Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1960)
PAGE FOUR MARKETS Stocks WALL STREET NEW YORK (API-Industrials paced another sharp stock mar ket decline late this afternoon. Trading was active. Volume (or the day was esti mated at 3,700.000 shares com pared with 3,470,000 Monday. Most key slocks were down from fractions to a point or more. A few losses were much wider. Youngstown Sheet and US. Gypsum were down about 2 each. Losses of about a point weie snown ny General .Motors, Jone: & Laughlin, Air Reduction, West inghouse Electric, Texaco, Home- stake and Southern California ison. Continued concern about higher interest rates was among causes cited bby brokers for the decline U.S. government bonds held dim gains. 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 4 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 Zellerbach Curtiss Wright Douglas Aircraft Dow Chemical du Pont dc Nemours Eastman Kodak EI Paso NG Emerson Radio Firestone Tire First American Corp. Ford Motor General Dynamics General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pac Cp Goodyear Tire Great A. it P. Great Northern Great West. Sugar Gulf Oil Co. Idaho Power Illinois Central International Bus Men International Nickel International Paper International T & T Johns Manville Kaiser Aluminum Kennecntt Copper Libby, McNeill St Libby Lockheed Aircraft Loew's Incorporated Minnesota Mining Monsanto Chemical Montgomery Ward National Cash Reg. New York Central Northern Pacific Pacific Gas & Electric Pacific Tel k Tel Pan American Airways Tenn Dixie Cement Penney (J.C.) Co. Pennsylvania R.R. Pepsi Cola Co. Philco Corp. Phillips Pet. Polaroid Pugot Sound P 4 L Radio Corp of Anier Rayonier lncorp. Raytheon Republic Steel Reynolds Metals Richfield Oil Safeway Stores Inc, St, Regis Schenley 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. Studebakcr Packard Sunray Sunshine Mining Swift & Company Texaco Thompson. R.W. Timken R Rearing Transamerica Corp Twentieth Century Fox Union Oil Company Union Pacific t'nited Air Lines United Aircraft United Corporation United States Plywood United States Smelting United States Steel Walgreen Stores W.irner Pictures Western Union Tel. Westinchousc Air Brake Westinphouse Electric Wheeling Steel Woolwcrth Company 21 109 35 102 22 42 54 53 83 50 81 107 40 68 71 J.I ! 69 'A 53 li 31 U 80 Vt 46 33 28 -14 25 33 31 65 ',i 47 59 'k 45 51 i 29 Vt 39 94 257 103 30 16 136 V, 27 Vt 52 11 93 102 ,i 52 54 49 ?' 45 !i 39 51 V, 29 'A 34 47 45 423 V: 105 t 127 14 36 V4 45 52 97 11 29 30 164 V. 51 V 50 65 30 46 62 29-1, 21 : 30 125 16 37 30 ft 46 Vj 172 30 65 M 26 !'4 51 14 70 68 H 75 V, 37 51 V, 35 49 V, 80 53 40 22 24 48 48 H 22 t. 24 7 45 54 65 27 32 1 40 V 29 33 39 3i 7 48 30 96 ' 4 46 '4 41 i 54 so n 105 58 i 64 14 and FINANCE Livestock KLAMATH FALLS LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET January 11, 1960 Receipt: Cattle 583. Hogs 58. Sheep 0. Compared last Monday, fed cat tic weaker to .50 lower; stockers and feeders .50-1.00 higher: calves, .50-1.00 higher. Butcher hogs in short supply, weaker. Fed Steers: Choice, 1250 lbs. 23.JJ: Good-Standard 23.90-24.85; Std. Hoi. 21.50-21 80. Fed Heifers: Chose. 13 00-24 60: Good. 21.60 13 W: Std.. 18.10-22.10. Cos: Sid. 190O-215O: Cmcl. 17;M: Utility 16.00-17 85: Can- ners & Cutters 12 00-16.35. B-.r.U: Utility and Cmcl., 19.00 21.70: Feeders 16.00-19.ti0. Veal Caaits: Good-Choice. 28 40 2900: Hvjr Killer Calves. 23. JO: Ed Baby Ctlies. 31 00 per head stockers and Feeders: Steers Good-Choice. 5.-70O lb. 24 00-25 50 to 725-900 lb. 21.75-24 50 : 900-1100 lbs 20.2.1-21 50; Med-Com. 18.75-22.50. Heifers. Good-Choice, 500-650 lbs 23.00-25.00: Med-Com. 17.00-21.20. Steer Cahes. Good-Choice. 300 - 550 lbs. 25.75-27.60. 1 lot light wt 84 00 per head. 5 U Heifer Calves, Good-Choice. 400 - 500 lbs. 25.00-26.00. 1 lot light wt 77.50 per head. Feeder Cows, 11.00-15.00. Stock It Cows, Aged 120.00-142.50; Young 147.j0-165.0O; bred heifers 135.00. Hogs: U.S. 1 & 2 (180-220 lbs.), 12.60-13.20; Weaner Pigs, 3.00 Per Head; Feeders, 10.70-10.83. Reported by F. A. Skinner, coun ty extension agent. PORTLAND (AP) - (USDAU Catlle salable 300; holdover 90; in eludes five loads fed steers, couple loads fed heifers; trade slow, steady to weak: sonic unsold; truck lot good 1,213 lb steer 25.00; load mostly low good 1032 lbs 4.50; truck lot standard-commer cial 1266 lb Holstcin steers 22.50: truck lot good 740 lb fed heifers 23.00 with two out at 22.00; few cutter-utility steers, heifers 15.00- 1.00; utility cows 15.00-16.00, in cluding heavy Holsteins to 16.00; canners-cutters 11.50 - 13.50; Hol- stein cutters to 15.00; bulls scarce, couple heavy commercial bulls 21.00-22.00. Calves salable 50; trade active. strong; good-choice vealers sal able 28.00-33.00. Hogs salable 350; trade active, teady; U. S. 1 and 2 butchers around 185-235 lbs 14.25-14.50, in cluding 200 head at 14.50; mixed No. 1, 2 and 3 lots 13.50-14.00; few 270-325 lbs 12.50-12.75; sows 360- 540 lbs 9.50-11.00. Sheep salable 200; trade active; slaughter lambs strong to 50 cents higher; feeder lambs scarce; few slaughter ewes steady; two lots high good-choice fall shorn and wooled 105 lb lambs 19.00; few lots mostly good 100-103 lb wooled lambs 18.00; truck lots good-choice 101 lb fall shorn lambs 18.50; few utility-good 72-88 lb lambs 16.00- 17.00; good 95.-133 lb slaughter ewes 4.50-5.00. STOCKTON (UPI -FSMNS) - Livestock: Cattle salable 100. 825 lb low good slaughter heifer 21, commer cial cows 17.50-18, utility 16.50 17.50, canncrs and cutters 11.50 16.50. shelly canncrs down to 8. Utility bulls 1,325-1,570 lbs 21-22 cutters 19-20. Medium-good stock' or and feeder steers 550-700 lbs 22.50-24. Calves salable 25. Good stock steer calves 400-460 lbs 26-26.50, medium steers 300-325 lbs 24.50. Good heifer stock calves 24-24.50, medium down to 22. Hogs salable 250. Market not established. Sheep salable 25. Market un tested. GRAINS CHICAGO (AP)- High Low Close Prev.Close Wheat Mar 2.04'a 2.03 2.04-14 2.04 May 2.0314 2.02's 2.0314 2.03 Jly 1.83 1.8314 1.83- 1.83 Sep 1.861-1 i.86' 1.86'4 1 Dec 1.914 1.91 1.91'i 1.91'i Corn Mar 1.14'i 1.14 1.14'4-li 1.14 May 117 1.17 1.17 1.17 1.19'. 1.19 1.19'i 1.19 Hy Sep 1.15'. 1.15 1.15 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.15 Dec 1.09'i Oats Mar May .76 ,74'i .67 4 .65 .76 .73 .67 .65 .76V .74 '4 .67'. .65 .7614 .74 .67 .65 Jly Sep Rye Mar May 1 30 1.29'4 1.29'j 1.29 1.31 1.30'j 1.31-30 1.30 Jly 1.26 1.25 1.2614-26 1.26 127 1.26 1.27 1.26H Sep Soybeans Jan 15 2.14 2.14- 2.14 Mar 2.18 2. 17 2. 18- 2.18 2 20 2.19 2.20- 2.20 May Jly Sep 2.21 2.20 2.21- 2.21 2.12 2.12 2.12 2.12 POTATOES CHICAGO (AP) Potatoes ar rivals 142; on track 236; total A.S shipments 724: supply for Russets moderate. Round Reds rather lib eral: demand slow; market for Russets steady. Round Reds lightly weaker; car lot track sales: Idaho Russets 5.60; Minne sota North Dakota Red River Val ley Round Reds 2.80-2.95. MRS. MAXINE SMITH OEA Chief To Give Talk Mrs. Maxine Smith of Medford, president of the Oregon Education Association, will be guest speaker at the winter meeting of the Klamath County chapter of OEA Thursday. January 14, at 7 p.m. in the First Methodist Church, Ninth and High streets. Her topic will be "Merit Rating Is It the Answer?" The public is invited. Mrs. Smith is well known as an educator in Oregon. She teaches Latin at Medford Senior Hieh acnooi. She is a past president of the OEA Department of Classroom Teachers and is a member of the Advisory Committee on Teacher Certification, State Department of Education Mrs. Smith has participated in several conferences sponsored by the National Education Associa tion. She also was a member of a committee in Medford which recently completed a long study of merit ratings for teachers. Police Give Theft Report Thieves struck boldly several times in the city recently, Klam ath Falls police said. They stole two gasoline powered pumps worth $300 each from the ear of a pickup truck owned bv the Lee Hoffman Company of Bea- verton Sunday night or Monday. company representative Arthur M. Carson said he parked the truck at 320 South Sixth Street overnight Sunday. He discovered the theft when he arrived at a construction job in town Monday morning, he said. One pump was a centrifugal tvne. The other was a diaphragm tvne. Both were powered with Homelite motors. Another thief broke into a sta tion wagon owned by Lawrence G. Duffy, 3860 Bristol Avenue, Sat urday evening. He said the vehicle was parked at a lot at Shasta Way and Divi sion Street at 8:30 p.m. Someone forced the lock on a rear door and made off with a black metal toolbox and tools worth about $75, Thefts of hubcaps were report ed by Michael Prangcr of Route One and Leland Nyswonger of Route 3 Monday from a parking lot on South Sixth Street. Both are missing wo caps. Officers also are looking for the man who stole a blanket worth $6 from the Klamath Hotel Monday. The management said the man tooK tne Blanket with him when he vacated a room there. In other action, police apprehend ed a jail escapee, Blurton Baker, 54, at the Sears, Roebuck store on South Eighth Street Monday after noon. They said Baker would be charged with petty larceny. Baker.' a trustee, was halted by Sears Manager Chuck Burman and Assistant Manager Thel Rea as he stepped out of the store. They said he attempted to steal a pair of boys' trousers. Baker had been entrusted with work out side the jail. Funerals JOHNSON Funeral services for Ora Charles Johnson, 83, who died in Langell Valley January 10, will be held in O'Hair's Memorial Chapel Wednes day, January 13, at 10:30 a.m. In terment will be made in the Lost River Cemetery, Bonanza. MC Appointed For Banquet LAKEVIEW Tom J. Flynn has been appointed master of ceremon ies for the annual Lake Countv Chamber of Commerce banquet and installation of officers Monday eve ning, January 18. The dinner and ceremonies will be held in St. Patrick's Parish Hall. The dinner will be catered by Van's. All chamber members arc being contacted and if there are seats remaining, they will be made available to the public. Kevin Rush. Irish consul in San Francisco, will be guest speaker. First Kuropoan to round the Cfcpe of Good Hope was the Por tuguese navigator, Bartholomew Dias. HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, POTATO MARKET INFORMATION (Furnished by Federal-Stot ' Marketing News Service) POTATOES RAIL AND TRUCK SHIPMENTS (CL EQUIV.) KLAMATH BASIN Oregon Rail Oregon Truck Calif. Rail Calif. Truck CENTRAL OREGON Roll COLORADO IDAHO Rail WASHINGTON Rail U.S. TOTAL Rail SHIPPING POINT PRICES: (SKD. PER CWT) FOB KLAMATH BASIN PTS: NETTED GEMS U.S. No. 1-A 2" or 4 ox. min U.S. No. 1-A 5-14 oz. U.S.2 2" min. NET PRICE TO GROWER BULK AT CELLAR: NETTED GEMS U.S. No. 1-A 2" min. U.S. 2 FOB CENTRAL OREGON PTS. RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A U.S. No. 1-A 6-14 ex. min. U.S. 2 2" or 4 ox. min. 50 lb. NET PRICE TO GROWER . BULK DELV D. WHSE RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A U.S.2 2" or 4 ox. min. IDAHO PTS: NET PRICE TO GROWER. RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A U.S. No. 2 6-oz. POTATO 38 CITIES Rail Unload Truck Unload Total Unload Murder Trial In Vindup The basic question in the first degree murder trial of Leonard Marvin Lugo whether the man Lugo killed was armed with a knife was reviewed in detail at the close of Lugo's trial Tuesday Defense Attorney Joseph O, Stearns of Portland contended that Joseph Owen Martinez II was car rying a knife when he and Lugo walked down an alley last August 31 and Lugo fired six shots into Martinez' body. District Attorney Arthur Beddoe said testimony showed that Mar tinez was not armed at the time of the shooting. These statements were present ed in closing arguments before a four-woman, eight-man jury that was expected to begin deliberations this afternoon. The trial has been in session, since January 4. Final arguments were split into two days. Beddoe presented the slate s opening final argument yesterday afternoon, and was fol lowed by Defense Attorney Glenn D. Ramirez with the first half of the defense statement. Stearns Oregon Weather By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Tuesday Mux. Min. Prep Astoria 43 32 .10 Baker M 22 .11 Bend 34 4 Brookings 48 35 .61 Burns ' 36 24 .25 Chemult 34 0 Chiloquin 35 1 1.02 Eugene 40 31 .44 Lakeview 35 . 18 .37 Medford 40 32 .16 Newport 45 31 .24 North Bend 43 34 .74 Pendleton 28 19 .35 Portland Airport 35 33 Red Bluff 47 34 .3!) Redmond 36 10 .1!) Roseburg 41 31 .30 Salem 42 31 .08 The Dalles 25 19 .02 4 Northern Oregon Beaches Rain beginning early Wednesday, Temperature range 35-48. Souther ly to southwesterly beach winds 15-30 miles an hour. Western Oregon Increasing cloudiness with patches of valley fog tonight with rain beginning on northern coast late tonight. Cloudy with occasional rain along coast and rain or snow in interior val leys Wednesday. Temperatures about the same. Low tonight 30-36: high Wednesday 36-43. Southerly coastal winds 10-20 miles an hour. increasing to 25-35 late tonight and Wednesday. Eastern Oregon Partly cloudy tonight except fog or low cloudi ness in the north. Cloudy Wednes day with a little snow beginning n the western and northern por- 10ns late Wednesday. Continued cold. Low tonight 10-20 except near zero in a few higher valleys. Wallet Lost Ivon Trapp. Route 1. told state police he lost a wallet containing about $150 in cash last night about 3 p.m. Trapp said the wallet con tained one $50 bill, two $2 bills, and the rest in $10 bills, plus personal papers. He said it may have been lost near Al's Drive Iti. Wm-W't Only Mly Avfomoffc Omar El.ECTROLUXs TARKEL TWEET Ph. 4-7147 25S0 Whit. St. Ore. Tuesday, January 1-11-60 1959-60 1958-59 16 510 20 1,084 37 1,715 13 ,007 13 1,210 34 2,547 213 19.427 6 8,631 724 93,605 312 859 1,160 829 607 3,265 23,691 6,462 90,393 Monday 4.25 4.70-4.75 2.25-2.50 3.50 1.35-1.50 4.20-4.25 4.70-4.75 2.20-2.50 3.70-3.7S 1.70 3.50-3.80 1.50-1.75 UNLOAD Mond av Week Aao 523 484 546 1,069 416 900 opened the session with a lengthy conclusion of the state's case, and Beddoe followed with the state's last statement, Stearns asked the jury to return a not guilty verdict; Beddoe asked for a first degree murder convic tion. Stearns reviewed Lugo's nast life, which included marriage at 16, a penitentiary sentence for as sault during which Lugo's wife di vorced him, and release from the penitentiary last April. "We cannot look into his mind, we cannot look into his heart," Stearns told the jury, "but we do know he was under parole and un dor constant watch of the law. He knew that if he made a slip, he wouia go back behind those gray wans ... in tear of his life, he went down and bought that gun, Stearns conceded that no knife had been found during police in vestigation, but he suggested "Mar tinez could have thrown it any wncre when that first shot hit him or that the knife "could have been lost in moving the body Beddoe scoffed at the self-do, fense appeal and told the iurv. "The defendant is relying on self protection as an excuse for cold blooded murder." He reminded the jury the gun was found on a roof, and asked "Why, in heaven's name, did he try to hide the gun (Martinez) was totally unarmed.' Stearns, supporting the defense case, asked if Lugo "would have gone into a public tavern, with police at his elbow, with intent to kill a man? He also said Lugo was right handed, but grabbed the gun with his left hand because "he was frozen with fear Beddoe described the walk down the alley and Lugo's display of a 22 caliber semi-automatic pistol. "Oh, so this is the way it's go ing to be," Beddoe quoted Mar tinez, according to testimony. Lugo said, 'Yes, this is the way it s going to be, Beddoe said Then, bang!" Ramirez called for a blackboard as a prop for his closing argu merit. On it he codified the testi mony from each of 20 witnesses 13 for the state and seven for the defense, according to his own in terpretation of their statements His classification placed testimony from almost all witnesses as of fcring no overbearing testimony for either state or defense. OBITUARY BARKER Minnie Barker, 89, died Monday, January 11, at a nursing home in Gresham after an illness of about two years. Mrs. Barker was the mother of Loy Barker, Klamath Falls insurance man, and had visit ed here a number of times. She was born February 2, 1870, at Yon calla, Douglas County, and was the last surviving granddaughter of Jesse Applegate, early day Ore gon pioneer and leader of the fam ous Applegate Road expedition. She lived her entire life in this state. Interment will be in the Apple- gate family cemetery on the orig inal homestead, three miles from where she was born. Funeral serv ices will be at 2 p.m. Fridav, January 15. in the Church of Christ at Drain. Newspaper SPOT ADS are inexpensive - repeated daily $1.16 12. 1960 Gospel Mission Given Clean Bill By Klamath Falls Chief Of Police The Gospel Mission on Walnut Avenue was given a virtual clean bill-of-hcalth by Police Chief Charles Howard at the regular Monday night meeting of the city council. Chief Howard gave the council a report of comparison of names of persons registering at the Mis sion for assistance and those names appearing on the police blotter for arrest for drunk or vagrancy, HOWARD REPORTED that he had checked 500 names for the month of October with John Peder son of the Mission. "About five out of every 100 were on both lists, he said. When asked if this was high or low, he remarked, "It's very low I would say that there is little correlation between the Mission and our arrest lists." councilman Walter Fleet re marked, "Apparently we'll have to look someplace else for the rea son for all the guests in our ho tel." Chief Howard pointed out to the council, however, that while the Barbara Hit By Doctor, Says Lawyer LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A di vorce lawyer testified today that .Mrs. Barbara Finch told him her husband struck her with a gun and threatened her life two months before she was shot to death at her hilltop residence. Attorney Joseph Forno said Mrs Finch told him May 16 that she wanted to press a divorce action immediately because of what had occurred the night before. Deputy District Attorney Clif ford Crail then asked Forno "On the subject of fear, will you tell us now what that con versation was?" "Mrs. Finch called and advised me that Dr. Finch' had assaulted her, hit her with a gun and threat ened her life and that she wanted to proceed immediately with a di vorce," Forno responded. "She also asked for a restraining order m connection with the suit." Forno said Finch later attempt ed to persuade his wife to go through with a reconciliation but that she told him it was "just a trick on the doctor's part to get her back to the house so he could kill her." Cecil J. Lushkin of the county clerk's office identified divorce papers filed May 21 and also the will of Mrs. Finch which was filed for probate. The distance Dr. R. Bernard Finch was standing from his wife the night she was slain is a key question in the murder trial of the surgeon and red-haired Carole Tregoff. The defense is expected to claim Mrs. Finch was shot ac cidentally while struggling with her husband for possession of a gun she was carrying. (See Earlier Story on Page 3) Car Smashed; No Injuries A southbound Southern Pacific train smashed into a car last night but the car's two 18-year-old occupants walked away uninjured. State police said the car was driven by Robert Dean Hughes of Bonanza. His passenger was Benjamin Davis, Malin. Hughes apparently did not see the SP train when he started across a crossing at Wong's po tato cellar between Klamath Falls ana maun, me train was oper ated by Calvin Davis, 405 North Fourth Street. The front end of the car was completely demolished, police said. Officers said that both boys could have been killed if their car had started across the tracks a sec ond sooner. Budget Meetings Budget committees of the two city school districts will meet Fri day at 7:30 p.m. in the KUHS cafeteria to hear salary proposals from teachers and other school personnel. The budget committees are slat ed to meet frequently during the next two months to work out budg ets for presentation to voters for approval. ARTHRITIS? I have been wonderfully blessed in being able to return to active life after suffering from head to foot with muscular soreness and pain. Most all joints seemed af fected. According to medical diag nosis. I had Rheumatoid Arthritis. Rheumatism and Bursitis. For free information write: MRS. LELA S. WIER 2805 Arbor Hills Drivt GT P. O. Box 269S Jackson, Mississippi Adv. number of arrests has Increased by 40 per cent, the nunuer 01 po lice personnel has increased only 10 per cent. Fleet remarked, "This means that our policy of car patrols ap parently is working very efficient iv " The question of city policemen carrying deputy sheriff badges was ni.on a thnrouch airing. Chief Howard reported to the council CHIEF CHARLES HOWARD that three men currently carry such badges. "One," he said, has carried a badge since 1943 and has never used it." HE STATED that two policemen carry deputy sheriff badges for the purpose of patrolling private lands during the deer hunting sea son. "These men tane meir vaca tion at that time," he said, adding that he had no objection to the practice. He did object, however, he said, to policemen taking jobs as bounc ers at dances outside the city lim its. After some discussion the coun cil adopted a policy which would permit the juvenile officer, two de tective sergeants and the three pa trol sergeants to hold such deputy sheriff badges if they wished. Also the council gave Chief Howard au thority to approve other requests, providing they were for a specific purpose and the badges surren dered following completion of the job. Howard indicated that this met with his approval. The question of square dancing on Sunday came before the coun cil when the Merry Mixers asked permission to stage their Fifth An nual Square Dance Jamboree at the National Guard Armory on April 16 and 17. Councilman Floyd Wynne point ed out that the council was caught in the middle on this request. "We have an ordinance prohibiting dancing on Sunday," he said, "yet we have always approved this re-. quest in the past." IN PREVIOUS YEARS, the council stated since the dance was in the National Guard Armory it did not have jurisdiction. City At torney Henry Perkins told the council this was not correct, that the council had jurisdiction over everything inside the city limits. Discussion brought out, however. that the dance is not open to the public and there is no admission charge. Perkins stated he felt that the ordinance probably would notl apply to this type of dance. The matter was put over until next Monday to enable him to check this point. An ordinance covering "closine out" sales in the city was dis cussed and tabled until next meet ing when a representative of the Klamath Merchants failed to an- pear for the discussion. Council man Wynne pointed out that he preferred the Portland ordinance on the subject, and that the Klam Scrub Party MALIN The community hall here should shine by Wednesday night. Women of the commnnitv will wield brooms, mops, soap and dier 10 give it a thorough clean intf All t,,nn-nH t ,1. .... uiiii-ii ui me area are invited to join the scrub party and it is suggested they bring sat luncnes. Any ladv w th n electric floor scrubber is particu larly invited. The work day is be ing sponsored by the Home Ex tension Unit. ( LI Nation's No. 1 Camping Trailer Has DEALERSHIP OPEN In Klamath Falls area! ou con eoerato a i.i:.i.i. business wh il, i0yi9 ,he outdoors with you, fomilyi Spociol deoler plons . toilored to help you get storied . 0 open now for the right mon or rm in th. Klomoth Foils oreo. complete soles moteriol needed o operora your business . 01 ond demonstration use on deoler-cott basis. ath Falls ordinance should be pa(. ternea aner 11. A Ireasurcr's report by Mrs. Le, ola Heilbronner informed the coun. cil that tax collections up to Janu ary 1 had amounted to 82.9 per cent as against 80 per cent fot the previous year. A DAMAGE CLAIM amounting to $33 was presented to the coun. cil by Mrs. Eugene Demers, 1401, Wall Street. Vcrgecr reported that he had sent the damage claim t the city's insurance company i0 October, but that it had now been returned, the company refusing to pay it. ' The claim arose out of an incl.' dent involving Mrs. Demers 15.' year-old son who was playing tag football in Ewauna Park bare foot. He stepped on a square rod' projecting out of the ground, run. ning it through his foot. Councilman Fleet, acting as may. or pro-tem, reported he would taki the matter up with the insuranct company and report to next Mon' day's council meeting. Jaycees Pick 2nd Farmer For Honors Howard Holiday, who farms in partnership with his father, Lee,' was named the second of thret candidates for this year's Junior Chamber of Commerce Outstand ing Young Farmer Award. Judging will take place during the 25th annual Jaycees awards banquet at the Willard Hotel be ginning at 6:45 p.m. January 22. Holiday, 35, impressed Jaycees with forward-looking techniques he uses in coping with heavily alkali land and with the records he keeps of cattle productivity, on his ranch near the Weyerhaeuser mill. Since 1947 when the partnership was formed, the Holidays have boosted alfalfa yield to a wallop ing five and two thirds tons per acre on the 120 acres they reserve for that purpose. Proper irrigation practices and good crop rotation is the secret to high yield, they say. The Holi days fertilize only lightly. Cattle records the Holidays keep are so complete local farm bureau members are adopting the method, the Jaycees say. Last year 94 per cent of their heifers calved. The herd numbers more than 100 head The partners experiment fre-' quently with their land in coopera tion with the county farm agent's office. They have cleared 100 acres of their 800 acres of . range land since 1947 and use that land for experimental purposes. The younger Holiday has a wife, Barbara, and three children. He is a charter member of the local' Farm Bureau chapter, is past pres ident of the Klamath County chap ter of Young Farmers, and is as sistant 4-H club leader. Crash Victim Still Unconscious EUGENE, Ore. (AP)-Barbara Hill remained unconscious in a hospital here today, just two weeks after four fellow students at the University of Washington died in a car-truck crash. Miss Hill, 21, has been uncon scious since the accident although hospital attendants say she has shown some slight improvement. sne was one of five students driving to the Rose Bowl football game at Pasadena, Calif. The LUCKY NUMBERS are on K-LAD 960 TAP BIG NEW PROFIT AREA SporitngGoods, Marina, Hard wore stores - don't overlook this opportunity to cash in on the growing camping market by adding the nation's best -selling trailer to your outdoor department. Opens up big new soles area for Auto and House Trailer dealers (also ideal rent al product). "Protected" deoler franchises granted. rr com pine Intorm.tlgn write dlrrrtlr t: Mr. Ted Heil, President HEILITE TRAILERS, INC Sil South Sirr.mtnt. Slrttt c.hrerni.