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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1956)
PAGE FOUR MARKETS AND FINANCE STOCKS WALL STREET NEW YORK I The itock market pursued an Irregularly low- r course Wednesday with trad ing relatively quiet In the late af ternoon. Prices sagged around 1 points at the outside but at the same time there were many gainers, some si cable. Trading amounted, to an esti mated 2.300,000 shares for the day as compared with 2,770.000 shares Tuesday when Uie market was alightly lower. Ford Motor was the center of all attention at the opening of the market when It made lUi Dow on the New York Stock Exchange. It was moderately active at un changed to slightly lower prices. The stock opened on 1.300 shares at 63 and held persistently In a range of 61 to 62 ,. It closed Tuesday on the over-the-counter market at 617. bid and 62!, of fered. NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation IB Allied Chemical 114 "t Allis Chalmers "8 3 Aluminum Co. America 02 "a American Airlines 24 'i American Motors 8 H American Tel. It Tel. 18:) ' American Tobacco 79 Anaconda Copper 78 Atchison Railroad 149 Vi Bethlehem Steel 153 Boeing Airplane Co. 78 fi Borg Warner 47 'i Burroughs Adding Math. 33 California Packing 41 '2 Canadian Pacific 34 !j Caterpillar Tractor 05 '. Celanese Corporation 20 Chrysler Corporation 73 'i Cities Service , 60 Consolidated Edison 48 S Crown Zellerbach 58 3i Cuttiss Wright 31 A Douglas Aircraft 84 Vt du Pont de Nemours 225 Eastman Kodak 83 !i Emerson Radio 12 ' Ford Motor Co. 61 i General Electric 60 3, Oeneral Foods 92 U General Motors ' 44. Georgia Pao Plywood 40 Vi Goodyear Tire 87 'i Homestake Mining Co, 36 International Harvester 37 International Paper 122 !'2 Johns Manvllle 04 :, Kaiser Aluminum 40 '2 Kennecott Copper 134 , Llbby. McNeill 16 Lockheed Aircraft 60 ', Lowe's Incorporated 23 Longs Bell A 62 Montgomery Ward 91 '2 New York Central 44 , Northern Pacific 78 Paclflo American Fish 10 Paclflo Gas Ji Electric 51 Pacific Tel. & Tel. 139 , Penney (J.C.) Co. 99 Pennsylvania R.R. 24 Pepst Cola Co. 24 V. Phllco Radio 32 Puget Sound P Si L 26 ' Radio Corporation 45 2 Rayonler Incorp. 37 Republlo Steel ah -i, Reynolds Metals 67 'i Richfield Oil 76 Safeway Stores Inc. 63 Jj Scott Paper Co. 74 Sean Roebuck & Co. 35 Sinclair oil 62 Socony-Vacuum Oil 70 't Southern Pnclflc 66 Standard Oil Calif 95 ' Standard Oil N.J. 158 8tudebaker Packard B ';t Sunshine Mining 10 Swift it Company 46 "i Transamerlca Corp. 42 Twentieth Century Fox 26 Union Oil Company 69 i. Union Pacific 179 United Airlines 42 ij United Aircraft 70 i United Corporation 6 United Btates Plywood 44 a, United Stntes Steel 66 Warner Pictures 31 Western Union Tel 22 1; Westlnghouse Air Brake 33 Westlnghouse Electric 2 Woolworth Company 47 1, POTATOES By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Wednesday polalo market report from the U. 8. Department of Agriculture's Portland olllcc: Sixteen cities arrivals 324, track 1.10O. shipments 974, central Calif. S. Northern Calif. 7. Idaho 302, Oregon 21, Washington 15. IDAHO PALLS Mnrkel about eleady. Russets No. 1-A. 10-20 per cent 10 os and larger 2.70-2 80; 20- au per ceni 10 01 and larger 3.7o 1 90: 30 per cent 10 os and larger J.90-3.00. SAN FRANCISOO Street sales market about ateadv. Willamette Russets No. 1-A. 2-Inch 4 25-4 50, Deschutes 4 25. Idaho 4 50-4 65. LOS ANOELE3 Market about steady; cBr lot sales Idaho Russets No. 1, 3.40-3.65. CHICAGO POTATOIS CHICAGO if! Potatoes: rivals old slock 79; on track total U.S. shipments 961; Carlnt trar- al nlH t,J.lr. Ar- 203; firm. Ida- hO RUSSetS t4 10-4 TS halrnr. tA T. 8 00, utilities $3.10-3.20; Minnesota North Dakota Pontiacs washed and waxed 3 85-4 10. Potato Shipments CASONS I4-5S 85-51 Dally Trurk Ore. 4 9 Dally Rail Ore. 6 4 ballyTrurk ( ailf. 3 2 Dal lyTfa llCa llf . i I J Dally Total ORE. AjrAMF. 24 17 Monthly Total lis 107 Season's Total 5.111 6rt.t J Do FALSE TEETH Reck, Slide or Slip? PASTE ETH. an Improved powder to at prtnkltd on upper or lower pl.ua, hold. IslM uth more firmly l pure. Do not elide, slip or rock No gummr tooer, paety Uete or reeltnu. PAR. TEETH u alkaline Inoa-arldl Does aot eour. Checks '"pl.t odor" (den tun breath I. Oet PA0TKETH at ani drug counter. LIVESTOCK PORTLAND LIVESTOCK PORTLAND lfi (USDAl Cattle salable 500; market now moder ately active; fed steers and hellers steady to strong; cows and bulls fully steady; load choice 1065 lb fed steers 18.50: with load mostly choice 950 lb 18.25; lightly sorted at 16.50: few lots good steers aver aging 935-1040 lbs 17 00-18 00; few 1200-1300 lb steers 17.00; new high utility commercial steers 14.25- 15 50; short load choice 896 lb fed heifers 16.50; good heifers 15.00- 16 00: with utility and commercial 12.00-14.00: canner and cutter cows largely 8 00-9 50; few 10.00; utility cows 10.00-12.50 with few commer cial to 13.0: utility and commer cial bulls 14 00-15.00; light cutters down to 11.00. Calves salable 50; good and choice veiilers active and fully steady; choice vealers mostly 26.00-30.00 with prime Individuals 21.00-32 00; good offerings 21.00 25.00; commercial 16.00 - 20.00; heavy calves scarce. Hogs salable 60; market moder ately active, steady; sorted lots U. 8. No. 1-2 180-235 lb butchers 14 50-15.00: several No. 1 lots 15.25; No. 3 butchers mostly 13.50; few 150 lb No. 1 butchers 13.00; sows 300-500 lb weights salable 10.00 12.50. Sheen salable 200; few scattered sales generally steady: small lot choice fed wooled lambs 19.00: good and choice slaughter lambs mostly 17.00-18.00: feeder lambs scarce and demand narrow; good pnd choice slaughter ewes quotable 5.50-7.00; cull and utility 3.00-4.50. SAN FRANCISCO (UP-FSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 100. Supply mainly dniry type caws. Trading moder ately active, cows and few feeder heifers about steady. Most utility cows 11-12, canntrs and cutters 8.50-10.50, One lot medium and good 619 lb feeder heifers 14.50, few head 674 lb averages 13. Gen erally good clearance. Calves salable none. Hogs salable 200. Supply mainly butchers, other classes scarce. Moderately active, butchers 25 cents htuher than Tuesday. Mixed grade lots U. S. No. 1 to 3 1180-240 lb butchers 14.25, 240-260 lb aver ages 13.75. Sheep salable none. (TIICAfiO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO Wl Most butcher hops and .sows sold 25 cents high er Wednesday, the top being up 20 cents at $12.85. Salable receipts at 9.000 head were 3,000 less than expected. Most 190 to 270 pound butchers moved at $12.00 to $12.50 with a few hundred at $12.60 to (12.75. Butchers scaling 270 to 330 pounds brought $11.50 to $12.00 and 340 to 400 pounds $11.25 to $11.50. Sows sold from $10.00 to $11.50. Steers and heifers sold unevenly steady to 25 cents higher. Cattle receipts at 14,000 head were 2,000 below the advance estimate. A few prime steers sold at $28.- 00, the top. Most prime brought $19.50 to $24.00. choice $118.00 to VJ0.50 and good $15.50 to $17.50 Most. Rood and choice hellers were taken at $15.50 to $18.75. Cows sold steady to 25 cents high er at $10.75 to $12.50 for utility and commercial. Salable sheep receipts totaled 1,500. Lambs declined 26 to 50 cents, good to prime wooled kinds going at $19.00 to $21.00. GRAINS CHICAGO T) All grains ex cept corn had an easier undertone throughout most of the session on the Board of Trade Wednesday. Toward the finish the market re covered part of the ground lost in early dealings. Moisure In the winter wheat belt and uncertainty over new farm legislation de pressed wheat. Wheat closed lower to sp high er, March 2.18'i. oals yt lower to higher, March 61, rye un changed to 1 cent lower, March 1.31 'j, soybeans lower to higher, March 3.59 14.14 and lard 17 to 22 cents a hundred pounds lower, March 11.97. WHEAT Open High Low Close Mar 2 18 N 2.19 V, 3 11 2 18 May 2 lrt 1, 2 16 2 14 2.15 July 1 97 V 1.98 S 1.96 4 1.98 Sep 1 M 2 00 , 1 9,1 2 00 Dec 2.03 2 04 2 02 U 2 04 PORTLAND GRAIN PORTLAND Coarse grains 15-day shipment, hulk, const dellv. cry: Onts No. 2, 38 lb white 53.00- 54 00. Bnrlev No. 2. 45 lb B. W 47.50. Corn No. 2, E. Y. shipment 63 50. Wheat (bldi to arrive market. ns.sis rvn. 1 oulk. delivered coast: Soil White 2.21; Suit White (ex. eluding Rexi 2 21: White club 2 21 Car receipts: Wheat 9; flour 1; corn 3; mill (eed 19. MEDFORD $3,75 plus lax Scheduled Local Snk$ only 35 ) minutes to J Weather Table By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS J4 hours to 4:3 s. m. Wednesday Max.' Min. Prep. Baker 34 23 .02 Boise 37 23 Eugene 44 34 Klamath Falls 30 15 Lakeview 36 6 Medford 40 26 Newport 45 39 .07 North Bend 48 37 Pendleton 41 33 Portland Airport 44 38 T Roseburg 4f. 31 8alem 43 37 T Spokane 34 25 .01 By UNITED PRESS Temperatures and rainfall for 24 hours ending it 4:30 a.m. High Low Rain 64 22 79 61 T. 64 34 37 35 .72 87 46 36 .12 34 7 .34 43 36 67 43 -9 -27 T. 52 32 31 22 66 25 T. 63 47 76 72 37 18 .03 82 68 48 36 .41 62 41 80 28 49 38 64 44 .90 63 35 36 20 61 46 53 44 43 35 T. 52 33 67 46 69 28 59 43 .01 65 43 Albuquerque Atlanta Bakersfield Boston Brownsville Chicago Denver Detroit El Centro Fairbanks Fresno Helena Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York Oakland Oklahoma City Phoenix Pittsburgh Red Bluff Salt Lake City San Diego San Francisco Seattle Stockton Thermal Tucson Washington Yuma - Oregon Weather Western Oregon Occasional rain Wednesday night. Showers and partial' clearing Thursday. Warmer in south Wednesday night with lows 36-42. Winds will become westerly and 15-26 Thursday ex cept locally stronger gusts in ex treme norm. - Eastern Oregon Cloudy Wed nesday night with snow or rain be ginning during night and continu ing Intel mittcntly Thursday. A little 'varmer. Highs 38-48 Thurs. day. laws Wednesday night 25-35 except locally 15-25 in extreme southeasc. Grants Pass and Vicinity Cloudy through Wednesday night. Intermittent rain Thursday. Highs 42-47. Lows Wednesday night 33-38. uaker and vicinity Mostly cloudy with occasional snow flur ries through Thursday. Lows Wed nesday night 23-38. Highs Thursday 33-38. California Weather By UNITED PRESS San Francisco Bay Rogion: Fair today, tonight and Thursday; warmer today: high today San Francisco, Oakland, San Mateo and San Rafael 59-65-, low tonight ji-so; gentle winds. - Northern California: Fair, todays tonight and Thursday except oc casional rain extreme north por tion tonight and Thursday; warm er today and in Central California Thursday; variable winds 7-15 mph near coast but southerly 12 25 mph above Fort Bragg tonight and Thursday. Sierra Nevada: Fair today, to night and Thursday but occasional cloudiness north portion Thursday; rising temperatures. Sacramento Valley: Fair today, tonight and Thursday: warmer to night 32-40; gentle winds. Northwestern California: Fair to day, tonight and Thursday except occasional light rain Eureka north ward tonight and Thursday; warm er today and north portion tonight; high today and low tonight Uklah 60-34, Santa Rosa 62-32, Napa 63 32; variable winds 7-15 mph near coast except becoming southerly 12-25 mph Cape Mendocino north ward tonight and Thursday. BALLOON EXHIBIT TOKYO Ltl Chinese Commun ists are exhibiting U.S. balloons In Pelplng to show they wero used for "spying," Kyodo news service Wednesday. A Kyodo correspondent in reipmg reported six U.S. bal loons carrying cameras, batteries and ballast are on display. Like 2 trucks in one ! I 0) tie Ililhway-The 'Jeep' Truck operates in conventional 2-wheel drive al normal highway speeds. Its extra slamina assures long and dependable fcrvice. I. Off Kit raid-A quick shift into its 4-tvhecl drive make the 'Jeep' Truck a "go-anywhere" vehicle that carries a paylosdof more than a Ion and gets through when oilier trucks can't Now available with power brake. llLLTS...nlfj lirptt iikif if 4 wknl iriti nitidis See this aU-purpote 'Jeep' Truck today... PARKER MOTOR CO. 0 U. tin Si. Klamath P.lli, Ortao HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH Matin High School Wins Speech Festival Award CHILOQUIN Malln took another county trophy Tuesday by winning the senior nigh school speech festr val which was held In Chiloquin The win was by the small mar gin of .1 of a point over second place Henley and only .2 of a point over third place Chiloquin, Other schools competing were Bo nanza, Merrill, Gilchrist and Bly. Judges were Joseph Mercer, Floyd Wynne and the Rev. Galen Onstad, all of Klamath Falls. Chi), oquin principal John Mathis greet ed the participants. OTI Students Aid Blood Drive Students of Oregon Technical In stitute gave 126 pints of blood when the Red Cross Bloodmobile visited OTI Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p m. A total of 156 students offered blood, approximately 10 pec cent of the student body. The Bloodmobile will be at the Elks Temple today from 4 to 8 p.m. Free transportation and nurs ery service for small children will be available. The Future Nurses Club of KUHS will staff the nurs ery, and car service will be fur nished by members of Uie teen-age Outlaw Hotrod Club. For transpor tation call the Red Cross oliice, phone 4125, or the Elks Lodge, phone 8181, after 5 p.m. Train Marks Tunnel Opening ROSEBURO- Ifl A Southern Pacific freight train left here at 7:45 a. m. Wednesday, marking re opening of Tunnel No. 1 closed by a derailment 25 hours before. The tunnel Is at Peck, between here and Grants Pass. The line was cleared at 7 a. m. William Peebles, assistant district aeent here for the SP. said he didn't know the cause of the de railment. No one was Injured. Three dlesel units and lour cars left the rails but remained upright. Two of the derailed units were in side the tunnel on the train s northbound run from Ashland. The freight which left at 7:45 Wednesday normally goes south at 4 a. m. WOOL MARKET NEW YORK (UP) Wool top futures on the New York Cotton Exchange today opened 7 points higher to 5 points lower. Opening prices follow: March 15.6 bid; May 157.5 traded: July 156.0 bid: Oct. 156.0 bid: Dec. 155.3 bid; March (1957) 155.0 bid; May 153.0 bid. Wool futures opened 2 to 10 points lower; March 125.0 bid; May 125.8 bid: Julv 125.8 bid: Oct. 126.0 bid: Dec. 125.0 bid; March (1057) 124.0 bid; May 123.0 bid; July 122.5 bid. Legal Notice NOTICE OF MEETING TO AUTHORIZE DISSOLUTION Notice Is here!y clven thnt a niMUnn or Dewey Powell Chapter No. 12 DAV will be held on Mnrch 10. 1054 at the hour of B-OO o'clock p.m. in the VFW Club. Ai members of Allied Rehab. Inc. an Oregon corporation for the purpose of considering a dissolution of said cor poration, and you are thus afforded the right to vote on such Question. L. A. WlrU Cecil C. Nicholson Commander March 7 No. 819 BOB HOPE HOME HOLLYWOOD W Bob Hope Is home from three months of globe trotting. When his wife and four children met him at International Airport last night he was wearing a monocle, homburg hat and cane. But the family was prepared. All of them had monocles, too. The comedian said he plans to spend some afternoons In the sun to re gain his lost tan. "I did a lot of sun dodging in Europe's bad weather," he explained. RED STAR REPORTS MOSCOW WV-Red Star'reporled Wednesday the death of reserve Maj. uen. lvan M. Khokhlov, a hero of the Soviet Union whose dec-! orations included two orders of Len in and four Orders of the Red Banner. The army newspaper said : he died after a sudden illness. It did not give Khokhlov's age. FALLS, OREGON In one of the two 10 o'clock divisions, serious interpretation, David O'Donahue, Henley w i t b "Beach Red" rated 3 9 of a pos sible 4.0, and Chiloquin and Malin placed second with "Footfalls." In poetry interpretation Charlynn O'Neill of Chiloquin rated 4.0 with Houses. ' At 11 o'clock the extemporaneous and humorous divisions were held. Jim Hoback, Chiloquin and Jeff ery Lee, Henley, tied for first with 3.3 each. The popular hum orous division was led by Marcia Prescott, Malln, who took the top award of 40 for "Contest Day" and Henley's Margie Whittemore was close behind with 3 9 (or her "At the County Fair." The last sections of the day saw a clever radio presentation by Malin walk off with honors In that division. Styled after "Dragnet," Malin gave lis conservation topic, "Case No. 69 Missing Animals." In the panel discussion with the Rev. Onstad as both moder ator and Judge. Kathleen Marshall, Henley, received 4.0 and there was a 3.9 tie between Deborah Ken dall. Bly and Carmen Hill, Chilo quin. At 3 o'clock Mike Ravlzza, Chilo quin, entertained with accordion solos before the giving of the awards. Members of the faculty speech committee throughout the county were Mrs. Koertje. Merrill; Mrs. Cooper, Henley; Mrs. Frank Bell, Chiloquin: Dorothy Houston, Gil christ: Howard R. Bingham, Bly and Charles Steber, Bonanza. Petty Larceny Charge Filed Klamath Falls police today re ported the arrest Tuesday after noon of Leonard Smith, 61i Front Street, on a charge of petty larceny as the result of the theft of several tools from Basin Builders Supply on South Sixth Street. Police, said that Smith had of fered some tools at a second hand store for an unreasonably 1 o w price, and that the tools offered for sale were identified by a Basin Builders Supply official as having oeen lanen lrom that store. Smith's name was obtained from records at the store after police had obtained his description from the second hand dealer, whose name was withheld by officers. Police said that the district attor ney's office is investigating the matter. UNPROVED BACHELOR MEXICO CITY (Pi Andres Col- lado Atrasanchez left his parked car unlocked for ten minutes and returned to find a 5-month-old baby on the front seat. No one knew Its mother, and the worried bachelor finally turned It over to the Casa de Cuna (house of cribs) Orphanage. Your Crops Will Crow Great... The Following List of Fertilizers Are Available At All Times iHYANIMIDE 21 SULPHATE OF AMMONIA 21 AMMONIUM NITRATE 33.5 AQUA AMMONIA 20 TRIPLE SUPERPHOSPHATE 45 Granular Superphosphate 20 REGULAR SUPERPHOSPHATE 19 11-48 16-20 SULPHATE OF POTASH 50 MURIATE OF POTASH 60 OTHER FERTILIZERS AVAILABLE ON REQUEST! NO WAITING! WAREHOUSE STORE AVAIL So. 6th & Washburn Way Ph. 637 Weather Abates At Crater Lake Weather has moderated at Cra ter Lake National Park and skiing Is good, the ranger station re ported this morning. Ten Inches of new snow fell Mon day night- bringing snow depth to 198 inches. There was no new snow last night and snow depth has set tled to 192 Inches. Maximum Tuesday temperature was 23 degrees; minimum last night was minus 1 and 8 a.m. temperature today was 21 degrees. There Is a high overcast and no wind. Highway 62 U open through the park. Motorists are advised to carry chains. The road from An nie Springs to headquarters is open, chains required. Smith Hill Falls Across Highway GRANTS PASS in Smith Hill collapsed across Highway 99 Tues day afternoon, closing that main north-south highway at Wolf Creek 8ummlt for the fourth time since Jan. 7. Highway crews, working through the night, got the slide cleared off and traffic started at 8 a. m. Wed nesday. J. O. Bromley, state highway maintenance engineer, saia that previous slides at the same spot at the top of Wolf Creek summit some 20 miles north of here, had occurred Jan. 7, Jan. 15 and March 5. British Ship Runs Aground PORTLAND 1.T1 The British motorship Pacific Fortune re lumed to a berth here Wednesday morning after spending five hours on a mudbank near the Washing ton shore of the Columbia River below here. The vessel, outbound for Eng- lanu. struck a dredge's anchor cables and swung Into the mud bank Tuesday night. She was freed by tugs at 2 a. m. Both the Pacific Fortune and the dredge were being inspected for possible damage. HURRICANE BRISBANE, Australia Ifl A 90-mile-an hour hurricane battered North Queensland Tuesday night. It swept a freighter ashore, de stroyed a bomber and ripped away hundreds of roofs in the coastal city of Townsville. The storm was described as one of the worst on record. PLANS LAID TOKYO Of) Prime Minister Hatoyama said Wednesday he would try to convince U.S. Secre tary of State Dulles when tie comes here March 18 that Ameri ca should halt its planned spring atomic tests. WITH SDMPLOT MALIN FUNERAL RITES for Mr. N. E. Berry, one of the principal owners of the Klamath Falls Medical-Dental Building will be held in Seattle, Washing ton at the Bonney-Watson Mortuary Saturday March 10 at 3 p.m. Mr. Berry died March 2 in Lima, Peru while on a South American tour. Honorasy pallbearers from Klamath Falls will be Dr. C. V. Rugh, Walter Waggoner and Howard Barnhisel. KF Judge Gives Probation Order' Mary Elizabeth Barklev. 38-year-old mother of eight children, was placed on three years probation late Tuesday bv Circuit Judge David R. Vandenbere after she pleaded guilty to a charge of as sault with a dangerous weapon. Mrs. Barklev was arrested Feb ruary 6 on the outskirts of Bly after she attacked her husband, Donald. 38, with a switch knife and wounded him In the shoulder and abdomen. Barklev was In a serious condi tion for several, days in Klamath Valley Hospital. He has since fully recovered. SUGGESTION BOSTON UP) Archbishop Rich ard J. Cushing of the Boston Cath olic archdiocese suggested today that "all the hustle and bustle of Enster shopping should be out of the way before Holy Week." He said Holy Week itself should be kept free "for prayerful reflec tion . . ." Copper Craft Supplies In Stock At POOLE'S 222 So. 7th Phone 5520 10-16-8 10-20-20 10-10-5 10-10-0 SULPHUR GYPSUM MANGANESE SULPHATE ZINC SULPHATE COPPER SULPHATE COBALT CARBONATE COPPER OXIDE Klamath Falls BRANCH .WEDNESDAY. MARCH 7, -195ft Expected River Peaks Told PORTLAND OH The riverj Southern ana Eastern Oregon in flow at or near record levels um year, Oregon's snow survev (7 pert, W. T. Frost, reported Tui da.'. Snow packs are at record Ipv.i. in Mme of the Rogue-Klama:h am Wallowa Mountain areas, and the, approacn record levels elsewhere i-ne report aid not cover ik. Willamette Basin. For the southern and eastern parts of the state the water coo tent of the snow is 140 per cent of average above the 5.000-io level and 150 per cent of avera below the 6.000-foot mark sa,I Frost, who Is snow survey super visor for Uie Soil Conservation Service and the Oregon Aerlculim- al Experiment Station. He said 20 major Irrigation res ervoirs have 44 per cent more a. ter In them than at this time last year. The stored water is 8 pe, cent greater than average, and some of It is being released to make room for spring run-oft. He said these rivers can exped record or near-record flows; Malheur, Burnt, Powder, Imna ha, Wallowa, Grand Ronde, John Day, Dsschutes. Applega.e. H-. nois. Rogue, Klamath and Warner Lake. - KF Women's Father Dies BEND Funeral services for El more C. Engle. 88. were held Fri day morning, March 2, at the Nis-wonger-Winslow Chapel. He died Monday night at St. Charles Hos pital in Bend following a short ill ness. Engle was a native of Har per's Ferry, West Virginia, a resi dent of Bend for four years be fore his death, and had lived at Crescent, Oregon, for six years. He is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Wayne Negus, of Klamath Falls. The Rev. Jack MacLeod of First Presbyterian Church officiated at the funeral rites. Honorary pall bearers were Ralph Laird, Thorn, as Negus, Dean Negus, C. W. Ne gus, Austin Negus and Carl Lar son. Active pallbearers were Cecil Moore, Leonard Trueax, Lyndell Wise, Kenneth Arnold, Emmett Evans and William Parker, mern bers of the Bend lodge of Odd Fel lows, who were also in charge of graveside services In Pilot Butte Cemetery. FINAL 2 WEEKS Stock Liquidation Sale ART - NEEDLEWORK 412 Main Ph. 2-1438 Ph. 637