Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1961)
MARKETS and FINANCE STOCKS , NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral . AJ Indust 12 i 4 56 V, Allied Ch Allis Chal Alcoa Am Airlin Am Can Am Cyan Am M&Fdy Am Motors Am Smelt Am Tel &Tel Am Tob Am Viscose Anaconda Armco Stl Atchison Bendix Beth Steel Boeing Air Borden Borg Warn Brunswick Burroughs ' Cal Pack Cdn Pae Cater Trae Cclanese Chrysler Con Edis Cont Can Crown Zcll Curtiss Wr . Decca Rec Doug Aire duPont East Kod ElPaso NG Emer Radio Evans PD Firestone Firstamer Ford Mot Gen Dynam Gen Elec Gen Fds Gen Motors GTel&El Ga Pac Cp Goodyear GtA&P Gt No Ry Gt West S Gulf Oil Idaho Pw ' 111 Cent Int Bus Mch Int Nick Int Paper ' Int Tel&Tcl Johns Man Kaiser Al Kennocott ' LibMcN&L Loch Aire ', Loew's Thca Marl in Co ' Minn M&M Monsan Ch Mont Ward Nat Cash R ' NY Central-; Nor Pac Pac Am Fish Pac G&E1 Pac T&T Pan AW Air Penn Dix Penny JC PaRR Pepsi Cola Philco Phill Pet Polaroid PugSdP&L ; RCA Rayonicr Raytheon : Repub Stl . Reyn Met Richfld Oil , Sale way St ; StRcgPap Schenlcy ; Scott Pap ; Sears Rocb : Shell Oil Sinclair Socony Sou Pae Sperry Rd StdOil Cal Std Oil NJ ,Stud Pack Sunray Sunsh Ma Swift&Co Texaco Tliomp RW TidcwatOil TlmkRBcar Transamer Twent Cen Un Oil Cal Un Pac Unit AlrLin Unit Aire Unit Cp US Plywood US Smelt US Steel West Auto S West UnTcl WestgABk Wcstg El Wheel Stl Woolworth 74 '.i 22 36 45 88 H 18 58s 116 46 Vi 69 V 23 71 45 39 59 V, 37 "4 45 i 29 ? 41 22 V. 30 Vi ? 31 an 18 38 H 33 Vi 206 112 Vi 29 i 12 Vi 12,i 38 V'i 29 70 ', 44 ' 70 V 74 . 44 27 'A 57 Vi 36 42 Vi 49 Vi 33 36 A 57 36 647 61 34 W 47 Vi 61 41 80 Vi 11 V, 29 V, 19 63 Vi 73 Vi 46 29 73 18.: ;44 ' 16 79 38 Vi 19 31 42 Vi 13 Vi 49 Vi 18 Vi 57 1a 186 V'4 35 56 li ' 19 ' 37 4U 45 22 Vi 23 49 45 Vi 7t 26 8Vi 46 ', 92 Vi 73 23 52 Vi 30 47 47 V41 30 V4i23.50, 39 42 H .IVi 44 . 30 81 . 37 43 24 4 46 H 93 , 67 POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO IUPI FSMNSI-Potatoes; Russets Klamath U.S.1A 525; U.S.I 6-14 oi minimum 5,75-6 00 LOS ANGELES (UPl-FSMNSi No Oregon potato (ales. POTATO SHIPMENTS KLAMATH BASIN Srahons 59-60 60-61 Dally Truck, Ore. Dally Rail, Ore. Dally Tmrk, Cnlll. Dally Rail, Calif. Dally Total Ore. A Calif. Monthly Total 13 12 7 11 20 16 2(1 21 77 799 iZii 43 1273 J41 Season Total WALL STREET NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market took off for renewed gains in the wake of President Kenne dy's State of the U."io speech 28i!in heavy trading late this after- noon. Volume for the day was cstimat- ed at 5.5 million shares com pared with 4.al million on rnday. Gains of key stocks went from fraction to 2 or 3 points. The aircratf missile stocks were, fn,.uim. kVnnn. I riv. nrrfr for .irmeihpnine nf de- lenses The cold minine sharcslboard lo coocrale with agencies, backed away sharply in the wake 0' neighboring states and submit of the President s statement that .""8 ' the legislature interstate there would be no devaluation of compacts relative to the distribu- the dollar. Corporate bond , ,i6tate prices pushed jf higher in moderately active trad ing. U.S. government bonds were narrowly irregular. LIVESTOCK , PORTLAND (API - (USDA) -67 Cattle salable 1.200; slaughter ai'Sicers. nciicrs anu cows muuer atcly 'active; steers steady to 25lComm,or Jon,cl C Hill today i,;i,... hnifn,c si,..n,l- -n w q I W'KC(I legislature to prevent strong lo 50 higher; bulls weak to 1.00 lower than last Monday but steady with late last week; feed ers steady; one load mostly choice 1,120 lb slaughter slecrSiGov. Mark O. Hatfield, would be 26.50; load low choice 1,100 lb 26.00; good steers 23.50-24.50; util ity and standard 15.00-21.00; small lot high good and low choice 850 lb slaughter heifers 24.00; good heifers 22.00-23.00; most utility cows 14.50-16.50; several lots high utility and commercial 17.00; can- ners and cutters 11.00-14.50, those above 13.00 usually Holsteins; cutter and utility bulls 16.00-21.00; two load good and choice 550-773 lb stockcr and feeder steers 21.00- 23.00; medium 650 lb steers 19.00. Calves salable 200, steady; good and choice vcalers 26.00-30.00: standard 20.00 25.00; utility 15.00 19.00; good and choice stock calves 23.00-26.00. Hogs salable 800 barrows and gills steady lo 25:ly wherc priva(e companU,s "" outers jwi-ahi io iimu.uu; no. n urn tin tU in nn in rn. in orm 2-3 190-220 lb 19.00-19.50 ; 250-290! lb 18.00-18.50; to 300-325 lb 17.50. mostly medium 150-170 lb 17.50 18.50; sows No. 1-2 300-425 lb 15.50-17.00; heavier sows scarce. Sheep salable 800; slaughter! lambs mostly steady with Monday of last week, but steady to ' 25 higher than close of last week other classes scarce, steady mostly choice and mixed choice and piimo woolcd and shorn slaughter lambs 90-116 lbs, 17.25- 18.00; few small lots .wooled and nearly full woolcd 90-106 bs 18.25-, 18.50; sizable lot 116 lb. 17.25; cull to good slaughter ewes 3.00-5.50; Iwo lots choice 75-84 lb feeder lambs 17.00. STOCKTON (UPI FSMNS) Livestock; Cattle salable 900. Slaughter steers 1.000-1,150 lbs standard Hol steins 18.50-19.00. Slaughter heif ers standard 20.00, good 850 lbs 23.00. SlailL'hlpt- rows til il it v nnrt 59 J" commercial 1 070 lbs 17.00, ut il 49 ity 15.50-16.50, cutters 13.00-15.00, 91 Vanncrs 1 1 00-13.00. Slaughter bull lutiility and commercial 1.350-1,625 " f jibs 20.00-21.00. Stocker and feed 24 ':Cr steers good and choice 500 24HOO lbs 23.50-26.00. Medium 20.00- MV423.00. Slocker and feeder heifers ,3,4good and choice 550-860 lbs 21.50- 43 Vi 94 OH. low ff(MH 911 SO. Mnliiim 18.00-21.00. Calves salable' 100. SLii.ehlprl01' P"t. He received an honor calves good and choice 300-500 lbs 23.00-25.00, good vcalers 27.00-1 29.00. Stock calves - cood and I choice 350-500 lb steers 26.00- 28.00, comparable grade heiferMaxine, this jjy; daughter, Bct- slock calves 24.00-26.00. Hugs Billable 700. Barrows and gilts No 1-2 190-240 lbs 20.00, No 1-3 19.75. Medium and No 3, 19.50, No 1-3 240-260 lbs 19.25. Sows No 1-3 300-400 lbs 14.00-15.00, 400 550 lbs 12.00-14.00. Feeder pigs good and choice 50-80 lbs 22.00- under 50 lbs 24.00, 80-I2o'Laren and Fred Peters. ,,II)S 20.00-22.00. bneep Billable 15. Market not established. GRAINS CHICAGO (API- Prev. Close High Low Close Wheat Mar May 2.15S 2.14 2.15'i 1.15 2,I4' 2.12'. 2 144 2.13 t.954 1.92'i 1.95 l.Vi'i 1.97'i 1.95s 1.97H 1.95-4 2,03 '4 2.01 2.03 2.01 Jly Sep Dec Corn Mar Mar Jly Sep Dec Oals Mar May Jly 1.16 1.14H 1.154 1.134 1.20'i 1.181! 1.19'a 1. 17'. 24' 1 22L l.Zi't 1.20'ilHame ea.iay. orrm. Mmourii is ara'M- 1.25'i 1 ll'4 1.24 1 .21 J 1.24 121'i 1.22'i l.l'.l'i .67'4 .69' i .70'4 ,72'4 ,65'a .68 68H .71. .67'. .70' 4 .72 .bo- .67 'i .70' Sep live Mar May Jly 120'4 1 17'i 120 I.I6-H 1.24'4 1.21U 1.24 1 20', 1.26', 1. 23', 1.26', 1.22', 1.28', 1.25 I28'( 1.24', Sop Soybeans Mar 2 66 2 6l'4 2.(i(i 2I!0'4 2,70 S.5' t.tt 2.64', May Jly Sep 2.72'4 2,67'i 2 71', 2 68 241 2. Wit 2 40 ''4 2 37'4;Tljdv JfV Jl- it I JO pm. Intar- Legislature Studies Goose Lake Problem SAT FM (API Iton Robert sj.. ji.nu,ns. iolav introduced a bill which would empower the I Oregon Water Resources Board ,0 cntcr lnl a compact with Cali fornia over tno use oi ine waicrs I of Goose Lake in Lake County, Smi(h sid ,lat alou(,h the'ale a five-member Goose Lake bill docs not specifically mention 'Goose Lake "a problem which ex ists there now is the primary reason for introducing this bill." Hc said the bil1 pwmits Ihe tion and use of waters of inter- streams, lakes and tribu- PUC Commissioner Hits Duplication By PAUL W. SALEM (AP) HARVEY JR. Public Utility private and public power, gas and telephone utilities. Hc said his bill, endorsed by a spur lo economic development and save consumers money' in the' long run. . As Hill testified before the Sen- ate Commerce and Utilities Com mittee, highly controversial legis lation was introduced to reduce In.nmn )qv 1A n.. nl Kl;U' , f X ,'. i j the state Board of Control, and consolidate the Fish and Game commissions. The legislature opened its fourth week today. Hill was questioned sharply by Sen. Andrew J. Natcrlin. D-New. port, a committee member who has been active in the Central Lincoln Peoples' Utility District. Natcrlin pointed lo cases slaughter!Sr,ri,,oriM ,, . Till.,ml, ,. charge lower ttcs, which he as cribsd to cnmpcmion with puWic 1 power agencies. Hill replied thai such benefits are only shorl-tei m, and that in evitably one utility will swallow up the other and increase rates. The bill would not remedy pies cut duplication. It would only pre vent more of it by providing that Clyde Olson Riles Slated Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p.m.' Tuesday, Jan. 31, from O'Hair's Memorial Chapel for Clyde Olson, 48. Final rites and interment will be in Klamath Me morial Park. Mr. Olson, a resident of Klam ath Falls 25 years, suffered an attack during the noon hour at Weyerhaeuser Camp 9 near Silver Lake. Jan. 27 followed by his death. He had not been previous ly ill. He was a limber fatter for the company and had recently re ceived recognition as, a 20-year' employe. Mr. Olson was a member of the IWA-CIO Local 312 and its presi dent for more than five years and had, served as a credit union official for the local Wcyerhaeus- ab,e discharge horn the Navy in l'm- Tlie family home is at 1452 McClellan nrivc. Survivors include the widow,! iv utiuuy ; 4 luuuici -, iirs. urace Olson; brothei.', Virgil Olson; sis ter. Doris Clark', all of Klamath Falls, and a brother John, in San Diego. Active pallbearers will bo Ralph Darling. Art Leslie. George Coats, AI Hillman, Richard Me- OBITUARIES KLAMATH SMBLTON OL40YS T 5H6LTON, u. ri,v. oi! Fnemo, Nwlh Oahota, M inn tuv ii. mi. j.., ana rti.aen? 7v. sn wrvivad by the couimi. Amanda Oliver. Tacoma, Wash.! Alma' Lulu, e iimiDuro. wain cra Htwin. I SMro Woollay, Waill. 0 Halr i Mamorlal ' "ID. W. Sergent WOODWARD native ol Albany. Minourl. mrd here January 7V. 111, Survivori: daugmen. Wri. Pemiece Knapp ol this city. Mr. Erna Coll.nawood. Snell, Wvoirnne,- ion. Calvin DrKkery ot Ihn city; brotntrl. Railav. Port Cnlcaoo. Califor cn.imen, oreei-sranatn.Kiren. Puneiai VVMnvsclitv, 2 p m . Ktmth 7mplt, Ward Klmlri Funtrnl Homt in crirg. KUT2EN HENRY GEORGE RUTZCN. it. nitlvC Harvard. Mlmoit. did In Tultldht. Cll Or"i. Januflry t9. 1961. JUfVivorj: widow, Malrnx. TuilaVj; moihr, Mamif. Rufi ttn. and infer, Wilhfllmma Strong, Jer-ti-vi "It. Wucwiln. Funaral arrano"int will b announctd by Ward Klamalh r-untrai Mom. FUNERALS KLAMATH OLSON Funeral 'vkai tor Ovda Olion. 41. 'will ba told In O Hairs Memorial C ha pal taries. Any such compact would re quire approval of the Oregon Leg islature, those of any other state involved and Congress. He said the California Legisla ture has before it a bill to ere i commission w hich would be env powered to cooperate with a sim ilar Oregon commission. The lake lies on the Caifornia Oregon border and the Oregon portion of it is in Lake County. Smith said Lake County resi dents are concerned about Call fornia preempting the waters of the lake if something is not done to solve the problem equitably. no private or public utility could extend its service area without permission from the public utility commissioner. Hill said, duplication is threat ened at the Boardman Space Age Development Site, and at Pendle ton and Hood River. He estimated that "20 per cent of the people of Oregon right now could change their electric serv ice just by making a phone call." The duplicate!, he said, wastes millions of dollars a year. He called the Eugene-Springfield area as the worst in the state, allhnnoh ho eaiit nfintan nf Iho -H" - several utilities serving that area now are getting it stabilized. "The trouble," Hill said, (hat in areas where there is dun lication of service, neither system is able to earn in .proportion to jits capacity. And John Q. Public navs the bill." Naterl asked Hill if he would have power to enforce the pro visions if the bill became law. He ln'pointed out that the public utility commissioner wa helpless in pre venting Idaho Power Co. from building its middle Snake River dams, and from preventing Port land Traction Co. for abandoning its passenger service Hill replied that he would have enough authority. The 10 per cwit income tax reduction 101 was introduced by Sens. Walter Pearson, D-Portland and Boyd R. Overhulsc, D-Mad-ras. There is some question, how ever, whether it wo(3tl be consti tutional The Constitution says that rcv- enue bills must be introduced in the House. There is legal doubt as to whether a "revenue bill" is one to reduce taxes. At any rate, the Pearson-Over- hulse bill throws further fuel into the boiling controversy over what should be done about taxes. The House Taxation Committee opened hearings today on its bills to shift the tax burden, but to hold revenues at current levels. The House program calls for a one per cent tax on gross income, eliminating all deductions, and reducing lax rates. The measure to abolish the Board of Control was sponsored by Rep. W. O. Kelsay. D-Rose-jpoycs burg. II is part of atficld's re-i organization plan. The stale instit nitons, now run by the board, would be trans ferred to other divisions directly under the governor. The House Fish and Game Com mittee sponsored tlie bill to con solidate the Fish and Game com missions. The Fish Commission regulates commercial fishing, while lne Game Commission handles sports fishing and hunt ing. There is much opposition lo the bill on the part of sportsmen. M Cni-nnni Services Dated Services for Mrs. Mary Elcan- or Sergent, 89, will be held at 11 a.m. Feb. 1 from the Holman and Sons Mortuary in Portland. Final riles and interment will be in Riverview Abbey. Mrs. Sergent died Jan. 29 in a Portland hos pital. She was a native of Mount Ver non, Mo born Jan. 28t 1872. The family came to Ashland in 1912 t t- . i :hcre many times has a daughter' oeiKciu uo nas Sergent who has visitedl""" !)11'!'' howling alley, om-J j ., , . ; vl.iu t-Tl- and two sons in Mamath falls. Survivors include tWO SOI1S, D. W. Sergent and II. C. Ser-1 genl, Klamath Falls: three daugh ters, Mrs. E. J. (Hilda) Vaillan- mis c"' ",rs- (Mil- drcdi Wilson and .Mrs. R. W. (Mary' Swihart, Portland: a sis ter. Mrs. Mildred Van Hoy. Ful- Icilon. Calit.; six grandchilcutn -n(i BPM.r.nrf,.hi di-pn Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch Relieves Pain ttm T.k, N. T. Sfui-For the ft rat timt iritnct hi found nw h rating lubatanc with tht aiten lihinr Ability to shrink htmor r ho ui a, atop itehinf, and rliv pain without aurgerjr. In caat after ct, whilt tMf rhvinf pain, actual reduction (hrinW(r) took pi act, Uoat am a img of all-raiul u vara PAGE HERALD AND iii-;IMWWMH'IJllPHI,lr'"",'?"'JHl" J t-" '""-' 4' 't I) '"- "" , , I"-" . - '.i-ifi k mm ft :Wmmi Hi I LOOKING LIKE the bombed out inferior of a cathedral is this Inside view of the Peli can theater as it continued to disintegrate into rubble in the smoothly planned dem olition to clear the site for a parking lot. The reinforced concrete slows the rate of destruction, but everything is progressing as planned on this community land mark. Photographer Don Kettfer got'tnis unusual view late last week. Busy Schedule At Aqing A tightly dovetailed schedule1 was arranged for delegates to the White House Conference on Aging in Washington, D.C., in early Jan uary. Mrs. Marshall E. Cornctt, ap pointed by Gov. Mark O. Hatfield as one of Oregon's 17 delegates to attend the first session on the vital problem facing the natibn said "(here never was an idle moment from the opening of the briefing session at the Statler Ho tel, the opening plenary session on the ninth until tne adjourn ment in Constitution Hall at noon, Jan. 12." All delegates are currently serv ing on state councils for the ag ing. Of the 3.000 persons present, there were 2,415 official delegates scattered in six or seven hotels to work in group sessions which covered subjects relating to health, the most controversial is sue; education, religion, employ ment, income and maintenance, housing and organization on com munity, stale and national levels. Reports of the work groups Rotarians Hear Talks On Labor Employer-employe relations was the program subject at the Klam ath iFalls Rotary Club Friday noon at tho Willard Hotel. Andy Collier was chairman of the day for the club's employer-employe relations committee. Rollin Cantrall member of the committee and manager of the Klnmath Lumber and Box Com pany, spoks of the fine relations that have existed many years at his firm which always has oper ated without unions. He credited management', under Gus Krausc for many years, with the desire always to do a bit more for cm than was expected H. A. Hurlbut, Copco personnel manager from Medford. said that 55 per cent of the 903 Copco em ployes belonged to unions, and -...Il I IU. H.lm.n.nnl In.l.rMM i: i.. tunt ua tw anil VriCiUlUll uictiis mat navi jwii worked out at Copco. Chuck Burman, Klamath Falls manager of Sears, Roebuck and: Company, explained the m a n yj empioyer-cmpioye programs oi nis company. Scars' profit sharing plan, which was started in 1915. is outstandine in their operation and outstanding in the .business' wnrlH. hp s.iiH. . Scars employes' profit sharing funds now exceed one billion dol. lars and account for ownership 28 P" cent ol Sears slock Youths Jailed City juvenile officers said they jailed three 17-ycar-old youths over the weekend for possession of liquor. Thev were taken into temporary custody in the vicinity of a South l'cr s'ated. They are scheduled lor an appearance in tne county juvenile office. And officers cited three youths into juvenile court Monday aft- ernoon to answer a complaint that im-y Munca a ngm wiui a inii; sley Field airman at Moore Park recently. Snails without shells are called io thorough that utTrrs tnadi aitoniahing atatrirtnu like "Pilea have ceasfd to he a problrmf The tec rat is a new healing sub stance Bio-Dyne') discovery of a world-famous research institute. This substance is now available in attjtpoaitpry or ointmnt " under the name Prtpamtio H At all drug counter. NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore, . t X !V t if I r. X ft t i ;i 3 If .: 9 Sk i 'i lit U' , r v-v v i:t nil, ii 1 a--, j ttfiatimmtm- rwrnrntiifftirttm were condensed into two or three pages for each division and re viewed in plenary sessions before adjournment. The conference was organized and sponsored by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare with the aid of an advisory com mittee composed of two members from each stale. There were speakers of note from the education, religious and industrial fields and from the gov ernment. President Eisenhower addressed the assembly at the opening ple Qommiuiiiij. Qakndah MONDAY maw t. nnn, ..... mrti.iix 1'nuai-E.Kii x oulial, CLUB will meet Monday. Jan.i,, ,u w. hm u-o.. 30, at the home of Mrs. Charles Hale at Henley. MALIN, CIIII.OliLIM AND KLAMATH FALLS RAINBOW AS SEMBLIES will hold a joint for mal meeting Monday, Jan. 30, at 7:30 p.m. in the Scottish Rile Temple for the visitation of the supreme deputy, Mrs. Hazel Gra- ham. SI'EBSQSA will meet Monday, jan. 3D, ai a p.m. at tne willard Hotel. Full attendance is request ed. GREAT DECISIONS ORGANI ZATION will meet Monday, Jan. 30. at 7:30 n m at I hp rnnnlv li. brary. Group leaders are asked to attend. Anyone interested is welcome. ' TUESDAY SHASTA VIEW GRANGE OF- FICERS will meet Tuesday, Jan. 31. at 7:30 p.m. in the grange hall. Flag drill will be practiced. j Duties and activities for 1961 w ill be discussed. KLAMATH TOPS CLUB (Take un i-ounas sensmiyi wui meet at ,U" tne community Lounge Tuesday.ithe Willard Hotel. Installation of dl- at , M P-m. ror mnnor . , . imiuimaiion can iu L A. Decker L.AKt.vic.w Lawrence A. (Bill) ice C. Decker of Lakeview and Decker, 58. a resident of Lake.-; Mrs- Bonnie Lou Mowdy. Klam view since 1927 and well knownlalh Kalls; four brothers, Paul of businessman, died at his home Jan. 29, Ml- lloflOf II ac nil-on onA n ..' t iu. ni. cj j orator of the Decker Sand and Gravel Company. He was a mem ber of the Lakeview .Elks Lodge. He was a native of Placer, Ore., born June 19, 1902, and was mar ried Oct. 25. 1M9, to Dr. Joyce Jovcelin Robertson. Survivors include the w idow and two sons, Lawrence Allen Deck er, and William Roy Decker, both of Lakeview; two daughters. Jan- SKEK SI'DAV AfTKSS Moscow (UPIi Russia has Sudanese Premier Ibrahim i.bboud for permission to send food, medicine, and 20 trucks ,nrough Sudan to lne p,.0.Lurnum. 0, arcas of ,h. Coni. ,h Snvi(,. ncws agency Tass reported today. ONE-HOUR CLEANING AT NO EXTRA COST! DRIVE-IN CLEANERS 2041 Radci iff c SoutS 6th Acron From Fortun Station , Monday, January SO, 1961 , t-mr- I'll! J f 1 1 li -. Conference nary session. Arthur S. F 1 e m ming, secretary of HEW, spoke at the closing session. Mrs. Cornell, chairman of the State Committee on Community Organization, will report on the White House Conference on Aging at the dinner meeting of the Klamath County Community Coun cil the evening of Jan. 31 at the Winema Hotel. The public is invited and reser vations may be made at the hotel or at the office of Mrs. lsabclle Brixncr, secretary for the coun cil. at TU 4-7786. WEDNESDAY PLAYERS CLUB members will! " ' t,.- ---..i k;!r. -i;nrInr 11 Feb. 1, at 7 p.m. Social hour lne yard stepped on broken glass, will be from 6 to 7 p.m. Reser-shc investigated and found a win vations must be made by noon rfow broken in the anarlmpnt - - - Jan. 30. Call Dorothy Neet TUjnCarby. 2-4185 for reservations. Officers were nnl hlo in finrl city association women BOWLERS will meet Wednesday,! Feb. 1, at the Lucky Lanes Bowl ing Alley at 7:30 p.m. All mem bers are asked to attend this, mecling as rules and prizes for " luuiimniciii mil ua lie- cided. INTERNATIONAL RELATION'S (group of American Association of University Women) will meet at the home of Mrs. Charles John son, 1005 Newcastle, at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 1. Tibor Kal- man will be the guest speaker, AAUW members and guests are invited. CASCADE CREST CHAPTER No. 159 OES will meet Wednes day, Feb. 1, at 8 p.m. at the Chiloquin Masonic Hall. Past ma trons and past patrons will be honored. Zl'LElMA NILE CLUB will meet for a luncheon meeting on Wednesday, Feb. 1, at 1 p.m. at othcers will be held and Dast Iclub presidents will be honored. .... Succumbs Mount Shasta, Vern of Jackson Calif., Ed of Ashland and John " OI-HI 111." , lU SISlfl S, IIU'S. ECr- tha Lund of Klamath Falls and Mrs. Marion Perry of Roseburg; also one granddaughter. Funeral services will be held in (he Elks Temple at 2 p.m. Tues day. Jan. 31. with the Rev. Hal Hargraves officiating. Final rites and interment will be in Sunset Park Cemetery with Ousley-Osler-man Mortuary in charge. The family requests memorial contributions to the Lake County! Disaster t ar Fund Newspaper SPOT ADS are inexpensive Use Our Convenient Dn'vein Window Business School Rifled By Second Story Thief A "second story man"-liter- Investigating police staled Hi allv-entercd Robertson's School of Business. 411 Main Street, over, the weekend and rided a cabinet and soft drink machine of $21. The thief entered the ottice building through one of. the un - locked doors on the ground lev el, and broke a window to gain entry into the second-story school facilities. He first attempted to pry a locked door open, said city po- lice. Inside, the thief found and stole kevs to a cabinet containing a cash box and $12, said officers. He locked the cabinet after tak ing the money. He also broke into the vending machine and took $9, officers add ed. They said the culprit missed about $80 in cash in "various desks. The theft was discovered Monday morning by one of the school's instructors. In other activity, officers are checking out a report by person nel of a Safeway Store, Eighth and Pine streets, that a man at tempted to steal four packages of meat worth a total of $9.66 over the weekend. One of the store's supervisory employes told officers customers in the store told him they saw a man slip a package of meat under his clothing, leave t h e building and deposit the package in a wooden box outside the store. The store employe said he went to the box and found three packages of ground beef and roast in the box. He said he met the man coming out of the store, again, this time with a loaf of bread he bought. When queried, the man told of ficers he took nothing from the store except the bread. He was booked at the city jail f o r charges of drunkenness. Police are continuing their investigation nffinm-c akn rp inuosiioaiini. a report that an apartment at 171 Hillside Avenue was broken into. Police said a neighbor there LdlltJU W1LI1 MW 111 lilt! 1I-.J .1 ...:.u -t .1.- , .. . . . . . . . , , ! 6 . . a iiouci uur un iiis way uui ui evidence of disturbance inside the: apartment Vandals were active over the weekend, too. One man told offi cers he spotted two men jumping up ana aown on tne Hood ot a car parked nearby as he was COminC Out Of a Dmnrv cl, at Eiehlh snA Pino c... day morning. 'yDI JAM,, SAFETY brake . r; "P ""a drums 1QR1 JANUARY 1961 Timtoru i MUFFLERS I 888 UP I t '. ' hood Dore consiaeraoie aamage to its paint, apparently as a result of vandals scuffing it with their feet. The car was registered lo Orval Michaelis, 1725 Division !Street, said police. And M. Dale Hallack, director of vocal music for city schools, reported that vandals smashed a window in his car as it was parked near tne Klamath Union High School catetena Saturday night. One check case was reported lo officers over the weekend. They learned that a woman passed a no-account check for $35 Satur day afternoon at the Safeway South Sixth Street Store. A prowler apparently was busv too. Mrs. Janet Bailey, 700 North j Third Street, told officers she spotted a man in her garage ai she entered the basement Satur day evening. Mrs. Bailey told of ficers she hurried back upstairs, locked the basement door and called police. The prowler was gone when officers arrived. Oregon Weather Western Oregon Showers wilh periods of partial clearing through tonight; mostly cloudy Tuesday with heavy rain at times; contin ued mild. Highs 48-56; low light 42-52. Winds on coastal waler southerly to southwesterly, 28-40 m.p.h. through tonight, increasing lo 50-60 m.p.h. Tuesday. Gale warnings displayed on north mast and sma" crafl wam'ngs on south coast. Eastern Oregon Mostly cloudy with rainy periods in north and scattered showers in south portion through Tuesday, mild tempera tures. Highs 45-55; low tonight 35-45. Gusty winds in some places Tuesday. Northern Oregon beaches- i Mostly cloudy with occasional ain r dr,;zzle 'oniSht and Tues- uajr. DCdun nuius ooullieny, IU-20 m.p.h. Temperature range 45-55. Northern California Rainy to night and Tuesday with snow , in hieh mnunlains Incin. c,n,. , . , ..... . erly winds. Little change in tem peratures. Leprosy is contagious only on prolonged skin contact. Helps You Overcome FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry No lonner be annoyed or feet 111-Bt.-ease because of loose, wobblv fftle teeth. PASTEETH, an Improved alka line (non-acid) powder.sprlnkledon your plates holds them firmer so they feel more comfortable. Avoid embar rassment caused bv lontn nlt nut i PASTEETH at any drug counter. 1961 SfSw... FOR ONLY BAVsERTYH!;AlLf number 1 Winter Service Problem BATTERIES 144 UP with your old batienf 3 wmu. u yNov 2.31', 2 28', 2 31 2.274!' I