PAGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH KAU.S. ORKflON
MONDAY, JULY 21, 1052
MARKETS
Stocks
NEW YORK Ifl The atock
market Was quietly higher Monday
wllh the Democratic National Con
vention getting most of Wall
. street's attention. The close was
without feature.
There was little or no trading
emphasis in any part of the Hit
with prices spread out over a
ramie of fractions lower to between
1 and 1 points higher. ,
Volume came to an estimated
' 8800,000 shares.
NEW YORK STOCKS
By The Associated Press
Admiral Corporation
Allied Chemical
i Allis Chalmers
, American Airlines
American Power : Light
Aiucrtcitn Tel. & TeL
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper
Atchison Railroad.
Bethlehem Steel ' '
Boeing Airplane Co.
Bom Warner
Burroughs Adding Machine
California Packing .
Canadian Pacific .-
Caterpillar Tractor
Celanese Corporation
Chrysler Corporation
Cities Service
Consolidated Edison
Consolidated Vultee
t Crown Zellerbach
Curtiss Wright
Douglas Aircraft
; dupont de Nemours
, Eastman Kodak
Emerson Radio
General Electric
General Foods
Cieneral Mlors
Georgia Pnc Plywood '
Goodyear Tire
, Homestake Mining Co.
International Harvester
International Paper
Johns Manville
Kennecott Copper
Libby, McNeill , .
Lockheed Aircraft
Loew's Incorporated - -
, Long Bell A
" Montgomery Ward
i Nash Kclvinator . .
New York Central- f .
Northern Pacific
Pacific American Pish .
Pacific Gas it Electric
Pacific Tel. TeL
Packard Motor Car
Pennev J. C. Co
Pennsylvania R. R.
Pepsi Cola Co.
Fhilco Radio
Radio Corporation v
Ravonler Incorr
Republic Steel
Richfield Oil
Safewav Stores Inc.
Scott Paper Co.
Sears Roebuck It Co.
Socony-Vacuum Oil
Southern Pacific
Standard Oil Calif
Standard Oil N. J. 1
Studebaker Corp.
SurKhine Mining " "
Swift tt Company-
Transamerica Corp.'-'
Twentieth Centurv Fox -Union
Oil Company
Union Pacific'
United Airline
United Aircraft
United Corporation
United States Plywood
United States Steel -T
Warner Pictures
Western Union Tel. ' V '
26s;
50 ia
13',
sai
154
67 S
H
92
'81,
M
TO,
VH
, J7
36
103
334
18?,
56b
8S
. 63!i
8
- t,
13
' 62S
46",
S8'4
lTt
. 4S,
36a
33
. ii9S
7S
79
r 1
23H
13i
38
64',
. 19H
19H
7554
34
4',
684
19'i
10t,
32 ,
26'i
31
43
69H
32;
56
57
37 "
81
591
M'i
3V,
93s
j 33
'. 27i;
15
41'
. , 118
. !7H
32',
S"
?8S,
.'- 40Ji
. 13"
, 4P',
- 254
. 39' ;
' '.
Westinghouse Air Brake
Westinghouse Electric
Woolworth Company
POTATOES
CHICAGO 11 Potatoes: Arriv
als 161, on track 203: total U. S.
shipments Friday 459. Saturday
332. and Sunday 50: supplies light;
demand moderate; market about
steady; track sales 100 lb sacks in
carlots: California long- Whites
S6.50-75: Idaho-Oregon Long Whites
86.25. Triumphs $5.50-90; Texas Tri
umphs $6.00: Washington Long
100 lb sack: Arizona Reds $6.35-60;
California Long Whites $7.00-25;
Idaho-Oregon Reds $6.00-66; Texas
Triumphs $6.35-50. ' - - .
Weather
Western Oregon Cloudy Tues
day morning and sunny in after
noon except fair in southern inter
ior; little change in temperature
with high of 75 in northern Interior
and 90 in southern interior, coastal
"'Jh 60-65; low Monday night 50-60.
Offshore winds northerly, 16-25
m.p.h.
LGrnls p" Vicinity Fair
Tuesday. High 90; .low Monday
night 53. , : . . .. .. ... .
Contest Closes July 28
No Need to be Present to Win
WE HAVE EVERYTHING (ALMOST)
2260 SHASTA WAY
and FINANCE
GRAINS
CHICAGO lfl A let-up In
hedging pressure, which resulted
from smaller receipts of cash grain
at major terminals, enabled wheat
to give a pretty good account of
Itself on the board of trade Moil
day. It was ahead more than a cent
at times.
The rest of Uie market, with the
exception of oats, also forged
ahead.
Wheat closed S to 1 higher.
July 3.38 (4. corn Vr higher,
July 81.79. oats "4 lower to i
higher, July 78 ,-78, rye 1 VJ '4
higher, July 83.01 soybeans ,
lower to higher. July 83.31 V,
. and lard 5 to 30 cents a hundred
pounds higher, July $11.06.
Wheat
Open High Low Close
3.27 H 3.39 3.37 H 3.38 ',
3.33 !, 3.33 ', 3.33 , 3.33 ,
3.37 3.38 s, 3.37 3.37 ',
3.41 3.43 3, 3.41 3.41 ',
3.41 V, 3.43 t, 3.41 3.41 ,
Jiy
Sep
Dec
Mar
May
PORTLAND 1 Coarse grains,
15-day shipments, bulk. Coast de
livery: Oats, No. 3, 38-lb white,
64.00; barley, No. 3. 46-lb B. W-.
64.00: No. 1 flax 63.00.
Wheat (bid) to arrive market,
basis No. 1 bulk, delivered Coast:
Soft white 3.33: soft white (exclud
ing Re.il 3.33: white club 3.33. '
Hard Red Winter: Ordinary 3 35:
10 per cent 3.35: 11 per cent 3.37;
u per cent l it.
Hard White Baart: Ordinary
3.30: 10 per cent 3.39: 11 per cent
u per cent 2.41.
Car receipts: Wheat 38; barley
flour 12;.
corn 9; oats 7; mill
feed .
LIVESTOCK
CHICAGO I Farmers who
put hogs on the market Monday
received some of the best prices
mu montns. Average values were
up a to 50 cents over Friday.
Two loads sold at 33.35 a nun
dred pounds, matching the recant
peak of May 19 which was highest
since Aug. 13.
Most barrows and gilt sold fmm
$30.00 to $23.00 and sows from $16.-
50 to $19.05. Clearance was good
Cattle were steady to 60 cents
lower, vealers steadv to $1.00 off.
and sheep unevenly strong; to 60'
cents lower with . spring lambs
showing the decline and ewes the
sirengw.
Most choice and nrime xImm
brought $31.60 to $34.60. a few loads
going on up to $34.75 to $35.60.
cnoice and prime heifers were
$32.00 to $35.00. Cows topped at
$33.00. bulls at $27.75, and vealers
at $33.00.
Most spring lambs took $39.00 to
$30.00 with the top at $30.50. old'
crop lamDs and yearlings were
mostly z3.oo to $24.75, one load
touching $25.00. Ewes were $9.00
and below. .
Estimated receipts included 9.500
nogs. 14.000 cattle. 400 calves and
500 sheep.
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO W)
(USDA) Cattle 900: receipts in-
ciuae nsu dozen loads, some odd
lots steers, largely feeders: load
heifers;, balance cows: market ac
tive, strong-60c higher, on steers:
mostly 60c higher on cows, snots
up 1.00. load and small lot com
mercial steers 2b.oo-28.SO: . load
good' feeders. 28.00: early, canner-
cutter1 cows 15.00-19.00: -lew shelly
n.uu: lew. utility cows 30.00-21.00:
odd young commercial cows 23.60.
Calves' 100; no early sales. .
Hogs 300; opened steady;' few
head choice No. 1-2 butchers 190
lbs 23.60.
Sheep 5,600: large percentage
good-prime spring lambs; no early
trade.
Man Signs For
Extradition .
Rudy RItterbusch, 28. who has
confessed to crimes in half a dozen
states since he was arrested here
last week on a traffic charge, has
signed waivers of extradition to
Phoenix, Ariz., and Woburn, Mass.
So far be is still in the County
Jail, serving a -10-day sentence.
RItterbusch Is wanted in Phoenix
for car theft and in Massachusetts
for stealing some $1,100 from a
restaurant where he worked.
He also has admitted car thefts
In Los Angeles, passing bad checks
in me uaxersneid area, thefts In
Washington and other crimes.
RUSSIAN HARVEST
-MOSCOW Ifl The Moscow
"press reported Monday that the
soviet Union expects a rich grain
harvest this year.
$150 DIAMOND
CLUSTER KING
Get Your Tickets
here
California Quoke
(Continued from rage One)
and a family probably trapped.
In Sacramento, the .state capital
state civil defense headquarters
ordered medical equipment mobil
ised to tlv Into the area.
Tehachapi. with a population of
about 3.000. is on U. S. 464 batween
Bakersfield and Molav. a little
mountain town 4.000 feet high,
many of whose residents work at
Uie big monolith Portland cement
plnnt nearbv.
It also is the site of the State
Women's Prison. hlch ' was re
ported so hard hit thai most of Its
cluster of two-story buildings are
unusable.
IlKASTFR TALL
A call went out for tents tn
which to house the 37 mmaws,
Including all of California's women
convicted of felonies. The prisoners
were reported panic-stricken but
unhurt.
Sheriff's Cant. F. D. Jones said
he understood most of the dead
were in an old brick hotel.
The town's residential district
was dsmaced. but no deaths were
reported there. '
Caverns were reported In at least
iu-a tunnel In the area, used loinl
ly bv the Santa Fe and Southern
Pacific raiiroaas, ana u
was blocked. -
Tie S. P.'s main line to San
Francisco, which runs along the
coast, was not damaged. The Santa
Fe said it would move us passen
gers by bus. .
But tne main-traveiea rouio
tween hero and Bakersfield. the
Ridge Route (U. S. 99) was blocked
by a slide near Gorman.
A highway patrolman said "it
seems like the too of a mountain
slid off." burvlng the busy, four
lane freewav route under 5 feet
of dirt at one point.
Elsewhere In the isolated Te
hachapi mountains, which separate
coastal Southern California from
the San Joaquin valley, there were
growing reports 01 loss ana injur
ies. At least 10 persons were hospital
ized at Mojave, 20 miles east of
Tehachapi.
A motel and store at Grapevine
was reported wrecked, with two
persons injured.
Shocks were still being felt In
the community of Frailer Park
four hours after the first quake
hit at 4:2 a.m. pot.
The strongest quake In Southern
California in nearly a half-century.
the thinly-populated area in which
it hit kept tne oearo tou irom
being much higher.
Its force was felt, mostly In a
rolling motion, from San Francisco
on the north to the Mexican border
on the south, and- eastward into
Nevada.
As dawn came, clouds of dust
could be seen rising back in the
mountains, indicating landslipes
deep in the canyons.
Bakersfield itself, a citv of 35.000
was : hard hit. A refinery was
afire.' the downtown business dis
trict was littered with rubble.
Plate glass windows were splint
ered and an explosion blew out
the walls of an automobile agency.
The Kern County courthouse at
Bakersfield showed such cracks
that employes were not permitted
to enter.
Dozens were treated for shock
and minor cuts and bruises at
Kern county general hospital.
seismologists at California in
stitute - of Technology put the
auake's center on a branch of the
famed San Andreas fault, which
cuts through the mountains near
Gorman, and fixed Its distance at
70 miles north of here.
Viaduct Due
For Repairs
The S. 6th Street viaduct Is to
undergo some repairing by the
mate. Highway Department start
ing tomorow morning. I
The structure will open for one
way tramc only, outoound, for
about a week, and Inbound traffic
will be routed around E. Main. -
The sidewalk and curbs are to
be repaired. Later this summer the
viaduct surface is to be renewed.
Lifesavinq .
Course Set '
An adult lifesaving swim course
is to be started next Monday night
at the KUHS natatorlum, and those
entering must register at the Rec
reation Office before Monday, Rec
reation Director Bob Bonney says.
The course will be conducted
Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday
nights, 7-8 p.m., for the rest of the
swimming season. t
John Turner is the instructor. 1
On The Record
BIRTHS
HEWITT Bcwn t.i Mr, and Mn.
Robert Hewllt, Cipcnl l.kt, Or,
at Klamath Valley .Mspllal Julv in,
ItAS, girl, Wtlghtt t pouitdt til (Antra.
ORANQVKST -RiH-n to Nr. and Mr.
Richard (tranqurat, IWK Rlvariid at
Klamath Vallay Hospital July IS, IWU.
boy, Wtght: poimdt oum-.
Sl-AIGHT -Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ray
alht. 10 Pint, at Klamath ValUy
HoaplUI July 19. IMS, ft strk Wan lit:
t itounda 4 uuncaa.
Ptnm-IC- Rom to Mr, and Mn.
Harbart Tardut. till WUrd. at Klam.
ath Vallty Hospital July . IBM, boy.
Weight 1 T pounds 4 ouncta.
SAMPKON-Born to Nr. and Mr.
Phtlan Sampaon, 9& K. rtd Slml.
R.no, Nv.. at Klamath VH- Hwa
pllal July , 19&1, t girl. Wtlght: I
pound a A ouncaa,
KRIKR Born lo Mr. and Mr. K.v
land KrUb, Kouta 3 Box 6M. at Klam
ath Vallny Hospital July 21. IKu, a
boy. WaliM: T pound a' ounosa,
SCHOLtR Born to Mr, and Mrv
Dlbrt Scholar. IKM ntvtralda. at
Klamath Valley Hospital July 30. ItVU,
a alrl. Walfhl: T pounds 11 ounce.
DYE Bron to Mr. and Mr. Jamaa
Dvo, Bonarua. Or., at Klamath . Val
ley Hoepiut July 11. boy. Weight
pounds 10 ounce.
DOWNING Born to Mr. and Mr.
Dm Downing, a4 TUdrllffe. al Klam
ath Valley Hosnlial July SI. IBM, a
girl. Weight: 1 pound l'a ounce. i
McNEARY Born to Mr. and Mr.
Donald McNoary. 1405 Delta, at Klam-
ath Valley Hrupltnl Julv 20 IHS3, a
girl. Weight: 6 pound 4 ounce.
STRID Born to Mr. and Mr. L. II ;
Strtd, 2434 Radcllffa. at Klamath Val
lev Hospital Jul.V 90. 1953, girl. '
Weight: 1 pounds 13 ounce. I
CARMCWABorn to Mr. and Mr.
Raymond Cartnona, Modoc Point, Ore...
at Klamath Valley Hospital July TO.
1953. a boy. Weight: 1 pound ft
ounc.
SMITH-Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jess
Smith. loU Eberleln. at Klamath Va.
ley Hospital July 31. 13 a bo
Weight; 9 pound 9 ounces.
MARRIAGE LICENSn
MORGAN-SIMS. Henry H. Morgan.
T3. retired chembt Native of Delaware,
roaldent of Klamath Falls. Ruth Sim.
46. teacher. Native of Alabama, resi
dent of Florence. Ala. a
MVTLXR-ROBATCEK. John Prank
Un Metier, fit. VS. Navy. Native of
Washington, resident or Klamath PalU.
Jacqueline Joy Rob trek. 19 stenog
rapher. Native of Minnesota, raaldent
where "the nation's
lumber supply
comes froEii
f 3SmLUMBER 'PRODUCTIONS
AL Parade
Entries Due
LochI IloalM mid ot'Liimliuttiuna
wi.sIuiik to imrlU-ipnto 111 Lie muni
pniiitlo -or (ho forlln'oinlim iDipuoii
American Lrnlon tumvriiiUm bcrr
next week nip oskrcl to cU bill
DePcw, KcnoiiU rimlrman, 11 1 til'J.
Al pretMH, UflVw rrporU, there
are r hnlf duisvii utit-oMnwii nut U'm
In the particle, itnd a ntiiubor ol
lornl cntrlfH urn tlclinblo.
'I hp pAiudo U to bcyin at the
armory at 7 p.m. Turorinv, July
and will continue Uonu Mum
birrct.
Thuie was some tiullcnttun that
the Oregon Nnitoiml Ounrd bnnd
may hUo pnitlcipalc, OcPcw report
ed. ol Klamath ralla-
Bl.KKMAN.PATTFUSON Slephrh
II. Ulaketnan. .V), mlllHrlaht. Native o(
Mnniaiu. resUlcnt of Oiralrr. Calif.
Ruby Marian l'.itteraon, 41. maid Na
tive of Washington, resident of KUnt
alt) rails.
t OMI'l.AINrs 1I1M)
Wonha Vivian Butler vs. Floyd Wtl
laim llutler, suit for divorce, Charge
ciuelty. Couple man led June t 10.UJ.
Grantlvllle. Okla. Platnilff ik custo
dy or hk mlnv chihlren. SUA u mnth
support and propaily scttlrnnnt. t'hat
burn and Urtcknei, aitumey fur plalil-
tirr.
Maynard N. Hrlcslcsv.. by jvle
Hrlczlscse, his guartllan ad litem. v
Elttabeih Abercrombie, autl tor annul
ment. Charie, dofrridanl not If I'M age
when couple went thtough marrliHv
ceremonv April 4, llXI. h -o. Nev
A. W. Hchtnip. attorney for pllnliff.
Chester L'UKord Jninva y. ttllimt
Irene Jainr suit for divorce, t'harm',
rrurlly. Couple married Jone 34, Hlki.
Klamath K1U. lieurge lioctur, at
torney for plaintiff.
Winifred 11. Reed v. Howard Kuuene
Reed, suit for divorce. CharK. eruielt.
Coupl married April g, lUM, Wichita.
van, uon riper, aiiorney lor putinuii
ItrcRLK fiRANTin
KHen Sullivan vs. Frank J. Sullivan
WEYERHAEUSER
TIMBER COMPANY
Two Missing Men
iCuiitlnurd from Pniio One)
wcio to work Ihrlr way bv roij
tiowu Hie nlierr vnnvon wnll at the
iMlut tile inlsaUiK iiien'a car wu
pnrkpd.
Ihr i niivoii In RDPrnnhniitalv 300
fret dron nl tlila txilnt. The flint
linlf nt Hint lllnce below the rtm
la a ntect loM) eoveieii with loose
liuiulce that would not afford
curs footlnii; the botliim 1W fret
In a nlmer droo to the canyon
floor. There In 11IIU a aluible anuw
lmk at thn bottom of the ranvnn
wnll mut Urn snow wua to bo lllor
oimhlv urohrd HiUi nionihin.
Uut innuora are bOHlnnlni to
doubt Unit Ihe nilioInK men went
over Uia ennvon rim. There In a
Kiowlua thonrv that the two men
mnv luivo left the rrne In aome
other rnr. A clone check of all In-
Inrmnilon uronulv Indlcatea Diet If
Ihev did leave Ihe canyon aoenlc
allot by aome oilier car, they were
nrobnblv farced to do o. Both
men hnve hluh tKuiltloni wllh Qen-
mil Motor, and both have valid
ininllv backimroimd. Added to that
Is Hie manner In which the ear
j left, wllh valuable personal
hrlnnnlniti and business pnpera un
protected. The rnr was In aood runnlna
order. The motor started on the
first trv when member, of Hie
srnrrli iwrtv checked that aimle.
nits reporter went over the esse
completely with Chief Flanier Hal-
lock Isle Inst nlxlu al his park
residence. ,
Fsld the chief In aununlna up
thr rose1 . .
'This is the darnrtr.t ihlim I have
rvrr. rim Into . . The two men
lust don't sreni to be tn Uie nark
nt all . . Al lenst. not anywhere
renr where thn' narked thsf car."
There was a stroiuf liutlcntlon
todev Hint an official criminal In-
vrstlcntton mleht be launched In
support of the theorv thnt the men
were forcibly tnken from the acene
of their parked cnr.
customers by
prices and
operating continuously.
1
m
ItliTRHT 1'OIRT
Peler Knsarert, no vahlrla lirenst.
rotfeit au.an hit
Jlmini Allen Moffltt overload, for
fall HJ hall.
Krnest Oackitrom, overload. Forfeit
9411 ball.
Hoy Alva Shumaker, overload. For
feit in bail.
Melvin Allen Ureeley, overload. For
feit lO ball.
Ilemy Chart Bchuharl, overload.
Forfeit lis hall.
William Daniel Dingier, no vehicle
iiceuie, vnrien n nan.
I'atrlrk Whyn, drunk on publlo hlglf
way, Kentence, 10 dyi,
Mt'Kii itai. t oi ar
Fred Rchonfleld, drunk, Fine, 111
Fred Hchuiifleld, hit and run driving.
Fin si oo and 00 dya, jail tlma ins-
pended.
l-eouard Cloman disorderly conduet
Forfeit J3 ball.
Kiirii Htauiiatnlrt, disorderly conduct.
Forfeit lifl ball.
Van Cllosaoii, diiorderly conduvt. For
fell I3A ball-
William Jones, drunk. Furfelt 91(1 ball.
Richard Toyly. U-turn. F"lelt li Imil
Harvey Addlnton. violation basic
rule. I'oil 111 hall.
Hubert Casper, pasalng on right. Fine
James Williams, ran red llihl. Fur
felt as bail.
J ante Williams, no operator II
ten. Forfeit A bail.
Hlchard lloberu. drunk. Fin. Ill Or
TS days. . .
flea-ie Klatl. ran aton s an. Forfeit
13 hail.
Maynard Taup, fall aet hand brake.
Forfeit M bail.
' HIIH.WAY TO ATIIKNH
Parla W Clcn. Mntthew B.
RUIuwny. supreme nltled comman
der In Europe, left 1'arls by air
Monday (or Athene to Innpocl
Greece's Atlantic Pact lorcca.
StJOSGDh
H ASPIRIN
mm
f!.V..UJ
Did tou know Uit tin Pncific Cojt UiwVMliin5ton, Orefon
nd Colifornia produce only 40 of tho nalion's lumber? And that
41 comes from the southern states? There are more than 63,000
sawmill in America, plus many thousands of producers of .building
materials that can be substituted for lumber. This is what makes
the building supplies industry such a highly competitive one.
Some 6,000 lumber wholesalers snd 20,000 retail lumber dealers
seek lumber supplies for thoir customers at the lowest possible prices.
It is' this competitive buying based on supply snd demand that
determines lumber prices. The market is so widespread and the
distribution system so complex, that no single producer or group of
producers can control prices. It is up to the Weyerhaeuser Timber
Company, producing only 2.6 of the nation's lumber, to win
manufacturing needed quality
by giving good service, so that
working in fis
Pacific Northwtsi
fo build a permonsnf
foreif industry
Hit and Run
Brings Fine
Fred If. Hchonfleld. 46, Weyar.
baruxrr Hotel, was fined tlOO In
Municipal Court till, morning for
hll-aiid-ruu (Irlvliitf Involvlni an
auto accident on Orchard tarly
Hiinday morning.
A HM8 Poutlae aednn registered
tn K Ininulli Aiienry, parked at the
ll,i,-nllijt Mi'Aniiltu ra.lH.iin. .11.
Orchard, waa atrmk and badly
nauiagca auout j;w a.m. aunaay.
loiter Sunday inornliif 8ohonfi,ld
waa a rested for belli, drunk, and
OUy Police determined III, auto,
mobile had been In an accident.
Homo broken alas, and bit of
chrome name plat flicked up al
Uie acane of the Orchard Btreel
mishap matched te marka of a
collision on Bchonflold'a oar.
Hchonfleld posted lilt ball for
loduy's appearance In court, and
pleaded gulliy both to Ihe hit-run
count as well as to Hi drunk
charge. He waa fined 116 for being
drunk. A JO day suspended tall len
ience accompanied Hi 1100 fin
levied for the trafflo count.
KIHK IN MILAN
MILAN. Italy All of Milan's
fire milling forces and equipment
baitled throuih Sunday night
against a spectacular flra thai
destroyed one of Italy'a largest
paint and dye factories. Company
officials estimated the loaa al
more than ll.MO.0U0.
"BUY YOUR FUTUM"
far a complimentary epv al
sliractofy at at tin aim far tela In
USA, wrlra la NUheJi anJ Ai
ilatai. 100 W. Manraa St., Chi
cago, Illinois.
products at competitive
we can keep our mills
., i.