Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 06, 1960, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Wednesday, January 6. 1960
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
WALL STREET
NEW YORK (API - The stock
market closed lower in heavy
trading today with final prices
near the day's lows. The ticker
tape was late.
Volume for the day was esti
mated at 3,800.000 shares com
pared with 3.710.000 Tuesday.
Losses of fractions to more than
i point prevailed among most key
stocks but some industrials erased
declines and others moved to the
upside for gains of fractions to
about 2 points.
An assortment of secondary
stocks also met active demand
and made substantial gains.
The overall market was lower,
Brokers sard, on tight money
fears and also on profit taking
after five straight sessions of ad
vance.
U.S. government bonds contin
tied to decline.
NEW YORK STOCKS
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Admiral Corporation
A. J. Industries
Allied Chemical
Allis Chalmers
Alcoa
American Airlines
American Can
American Cyanmide
American M & Fdy
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
Cities Service
Consolidated Edison
Continental Can
Crown Zcllerbach
Curtiss Wright
Douglas Aircraft
Dow Chemical
du Pont dc Nemours
Eastman Kodak
El Paso NC
Emerson Radio
Firestone Tire
First American Corp.
Ford Motor
General Dynamics
General Electric
General Foods
General Motors ) '
Georgia Pac Cp
Goodyear Tire
Great A. & P.
Great Northern
Great West. Sugar
Gulf Oil Co.
Idaho Power
Illinois Central
International Bus Mch
International Nickel'
International Paper
International T !s T
Johns Manvillc
Kaiser Aluminum
Kennecott '' ipper
Libby, McNeill & Libby
Lockheed Aircraft
Locw's Incorporated
Minnesota Mining
Monsanto Chemical
Montgomery Ward
National Cash Reg.
New York Central
Northern Pacific
Pacific American Fish
Pacific Gas It Electric
Pacific Tel & Tel
Pan American Airways
Pcnn Dixie Cement
Penney (J.C.) Co.
Pennsylvania R.R.
Pepsi Cola Co.
Philco Corp.
Phillips Pet.
Polaroid
Puget Sound Ptl
Radio Corp of Amer
Rayonicr Incorp.
Raytheon
Republic Steel
Reynolds Metals ,
Richfield Oil
Safeway Stores Inc.
St. Regis
Schcnley Distillers
Scott Paper Co.
Sears Roebuck & Co.
Shell Oil Co.
Sinclair Oil
Socony Mobil Oil
Southern Pacific
Sperry Rand
Standard Oil Calif.
Standard Oil N.J.
Studehakor Packard
Sunray
Sunshine Mining
Swift k Company
Texaco
Thompson. R.W.
Timken R Bearing
Trans-amcrica Corp
Twentieth Century Fox
Union Oil Company
Union Pacific
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.
Westinghouse Air Brake
Wejtinghouse Electric
Wheeling Steel
Woolworth Company
23 ';
4 i
113 3.
36 V,
106 i
24 V,
43
57 H
53 t
86
53
81 i
107 .
41 1i
67
76
27
72
55
31
86
48 i
34
7 "
' 26
33 ',
29 Vt
70
47 V,
60 W
47 U
54
30 V,
39 4i
98 3
264 i
107 U
31
17 ',i
138
28 ?
92 V,
50 '.'4
98 Vi
103 :
55 Ti
50 4
47 i
39 V,
52 'i
30 V,
35 'i
48 ',4
47 ti
441 i
109 '
136
37
49
54
99
10
31
30
172 1
52
51 "i
66 ,
31 1
47
11
63
29
22 H
30
120
IB3
' 39
31
47
173
31 !i
68
27 'i
51
75 4
70
77
37 i
53
36
Livestock
KLAMATH FALLS
LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET
Janunry 5, 1960
Receipt: Cattle 477. Hogs 84
Sheep 42.
Compared last Tuesday, cows .50-
1.00 higher; other cattle about stea
dy; butcher hogs steady.
Fed Steers: Sid. Hoi. 1J.60-21.90
Fed Heifers: Good, 23.25-23.80; Std
20 30-22.00.
Cows: Sid. 18.25-20.40; Cmcl,
17.40-18.00; Utility 14.20-17.50; Can-
ners & Cutters 12.60-14.75.
Bulls: Utility and Cmcl.. 20-50-
21.80; Young Breeding 170.00-270.00
per head.
Veal Calves: Hvy Killer Calves,
23.10-25.75; Baby Calves, 22.00-41.00
per head.
Stockcrs and Feeders: Steers
Good-Choice, 550-650 lbs 23.30-25.90
Med 19.10-22.00 ; 750-900 lbs 23.20-
24.10. Heifers, Good-Choice, 525-650
lbs 21.00-23.10. Steer Calves, Good
Choice, 300-550 lbs. 24.10 - 27.00
Heifer Calves, Good-Choice, 300-500
lbs 23.25-25.00. 1 lot 76 light Heifer
Calves 98.00 per head. Stock Cows
130.00 178.00 per head.
Hogs: U.S. 1 & 2 (180-220 lbs.)
13.10-14.00: U.S. No. 3, 12.10-12.60.
Sows, 9.00-10.20; Wcancr Pigs, 4.50
7.50 Per Head; Feeders, 10.50-11.60.
Sheep: Fat Lambs. Good-Choice
16.90. Ewes, bred 16.50-19.00 per
ncaa.
Reported by F. A. Skinner, Coun
ty extension agent.
RED BLUFF (UPI-FSMNS) -
Weekly livestock auction:
Cattle salable 715, including 300
calves. Active, steady.
Slaughter cows utility and com
mercial 15-16.50, high yielding 17-
18.40, canncrs and cutters 11-15.
Slaughter calves good to low
choice 24.40-27.
Stocker and feeder steers good
and choice 340-540 lb calves 25.60-
29.10, common and medium 20-25,
Good and choice 525-697 lb year
lings 25.25-26.80, 700-885 lbs 23.90
24.50, medium 500-760 lbs 23-25.10
Stock heifers good and choice
calves 23.80-27.50. Good to low
choice 500-545 lb yearlings 23.50-
24.90.
Stock cows common and me
dium 81-114 per head.
Replacement bulls few purebred
yearlings 200-300 per head. Me
dium and good 1,040-1,945 lb feed
ers 18.10-22.70.
50 U
83 '
54 '
41 -
23 i
25 '4
48 i.
49
22 1
24 V
7
48 i
84
5 's
68
28
33
41
30 ,
35 ,
39 '
7 '.,
49 ',
29
102 i,
48 fc
44 U
31
50
32
111
l 4
66 h
PORTLAND (AP) (USDAi-
Cattle salable 350, includes equiva
lent of three loads fed steers and
one load heifers; trade opening
slow, few sales fed steers, heifers
about steady; cows steady to
weak; some sales 50 cents lower;
high good 993-1.050 lbs fed steers
25.00-26.00; truck lot high good
low ctfoice 882 lb fed heifers 24.50;
good 1221-1237 lb steers 24.50-25.00;
truck lot 950 lb 23.00; utility cows
15.00-16.50; canners cutters 12.00
13.50; Holstcin cutters to, 14.50.
Calves salable 50; rather slow.
steady; few good-choice vcalcrs
28.00-32.00; utility-standard veal-
ers, calves IB. 00-27.00; culls down
ward to 12 00.
Hogs salable 400; trade active,
strong to mostly 25 cents higher
or fully steady with Monday; U.S.
No. 1 and 2 butchers 190-220 lbs
14.00-14.25; several lots No. Is
14.50; mixed 1-2-3 190-235 lbs 13.00
14.00; No. 1 and 2 sows 275-445 lbs
10.50-11.50.
C Of C To Follow Through
On 1959 Program This Year
The Klamath County Chamber
of Commerce will devote much of
its energies in 1960 to following
through on its 1959 program. Presi
dent W. H. Graham announced his
policy decision at an organization
al meeting of the board of direc
tors, held at his home Tuesday
evening.
Among the projects started un
der 1J59 president Bob Mest's ad
ministration which will be carried
on this year, Graham said, are
those connected with Oregon Tech
hical Institute and a proposed com
munity hospital.
Director Mike Balsiger accepted
reassignment as director in charge
oi the OTl-Public Schools Commit
lee, and said J. Vern Owens has
agreed to continue as committee
chairman. The committee's chief
function this year. Graham indicat
ed, would be to follow through on
the 1959 campaign which raised
540,000 for a new campus site for
Oregon Tech. A Business-Educa
tion Day also is under consider
ation for the committee.
The Community Hospital Com
mittee, for which no director has
yet been named, will be charged
with raising the small balance of
money needed to finance a hospital
survey, to study the survey and
take the responsibility for dissem
inating the information contained
in it, and to follow through in
whatever direction indicated by the
survey toward actual acquisition or
construction of a hospital.
One new committee has been
added to the chamber thus far.
Ir line with an increased concern
in all government affairs, City and
County Affairs Committee was cre
ated with director Frank Tarr as
suming the responsibility for it.
Graham said the committee would
ofier assistance to city and coun
ty officials where needed or re
quested, and would serve as liasion
between the business and profes
sional community and local gov.
ernmental agcocies.
The first major activity planned
this year by the chamber will be
the organization's annual meeting
scheduled for January 20. A well
known California businessman and
Klamath County ranch owner, Page
Lamoreaux, will be the principal
speaker at the dinner meeting to
bA held at the Willard Hotel.
Local Firm
Buys Timber
of
STOCKTON (UPI- FSMNSi -
Livestock:
Cattle salable 50, calves salable
10. hogs salable 50. sheep salable
none. No price tests.
GRAINS
CHICAGO (AP)
High Low Close Prev.Close
Wheat
Mar 2.04'4 2.03'a 2.03'i-04 2.03'i
May 2.021. 2.01 2.02 2.01
Jly 1.83' 1.82H 1.83i-i 1.83
Sep 1.86'i 1.85'a 1.86'i 1.85'
Dec 1.91'j 1.90'i 1.91i-'i 1.90-'
Corn
Mar 1.14'i 1.13', 1.14'i-H 1.14
118 1.17 1.17'i 1.17',
MD'i 1.1834 1.19'.-'i 1.18s,
1-lB's 1.151, 1.16 1.15'i
l.U1. l.lO', 1.101, 1.0
More than a million board feet
Rogue River National Forest
Timber was sold to the Klamath
Lumber and Box Company during
an oral auction in the Klamath
district office, Post Office Build
ing, Wednesday morning.
Offering slightly higher than
minimum bid price, the company
will pay $32,748 for the 53-acre
parcel located in Sevcnmile Sale
Area 2, west of Fort Klamath.
The bid included the usual quo
tations for access, slash disposal
and other forest service require
ments.
The area contains an estimated
460,000 board feet of ponderosa
pine, 90,000 feet of Douglas fir
and 570,000 feet of white fir and
other species.
Timber was appraised at $37.05
per thousand feet of pine. $42.65 for
Douglas fir and $17.50 for white
fir and other species.
After 27 bidding rounds, Klam
ath Lumber and Box emerged vic
torious, bidding $41.10 for pine and
the minimum bid price on other
species.
Two other sealed bids were re
ceived from local companies.
Bond Posted;
Pair Released
Philip Duane Jackson, 23, and
Bernadine Dickens, 18, were re
leased from jail late Tuesday after
posting a total of $3,750 bond.
Property bond signers on behalf
of the defendants were Jonathan
and Dorothy Crume and Alice
Chipps.
Jackson faces charges on three
counts ranging from assault with
a dangerous weapon to lewd co
habitation; Miss Dickens is
charged with lewd cohabitation.
The couple was arrested December
21.
Yule Tree
Burning Set
The last, forlorn reminders of
the Christmas season will go up
in smoke Sunday evening. Mem
bers of the local Moose Lodge will
ignite the pyre.
They are ready to tackle their
third annual Christmas tree round
up Saturday and Sunday, January
9 and 10, in Klamath Falls, the
Suburban Area, and Stewart-Lenox
ana Chelsea additions.
I-odge members have some fa
vors to ask. They need trucks and
ask those willing to lend vehicles
to call the lodge at TU 4-8454 after
4 p.m. any day.
They ask residents who want to
get rid of their Christmas trees to
leave the trees conspicuously fac
ing streets where collecting trucks
are liable to pass.
And they ask willing residents to
donate something to the Moose
Christmas fund when members call
at doors during the tree pickup.
Donations are not required, they
stress.
Tree owners should be prompt
in getting the trees out for pickup
early Saturday morning. The lodge
has divided the town into a grid
network to insure complete cover
age. Trucks and crews have spe
cific areas to cover. But the pick
up schedule is indefinite.
When all trees are collected, they
will be piled and burned in a yard
owned by the Graham Brothers
Construction Company on Biehn
Street.
To insure pickup. lodge members
ask residents to call the lodge after
4 p.m.
I -V.X", II 11. V-'W'
h far "4
4
Slate Of January Events
Noted By Camp Fire Girls
Klamath Council of Camp Fire
CIVIL DEFENSE procedures in Kltmafh County are being
revamped in part to fit the needs of this area. Here from
Salem during the early part of the week was Malcolm H.
MaeEwan, left, public information officer, state Civil De
fense, to confer with Joe Searles, Klamath County Civil De
fense director. Heads of communications and e women's
organization are being appointed. Mrs. Natalia Reichen
berg and Mn. Bernard Schiff were named as chairman and
secretary pro tern, respectively, of the Klamath County
Women's Civil Defense Committee formed on Tuesday.
Jury Picking
Slows Trial
Check Passer
Pleads Guilty
James A. Wilson, returned here
from St. Paul, Minnesota, on a bad
check charge, pleaded guilty before
Circuit Judge David R. Vanden
berg yesterday.
Wilson, 45, was accused of ob
taining $6.52 in gas and oil and
$1.48 in change with a check writ
ten on the First National Bank,
Lakeview Branch, in which he had
no funds. The check was written
October 24.
Wilson appeared with his court
appointed attorney, H. F. Smith.
The judge scheduled sentencing for
in a.m. January 8.
The first degree murder trial of
21-year-old Leonard Marvin Lugo
entered its third day in circuit
court with no witnesses heard and
no testimony given.
Instead, the complicated task of
selecting a jury was developing
into one of the longest in the coun
ty s history.
A new special panel of 25 names
was called for this morning,
bringing to 90 the number of pros
pective jurors examined by Cir
cuit Judge David R. Vandenberg
ana attorneys for each side,
The defense, represented by at
torneys Joseph O. Stearns of Port
land and Glenn D. Ramirez of
Klamath Falls, was entitled to 12
preemptory challenges equal to
the numter of jurors to be se
lected. This morning the defense
still had four preemptory challeng
es remaining.
At one time the state, represent
ed by District Attorney Arthur Bed
doe, offered to accept all jurors
presently seated, but defense chal
lenges required additional venire
men.
The trial opened Monday with 25
regular jury panel members pres-
en;. Another 25 names were
called that afternoon, another 20
Tuesday, and an order for 25 more
was issued by the judge before
the session ended about 7 last
night.
Lugo Is charged with shooting
Joseph Owen Martinez II, 26, in
a downtown alley early last August
31 after a dispute involving Mar
tinez estranged wife. Martinez died
with six .22 caliber bullet wounds
in his body.
May
Jly
Sop
Dec
Oals
Mar
.May
Jly
See
Rye
Mhr
May
Jly
Sep
.1.1',
.73'.
.66',
.65',
.753.
.73'i
.65',
.64.
.75'.
.734
.66' i
.65
.75H
.73s.
.66
.64-'.
Soybeans
1 28'4 1.25'i 1.28'i-', 1.26',
1 30 1.27'4 1.29V30 1.28
1.23'i 1.23 1.23'4-25 1.23',i
1.26'. 1.24 1.26' 1.24
Jan
Mar
May
Jly
Sep
2.15', 2.11', 2.1413,4 2.11',
2.19 2.14-. 2.17V'i 2.15'4
2.21 2.16'. 2.19',-4 2.17.
2 21' 2.17'i 2 20'j-H 2.18',
2.1254 2.10'4 2.11V, 2.103
POTATOES
SAN FRANCISCO i UPI-FSMNS
Potatoes:
Russets Klamath U.S. 1A 4.75
U.S. 1 6-14 ounces 5.50-5.75; De
schutes U.S. 1A 4.50-4.73.
LOS ANGELES (UPI-FSMNS) -
No Oregon potato sales.
CHICAGO (API - Potatoes ar
rivals 68; on track 212; total U.S.
-hipiiMMils 544: supply light; de
mand for Russets good, market
bout steady; demand for round
eds good, market firm; car lot
track sales: Idaho Resets $.50
5.60: Idaho Standards 383; Idaho
Utilities 3.7.V' Minnesota North Da
kota Red River Valley Pontiacs
3.0O-3.15.
POTATO MARKET INFORMATION
(Furnished by Federal-State
Marketing News Service)
POTATOES
RAIL AND TRUCK SHIPMENTS (CL EOUIV.)
1-5-40 1957-60 1958-59
KLAMATH BASIN
Oregon Rail 5 454 293
Oregon Truck 9 991 784
Calif. Rail 30 1.524 1,061
Calif. Truck 24 911 742
CENTRAL OREGON
Rail 12 1,115 563
COLORADO 26 2,334 3.087
IDAHO Rail 227 18.148 22.145
WASHINGTON Rail 2 8.795 6.433
U.S. TOTAL Rail . 544 90,160 86,977
SHIPPING POINT PRICES:
(SKD. PER CWT)
FOB KLAMATH BASIN PTS:
NETTED GEMS U.S. No. 1-A 2" or 4 oi. min
U.S. No. 1-A 5-14 0.
U.S.2 2" min.
NET PRICE TO GROWER BULK AT CELLAR
NETTED GEMS U.S. No. 1-A 2" min. 3.25 oce 3.50
Tuesday
4.00 .
4.50
2.10-2.20
U.S.2
FOB CENTRAL OREGON PTS.
RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A
U.S. No. 1-A 4-14 01. min.
U.S. 2 2" or 4 at. min. 50 lb.
NET PRICE TO GROWER . BULK DELV'D. WHSE,
RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A
U.S.2 2" or 4 oi. min.
IDAHO PTS: NET PRICE TO GROWER.
RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A
U.S. No. 2 6-OI.
POTATO UNLOAD
38 CITIES Tuesday
Rail Unload 473
Truck Unload
Total Unload
283
756
1.15-1.30
4.20-4.25
4.50-4.70
2.25-2.40
3.10-3.45
1.30-1.70
3.40-3.60
1.50-1.75
Week Aqo
382
411
793
Fire Razes
Local Home
Fire destroyed a three-room
frame home owned by Keith Coop
er in the Chelsea Addition Tuesday
noon.
Furniture and other contents
were completely burned, tod. fire
men said.
Three agencies, the suburban
Oregon Technical Institute and
I county fire departments, sent men
and equipment to the home near
the waterfront just north of the
city limits.
Firemen said a faulty kitchen
flue fired a wall. Thereafter, fire
men could do little.
iney said the home was con
structed in such a fashion flames
were difficult to combat.
They added they believe the
home and its contents were at
least partially insured.
In other action, the city depart
ment was called to the Klamath
Falls Distributing Company, 461
Spring Street, at 8:57 Wednesday
morning.
A chimney cairght fire in the
beverage warehouse. No damage
resulted.
The OTI department sent a truck
to the Sam Ray ranch near Modoc
Point Tuesday at 10:23 p.m. A
garage and workshop burned as did
contents, including an automobile.
Firemen were not sure how the
fire began. They were assisted by
the Klamath Agency Fire Department.
OBITUARY
SOLI'S
VREKA Funeral services will be
held for Mary Emily Solus, 87,
Thursday, January 7, at 10 a.m. in
St Joseph's Catholic Church. .In
terment will be in the family plot
in St. Joseph's Cemetery. Mrs. So
lus died Sunday, January 3, in the
Siskiyou County General Hospital.
Mrs. Solus was a life-long resi
dent of Hawkinsville. She was a ture
Girls headquarters this week re
leased a schedule of January
events.
Special events Include dad-
daughter dinners January 18 for
girls and fathers from areas served
by Shasta and Ferguson schools at
6:30 p.m. in Altamont Junior High
School cafeteria; January 19 for
those In the Stearns and Altamont
School area at 6:30 p.m. in Alta
mont Junior High School cafeteria
and January 21 for those in the
Peterson and Henley schools area,
at the same time and place.
An annual council meeting for
all adults in the Camp Fire Coun
cil will be conducted in the First
Methodist Church January 26. Mrs.
George Nelson is chairman. Fea
tured speaker will be Kenneth
Johnson, chairman of Region 6.
Dinner will be served there by
women of the church at 6:30 p. ill
A Horizon Club snow party j
Irish Consul
To Give Talk
LAKEVIEW Kevin Rush, Irish
consul in San Francisco for the
West Coast area, will be featured
speaker for the annual banquet of
the Lake County Chamber of Com
merce. ine announcement was
made at the Monday forum lunch
eon by Bob Nichols, chairman of
the committee in charge.
The banquet is tentatively set for
St. Patrick's Parish Hall January
18 at 7 p.m. There will be an ad
vance ticket sale. At this time, jun
ior and senior awards and a spe
cial award will be presented and
new officers will be installed.
Guest speaker at the Monday
luncheon was Oris Rudd, county
extension agent, who summarized
the agricultural picture of the past
year and gave a look into the fu-
member of tne Altar Society of
St. Joseph's Church and the
b.P.R.S.I. Lodge. In addition to the
widower, John, 95, Mrs. Solus is
survived by two daughters, Mrs.
Emma Mills and Mrs. Marie Sil-
va, both of Yrcka; two sons, John
J. Solus Jr. of Yreka, and Georee
soius of all River, 13 grandchil
dren and 25 great-grandchildren.
Shopper Finds
Gun In Car
Mrs. H. T. Wilson, 520 North
Tenth Street, ,vas puzzled Tuesday
afternoon when she returned home
from a downtown shopping trio and
found a 12 gauge shotgun in the
Pack seat of her car.
Police were puzzled, too. They
suspect tne owner may have mis
taken Mrs. Wilson's car for anoth
er.
Realistically, police are not rul
ing out the possibility that the gun
was cached in haste by a thief.
In any event, the gun. a Win
chester Model 12 pump action, was
tagged and locked up at the police
station.
Another 12 gauge shotgun, a Ste
vens double-barrel, was reported
lost near Keno Sunday by Brooke
Shadburne of Ashland. City police,
who were notified, asked the find
er to bring the gun to headquar
ters. They said they would notify
Shadburne.
City police also investigated a
pair of thefts reported Tuesday
irs. ired Kelsay, 615 Upham
treet, told officers Tuesday morn-
someone stole two crescent
wrenches, a pair of vice-grip pliers.
nammer and some flashlight bat
teries from the toolbox of a pickup
truck parked behind the home
sometime over the weekend.
And Henry Stidham, 625 North
Eleventh Street, reported the theft
of two fender skirts from his 1952,
Pontiac as it was parked at Sev
enth and Pine streets Saturday
nignt.
The past year was a poor one
for agriculture in Lake County.
Weather was dry, crop production
was down, cattle were lighter,
there were fewer fat lambs, lamb
prices were lower; cattle, wool and
hay were up and the hay supply
adequate. Winter wheat -was down
15 per cent, spring wheat down
50 per cent, barley down 75 per
cent and irrigated alfalfa was near
normal.
In 1960 we will probably see larg
er units in agriculture, fewer peo
ple in agricultural production, more
technology, higher investment per
worker, increased farm debt, more
surplus and further restrictions on
federal grazing land. There is apt
to be pressure to increase effi
ciency, more attention to market
ing and a five per cent decline in
net farm income. The new year
will be good for consumers, Rudd
said. Food will be cheaper and
there will be better buys. There
will be a stronger demand for beef
with no drastic drop in beef price.
Consumer price will be up four to
five per cent.
Manager Ernest McKinney of the
C of C reported representatives
from Yreka, Crescent City, Med-
ford and Grants Pass will visit
Lakeview about the first of April
and said a program should be
planned for them.
slated for January 30 beginning at
1 p.m. at Fort Klamath. Hostesses
will be Chiloquin Horizon Club
members.
A Council Camping Committee
meeting and potluck dinner will be- ,
gin ai b.m p.m. January 11 jn
MCA headquarters. Mrs. Robert
K.iird is chairman. Husbands of
committee members are invited.
The Klamath Falls District Pro-
gram Committee will meet Janu
ary 12. Mrs. Naomi French, scout
executive, wiil be present.
Training meetings for new Blue
Bird leaders will be conducted in
council headquarters January 12
from 9:30 a.m. until 2 p.m.; again
January 14 at the same time, and
January 27 from 7 until 9:30 p.m.
All Chiloquin Blue Bird leaders
are asked to meet January 13
from 9:30 a.m. until noon. The
place to be announced.
New Camp Fire, leaders will
meet for training sessions Janu
ary 11 and 13 from 9:30 a.m. until
2 p.m. and January 25 from 7 un
til 9:30 p.m. in council headquar- -ters.
The following is a schedule of
meetings for all leaders: January
5, Klamath Falls Camp Fire lead
ers, 10 a.m. in the county library.
Jubilee Year and All That s New
in CF" is the theme. Mrs. Robert
Clark and Mrs. French will pre
side.
January 7, South Klamath Falls
leaders, 10 a.m. in Peace Memor
ial Church. The theme also will
concern Jubilee Year. Mrs. Phares
Book and Dollie Moore are in
charge.
January 8, Merrill leaders and
other adults, 1 p.m. in Recreation
Hell. The theme is "Planning for
1960." Mrs. French will be present.
January 11, Dorris leaders, 7:30
p.m. in Dorris Elementary School.
To be discussed: "Complete Plans
for 1960 Events." Mrs. Robert Lu
cas is chairman. j
January 20, Klamath Falls Blue
Bird leaders, 10 a.m. in the Boy
Scout Training Center, Manzanita
Street. Again, the meeting will
stress the Jubilee theme. Mrs.
George Y'ahraus and Dollie Moore
will be present.
January 25, Chiloquin and Fort
Klamath leaders, 7:30 p.m., place
to be announced. Plans for Jubilee
Year and new CF developments
wiil be featured. Mrs. Cecil Dye
and Dollie Moore are in charge.
All leaders are invited to a spe
cial workshop January 28 from 10
a.m. until 2 p.m. in YMCA head
quarters involving the "Jubilee
Girl Project."
Home Extension
CHILOQUIN - The Chiloquin
nome Extension Unit will meet at
10 30 a.m. Thursday, January 7. at
the Agency Lakeshore home of
Mrs. Earl Hall. Mrs. Hall and Mrs.
Forrest Freid will demonstrate the
making of soups. Each member
s akcd to take an apron and
paring knife. I
Mishap Victim
Returns Home
Harry Baum, 1332 Sargent
Street, has returned home from
Klamath Valley Hospital where he
spent several days for treatment
of a severe back injury.
nun .urs. naum ne was en
route Christmas Day to Tulelake
to spend Christmas with Mrs.
Baum's brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hooper, when
the car Baum was driving struck
ice on Highway 39 near Henley
and partially turned over.
Mrs. Baum was badly shaken
and bruised and both suffered
snock.
Baum was brought to Klamath
Falls by Tulelake Ambulance.
Fund Drive
Nears Mark
A total of $8,100 has been raised
toward the $8,750 cost of a com
munity hospital survey, it was an
nounced at a meeting of the Hos
pital Survey Board of Directors.
The total was boosted by indi
vidual contributions, including $102
from a Kingsley Field Officers' I
Wives fashion show and a match
ing $102 from the Officers' Club.
Today, also, the board of gover
nors looked over a letter of sur
vey proposals promised last week
by Dr. Mark Blumberg of Stanford
Research Institute of Menlo Park,
California, the organization to con-
duct the four-month survey.
The board did not formally ac
cept the letter, pending clarifica
tion of a usage clause, but the
pause was expected to be momen
tary and no great delay in get
ting the survey underway was expected..
With the clarification desired ih
board will signify its agreement
and seal it w ith a $4,375 payment
half the cost. W will be billed
monthly for the balance. i
The goal still to be reached was
$650.
Ad Program
To Be Mulled
Possible expansion of advertis
ing to include Southern California
markets is scheduled for discus
sion at the Klamath Potato Grow-
ers Association annual meeting in
the .Merrill Recreation Hall at 1:30
Monday afternoon, January 11.
The present advertising program
of the Oregon Potato Commission
is confined to the Bay Area and
Willamette Valley markets and is
limited to point of sale material
which includes posters, bin strips,
price cards and recipe cards.
Don Palmer, Oregon Potato Com
mission administrator, serves as
field man in Willamette Valley
Markets. Walter Mason of Oakland
is employed to service Bay area
markets.
The association will elect three
new directors to fill the expired
terms of James Ottoman, Malin;
W. W. Thompson, Henley, and Carl
Rajnus, Poe Valley and will elect
a president and vice president from
the new board members.
Holdover directors are Joe Steele,
Klamath Falls, president; Joe Foth.
eringham, Merrill, and L. L. Por
terfield, .Bonanza.
Secretary for the association is
County Agent Walt Jendrzejewski.
The association provided funds to
match California state funds which
together matched federal funds for
operation of the new USDA Po
tato Market News Service office in
Klamath Falls.
Rutgers University offers a
two week course in ice cream-making.
People Read
SPOT ADS
you are
To Be Installed
Sandra Short, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Short, will be in
stalled as honored queen of Hen
ley Bethel No. 51 and George
Howe will be inducted as master
councilor of Lost River Chapter
DeMolay in joint ceremony Satur
day. January 9. The installation
is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the
Henley High School cafeteria and
the public is invited.
George is the son of Klamath
County School Superintendent Car
rol Howe and .Mrs. Howe.
Non-Surgical Method
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A relatively painless, non
surgical method of treating
hemorrhoids (piles) is work
ing therapeutic miracles for
thousands who suffer from
rectal and colon disorders.
A recently developed elec
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more effective than surgery,
with none of the after effects
of surgery.
The treatment requires no
hospitalization or confine
ment. Patients show marked
improvement almost im
mediately, and uncompli
cated cases can be frequent
ly corrected in as little as 10
days. I
Descriptive booklet your
free without obligation by
writing the Dean Clinic,
Chiropractic Physicians,
2026 N. E. Sandy Blvd.
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Advrt(wmn
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