THURSDAY. AUGUST 21, 1958
PAGE 6 A
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
MARKETS and FINANCE
STOCKS
i
WALL STREET
NEW YORK (AP) The stock
market closed higher today with
advances shown by oils and cop
pers. Gains of key stocks ran to a
fioint or so. There were scattered
osses.
The coppers which had been
well ahead, gyrated as the House
tentatively killed a domestic min
erals subsidy bill, then brought it
back to life on a roll call vote.
Volume for the day was esti
mated at 2.400,000 shares com
pared with 2,460,000 Wednesday.
NEW YORK STOCKS
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Admiral Corporation
Allied Chemical
A His Chalmers
Aluminum Co. America
American Airlines
American Can
American Cyanamide
American Motors
American Smelting
American Tel. & Tel.
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper
Armco Steel
Atchison Railroad
Bendix Aviation
Bethlehem Steel
Boeing Airplane Company
Borden Co.
Borg Warner
Burroughs Corp.
California Packing
Canadian Pacific
Caterpillar Tractor
Celanese Corporation
Chrysler Corporation
Cities Service
Consolidated Copper
Consolidated Edison
Crown Zellerbach
Curtiss Wright
Douglas Aircraft
du Pont de Nemours
Eastman Kodak
El Paso NG
Emerson Radio
Ford Motor
General Dynamics
General Electric
General Foods
General Motors
Georgia Pac Cp.
Goodyear Tire
Great Northern
Great West. Sugar
Idaho Power
International Harvester
International Paper
Johns Manville
Kaiser Aluminum
Kennecott Copper
Libby, McNeill
Lockheed Aircraft
Locw's Incorporated
Montgomery Ward
National Cash Reg.
New York Central
Northern Pacific
Pacific Gas & Electric
Pacific Tel. & Tel.
Penney (J. C.) Co.
Pennsylvania Railroad
Pepsi Cola Co.
Philco Corp.
Phillips Pet.
Polaroid
Puget Sound P & L
Radio Corporation
Rnyonicr Incorporated
Republic Steel
Reynolds Metals
Richfield Oil
Safeway Stores Inc.
St. Regis
Scott Paper Company
Sears Roebuck & Co.
Shell Oil Co.
Sinclair Oil
Socony Mobil oil
Southern Pacific
Sperry Rand
Standard Oil California
Standard Oil N. J.
Studebnker Packard
Sunshine Mining
Swift It Company
Thompson Products
Transnmerica Corporation
Twentieth Century Fox
Union Oil Company
Union Pacific
United Air Lines
United Aircraft
United Corporation
United States Plywood
United States Smelting
United States Steel
Warner Piclures
Western Auto Supply
Western Union Tel.
Westlnghouse Air Brake
Westinghousc Electric
Woolworth Company
86
28
79
22 K
46 Vt
48
16
44
183
87
51
56
23
58
45
43
71 V4
32
36
45
2BW
80 Vt
18
53
60
13
52
52
28
58
118
118
32
6
42
59
63
88
43
43
87
41
28
43
37
106
46
33
94
10
51
18
38
68
19
44
55
134
95
13
23
18
47
64 '.
29
34
19
56
57
87
33 V,
38
69
33
83
61
47
52
20
51
55 74
6
7
36
57
25
33
49
30
29
64
8
39
35 '
72
20
18
24
26
Rl
47
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
NEW YORK (AP)
Slocks Higher; coppers and
oils advance.
Bonds Mixed; governments
decline.
Cotton Irregular: hedging
and commission bouse demand,
Chicago:
Wheat Narrowly Irregular;
mixed trade sentiment.
Corn Steady to weak; light
trade.
Oats Steady to easier; light
trade.
Soybeans Lower; late liqui
dation.
Hogs Steady to 25 cents low
er, top S21.25 very sparingly.
Cattle Slaughter steers steady
U weak; top $27.
LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND (AP) - (USDA1-
Cattle salable 100; market mod
erately active, steady; one load
choice 1,293 lb fed steers 25.50;
utility slaughter cows 17.00-19.00;
canners and cutters 14.50-17.00.
Calves salable 25; market about
steady; choice vealers 27.00-29.00;
good 26.00-27.00.
Hogs salable 100; butchers most
ly 50 cents lower; U. S. No. 1 and
2 grade butchers 23.00 - 23.50,
mixed grade lots 22.00-22.75.
Sheep salable 250; market about
steady; good slaughter lambs at
19.00-19.50; common and medium
lightweight feeders 14.00 - 17.00;
cull to good slaughter ewes 3.00-6.50.
STOCKTON (UPI - FSMNS) -
Livestock:
Cattle salable 25. Market untest
ed.
Calves salable none.
Hogs salable 25. Not enough to
test prices.
Sheep salable none.
CHICAGO (AP) USD A Hogs
5,500; butchers steady to mostly
25 lower; 1-3 200-225 lb butchers
20.00-20.25 a few lots 1-2 these
weights 20.25-20.65; a lot Is 210
lbs uniform in weight and grade
20.75; 30 head lot selected Is 220
lbs to 21.25; 2-3 230-270 lbs scarce
at 20.25 to mostly 20.50; mixed
grade 180-195 lbs unevenly 19.00
20.00; mixed grade 400-500 lb sows
18.00-19.00; most 300-400 lbs 19.00-
20.00.
Cattle 1,000; calves 100; steers
few loads and a lot good and
choice 1.000-1.300 lb steers 24.50
27.00: a few standard and low
good 23.00-24.25; a small lot utili
ty and standard Holstein steers
22.00; several lots good and low
choice 800-925 lb heifers 23.50-
25.00: utility and commercial
cows 18.00-20.50: canners and cut
ters 15.75-19.00: a few light weight
canners down to 15.00; utility and
commercial bulls 21.50-24.00: s
few good heavy bulls 21.00-22.00
good and choice vealers 29.00
32.00; utility and standard 19.00
29.00; culls down to 12.00; several
loads largely good 756-950 lb feed
er steers 24.60-25.60.
Sheep 1,000: fully steady on all
classes; good to prime spring
lambs 73 - 98 lbs 22.00 - 25.50; cull
and utility 17.50 - 21.00; cull to
choice slaughter ewes 5.00-7.50.
JAY SORSETH
Photo by Bennett
City Planning
Street Dance
LAKEVIEW There will be danc
ing in the streets of Lakeview on
the evening of Saturday, August
23, and Jupe Pluvius has been is
sued orders to withhold his activi
ties so that nothing will dampen
the merriment of the local folk
who are getting into the spirit of
the coming Lake County Roundup
and Fair.
Headed by Jay Sorseth, the
merchants committee of the Lake
County Chamber of Commerce
has arranged for roping off the
block between Center -and First
on E Street South. There will be
no charge and music is to be
furnished by a local pick-up band.
The hours are from 9 to 12.
As a feature attraction there
will be a demonstration of square
dancing by the Timber Twirlers
at 9 p.m.
Masons Hold i
Crater Meet
Masonic bodies of 11 states and
Canada, with 285 members repre
senting 87 lodges, gathered re
cently at Crater Lake National
Park to put on degree work for
California and Oregon candidates
and the first and second sections
of the Oregon degree.
Highland Park Lodge, No. 382,
Los Angeles, put on the work for
a California candidate Robert Sim
monds Jr., whose father, Robert
Simmonds Sr., is a member of
the same lodge. The senior Sim
monds is a former resident of
Klamath Falls and served as wor
shipful master of Crater Lake
Lodge, No. 211, this city wnen it
was instituted in 1948.
Also present among other Ma
sonic dignitaries were Ernest Wal-
lin, master of Crater Lake Lodge
which put on the first section of
the Oregon degree, and Paul Kin
kaid. master of the Klamath Falls
lodge which put on the second
section.
George Vlahos. son of Gus Via
hos, Klamath Falls, received the
master Mason degree during the
ceremonies.
KF Man Dies
In Portland
Archie Patterson, about 48, res
ident of Klamath Falls for several
years died August 20 at the Vet
erans Hospital, Portland, where he
had been a patient for some time.
Funeral services will be held
at 2:30 p.m. Friday, August 22,
at the A. J. Rose and Son, Funer
al Home, Southeast Sixth and Al
der Street, Portland.
He was a veteran of World War
II, serving overseas. He had never
married.
Survivors Include his mother
Mrs. Minnie Patterson, Klamath
Falls; two brothers, lvie Patter
son, Salt Lake City, and John
Patterson Jr., Klamath Falls; also
three sisters, Mrs. Chnrlese Carr,
Manhattan Beach, California, Mrs
Herman Langjahr, Anaheim, Cali
fornia, and Mrs. Russell Weber,
Mollala.
Mr. Patterson had been em
ployed for many years by the
Great Northern Railway.
Council Holding
Lumberjack Fete
McCLOUD The McCloud Com
munity Recreation Council is hold
ing its Eighth Lumberjack Fiesta
this weekend. August 23 and 24.
The evening of August 22 will be
starting time for the event with
a preview showing of the aqua
cade at the McCloud swimming
pool. Following this main attrac
tion will be teen-agers dance with
music by Curtis Baker and his
Rock n Rollers.
The full program of the fiesta
will get under way at 2 p.m.
Saturday with a carnival, horse
show, hole-in-one golfer's contest,
gem and mineral show, flower and
hobby show, Little League base
ball game, junior boxing contest
and a continuous operation of the
miniature railroad; a major at
traction for young and old alike.
The aquacade, a full scale pre
cision water ballet, features more
than 30 lovely young mermaids
and consists of 12 numbers. Eu
gene Mason is coach and director.
Following the aquacade will be
the Monte Carlo Ball. Music is to
be by the Hottentots. This band.
led by Sam Mazzei, has played for
all previous fiesta dances.
Sunday s program will be much
the same with the exception of
drawings for 10 prizes.
Visitors are reminded of the fact
that the elevation of McCloud is
near the 3,300 foot mark and
comfortable, cool temperatures
may be expected, Al Morgan, com
mittee chairman, said.
GRAINS
PORTLAND (AP) Coarse
grains, 15-day shipment, duik,
coast delivery: Oats No. 2, 38 lb
white 48.50-49.00. Barley No. 2, 45
lb western 46.50-47.00. Corn No. 2,
yellow, eastern shipment 60.75-61.25.
Wheat (bid) to, arrive market,
basis No. 1 bulk delivered coast:
Soft White 1.94; Soft White (hard
appl.) 1.94; White Club 1.94.
lied Red winter: uroinary i.m:
10 per cent 1.94; 11 per cent 1.95;
12 per cent 1.95.
Hard White Baarl: 12 per cent
2.10.
Car receipts: Wheat 174; barley
39; flour 28: corn 3; oats 3; mill
feed 9.
POTATOES
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI-FSMNS)
Potatoes:
Round reds per lug San Mateo
County 2.00-2.50.
LOS ANGELES (UPI-FSMNS)
No trading In Oregon potatoes today.
CHICAGO (AP) Potatoes ar
rivals 73; on track 188; total U. S.
shipments 337; russets slightly
weaker: others about steady:
Washington Russets 3.20-3.25;
Washington Long Whites 2.65; Ida
ho Oregon Russets 3.10-3.15: Idaho
Oregon Long Whites 2.75: Wiscon
sin Round Reds 2 10; California
Bakers 3 75-3 85; Minnesota Rus
sets 2.25.
CHICAGO (AP) Wheat No 2
mixed 1.79. Corn No. 2 yellow
1.34: No. 3 yellow 1.31-34; No.
4 yellow 1.31-32. Oats No. 1 ex
tra heavy white 65-66; No. 1
white 65. No soybeans.
Soybean oil 910; soybean meal
57.50-58.00.
Barley: malting choice 1.20-1.40;
feed 94-1.05.
- - I - . .
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EUGENE M. HAMMOND
Eugene M. Hammond Dies;
Basin Resident Since '86
Eugene (Gene) Hammond, 86, a
native of Iowa, and a resident of
the Klamath Basin since 1886, died
in Grenada, California, at the home
of his only son William Hammond,
on August 20. The family home is
on the Mcrrill-Malin Highway.
Mr. Hammond devoted his life
time to livestock raising and ranch
ing and to interest in the progress
of the Klamath country. He came
to Portland from San Francisco by
boat, overland to Klamath County
and to Merrill where he homestead-
WILL SIGN TREATY
ZURICH, Switzerland (UPD
France and the United Arab Re
public will sign a treaty Friday
calling for resumption of normal
economic and cultural relations,
the French consulate general an
nounced Wednesday.
Teamos, Truck Industry
Mediators Still Apart
SAN DIEGO (UPI) Team- the Oregon border and into Nev-
MARKED FOR SALE .
McCLOUD - About 15 million
board feet of timber is being
cruised and marked for sale near
SlaRger Camp at Belnap Srpings.
east of McCloud Dave Scott, assis
tant U.Mh ranger, said that most
of the timber is white fir and the
stand also contains some pondero
sa and sugar pine and ineensc
cedar. The sale is presently sched
uled to be made by midsummer
Of 1959
CHICAGO (AP) The grain
futures market was draggy again
todav and prices steady to easier
most of the time on the Uoard oi
Trade.
September corn was under the
heaviest pressure and was off well
over a cent a bushel at times
while other price shifts generally
held within fractions.
Trade was slow and dealers
awaited some indication of a mar
ket trend before reinstating or li
auidating present positions.
Carlot grain receipts in Chicago
were estimated at: wheat 6a cars,
corn 220, oats 21, rye 4, barley 19
and soybeans 3.
Liquidation of soybeans gained
speed in the final few minutes of
trading and prices slipped from
major fractions to more than
cent.
At the close, wheat was cent
a bushel lower to higher, Sep
tember Jl.82: corn lower to
higher, September $1.26lk; oats
unchanged to lower, September
rye unchanged to high
er, September $1.21; soybeans i
m lower, September $2.22'-;
lard unchanged to 10 cents a hun
dred pounds lower, September
$12.67. J
sters and trucking industry rep
resentatives were reported as far
apart as ever today in talks to
end a 10-day strike lockout of
common carrier freight haulage
in the West.
Spokesmen for the Western Con
ference of Teamsters and the
California Trucking Association
met Wednesday in "exploratory"
sessions but broke up with no
progress reported.
Federal mediators scheduled
new meetings today in hopes of
finding a solution to the dispute
which has tied up three quarters
of the shipments west of Chicago.
The lockout, called Aug. 11 by
the CTA when members of Team
sters Council No. 38 of Sacramen
to struck, has idled an estimated
100,000 union members in 11 west
ern states.
Council 38, representing Team
sters from Bakersfield, Calif., to
ada, walked off the job in protest
over a master contract negotiated
last May 27 between the trucking
association and the Western Con
ference of Teamsters.
Members of the striking council
claimed they never ratified the
master pact and therefore were
not bound by its provisions which
provided for pay raises of 10-cents
hourly over a three-year period
The CTA contended that the
master contract was in force and
one member of the organization
was a strike against all.
A lockout was called
Still pending is a decision by
the state Department of Employ
ment on whether thousands of
California Teamsters will be eli
gible for unemployment insurance.
it tne Department ot employ
ment should rule that the drivers
are not eligible for benefits, the
CTA would be in a better position
to maintain its stand, members
of the association said
Oregon Weather
Western Oregon Partly cloudy
through Friday. Scattered after
noon and evening thunder showers
with locally strong gusty winds.
Mostly cloudy nights and morn
ines along coast. High Friday 85-
95 with 65-75 along coast. Low
Thursday night 50-60. Winds along
coast north to northwest 5-15 miles
hour except increasing on
south coast in afternoons to 15-25,
occasionally 20-30.
Eastern Oregon Partly cloudy
through Friday. Scattered after
noon and evening thundershowers
with local strong gusty winds. Not
quite so warm Friday. High 90
98 in north and 80-90 in south. Low
Thursday night 50-55.
Baker and vicinity Partly
sunny Friday with scattered after
noon and evening thunderstorms
mostly along the Cascades. Highs
85-90. Low Thursday night 48-53.
Grants Pass and vicinity
Partly sunny Friday with scat
tered afternoon and evening thun
derstorms. High near 90. Low
Thursday night 58-63.
Northern Oregon Beaches
Night and morning fog and low
clouds. Sunny Jjnday atternoon.
Temperature range 54-70. Beach
winds northwest 5-15 miles an
hour.
Loggers Fire Weather Contin
ued high fire danger West and Cen
tral Oregon through Friday. Scat
tered afternoon and evening light
ning with gusty winds vicinity of
storms. Lowest humidities west of
Cascades near 30 per cent.
ed. He used a horse-drawn scrap
er to help dig the canal that takes
water today to the south section of
Klamath County, taking his pay in
water for his own land.
He had served for many years
as president and director of the
Klamath Productive Credit As
sociation, as president of the Klam
ath Irrigation District and the
early day Van Brimmer Ditch
Company. He also helped to or
ganize the Merrill Volunteer Fire
Department.
Mr. -Hammond is survived by the
widow, Mrs. Mary Louisa Colwell
Hammond, Merrill; a son, William
(Bill) Hammond of Grenada; four
grandchildren, John P. Hammond
of Grenada. James E. Hammond,
Merrill, Mary Walker, Merrill, Bet
ty Mae Hammond, Grenada; five
great-grandsons, and a niece, Mae
Manning-of Watsonville, California.
Funeral services will be held in
St. Augustine's Church, Merrill,
Saturday morning, August 23, time
to be announced later by O'Hair's
Memorial Chapel. Recitation of the
Rosary will be Friday, August 22,
in O'Hair's Memorial Chapel. Final
rites and interment will be in Mt.
Calvary Cemetery, Klamath Falls.
Fire Activity
Peak Reached
After reachine'the season's peak
of activity in the 24-hour period
ended at 9 a.m. weonesoay,
crews of the Klamath Forest Pro
tective Association had relatively
few fires to deal with during the
day following.
Late Wednesday morning, two
fires west of Klamath Falls were
reported to the KFPA. One was
on the Jackson-Klamath County
line, just west of Parker Moun
tain. The other, on the Copco road
west of Grizzly Mountain, was
handled by a Weyerhaeuser Tim
ber Company Camp Four crew.
Wednesday afternoon, KFPA
crews brought a fire north of Wey
erhaeuser Camp Six, near Klipple
Lake, under control.
Thursday morning, a crew from
the Yamsay Ranch, at the head of
the Williamson River, went to
work on another fire reported to
the KFPA, this one in the Kings
Cabin area.
These four fires were all caused
by lightning, and all involved sin
gle trees.
The KFPA reports that one of
its crews and another from Wey
erhaeuser Camp Six spent hours
last night in the canyon of the
north fork of the Sprague River
looking in vain for two fires that
had been reported. Not only did
they not find the fires then, but
this morning there was no smoke
visible over the area.
The KFPA also reports that the
total number of fires it has han
dled this season is now 77. Of
these, only nine were man-caused
Furthermore, only one fire the
first of the season has been of
class B (over V acre) magnitude.
That first fire covered five acres.
V ' I
iLiuk l&m J
DEPUTY RETURNS
Deputy Sheriff Dale Mattoon re
turned to Klamath rails wednes
day afternoon with Glen Charles
Hatch, 41, Chiloquin, wanted here
on a charge of forgery. Hatch,
who was arrested in Sacramento,
was alleged to have forged the
name of Ora Summers, a rancher,
to a $125 check on or about Jan
uary 26.
Hit-Run Hearing
Held In Dorris
NEIL HURLEY
Hurley Given
UF-RC Post
Neil Hurley, local general insur
ance ager-t, has been named chair
man of the public service division
for this year's United Fund - Red
Cross campaign, it was announced
today by Dick Laudenschlager,
campaign chairman.
Such business organizations as
banks, finance offices, insurance
and real estate agencies, hotels,
the press, radio, printing shops,
cleaners and laundries lau wunin
the public service group. Hurley
will name unit chairmen shortly
for each of the above groups.
Hurley came to Klamath falls
in 1946 from California, and for
the past two years has been as
sociated with the Driscoll and
Padgett insurance agency. He is
married and has lour children,
two boys and two girls. He is a
member of the BPOE and an offi
cer in the Knights of Columbus.
Cafe Burglar
Overlooks Money
A burglar, possibly an amateur.
entered the Victory Cafe at 1343
South Sixth Street but overlooked
more money than he took, city po
lice reported Thursday.
The burglar forced open" a back
door sometime Tuesday night or
Wednesday, after breaking open a
window that stuck when he tried
to raise it. Missing was a type
writer, a carton of cigarettes, two
cartons of gum, and $5 to $10
in coin.
What the burglar missed, cafe
operator W. W. Schuldheise told
police, was $33 in tight, easily-
carried rolls of nickles.
DORRIS Norman Dale Cox, of
65 Pine Street, Klamath Falls, was
bound over to Siskiyou County
Superior Court on a charge of
failure to stop and render aid, a
felony, at a preliminary hearing
held before Judge Les Chase of
Dorris Judicial Court Wednesday.
Air Force S. Sgt. Mar
vin C. Nicholson, 79 Pine Street,
who is attached to Kmgsley Field,
appeared against Cox. The ser
geant said that on the early morn
ing of June 16, 1957, Cox was
driving Nicholson's 1957 Ford
sedan from Weed to Klamath
Falls, with Nicholson as a passen
ger. Just south of Juniper Lodge
on Highway 97, according to Ni
cholson, Cox wrecked and demol
ished the car and. leaving Nichol
son unconscious in a ditch beside
the road, hitched a ride into
Klamath Falls.
Judge Chase continued Coxs
bail at $1,000. Cox was taken to
the Siskiyou County Jail in Yreka.
BRUSH FIRE
DUNSMUIR The U.S. Forest
Service charged John Hansen, 68,
a transient, with being responsible
for a brush fire which burned about
one fourth acre near Mott last
week. Hansen was tried in Duns
muir Justice Court on Monday and
sentenced to 10 days in the Siskiyou
County Jail.
BOUND OVER
DORRIS Jessie Lee Harrington.
Dorris, charged with the theft of
a cow and a calf, was bound over
to the Superior Court Wednesday
by Judge Les Chase after a pre
liminary hearing in the Doris Ju
dicial Court. Jhe complaint had
Deen tiled Dy Mrs. Alary E
Noakes, Macdoel, who claimed
ir.ai Harrington had stolen a
4-year-old Hereford cow and
3 months old Hereford calf, both
belonging to her. Judge Chase
dropped the $5,000 bail and re
leased Harrington on his own recognizance.
Woman Resting
After Accident
Mrs. K. A. Moore, 2045 Lerojr
Street, was reported resting com
fortably in Klamath Valley Hospi
tal Thursday following an auto
mobile accident Wednesday noon.
City police reported that the
brakes failed on the car Mrs.
Moore was moving out of her
driveway. The car rolled a block
and a half down the street, cross
ing Pacific Terrace, and crashed
into a tree on the left side of
Leroy Street.
Officers said the car was badly
damaged in front. Mrs. Moore was
given initial treatment in her
home then taken to Klamath Val
ley Hospital where she was given
X-ray examinations.
Hospital attendants said the ex
tent of her injuries had not been
determined Thursday morning.
Weather Table
Max. Mfn. Prep,
Baker 91 62
Bend 85 53
Eugene 91 58
Lakeview 80 52
Medford 94 59
Newport 65 45
North Bend 64 53
Pendleton ' 95 69
Portland 92 63
Redmond 90 60
Roseburg 88 59
Salem 94 59
BARN TAKES BEATING
The barn belonging to Homer
Fields, who lives five miles north
east of Merrill, took a severe beat
ing in last evening's storm, which
brought rain, lightning and
strong wind to the area. The storm
blew the roof off the barn about
6 p.m. Later it was discovered that
the rest of the barn had been
moved slightly off its foundations.
, MEN ARRESTED
Two ' Merrill men were ar
rested Wednesday night on dis
orderly conduct charges following
a fist fight on Main street in Mer
rill, state police said. Lodged in
the county jail were James David
Hughes, 24, 151 East Front Street,
and Rodney Richard Lyon, 22,
Merrill. Officers said the pair was
causing a disturbance and using
profane language.
GLADS
75-.. Vt Dor.
Cash & Carry
SUBURBAN
FLOWER
3614 So. 6th TU 4-8188
GUESTS INVITED
WEED Siskiyou County Peace
Officer Association members will
Invite guests for the picnic barbe
cue and dance to be held Saturday
night August 23 at Pleasure Park
in Etna. The picnic will begin at
6 o'clock and the barlvcue supper
will be served at 8. George Dill-
man, Etna constable, Is chairman the basement floor was damaged
BURNED FLOOR
When W. J. Easter arrived at
the California Cash Grocery Store,
W.iO California Avenue, to open up
shortly alter 7 o'clock Thursday
morning, he saw enough smoke
swirling about inside that he de
cided the city firenvn should go in
first. Firemen discovered the
source of the smoke in the base
ment of the store where part of
the floor was burning for reasons
as yet unexplained. Only part of
of the event and will oversee the hut the smoke did some harm to
preparations. I the stock upstairs.
FINAL CONNECTION
of a 1,300-foot pipeline connecting a million gallon reservoir
north of Washburn Way with south suburban water mains was completed Wednesday
by Oregon Water Corporation crews. Twelve-inch asbestos cement pipe was used for
the first lime in the city water system. The line is designed to increase water pressure
along Altamont Drive and at the airport and Klngsley Field and will be extended to
Summers Lane this fall. Oregon Water crews under foreman Ralph Nelson laid the
pipe, and trenching and backfilling was done lay S. A. of Klamath Falls. The
total project is expected to cost $7,000.
WI-NE-MA ELEVATORS. INC.
Marketing For Your Advantage!
NOW IN 5 LOCATIONS
TO SERVE YOU!
We Now Have a Big, New Elevator at
DAIRY. OREGON
as well as:
O STRONGHOLD O TULELAKE
o MALONE O WESTSIDE
Government Approved and Bonded!
o