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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 18, 1960)
AGE FOUR MARKETS Stocks WALL STREET NEW YORK (API - The stock market was sharply lower at close today as the list weakened under increasing selling. Volume for the day was esti mated at 3,000,000 shares com pared with 3,400,000 on Friday. Key industrials and rails took losses running from fractions to about a point. Utilities edged off. A few stocks had wider declines and a scattering of selected issues posted gains of 2 or 3 points as they responded to comment or spe cial situations. Despite larger than expected steel production, steel shares were down, Jones & Laughlin losing about a point and Republic Steel more than that. Ford dropped more than a point, taking the worst loss of the auto motive section. Other losses were fractional. Studebaker Packard (when issued! was off '. at 17 on a late block of 43,000 shares. NEW YORK STOCKS Admiral Corporation 20 A. J. Industries 6 Allied Chemical 100 ' j Allis Chalmers 36 ' Alcoa 03 Vt American Airlines 22 .k American Can 43 1 American Cyanainide 54 ! American M t Fdy 56 Vt American Motors 87 ' American Smelting 43 n American Tel & Tel 82 V, American Tobacco 107 'i American Viscose 39 ',4 Anaconda Copper 63 Vt Armco Steel 69 U Atchison Railroad 26 Vt Bendix Aviation . 70 Bethlehem Steel SI Boeing Airplane Co. 30 Borden Co. 86 7. Borg Warner 45 Vi Burroughs Corp. 33 Vt California Packing 29 Canadian Pacific 25 Vt Caterpillar Tractor 31 Vt Celanese Corporation 31 Chrysler Corporation 63 Vt Cities Service 47 Consolidated Edison 61 Vt Continental Can 43 Vt Crown Zellerbach 51 "S Curtiss Wright 28 ! Douglas Aircraft 38 Dow Chemical 93 Vt du Pont de Nemours 205 Vt Eastman Kodak 103 El Paso NG 29 Vt Emerson Radio 16 Vt Firestone Tire 34 Vt First America Corp. 28 Ford Motor 85 General Dynamics 50 Ik General Electric 91 Vt General Foods 103 General Motors 51 Georgia Fac C'p ' 48 Vi Goodyear Tiro 43 i Great A. & P. 40 Vt Great Northern 52 ? Great West. Sugar Gulf Oil Co. Idaho Power Illinois Central International Bus Mch International Nickel International Paper International T & T Johns Manville Kaiser Aluminum Kennccott Copper Llbby, McNeill & Libby Lockheed Aircraft Loew's Incorporated Minnesota Mining Monsanto Chemical Montgomery Ward National Cash Reg. New York Central Northern Pacific Pacific American Fish Pacific Gas & Electric Pacific Tel & Tel Pan American Airways Penn Dixie Cement Penney (J.C.) Co. Pennsylvania R.R. Pepsi Cola Co. Philco Corp. Polaroid Puget Sound P & L Radio Corp of Amer Rayonier Incorp. Raytheon Republic Steel Reynolds Metals Richfield Oil Safeway Stores Inc. St. Regis Schenley Distillers Scott Paper Co. Sears Roebuck 4 Co. Shell Oil Co. Sinclair Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Pacific Sperry Rand Standard Oil Calif. Standard Oil N.J. Studebaker Packard Sunray Sunshine Mining Swift & Company Texaco Thompson, R.W. Tiroken R Bearing Transamerica 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. Westinghousc Air Brake Westinghoust Electric tVheeling Steel Wcolworth Company 29 Vt 33 It 47 Vt 45 430 i,4 103 125 V4 35 '-i 47 '4 49 Vt 95 Vt 10 '4 29 :, 29 It 165 50 Vt 49 ft 63 14 29 Vt 45 . 12 Vt 63 i 29 Vt 21 31 120 r, 16 H 36 Vt 32 175 30 63 Vt 23 V4 49 68 66 ' 76 Ji 36 U 50 32 i 77 4 49 40 4 50 'i 39 'I 2J T 23 14 47 47 -H 22 1 23 H 6 46 Vt 79 53 66 4 26 '4 34 H 40 30 n 32 j 40 7 5i 49 33 93 s 47 39 J 32 V, 51 30 ' 105 57 'i 63 !, and FINANCE Livestock PORLAND (AP) - (USDA) -Cattle salable 1,650; fed steers and heiters moderately active, the mostly steady; few loads heavy. weight fed steers unsold; cows closing slow, steady to weak; 35 head load high good and low choice around 960 lb fed steers 26.50 ; 33-head load 1,180 lb 26.25; five head 25.25; good fed steers 24.50-26.00; standard 21.50-23.50. including load 1,150 lb Holstein steers at 22.50; two loads good and choice fed heifers 24.50; good heifers 22.50-24.00; standard 20.00 22.00; utility cows 15.00-16.50; can ners and cutters 11.50-13.50, Hol stein cutters to 15.00; few good and choice feeder steers 23.50 24.00. Calves salable 150; moderately active, fully steady; good and choice vcalers 28.00-32.00; utility and standard 19.00-27.00; culls down to 12.00; few stock calves 24.00-26.00. Hogs salable 1.250; trade active, generally 50 higher; U.S. No. 1-2 butchers 180-235 lbs mostly 15.00, few head 15.25: few lots mixed 1, 2 and 3s 177-233 lbs 14.00-14.50: 2-3 275-280 lbs 13.50: 2-3 sows 400 535 lbs 10.50-11.00; few around 300 lbs 13.00. Sheep salable 1,000; trade active. steady to strong; 251- head lot full shorn 106 lb lambs 19.30; small lot choice 102 lb woolcd lambs 19.25; few decks high good and choice No. 1 pelt to full wooled lambs 102-109 lbs 19.00; small lot 131 lbs 18.00: feeder lambs strong to 25 higher: several lots 78-86 lb feeders 16.50-17.23: couple head good slaughter ewes steady at 6.00. STOCKTON UPI-FSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 1.800. Low-choice 1,240 lb fed slccrs 23.50, standard to mostly good 1.000 - 1,275 lbs 23-24.30. Standard and good 800 960 lb slaughter heifers 22.25-23. Utility cows 16, cutter cows 14 14.75. Utility 1,400 lb bulls 22. Good 775 - 1,000 lb feeder steers 22-23. Medium and good stock cows 15-17. Calves salable 300. Good and choice 350-475 lb stock steer calves 27-29, medium down to 24.50. Good and choice heifer slock calves 24.50-26. Hogs salable 800. No. 1-2 -190-240 lb barrows and gilts 14.75, No. 3 14.25. 240-260 lb butchers No. 2-3 13.75-14. No. 1 to 3 300-600 lb sows 6.50 - 10.50. Good and choice 30 90 lb feeder piss 13.50-15. Sheep salable 100. Market n o t established. LOS ANGELES (UPI-FSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 1,550. Slaugh- tcr cows moderately active. Others slow. Slaughter steers and cows firm to 50 cents higher. High-good and low-choice 1,187 lb slaughter steers 24.50; good around 900 lb with end standard 23.50: standard to low-good 900-1,000 lb 21-23; util ity 18; low-choice 817 lb crossbred heifers 25; utility range slaughter cows 15-17; utility dairybreds 14.50-17; canners and cutters 12-15; light or shelly canners 10-12; util ity dairy-type bulls 22-23.50; 800 lb medium and good but aged feeder cows 15: medium cows and young calves $200 pair. Calves salable 75. Not estab lished. Few sales slaughter class es about steady. High-standard and good 275-330 lb 24-26. Hogs salable 500. Butchers and sows firm to 50 cents higher. No. 1-3 sows 260-350 lb 9.50-10; No. 2-3 around 445-580 lb 8.50-9. Sheep salable 25. Not estab lished. GRAINS CHICAGO (API High Low Close Prev. close Wheat Mar 2.02 2.02-H 2.02'i 2 02i May 2.02'i 2.01 2.02 2.02 Jly 1.84'k 1.834 1.83'k 1.84'k Sep 1.86'i 1.86-1. Dec 1.91'i 1.91'i Corn Mar 1.15'V 1.14'k 1.15'i 1.14i May 1.18'i 1.17'i 1.18', 1.17i Jly 1.20'i 1.195 1.20'i 1.19'i Sep 1.16'i 116'k 1.1S 1.16'k Dec 1.10 1.094 1.10 1.09'i Oats Mar .77-1. .77'k .77'-. ,77' May .75 .74'i .74'i .743i Jly .67 .67'4 .67'4 .67W Sep .65'4 .65 .655i .65" 4 Rye Mar 1.28'4 1.28'i 1.28'4 1.28'i May 1.30' l 1.29-'i 1.30 1.30 Jly 1.26'k li 1.26 1.25'4 Sep 1.27 1.264 1.26' 1.27 Soybeans Jan 2.15'k 2.14 2.1.V147k 2.13'. Mar 2.17'i 2.164 2.17'i-' 2.16'k May 2.19'k 2.18'i 2.18V4 2.18 Jly 2.19'i 2.18i 2.18-V4 2.184 Sep 2.11'k J.10'4 2.10V4 2.11-4 POTATOES FRANCISCO (UPI SAN FS.MNS) Potatoes: Russets Klamath U S 1A 5.00 3.25. Elks Gathering Names Medford OREGON CITY (AP - The Oregon Elks Assn. has picked Medtord tor the site of its summer meeting. More than 1,000 members of the Elks Lodge and their wives at tended the mid-winter meeting, which closed here Saturday night. Director Schedules Tour For Shakespearean Talent ASHLAND Angus L. Bowmer, founder and producing director of the Oregon Shakespearean t estival in Ashland, departed January 11 on a two-month 28-state tour of the nation's leading theater cen ters. Under the auspices of South ern Oregon College (where he is professor of drama) and the Fes tival Association, Bowmer will vis it 33 universities and a number of community theaters between now and mid-March. 'For the festival organization I'll be interviewing and audition- GOP Chairman To Talk Here Klamath County Republicans will have an opportunity to hear Pe ter M. Gunnar, chairman of the State Central Committee, at a no- host dinner Thursday, January 21 at the Wincma Hotel. In announcing Gunnar's appear ance here, Klamath County Vice Chairman Ann Watters, pointed out that everyone is invited. Those who wish to attend the dinner arc asked to phone their reserva tions to TU 4-8374 so that arrange ments can be made. However, Mrs. Watters empha sized that those who do not wish to come for the dinner are wel come to come and hear Gunnar talk about 8 p.m. The dinner will begin at 7 p.m. Gunnar is now completing a tour of southern and western Oregon. He will appear in Coos County Tuesday night, Jackson County on Wednesday. A Salem lawyer, Gunnar has traveled an estimated 17,000 miles in Oregon on behalf of the Re publican parly since his election as state chairman in January, 1959. He will talk here on the future of the Republican party. Chief Skeds Russian Trip WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi dent Eisenhower's crusade o( world travels to promote peace and freedom will tako him be hind the Iron Curtain into the So viet Union for 10 days starting June 10. Dates for the President's trip, planned since last summer, were announced Sunday by the White House and the Soviet government. ine u.. announcement was made in Albany, Ga., shortly be fore Eisenhower (lew back to Washington after a weekend of quail hunting. In going to the Soviet Union Eisenhower will be returning the two-week visit which Soviet Pre mier Nikita Khrushchev made to the United States last September. I he President will go first to Moscow. He also will visit a few other cities in the Soviet Union but there has been no final de cision as to which ones. There were no immediate an nouncements as to whether the President will be accompanied by Mrs. Eisenhower and their four grandchildren. Khrushchev invit ed the youngsters when he mot them at the President's Gettvs- burg. Pa., farm. Diplomatic sources in Moscow said Eisenhower will stay in a guest house in the Kremlin rather than the Kremlin palace. Eisenhower's trip will be part of his campaign of worldwide tra vel in behalf of what he terms "peace and friendship in free dom." Khrushchev's two weeks in this country seem to have made no basic improvement in relations, and now he is pushing a new pres sure drive to force the Western leaders to give up protection of West Berlin. That will he a main issue at the Paris summit conference starting May 16, less than a month before Eisenhower's ar rival in the Soviet Union. The President, Britain's Prime Min ister Harold Macmillan and French President Charles de Gaulle will meet with Khrushchev at the Paris session. Wood of the persimmon tree Is used to make shuttles and wooden ff4 fc tfft PETER M. GUNNAR heads for golf clubs. j HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath ing actors and technicians who may wish to join future festival companies," Bowmer said. "To as sist future planning at Southern Oregon College I will also be com piling a study of theater courses, methods, and stage facilities on each campus." Although Bowmer will be pre pared to answer individual ques tions about the festival, most of the schools on his itinerary have already supplied his Elizabethan theater with personnel. Company members and audiences annually come to Ashland from all geograph ical areas. The Oregon event, old est of its kind in the Western Hemisphere, stages a six-week repertory season of Shakespeare an drama each summer. The 1960 schedule will offer "Taming of the Shrew," "Julius Caesar," "T h e Tempest, " and "Richard II" in nightly rotation from July 25 through September 3. Two special performances of John Webster's "Duchess, of Malfi" will also be staged on August 22 and 31, the first non-Shakespearean Elizabe than work to be produced in Ash land. Lad Samples Bad Medicine City police rushed Tony Knight, age 1 1 2 . to Klamath Valley Hos pital Sunday evening. About a "half a bottle" of tonsilitis med icine was pumped from his stom ach. His mother, Mrs. Peggy Knight of 911 Walnut Avenue, called of ficers. He was released in good condi tion after treatment. In other action, officers ar rested William H. McLaughlin Sunday evening in connection with the theft of a coat and an article of luggage. McLaughlin was charged with drunkenness. Officers recovered the missing articles from McLaughlin's room in a local hotel. He admitted stealing them, officers said, but no complaint was filed against him. The theft was reported by Rob ert B. Cox of Portland, who said he left the articles on the cor ner of Sixth Street and Klamath Avenue and entered the rest room of a nearby filling station. The gear was gone when he re turned, he said. Officers later spotted McLaugh lin walking on Klamath Avenue carrying a coat answering the description. Other thefts reported to police included a burglary in a home occupied by Johnny Mayfield at 729 Willow Street. Mayfield told police early Monday morning burglars broke a door to gain en try to his home while he was in Portland over the weekend. A cigarette lighter, two wom- fn's skirts and a sack of fire wood were stolen, he said. Earlier over the weekend, po lice learned from Peter Ronnin- gen of 1143 Alandale Street that a toboggan and a sleigh, worth a total of $15 were taken from his yard Friday or Saturday. Budget Lists Crater Money The budget for the year begin ning July 1 presented to Congress by President Eisenhower Monday morning contained two appropria tions for Crater Lake National Park. Included in the total appropria tion of $86,311,000 for national parks were: $39,400 for recon-1 struction of Sinnot Memorial and Annie Springs campground, and $595,000 for construction of roads and trails. The money also included $52, 900 for utilities at Fort Clatsop National Monument. State Traffic Toll Rising By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oregon's highway death toll in I960 is rising at a slightly higher rate than in a comparable period of 1959 a year in which a record 497 persons perished on the state's highways. Three more persons died over the weekend in Oregon traffic ac cidents pushing the 1960 death toll to 17 persons, in the As sociated Press tabulation. Sixteen persons were killed on Oregon highways through the first 18 days of last January. Two cars collided hcadon near Foicst Grove Sunday night, kill ing George Leonard of Tilla mook, 52. and his wife. Iniz. 51. Sheriffs deputies said the two occupants of the other car, Mr. and Mrs. Nolna Haworth of Hills boro, suffered minor injuries. Peoplt Read SPOT ADS you arc Falls, Ore. Monday, January 18. lOfiO POTATO MARKET INFORMATION (Furnished by Federal-Stota Marketing News Service) POTATOES RAIL AND TRUCK SHIPMENTS (CL EQUIV.) 115-14-1740 1959-40 1958-59 KLAMATH BASIN Oregon Rail 25 570 338 Oregon Truck 8 1,132 924 Calif. Rail 51 1,842 1,279 Calif. Truck 8 1,050 905 CENTRAL OREGON Rail 19 1,249 425 COLORADO 37 2,470 3,421 IDAHO Rail 271 20,308 25,045 WASHINGTON Rail 8 8,448 4,493 U.S. TOTAL Rail 1,001 94,437 93,704 SHIPPING POINT PRICES: " Friday (SKD. PER CWT) FOB KLAMATH BASIN PTS: NETTED GEMS U.S. No. 1 -A 2" or 4 oi. min 4.25 U.S. No. 1 -A 5-14 or. 4.45-4.75 1 lot $5 U.S.2 2" min. 2.25-2.50 NET PRICE TO GROWER BULK AT CELLAR: NETTED GEMS U.S. No. 1-A 2" min. 3.50 occ 3.70 U.S.2 1.50 FOB CENTRAL OREGON PTS. RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A U.S. No. 1-A 4-14 oi. U.S. 2 2" or 4 oz. min. NET PRICE TO GROWER . BULK DELV'D. WHSE. RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A U.S. 2 2" or 4 oz. min. IDAHO PTS: NET PRICE TO RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A U.S. No. 2 4-oz. POTATO 38 CITIES Rail Unload Truck Unload Total Unload Tulelake Schedules Many March Of Dimes Projects TULELAKE Ed Lance, 1960 New March of Dimes chairman for Tulelake, has announced schedule for coming events of the fund drive and reported on past successes. A dime board, placed in the Sportsman's Hotel, believed to be the first filled in Tulelake or adja cent communities totaled $88 and further contributions by townspeo ple and farmers increased the fund at the hotel by another $40. Jim Briley is proprietor. Assisting with the filling, accomplished in about three hours, were Virgil Barron Clyde Todd and Al Hardman. Members of the Merrill Moose Lodge staged a successful chili- dog sale at Jock's Super Market on January 16 for benefit of the Tule lake drive. Dope Trial Awaits Jury Selection of a jury nearcd com pletion at noon today in the dope possession trial of John William Carswell, a 22-ycar-old Kingslcy Field airman arrested with what police said was marijuana in his pocket. It is the first marijuana case here in a great many years. Carswell was arrested on a downtown street corner October 1 by city police staked out on an across-the-strcet parking lot. At Carswell's preliminary hearing, another airman and three police officers described a planned "buy" that led to. Carswell's ar rest. . Carswell was represented by at torneys Richard C. Beesley and P. K. Puckett in his circuit court trial before Judge David R. Van denberg. The slate was represent ed by District Attorney Arthur Beddoe. Referee Hearing Held For Boys Referee hearings in the county juvenile office a new step in stituted under state law were held for the first time Friday. Three cases involved four boys. Juvenile Officer Francis Math ews, the referee, said three cases involved truancy and the fourth involved prowling. A boy accused of prowling in a garage to steal pop and beer bot tles he wished to sell was placed on a nightly 7:30 p.m. curfew, with one exception until 10 p.m. one night a week with parents' permission, and was ordered to do a minimum of five hours homework a week. He was placed on probation for three months. One ' of the youths brought be fore the referee for truancy was ordered to attend school or work (or the city of Chiloquin. his home town, if he did not go to school. The other two truants were warned they would be placed in the juvenile home if they couldn't make it to school on their own. The first traffic referee hear ings are scheduled for this week before Mrs. Maxine Smith, traf fice counselor. J. Henry Helser & Co. lnTtlMnl MRtrra taubtuktl Itn OffleM la FrtBfflalt hi cm CIIIm Erneit Bunev 333 Vl. At. TO 4-3041 Klamath Falls 4.20-4.35 min. 4.75-4.90 50 lb. 2.45 Too few to quote GROWER. Too few to quote UNLOAD Friday Week Ago 311 523 403 544 714 1,049 Future events include a Block of Dimes between the Sportsman's Hotel and the Bank of America and a Crutch Sale Saturday, Janu ary 23, sponsored by the Westmin ster Youth Group of the Tulelake Community Presbyterian Church. A Rotary luncheon and Kiwanis dinner at $2 per plate, $1 per plate to go to the drive, the meals to be served at the Sportsman's Hotel, January 27. The annual Mothers March is planned for the same night with both city and rural areas to be covered. On January 28 a March of Dimes Sports Night, which promises to be hilarious for players and spec tators, will be staged in the Tule lake High School gymnasium start ing at 7 p.m., all proceeds to go to the drive. Three basketball games are to be played, the first between New ell and Tulelake Elementary School squads; second between the juniors and seniors: third between members of the Rotary and Ki wanis clubs. Lance urges residents of the community to attend the various events and support the drive. Crash Hurts Klamath Man Louis Corrigan, 933 High Street. Klamath Falls, a passenger on the Southern Pacific's southbound Daylight, that struck a truck at a grade crossing Sunday near San Lucas, California, was one of four passengers to suffer minor inju ries. There were 241 persons on board. Corrigan remained on the train and continued to Los Angeles. According to an Associated Press report, the first diesel of the Dav- light was derailed and ripped out several hundred yards of track. The wreck and torn up track blocked traffic for several hours. The truck driver and a com panion were injured, one serious ly. Bly Store Robbed The Sycan Store in Bly, operat ed by Mr. and Mrs., Larry Svcns- gaard, was robbed Sunday night, the sheriff's office reported. Missing was a quantity of wine and cigarettes, the value not fully determined. Deputy Sheriffs Jim Conroy and John Holloway said entrance was gained by throwing a whisky bottle through a plate glass window. The deputies said about $50 in cash, lying in an opened cash reg ister drawer, were untouched. The theft was under investiga tion, Sheriff Red Britton said today. Nation's No. 1 Camping Trailer Has DEALERSHIP OPEN In Klamath Falls area! You eon operate o profitable business while enjoying the outdoors with your family! Special dealer plans - tailored to help you get started - are open now tor the right man or firm in the Klamath Falls area. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED PRODUCT - Program includes complete sales material needed to operate your business . . . actual trailer unit for person al and demonstration use en dealer-cost basis. Wool Pool Hears Warning, 'Must Meet Competition "In order to maintain their pro- Dortionate share of red meat sales, sheep producers are going to have in meet comnetition. ur. u r , Fox of Corvallis, in charge of the sheep division, Oregon State Col lege, told a capacity crowd at the annual meeting of the Klamath Basin Wool Pool last week. Dr. Fox pointed out the enor mous changes in beef and pork going to market today over that of a decade ago. Just as consumer demand resulted in the develop ment of the broad-breasted bronze turkey which is mostly white meat the same demand has brought about leaner pigs and more tender beef, he staled. He showed slides of experimental work being done to improve the meat type sheep. The fifth annual meeting of the wool pool was held in the Henley Grange Hall on January 14. Paul Hatchett of Poe Valley and Glenn Haskins of Merrill were elected as new directors. Haskins and Bob Hunt of Henley are directors-at- large. Holdover directors are Earl Mack of Henley, chairman of the pool since its formation: Barry O'Connor of Tulelake, Lester Moore of Merrill and Bob Brett of Lan gell Valley. The directors will meet soon to select officers for the coming year. Dorman Turner of the Klamath Falls branch of the First National Bank of Oregon, gave the treasur er's report for last year's opera tion. The pool handled more than 19,- 000 fleeces for 146 members. Buy ers included three who have pur chased for the last several years which shows continued satisfaction with the quality, Turner pointed out. Price was 49.15 cents per pound, right along with lop prices in the Basin, he added. The organization started out with 48 members and has tripled membership in four years. It has offered a particularly advanta geous method of marketing 4-H and FFA members' fleeces. The cost of operating the pool has been covered by a levy of two cents per fleece. The levy is being continued this year, except that a $2 per flock minimum has Skier Breaks Leg In Fall A Klamath County man who nearly won the 5,000 meter foot race in the Olympic Games of 1932 at Los Angeles received a broken leg in a fall on a steep slope of Tomahawk Ski Bowl Sat urday afternoon, 25 miles north west of Klamath Falls. He is Ralph Hill, 51, who has been skiing for years never, how ever, as a professional. Hill was to have been discharged from Klamath Valley Hospital Monday. The break was not con sidered an extremely bad one. He told rescuers, who towed him on a stretcher off the ski slope that a safety binding had been ad justed too tightly and failed to release when he fell. His right leg received the in jury. It had been damaged about four years ago by polio. Hill lives on a ranch near Hen ley. Oregon Weather 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Monday Max. Min. Prep, Astoria 45 35 Baker 21 -9 T Bend - 21 15 Brookings 49 44 .25 Burns 31 0 T Eugene 40 32 .40 Lakeview 33 21 .22 Medford 40 38 .04 Newport 49 33 .29 North Bend 53 44 .21 Pendleton 25 16 T Portland Airp't .. 39 32 Redmond 31 17 .07 Roseburg 45 40 .08 Salem 43 32 .02 The Dalles 29 23 T Eastern Oregon Partly cloudy colder in south tonight. Highs 22-32; low to- nignt -5 to 15. Western Orecon Parllv rlnnHv tonight and Tuesday; colder in south tonight. Highs 38-46; low to night 25-35. Coastal winds easterly 10 nonneasterly, 10-25 m.p.h. Northern O r e e o n heachc Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday. Highs 40-45; low tonicht 2S-3n Beach winds easterly, 5-15 m.p.h. TAP BIG NEW PROFIT AREA aporirngboods, Marine, Hard ware 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 sales area far Auto and House Trailer dealers (also ideal rent al product). "Protected" dealer franchises aranted. Fr c.mpl,,. Inf.rmill.B T alrrcllT - write Mr. Ted Heil, President HEILITE TRAILERS, INC. r.,:,.,r.:!',.,v,."-" been set. This minimum does not apply, however, to 4-H and FFA boys and girls. Earl Mack, chairman, urges all wool pool members to sign the new agreements as soon as pos. sible. Forms are available at ths Klamath County agent's office, the Faim Bureau office on South Sixth Street and at Turner's office at the First National Bank in Klamath Falls. In addition, there are avail, able forms at the Merrill hranrh of the First National Bank and at Farm Adviser Ken Bahott's ol. lice at lueiaKe. The group passed a unanimous motion directing a letter to be sent to the management of the First National Bank of Oregon express, ing appreciation for Turner's serv. ices to the group and a similar let. ter to the extension service in appreciation for the assistance giv. en by Ray O. Petersen of iu Klamath County agent's office. ... "A large share of the success of the local pool has been a result of the untiring work of these two men," Mack stated. Plans are getting underway for strong promotion campaisn at the local level on both wool and lambs, the chairman reported. Thief Placed On Probation William Lee Fargo, 19, Malin, was placed on probation for one year today, after pleading guilty to theft of about four cases ot beer from a storeroom in the Ma lin Fire Department building Janu. ary 12. Probation was determined by' District Judge D. E. Van Vactor.; Juvenile court hearings were an ticipated for two juveniles de-, tained with Fargo" for questioning' in the theft. The juvenile office said a 14-year-old was implicated in the theft, and a 16-year-old was involved in drinking the beer he had known to have been stolen. Neither of the boys had been in trouble previously, the office said. In another district court case. Leslie Edward Price, 42, Chemult, was arraigned on a charge of steal ing an air horn from a lumber truck owned by W. M. Raymond at Chemult on New Year's Eve. Price was ordered to appear at 10 a.m. Thursday to enter a plea to the petty larceny charge. He was released on $250 bail. Pair Injured In Car Crash Mr. and Mrs. William E. Van Meter of 635 Nosier Street were in jured in a two-car collision at the corner of Nevada and California avenues at 8:50 a.m. Monday. Mrs. Van Meter was unconscious when brought to the hospital by Peace Ambulance. She was admit ted. She apparently suffered in juries to a wrist. X-rays had not been examined at noon. Van Meter's injuries probably are not serious, (he hospital indicated, City police said the Van Meter car collided with a truck driven by Donald E. Hodgdon of 73B"-i Doty Street. Officers blamed icy pave ment. No citations were issued. The car was demolished, they said. The truck was not badly dam aged. Hodgdon escaped injury. Appeal Requests Records Return City police issued an ureent broadcast at noon for the return of two filing cases of medical rec ords of patients, stolen sometime over the weekend frnin thp nffire of Dr. F. W. Johnson of 112 North Fifth Street. Dr. Johnson is extremely anxious for the safety of the rec ords, police said. Burelars pntprprl an linlnrL-prl door at the street level and pried open the door to Dr. Johnson ! second floor office. They took a small safe ronlain- ing the records and $20. The theft was discovered Montiay morning oy an employe. YOU BE THE JUDGE k Isnt it better to stay on the job than lose tfme taking Rectal treatments? fr Isnt K better to go to one who specializes in Rectal treatment than to suffer from treatments by inex perienced hands? Isnt it better to be cored quickly and permanently from PROLAPSE, FIS SURE. FISTULA. ANAL THROMBOSIS and other Rectal disorders WITH OUT HOSPITAL OPERA TION? You Be the Judge The decision H yovrv ct now I Dr. Reynolds Cfinfc Narmmpataic PkyifciBB Rectal Specialist MM Onm. N.E, gain. CM. Phone EM 3 9460