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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1954)
PAGE KOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON WEDNESDAY. JUNE 30, 1054 STOCKS WALL STREET NEW YORK U-The stock mar ket declined Wednesday after in early show of strength petered out. Losses ranged to a point or two but the great majority were frac tional. Trading was markedly slower than Tuesday. Volume lor the day waa around 1.800,000 shar; 1 com pared with the 3.580.000 shares which changed hands Tuesday. . Water Survey Session Ended ' PORTLAND I A Hoover Com mission task force completed a na-tlon-wtde survey of water and pow er resources with a two-day scs- . aion which ended here Tuesday. - The 47 speakers who appeared at the Portland session offered varied views on how the region's water resources could best be developed. Among proposals advanced Tues- day was a public corporation, fin ancing Its operations through bond issues, to replace the Bonneville Power Administration. This was ' the suggestion of Gus Norwood, executive secretary or the Nortn- . n . M.KL-h represents 100 publicly owned elec- trie systems. He would have Congress author lie specific projects recommended by the corporation, then the cor poration would undertake construc tion with tinancing nonas guaran ' teed by the federal government. Social Security Expansion Urged WASHINGTON W The Con- gress of Industrial Organisations (CIO) urged the Senate Wednes- day to go further than the House In expanding social security cover age. Joseph Childs. speaking for the CIO, asked the Senate Finance Committee in prepared testimony to boost the ceiling on earnings taxes to $6,000 a year. Instead of the $4,300 voted by the House end the present $3,600. The current tax rate, levied on both workers and employers, is 3 per cent. Childs, a vice president of the CIO United Rubber Workers, also urged: ' 1. Inclusion of physicians and mi rant farm workers in the social security system. 3. Enactment of a long-term dis ability insurance program so thai pension rights of disabled workers are not frozen until they reach the present minimum age of 65. municipal roriT Trank Gastrana. held fnr .t. nnili Jotyi Lawrsnca Thylan. drunk. S2S or Andy Winn, vigrancr $100 and 30 BltTBS CARLSON Born to Mr. and Mr udolph Carlson, Juna 29 at Klamath uj- oospnai, a Dor wetghins 7 lbs. STACY Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Del mar Stacr. Juna 3 at Klamath Valler Hospital, a gtrl wciahlnt s lps. '4 oz. BUCKINGHAM Bom to Ur. and Mrs. K- 8. Bucktnsham, June tt at Klamath Valley Hospital, a girl weigh- COLLINS Bom to Mr. and Un Clifford H. Collin. June 29 at Klamath Valley Hospital, a girl weighing a lbs. autre Marearet Maulrita va TCIIIi.m T Mauldin. suit lor divorce. V. S. BaJeiU FINAL DECREES atabesok!U " Babcook fron ameloa ASSASSINATED CASABLANCA, Morocco Ul Emlie Eyraud, publisher ol the Newspaper La Vigie Marocaine and a member of the government council, was assassinated by ter rorists Wednesday in the heart of Casablanca. HOW TO BLEACH PROPERLY IN YOUR AUTOMATIC WASHER Get the whiteness you want every time : this easier way oft raselti in y type of washer depend on an adequate amount of good bleach added to your detergent and hot water-especially ge-action PUREJC. This is the way to get white, WHITE clothes, sweet smelling and clean! But the proper amount de pends on the water capacity of your machine. For white, fluffy, sanitized clothes simply use one cup of wonderful Purex Liquid Laundry Bleach per washing machine load (16 jallons). ' No chlorine bleach, of OltMNHI OHP.,LT..IOUrN jtf i a PORTLAND LIVESTOCK PORTLAND 1JP tUSDAI-Cat tie: salable 600, market slow, stca dy to weak with canner and cutter cows generally 50c below Monday: rucked lot good-choice 958 lb, fed steers 33.60; load held higher: few cutter and utility ateers 11.60-11.00 cutter and utility hellers 10.00 15.00; canner and cutter cows 50- 10.50; utility cows 11.00-12.00: uttl ity and commercial bulls 14.00- 16.00. Calves: salable 135, market about steady; good-choice vealers 18.00' 31.00; utility and commcr. cial grades 10.00-17.00; culls down to T.oo. Hogs: salable 100, market c live, mostly steady with sows scarce and fully $1.00 higher: choice 1S0-235 lb butchers mostly 37.50v2.oo: choice 290-340 lb butch ers 33.00-35.00; Choice 400-500 lb sows mostly 18.00-30.00; smooth sows to 31.5. Sheep: salable 350, holdovers 300; market about steadv slaughter classes but 50-1.00 lower on generous gathering of feeder lambs; choice and prime spring lambs mostly 30.00; good-choice lots 18.00-19.00: good 108 lb year lings 14.00; good and choice 65-15 lb leeder lambs 15.00; medium uraues uum n iu lu.ou: several lots i nd cl)oicAsnorn ewes 4.50: culls down to 3.00. (The North Portland market will be closed Monday, July S) CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO Id! Butchers were mainly ateady Wednesday, al though the top price was off 1Q cents, while sows sold steady to 50 cents lower. Buyers paid $34.00 to $34.35 for most choice 180 to 330 pound butch ers while 340 to 310 pounders went at $33.00 to $34.50. Sows sold within a $15.50 to $31.35 range. A few loads of prime steers sold for $36.50 to $31.00, the top. Good to low choice grades brought 30. 00 to $33.00. Cows sold steady to 35 cents lower, topping at $13.73. 8pring lambs went to a new low on the current crop, selling weak to 50 cents lower at $30.00 to $33.00 for good and prime types. Salable receipts were estimated at 1.000 hogs. 8.500 catUe, 600 calves and 1,000 sheep. CHICAGO GRAIN I CHICAGO Ul Wheat firmed In I active dealings on the board of iraae weanesaay, ncipea oy auui Uonal advances In cash wheat and a better lnaulry for flour. Feed grains did not do much, although maintaining a steady tone. The Foreign Operations Ad ministration granted Great Britain seven million dollars to buy Amer ican corn. Soybeans weakened at the start on fears of substantial deliveries of cash beans on July futures Thursday. Later, they worked hlEher but had difficulty getting back to previous closing levels. Wheat closed lYm-lYt higner, juiy I.94i-'-,. com 'a lower to 3 mgn er, July 1.5SS. oats unchanged to lower. July wt. rye i-f, Julv 99-98 soybeans I to 3 cents lower, July 3.66-3.61 and lard 13 cents lower to 13 cents a nunorea pounds higher, July 15.06. wneai Open High Low Close 1.94 ' 1.05 U 1.94 1 94 H Jly Sep 1.91 i 1.99 1.91 'ml Dec 3.01 3.03 3.01 Va 3.01 's 2.04 3.05 3.03 ?. 3.04 ! Mar OBITUARIES iTnnn akb Ror Tztm StodtUril. 29. native of Kimbcrly. Idaho, rctldent ol Bowe, Malu MtmA tiaar Ktrk OrcaTOn. Juna 29. He la urvtvtKi by hii pirenU Mr. and Mra. George B. Stoddard of Buhl, Idaho. Mineral Mrvlcta will take place later daw irorn inr vii-, uun runeral Home. Buhl. Idaho. Wart i Klamath runeral Horn In chajgt of uie arrangemcnii. fECK vfrtft Cltoa Peck. 71. native Of 1111' ncii. resident of Klamath raiu lor m ears oiea sere iune surv.vins i dauetiter. Mrs. Irma Jean Gibson of Litchfield. Callfcrnia. runeral er. vIcm will tk nLaat-t from the cIudc.1 of Ward's Klamath runeral Home, 93) High St.. on Thursday. July 1, at 1:00 n.m.. the Rev. Llovd Holl - wo - p.m., the Rev. Lloyd Hotloway of the First Methodist churcn officiating, com mitment service and Interment in Link ville cemetery. course, should be poured di rectly on clothes; Best method is to add it to the water first. If clothes are pur into the ma chine first, dilute Purex in a quart of water before adding. Do this ntry litigU wash ing and your clothes will never accumulate "detergent gray" Insist on PUREX because it's pure! PUREX. LIQUID UDNMY BLEACH . CHLIf, HC6IA. HAIi. ft? lag,-' ad' .' " - ' . - --. t, PERFECT WEATHER aided ihe tuccetsful transmitter hunt held by members of the Oregon Amateur Radio Association Sunday, June 27. The group assembled at the Armory as start "T1 v 2ND. LT. Harold E. Balin of Rt. I, Klamath Falls, has completed primary pilot training at Hondo Air Base, Hondo, Texas and is now un dergoing basic training at i Goodfellow Air Force Base, San Angelo, Texas. Upon completion of his training at ' Goodfellow in October, he 1 will receive the silver wings of en Air Force pilot. Lt.. Balin is a graduate of Henley High School, and Oregon State College. He received his Air Force commission in 1953 throuqh the ROTC pro gram at Oregon State and was a member of the Arnold Air Society. Judge Orders Man Released SALEM Wl A nrlnn frm Jackson County was ordered re leased from the state penitentiary here Wednesday in a decision is sued by Circuit Judze Oenrir r Duncan. Duncan ordered Warrlnn rioror,,. T. Gladden to release Robert E Blair, sentenced to 10 years on a charge of burglary not in a dwell ing. ... the maximum sentence limited by law for the crime . ' was live years, which nertivl , plaintiff has now served .-, .," Duncan wrote in his decision'. Where there's .7 n Glamour and Beauty... Now Available For 01DSM03IIE "Oldsmobile'i style setting special Jwo tone, previously used only on the "98" series 4-door sedan, is now available on all models in the Super "88", line and the "88" Holida) coupe' DICK B. MILLER CO "1 Yeors with OldtmobiL" 7th and Klamath i Phone 4103 Former Tax NEW YORK U Joseph D Nunan Jr., once the nation's top tax collector, has been lound guilty of income tax evasion. A Brooklyn federal court Jury convicted the former commissioner of internal revenue yesterday on all five counts of an indictment Small Girl Dies In Fire BREMERTON, Wash. U A B-year-old girl perished early Wed' nesday in a resident fire from which a quick acting neighbor oareiy saved tnree other children. The victim was Jackie Van Ruth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Van Ruth. The fire struck at about 1 a.m a few minutes after Van Ruth had icit me house to pick up his wife at the restaurant where she worked. . .' Toe fire destroyed the four-bed' room home at Rocky Point. Just outside the city. Four other children. Including 2-year-old twins, were in the house at the time. Joe Stoner, a neighbor, rescued inree ot tnem oy dashing into the house for one and smashing a ground floor window to rescue the twins. Joe and John. The Stoners said they saw flames licking from the house shortly after an explosion attracted their attention. Jimmy, 7. and Judy. 4. bad reached safety when Stoner ar rived, but Judy rushed back Into me nouse in apparent effort to reacn ner sister, stoner caught her In the hallway and dashed out wim ner. names blocked his au tempt to reach the other girl in an upstairs bedroom. None of the four survivinr chil dren was injured. The lather Is a construction worker for a Bremerton building firm. " POTATOES CHICAGO I Potatoes: Ar rivals 143; on track 34: total O. 8. shipments 668: market verv dull: California long whites 4.10 - 69; round reds 4.33-30. color, there's ing point for the hunt and field strength measurement tests. Photo by Guderian Collector Found Guilty charging hint with evading pnv mem of $91,086 for tho years lMtl through 1950. The (S-yesr-old Nunan faces possible total sentence of 25 years in Jail and a 150,000 fine. He was continued In $1,500 ball pending sentencing July 33. Federal Judge Waller Bruclv hauscn told the Jury of seven wom en and five men the verdict was "Justified by the evidence." Nunan. an appointee of the lute President Franklin D.. Roosevelt, served as the nation's No. 1 tax collector from 1M4 to 1947, when he resigned to return to the private practice of law. The indictment charged him with reporting Income of M16.144 tor 1946-1950. when It actuully was IM3.396. He thus paid taxes dt COO. 437, when he should have paid $291,523, the government said. The defense contended the money on which he was accused of fulling to pay taxes was Inherited by his wife and was not subject to tax. Nunan claimed he withdrew his assets of $170,000 from the bank In 1933 and kept the money In a tin box. banking it again In 1940. Testifying In his own behalf in the trial, he said he became tax collector for the Brooklyn district "through the fortunes of politics." "As collector I was primarily an administrator, not particularly an expert on tax laws," he said. "Washington liked Uie way I ran nty olllce and made me U. 8. com-! mlssloner." Tie 16-day trial was hlglilluhted ) by the testimony of gambler Frank 1 Erlckson and James P. Flnnegan. ' former tax collector at SI. Louis and a pal of former President! Harry S. Truman. Flnnegan Is now serving a sentence for mia- conduct in office. ; Erlckson testified he lost a $1,600. bet to Nunan that Truman would not be re-elected President In 1946. ' He said he gave Nunan, who was backing Truman, odds of 9 lo 1 Nunan claimed he did not report the winning on his tax return be cause other gambling losses dur ing the year balanced It olf. . Flnnegan. who testified Nunan once gave him $1,000 In cash lor a new station wagon and paid the balance of $408 33 by check, said of himself and Nunan, "Wo wore close friends." Nunan was Indicted on the tax evasion charge Dec. 3, 1953, and a week later pleaded not guilty. The Indictment stemmed from en! Investigation by a special federal Brand Jury. A charge of perjury, which re sulted from Uie grand Jury inquiry, Is still pending against Nunan. The Herald and News is the basic i advertising medium of the Klamath Basin because it enters most all homes every day by paid invitation and carries the complete messages of commercial concerns, politely yet forcefully, to all members of the family at the times they wish to receive them. . Actress Faces BEVERLY MUS, Calif. Ml Trial ol aotress Mario McDonald on misdemeanor chargea of hit-, and-run driving while under the In lluence of a drug has been set fur Oct. 4. Through her attorney, Mlsa Mo- ponnlcl, 30, pleaded Innocent yen- teruny anu requestea cue jury ii'ini, which wan granted by Municipal Judge Henry Draeger. Weather PSnw aiiul uw ore wea tOOa 30 WoHiu,., Ow n .. can uerablo cloudiness Wcdnosday night, and Tluii'sUuv .,i. ,.in with wltiely scattered i bowers, mostly over the mountuliut, 'mil' 'iiiiv 'iliii.'ti, v afternoon, llltiha 60-70 except 60 on Hie co" . -iiivs . - 1 46-64. Winds off coast northwesterly 10-30 mile 'uu Eastern Oregon Cloudy through Wednesday nlgiit with a lew snow era persisting over Blue Mountains, mostly over mountains. Partly cloudy Thursday with a tew ahow era piTiiiMing nvo lu h u,i. Cooler. Highs 66-76 Thursday. Lows Wettiirauay. Lows V euue.itluy ulglii 46 56. Hy Till-: ASSOCIATKIl I'llKSS 34 hours to 4:30 a.m. ,te ucsnny. Max. Mill. Prep. Bnker 7.. 4li Bend 63 50 .03 Eugene h;i 51 Klamath Falls 11 65 .07 Lnkevlrw HI 63 Med ford 86-64 T Newport t 64 . i North Bend 68 64 .05 Ontario K M t Pendleton 81 64 Poil'aiiM Airport ,l T Roseburg 15 66 T Salem oj &j Boise 61 Chicago 97 6 .31 Denver i tit Eureka 68 ti ! Los Angeles n 3 i New York 76 63 T ' Red Bluff H9 ?U Seattle ! M T Spokane 16 M Misttr The newest reuiobU conned ff refrigerant at only A J PIECE "PICNIC PAK" tf ?Q JJX Colorful Ploitl Dlihei and I " ' Utenillt for many uiei. ' Wientr Forks 10c -29c -49c Steak Broilar 89c Charcoal Grills 2.69 up Laull. a : WnaaaaV' waweaalie , , - . Owaad w,W,y Ofiaalstd 1031 MAIN ST. PHONE 6241 Hit, Run Trial The attorney, 0. Dentley Ityan, Introduced an allldavlt front the shapely actress' phyaloluii thai aalo: "Bin has been III fur a number of years, sintering trout an active duodenal ulcer and a neuro-musou lar oniulltlon." Mlsa McDonald was arrested June 31 niter an autu aocldem, Bin told police she had taken two nembutol and four Seconal tablets which her physician had pro scribed. FUNERAL NOTICES fHirri Tuntrat tervlcti fur MylvetUr Phi pit. 50, who dltHl lit thU ctly June i& will um lit I tt strum O'lUir'i Memorial Chip! WeiitieiUaty Juit JO mi 2, to pin, In. Itrment will be nit.de In Klamath Mem oriel J'tirk. Fuiieral ftvrvlrffa lor Chailu If, fr)e, U, who clival al Matin Juna rt will Im livid front O'llalr'a Mainorlal Chap I Thursday July I ai jo urn, th ltv. P. U Prualt ofllrlallng. Iitlarmant will b iiuiilv Hi Hit) Ma hit ritilry. tiTl.l.lVAN runaral tarvira for Tim T. HulHvan, AH, who dlffd Itatf Juna 31, will laka iiImi front lha Harrvd Maarl Churvlt, lliili at aih, on Th ur .day, July I. whin a Haqulant Mat will b calaliralad for lh rn.a of hi tuul niniiiiaiii'iux at U:.lu ant . Ih ttav, T. P. C'aaay olll rlallng. Oniniiillnianl aarvloa aiuf Hilar, ittant In Ml- Calvary Memorial I'ai k . Ilfi-llallim of lha Holy llary will (aha placa front tha Chap I of Ward'a Klain aitt runaral lloma. VJA High It on Wdn-lar, Juna JO al I UU p in. Vault nlonthmaitt. Ml HI-HV Kunrrat tarvlra for Eart fllbha Mtir pin, JJ. who died hfia Juna jd, will id ha plava from lha J. I, rinlay tt n uttar a I oii, for Hand, Oiagnn. an Ttturaday, July I, l . JO pm wlh In. trrintnt following In Hlvarvlaw ram tar). Ward'a Kfamalh runaral lloma In charga ot tha arrangamtnU. runaral lervlra. for Iiufa An4rw Turpait, 1A who diad hra Vina 34, will taka plara at lha gravailda In tha Mu datlo. California canialary on laturdav, July a at IN am Ward'a Klanta'g lunarat llama In charga ot tha ar rangamanla. LAWNS Da yaa want a gaag law af faai a law arlra? Vaa ran'l alwaya fcava kalh. Ha da a,aallly wata, and tar alia avarylalac. a a vara tag g gaad ataad af graaat rbana 4ta, UKISHOM OARDINS NURSIAY ice zinc 5. DOLTS for SWIM SHORTS -THE PLACE TO GO FOR THE BRANDS YOU KNOW McGregor GANTNER 6th and Main