FAGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore.
Friday, August 21, 1059
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
WALL STREET
NEW YORK AP) - The Hock
market closed sharply higher to
day a a late rally pushed some
issues ahead by as much as 6
points.
Volume for the day was esti
mated at 2.300.000 shares against
3,050,000 Wednesday.
Most shares held gains ranging
from fractions to I points or so
as trading headed into the final
hour.
A sharp upturn in steel shaies
touched off the brisk mid - day
rally.
The upturge in steels followed
a statement by Labor Secretary
James P. Mitchell which was in-
tcprctcd by some to mean a swift
steel strike settlement is possible.
Voungstown Sheet & Tube ran
ahead more than 3. Bethlehem
Republic Steel, Jone & Laughlin
and Lukens each picked up
around 2. U.S. Steel added about
1.
Phelps Dodge fell around 1 but
Anaconda rose about 1.
Gains of 2 points or more were
chalked up by Goodrich, Reyn
olds Metals, Alcoa, Polaroid and
Merck.
Caterpillar spurted ahead better
than 3.
Baltimore & Ohio jumped more
than a point while New York Cen
tral and Southern Pacific each
rose around 1.
Government bonds were steady
NEW YORK STOCKS
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Admiral Corporation
A. J. Ind. -.
Allied Chemical
Allis Chalmers
Alcoa
American Airlines
American Can
American Cyanmide ,
American Motors
American Smelting
American Tel fc Tel
American Tobacco .
Armco Steel
Atchison Railroad
Bcndix Aviation
Bethlehem Slcel
Boeing Airplane Co.
Borden Co.
Borg Warner
Burroughs Corp.
California Packing .
Canadian Pacific
Catei pillar Tractor
Celanese Corporation
Chrysler Corporation
Cities Service
Consolidated Edison
Continental Can
Crown Zellerbach
Curliss Wright
Douglas Aircraft
Dow Chemical
Du Pont De Nemours
Eastman' Kodak
El Paso NG '
Emerson Radio
Firestone Tire
Ford Motor
General Dynamics
General Electric
Genural Foods
General Motors
Georgia Pac Cp
Goodyear Tire
Great Northern
Great West. Sugar
Idaho Power
Illinois Cent.
International Nickel
International Paper
International T k T ,,
Johns Manville
Kaiser Aluminum
Kcnnecott Copper
Libby, McNeill & Libby
Lockheed Aircraft
Locw's Incorporated
Montgomery Ward
National Cash Reg,
Now York Central
Northern Pacific
Pacific American Fish
Pacific Gas & Electric
Pacific Tel 6 Tel
Pan American Airways
Penney (J.C.) Co.
Pennsylvania R.R.
Pepsi Cola Co.
Philco Corp.
Phillips Pet. .
.Polaroid
Puget Sound Pi I
Radio Corp of Airier
Rayonier Incorp.
Republic Sleel
Reynolds Metals
Richfield Oil
Safeway Stoics Inc.
St. Regis
Scott Paper Co.
Sears Rochuck & Co.
Shell Oil Co.
Sinclair Oil
Socony Mobil Oil
Southern Pacific
Spcrry Rand
Standard Oil Calif.
Standard Oil N.J.
Studebakcr Packard
Sunray
Sunshine Mining
Swilt & Company
Texaco
Thompson Products
Transamcrica Corp.
Twenticlh Century Fox
Union Oil Company
Union Pacilic
United Air Lines
United Aircralt
United Corporation
United Slates Plywood
United Stales Smelting
United States Steel
Walgrten Stores
Warner Plclurcs
Western Auto Supply
Western Union Tel.
Wedinghouse Air Brake
Weslinghouse Electric
Woolworth Company
19 1.
5
118 4
34 '
107 Vi
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60
44 V
44 4
70 7k
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78 Vt
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265 ,s
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47,
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43 V4
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103
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89
57
. i High Low Rain
LlVeStOCK Albuquerque 83 64
PORTLAND (AP) USDA Atlanta 92 70 1.12
Cattle salable 15; includes 39 Bakersfield 77 54
head load high good and choice; Boise 70 49
810 lb fed heifers steady at 27.25: Boston 92 74 1
6 head at 26.25; small lot good Brownsville 95 74
and choice 1,221 lb steers 27.50: Chicago 91 77
cows steady; canncrs and cutters Denver 88 62
13.00-14. 50; few thin lightweight Detroit 93 . 75
tanners down to 10.00; scattered Fairbanks 61 48 T.
head common to medium feeder Fort Worth 97 75
steers 18'.00-21.00. Fresno 76 53
Calves salable 25; trade slow Helena 69 41 .01
and steady; few good and low Kansas City 94 78
choice vealers 27.00-29.00; utility Los Angeles 79 59
and standard vealers and calves Miami 86 75 .09
19.00-25.00. Minneapolis 92 78 .31
Hogs salable 200; butchers and New Orleans 88 74 .73
sows strong to 25 higher: U. S. New York 89 71
No. 1 and 2 grade 190-225 lb hutch- Oakland 63 56
ers 17.50 17.7,3; mixed grades Oklahoma City 92 70
mostly 17.00: few 250-20 lbs 14.50- Phoenix 96 79
16.00; 150-175 lbs 15.00-16.50; No. Pittsburgh 91 70
2 and 3 grade 350-50 lb sows 11.50- Red Bliff ' 71 53 .03
14.00; few 14.50. Reno 68 46 .01
Sheep salable 150; all classes Sacramento 73 53
steady; high good and choice Salt Lake City 82 59 .30
spring slaughter lambs 19.00- San Diego 76 62
19.50; few 20.00: good spring San Francisco 64 56
lambs down to 18.00; good and Seattle 75 58
choice feeder lambs 15.00 - 16.00; Spokane 58 47 1.07
medium ' lightweights down to Stockton 77 52
13.00; cull to good slaughter ewes Thermal 94 64
2.00-4.00. Washington 91 74
STOCKTON ,(UPI - FSMNS) -
Livestock:
Cattle salable 100. Market un
tested.
Calves salable none.
Hogs salable 25. Market un
tested.
Sheep salable 25. Market un
tested.
GRAINS
CHICAGO AP-
. High Low Close Prev. Close
Wheat
Sep 1.89 1.89 1.89 1.89
Dec 1.95 1.93"4 1.95-'4 1.95
Mar . 1,99 1.98 1.98 1.99
May 1.97 1.96 1.96 1.97
Jly 1.83 1.83 l.3'i-83 1.83
1960
Sep 1.85 1.85 "4 1.8.V4 1.86
Corn
Sep 1.19 1.19 1.19- 1.19
Dec 1.12 1.11 1.12 1.12
Mar 1.16 1.15 1.16 1.15
May 1.17 1.17 1.17 1.17
Jly 1.19 1.19 1.19 1.19
Oats (old)
Sep .65 .65 .65 .65
Oats (new)
Sep .67 .66 .67-67 .66
Dec . .70 .69 .69 .69
Mar ' .71 .60 .70 .70
May .69 .69 .69 .69
Jly .66 .66 .66 .66
Rye
Sep 1.29 1.28 1.28 1.28
Dec 1.34 1.33 1.33-33 1.33
Mar 1.37 1.35 1.36-35 1.36
May 1.36 1.35 1.35 1.36
Jly 1.31 1.29 1.29 1.31
Soybeans
Sep 2.09 ,2.08 2.09- 2.08
Nov 2.12 2.11 2.11- 2.11
Jan 2.16 2.15 2.15 2.15
Mar 2.19 2.18 2.18 2.18
May 2.21 2.20 2.20 2.20
Potatoes
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI FSMNS)
Potatoes:
Russets Washington U.S. 1A
3.75-4.00.
CHICAGO (API- Potatoes ar
rivals 63; on track 147; lotal U.S.
shipments 312: supply light; de
mand slow; market dull to unset
tled; carlot track sales: Idaho-
Oregon Russets 4.10: Washington
Long Whites 3.20; Washington
Russets 3.80-3.85; Nebraska
Round Reds 2.65.
Cache Hidden
In Marin
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)-Somc
where near a tree in the hills of
Marin County, there's approx
imately $12,000 in cash buried.
But the f til is handing out no
hints for treasure hunters.
The" money is the greater por
tion of the loot taken Monday
from the Point Reyes' branch of
Bank of America. FBI agents and
Marin deputies searched fruitless
ly (or the money Thursday.
William Jerry (Dugie) Williams,
3l, surrendered to authorities
Wednesday and conlcssed robbing
the Point Reyes bank. An alleged
accessory lo the crime was Ter
ranee C. Corkcry, 50. who buried
$1,600 of the loot. This money was
recovered when Corkcry led FBI
agents lo where it was buried
Williams took FBI agents lo the
southern Marin County spot Thurs
day where the remainder of the
robbery loot was supposedly
cached. "It's somewhere around
here, near a tree.", he said.
"There was a bulldozer some
where around," said Williams,
throwing in an additional clue
Bui the money was not found. '
The FBI has refused to pin
point the location where Williams
said he buried the money for
obvious reasons.
"If we said where the area Is."
said one FBI agent, "there'd be
hundreds of people all oer it
within a few hours after it got
in the papers."
APPOINTED
SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Assem
bly Speaker Ralph Brown iD-Ms-deslo)
today appointed Assembly
woman Pauline Davis ID-Portola'
to the Joint Legislative Advisory
Committee of the Wildlife Con
servation Board.
Weather Table
United Press International
Rotarians -To
Host Chief
MONTAGUE James B. Mc-
Adams, president of the Montague
Rotary Club, announced last
Thursday that the club will be host
Monday, August 24, to Eugene
Rideout of Chico, governor of 516th
District of Rotary International
who is making his annual official
visit to each of the 52 Rotary
clubs in Northern California.
In addition to addressing the lo
cal club at its regular Monday
night dinner meeting, Rideout will
confer with McAdams, Donald
H. Gordon, secretary, and com
mittee chairmen on Rotary admin
istration and service activities.
Rideout is with the Pacific Tel
ephone and Telegraph Company,
Chico, and has been active' in
American Red Cross work. He has
held seats as a director on the
chambers of commerce in San
Luis Obispo. Santa Rosa and
Marysville. He has been a Ro
tarian since 1924, is past presi
dent of Durham Rotary Club, and
was elected governor of the 516th
District of Rotary International
for 1959-60, last June, at tho Ro
tary 50th annual convention held
in New York.
According to McAdams, Rideout
is one of 216, governors in super
visor's 'activities involving more
than 10,200 Rotary 'clubs in 113
countries with a membership of
half a million.
Each year. McAdams added,
this world wide service organiza
tion continues to grow in numbers
and strength. During the past fis
cal year, 389 new Rotary clubs
were organized in 54 countries,
bringing the total number "of Ro
lary clubs to more than 10,500,
and adding four more countries
to the Rotary roster, the coun
tries being British Guiana, Ghana,
Madagascar and Nepal.
Moon's Pull
Cuts Orb Life
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (API-
Scientists at Smithsonian Astro-
physical Ohscrvatory say that be
cause of the moon's gravitational
pull the life of the new paddle
wheel satellite Explorer VI will
be lvb years instead of 20.
The satellite has a long oval
oi bit 25.000 miles from earth
at its greatest height. '
Dr. Yoshihide , Kozai, Smithso
nian astronomer, determined that
the moon's pull would cause the
satellite to be drawn gradually in
to il.c earth's atmosphere, where
there is increasing air resistance
Future Marines
Termed AWOL
HUNTINGTON. W. Va. (AP-
The Marines will just have to wait
a few years.
Two boys, one 11 arid the other
12, armed with bb guns, tried to
board a bus here Thursday for
the Pan-is Island, SC., Marine
base. Police reported the young
sters said Ihey wanted to join up.
rurther questioning revealed
that the would-be Marines were
abscnt-without-leave from their
home at nearby Chapmanville
Authorities turned them over to
relatives.
AUGUST CLEARANCE
Broadloom Carpets
Sove on ivory yard of carpet or
LINOLEUM f . CARPETS
4UMSRraa
Waterfowl
Coming Soon
SACRAMENTO (LTD Call
fornia's grain farmers were issued
a joint warning today that the an
nual southward migration ot wa
terfowl is coming soon.
The word of caution came from
the California Department of Fish
and Game and the U. S. Fish and
Wildlife Service. They said rice
and other crops are "particularly
vulnerable at this lime."
Farmers were told they should
'lake the initiative in frighten
i!,g waterfowl away from private
land onto stale and federal water
fowl management areas."
The areas have been planted
witn crops designed to keep hun
gry birds busy enough that they
won't shy away into cropland
nearby and eat grain crops.
"Our crops are ready," said
Director William E. Warne. "It's
up to the farmer to shoo the ducks
our way." He suggested that
larmers buy equipment like crack
er shells and carbide exploders to
frighten the birds.
Aqua Project
Exams Start
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The
third in a series of physical ex
aminations to gather data for an
85 million dollar Delta water proj
ect began today in San Francisco
Bay.
Eighteen small boats, manned
by government engineers, were
equipped to make tests from the
water every half hour. The tests'
will last until approximately 3:30
p.m. Friday; The engineers will
test the salinity and measure the
currents in the North Bay and
lower Delta region.
The Delta water project calls
for master levees along the Sac
ramento and San Joaquin rivers
with barriers across the Sacra
mento and a cross-Delta channel
for fresh water transportation
The tests, being taken during
the "highest high tide" period
will be repeated Aug. 27-28 during
an average tide period.
75 To Enroll
In Hilt School
HILT Approximately 73 stu
dents are expected to be enrolled
in the Hilt Elementary School
when It opens its doors August
31, with Aristeo Perez as '.irinci
pal. . : .-
The present school building was
first occupied in 1956, has four
classrooms, a multi-purpose room
and kitchen. Classes are from the
first grade through the eighth
grade, after which students con
tinue their education at Yreka
High School.
Other teachers, in addition to
Perez, are John Fenton, Alice
Rutledge, and Mrs. Eller Jeter.
School board members are Mrs.
Phoebe Thompson, clerk, and
Douglas Whi taker and John
Smith.
Crash Helmet
Saves Pilot
STOCKTON, Calif. (UPI)
Pilot Allan Blewett bought
cissh helmet Wednesday
al
uiougn ne naa never worn one in
his hazardous work as a cron
ouster.
inursoay, mewett s head was
through the dashboard of -his
plane when the craft smashed
through two trees, sheared off
power poie ana crasned on a
road.
The pilot walked away from the
crash without injuries.
"It was the best investment I
ever made," Blewett said, rap
ping his scarred helmet.
BUSY RETIREMENT
NEW YORK (AP) - Although
he retired and came back to the
United States in 1955 after 54
years missionary work in Japan.
the Rev. Dr. William Axling still
hasn't found time to take it easy.
In a recent 30-day period, the
Baptist clergymen filled 40 speak
ing engagements.
REDECORATED
Office Space
$45 Month Inquire
DREWS' Monitor.
Phone TU 4-4121 .
BUNDS
ASM
4-H NEWS
VREKA According to the "Sis
kiyou 4-H Leadergram" ' issued
monthly from the Siskiyou Coun
ty Farm Advisers office, delegates
to the State 4-H Convention at Dav
is, August 31 to September 4, were
designated recently after the club
council named the clubs to the
nine places Siskiyou County was
asked to fill.
Those chosen as delegates, and
the 4-H clubs they are represent
ing are Bill Hoy, Shasta: Patty
Rich, Etna: Monte Robison, Butte
Valley; Sandy Holloway, Delphic:
Bob Singleton, Greenhorn; Daryl
Severns, Willow Creek; Arlenc
Sears, Grenada; Don Kreutzer,
Table Rock: Phil Zediker. Big
Springs; and Janice Birdwell,
dress revue winner, Quartz Val
ley. Chaperons to accompany the
4-H delegates are Dorothy Tozier,
Quartz Valley, and William Ruddi-
man, farm adviser.
New Gadget
Gives Warning
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A sci
entist says a gadget that howls
like a siren can be built into port
able radios for $15 to warn of dan
gerous radiation.
The penny-size device could
save thousands of lives in an
atomic attack. Dr. Willard F .Lib
by told the City Council Thurs
day. He is a UCLA chemistry pro
fessor and former member of the
Atomic Energy Commission.
The device, called the Banshee
contains a cadmium sulfide crys
tal. To demonstrate its effective
ness, Dr. Libby moved a piece of
radioactive cobalt near his Banshee-equipped
portable radio. The
device emitted a loud wail.
Over The
Garden Gate
YREKA GARDEN CLUB
The Yreka Garden Club, which
is to be in charge of the flori
culture building and its exhibits
during the 'Siskiyou County Fair,
August 21-23, chose the commit
tee members who will assist in
accepting exhibits and arranging
them at the recent meeting of the
club held at the Yreka Inn, which
was conducted by the newly in
stalled president, Mrs. Edson
Foulke Jr., Gazelle.
Also during the business session,
Mrs. Kenneth Whipple outlined
programs, which have been planned
for the coming year to be pre
sented during meetings.
Following the business session,
members devoted the remainder
of the afternoon on the creation of
floral arrangements, which were
discussed at length by the group.
The evening section of the club
met last week in the. patio, at
the home of .Mrs. Ernest Johnson
on Lane Street, at which time
the members discussed flower en
tries for the floriculture exhibit
at the fair. Mrs. Kenneth Whip
ple also attended this meeting,
where she again informed the eve
ning club of the programs outlined
for the coming year, stating that
plans included having out of town
speakers who would also be avail
able for the evening sessions.
Funerals
OQUILA
MOUNT SHASTA Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Louisa Oquila, 58,
Weed, who died August 19 at the
Mount Shasta Community Hospital,
will be held at 9:30 a.m. Saturday
at the Holy Family Catholic Church
in Weed when a Requiem Mass
will be said. Rosary services
will be Friday at 8 p.m. at the
same church, the Rev. James
Vaughan officiating. Mrs. Oquila
had been a resident of Weed for
40 years. She was a native of
Italy, born November 7, 1899. Sur
vivors include the widower, Frank
four sons, Joseph F-, James L.,
Frank B. Jr., all of Weed and
John A. of Mount Shasta; daugh
ters', Mrs? Rena Stemac, Mount
Shasta. Mrs. Flora Spinello, Sac
ramento; one brother, Joe Tal-
lencom, San Jose; two sisters.
Mrs. Teresa Catalano, and Mrs.
Rose Iconis. both of San Jose;
also 14 'grandchildren. Services are
in charge of Upton's Mortuary,
Weed. Final rites will be in the
Winema Cemetery. .
Jfcrf HUNTERS
Now's the time to get your winter supply
in! We hove a good selection of . .
USED CHAIN SAWS
All Makes and Models . . . All Reconditioned
Fred E. Barnett Co.
600 Spring
Widow Killer
Sought
By FBI Men
SIERRAVILLE. Calif. (UPD-
The FBI and Washington. D. C,
police were prepared today to
aid in the search for Larry Lord
Motherwell, central suspect in
tlie unexplained disappearance
and death of a Washington, D.C.,
widow, Mrs. Pearl Putney, 82.
A murder complaint- was filed
against Motherwell Thursday and
an all-points bulletin was issued
lor his arrest.
The bones of Mrs. Putney were
found Sunday along a logging
road six miles from here. She
disappeared Aug. 15, 1958, after
leaving a Marysville, Calif., mo
tel with Motherwell, 42.
'It's not the easiest case in the
world to prove," said Sierra
County District Attorney Gordon
I. Smith, who filed the com
plaint, "but we think we've got
enough to go after him."
Authorities here hinted they
knew where Motherwell could be
ocated, although his third wife
in Washington refused to discuss
his whereabouts.
Mrs. Putney's bones were iden
tified from dental charts, but the
cause of death was still un
known. Motherwell became ac
quainted with Mrs. Putney about
10 years ago. Last June her
mother died and left her about
$50,000. She went away with
Motherwell on a transcontinental
trip, police said.
Hire-Killing
Record Made
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Hojv
aoes a husband talk when he s
trying to hire another man to kill
his wife?
The state claimed in court
Thursday it had recorded in se
cret such a conversation.
'It ($5,000 to kill a crippled
housewife) isn't worth that much,
believe you me. Mike," said a re-
curded voice.. "I've been tempted
to do it myself at times, but then
the finger would always point to
mc, who else?
"I go in there and just stuff
pillow up against her mouth and
in three minutes she's a goner.
But as soon as this would hap
pen, they'd check on me."
The state charged the man
making these statements was
Kris Albert, 46, wealthy Beverly
Hills, Calif., motel owner ac
cused of trying to solicit the mur
der of his estranged wife, Pearl,
46-year-old victim of multiple
sclerosis. She has suffered frorrfl
the ailment for 12 years.
Deputy District Attorney James
Ford said the recording was made
at a meeting between Albert and
Michael Angulo. 43, Agoura
Calif., farm worker, last March
Ford told the Superior Court
jury of 10 women and 2 men
that the recording was -made by
small wire recorder secreted
under Angulo's armpit. Angulo
had gone to police earlier saying
Albert was attempting to hire
him to commit murder.
California Weather
United Press International
San Francisco Bay Area: Fair
through Saturday except fog near
ocean extending inland locally in
morning; high today San Fran
cisco 67, Oakland 67, San Mateo
72, San Rafael 75; low tonight 52
56; westerly winds 12-20 m.p.h.
afternoons.
Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Fair
and warmer through Saturday.
Sacramento Valley: Fair and
warmer through Saturday; high
both days 76-83; low tonight 53-59:
gentle winds.
Northwestern California: Fair
through Saturday except fog on
coast; warmer inland; high today
and low tonight Ukiah 80-55, Napa
80-53, Santa Rosa 80-44: coastal
winds northwest-12-25 m.p.h. -
Want Something
Delivered or tfoved?
Phone TU 2-3737
CITY DELIVERY SERVICE
ATTEMTinMI
Wood Cutters
Phone TU 4-5153
Residents Of Siskiyou
To Be Given Free X-Rays
YREKA Siskiyou County resi
dents will be offered free chest
X-rays next month when the mo
bile X-ray unit of the California
Tuberculosis and Health Associa
tion tours this area for the first
time since 1957.
Beginning Monday, August 31, in
Dunsmuir, the unit will make one-
day stops in McCloud, Mount Shas
ta. Etna, Yreka, Happy Camp,
Weed, Dorris, and will terminate
the tour Monday, September 14,
in Tulelake. The unit will not oper
ate on holidays or weekends.
Anyone who has never had a
chest X-ray is particularly urged
to do so, according to Nino Cat
tuzzo. McCloud, president of the
Siskiyou County Tuberculosis andj
Health Association. Food handlers,
boarding house operators, beauty
operators and other? who meet
the public daily in their work are
asked to have X-rays as a precau
tionary measure.
No disrobing is necessary. New
and refined X-ray equipment en
sures complete safety. The process
takes only a few minutes' time and
results are confidential.
Girl Drowns
In Motel Pool
MONTEREY (UPI) Michele
Cline, 14, San Anselmo, drowned
Thursday in a motel swim pool
here. Firemen said that although
there were about 30 persons near
by, no one tried to .recover the
body before the rescue squad ar
rived. Her body was sighted at the
bottom of the pool by Stephen R.
Mitlel, 15, San Francisco. He no
tified the Casa Munra motel man
agement, which called the fire de
partment. A few minutes later a fire de
partment squad arrived and As
sistant Chief William Stone tore
off his coat and dived into recover
the body. Firemen tried vainly to
revive her.
'I've never seen anything like
it," Stone said. "AH these people
just standing around. My God
you'd think that at least one of
them would have known enough
to get the girl out."
It was estimated that the
daughter of Mrs. Marjorie Cline,
went down 15 to 20 minutes, be
fore her body was recovered.
The girl had been staying at the
motel with an aunt, Mrs. Alice
Smith, San Jose, Mrs. Smith left
her in bed asleep and went to
breakfast. She returned as fire
men were recovering the body.
Sheet Neckties
Not Selling Well
SAN FRANCISCO (API Neck
ties made out of Kim Novak's
lavender bed sheets are not sell
ing so well.
This complaint, lodged to no one
in particular, was 'registered by a
S a n Francisco manufacturer,
Beall Ernst, who obtained the
frilly sheets at an auction.
He said he appears to be stuck
with about half, the 200 ties he
fashioned from the sheets, used in
the film "Vertigo."
He has cut the price from $10
apiece to $3.50.
INSTANT
LETTUCE
CA$H WHEN
mum
A VITAL INGREDIENT FOR
BACK TO -SCHOOL
SHOPPING
CALL TU 4-7783
Quick, Confidential Service
, Klomolh'i Locally Owntd Drivo In Financa t Loan Co.
Motor Investment Co.
Chuck
531 So. Sixth
The tour is sponsored by the
Siskiyou County TBHA through
funds raised in sale of Christmas
Seals. Chest X-rays have proved
effective m combatting tuberculo
sis through early detection and art
also helpful in determining other
chest conditions.
Arrangements for the nine-day
tour were made at a meeting of
the board of directors of the coun
ty tuberculosis association held
Saturday at the Ski Bowl restau
rant in Mount Shasta, i
Working on the project with Cat-
iiizzo and Mrs. Zelma Gerlicher,
McCloud, secretary, were Mrs.
Victoria Thaler- and Mrs. Naomi
Rurtz, Tulelake; Mrs. Dorothy
Johns and Mrs. Anna Motschen-
bacher, Dorris; Mrs. Marion New
berry and Mrs. Mary Sheldon,
Mount Shasta; Dr. J. P, Taylor,
Mrs. Dorothy Hill. Mrs. Jo Kin
ney, Yreka; Mrs. Marie L. Glover,
Dunsmuir, and Mrs. H. L. Vidrick
scn and Mrs. H. G. Reents, Weed.
The unit will be at the follow
ing towns at the following dates
and times:
Dunsmuir, Monday, August 31,
1 to 4 p.m. and 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.;
McCloud, Tuesday, September 1,
to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m.;
Mount Shasta, Wednesday, Septem
ber 2, 1 to 5:30 p.m. and 6:30
to 8:30 p.m.; Etna, Thursday, Sep
tember 3, 1 to 5:30 p.m. and
6:30 to 8:30 p.m.; Yreka, Friday,
September 4, 1 to 5:30 p.m. and
6:30 to 8 p.m.
Happy Camp, Tuesday, Septem
ber 8, 1 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m.;
Weed, Thursday, September 10, 1
to 5:30 p.m. and 6:30 to 8 p.m.;
Dorris, Friday, September 11, noon
to 4 p.m. and 5:30 to 8:30 p.m.;
Tulelake, Mondaly, September 14,
1 to 5 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m.
Negotiations
Scheduled
SAN FRANCISCO (UPD-Joint
negotiations were scheduled to re
sume at 2 p.m. today in the 2-
week-old trucking strike in San
Francisco and San Mateo coun
ties.
No progress was reported in
Thursday's negotiating sessions,
guided by three commissioners of
the U. S. Mediation and Concilia
tion Service.
More than 600 striking team
sters Thursday night asked for
secret balloting on any negotia
ting peace plan approved by their
officers. The rank and file move
ment, in a petition, said the
standing vote rejection of the- last
offer of the Draymen's Associa
tion did not represent "the trua
feeling" of the majority of the
3,500 members in San Francisco
and San Mateo counties.
Earlier Thursday, the ' strike
spread to 75 other firms and a
union spokesman said picketing
by truck drivers may be extended
to the East Bay and to branches
of struck hauling firms.
KIRBY REPAIRS
Leber Sfl.Bff plat verts, - Oae yew
GnexftBtee
Farte. Brnshec, Bifi la Slack
DEAN'S STARK'S
1 So. 9lk TO 4-111
WU
Bailey, Mgr.
TU 4-7783