosy bidders. A Cezanne land,
scape thought capable of bring
in $250,000 sold for $106,400.
A Degas oil of ballet dancers
brought $154,000 instead of the
predicted $280,000.
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69 Students Face Jawbreakers In Spelling Bee
WASHINGTON UP1 - The
word "dropout" look on extra
meaning today (or 69 special stu
dentsfinalists in the 36th annual
. Nttar T
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PIE COMIN' UP Bobby Axel was in the mood for pie,
any kind of pie, during a pie social and dance sponsored
by the Klamath Ridge Riders. Admission was one pie per
man. Women bid on the pies, auctioned by Dan Emrick
and Bill Bailey.
Movie-Goers Pay $100
A Seat For'Cleopatra'
y M q Z
"How can you keep him from being bored at horns
now that school' out? Have you thought of changing
the design of the paper on the ceiling?"
NEW YORK (UPIl-"Clcopa-tra,"
the most costly movie ever
made, will barge onto Broadway
tonight for a $100-a-ticket world
premiere that is expected to at
tract a New Year's Eve size mob
to Times Square.
Two tickets to 20th Century-
Fox's $37 million epic were being
held for Elizabeth (Cleo) Taylor
and Richard (Mark Antony) Bur
ton, romantic stars of the film,
on screen and off. But latest re
ports said they will remain togeth
er in London where Burton is
making a new movie.
"That's good, said a police
spokesman. "We'd have to de
clare martial law if those two
showed up."
Neither Miss Taylor nor Burton
has seen the completed master
print of Cleopatra, wnose lmai
editing was completed only last
week nearly three years after
filming began. Only writer
director Joseph L. Mankiewicz
and a half-dozen others have
viewed the final version in its
four-hour, 11-mintite entirety, a
half hour longer than "Gone With
The Wind."
Record Crowd Expected
Even though Rex (Caesar) Har
rison will be the only star in at
tendance, a record Broadway
opening crowd was expected and
a record police detail was as
signed to the Times Square area.
There will be 105 mounted and
foot police, plus plainclothesmen
and private detectives.
More than 1,900 film Industry
bigwigs, stage and screen stars
and celebrities from many walks
of life have paid $25 to $100 apiece
to charity to be the first to see
the ambitious account of ancient
history's immortal love triangle
The Will Rogers Memorial Hospi
tal at Saranac Lake, N.Y., will
get about half the $150,000 open
ing box office.
Gets TV-Radio Coverage
The three major television net
works will provide live and filmed
coverage of the kliee-hehted scene
outside tne theater for millions of
home viewers, and three radio
networks will carry the event. Ad
ditional millions abroad will share
the razzle-dazzle via the Voice of
America and the armed forces
radio network.
Rod and Gun
Outing Set
A combination turkey-shoot and
picnic will be held by the King
sley Field Rod and Gun Club (or
its members, families, honorary
members, and air field person
nel, 1 p.m., Sunday, at the base
skcet range, the Information Of
fice of the air field has an
nounced. Drinks will be available at cost,
but picnickers must bring their
own food.
Participants may compete for
hams or turkeys in four events,
and 12 gauge shotgun shells will
be available at the skeet range.
Guns will also be available at
the range for those who do not
bring their own.
Additional details will be an
nounced later in the week, ac
cording to Capt. Gordon Dckrey,
coordinator for the event.
National Spelling Bee.
The 39 girls and 30 boys won
out over more than six million
youngsters in local contests all
over the country and now (ace
two days of elimination to decide
the national champion.
The bee is sponsored by the
Scripps-Howard Newspapers in 17
cities and by 51 other U.S. daily
and Sunday papers.
The f'nalists represent 68 differ-
At some places in Panama, the
sun rises over Pacific waters and
sets over Atlantic waters.
Riders Drill
For Parade
Klamath Ridge Riders are pre
paring for the Fourth of July
parade, rehearsing drills for men
and women and horses.
Meetings of the group are held
the second Wednesday of each
month at 7:30 p.m. at the Shasta
Grange Hall unless otherwise no
tified. The riders, who have frequent
get-togethers, recently had a fresh
air breakfast followed by drill
practice. Cooks were Kenneth
Snyder, Pete Pederson. Ted Lub
be and Clarence Adams.
A chuckwagon breakfast on the
Maude Liskey ranch, Pine Grove
Road and a pic social at the
Midland Grange Hall were oth
er recent events.
ent communities, as far away at
Alaska. Texas is the leading state!
with nine champion spellers. Ohio
is second with eight, Pennsyl
vania has six and New York five.
Hundreds Of Words
Last year, it required a total
of 718 words to decide the com
petition which resulted in co
champions: Michael Day of St.
Louis and Nettie Crawford of El
Paso.
There are four veterans who
will stand up in the finals. Thev
are Vivian Salazar, 14, sponsored
by the Amanllo (Tex.) Globe
News, who finished 52nd last
year; David Leycnson, 12, repre
senting the New ork World
Telegram and Sun, who finished
21st in 1962; Casey Charness Jr.
13, of the Lubbock (Tex.)
Avalanche-Journal, w-ho came in
42nd last year, and Steven Pal
mer, 12, sponsored by the Wichita
Falls (Tex.) Record News and
Times, who finished 7th in the
1961 national finals.
Pronounces The Words
The man who must pronounce
the jawbreakers for the final two
Arrowhead Bolo Ties 1,50
For Father's Day &
July Celebration
Agora Key Rings $1.00
Duck Caddici $1.50 to $2.95
GAY'S GIFT SHOP 219 Moin
days is Pr. Richard R. Baker,
professor of philosophy at the
University of Dayton, Dayton,
Ohio.
First prize is $1,000, plus a
weekend trip to New York City.
Second prize is $500; third, $230:
the next dvc prizes, $100 each;
the next 10 prizes, $75 each. The
remaining 51 finalists will get $50
each.
The youngsters reached the bid
for the top money by spelling
such words as "periphrasis,
"erysipelas" and "bacchanalian."
Now they're going to get tough!
Children's play shoes...
to run in to sun in,
to have fun in...
Warm weather knockabouts by Baby Deer
of soft leather or scrubbable sailcloth.
Springy crepe soles that shed water and
take wear. Sizes 2 thru 8.
Special
3.00
Exclusively for Children
619 Main Wt Giv frJC Green Stompi
Seattle-Portland
Top Students
Get Honors
MOUNT SHASTA - The final
grading period at Mount Shasta
High School resulted in 32 stu
dents achieving honor roll recog
nition. There were seven seniors.
six juniors, nine sophomores, and
10 freshmen.
Many honors and scholarships
were also won by students in
various classes. Valedictorian was
John Herzog, who was recog
nized for athletics and for deport
ment. Salutatorian was P a 1 1 i
Hunter.
Six outstanding students in ath
letics, deportment, school spirit,
and scholarship were given med
als along with diplomas. They
were Edwin Smutz, John Herzog,
Laura Melo, Patti Hunter, Bob
Mongini and Virginia Bitmisa.
TWO FLIGHTS DAILY
37
West Coast Airlines
SHIFTS AND SKIMMERS ARE BIG FASHION NEWS
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under
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Say it with a Parker
New PARKER ARROW
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If yrMj'rc tittle shy and have difficulty saying "1 love
you'-say it with t Parket.
Shaw Stationery
729 Main
f SE98 $11
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