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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1956)
PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 195J MARKETS AND FINANCE STOCKS WALL STREET NEW YORK An early Boy Reared As A Chicken LIVESTOCK PORTLAND LIVESTOCK PORTLAND 11 (USD A I Cattle stock market rise was cut short ! salable 200: supply largely slaugh Thursday and Drices turned irreg-itmr cows- steadv: standard steers ular but steels, aircrafts and se- 17.50; few standard heifers 17.00: j boy apparently about seven lected oils made gains. f utility heifers 10.00-13.50: canncr who they said has never bathed, The Associated Press average and cutter cows 7.00-9.00; strong cannot eat human food, who of 60 stocks declined 40 cents to weights to 9.30: utility cows 10.00- j grunts like an animal and roosts 181.10 with the industrials down u.50; utility bulls 14.00-15.00. like a chicken Calves salable 50; luny steady; good and choice vealers 18.00 1 19.00: individual choice to 20.00: 1 utility and commercial calves and vealers 10.00-15.50. Hogs salable 200: moderately ac 50 cents, the rails down 11.00 and the utilities up 10 cents. Volume totaled two million shares compared with 1,930,000 shares Wednesday. 43 i 70 ',. 5 172 V 76 '.4 82 ? 4 27 ' 166 3 . 57 45 44 .14 . 85 m 15 65 ' 46 58 38 Vt 05 204 ' 93 !j 8 Hi 59 Is IK) NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation Allied Chemical Allis Chalmers Aluminum Co. America American Airlines American Can American Cyanamide American Motors American Tel. Tel. American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Atchison Railroad Bethlehem Steel Boeing Airplane Co. Borg Warner Burroughs Adding Math Canadian Pacific Caterpillar Tractor Celanese Corporation Cities Service Consolidated Edison Crown Zcllerbach Curtiss Wright Douglas Aircraft duPont de Nemours Eastman Kodak Emerson Radio ford Motor General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pac Plywood Goodyear Tire International Harvester International Paper Johns Manville Kaiser Aluminum Kcnnecott Copper Libby,. McNeill Lockheed Aircraft Loew's Incorporated . Long Bell A -Montgomery Ward New York Central Northern Pacific Pacific American Fish Pacific Gas & Electric Pacific Tel. 4 Tel.' Penney tJ.C.) Co. Pennsylvania R.R. Pepsi Cola Co. Philco Radio Puget Sound P & L Radio Corporation Rayonier Incorp. Republic Steel Reynolds Metals Richfield Oil Safeway Stores Inc. Scott Paper Co. Sears Roebuck & Co. Shell Oil Co. Sinclair Oil Socony-Vacuum Oil Southern Pacific ' 1 Standard Oil Calif Standard Oil N.J. -Studebakcr Packard Sunshine Mining tj Swift & Company ' Transamcrica Corp. Twentieth Century Fpx Union Oil Company Union Pacific United Airlines , United Aircraft United Corporation United Slates Plywood United States Steel Warner Pictures Western Union Tel Weslinghouse Air Brake Westinghouse Electric Woolworth Company BELFAST, Northern Ireland Police discovered Thursday a Sgt. Hugh Russ said the "pitiful little boy was found in a hen' house at Down Patrick, County Down, 15 miles from Belfast. He has been taken to a home live, steadv: sorted U. S. 1 and 2 n Belfast and turned over to a grade butchers 18.75-19.00; mixed j team of physicians for examina- 17 VI. 2 and 3 grades 180-235 lbs 17.50- 103 i 1 18.50: sorted off No. 3s 17.00; 33 weights 240-270 lbs largely 2 and 3 115 Igrades 16.50-17.00: sows mixed 1, 23 2 and 3 grades 300-500 ids 12.00 15.50: few 1 and 2 ro.uo-io.ao. Sheep salable 350; steady to weak: good and choice spring slaughter, lambs 17.00- 18.50: no test on top limit; small lots shorn lambs 83 lbs No. 1 pelt 18.00; util ity and low good springers 16.00 17.00; common to good feeders 11.50-16.50; cull to good shorn slaughter ewes 2.00-4.50. SAN FRANCISCO (UP-FSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 50. Supply mainly cows. Moderately active, about steady. Few high-good to low choice around 1100 lb slaughter steers 22.50. One lot high-utility to low-commercial cows 12.50, can ners and cutters 8.50-10.50. Other classes scarce. Calves salable 10. Supply insuf ficient to test market. Hogs salable 50. Supply mainly 47 'i 1 b u t c h e r s. Moderately active, 47 ' b u t c h e r s 25- 50c lower than 72 " I Wednesday. Mixed grade Jots U. " 74 S. No. 1 to 3 180-240 10 gamage and grain fed butchers 17.50. Sheep salable 100. Supply main ly spring lambs. Moderately ac tive, about steady. Few lots mixed slaughter and feeder spring lambs grading mostly good from a slaughter standpoint 19-20, these lambs carried No. 1 or better pelts. Other classes scarce. 35 122 53 ', 63 135 3 15 51 h't 19 ?i 72 '4 41 ', 35 ?. 38 V, 12 50 14 127 87 23 It 20 20 14 29 41 36 55 lb 75!. 72 "t 62 66 4a .12 88 14 61 '.. 52 48 49 ' 54 Is li 8 ! 46 14 37 14 24 61 '. 29 tion. Sgt. Ross said a group of chil dren playing "hide and seek" ran into the hen house which adjoins a cottage occupied by a widow and her two grown daughters. The children found the boy perched on a roost with the hens and roosters. "He cannot talk. He cannot walk and he cannot eat human food," the police sergeant said. "He has been reared like a chicken." The mat of hair on his head did not appear ever to have been cut or washed. He had clawlike fingernails which probably never had been trimmed. Said William Hamilton, official of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Chil dren: "He gets about by hopping like an ape and he replies to voices with grunts In a half human fash ion." Police would not give the name of the widow who is being ques tioned. ' California Weather By UNITED PRESS San Francisco Bay Region: Mostly fair today after morning 'til" -Jr-V&J 1 1 Disbar Rule Before Court SALEM LTi The Oregon Su preme Court was asked Wednes day to disbar permanently three attorneys. The board of directors of the State Bar made the request, nam ing attorneys Elmer G. Baldwin, Roseburg: David C. Pickett and L. B. Sandblast, both of Portland. Each has the right of appeal. Baldwin is in the penitentiary for embezzling funds of an estate. Pickett is accused of collecting $650 for a client and failing to turn the money over to her. Sandblast, who was a candidate for state Supreme Court justice in the May primary, is accused by the Bar directors of having represented conflicting interests in the handling of an estate, and of purchasing property against a client s wishes. Sandblast was defeated In the election by Justice Hall S. Lusk. Court Records . KLAMATH FALL MUNICIPAL COL'KT Charles Edwin Otii. drunk driving, $1UU and W days. Auiuit Brfen, drunk in automobile, 925 or 12's days. Richard L. Wentworth, no visible reg istration, 3 forfeited. On The Record KLAMATH FALLS BIRTHS LUDW1G Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ot to C. Ludwig, September 12. a girl welshing 7 lb. 13'a oz.. In the Klam ath Vnlley Hospital SMITH Born to Mr. ana mrs. Charles E. Smith, September 12, a boy weighing S lb. B oz., in the Klamath Valley Hospital. JERRIO THE CLOWN, out of breath from consuming two pounds of spaghetti in three minutes, was crowned 1956 Spaghetti King of the annual Weed Italian Carnivale. Lewis Luzzi, Butte Valley, 1955 King, is shown placing the crown on the Redding television star. . Photo by Gaynor BASEBALL FAN CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO Ifl Butcher hogs sold steady to 25 cents lower Thursday. Sows were steady to strong. Butcher hogs scaling 10 to 190 pounds sold at $14.75 to $15.50 while 200 to 2.10 pounders brought $15.25 to $16.25, the top. Steers and heifers sold steaay to 50 cents lower. Good to low choice heifers brought $19.50 to $23.00. Choice and prune spring lambs moved at $23.00 to $24.00. Salable receipts were 8.000 hogs, 2,500 cattle, 300 calves and 1,500 sheep. GRAINS PORTLAND GRAIN PORTLAND Coarse grains, 15-day shipment, bulk, coast deliv ery: Oats No. 2, 38 lb white 53.00, Barley No. 2, 45 lb B. W. 47.50. Corn No. 2, E. Y. shipment 70.10 25. Wheat (bid) to arrive market, basis No. 1 bulk, delivered coast: 38 Ml Soft White 2.17; Soft White ex- 83 8',i 39 '. 6!l 27 19 :in ... 55 7i I 45 eluding Rex) 2.17; White Club 2.17. Hard red winter: Ordinary 2.18: 10 per cent 2.18. Car receipts: Wheat 47: barley 8; flour 9; corn 3; oats 2. Sgt. Gl Rescues Pal In Mid-Air FT. BRAGG, N.C. on - Leon L. Peine and S. 3. C. Roger D. Busch, both paratroopers, jumped trom opposite sides of a CI 19 Flying Boxcar while more than l.ooo feet aloft Wednesday. Sgt. Peine's parachute om ii. nuscn snvcQ mm. I beans Busch described the rescue this j j.sp, CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO Oft - Wheat firmed but other grains had an erratic tone on the Board of Trade Thurs day. Buying in wheat reflected ex port business overnight, plus gov ernment allocations which will per mit additional foreign purchases. Some contracts were not able to make any progress, however. Wheat closed ta-l-'a higher, September 2.24's-2.25, corn un changed to lower. September 1.47-1. 47'ii. oats unchanged to H hicthnr Conlamknp TIT-1. , 1 didn't a, hichpr Montomhni- 1 Jfi tnu. -Pt lower, September and lard 8 to 23 cents o BcGhott To ALBUQUERQUE. N. M. I - - 7 ... low clouds, partly cloudy tonight !tt. s, Dist, Judge carl llalch is a Attend Meet and Friday; chance of a few . .... . .. . , ... . i ...,.. ....,. ...,., . u ... , KhKA rami Adviser Ken voluntary manslaugmer case yes-Baghoit was authorized by the terday he announced to the jury i board of supervisors this week to at intervals how the Milwaukee. represent Siskiyou County as part Braves-Brooklyn Dodgers game of a combined Siskiyou and Modoc was progressing. By the time the delegation to Washington. D.C. in sprinkles late tonight or Friday little change in temperature; high today San Francisco 66, Oakland 71, San Mateo 73, San Rafael 75; low tonight 52-58; westerly winds 8-16 mph afternoons. Northern California: Mostly fair through Friday but chance of a few sprinkles Modesto and King City to Red Bluff and Fort Bragg tonight or Friday; little change in temperature; variable wind 8-16 mph near coast. '' Sierra Nevada: .Mostly fair through Friday but chance of a few showers late tonight or Fri day; little change in temperature. Sacramento Valley: Fair through Friday but chance of a few sprinkles late tonight or Fri day: little change in temperature; high both days 76-86; low tonight 52-62; gentle variable winds. Northwestern California: Mostly fair through Friday but local morning fog near coast: chance of a few sprinkles late tonight or Friday south portion; little change in temperature; high today and low tonight Ukiah 74-48, Santa Rosa 76-49, Napa 76-53; variable winds 8-16 mph near coast. jury retired to deliberate it knew Milwaukee won 8-7, EXHAUSTION an attempt to obtain government permission for the raising ot Dur um wheat under the support program. Supervisor Joe Allen explained SANTA MONICA, Calif. W Suf- 'hat the delegation felt they could ferine from nervous exhaustion. fVirs. Georgia akelton, wife of co median Red Skelton, was admitted to St. John's Hospital yesterday. Her doctor said her condition is not serious but she will be hos pitalized three or four days do something to stabilize the farm economy in the two counties, THEATER PURCHASED McCLOUD Joseph Sarti recent ly purchased the McCloud Theater Yin irom the Harvey Amusement Corn- said she was "worn out from try-!pany. The new management states ing to keep up with Reds hectic it will bring only the latest major schedule. 'movies to the area. KCAMATH COVNTV MARRIAGE LICENSES GEORGE-SMITH Clifford George. 33. and Harriett Smith, 25, both of Chiloquin. , KLAMATH COUNTY SUITS Morris C. Anderson va. Myrtle Irene Anderson, seek divorce, C. A. Humble attorney for plaintiff. Raquel Clark vs. William L. Clark, seek divorce, Don A. Piper, attorney for plaintiff. Edna A. Kennington vs. Joda L. Ken nington. divorce granted. Don A. Piper attorney for plaintiff. Janice L. uordy vs. nay k. uoray, divorce granted, G. A. Proctor attor ney for plaintiff. Eldon Li. Miller vs. Billy Ann Miner, divorce granted. Don A. Piper attor ney tor piainini. Joseph E. Bradford vi. Mildred Brad ford, divorce granted, Chatburn and Brickner attorneys for plaintiff. Anna Goueher vs. Bank of America as executors of estate of Robert 'D. Duncan and Ruth O. Duncan. B of A reply to effect that allegations correct and B of A is in accord with re quests of plaintiff. Leo A. Reis vs. State Industrial Ac cident Commission, seeking reopening of case and granting of permanent disability award. KLAMATH fOl'NTT UISTBICT COURT John Paul Romero, inadequate muf fler, dismissed. Walter Franklin Pepper, Inadequate muffler, dismissed. Norman Joseph Gibson, truck speed ing, S7.SO ball forfeited. Charles Kenneth Durling, excessive lengtn, ia nan lorjeuca. William C. Brown, excessive height, S7.au bail lorieiten. Otis Oliver Ball, driving during sut. nended neriod. SAO nald. Robert Franklin Elliott. Improper muirier, 57.30 nail lorieiiea. Adln DeLos Davis, violation basic rule, iu paia. RandolDh TuDDer. driving while In- toxicated, GO days and $250 fine and costs: mVa days In lieu of fine; com mitted. Willie Ruvina Covington, violation basic rule. S15 Daid. Leonard Milton Williams, failure slop at stop sign, 95 paid. Loretta Kirk, murder in the first de gree, time set for preliminary hear ing: Tuesday Seotemebr 25.. at 10 a.m. Remanded to sheriff. No ball allowed. Timothy Francis Keaneally. pass ing Insufficient clearance, $7.50 bail lorreltcd. Adrian Merrill Erlcson. failure stop at slop sign, so oau lorieiiea. Freddie Gene Tyree, Improper muf fler. S7.5U bail forfeited. Elrov Elmer Meyer, two head lamos. $7.30 paid. William jiarry mcitimey, violation basic rule. $12.50 ball forfeited. Walter Phillip Spusa, Improper, muf fler. $5 suspended. Gerald William Hamilton, violation basic rule, $10 paid. Erna Aimn Decker, violation basic rule, S7.SU paid. Wayne Earl Niehaus, selling lot tery tickets, asked for further time. Set for Thursday September 13 at 10 a.m. Hcieased on own recognizance. Ray Clyde Waldron, no operator's license. $7.50 ball forfeited. Rex Sigman Grltzmaker, no trans portation certificate. $15 paid. CharieB E. Hutchinson, entering mo tor vehicle with Intent to stea. asked to waive preliminary hearing. Ordered held to grand Jury. Bond set at $1,500. Remanded to sheriff. William Craig Caster, no vehicle li cense nlates, $5 Daid. Vernon Lee Ward, Improper muf fler, $5 paid. Irene Elizabeth Seely, no vehicle li cense, S5 paid. William John Murray, no operator's license, $5 paid. Gerald Luther Bachman, violaUon basic rule, S12.50 paid. Joseph William Kee, violation basic rule, dismissed. Constance Lorayne Podawlltz, Impro per muffler, $5 paid. Baker 72 37 Bend , 72 33 Boise 76 47 Eugene 72 42 Klamath Falls 67 37 Lakeview. 68 49 Medford 79 47 Newport 64 45 North Bend 64 51 Pendleton 75 51 Portland Airport 71 48 Roseburg 77 45 Salem ' 73 48 Spokane 76 48 SENTENCES SERVED Aurelio J. Sanchez, 21-year-old Modoc Point railroad worker, started serving 120 days in the county jail Thursday after convic tion by Justice of the Peace Wal ter Zimmerman of Chiloquin of furnishing liquor to minors. Judge Zimmerman also imposed a $150 fine on Sanchez. The rail-! gram is being "re-evaluated. roader was arrested by Deputy denied there has been any can- fcncriit Alvie Youngblood. I collation of projects Bases Policy 'Re-evaluated WASHINGTON Wl The 200- million-dollar program for build ing a series of American-operated air bases in Spain is undergoing a routine "re-evaluation." Penta gon sources say no changes had been decided upon so far. In answer to questions about reports that cuts have been or dered in the program for economy reasons, including cancellation of one projected fighter field, an Air force spokesman said the pro- He Court Studies Murder Appeal SALEM Ifl An appeal of woman sentenced to life imprisJ ment for second-degree mnrHi went belore the Oregon Suprenj loun vveunesuay. Attorney representing M, Ann Whitney Avant told the r the conviction should be reverb on the grounds of prejudicial tcsl mony, improper jury instructs and insutticiem evidence. Mrs. Avant, 49, was convicted fatally shooting Delmore Lessan prominent Portland attornev. in Heppner cafe in which she wal empioyeu, on uiie iyo5, Lessard had gone to the i-afo discuss the education of one nf ik. woman's two children. She haj oeen divorced iwo years orev .d ly and Lessard represented Mrs Avant s iormer nusoand. . Weather Table By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a. m. Thursdal By UNITED PRESS Temperatures and rainfall for 24 hours ending at 4:30 a.m. High Low Rain Albuquerque 91 62 Atlanta 85 63 flakersfield 83 55 Boston 74 63 Brownsville 90 72 Chicago 83 66 Denver ' 91 56 Detroit 79 64 El Ccntro 106 77 Fresno 83 55 Helena 72 52 Kansas City 103 78 Los Angeles 83 60 Miami 82 78 .60 Minneapolis . 85 66 .01 New Orleans 85 66 New York 75 63 Oakland 69 57 Oklahoma City 97 69 Phoenix 101 72 Pittsburgh 78 61 Red Bluff 80 56 Salt Lake City 91 50 San Diego 78 63 San Francisco 67 57 Seattle 66 50 Stockton 76 56 Thermal 107 77 Tucson 102 70 Washington 81 63 Yuma 108 78 "I counted off my four seconds ber 11.25 and looked up to check my canopy ! ipm-achiHe'. I saw that it was still'Sep opening. Then I saw Sgt. Peine. I Dec I recognized him as he hurtled Mar hundred pounds higher. Septcm- by. Then his chute hit me in the fate. By instinct I grabbed it." They were part of a 700-man drop of the 82nd Airborne Corps putting on a display for a touring Defense Department Committee. the two landed on a dirt road CHICAGO POTATOES CIIICAtiU iiP Potatoes: nr. Peine, of Bcllairc, Tex., suffered i rivals 123; on track 26(1; total U. head injury and was taken lo,S. shipments 518: barely steady Jiy WHEAT ! 24 2.25 2 23 2.24 'sate 2.28 , 2.29 i 2 28 '1 2.20 2 .33 2.33 2.32 . 2.33 ., 2 25 4 2.25 H 2.24 I 2.25 POTATOES Oregon Weather Western Oregon Fair through Friday except night and morning fog along coast and patches of early morning fog in valleys. Little change in temperature. Highs 70-80 except about 65 along coast. Lows Thursday night 42-50. Coastal winds variable 6-12 miles an hour, becoming northwesterly, 8-15 in afternoon. Eastern Oregon Fair through Friday. Highs 72-82. Slightly cool er Thursday night with lows 36-46. Northern Oregon Beaches Fair through Friday except morn ing fog. Highs 70-75. Lows Thurs day night 43-48. Beach winds gentle variable, becoming north erly in afternoon. Grants Pass and vicinity Fair through Friday with highs 82-87. Low Thursday night near 50. Baker and vicinity Fair through Friday. Lows Thursday night 35-40. Highs Friday 72-78. Loggers' fire weather Moder- but increasing lire danger next 36 hours with rising temper atures west of Cascades and in Central Oregon. Lowest humidi ties west of Cascades near 25 per cent in drier areas Friday. the post hospital. Busch. of Al buquerque, N .M., was uninjured. Zsa Zsa Stops Roulette Wheels to slightly weaker. Carlo! track sales: Washington Russets, L'.S l. $:t.003.65: U.S. 2 $2 80-2.63, U. United States Polio Drops WASHINGTON Public Health (I'P) - The Service reported S. 1 Bakers $4 25: Minnesota-!,,a' h"' Polio cas" dr(W'11 North Dakota Red River Valley routines u s. IA $2 75-2.65. War has $2.50. last week tor the second straight week. It was further evidence lliat the 1056 season has passed its peak. The service said 847 new cases were reported in the nation last week compared to 887 for the pre- NEW YORK il'pi Wool lop vious week. It was the smallest a ctimpni iiuie- evn 01 WOOL MARKET Zsa Zsa Gabor made her debut Exchange lodav opened 7 to 16 any y in a daringly low cut $17,000 ; points higher. 1 In . LAS VEGAS H'PiThe roulette wheels in this gambling resort city all but stopped turning Wednesday night when actress f,,ir.,. .1.. v.... v.i. .- i.,i .i year since ltMi. another hoiwful note, the Spwn- i Oiwnini nri, f. f a 1 1 n iv- n..i ' cflrvir- atH that the nercentace When Miss Gabor walked on j;j.O bid: Dec. 174 2 bid: March of paralvtic cases last week was siage in the new attire, a lull,i;j. traded. Mav 174 0 bid: Julv 34 5 compared to 43.2 per cent (or I'K'r 'n J!!!! 0 Vr!V1"' 1:3 5 M: Oct. .W57 172 5 bid. the disease year which began ( lover Room of the Hotel Riviera Dec. in 5 hid. I April 1. ' iiJn .u ocl',"5"mi Wool futures opened 7 to 19, In Chicago where there was rLie r .?,.?, 1 - , ' '"" points higher: Oct. 143.5 bid; Dec. severe outbreak this year, there S.H i?. J''rln!JM'"" M511 h,d: Mn'h ! 145.1 were 54 cases last week compared S! ? nV,0fy A(,ni"-Haded: May 144 4 traded: Julv with 62 for the previous week. It .... ..... "'--- u; o i,irt; Oct signed by Charles l.a Mane of iVc ,, .j 2h Century-Fox Studio. It was """ma- made up of pale peach colored chiffon panels and topped only with a glitter of simulated dia monds, i BLADKXSHL'RO. Md. ift - Po- INniAVS GET MONEY WASHINGTON i-lndians H957I 1410 bid; RECOVERED JINK BLADENSHL'RG. Md. m was the lourtn consccimve ween in which the new cases have (alien oil. iwmfr If" A for sub-teens . . . Swiss Maid cotton provincial prints with an old world aura Their warm, vibranf colon drift beautifully into fell . . . and make themselves at horn in the clati room. The quitt charm of these provincial prints brings to mind evenings by the fireside . , . . 'ong walks in the country. ALL IN SIZES 8 TO 14 Sprigged floral print, Aqua, pink, or yellow on black back ground. Others with Brown, beige and green. riced 79M2 98 INVITATION hoe have recovered the following' NEWTON, Iowa President! from 30 teen-agers: 71 pistols, t Eisenhower has accepted the in-! isholguns, 3 rides, 1 baiuoka. Invitation of the executive comnut-i reived a record 41 million dollars hurP un. 1 machine guns, 1 lee of the National Field Days and! from oil and gas leasing of their machine gun .barrels and 4 broken Plowing Matches to be honorary lands In the year ended June ). ; bayonets. They say the youths chairman ot the event Sept. 20 I'ecrelary of the Interior Sealon puked them up at a junkyard. 1 21-22. The President is scheduled said this compared with 28 millionjTh junk dealer had bought thello speak her Sept. 21 with his dollars in 1J54-S5 and 11 million old weapons Irom the government , Democratic competitor Adlai Stev ln IM0-M. jand piled them up in the yard. enson following him Sept. 22. Viic our Sub-teen deportmenr toon, for a wonderful (election of all types of Sub-teen foshions. .a YOUNG SHOP