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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1954)
PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY. .TANiia... 1: i.rMJ,f JLlXr' JK i WALL STREET , NEW YORK 11 Steadiness prevailed Thursday in the stock market with most prices showing email changes. ', A few issues moved as much as a point, but the general rule was for minor fractional changes. Trading subsided to an estimated MUC.OOO shares as compared with 1,460,000 shares traded Wednesday. NEW YORK STOCKS By THK ASSOCIATED I'KESS Admiral Corporation Allied Chemical , ills Chalmers 'American Airlines American Power & Light. American Tel. & Tel. American Tobacco . Anaconda Cpper Atchison Railroad Bethlem Steel Boeing Airplane Co. Boig Warner Burrough Adding Mach. California Packing Canadian Paciiic Caterpillar Tractor Celanese Corporation Chrysler Corporation Cities Service Consolidated Edison Consolidated Vuitee Crown Zellerbach Curtis Wright Douglas Aircralt du Pont de Nemours Eastman Kodak Emerson Radio General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pac. Plywood Goodyear Tire Ilomestake Mining Co. International Harvester International Paper Johns Manvllle Kaiser Aluminum Kennccott Copper Libby, NcNeill Lockheed Aircraft Loew'a Incorporated long Bell A Montgomery Ward Mash Kelvinator New York Central Northern Pacific Pacific American Fish Pacific Gas It Eleotrlo Pacific Tel. li Tel. Packard Motor Car Penney (J.C.) Co. Pennsylvania R.R. ' Pepsi Cola Co. Philco Radio Radio Corporation Rayonler Incorp Rayonler Incorp Pfd ftepublic Bteel Reynolds Metals Richfield Oil Safeway. Btores Inc. Scott Paper Co. Sears , Roebuck it Co. 1 Bocony-Vaouum Oil Southern Pacific - Standard Oil Calif Standard Oil N.J. Studebaker Corp. ' Swift & . Company Tr&nsamerioa Corp. .. Twentieth Century Fox Union Oil Company Union Pacific United Airline - ' United Aircraft United Corporation United Stales Plywood United States Steel Warner Pictures Western Union Tel. 1 Westlnghouse Air Brake jWestinghouse Electric Woolworth Company 19 12 ;, 46 3. 12 ','a 157 61 ' 31 'a 84 i 60 47 U 73 U 16 J 22 ',, 22 ;e 50 IS". 60 79 a 42 I, 17 35 U 8 81 U 108 47 !, 10 ; 68 59 ., 01 11 ? 54 i 33 " n 28 a 56 ! 65 !a 27-! 66 9 27 H 13 ji 23 57 ,; n 19 54 7, 7 39 115 i 4 10 U IT, 13 ' 29 23 27 ti 48 , 63 !i 49 - 38 1 70 y. 61 35 V, . 37 a. 64 'i ' 13 Vj 21 a, 43 i 27 20 39 io6':, 22 14 47 5 25 'i 39 3 j 14 '. 41 241, 60', 43 H Livestock PORTLAND LIVESTOCK PORTLAND i (USDAJ Cattle salable 200; market active, steady; supply mostly cows; fed steers, heifers scarce; few commercial good grades 16.00 - 21.50; utility steers 14.00-15.00; load around 1.10O lb commercial cows 14.50, utility 11.00-15.00. canners - cutters 8.50 10.50; utility bulls 13.50-15.00, heavy commercial quotable to 16.50. Calves salable 100; scattered sates strong with extreme top 1.00 higher; one prime 275 lb vealer 27.00. sood-choice grades 20.00- 24.00; good choice slaughter calves 18.00-21.00. Hobs salable 250; market about steady with extreme top 25 lower; choice 180-235 lb butchers 27.25 21. 75, few lots choice No. 1 butch ers, late Wednesday 28.00; choice 350-550 lb sows 22.00-23.50. Sheep salable 50; market steady; one lot choice-prime lambs 19.50, good - choice salable 17.00 18.50; good yearlings 15.00; medium-good feeders salable 14.50; good-choice ewes salable 5.00-6.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO ifl Some of thei hogs which have been held back for the past two days turned uo on tne livestock market Thursday and prices dropped 25 to 75 cents. Most choice 180 to 230 pound butchers sold in a $25.00 to $25.50 range. Prices were steady to 50 cents nigner on all types of steers and heiiers. Most choice to low prime steers broucllt S24.00 to 528.00 with a top at $28.75. A few prime native lambs reached $21.50 while load lots of mostly choice and prime woolcd lambs moved at $21.00. Salable receipts were estimated at 13.000 hogs, 4,000 cattle, 400 calves, and 3.000 sheep. Rains Cause Slide Damage By THK ASSOCIATED PRESS Slide and flood damage was re ported in W e s t 0 r n Wash ins ton Thursday as rainfall ranged up to 9 2 Inches in the first seven days of January, A flpod on Finch Creek near Hood.sport Wednesday overflowed ponds holding more than 500,000 silver and pink salmon fingerlings. Damage was unestimated. The Chehalis River was leveling off Thursday alter flooding low lands in eastern Grays Harbor County. Borne families were Iso lated temporarily, but no distress was reported. Six earth slides south of Everett delayed Great Northern trains up to four hours Wednesday. There was minor damage from flooding at a state trout hatchery on a tributary to the Skokomish River in Mason County. Aberdeen reported the 9 'z inches of rain thus far in January. Brem erton, where normal rainfall for the month of January is 5 inches, recorded 7.38 inches since Jan. 1. iC3 State Road Deaths 370 SALEM lTI Oregon's 1953 truf fle death toll stands at 370, a re duction of 00 from the 1952 total, Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry announced Thursday. Newbry said the 370 total might be increased. Persons injured last year, but who die this year, are Included in the 1953 total. January was the worst month in 1953, with a traffic death rate of 7.8 per 100 million miles traveled. August was best with a rate of 4.6, Newbry said 75,000 drivers were convicted last year of violating traffic - laws. Including 3,346 for driving while drunk.. ' Grains I CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO Wl Most grains had a sleudv tone on the board ol trade Tnursoay but gains were not large. Mill buying and export business gave the market support. Presi dent Eisenhower's message to Con gress appeared to have little In fluence on price trends. Some grain men felt the Pres ident's message was bullish be cause of the plan to "freeze" pres ent surplus supplies. But there was no rush to buy. Bullish enthusiasm was tempered by the President's request for a flexible price support system. Wheat closed ; lower to Vi high er, March 2.09-2.08 Ti; corn higher, March 1.55 ,; oats VWi higher, March 79 'A; rye 1 to 1 , lower. March 1.20 4-i.20; soybeans 1 cent lower to 1 Vt higher, Jan 3.07 y,-3.07, and lard 5 to 35 cents a hundred pounds lower. Jan 17.65 17.70. .... WHEAT Open High Low Close Mar 2.10 2.10:H 2.08 (, 2.00 May 2.09 !i 2.10 N 2.08 2.08 "1 Jly 2.02 2.02 . 2.00 V. 2.00 K Sep 2.02 'A 2.03 . 2.02 , 2.02 PORTLAND GRAIN PORTLAND M No bids on grain. Thursday's enr receipts: wheat 7; barley 2; flour 6; corn 1; oats i; mill feed 3. Tug Drifting Off Coast SEATTLE (flV-T he Coast Guard sent aid Thursday for the 135-foot tug Sea Lion of San Francisco, which radioed it was drifting in heavy seas off the Oregon coast after losing a barge it was towing. The Sea Lion reported the line to the unmanned 275-foot barge, which was loaded with high octane gasoline, parted about 4 a.m. The tup, with 11 men aboard, later radioed its engines were inopera tive, but it was in no immediate danger. A Coast Guard tug, the Yocona was dispatched from Astoria, Ore., and a plane was sent from Port Angeles, Wash. The Sea Lion's lo cation was given as 7U mnes soutn of the mouth of the Columbia River. s GEORGE W. DOW, USN, is serving aboard the cruiser USS Rochester, now en route to the Far East. George, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Dow, Keno highway, is a 1952 graduate of KUHS. Weather r Trees Are More Than Just That NEW HALL, Iowa W To many persons a tree Is Just a tree. But to Harvey Hartz, the three maples he planted 38 years bro on his farm near here are more like old friends. r nut nirpn snecmiisiA in mnvp Potatoes , SAN FRANCISCO POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO Isl tUSDAl Potatoes: on track 24 cars; arri vals California 4, Oregon 4; mar ket about steady; Klamath Russets No. 1-A, 2.50. I.OS ANGKLKS POTATOES LOS ANGELES Idl tUSDAV Potatoes; on track 72 cars; arri vals California 3, Oregon 4, Idaho 5; market steady; Idaho Russets No, 1-A, 2.50-3.00; Deschutes 3.00. IDAHO FALLS POTATOES IDAHO FALLS MV- (USDA1 Potatoes: market about steady; Russets No. 1-A, 2 Inch mln, 15-20 per cent 10 oz and larger 1.80-1.90; 26-30 per cent 10 oz and larger 1.00- 2.05; No. 1 exlras 2.05-2.2. Sixteen cities, arrivals 205; on track 633, rillCACiO l'OTATOUS CHICAGO 1.41 Potatoes: Arri vals 60; on track 162; total U.S. shipments 100; about steadv: Idaho Russets S3. 55, bakers $4.50. Boston Fires Professor BOSTON W Boston University has ilred Prof. Maurice Halpcrin, who was named last November in an FBI report as a link in a Com munist espionage ring In high u. S. government circles. The university announcement said Wednesday that Halperln was dismissed "for the good of Boston University" alter he failed several times to appear before a school review board assigned to consider his "fitness to teach." Reached by telephone in Mexico City, where he went late in Novem ber, Halpcrin told the Boston Herald: , "It is very much to be regretted that Boston University hns suc cumbed to the ways of hysteria, manipulated by unscrupulous poli ticians. It has done a disservice to its own good name and to the cause of academic freedoml" Halperln said he went to Mexico "because my wife has been ill be cause of the pressures." His wife, Edith, is on leave of absence from the Brookline school system. The 47-year-old fired director of BU's Latin American regional studies has been under suspension since Nov. 18. the day after his name was read from an FBI report bv Atty. Gen. Brownell before the Senate (Jenner) Internal Security Subcommittee in Washington. Western Oregon Partly cloudy and a lew showers and patches of vaney log Thursday night. Cooler. Considerable cloudiness with briel showers and partial clearing Fri day. Highs both days 42-48. Lows Thursday night 30-40. Winds off coast win become mostly westerly 15-25 miles an hour Thursday night ana rriaay. Eastern Oregon Snow flurries, clearing and cooler Thursday night. Partly cloudy and cooler with snow flurries in mountains Friday. High 32-42 Friday. Lows Thursday night 22-32. Grants Pass and Vicinity Mostly cloudy with occasional showers Thursday night. Patches of valley fog Friday morning. Part ly cloudy and cool Friday; low Thursday night 30; high Friday 45. Baker and Vicinity Mostly cloudy with showers Thursday turning to snow flurries Thursday night and Friday. High Thursday 45. Low Thursday night 25. High Friday 38. Northern California Clearing Thursday but a few showers in north portion. Fair Thursday night and Friday. Cooler Thursday and Thursday night. Winds near coast westerly 10 to 20 miles an hour diminishing Thursday night. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a. m. Thursday Max, Min. Frcp Concert Draws Full House A capacity audience sat spell bound through the concert pre sented In the Pelican Theater last night by Erica Morinl, world fa mous violinist, appearing here under sponsorship of the Klamath Community Concert Assn. The tal ented artist and her sister Alice Morlni, San Francisco, who came here lor the Klamath Falls per formance were Introduced by George Mclntyre, member of the board of directors of the associa tion. Mrs. Sam Mushen greeted the visitors upon arrival. A guest review of the concert, written bv Mrs. L. C. Hornby, Klamath Falls, one-time member of a symphony orchestra in Den ver, will appear in a later issue. IIISTBH'T Ot T Uii Albtrl Kenlner, Ml. overload, ""urn'Srl Kenlner, .xl. overloU. ""jC.m.Vavler. void foreign licen.e, 3El'liiCRex Sawyer, wdomy. bound over to grand jury alter preliminary near- Allied Boss Makes Talk BERLIN ifl Western delegates met with the Russians at length Thursday but failed to reach agreement on the exact place in Berlin for a forthcoming Big Four foreign ministers conference. They will meet again Saturday at Soviet headquarters in the East sector of Berlin. A communique issued after six hours of meetings said only that there was an "ex change of views." A short time before they con vened, a Russian - licensed East German newspaper splashed a front page article claiming that Allied West Berlin was not safe enough for the conference of for eign ministers Jan. 25. The Western Allies have pro posed the 500-room former Allied control building in the American sector for the conference. "lllcha" 'wayne Fogle. failure to ilop (or school bun. lined $20.00. Evern Robert Holden, no reUtrtlon Harloi Levon Eakon. failure to report utomobile accident. $10 fine. Forrest Lester O'Conneli, no opera tors llcerue. $5 fine. Walter Benny Hanson, failure 10 drive In ainsle lane of traffic. $3 fine. Lon Arthur Sanders, no muffler. 7.50 ''"Esther Watah Ptrlter. drivin during suspended period, 1M or 47 '.j days, committed. . ... . . . Dale Billy Nott, drunk on public hicn way. 10 davs. - Harold Dean Weiton, no vehicle li cense. S5 fine. Lewis Alfred PUan, parking on itreet $5 fine. SU-NIUI'AL roiRT Pearl Ray. drunk. 30 days. Bait Calahan. drunk. $15 or 7',i days. James McDonald, drunk, $15 or 7!a davs. Boyd F. Sprague Jr., no vehicle li- r-n fiim Alfred Clnwson Jr.. violation basic rule, $16 ball forfeited. Eisenhower Message Continued: (Continued from page 1) Climber Wins On Mt. Aconcagua BUENOS AIRES, Argentina Ifi Alejandro Cassis reported yester day he had climbed to the summit of Mt. AconcasuR. 23.081 feet high, making the assault alone with 18 pounds of equipment. Aconcagua, on the Chilean fron tier, Is the highest peak In the Western Hemisphere, Cassis brought back documents led by an earlier expedition, as proof of his successful climb. Hermiston Hospital Dedicated HERMISTON Ifl The new 30 hed Good Shepherd Hospital waa dedicated here Thursday. Secretary of State Earl Newbry was the main speaker at ceremonies. The hospital, valued at $450,000. will ba ready for use within two Weeks. Money to build It was raised through a fund-collecting drive. The hospital will be operated tinder supervision of the Oregon Lutheran Welfare- Assn. Adminis trator will be Anna Wild, who re rently wa head of th Tillamook Couty Hospital. Oregon Roads In Shaky Condition SALEM Ifl The Oregon Const Highway was closed Thursday by a allde three miles north of Rocka- wny in Tillamook County. The highway commission said It hopes to get (he route opened Fri day. Traffic is detouriiig bv the Miami River county road, four miles long, Elsewhere, the commission said motorists should enrry chains be cause of packed snow at Cllemult, Bly and East Diamond Lake. It reported ley spots at Govern ment Camp, Timberllne, Sanliam Pass, Lakeview, Baker and Seneca. There is sanded nncked snow nt Siskiyou Summit, Green springs, Willamette Pass. Ochoco Summit, Mcacham and Austin. Unemployment Still Gains SALEM t.fl Oregon's unemploy ment total has soared to 63,395, with 18.000 more workers laid off during December, the state Unem ployment Compensation Commis sion said Thursday. Tlie commission paid out $2,884, 707 in benefits in December, the largest December total on record. The commission said 12 per cent of the state's workers are unem ployed. Benefit payments in 1953 totaled $19,275,204, which was 5.6 per cent under the record established In 1950. Lumber, construction, food pro cessing and trade groups in West ern Oregon accounted for most of (he layoffs. Eight offices in East ern Oregon report the number of Job seekers is up 65 per cent from a month ago. The Grants Pass, McMinnville, Astoria. Snlem and Toledo areas have the largest unemployment totals, all being more than 22 per cent. The Portland area remained low, with only 6.9 per cent Jobless. Baker 41 37 T Bend 54 32 .08 Eugene 53 42 .11 Klamath Palls 44 33 T Lakeview 44 32 T Medford - 58 38 . .01 Newport ' 57 41 .63 North Bend 58 44 .15 Ontario 40 33 1 Pendleton 56 43 Portland Airport 51 44 T Roseburg 56 37 .22 Salem 50 43 -.05 Boise 51 39 Chicago , 38 25 Denver 62 36 Eureka 60 45 Los Angeles 72 81 New York 38 28 Red Bluff 49 45 T San Francisco 61 48 ,11 Seattle 44 41 .35 Spokane 49 41 .08 Stare Dairymen, Discuss Problems ONTARIO, Ore. Ifl Production and marketing problems of dairy products are being discussed in a two-day meeting of the Oregon Dairymen's Assn., which opened here Thursday. Speakers include Lester J. Will, Washington, D. C, general man ager of the American Dairy Assn.; Merrill Warnick, Pleasant Grove, Utah, president of the national association; Fred Olsen, Seattle, president of the Washington Dairy Council; E!' L. Peterson, Oregon state agriculture director, and WIN Ham S. Weidel, state 'milk market ing administrator. N 1 BIRTHS HOBBS Born to Mr. nnd Mrs. Ralph Hobbs, Jan. 6 at Klamath Valley Hos pital, a boy weighing 7 lbs. J oz. RODGER5 Born to Mr. and Mrs. I. F. Rodpers, Jan. 6 at Klamath Valley Hospital, a boy weighing S lbs. 8 oz. CRUTCHFIELD Born to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Crutehfield, Jan. 6 al Kl;i ni nth Valley Hospital, a girl weighing 6 HAYDEN Born to Mr. and Mrs. Dale M. Harden. Jan. B at Kin main Vnllry Hospital, a girl weighing 6 lbs. 2U oz. Thieves Moke Off With Hard Cash A further check into the con tents of the safe at Hnrtfield's store, 737 Main, Wednesday, dis closed that the burglar who broke into the establishment fared better than at first reported. An envelope containing a made-up bank deposit for $272.62 was re ported taken along with four $1 bills missing from the cash regis ter. The envelope contains $242.62 in bills and $30 worth of checks, ac cording to Helen Clugston. man ager of the store. TOLIt HASTINGS, New Zealand W Queen Elizabeth II went whistle- stopping through New Zealand Thursday to show herself and the Duke of Edinburgh to the Dominion countryfolk. sit ion party leaders Tuesday. The momentous prooiems in those fields Include continuing to prepare America and her allies against the possibility of commu nist aggression; working to rid the world of the threat of hydrogen bomb devastation; expansion of foreign trade. Confronting the administration, too, is the Job of working out a compromise on th ncntroversmi Bricker amendment, which would limit treaty-making powers. On the domestic front, Eisen hower has made no outright ad vance move to enlist support of the Democrats. King size headaches which may develop on that front includes is sues of federal spending how to cut it to come as close as possible to balancing the budget; what to do about election year taxes with revenue already pared by the Jan. 1 income tax reduction and expira tion of the' excess profits levy on business. Also, amendment of the Taft Hartley Labor Relutions Law to keep an administration campaign pledge: drafting of a new farm program to prop up larmer in come; and dealing with the politi cally explosive problem of increas ing unemployment. On that matter, Eisenhower told the nation Monday night his ad ministration will spare no en on to sustain prosperity. He deplored "peddlers of gloom and doom" who talk of business recession and depression, and he ruled out "pie in the sky" promises. In his first state of the union message 112 months ago, Eisen hower pledged his administration to development of a "new, posi tive foreign policy" to deal with aggressive communism. Communist pressures continue today, but Eisenhower said in his Monday nlftht report on his first year that tree world defenses have been strengthened against Red ag gression. How to strengthen them further while working at the same time to ease the pressure remains Tile keystone of the foreign policy Ei senhower discusses today. Involved are such problems as cuttintr United States defense I spending without weakening the 1 nation's overall miiiu, bringing the Eurooe. Army Ulto beinc; duotion of American S! attack by the CnmJ. charting of plans for SJ retaliation .in. -"4 Kiir-h an olau UNITY SOUGHT It Is In those field, , Is seeking to win bin,,, But some DemocratTiS questioned t h e adC wisdom in one such i American illvlcl... ,T"1 On the domestic J?.' tax revision DroernT?l provide for almost lii 3 Iars in additional tax ctrl With some reductions j "jwi, iiiui, poses g j finding more revenue 1 Another problem i. J about the federal debt li billion dollars. Just iJX Kress adjourned in Ai! hower asked for a 151 hike. 1 The House went ataul Senate Finance Comrrjl ed it. Now the debt has cllt, to the ceiling and the , tion probably will m,k peal for a higher limit-, soon. There still is position in the Senate The tax, spending am', leins will be dealt wia i in later messages to Ca I There will be later 2 sages, too, on Taft-Hi. ! changes, the farm prob'i housing program, and the social security projC , er additional millions i i cans. . The field of internal stc ' is certain to come In hower attention. Last y,I the executive branch responsibility for keeptar loyal and the dangetock government jobs. That statement wist?, widely at the time UT Sen. McCarthy (R-WisliiT hower felt he needed from Congressional hf committees. Their relsil watched closely duriniE session. V Atty. Gen. Brownell ii recommended that r.m two laws in the int.,! field. One would penrj? ecunon immunity, md! conditions, to wi'tnps refuse under protection fifth amendment to tii lion to testily. tu mite a close look 11 not spots in Kenya. Ducks Stickir In Idaho Arec KEI.LOOO. Idaho 1H Con servallon Officer George Slaudt said Thursday an estimated 15,000 ducks and about 1,000 geese are still around lakes In the lower Coeur d'Alene valley near St. Maries, Idaho. Ctaudt aald the winter has been so mild the birds decided there was no point In going south. He made the estimate of waterfowl in the Round, Chatcolet and Benewah lakes area. Conservation olflcers are making their annual census tollowlnii the close of lha (hooting season last monin. Steamfitters Get Pay Check Boost PORTLAND (.ft A 20-cent hourly wape Increase was announced here Wednesday for plumbers and stpamfltters. That boosted the scale for the 1.800 union members to $.1.03 an hour. A 10-cent hourly health and wel fare contribution by employers also was announced for about 700 AFL Electrical Workers. Their scale is $2.85 an hour with another 1 per cent going to a pension fund and 10 cents going to the health and welfare fund. Enrollment At OTI Gains Oregon Tech Director Winston Purvlne announced today that 115 new students had enrolled for the winter term on the mile-high cam pus. He termed the number "grat- liying ". This time last year there were just 79 new students for the win ter term, Purvine added. The school director said there was no definite count available but the new influx of students should bring Tech's total to "over 600 ". as compared to 662 enrolled in the fall term. That would indicate a "very slight drop" from fall to winter. Enrollment of new students will continue until Jan. 15. and old students are asked to return to the campus Immediately from Christ mas vacations. Exlro Work Mod Easy Rent A Typewriter Addi'nq Mochine Rl.rtrir- ar Rani Lost month's renrol Ii applied to purchato price VOIGHT'S PIONEER OFFICE SUPPLY Tube Blowout Cuts TV Net A critical tube, a Klystron, blew out at KBES-TV, according to sta tion officials, and put the micro wave relay out. This is the system that supplies the station with their network programs. It la hoped that repairs will be effected by tonight. The tube Is available only through a pool sys tem. Local programs were unef fected. although the mlsharj cos; TV viewers their chance to watch President Eisenhower deliver his state of the union message. Funeral BRAKEVEI.T Ftin.ral a.rvlr,.. fnr nn.taf Tn Rrakrvelt. 64. who dil In tMi cllv Jan. 5. will he held from Sacred Hear! Clurrch Saturday, Jan. 9 at 9::!0 a.m Recitation of the Holy Rosary will be ai uitnim memorial lhapel 6th eV Pine Friday evening al 8 p m. Inter ment will be made In Klamath Memo Hal Park. 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