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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1958)
PAGE 4 A HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7. 1958 MARKETS Editor's Note: The market re port lilted below ere yeter daj'e market, not today', aid are carried a a terrlce to those subscribers la early de livery zone which make publi cation ol dally market Impot ilble within the route schedule. STOCKS WALL STREET NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market widened its gains in active trading late this afternoon. Volume for the day was estimat ed at 3.600.000 shares 'compared with 3,830.000 rriday. Key stocks were ahead fractions to about 2 points. Selected issues made bigger gams. Jlagma jumped about 5 points Anaconda, Phelps Dodge and la ternational Nickel were up 2 better. American Telephone added around 2 points. U.S. Steel rose more than a point. Jones c Mc Laughlin and Crucible Steel were 1-point gainers. Du Pont was ahead about 2 and Air Reduction better than a point. Other gains of about a point were made by General Motors, Chrysler, American Motors, Cat erpillar, Baltimore & Ohio, Royal Dutch, Gulf Oil and Lorillard. U.S. Gypsum stepped ahead more than 2 points. U.S. government bonds rebound ed sharply. NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation Alaska Juneau Allied Chemical Allis Chalmers Alcoa American Airlines American Cyanamide American Motors American Smelting American Tel & Tel American Tobacco American Viscose Anaconda Copper Armco Steel Atchison Railroad Bendix Aviation Bethlehem Steel Boeing Airplane Co. Borden Co. Borg Warner Burroughs Corp. California Packing Canadian Pacific Caterpillar Tractor Celanese Corporation Chrysler Corporation Consolidated Copper Consolidated Edison Continental Can Crown Zellerbach Douglas Aircraft Dow Chemical Du Pont De Nemours Eastman Kodak El Paso NG Emerson Radio Firestone Tire Ford Motor General Dynamics General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pac Cp. Goodyear Tire Great Northern Great West. Sugar International Nickel International Paper International T & T Johns Manville Kaiser Aluminum Kennecott Copper Libby, McNeill k Libby Lockheed Aircraft Loew's Incorporated Montgomery Ward National Cash Reg. New York Central Northern Pacific Pacific American Fish Pacific Gas & Electric Pacific Tel & Tel Pan American Airways Penney (J.C.) Co. Pennsylvania R.R. Pepsi Cola Co. Philco Corp. Phillips Pel. Polaroid Puget Sound P & L Radio Corp. of Amer. Rayonier 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 Calilornia Standard Oil N. J Studebaker Packard Sunray Sunshine Mining Swift & Company Texaco Thompson Products Transameriea Corporation Twentieth Century Fox Union Oil Company United Air Lines United Aircraft United Corporation United States Plywood United States Smelting United States Steel Walgreen Stores Warner Pictures Western Auto Supply Western Union Tel. W'ostinghouse Air Brake W'eslinghouse Electric Woolworth Company 14 H 3 '., fl.i '2 28 i ilO i 25 SI '.2 20 s. 48 192 (K) H 34 5!) , 6 25 V, 58 j 4!) 48 ', 73 H 37 38 H 54 , 30 i 81 , 21 V, 57 14 . 55 53 ' 4 55 , 59 68 I. Kill 126 33 9 li 102 47 : 58 67 , 68 U 49 'i 44 44 H 48 ,. 29 ' 88 -si 111 2 47 i 44 40 k 101 13 51 20 '4 39 ' 71 23 li 51 ' 13 U 57 139 'i 21 98 4 16 4 24 21 47 '4 71 2 211 37 " '50 . 62 h 65 -li 88 34 'i 40 U 69 33 ' so , 49 56 211 ; 55 , 58 i 9 26 8 34 36 ' 77 H 57 26 t 33 47 , 31 61 8 38 38 81 39 22 H 47 25 Dji, JJn, 48 H POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO (UPI FSMNSi Potatoes: Russets U S 1A 2-inth minimum 100 lbs Deschutes 2 50-2 75. LOS ANGELES (1 PI FSMNS' Potato market about steady. Russets U S 1A inn lbs Klamath J23, one mark 2 75: Deschutesiset by an arsonist U.S.1A 2 50. CHICAGO (APi-rntatoos. ar rivals 259; on track 301; total U S shipments for Friday 375; Satur day 331; Sunday 2; car lot tiaik sales: Idaho Russets 3 15 325 Idaho Bakers 3 40-3 50. VA iscuism Round Reds 1 .; .Minnesota North Dakota Red River Valley I'ontiac.s 1.85-319. and FINANCE LIVESTOCK STOCKTON (UPD-FSMNS Livestock: Cattle salable 2.000. High-good to mostly choice 785 lb fed heif ers 25.35. Utility cows 18-19, can ners and cutters 14 50-18. Utility and commercial 1,210 1.500 lb bulls 23-25. Around 1,200 lb slaughter bulls 23-24. Good and choice 700-1.000 lb feeder steers 25.50-23. High - choice 655 lb steers 30.75. medium steers 700 800 lb 24-24.50. Good and choice 650-700 lb stocker and feeder heif ers 24-25. Calves salable 300. Good and choice 350-600 lb stock steer calves 29-31.50, common 450 lbs 22.5a Good and choice heifer stock calves 28-29. Hogs salable 700. No. 1, 2 and 3 190-240 lb barrows and gilts 21. No. 1 to 3 sows 300-650 lbs 16.50 18. Good and choice 50-120 lb feeder pigs 22-30. Sheep salable 800. Good to most ly choice wooled and shorn or slaughter lambs 21-22. PORTLAND (API (USDAt Cattle salable 1.650; early sales ted steers weak to 2a lower; heif ers steady; cows not fully estab lished; load of average choice 1.075 lb Idaho fed steers 27.50; several loads low to average choice 27.00-28.50; mixed good and choice steers 26.00-26.50; good fed steers 25.00-25.75; standard 23.50 24.50; two truck lots choice fed heifers 26.50; good fed heifers 2-f.50-25.50; utility cows 20.00; can- ners and cutters 14.50-16.00; heavy cutters 17.50; light canners down to 12.00; utility bulls 23.00-24.00. Calves salable 250; early sales steady; choice vcalcrs 30.00-32.00 good 27.00-29.00; cull and utility calves and vealers 15.00-21.00. Hogs salable 1,200; steady; U.S. No. 1 and 2 grade butchers 21.50- 22.00; mixed grade lots 21.00- 21.50: heavier and lighter butch ers 20.50-21.00; mixed grade sows 300 to 550 lbs 17.00-20.00. Sheep salable 2,250; steady; choice slaughter lambs 20.50-20.75: good slaughter Iambs 19.00-20.00; good and choice feeders 17.00- 19.00; cull to good slaughter ewes 3.00-7.50. CHICAGO (API IUSDAI Hogs 8.000; good shipping outlet; 1-3 mostly 2-3 mixed grade 195-235 lb butchers 19.75-19.90; several hundred Is and mixed grade 1-2 200-225 lbs 20.00-20.25; a 40-hcad lot Is 20.35; a few lots 3s 200-230 lbs as low as 19.50; 2-3 240-280 lbs 19.50-19.73: including a double deck 2s 250 lbs at 19.75: a lot 3s 290 lbs 19.25; a small volume mixed grade 180-195 lbs 19.25- 19.85; mixed grade 300-400 lbs sows 18.50-19.23; most 400-50O lbs 17.50-18.50; small lots up to 550 lbs down lo 17.00. Cattle 19.000; calves 100: steers unevenly steady to 50 or more higher; several loads prime around 1.300-1,350 lb slaughter sicers zh.7.vz.u: bum choice and prime 26.25-28.00; a few prime loaas 28.25-28.50; load lots good and mixed good and choice steers 24. 73-26.00; a few loads high choice and prime heifers 27.00-27.25: bulk good to high choice 24.50-28.75; utility and commercial 18.25-21.00; canners and cutters 15.50-18.50; utility and commercial hulls 22.00- 24.00; most good vealers 29.00 31.00; utility and standard 20.00 29.00; culls 15.00-10.O0: a part load good stock steer calves 28 00: 70 head medium and good around 750 lb stock steers 25.75. Sheep 2.000: all slaughter class es fully steady: good and choice wooled slaughter lambs 21.00- 24.25: a few lots high choice and prime 80-110 lbs 24 50-25.00; cull and utility 14.00-20.00: good and limca shorn lambs No 1 and 2 pelts 20.50-23 50; a load high choice and prime 90 lbs No 1 and pelts 24.25: yearlings scarce; 1 to choice slaughter ewes 5 00-8.00. GRAINS PORTLAND (API Coarse grains, 15-day shipment, bulk, coast delivery: Oats, No.2, 38 lb white 49 .00-49 50 Rarley. No.2. 43-lb B.W 50(H) Corn. No.2. E.Y. sh p't 58.511-57 (HI Wheat bid to arrive market. 843iihasis No. 1 bulk delivered coast: Solt White 2.00 2.00 2 0(1 2.00 2 IH) 2 1)0 2 00 2.00 White Club Hard Red Winter: Ordinary 10 per cent It per cent 12 per cent Hard While Baart: Ordinary in per cent 12 per cent . 2.10 Car receipts: Wheat 43; barley 8: flour 12: corn 6; oats 4; mill feed 3 Suspect Arson In Portland PORTLAND (APKires struck four Portland firms this weekend causing more than $33,000 dam age, ciiy u e ouinais ueneved the bla?cs were sol deliberately. There have been others believed set in recent days. A major Sunday nisht blare sent flames leaping 100 feet into the air as it destroyed a two-story wooden structure bounded bv SE 8th. 9th. Taylor and Salmon streets. City Commissioner Sianley W Earl said it almost certainly was The building was owned bv the Joseph E L.insherg rst.itc and used to bouse machinery. The loss cniiiic bimks available will be cir was estimated by the Fire Bureau Uul.-itcd at the school. This library at HS.tM). ( being promoted by the Ndtion.il Firemen saved an arliointrii; i s!-rii 0 Inundation that has sent building containing Ihe Hardhoardjlri'iin.' science teachers i n t 1 Processing Co bv sie.idily spt.ty mg wun wairr. ine names r ed down neaihy .wer hues blacking nut stitg m at 00 ' - fv te3..'J,1Tl( , , iifuiHiMi 1 Jujm, , 1, , iiimiimiiiii THE NEW 1959 RAMBLER is now being displayed on the showroom floor at ' Eecles Motors, 606 South Sixth Street. Here Julian Eccles, owner, and H. B. (Ross) Rawson, sales manager, are shown standing by the 1959 model. This is the four-door station wagon model. Rambler has also added a new two-door station wagon. Both models are powered by an economical six-cylinder L-head engine developing 90 horsepower. Oregon Governor Holmes Behind Route Development The long-standing effort to de velop a direct route from U.S. 40 through Southern Oregon to the coast was given some support by Governor Holmes on his visit here last week. Asked by County Judge Char lie Mack about his stand on the proposal. Holmes was quoted, "I'll get right on it. Advocates in Southern Oregon particularly in Lake and Klamath counties, long have sought a route cutting through Northern Nevada and Southern Oregon. This would eliminate the need for travelers to dip into California before heading east from here or arriving here irom ine east. The proposed route' has been Local Hunter Still Critical Leon James Richardson. 35. head of the appliance department of the local Montgomery Ward slore' . was SIIM m serious condi . on . '". 1 viencc Ilospita at Portland this morning, according lo a report from the Associated Press bureau at Portland. Richardson was flown from Lakeview to Portland Monday by Mercy r light in order that he might have the care of specialists. He was shot through the chest by a 270 caliber rifle at a distance of some 300 yards late Sunday fternoon, according to Lake Coun ty Sheriff Tom Elliott. The bullet went completely through his bodv. struck a rock, ricocheted and fragments of the rock caused mi nor head injuries to Mrs. Clain Randolph who, with her husband. was a member of Richardson'; hunting parly. The accident oc curred about 5:10 p.m. near Bow ers Creek, northwest of Lakeview. Mrs. Richardson is with her hus band in Portland and their son. Norman Leon Richardson, who had iccompanied his father on the decl aiming trip has returned to Klam- ith falls. He is with Mrs. Richard son's sister. Sherilf Elliott and Lake County District Attorney Julian Herndon are investigating the circum stances surrounding the shooting. I lie shot was lucd bv Burt Moore 46. a Lakcvievv timber faller. who was with another hunting party. according 10 onicers Interpretation Of Bible Slated Modern day interpretation of the iMiile will De considered Wednes day evening when Rev. James Overdorlf ol St. Andrew's Church school will be guest speaker at the Klamath Unitarian Fellowship. Rev. Overdorff's topic will be "20th Century Understanding of an Old Hook." A discussion period will follow the lecture. The program will be at 8 p.m. Wednesday, at the Klamath Art Center in the Mountain View hous ing area. Colfee will he served at 7 30. The public is cordially in vited COf C Manager Gets Post Again R. Frank Tucker, manager ol the Klamath County Chamber of Commerce. as elected to a fourth term as secretary-treasurer of the Oregon Chamber Executives at Pendleton over the weekend. President of the group for the coming year is Fred Hrenne. man ager of the Eugene Chamber ol Commerce lor the past 19 vears. Other ollicers are Fred Schneider ot La Grande, first ice president, and Bulord Wilkerson of Tilla mook, second vice president. APPLICATION ACCEPTED MOUNT SHASrX-Mount Shas ta llith School 1 - uhli has announced that his ap plication lor the Traveling lli;h School Science Library has been new branch oltice lor Mount Shas accepted, and 2U0 of the best sn it.i about (Vtober l'ii It will he i ! In : ""pen m.it svan le.uficrs will j again visit Mount Shasta during 1 I'CO d o 00 I called the "Winncmucca-to-the-Sea Highway.'" Backers of the proposal have asked the State Highway Commis sion for assistance. This plea would have the governor's support, Holmes said. The governor's interest was heightened by a visit to Lake Coun ty during his tour of this area. At about the same time, Fran cis Landrum, chairman of the Roads and Highways Committee of the Klamath County Chamber of Commerce, sent a new appeal to ine state Highway Commission ask. ing, once again, for state finan cial aid to help complete a sec tion of the proposed highway from Adei, Lake County, to the Nevada border. Points Landrum cited in his aD- peal: 1. No east-west continuity Dres- enuy exists Between southern Ore gon and the east. 2. A tremendous amount of traf fic now flows between those ooinls hut must detour either by way of Burns or rieno. 3. The present status of the road is a heavy financial burden on low populated Lake County, which sim ply doesn't have the money to do the joh. 4. Other roads, or example the shland-Lakoview road, have been jointly linanced by federal, state and county funds with success. County Commissioner E. W. Gow- en and Landrum toured the first link (Adei to Nevada border) last week. "It's a bold start made by Lake County." they said, but I s a rough road right now. Stalp aid is necessary, they said. Chester Taylor Dies In Bend CHEMULT - Friends in the Klamath Basin received word of the death October 4 in Bend of Chester Taylor. Services will be held from Niswonger and Winslow In Bend on Wednesday, October 8, at 2 p in. Mr. Taylor was born July 18, 1895, in Lane County on a home stead near what is now the town of Coburg. His parents were early uregon pioneers, lie spent many- years of his life in Klamath Coun ty and worked to bring the rural electrification to the Oliemult and Bend areas. He is survived by the widow, Anna Dell laylor, 1154 Columbia Bend; two brothers, Give of Springfield and Harvey of Ellens burg, Washington: one sister, Mrs. John Sickner of Topaz Lake, N vada. His only son. William M. Taylor, lives in Chemult with the grandchildren, William, Chester, Ernie and Bonnie Jane. Death came after nine days In the St. Charles Hospital in Bend from cardiac trouble. Mr. Taylor had been ill since April of this year. Funeral UIIRINE Funeral services for Kem Uhrine, 66. who died in this citv October 3. 1958. will he held in O'llair's Memorial Chapel Thurs day. October 9, at 3:30 p m. In terment will be made in Klamath Memorial Park. MORTENSEN Funeral services for Rav Leon ard Mortensen. 34. who died at Reno October 3. will be held in O'llair's Memorial Chapel Wed nesday. October 8. 1958. at 10 a.m. Interment will he made in Klam ath Memorial Park. ROBINSON Funeral services lor George Francis Robinson, 70. who died here Octohrr 5. 1958. will be held in O'Hair's Memorial Chapel Thurs day. October 9. at 1:30 p m. In terment will he made in Klamath Memorial Park. NEW BRANCH OFFICE MOUNT SHASTA The Califor nia Division of Highway Patrol h.'.c annmim-eH lhi nivninn nl a W9U South Highway Lieut. A. T Cuminss. lormerlv of Sacramento will be in chaise. Five other no! men tii stationed here, olv.uh one at McCloud reporting intoiiation.il Woodworkers. land It islthis oftice Added travel, and a greater volume due to the Ski Row I on Mt. Shasta, is given lor the mo Injuries Kill Tule Resident TULELAKE - William Best Jameson, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs Frank (Ole Jameson, Tulelake, died October 6 in Yolo General Hospital, Woodland, California. He was injured in an automobile ac cident near Woodland Saturday night, October 4. Details of the wreck arc not known here. Mr. and Mrs. Jameson went to their son's bedside on receiving word of the accident. His parents are ranchers Young Jameson attended elc mentary and high schools here as an outstanding student and was a four-year member of the Califor nia Scholarship Federation, highest high school honorary in the state He was a sophomore at the Uni versity of California at Davis. Survivors, other than his par ents, include grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William E. Best, Riddle, Oregon, and an aunt, Mrs. E. L. Jackson. Riverton, Oregon. Those wishing to may contribute to a scholarship fund in his mem ory. Contributions may be sent to Virgil Barron, Tulelake. Funeral services will be held Thursday, October 9. from O Hair s Memorial Chapel with the Rev. Robert L. Greene, rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, offi ciating. Final rites and interment will be in Klamath Memorial Park. U.S. Workers Hold Meeting National Federation of Federal Employes. Local 704. held a din ner meeting at the Winema Hotel on the evening of October 2. Em ployes of several federal agencies within Ihe Klamath Falls area at tended lo hear J. Irvin Borthick president, make a report on his recent trip to Kansas City, Mis souri, to attend the organization's biennial national convention. The goal of the national conven tion was to set the organization's objectives for the next two years. and to mark an increase in the intensity of the organization's membership campaign now being carried on. Among the subjects discussed in the form of resolutions were: Extension and strengthening of the civil service merit system, pay merit promotions, travel allow ances, and many others. The convention featured ad dresses by high ranking ollicials and leading federal personnel ad ministrators. The buffet-style dinner was fol lowed by a presentation of color slides taken by Borthick, show-in? points ot interest during the trip and of convention activities. Speech Tickets Not Available Tickets for the Neuberger din ner Wednesday night have been sold out, the chancer of com merce announced today. A limited number of 100 tickets was printed for the 6:30 p.m. din ner at the Winema Hotel, with the understanding that the dinner would be limited to a relatively small number. The dinner was planned to honor Sen. Richard L. Neuberger D-Ore) and Thomas B. Walters. Indian bureau management spe cialist, for their work on the Mamath Indian Termination bill passed in the last session of Con gress. W AGE ROOST MOUNT SHASTA Robert D. Kohn. general manager for the Mount Shasta Division of the Ralph L. Smith Lumber Company. has announced that all ol the Mount Sh.ist.i employes will re ceive an hourly wage increase of seven and a half cents. This wage hike is retroactive to September 1. the time when bai gaming on the new contract began. Kohn st.iled th.it this wave increase is in line pa-lwilh Ihe igreement between other lumber cnmp-tnirs and the Inter- a Mihssdi- .ii y 01 u.e vr i. c 111 i.itmr org.inira tion. One hundred laborers :n the Mount MmsI.i Division are ai lecied by the O. rease. Weather Table 1 lao 8n Temps wb717a T United Press International Temperatures and rainfall for 24 hours ending at 4 a.m High Low Rain Albuquerque 71 52 Atlanta 74 48 Bakersfield 77 54 Boise 76 45 Boston 54 43 Brownsville 86 73 Cnicago 74 60 Denver 80 49 Detroit 60 51 El Centro 94 69 Fairbanks 25 7 Fort Worth 79 69 Fresno 77 52 Helena 72 48 Kansas City 83 61 1.08 Los Angeles 76 63 Miami 83 74 .07 Minneapolis 81 63 New Orleans 82 63 New York 56 46 Oakland 70 59 Oklahoma City 73 68 Phoenix 84 67 Pittsburgh 60 40 Red Bluff 78 53 Reno 81 33 Sacramento 74 51 Salt Lake City 82 43 San Diego 77 68 San Francisco 66 55 Seattle 57 5t Spokane ( 64 43 Siockton 75 51 Thermal 94 67 Tucson 79 61 .13 Washington 58 44 California Weather United Press International San Francisco Bay Area: Fair through Wednesday except high fog near coast extending inland in early morning; high today San Francisco 63, Oakland 72, San Mateo 73, San Rafael 75; low to night 50-57; westerly winds 8-16 m.p.h. afternoons. Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Fair through Wednesday; little change in temperature. Sierra Nevada: Fair through Wednesday; little change in tem perature. Sacramento Valley: Fair through Wednesday: little change in temperature: high both days i4-84: low tonight 48-58; gentle variable winds. Northeastern California: Fair through Wednesday except vari. able low clouds on coast: little change in temperature: high to day and low tonight Ukiah 77-58, Santa Rosa 74-42, Napa 75-48: northwest winds 8-16 m.p.h. near coast. TO ATTEND MEET MOUNT SHASTA-R. B. Man- ley, Mount Shasta High School teacher and chairman of the com mittee on moral and spiritual values in school for the northern district of California Teachers As sociation, will attend a state meet ing of the CTA in San Francisco Saturday, October 18. All six state districts of the association will be represented at the all-day discus sion. Use Our Biq Free Open Bible Church Meeting Begins In Klamath Falls The fall conference of the Open Bible Standard Churches, with some 150 ministers and wives, from churches of California, Ore gon and Washington present, opened in Klamath Falls today with the Klamath Temple as host church for the Pacific Coast Con ference. The sessions will con tinue through October 9. The conference is being directed bv the Rev. Theron A. Tousley, Pasadena, divisional superintend ent and president of the Calilornia Open Bible Institute. He has di rected affairs of the Pacific Coast Division for the last seven years. Tuesday evening the conference will be addressed by the Rev. Mil ton Stewart, Lewiston, Idaho. A highlight of the conference will be a missionary pageant Wednesday night when the Rev. Art Hender son, Jamaica, British West In dies, speaker, will be assisted by the Rev. Harvey Klapstein, presi dent of the Standard Bible College, Eugene, one of the first mission aries to Jamaica for the Open Bible Churches. The Women's World Fellowship REV. HARRY STRACHAN REV. THERON A. TOUSLEY esr' ..' ; vt-.f ! TIME IS RUNNING OUT! DAYS LEFT Savings Deposited by Oct. 10th Earn Interest from Oct. 1st DEPOSIT YOUR SAVINGS WHERE THEY EARN 20?b MORE! PER ANNUM PAID SEMI-ANNUALLY All Deposits Insured Up to $10,000 by F.D.I.C. Jhs. iBank OF KLAMATH FALLS South 6th end Klamath Are, Parking Lot or Convenier Krin - will play an important part in th conference with some 100 women expected. Women delegates will meet for a noon luncheon in the Winema Hotel Wednesday. Men will lunch at the Willard. Afternoon services will start at 2 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, evening services at 7:30 p.m. Tues day, Wednesday and Thursday. A youth program is scheduled for Wednesday, and a Sunday School forum Thursday afternoon. The public is invited to attend any or all of the services. The Rev. Harry M. Strachan is pastor of Klamath Temple. Oregon Weather By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Max. Mln. Prep. Baker 70 39 Eugene 71 41 Lakeview 76 Medford 82 45 Newport 63 43 North Bend 62 48 Pendleton 70 50 Portland Airp't .. 64 53 T Redmond 72 34 Roseburg 76 42 Salem 70 49 Eastern Oregon Mostly fair through Wednesday; slightly cool er in south tonight. Highs 62-72; low tonight 30-40 in south, 35-45 in north. Western Oregon Partly cloudy tonight with increasing cloudiness late Wednesday. Highs 64-74; low tonight 42-52. Coastal winds south westerly to northwesterly, 10-20 m.p.h. Baker-La Grande area Partly cloudy to cloudy through Wednes day. Low tonight 30-36; high Wednesday 65-70. Northern Oregon beaches Partly cloudy tonight; increasing cloudiness Wednesday. Temper ature range 40-65. Beach winds southwesterly, 8-18 m.p.h. Grants Pass and vicinity Fair through tonight; increasing cloudi ness Wednesday. Highs 75-80; low tonight 40-45. Fire Weather Fire danger high in interior of Southwest and Central Oregon but with slow moderating trend. Mod erate danger in Northwest Oregon and along coast, with cool weather and occasional showers. DISPUTE When city police were called upon to effect a quieter settlement of the differences outstanding be tween Doshia Clark and Charles Williams, both of 436 Broad Street, in the early hours of Sun day, they reportedly found the two arguing loudly in the 500 block of the same street. The discussion ended on a very quiet note, with the 65-year-old Williams being tak en to the police station, after it was allegedly discovered he was carrying a concealed weapon.