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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1960)
PAGE A A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Thursday, January 21, I960 MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks WALL STREET NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market remained irregularly ; higher at the close today despite ;'Jate profit taking. Final dealings 'were active. ' Volume (or the day was esti- mated at 2,600,000 shares coin spared with 2,720.000 Wednesday. I; Among key stocks the gains ran '. Jrom fractions to about a point ; 'generally while larger gains were , -made by more speculative issues. ' Steels, motors, rails, coppers ;'and aircrafts were on the upside 'as the market, battered by suc cessive declines, tried to make . good its third daily rise of I960, The Russian and American mis- t site firings drew attention to rock- let fuel-missileclectronic issues .'Gains of more than a point were ! scored by Thiokol, Zenith, Mo- ; torola, Texas Instruments and Lit- ; ton Industries, General Tire, which has a rocket subsidiary, and 'Ampcx were up about 2 each. Livestock PORTLAND (AP) - (USDA)- Cattlc salable 100; supply curtail' cd by transportation difficulties due to storm; offering mostly cows with few fed steers; trade moderately active, steady; small lot good 1105 lb steers 25.00; four head 1230 lb 24.00; canncr and cut ler cows mostly 12.50-14.00; few cutter and utility Ilolstcins 15.00- 15.50; other classes not tested. Calves salable 10; market not tested early: good and choice vcalers quotable 28.00-33.00; cull and utility salable 12.00-22.00. OBITUARY McCL'RLEY Mrs. May McCurley, 43, wife of Gene T. McCurley, 3939 Wiard Street, died in a Medford Hospital, Tuesday evening, January 19. Fu neral services will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday, January 22, from the First United Presbyterian Church at D Medford, with the Reverend Kirkland West officiating. In tcrment will be in the Siskiyo Memorial Park at Medford with Chapel Mortuary in charge. Mrs McCurley was born November 30, 1916, daughter of Condo and Eliza beth Pfaff Ballard, in Westfield Indiana. Both parents survive She was a registered nurse and sfrvpd Hurin? World War II as Hogs salable 50; scattered sales, an ensin in its Navy hospitals Grand Jury To Ponder Six Cases NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS r Admiral Corporation ;A. J. Industries Allied Chemical ; Allis Chalmers ; Alcoa j American Airlines ; American Can ; American Cyanamide ; American M k Fdy -. American Motors ; American Smelting American Tel k Tel ; American Tobacco ; American Viscose J Anaconda Copper jArmco Steel Atchison Railroad jBendix Aviation j Bethlehem Steel ' Boeing Airplane Co. 2 Borden Co. 'Borg Warner I Burroughs Corp. .' California Packing '. Canadian Pacific : Caterpillar Tractor ; Celanese Corporation Chrysler Corporation . Cities Service ; Continental Can ; Crown Zellerbach ; Curtiss Wright ; Douglas Aircraft ;Dow Chemical ; du Pont dc Nemours Eastman1 Kodak El Paso NG Emerson Radio ! Firestone Tire ', First America Corp. ! Ford Motor ', General Dynamics ! General Electric , General Foods General Motors ; Georgia Pac Cp . Goodyear Tire ; Great Northern : Great West. Sugar ; Gulf Oil Co. ; Idaho Power ' . Illinois Central ; International Bus Mch ;Internatinal Nickel international Paper International T k T Johns Manvillc '. Kaiser Aluminum IKennccott Copper :Libby, 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 k Electric ; Pacific Tel k Tel ;Pan American Airways ;Pen Dixie Cement Penney (J.C.) Co. Pennsylvania R.R. '. Pepsi Cola Co. '. Philco Corp. : Phillips Pet. Polaroid Puget Sound P k L Radio Corp of Amer Eajonier Incorp. 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. Istudebaker Packard JSunray Sunshine Mining ; Swift k Company . Texaco ; Thompson, R.W. Timken 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 Slates Steel ; Walgreen Stores ; Warner Pictures ; Western Auto Supply ; Western Union Tel. Westinghouse Air Brake - nvsiincnnii.M! r.iprrr p . Wheeling Steel Woolworth, Company 20 6 108 Vt 38 96 22 Vt 42 52 56 "4 85 48 82 107 h 39 65 69 25 14 69 A 51 Vt 30 A 86 V 45 Vt 32 ?i 28 25 30 29 Vt 63 3. 46 ' 43 V, 49 28 Is 38 93 ' 246 Vt 101 V, 29 V, 16 Vt 132 Vi 27 84 49 Vt 90 101 50 .i 47 Vi 42 52 !4 31 33 Vi 47 Vt 44 Vt 420 103 122 Vt 37 46 i 49 Vi 94 V4 10', 29 29 Vi 165 Vi 49 Vt 49 63 29 H 45 12 Vi 61 Vt 29 Vi 20 30 'i 120 Vt 15 V. 35 30 ' 44 i 173 si 30 !4 62 Vt 25 48 i 69 64 i 77 ij 36 50 32 1, 76 47 Vi 40 Vt 50 39 i 22 i 23 Vt 47 Vi 47 22 ', 24 6 Vi 47 77 52 Vt 65 26 IV 34 H 38 H 29 S 31 39 7i 57 31 'i 93 47 Vi 40 32 52 i 30 i 103 57 V steady; few U. S. 1-2 butchers around 185-200 lb 15.25; few No. 2-3 grade 14.50; sows scarce. Sheep salable 25; prices untest ed early; good and choice fall shorn and woolcd lambs earlier this week 19.00-19.75; good and choice feeder lambs 16.00-17.25; cull and utility 78-98 lb ewes 3.00- 5.00. STOCKTON (UPI-FSMNS) . - Livestock: Cattle salable 100: hogs salable 25; calves and sheep salable none. No price tests. LOS ANGELES (UPI-FSMNS)-Cattle salable 300. Cows slow, about steady. Others nominal. High-utility to low-standard 700-750 lb heifers 21-22; utility cow-type 17; cutters 15: utility dairybred cows 14.50-16; low to average-util ity range cows 15-16; canncrs and cutters 12-14.50; light shelly can- ners 10-12; common 550-700 lb. dairy-type stock steers 16-17: me dium 800 lb stock cows 14-15. Calves salable 15. Nominal. Individual high-good 285 lb slaugh ter calves 27; high-standard 250 lb 25.50. Hogs salable 50. Unsold. Sheep salable 100. Good and choice 97 lb woolcd slaughter lambs 18.50; 123 lb 15. 2.01',i 2.01 'i 1.84 l.B6-4 1.914 GRAINS CHICAGO (API High Low Close Prev.Close Wheat Mar S.OS. 2.01 "4 2.02 ','4 May 2.01 2.00tt 2.01'i Jly 1.84 1.83 1.83!. Sep lMi 1.86', 1.86'i Dec ' 1.91 li 1.91V4 1.91', Corn Mar 1.14'k 1.1414 UV't-V. 1.14'4 May 1.17',k 1.173. 1.17'i-Vi 1.17!4 Jly 1.20 1.194 1.20-19V4 1.193i Sep 1.16'k 1.16'i 1.16'i 1.16'i Dec 1.10T4 1.09?', 1.093i 1.10 Oats ,76'i .76 Vi .74-1i .74 .67 .67V4 .65 .65 Mar May Jly Sep Rye Mar May Jly Sep .76 '".74-Vi .67 .65 .77 .74 .67V4 .65'i 1.28'i 1.26 1.28 1.27 1.29 1.28 1.29 1.29 1.25'4 1.24"4 1.25'i 1.25' 1.26',i 1.254 1.26',i 1.26 POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO (UPI-FSMNS) Potatoes: Russets Klamath U.S. 1A 5.00- 5.25; U.S. 1 5-ounce minimum 5.75-6.00. LOS ANGELES (UPI-FSMNS)- No Oregon potato sales. Kingan of Pasadena: three sons Richard Balthasar, Pasadena. Harry, Hollywood, and Lewis of Altadena. He also leaves five grandchildren and three great grandchildren. Interment will be in the Evergreen Cemetery. Radio Net Pact Awarded A mobile radio network for use of the county sheriff and road de partments should be in opera tion about mid-April. The county court yesterday awarded a $26,994 contract to Mo torola for the transistorized system to include a base station, three control stations, five remote units 19 mobile units, three portable units, plus installation and acccs sories. Cost to the county will be $13.- 189: the state will pay $308. and half the cost, or $13,497, will be paid by the federal government on condition the network may be used for civil defense purposes. The contract is subject to con firmation by Motorola and approv al by federal civil defense author ities. The court awarded its contract after bids by both Motorola and General Electric were examined in detail by Joe Searles, Klam ath County Civil Defense director. General Electric had bid $23,829, or $3,000 under Motorola. Searles' evaluation, the court said, found Motorola met bid speci fications but General Electric omit ted required items. General Elec tric did not meet specifications for transistorized portable equipment crystal stability, power output, portable equipment modulation, or technical specifications for one band. The Motorola mobile unit, the court said, will require no more power than an auto dome light at Portsmouth, Virginia, Camp White and San Diego. She was married in Westfield to Gene Mc Curley, who survives. McCurley was the agricultural representative for the First National Bank in Medford until 1958 when he was transferred to Klamath Falls where he holds the same position with the First National Bank. Mrs. Mc- Curley was a member of Peace Memorial Presbyterian Church Oregon Nurses Association, Cen tral Point Grange and Pomona Grange of Oregon. Besides the widower and parents, survivors are three daughters, Patricia Gene, Maureen Kay and Arlenn Sue two brothers. Max Ballard, Wright- Patterson Air Force Base, Day ton, and Lowell Ballard, Nobles- ville, Indiana. The family requests that those wishing to do so may contribute to the Cancer Fund. LAUGHLIN Willda Anna Laughlin, 79, a na tive of Baker, Oregon, and a resi dent of this city since 1939 died here January 20. She is survived by two daughters, Clara Laughlin, Klamath Falls and Ethel Phillips. Perkins, California. Funeral serv ices will be held in O'Hair's Me morial Chapel Saturday, January 23, at 10:30 a.m. Interment will be in Klamath Memorial Park. ACREE Claude E. Acree, 65, a resident of Merrill and Tulelake, died in Tulclake, January 19. O'Hair's Memorial Chapel is in charge of the funeral arrangements. BALTHASAR YREKA Funeral services will be Friday, January 22, at 2 p.m. for Otto Bismark Balthasar, 84, resident, of Yreka since 1935, who died early Tuesday morning in the Siskiyou County General Hospital following a brief illness. Funeral services will be held in Girdner's Funeral Chapel, conducted by the Yreka Elks Lodge of which Mr. Balthasar was a charter member. He is survived by four daughters, At... li-- . 1 X ,- ouifiuid, tl l-ftUld, iVlTS.I Tilt CT Al-P r"l.,J- -C A rr.T . ' y, 6S' resident of Merrill and Tulc uuui vi kjamd 111a, itus. juiiarca One first degree murder case and four assault charges come be fore the grand jury meeting here Thursday and Friday. In addition, the district attorney's office said, one secret indictment will be presented to the jury. The first degree murder charge against William Olcn Gairson, a 40-year-old cattle feeder from Bo nanza, was referred to the grand jury only yesterday. Gairson was bound to the jury by District Judge D. E. Van Vactor after a prelim inary hearing in which Mrs. Ethel Myrtle Bursik described beating of her 11-month-old son, Gary Lee Bursik. Gairson and Mrs. Bursik are serving six-month terms for lewd cohabitation. Additionally, Gairson goes on trial next Tuesday on charges of beating Gary Lee and his 3-year-old half-brother, Billie Joe Breeding. Assault charges before the jury frank L. Lounsbury Jr. year-old lire repairman charged with assault with intent to kill in the .22 caliber revolver shooting of lellow employe, Paul Clay, 37 uecemoer 19, during a private drinking party. Philip Duane Jackson, 23, Bonan za, charged with assault with dangerous weapon for allegedly pointing a .22 revolver at his aged I'andmother, Mrs. Anna May Lopperfield, after an involved fam- ly dispute December 21. Jackson also faces charges of assault and battery and lewd cohabitation re sulting from the dispute. Leonard Thomas Powers, 25, charged with assault and robbery rmed with a dangerous weapon en the complaint of William Jones of Medford, who said Powers topped their car near the Mer- ill gravel pit December 28 and robbed him of about $100 at knife point. Lawrence Waller Mose, 21, Chilo- quin, charged with assault with a langerous weapon in an alleged knife attack on Marcella Allen ear ly in January. This is the first formal meeting For the December grand jury whose members are foreman Hen ry R. Grimes of Klamath Falls ''red G. Brown of Fort Klamath, and Maud Hosley, Howard G. Ami- don, Jack M. Patten, Harry W. Ward, and Willard Noble. Basin Resident Death Reported Yule Tree Theft Charges Leveled Frank Frederick Turnbow, 40, 1033 NE Tillamook Street, Port land, was charged Wednesday with stealing 25 Christmas trees from Brooks-Scanlon timber properties in the north end of Klamath Coun ty.- The petty larceny complaint was signed by Thomas Links, a Brooks Scanlon forester. Turnbow re mained free on $500 bail pending entry of plea at 3 p.m. next Wednesday. lake for several years, was found dead about 8 p.m. January 19 in a local hotel where he lived, by his landlady, Mrs. Vivian Myers ueain apparently followed a heart soizure about 6 a.m. the same day. An autopsy' was to be performed. Bill Miller, Tulelake Siskiyou County deputy sheriff and deputy coroner, investigated. Mr. Acree was born in Utah May 8, 1894, and had been re tired for some time. Survivors include two brothers, Edward F. Acree, San Pablo, and Clarence D. Acree, address un known; two sisters, Mrs. Pearl Hammond, Fresno, and Mrs. Lot tie Haukaas, Baudette, Minnesota; also several nephews and nieces Funeral arrangements will be announced by O'Hair's Memorial Chapel. Greece is slightly smaller than Alabama in size. New Snow LAKEVIEW - Reports of 30 inches of new snow at the Warner Ski Bowl indicate skiing there this weekend will he tops. The tows will operate both Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and 63 I will be open both days. POTATO MARKET INFORMATION (Furnished by Federal-Slat Marketing News Service) POTATOES RAIL AND TRUCK SHIPMENTS (CL EOUIV.) 1-20-60 1959-40 1958-59 KLAMATH BASIN Oregon Rail 8 Oregon Truck 1 6 Calif. Rail 31 Calif. Truck 8 CENTRAL OREGON Rail 6 COLORADO 18 IDAHO Rail 84 WASHINGTON Rail 2 U.S. TOTAL Rail 462 597 1.199 1.916 1,079 1.286 2.696 20,500 8,660 97.977 350 961 1,332 956 646 3,457 25,802 6,508 95,442 Wednesday 4.25 4.50-4.75 2.25-2.50 SHIPPING POINT PRICES: (SKD. PER CWT) FOB KLAMATH BASIN PTS: NETTED GEMS U.S. No. 1-A 2" or 4 ex. min , U.S. No. 1-A 5-14 01. U.S.2 2" min. NET PRICE TO GROWER BULK AT CELLAR NETTED GEMS U.S. No. 1-A 2" min. 3.50 occ 3.55 US-2 1.45-1.50 FOB CENTRAL OREGON PTS. RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A 4.40-4.45 U.S. No. 1-A 6-14 ox. min. 4.80-5.00 U.S. 2 2" or 4 ox. min. 50 lb. 2.40-2.60 NET PRICE TO GROWER . BULK DELV D. WHSE. RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A Too few U.S. 2 2" or 4 ox. min. to quote IDAHO PTS: NET PRICE TO GROWER. RUSSETS U.S. No. 1-A Too few U.S. No. 2 6-ox. to quote POTATO UNLOAD 38 CITIES Wed. Week Ago Rail Unload 369 366 Truck Unload 228 275 Total Unload 597 641 Operators Hear (Continued from Page 1) during 1960, depending upon cer tain factors of sale combinations. Howard Hopkins, timber man agement officer for the Rogue Riv er National Forest, .Medford, rep resenting Carroll Brown, forest su pervisor, explained the revisions of the sustained yield allowable cut of the West Klamath Working Circle of the Rogue. AT THE START of calendar year 1959, the working circle had an annual sustained cut of 14 MM board feet, he .stated. The new in ventory had been completed. How ever, it was evident that the cut should have been somewhat great er than the 14 MM and an interim cut of 24 MM was established by J. Herbert Stone, regional for ester for the Pacific Northwest This figure is being further re vised as more detailed informa tion is obtained from the inventory and, starting July 1 of this year, the sustained yield cut will be in creased to 40 MM board feet an nually, Hopkins said. Hopkins introduced Darroll Frewing, Klamath district ranger, who asked Doug Shaw of his staff to present detailed sales plans. Shaw stated that the forest plans to sell 71 MM board feet during the current calendar year. This sales program, in excess of the annual allowable cut of 40 MM is made possible by past under cuts and insufficient timber vol ume already sold and under con tract to be cut. Of this 71 MM, 13 MM board feet was a carryover from the second half of 1959 cal endar year sales program which had been delayed. The new sales program, includes 58 MM feet of timber in addition lo this past 13 MM carryover that will be sold during the current year. The areas involved are west of Klamath Lake and to the Cas cade divide, he explained. Ross Youngblood of Medford district manager., Bureau of Land Management, summarized the bu reau's sales program in the area ributary to the Klamath Basin and explained recent revisions in that area's declared annual allow able cuts. Prior to April, 1959, the area had a declared annual allowable cut of 13 MM board feet. At that ime, the BLM speeded up its re- inventory and allowable cut cal culations on this area at the re quest of local industry and govern ment officials. The result was an increase of the annual allowable cut to 23 MM board feet. THROUGH ADMINISTRATIVE decision, an additional 6 MM board feet were programmed for sale for the calendar years 1959 and 1960 after it was explained to industry and government in the basin that this accelerated cut during the two years would have to be followed by reduced cuts to balance the aver age annual cut to the declared al lowable cut figures over the five year period. Therefore, during the calendar years 1961 through 1963, the area can expect a reduced cut to approximately 19 MM board feet annually, Youngblood said This sales program was estab lished to help the basin insofar as possible during the reservation termination, according to Young- Wood. The Bureau of Land Manage ment will sell during the calendar year 1960 29 MM board feet of timber in the Greensprings Keno areas. The Lakeview office of the Bu reau of Land Management expects to sell 2 MM board feet during the current calendar year and con tinue its aggressive policy to com plete the forest inventory in or dcr to have the best available in formation upon which to base fu ture allowable cuts and timber sale plans, according to "Bud' urgess, district manager at Lake view. "Although this timber is geo graphically tributary to the Klam ath Basin, it is readily accessible, also, to operators in other areas,' McCracken pointed out in sum marizing the information. "T h e Klamath Basin cannot possibly ex pect to get the entire volume list ed for its own operation." McCracken thanked the govern ment officials for their attendance and detailed information. Local op erators also expressed their ap preciation at being able to get the complete picture of timber sup ply. .Many expressed the wish that a meeting of this type might be held annually. Before the meeting closed, the problem came up of timber hauling over the Diamond Lake Highway which is closed to commercial log- hauling. This road, built primarily (or recreation access, presently does not have either the subsur face or the surface construction necessary to allow commercial loads of logs to be transported over It. This is a major problem to the Klamath. Basin, it was pointed out, insofar as assuring the basin its proper share of the timber vol-! umes being sold now and in the future within the Diamond Lake ranger district of the Umpqua Na lional Forest. C Of C Hears Loan Program By TOM STIM.MEL The Lord helps those who help themselves. So does Page Lamor- eaux, a uuuornia Dusinessman who has his own ideas about for eign aid, and acts accordingly. An impressed chamber of com merce audience last night found much to favor Lamoreaux's meth ods over the government's foreign aid handouts. PAGE LAMOREAUX sells cars in Napa, California, operates a ranch in Klamath County, and travels the world looking for alert young men he can start in busi ness for themselves. He uses loans, not gifts. "These people don't want big gobs of money," Lamorcaux told 169 persons at the chamber's an nual meeting in the Willard Ho tel. "They want a little bit of money, and know-how." With little bits of money, $3,000 to $5,000 or sometimes $10,000, Lamorcaux and his associates have started or enlarged small businesses in the Communist clouded half of the world. He and his friends have helped a goathair coat maker in Lebanon, a spring coil manufacturer in Turkey, retail furniture seller in Greece, a steel chair fabricator in India an ice cream bar maker in Thai land. The relationship is strictly busi nessbut business with a magnan imous heart. Lamoreaux's "little bits of money" create a 50-50 part nership with the foreign manufac turer. When the manufacturer is able to repay the loan, the busi ness belongs to him. Lamoreaux International, as the organization is called, uses the money some where else. WHY DOES HE and his assoc iates do this? Since World War II, he said, 23 new nations gained independence Each of these nations chose some democratic form of government; none went Communist. But these nations have problems. "People in one-third of the world are hungry. In one-fourth of the world, people earn less than $50 a year, and have a life expectancy of 36 years. "This is the problem. It is not Quemoy, not Matsu, not Berlin The world is in a state of rising expectation, Lamoreaux said, To help this expectation become fact, the U.S. has poured into for eign countries 70 billion dollars since 1946. "It's your money," said Lamoreaux, ,a fiftyish man who looks like a college football coach, as he leaned over the rostrum and pointed a finger at his intent listeners. "But I have news for you. We didn't buy very much with that. People out there don't line you very well. We didn't buy much, he said, be cause we didn't send any instruc tions with our money and our aid People want technical help." A government shipment of wheat to India rotted in open storage places and sprouted stuff we wouldn't feed to cattle." Women gleaned wheat spilled on the highways took it home and cooked it. "It didn t taste very good." Antelope Bid (Continued from Page 1 ance is lodgepole pine, grazing, meadow, marsh or brushlands. Size of the Modoc Point unit Is listed as 56.389 acres. Of this amount. 47.506 acres consists of reserve sawtimber and 4,051 acres grazing land. The balance is lodg pole pine, meadow, brush or waste lands. There was no indication by Earle Wilcox, who returned here from Washington, D.C., for today bid opening, when a decision might be made on the request for ex tension. Wilcox indicated that such a de cision could be made by the Area Director, Don C. Foster, in Port land, or might have to be made by the secretary of the interior The one unit which received no bids was the Sycan which composed of 61,611 acres. 35,683 acres of this unit is listed as re serve sawtimber, 15,292 acres as lodgepole pine and 4,061 acres as virgin sawtimber. The balance is grazing, meadow, brush or water lands. - Following the opening of bids, Wilcox announced that the next sale would be held on April 1 for seven additional units. Four more units will be up for sale on August 1. Provision of the recently enact ed legislation stipulates that any of the reservation lands unsold to private interests will be pur chased by the federal government in an amount not to exceed 90 million dollars. Judge Rules For Demurrer District Judge D. E. Van Vac- tor ruled favorably Thursday on a demurrer filed on behalf of Los lie Edward Price, 42, Chcmult, ac eused of stealing an air horn from a lumber truck owned by W. M Raymond. The demurrer argued by Attor ney David R. Vandenberg Jr maintained the state's complaint inadequately described the prop erty allegedly stolen. As a result a dismissal motion will be filed in the case. Price freed on $250 bail, was to have entered his plea Thursday, Star Witness Was Afraid LOS ANGELES (UPI) - An ex- convict hired to kill a surgeon's wife today testified he was afraid defendant Dr. R. Bernard Finch would try to kill him if he ever got the opportunity. Star prosecution witness John (Slick Jack) Cody, under cross- examination by defense attorney Grant Cooper, detailed a conver sation with the socialite doctor at the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas. Cody has testified he was hired by Finch, 42, and his pretty red- haired girl friend, Carole Tregoff, 23, to shoot Mrs. Barbara Finch and eliminate the third person in a love triangle. The witness said he met Finch in the hotel after making one trip to Los Angeles and failing to car ry out his death mission. The doctor tried to persuade him to return and carry out the murder, Cody said, but he count ered by offering "fatherly advice" that they abandon the plan. Cody said he asked Finch if It was worth it to murder his wife if he really loved Carole. The ad mitted master liar said he coun seled the surgeon to go away and start life anew with Carole with out killing his wife. 4 Appointed To Boards The county court Wednesday named four appointments to boards and commissions. Lester Offield of Klamath Falls was reappointed to the County Budget Board for a term expiring January 1, 1963. Three replacements were named. . G. Burke of Bonanza was named to the dog commission to erve until further order of the court, replacing Harry Wiard, re signed. Jim O'Donahue, Klamath Falls, was appointed to the museum com mission for term expiring Janu ary 1, 1963, replacing Oliver Spi ker, who desired not to serve again. Margaret Whitlatch of Bonanza was named to the library board for a term expiring January 1, 1963, replacing Mrs. Mildred Campbell, resigned. 3 From County To Be Paroled Three penitentiary prisoners from Klamath County are to be paroled in February, the State Board of Parole and Probation has announced. They are Jack Gordon, sen tenced in April 1956 to 20 years for statutory rape; James Wallace Cash, sentenced in January 1951 to 15 years for forgery, and Edmund Mason Arterburn, sentenced last March to three years for forgery. Dance Studio Burglarized Burglars entered the Thurston Dance Studio headquarters in tht basement of the Winema Hotel Tuesday night. Nothing was dis. turbed or stolen, however. The breakin was discovered Wed. nesday morning by Mrs. Arthur LeCour, who works there. She said she tried to get in, but founrtths door was locked from the inside, A hotel custodian removed th door hinges. Investigation showed the culprits entered through a rear window They apparently sifted through the room s contents, and finding noth ing of value to them, left via the window. Police also received a report Wednesday of the theft of seven boxes of vinyl floor tiles from Ross Gilkson of Medford, a con tractor working on the new ad dition to Sacred Heart Academy. -. Gilkson said the tile was worth :': $8.50 per box. Other cases handled by city no. lice included an act of vandal ism and an auto accident. Mrs. J. W. Beard, 311 Lylton Street, said vandals poked three large holes in the fuel tank of her car while it was parked Tuesday evening in the driveway of her home. A car registered to Louie Gris- chowski, 3317 Boardman Avenue, rolled from its parking place near the Moose Lodge on Pine Street Wednesday afternoon and struck a panel delivery truck owned by Daniel J. Hueber, nil Washburn Way, which also was parked. Little damage resulted. Grischowski posted $5 bail on a charge of failure to park his car securely. .:. Autoist Flees From Officer TULELAKE-Driver of a l 1958 Chevrolet, reported stolen in Sac ramento in December 1959, is be ing sought by California and Ore gon highway patrol officers. Capt. James B. Booth, Yreka ighway patrol officer, reported Thursday that the car was stopped on January 20 by a highway pa- " trolman on U.S. Highway 97 near Grass Lake, California for a check on a traffic violation. The driver, Thomas R. Scott, Huron, California, and two uniden tified male passengers, were di rected to Justice Court in Dorris, followed by the officer's car. En route, as the patrolman paused lo radio the Yreka highway otlire for information on the car, Scott, driving at high speed escaped. Investigation indicated he turned off on a side road, drove through , parsely settled country in the ' Bray - Tennant - Macdoel areas, ' topped at two ranches for direc tions and drove into Oregon af ter reaching the California-Oregon line. Six patrol cars had failed to lo cate Scott by nightfall. ; Funerals HICKEY YREKA Funeral services were held for Carl F. Hickey, 58, Wednesday afternoon, January 20, at 2 p.m. in St. Mark's Episcopal Church with Father John Martin officiating. Mr. Hickey, who was born in Gazelle, died Saturday, January 16, at Sutter Hospital in Sacramento following a brief ill ness. He is survived by the widow Eleanor, and two daughters, Nan cy 15, and Ellen 9; two sisters, Alargaret Van Trease, Yreka, ana Helen Maus, San Diego, and a brother, Adm. Robert Hickey of La Jolla. Interment was at the Evergreen Cemetery. The principality of Liechtenstein paid for its new post office build ing In Vaduz through a single day'f sale of stamps. Symptom of Dittrau Ariilnj from STOMACH ULCERS due to EXCESS ACID QUICK RELIEF OR NO COST IIDECORATED Office Space S4S Montk . Inqvlra DREWS' Monitor PhM TU 4-4121 Orf fiv million packtit of lh Wnj.AD TvtATMBWT have been Mid for relwf of ymptonw of dntre tnnnf from ttoiti ll incl Wlliw Wlcon due to (Met Acle fr Oliertl i. Sewr or Upeef ttemetfc, Qaeelneet. Heartburn, ileesleeeneea. ale., due lo leeeee AeHJ. fee for "WIHerd'a leeuge" wmr.lt hilly zplaine thia hotM STAR DRUG Malin: MAUN DRUG CO. PAY-LESS DRUG CO. SUBURBAN DRUG CO. WAGGONER DRUG CO. WESTERN THRIFTY STORES NEW 4-TEMPERATURE 1960 Westinghouse ELECTRIC DRYER V V- Ifcea eaeeiiMf 1 Prices Start At 95 169 Separate Dial Sattinai Far Wosh 'n' weor ' Regular, fabrics Silks ond synthetics Air fluffing ASK ABOUT OUR PAYMENT PROTECTION PLAN Shop The "Home Of Fine Quality Merchandise" KIRKPATRICK'S Sids OppUmce Carr.tr 7tt. I Klamath "StH" Green SrnmM TU 4.88