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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1961)
MARKETS and FINANCE STOCKS By United Press International Dow Jones 2 p.m. stock aver ages: 30 industrials 646.41, off 59; 20 railroads 142.07, off 1.98; IS utilities 107.78. off 0.01, and 65 stocks 218.93, off 1.57. By The Associated Press Admiral 11 'i AJ Indust 4 i Allied Ch . . ' ' : 58 'i Allis Chal 27 ',4 Alcoa ' ' - 73 Vi Am Airlin : . 22 ', Am Can . 35 Vt Am Cyan r 44 H Am M&Fdy S3 H Am Motors 16 Vt Am Smelt 60 U Am Tel iTel 112 Am Tob 72 y Am Viscose 49 7$ Anaconda 49 hi Armco Stl 69 Vi Atchison ,23 Vt Bendix : '.. 68 Vi Beth Steel . 44 Boeing Air 40 Borden , 57 H Bore Warn ' 36 Brunswick . ' . . 48 Vt Burroughs . 32 Cal Pack . 43 Vt Cdn Pac . 23 Cater Trac 32 V4 Celanese 29 Vi Chrysler 39 Vi Cities Svc 53 Vt Con Edis mVt Cont Can 39 H Crown Zell . 55 Curtiss Wr 17T4 Dccca Rcc 33 Doug Aire 33 Dow Chem . 74 'A duPont . 205 East Kod - 110 Vt ElPaso NG . 27 Emer Radio 12 Evans PD 13 Firestone , 39 Firstamer 30 Ford Mot 67 V4 Gen Dynam 44 VI Gen Eleo 69 Vi Gen Fds 75 . Gen Motors 43 Vi :GTel&El 28 ; Ga Pac Cp 59 ; Goodyear . , ,35 ;GtAtP 42 Gt No Ry . 49 Vt - Gt West S 32 Vi V Gulf Oil . 36 ; Idaho Pw 57 111 Cent 36 Lit Bus Mch 643 Int Nick 60 'A Int Paper 34 Ins Tel . 47 Vi Johns Man 61 Kaiser At 44 Kennecott 82 Vi LibMcN&Lj -! . 11 Lockh Aire .... 32 Vi Loew's Thea 18 Vi Martin Co 59 Minn M&M 76 Monsan Ch 48 Mont Ward 28 Vt Nat Cash R 75 NY Central 17 Vi Nor Pac 43 Vi Pac Am Fish 15 Vi Pac G&E1 81 Vi Pac T&T 38 Vi Pan AW Air 20 Vi Penn Dlx 31 Vi Penny JC 40 Pa RR - . 12 Pepsi Cola 50 Philco 18 Vi Phill Pet ' 58 Polaroid 193 PugSdP&L 36 RCA 55 Eayonier 19 14 Raytheon 36 Repub Stl 59 Reyn Met 47 Richfla Oil 97 Safeway St 38 StRegPap 75 Schenley 23 Vi Scott Pap 99 Vi Sears Roeb 55 Shell Oil 44 Sinclair 43 i Socony 45 Sou pac 21 Sporry Rd 22 StdOil Cal SO Std Oil NJ 46 Vi Stud Pack 7Vi Sunray 25 Vi Sunsh Mr 8 i Swift rCo 46 Vi . Texaco 91 Thomp RW 77 Vi TidcwalOil ' 25 TimkRBcar 51 ;Transamef 29 Vt , Twent Cen 46 ; Un Oil Cal . 46 Vi ; Un Pac 30 V Unit Air Lin 39 Unit Aire 41 United CP 7 'i US Plywood 45 US Smelt 30 '. US Steel 83 Walgreen 62 Warn B Pic 55 West Auto S 36 West UnTel 43 WeatgABk 24 i Westg El 46 V , Wheel Stl 48 ' Woolworth 69 Vi POTATO SHIPMENTS KLAMATH BASIN Seasons ll-M 60-61 Dally Truck, Ore, Daily Rail, Ore. Dally Truck. Calif. Daily Rail, Calif. Dally Total Ore. ft Calif. Monthly Total Seam Total 11 11 I t S M 18 21 M (2a 66 106 I WALL STREET NEW YORK (AP) i- The stock market dipped sharply on profit inrlav. Tradins was fairlv active late this afternoon. Volume for the day was esti mated at 3.8 million shares com pared with 5.21 million Friday. Key stocks declined from frac tions to more than a point. Steels, motors, rubbers, rails, electrical equipments, oils, air crafts, and electronics were most ly lower. Airlines, tobaccos, build ing materials, and drugs were mixed. General Electric sagged about 2 and Westinghouse Electric more than a point in reaction to sen tencing in the antitrust cases against electric equipment manu facturers. LIVESTOCK PORTLAND (AP) - (USDA) Cattle salable 1.300; trade opening slow; scattered sales of steers, heifers and cows steady; 2 loads choice 1,088-1,157 lb steers 26.00; load good 1,105 lb 25.00; most good 23.00-24.50; standard 20.00-22.00; few good heifers 22.00-23.00; stand ard and low good 19.00-21.50; utility cows 14.50-16.00; canners and cutters 11.00-13.00, Holslcin cutters to 14.50; cutter and utility bulls 16.00-19.00; good and choice stockcr and feeder steers 22.00 24.00. Calves salable 150; -market active, steady on good and choice vealers at 28.00-31.00; few choice 31.50; few good and choice stock calves 23.00-26.50. Hogs salable 900; trade slow; butchers steady to 25 higher; sows firm; No. 1-2 butchers 190- 230 lbs 20.00-20.50; No. 1-2 sows 300-370 lbs 16.50-17.00 ; 350-522 lb sows 13.50-15.50. Sheep salable 1,000; market active steady; choice wooled slaughter lambs 18.00-18.25; No. 1-2 pelt shorn lambs 17.00-17.50; few lots fall shorn 17.75-18.00; cull to good slaughter ewes 3.00-5.00 good and choice feeder lambs 16.00-17.00. STOCKTON (UPI - FSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 800. Slaughter! steers good 1,021 lbs 22.00, stand ard 1,000-1,200 lbs 21.00, utility 17.00. Slaughter heifers standard to low-good 900-1,000 lbs 19.00- 22.00. Slaughter cows standard 17.50-18.50, commercial 17.00-17.50, utility 15.50-17.00, cutters 13.00- 15.50, canners 11.0013.00. Slaught er bulls utility and commercial 1,300-1,700 lbs 1950-21.23. Stocker and feeder steers good and choice 550-700 lb 24.00-26.00. Medium1 steers 3.00-25.00. Stocker and feeder heifers medium and good 475-635 lbs 21.50-22.00. Calves salable 100. Slaughter calves good and choice 300-500 lb 24.00-26.00, standard 22.00, vealers 26.00-28.00, Stock steer calves good and choice 350-500 lbs 27.00-20.50, medium 26.00. Slock heifer calves good and choice 340-450 lbs 25.00 26.00a , Hogs salable 700. Barrows and gilts No 1-2 100-240 lbs 20.25, No 1 20.50, No 3 20.00. Sows No 1-3 300-400 lb 14.00-15.00, 400-550 lbs 12.-14.00. Feeder pigs good and choice 50-80 lbs 22.00-23.50, 80-120 lbs 20.00-22.00. Sheep salable 100. Market not established. GRAINS CHICAGO (API- Prev. Close 2.14 2.14 1.95 High Low Close Wheat Mar May Jly Sep Dec Corn Mar May Jly Sep Dec Oats Mar May Jly Sep Dec Rye Mar May Jly 2.14 2.13'i 2.13 2.14 2. 13' 1 2.13 1.95ii i.tM'i 1.95 1.98 1.97 1.98 2.04 2.03 2.04 1.19 1.17 1.18 1.23 1.21 1.22 1.27 1.25 1.25 1.28 1.27 1.28 1.26 1.25 1.26 1.97 2.03 1.17 1.21 1.25 1.26 1.25 .67 .70 .72 .74 .76 .67 Vi .69 .71 .73 .76 .67 .69 .71 .74 .76 .67 .69 .71 .73 .76 1.23 1.22 1.22 1.27 1.26 1.26 1.30 1.29 1.30 1.33 1.31 1.33 1.22 1.26 1.29 1.32 2.68 2.71 2.73 2.41 2.31 2 34 Sep Soybeans Mar May Jly Sep Nov Jan 2.71 2.67 2.69 1.78 2.71 2.73 2.78 2.74 2.76 2.44 2 41 2.42 2.34 2.32 2.32 2.38 2 36 2.36 POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO (UPI-FSMNS'-Polatocs: Russets Klamath U.S. I A 5.25; U.S.I 6-14 01 minimum 5.75. LOS ANGELES (UPI FSMNSI Potatocs: Russcls Central Oregon U.S.I A 8 01 minimum 4 75. CHICAGO (AP) Potatoes ar rivals 239; on track 269: total U.S. shipments for Friday 571; Satur day 349; Sunday none; market about steady to firm; car lot track tales: Idaho Russets 4 40 4.85; Idaho Standards S.75; Min nesota North Dakota Red Riven Valley Round Reds, mostly Pon-1 tiac type, alto Norland type 2 50-2.70, PAGE 4 HERALD AND Spr&gm Miwer Mm Stabbed To An intensive questioning of wit nesses was continuing nionaay morning in an attempt to locate the murderer of Joseph Waite Penasse, 38-year-old Sprague Riv er man who was stabbed to death during a Saturday night drinking1 party. Riles Set For Victim Of Accident WEED Funeral services for'and Miss Ruff had argued during Mrs. Frances Eurcellc Mazzoni, 37, Weed, will be conducted Tues day at 2 p.m. in Grace Presbyter ian Church here lnlcrmcnt will be in Mount Shasta Memorial Park. Tom Barrett, a minister, will officiate. Upton's Mortuary, Weed, is in charge of arrangements. ivirs. Muzzuni u'cu in a cuiiimumi - i- 1 . II- .i of two cars near Gazelle, 10 miles north of here, late Friday after noon. Another victim was the dri ver of the other car, Floyd Hole ton, 61, Bremerton, Wash. Mrs. Louis Gonzales. 26, a pas sengcr in the Mazzoni car, still was on the critical list at Siski you Counly General Hospital, Yrcka, Monday morning. Her tarn ily stated that her condition is slightly improved Donald Freeze, 20, another pas senger, was said to he injured seriously. His condition was listed as unchanged in the county hospi tal Monday morning. Freeze is the son-in-law of Sheriff A. B. Cottar. Mrs. Mazzoni was employed at (he sheriff's office in Yreka, as is Freeze. Mis. Gonzales is an employe of uie Tebbe and Correin law firm in Yrcka. They were returning to their homes In Weed when the accident occurred. Freeze stated that his last memory before file accident was of Mi's. Mazzcni attempting to avoid hitting a car approaching the wrong lane. Investigation tended to corroborate that state- mcnt, police said, Saturday. Mrs. Mazzoni was born Jan. 26, 1&4, in Louisiana. Survivors in clude the widower, Peter; a daugh ter, Linda Arnold, and a son, Mark Mazzoni. both of Weed; par- enlv !)'.' 'and Mrs. W;-tiimpkfn and a grcat-a u n t, Mrs. Cora Odell, Weed; two brolhcrs, Jack and Ralph, Vallejo, and her grand mother, Mrs. Lucy Lumpkin of Texas. I Wilderness Early Congress Hearing WASHINGTON (AP-A bill to; set up a national program for preservation of wilderness areas will get an early hearing in the new Congress. Similar measures have met with strong opposition in the past. The Senate Interior Committee's first scheduled hearing this ses- sion is set tor Feb. 27-28, Willi a;e poucy 01. . congress. . .10 sc- ! 111 strongly backed new wilderness euro for the American people of.KCSCUe VY Gill w II bill Hie subject. The bill, designed to preserve Mlin nf nrres nf wilderness lands in their natural stale, was! introduced by the committee chairman, Sen. Clinton P. Ander son, d-N.m., aim nus 13 cospon- Similar measures have been;Amc!'ican tooplo in such manner sors. introduced in the House. Previous wilderness bills were blocked by opposition stimulated by groups and individuals using federal lands which would be volved. These groups include ranchers wilh livestock grazing on federal lands, miners, loggers and oil well drillers who protested their rights were threatened. Protests were voiced at com mittee hearings in Seattle, Phoe nix and hero. About 500 witnesses testified An estimated 10.000 letters and n.ini-H went mi-eivpH hv ihe,"nt"llons 10 ,llc system would oc committee from persons interest - cd in the bill. Members of Con- gross got thousands more. - The Senate bill was revised doz- ens of times at numerous mittce meetings in 1059 and 1M0. Finally It Was virtually amended to death and never reached thel Senato for a week. Sponsors of the 19tl version say, it is designed to satisfy reasonable critic of predecessor bills, and would fully protect existing rights to use of federal lands. In a statement of policy, the bill says: The Congress recognizes that an Increasing population, ac- RKICK Punt'tl itrvlctt for Kutl C k.J Ji. will b ht'd In OHitr i Mwnij ChlPtl WJrt4Hdv. F L ! I P. FUNERALS jQ' I If I A kA AT 1-5 I Uf : IT NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregrm The investigation was being pur- sued by the Klamath County Sheriffs Office and District At torney Dale T. Crnbtrce. Penasse was slabbed between 8:30 and 9 p.m. Saturday to cul minate a party that began in Fprague River, moved to Beatty and finished back at the home of Bobby Lee Bcal in Sprague River. Others present at the par ty, besides Penasse and Beal, were Verna Leo Ruff. 31, Sprague River, and Ervin W.. Holt and Howard Bryant, both of Klam ath Falls. A statement from one of t h e witnesses indicated that Penasse the evening. Two of the men had seen Penasse lying wounded on the ground in front of Beat's house. According to the statement, they pulled him into the house and put him on the floor in the living room Then, the statement said. Miss Ruff put some flour or baking - "" - '" "v "uuiiu auu mi;ii mu- , ., n IUa. ...... , . , . , tnnj n,L,rt group apparently ate, watched tel evision and played the piano, pay ing little attention In Penasse. Two of the men left the house after nine, but their car got stuck in the mud. They returned to the house and discovered that Pen- Game Ends In Fight, Stabbing An assault with a deadly wea pon charge was filed against a 17-ycar-uld Klamath Falls youth Saturday afternoon after a Kiwan is Park basketball game got out of hand and resulted in the stab bing of another youth. Larry Alvin Bunyard, 19, Route 3. Klamath Falls, was stabbed twice high on the shoul der. He was treated for skin lac erations and released from Klam ath Valley Hospital. Bunyard told city police that he and three younger boys were playing basketball Saturday at Kiwanis Park when three other youths asked to play. The game got rough, Bunyard said, and a fight developed. One boy stood back from the -fighting-and sud denly moved in with a knife. The 17-year-old was being qucs tioned by city and county juvenile uithorilics to determine further disposition of the case. Bill To Get companird by expanding settle ment and growing mechanization, is destined to occupy and modify all areas within the United States and its possessions except those that are designated for preserva tion and protection in their natur al condition. "It is accordingly declared to be present and future generations the of an enduring rcsou o wilderness.' , Tl,c wilderness system would be composed of federally owned areas. , .to be administered for the use and enjoyment of the as will leave them unimpaired for future use and enjoyment wilderness, and to provide for the protection of these areas and the preservation of their wilderness character." The wilderness system would comprise about 45 million acres of federal lands, mostly roadless for est and park areas. Designated areas would be placed in the system by order of I ho President, on recommenda tions by the Secretaries of Agri culture and Interior during a 15- car P'"0- Aflcr 11,0 P"iod. any, b.v Bct of Congress. i irsiucm mmm nae powcrn-oasi uuara men louna ine sun ' Petm't commercial dcvelop-iso rough they could not launch mm "ll ': com-i"Klum,,K 0,1 la leasing, logging, ,,nd mining. Existing grazing 'K mmura. '"'mitusiraiion support is ant ui- paicn since j iesiiioni M-nncny aPProwa lne wilderness prcserva - "l,n l ln campaign speeches. PEPPEPMINT HEART-CENTER EEGEBSM Monday, February (, 1961 Benin asse was dead, The sheriff's of fice was contacted. An autopsy performed Sunday determined death resulted from a single, stab wound in the lower stomach. Penasse was not known to have been employed. Attorney Fees Spark Court Suit In Yreka YREKA - Yrcka High School District has filed a lawsuit for recovery of $27,000 against Siski you Union High School District, a report of the Siskiyou County grand jury states. The grand juiy, the report states, is not concerned with de tails of the action, but with at torney's fees. "The jury very strongly feels that a $13,000 cost for recovering $27,000 is exorbitant," the report says. An agreement with the San Francisco legal firm of Perry and Preyer guarantees a fee of $3,500' plus 25 per cent if the case is von and potential fees of $12,950 and $1,000 costs if tne case debated by as high an authority as the supreme court. "The fee is especially exorbi tant when it is realized that all of this money will leave the county and will be forever lost to the taxpayers of this area," the court states. Local attorneys have advised the court that a fee of $3,500 with out percentage increments would be ample for the case, the report continues, and that the percent age arrangement would be ample without the flat guarantee. The 111 ry recommended that the Yreka High School District Board of Trustees renegotiate with its lawvers for a fee reduction. The action followed the Yreka area's withdrawal recently from the Siskiyou Joint Union High School District. Youth Arrested On Liquor Count An 18-ycar-old Klamath Falls youth was arrested Sunday night and charged' vim" being a minor in possession of liquor.' Harvev Lee Blevins, 18, 817 East Main Street, was arrested by city police in the Holiday Bowl parking lot. Police said they found cans and bottles of beer in Blev ins' car. He was released on $25 bail and scheduled for a munici pal court appearance. Four more youngsters were ar rested at 12:40 a.m. Saturday at the comer of Klamath Avenue and South Twelfth Street. Two 16 year-old girls were charged w ith violation of curfew and were re leased to their parents pending juvenile court app ara ices. Two Kingsley Field airmen with the girls were charged with aid ing minors to violate curfew. They were Lee Alfonso Trujillo Jr. and Jaime Leddcy Santos, both 18. pfOm Biq ROCk - CANNON BEACH. Ore. (API- Two young women, trapped on a coastal rock by the incoming tide, were rescued Sunday eve ning by the Coast Guard. Several Coast Guard men swam through rough surf to the rock, attached life lines and then helped Patricia Kobe, 21, Chicago, and Sandy Solo, 18, Portland, back to the beach. The young women were on a spur of 235-foot-high Haystack liock seven hours before the tide subsided enough to allow the Coast Guard men to reach them. The young women said they went out to (he rock about 10 a.m. to take pictures and did not notice the incoming tide untd it was too late. i lie young women were in no Idangcr while on the rock, but: " rcnriui mat me girls mignt gcti impatient and try to swim in the i-ougn waier, nay AKins swam out to tliem and spent tour nours wim tnem unlil the :n n tide allowed olher toast Guard men to complete the rescue. SSI State Jaycees Honor Three As Outstanding By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Oregon Junior Chamber of Commerce Saturday selected a doctor, an insurance executive, and a surveyor as the state's out- landing young men of 1960. The awards went to Dr. Robert'"1 tthicn a wnecI came 0,f I. Daugherty, 35, a Lebanon phy sician; Miles P. Englehart, 32, a Portland insurance executive; and B. Osburn Shaw, 35, of Sweet Home, w ho operates a survevinai'ruck driven by his stepfather, and timber management firm. All will be honored at an awards dinner Feb. 4 in Grants Pass. along with the state's three out standing young farmers of 1960. also selected Saturday by the Jaycees. The organization, in its an nouncement at Portland, said the farmers were Cornelius C. Bate- son of Salem, R. Norman Hukari of Hood River, and Alvin H. Meury of Forest Grove. fZl for contributions that "will truly be measured by future genera tions. . . . Shaw aroused public in terest in and spearheaded a suc cessful drive for the organization of a Linn County Parks and Rec reation Commission." Dr. Dgugherty has been active in a variety of community organi zations in Lebanon, the Jaycees said, adding: "If a particular in terest were to be cited, it would be in the area of youth work." Morse Trying To Get Switch WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., says he is trying to have the Northwest Regional Post Office moved back to. Portland. It was moved from Portland to Seattle last December bv Post master General Arthur Summer- field. In a radio broadcast taped in Washington for use in his home state, Morse said he had written William Brawley, the new deputy postmaster general about the mat ter. "ft Is my belief that those (Post Office employes) sent to Seattle should be returned to Portland as ! recupertaing in Mercy Hospital in soon as possible, and the regionallReddine from the amputation ofl otuce retained in Portland, Morse said. Police Charge Drivers Three persons were charged with drunk driving by city and state police over the weekend. They were Mrs. Willie Mae Down, 40, 4344 Avalon Street; David R. Concannon, Kingsley Field, and Marie Elaine Barkley, 18, 1243 Kane Street. Mrs. Down was arrested Sat urday night after she allegedly rammed a parked car owned by Glen Taylor, Silver Tip Trailer Court, and then smashed through a fence and gate on the property of Elsie Riddle, 210 East Main Street. Mrs. Down was arrested after the accident. She was later charged with disorderly conduct at the police station. Concannon was arrested at the corner of Main and Center streets at 2:05 a.m. Sunday and was scheduled for a Monday munici pal court appearance. Drunk driving charges were filed against Mrs. Barkley Sun day nightvafter another driver had called state police to tell them of a weaving car coming into Klam ath Falls. Mrs. Barkley's car was stopped on South Sixth Street and she was arrested. Three passen gers were charged with being drunk on a public highway. They were Daron Dickson, Erwin Weis er and Harding A. Brown, all of Beatty. Darrold Edward Olson. 25, 344 Torrev Streot, was cited for fol-i Weekend Cases Listed Two men were scheduled to ap pear in municipal court Monday lo answer disorderly conduct charges filed against them over the weekend. Melvyn Lewis Rucker. Tulelake. was arrested caily Sunday morn ing when he allegedly created a disturbance al The Broiler Rest uarant. 620 Main Street. Henry William Moore. 57, 629 North Thiid Street, was charged with disorderly conduct in a com plaint sicned Saturday night by his wiie. She said he used pro fane and abusive language. The charge was dismissed Monday morning by Municipal Judge Clarence Humble. Charles Schuss. owner of Klam Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery btops Itch Jiw Yrh, V T. 1rUi - for th first titnt trirnrt bs found a new healing ubslane?t with th anion iihinf ability to shrink hemor rhoid!, (top itching, and retiwa pain without turBery, In rac after ca. whil gently relieving pain, actual reduction (ihrinkage) took place. iloat am an n oi ail-reauita vara Five Die In Oregon Accidents By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Accidents claimed five lives in Oregon over the weekend. Three of the deaths were due to traffic mishaps, one an oddity pickup truck. One was a farm accident and one a drowning. A Portland boy, David G. Rob inson, 13, died when a pickup .Lester G. Patterson, 30, veered off a road northwest of Portland and went over an embankment because a wheel came off. Mrs. Maggie Watt, 75. Pasco, Wash., was struck and killed by a car as she walked across a Southeast Portland street Satur day evening. Charlie S. Dyer, 72, Roseburg, died Sunday, of injuries suffered in a highway crash near Suther lin Feb. 1. Cn a farm u-a,! nt Cnttini-lin - Edward Hoyle, 22, was fatally crushed by a trac tor that skidded down an embank- ment. A 4-year-o!d boy, Dennis Mar dis, drowned in an irrigation ditch at La Grande Sunday. Driver Facing Neglect Charge PORTLAND (AP) - A Portland man is charged with negligent homicide stemming from what po lice said was a hit-run traffic death Saturday evening. The victim was Mrs. Maggie Watt, 75, a former Portlander who had lived at Pasco, Wash., the past month,' She was struck bya car as she crossed a street at SE 94th Ave. and Stark St. in the Portland suburbs. Police said the car sped away after the accident. Later however, a man identified by sheriff's dep uties as David Freeman. 25, Portland, reported at the Rocky Butte jail and said he was the driver of the car. Mrs. Watt was in Portland to visit a granddaughter, Mrs. Ger ald Long. RECUPERATING MRS. ELVIN MOXNESS, for mer resident of Klamath Falls, is her leg. Cards from her friends I would be appreciated. lowing too closely and arrested for being drunk on a public street after a Sunday night accident at the corner, of Ninth and Main streets. Robert Dennis Kennedy, 22, 1607 Crescent Street, told po lice he was stopped for a traffic signal when Olson's car struck him from the rear. The drunk charge was dismissed in court Monday. Ruben J. Mosher, 63, 4005 Shas ta Way, was charged with violat ing a restriction on his driver's license Sunday morning after a two-car collision at Eleventh and Pine streets. Mosher's car was making a left turn when it col lided with one driven by Donald Lancaster, 18, 713 Cook Street. Mosher, who is supposed to wear glasses while driving, told officers that he didn't think he needed them. . Two Portland women escaped injury early Monday morning! when their station wagon went out of control on a curve on High way 97 near the Klamath View Auto Court. Erlene Louise Peter son told state police officers that her car apparently struck loose gravel on the shoulder and "spun out." The car ran into a dirt bank on the opposite side of the highway. Barbara Lester was a passenger. The car was towed from the scene. ath Billiards. 630 Main Street, said approximately $100 worth of pipes were stolen from a display rack Saturday or Sunday. A stolen bicycle was reported by Dale Himelw right, 2:140 Darrow Slreet. He said his pink bike was taken Sunday morning from the South Sixtn Street Overpass. It had red handle grips and seat covers. Mrs. Roy Farnam, Dairy. ?aid her purse was taken from her car while it was parked in front joi ltxu t-asi .Mam siree. u was brown and contained $6 and some personal papers. ' Ronald Fosdick. 2MB Raddiifc Street, complained that a neighbor was "rapping his pipes" and wak ing up his children. Relieves Pain to thorough that aufferera madi astonishing atatemenu life "Piles hav ceajed to tx a problem!" The secret is a new healing sub stance ( Bio-Dynel discovery of a world-famous renearrh institute. This aubftanc ts now available in SMppenfary or oiafeal form under the namt Veptrattea H At all drug caanura. No Exercises For Deformity By ANN LANDERS na Ann Landers: I'm 22 years old and I've been told by women as well as men that I'm beautiful. My measure ments are sim ilar to Mis s Michigan's or give an inch here and there. Y My face is the; fcri fcl classic beauty type high cheek bones and Jr . slender nose. I've always been interested in dramatics and I want to be an actress. The trouble is, my legs aren't very good. They are Solons Pass Teachers' Lunch Bill By PALL W. HARVEY JR SALEM (AP) The Oregon Senate passed 18-10 today a bill to give public school teachers duty-free half-hour lunch periods. The bill goes to the House. The Senate had defeated the bill Friday by a single vote, but it was reconsidered today. Sen. Al Flegel. D-Roseburg, said that chances now look brighter for passage of the bill to increase minimum salaries of j school teachers. After the defeat Friday of the lunch period bill, Flegel got the salary measure back into committee to save It from defeat. Sen. William A. Grenfell Jr., D Portland, moved for reconsidcra-1 tion of the lunch period bill to day. He made no argument as1 he knew he had the votes. j Sen. Walter Leth, R Salem, ap- pealed for defeat of the bill on the ground that the legislature has no business dealing with what he called "trivial matters." "We are legislating in a field of school responsibility," Lekh protested, "and the Oregon Edu cation Association pointed out the I I I same thing. This is a matter of;and her motner reads a" 11,9 school administration, not legisla- buoks she ls supposed to report ijon on for English. This girl's brother "The teachers oppose it on jf very good at Spanish and he want half-hour lunch periods. ......... ...j The bill was supported by the American Federation of Teach ers, which represents a minority of teachers. As the legislators came back for their fifth week, they were handed two new controversies with intro duction of legislation for compul sory automobile liability msur- ance and to repeal the state school reorganization law. But neither measure is given any chance. Sen. Robert Straub, D-Eugene, introduced the insurance meas ure. It would require every auto mobile owner' to cany liability insurance of $10,000 for injury or death to one person, $20,000 for injury or death to two or more persons, and $5,000 property dam age. Boivin Takes Governor Chair SALEM (AP) Senate Presi dent Harry Boivin, who has held his office just four weeks, served quesl 20 cents in coin and a long, his second stint as acting gover- self-addressed, stamped envelope. nor loaay' I 1 Ann Landers will be glad.te Gov. Mark O. Hatfield was in help you' with your problems. Boise, Idaho, for a meeting of. Send them to her in care of this Northwest governors on the Co-'newspaper enclosing a stamped, lumbia River salmon problem. self-addressed envelope.) START ;S3w onEAR TW FOOT BORROW MONEY THE MINEYLAHDWAY Whteef you need money for to take caft ol first of thi year expenses, to reduce monthly payments, to tVe I trip, to buy your family th, things they need - whitivt r the rei- son. come lo Pacific Finance Moneyland when you-maf ' charge money the Moneyland Wy! The Mone.lend Way is the fist, courteous iy...th. modem, ' sensiDI, ,ly M (olks we w(i(n(vtf flw(j js . 'si. come to Pacific Finance andborro ,t tht MoneylmdWiyl PACIFIC FINANCE '" "": MONEYLAND S Ul S. 9th iintt I bowed. Is there any exercise or surgical operation 10 correct this defect? 11 K weren t tor rny lees I think I could be a great drama. tie actress. Can you help met -ADELLE Dear Addle: If you want to b aa actress It doesn't matter wheth. takejer your legs are like this 0 or like this )(. I know of no exercises that will - uu '" M" ' 8urry advisable only In eases of extreme physi. U.l rial nrmltv. Dear Ann Landers: Two years aS I married a nice, home- loving girl. Five months later I took out a waitress on a dare. There wasn't much to it. I just wanted to show the fellows I could. My wife found out about it and raised a big fuss tears and the whole miserable bit., I promised her I'd never do it again and meant to keep my word. Everything was great until she went home to care for her sick mother in November. She was gone three weeks and I had to eat in restaurants all the time, A guy can get pretty lonesome, so I weakened and asked the waitress if she'd like to go out alter work. We went together about five times after that. Most ly laughs and like that. , 1 don't know how my wife found out but she did. Now she says she'll never trust me again. Please help me to get her to un. derstand that boys will be boys. -HIC-CUP Dear Hie: Boys will be boys all right but they look pretty silly the second time 'round. Since your weakness seems to be waitressegj why not stick to automats when you're on your own? A man whose record Is as shod dy as yours has to work double hard at building his wife's confi dence. It's performance that counts so get busy, Bub. Dear Ann Landers: A girl friend has been in my room since the third grade. We are now high school juniors. She has not done ione PaSe 01 nomeworK in an mis lime. Her grandfather does her his tory, her untie does her math, I work hard in school and do all my own homework. But her grades are always better than mine and it burns me up. I feel like telling the teachers. Do you' think T u-niiM ho inclitinH'' iHONEST BUT UNSUCCESSFUL I D(.,r . bu. ,,. rw. hasly with The Informer bit. No body could fake out the teachers ;,vh rp.it ,r (hu irl class? Who lakes her exams? Surely not her relatives. The girl may be getting help, which I agree is unfair, but she must know more than you think or the roof would have caved in long ago. Confidential to Double Dome: No slur of Robert Hutchins was intended. Many scholars have ex changed academic robes for foun dation garments and continued to. serve mankind. Are your parents loo strict? You can benefit from the experi ences of thousands of teenagers if you write for Ann Landers' booklet, "How To Live With Your TU 4.1121 t