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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1961)
r PAGE 4 Monday. March 8. 1961 HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Fills, Oregon MARKETS and FINANCE STOCKS NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral AJ Indusl Allied Ch Allis Chal Alcoa Am Alrlid Am Can Am Cyar Am M&Fdy Am Motors Am Smelt Am Tel tYTel Am Tob Am Viscose Anaconda Armco Stl Atchison Bendix Beth Steel Boeing Air Borden Borg Warn Brunswick Burroughs Cal Pack Cdn Pac Cater Trac Celanese Chrysler Cities Svc Con Edis Cont Can Crown Zell Curtiss Wr Decca Rec Doug Aire Dow Chem duPont East Kod , ElPaso NG Eer Radio Evans PD ; Firestone ; Flrstamer 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 TeltYTel - Johns Man Kaiser A) Kennecott Loch Aire Loew's Thea Martin Co ' Minn M&M Monsan Ch Mont Ward Nat Cash R NY Central ;,Nor Pac Pac Am Fish : Pag G&E1 ; Pae T&T i Penn Dlx ,' : Penny JC . Pa RR . : Pepsi Cola :Philco Phill Pet Polaroid PugSdPM, ; RCA Rayonler ; Raytheon 1 . Repub Stl Reyn Met Ricnfld Oil Safeway St StRegPap Schenley Scott Pap Sears Roeb Shell Oil Sinclair -: Socony Sou Pac Sperry Rd StdOil Cal Std Oil NJ Stud Pack ; Sunray Sunsh Mn j SwiftiCo Texaco Thomp RW TidewatOU : TimkRBear '. Transamer ; Twent Cen : Un OU Cal : Un Pac ; -Unit Air Lin ; -Unit Aire ; United Cp ; US Plywood US Smelt US Steel Walgreen Warn B Pic ;West Auto S West UnTel WestgARk Westg Ei Wheel Sll Woolwortn 13 Vi 4Vi S7V4 75 22 V4 38 44 118 18 56 Vi 115 H 73 48 Vt 53 54 74 24 Vi 68 Vt 47 42 H 61 40 68 Hj 34 V 49 Vi 22 35 'A 29 44 WALL STREET NEW YORK (AP) Selective strength helped keep the stock market hiRher in heavy trading late this afternoon. Volume for the day was esti mated at 5.5 million shares com pared with 3.53 million Friday. Gains of most key stocks were fractional but a few posted gains running to around 2 points. Among more speculative issues there were wide moves both ways. American Machine 4 Foundry nicked up 6 points. Polaroid dropped more than 2. Profit taking was strong but the market still kept ahead despite a wide assortment of losers. Up about 2 points were General Electric, Texaco and Eastman Kodak. Johns-Manville and Texas in' stuments dropped more than t point each. United Aircraft was off about a point. American Photocopy spurted about 5. Up more than a point were Avnet Electronics, Standard Kollsman and Libbcy- Owens- Ford. Up around a point were New York Central, Consolidated Edi son and Merck. Corporates wore irregular in heavy trading. U.S. governments were fractionally higher. 73 38 57 19 34 36 76 212 119 28 V , 13 14 LIVESTOCK 78 42 .. 69 80 45 27 60 . 38 49 48 33 37 54 38 668 68 33 56 65 44 87 35 22 37 79 49 33 82 ,19 44 16 81 38 31 41 14 50 21 60 180 37 87 20 37 65 47 96 39 39 26 105 58 46 44 44 22 25 49 44 9 25 8 47 101 76 25 54 32 46 49 31 40 38 7 46 30 88 69 63 39; 46 25 46 51 73 PORTLAND (AP) - (USDA) - Cattle salable 1,100; slaughter steers and cows opening rather slow; heifers more active than steers; early sales steers and cows steady-strong; heifers strong to 50 higher; bulls fully steady; one lot choice 1,067 lb slaughter steers 25.75; good steers 23.00 24.50; most 1,050 lb standard Hol stein steers 21.35; one lot choice 850 lb slaughter heifers 24.00; other good and low choice heifers 730-900 lb 21.00-23.75; utility cows 14.50-17.00; canners and cutters 11.50-14.00, some Holsteins to 15.00; cutter and utility bulls 16.00-21.00; no early sales stock ers and feeders. Calves salable 125; steady; good and choice vealers 29.00-32.00; utility and standard 23.00-28.00. Hogs salable 1,000; butchers steady to mostly 25 higher, in stances 50 higher; sows mostly steady; Tew small lots mostly U.S. Is, 200-232 lb 21.00; mostly l-2s, 190-230 lbs 20.50-20.75; 2-3s under 250 lbs 19.00-20.00; few 260-332 lb 18.00-18.50; sows, No. l-3s, 330-530 lb, 14.00-17.00. Sheep salable 1,000; slaughter lambs fairly active; early sales strong; otlier classes not estab Ushed; one lot 90 head choice and prime 113 lb wooled slaughter lambs 17.00; other good-choice wooled and shorn 15.00-16.50. A NUMBER of public appearances are planned for the present three girl candidates competing for 1961 Dairy Princess of the Klamath Region. Deadline for filing is March 17 at the Klamath County Farm Bureau Office. Any high school girl senior who will graduate this year and is not older than 25 years may compete. The winner will be named by a panel of judges on personality, ability to speak in public, dairy knowl edge and appearance. The winner here will go into state competition in June. Mrs. T. J. Albert, Lorella, is in charge of the contest. Contestants, left to right, are Kay Tofell, Bonanza; Pat Nelson, Bonanza, and Sharon Hobson, Merrill. All three will be 17 during the summer. ,' ' cobs Named Manager Of Park-Shop Effort STOCKTON (UPI FSMNS) - Livestock; Cattle salable 800. Standard cows 19.00-19.50, commercial 17.50-19.50, utility 15.50-18.50, cut ters 13.50-16.00, canners 11.00- 13.00. Slaughter bulls utility and low commercial 1,100-1,400 lbs 19.00-20.50. Stockors and feeders good 550-750 1 lb steers 23.00-25.00, medium 19.00-23.00, common 17.00-19.00. Medium and good B00 lb heifers 21.00. Calves salable 100. Good 300-450 lb slaughter calves 24.00-25.00, standard 22.00-24.00. Good and low choolce 350-450 lb stock steer calves 26.00-27.00, good and choice heifer stock calves 24.00-25.00, me dium 21.00-23 00. Hogs salable 600. Barrows and gilts No 1-3, mostly No 1-2, 190- 240 lbs 19.75, No 1 grain-fed sort ed butchers 20.00, No 1-3 240-260 lbs 19.25. Sows No 1-3 300-400 lbs 14.50-15.50, 400-600 lbs 12.00-14.50. Feeder pigs good and choice 50 80 lbs 20.00 23.00. Sheep salable 200. Market not established. Rudy Jacobs, formerly a busi nessman in Klamath Falls, was appointed manager Monday of the Klamath Falls merchants' Park and Shop Corporation. We re tickled to death to have secured his services," said Bob Beach, merchants association president. Jacobs will be able to devote full time to getting the park and shop system into operation by the April 1 deadline and to smoothing out any operating diffi culties, said Beach. Jacobs sold his business, Rudy's Men's Shop at the corner of Sixth and Main streets, last year. He was last year's merchants asso ciation president and was instru mental in formation of a park and shop corporation in 'Klamath Falls. Otic of his main responsibilities will be to help blanket the entire downtown business core with park and shop parking lots. Ideally, say the merchants, each block between about Fourth and Eleventh streets and Pine Street and Klamath Avenue should have plenty of park and shop space. ' '" They are asking property own ers to consider bringing their lots into the system and merchants and the public to buy stock in the corporation. Response has been enthusiastic so far, said Beach. The svstem works this way: The shopper drives into a lot and receives a ticket from the POTATO SHIPMENTS KLAMATH BASIN Seasons 59-W (0-61 Dally Track, Ore. I it Dally Rail, Ore. I 1 Dally Truck, Calif. I t Dally Rail, Calif. 1 a Dally Total Ore. A Calif. 31 47 Monthly Total (5 M Beasoa Total 7 60S 5811 GRAINS CHICAGO (AP) - , Prev. High Low.. Close Close Wheat Mar May Jul Sep Dec Corn Mar May Jul Sep Dec. Oats Mar May Jill Sep Dec Rye Mar May Jul Sep Dec Soybeans 2.10 2.08 2.08 2.10 2.11 2.10 2.10 2.10 1.94 1.93 1.03 1.1)3 1.98 1.90 1.90 1.96 2.04 2.02 2.02 2.0244 1.15 1.14 1.15 1.14 1.10 1.18 1.19 1.17'i 1.23 1.22 1.23 1.21 1.23 1.22 1.23 1.224 1.20 1.20 1.20 1.19 attendant, then hands the ticket to the clerk in the participating store when a purchase is made. The clerk validates the ticket and parking thus is free to. the patron. The merchant pays the corporation for the parking time. Corporation members plan to t " r a Mi Five Day Forecast By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Eastern Washington and East ern Oregon Temperatures aver aging below normal Eastern Wash. ington and northeastern Oregon and near normal southeastern Oregon. Maximum temperatures mostly 40-50, niinimums 25-35. Precipitation heavier than normal occurring mostly after Wednesday. Western Washington and West ern Oregon Temperatures be low normal with maximums rising to 45-33, minimums 30-38 rising to near normal Western Washington nnd northwestern Oregon and nbovo normal southwestern Ore gon by Thursday or Friday, with maximums becoming 52-58, mini- mums 35-40. Precipitation heavier lhnn normal occurring mostly after Wednesday. KLAMATH ' RUDY JACOBS open with at least one lot t h e site of the old Pelican Theater, currently under destruction. Ne gotiations are continuing for other properties. .64 .67 .b8 .70 .73 .62 .65 .63 .58 .72 .63 .IXIV4 .68 .69 .73 .62 .65 .67 .68S .71 1.26 1.22 1.26 1.21'. 1.31 1.26 1.30 1.25i 1.32 1.28 1.32 1.281, 1.34 1.32 1.34 1.31 - 1.36 1.33 Mar May Jul Sep Nov 3.031. 2.07 3.08 3.02 3.11 3.06 2.69 263 3.01 2.051: 3.06 3.00 3.00 3 03 2.64 2.63 2.44". 2.39 2.41 2.39 POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO (UPI FSMNS) - Potatoes: Russets Klamath U.S.I A 2 inch mimimum 1.00; (-14 01 minimum $.75. LOS ANGELES (UPlFSMNSi -No Oregon potatoes sales. FUNERALS HKATON BOBBI LYN HEATON, Infant son f Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lm Htaton of Mtr- rill, Ortaon, died htrt March X IHl. He 11 alio survived By grandparenti, Mr, and Mr. Norby Meat on 01 this city and Mr, And Mrs. Everett Hardina of Merrill. Graveside services took piaca In Klanv atn Memorial park Monday at 1 p.m., Ward's Klamath Funeral Home In charge, Mc ROBERT Funeral services tor Jamei A. Me Robert, M. who died In Yakima. Wash' Ington, March 2, 1961, will take place m int graveim in in mi. view cemt' ttry, AiWand, Oregon, on Tuesday, March 7. at I p m. Ward' Klamath Fu neral Home In charge. OBITUARIES HILI KARFN ARLENE HILL. K. pasted away Saturday, Mith 4. Chlloquln, Ore- survived Dy husband, crianit Mint three children, Marie Elena Hill. Harold Allen Hill, Janice Dm Hlltj mother and iher, Mr. and Mrs. Mllburn C. Rtatdle, Chlloquln, Oregon) brothers and listen. Sheila Ann Hill. Riverside. Calif., Mil dred Alberta Riddle, Mllburn, Avery Rid- ii. Steven Luke Riddle, jamet Let Rid 1le. all ot Chlloquln. Oregon i two grandmothers, Mrs. Ml'dred Cook man. Chlloquln, Mrs. R, C. Avery, Portland, Oregon, and grandfather, Martin Lotchet inuoquini ana numerous ointr reia tlvei and friends. Vault Interment Lobar t Cemetery I pm. Wednesday. March I. Ward Klamath Funeral Horn In charge. WILLI DONALD B. WFLLs, 43. died In Seattle March S. Survivors, Vivian Welts, wkt- Donna Lynn Walls. Dorothy Lee Wells, daughters. Klamath Fallti ltovd Wells, brother. Crescent City. Calif. i par ts, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wells, Klanv ith Falli grandmother, Lena Itrtud. It Helena, O'ego". Funeral service will be eld In O Hair's Memorial Chaptl Twa. March 7, at I p.m. Interment Klanv itn Memorial Park. i Police Mull Burglary City police investigated a bur glary Sunday in between traffic accidents. Burglars broke a skylight win dow in the National Guard Armo ry, 2501 Shasta Way, Sunday morning and stole $25 to $30 from some vending machines. , Police said a burglar entered the building through the skylight. crawled along some steam pipes and shinnied down another pipe into the building's assembly area. The burglar then apparently opened a kitchen window to allow entry by an accomplice. The thieves obtained a hatchet, claw hammer, a chisel and four screwdrivers from a supply room. They attacked four vend ing machines with the tools and took some cash from the coin boxes. They also ate two bags of peanuts. One of the thieves apparently cut his hand on the skylight as blood was discovered at the scene. One of the suspects was said to have been wearing a fuzzy red wool jacket.. ' Other police reports: A. F. Ligman, 139 Jefferson Street, said the battery was stol en from his car while it was parked in front of his house. Alfred Johnson, 31 Main Street. reported that he lost his wallet which contained personal identifi cation and an unknown amount of currency. fee Causes Accidents City streets were turned into sheets of ice in some spots Sun day after a heavy snowfall. At least four traffic accidents result ed. A car driven by Loyce Mitch ell, 47, 1738 Oak Street, skidded 96 feet Sunday morning, struck another car and then slid 20 feet farther. Mitchell told city police that he jammed on his brakes to avoid another car. The accident occurred on East Main Street near Reclamation Street. The parked car that was dam aged was owned by Betty S. Mitchell of Chiloquin. Her car was knocked 21 feet up over the curb. The street was described by po lice as "glare ice." Hubert Royce Owens, 50, 2337 Garden Street, was cited for back ing against traffic Sunday after noon after he backed up and col lided with a car driven by Ray mond R. Howard, 39, 465 Owens Street. The cars collided at Fourth nnd Pine streets. Howard's right front door was damaged. Two cars went out of control on icy streets early Sunday morn ing but their drivers escaped in jury. A car driven by Patricia M. Fcnimorc, 25, 331,4 Alva Street, hit an icy spot on the South Sixth Street overpass, skidded over the curb, struck a guard rail and veered back into the street. A car driven by Estella I. Bob bin, 45, 206 Michigan Street, slid on icy pavement near Main Street and Payne Alley. Mrs. Bobbitt's car hit a fire hydrant and a fence. She was cited for not having a driver's license. RainSnow Cover State By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rain fell over Western Oregon today and skies elsewhere were generally cloudy in the wake of a rousing storm that swept m from the ocean Sunday. Along the coast the heaviest blow was reported at Newport, where gusts of 83 miles an hour broke store windows, tangled power lines, and ripped shingles from roofs. The wind toppled trees from1 Portland to Salem, and caused widespread power failures. Snow fell heavily in both the Coast and Cascade ranges and the wind whipped It into a blizzard. Some 75 skiers at Timberline Lodge, who had left their cars at! Government Camp, were ferried to the lower level by snow tractor. Another 50 or 60 skiers were snowed in with their cars at the lodge and were still there this morning. Four Grants Pass high school students were rescued early today from a snowed-m mountain road where they had spent the night, north of Grants Pass. The highway from Timberline Lodge to Government Camp was snowed shut and in addition some trees were down across It. Snow still was falling there this morn ing, but not heavily. Although winds had subsided, the fishing boat Bering Sea rode outside Coos Bay today, waiting for rough water over the bar to subside so it could enter. It was in no difficulty. The storm that raked the state Sunday had moved into Montana today, the Weather Bureau reported. In Sunday's blow, store window breakage was reported at New- port, Salem and Lebanon. Felled trees struck houses in many cities but there were no reports of injur ies. A falling elm brushed the state Supreme Court Building at Salem. Among those upset by the many power failures were the municipal elevator operator and one passen ger at Oregon City. They were stalled midway for two hours. At a drive-in theater south of Milwaukie. the wind blew down the screen. Rainfall totals in the 24 hours at 4:30 a.m. today included 1.35 inches at Eugene, 1.29 at Newport, 1.20 at Salem, .35 at Medford, but only .04 at Baker and ,02 at Pen dleton. . ' (9 t f jfi Q :'TV A RECEPTION for mamber. of fhe joint legislative Ways and Means Commit, and other slate officials who toured Oregon1 Technical Institute's facilities Saturday was offered Saturday evening in th. Pelican Cafe by the Klamath County Chamber of Commerce. These men are, from left, Dr. Jshn R. Richards, state System of Higher Education chancellor; Ed Geary, former Klamath County legislative representative; Bob Kent, chamber president, and J. Vern Owens, chairman of the chamber s Edu. cation Committee. Architect Explains Building Plan For OTI To Legislative Committee David Pugh, registered archi tect of the Skidmore, Owings and Merrill architectural firm of Port land, explained plans for the first phase of building on the new Oregon Technical Institute cam pus to members of the state leg islative Joint Ways and Means Committee and other state offi cials who toured both campuses Saturday. Pugh presented details of the two main buildings to be con structed on the new site, begin ning next fall, probably, if money is appropriated by the state leg islature. That "if" may be settled one way or the other from results of the officials visit here. They were gathering facts for a study of the state System of Higher Educa tion's request for two million dol lars for first - phase construction, A hearing will be conducted la ter in Salem. The date has not been set, said Dr. Winston Pur- 6 Injured In Accidents On Ice-Slick Highways Vandals Strike KUHS BB Fans It was an especially dismal weekend for four Klamath Union High School basketball fans. While the four were watching the Peli cans lose to Medford, vandals were tampering with their cars, John Hydcn, 2640 Bisbee Street, said someone kicked in his hub caps while he was at the game. His car was parked near the high school. Windows were broken out of cars owned by Donald Ross, 1879 Del Moro Street, and Toby Schuh, 4039 Shasta Way, while both were at the game. Andrea Recder. 1105 Pacific Ter race, reported that vandals had rolled her car into a yard at 1176 Crescent Street, uprooting some flowers and shrubs. . x The incidents were being inves tigated by city police Monday. Youth Arrested A 17-yt-ar-old vouth was arrest-l ed Saturday night at a high school dance and charged with being drunk In public. He was sched uled to appear in juvenile court Monday. City police arrested the youth in the high school cafeteria after reports that he had been drink ing. He was jailed over the week end and questioned Monday morn ing aho'it his source of alcohol. Six people were taken to Klam ath Valley Hospital Sunday after traffic accidents On ice-slicked Klamath County highways. A 16-year-old Bonanza girl, her mother and two Lakeview youths were injured in a two-car crash near Olene on the Lakeview High way 1 shortly after noon Sunday, Eunice Bernadette Hunt, 16, the driver of one car, suffered factured knee, lacerations and bruises. Her mother, Martha Clara Hunt, 60, suffered a fractured left leg and arm and multiple con tusions and abrasions. She was reported in "fair" condition Mon day morning. The second car was driven by Douglas Anson Dameron, 16, Lake- view. Charles Grindestaff, 17, also of Lakeview, was an injured pas senger. Both youths were listed as "satisfactory" Monday morn ing with cuts and bruises. Two other passengers in Dameron's car were uninjured. State police said Miss Hunt was westbound on the highway when her car went Into a slide as she came down a hill. The ear slid sideways and hit the Dameron car in the left side. The cars went into ditches on opposite sides of the road. Both cars were towed from the scene. A Portland man and his wife were injured Sunday noon when I then' car went out of control and smashed, into a tree. Robert Lee Rennick of Portland and his wife, Jean, 31, were treated for facial cuts and bruises and released from Klamath Valley Hospital. Two other passengers were un injured. State police said the Rennick car was southbound just south of the Kirk Junction on Highway 97, when it skidded on the ice. The car veered back and forth on the highway and apparently grazed the rear end of a "semi truck driven by Marvin Otis Thornton of Madras. Rennick's car then went off the road and hit a tree headon. The car was heavily dam aged and was towed away. A minor collision occurred Sun day morning between two cars at the intersection of South Sixth and Madison .streets. Cars driven by Erie Maxine Kramer, 19, 212U4 Radcliffe Street, and Claude J. Long, 35, 7716 Cannon Street, collided. According' to state police, the Kramer car was attempting to make a left turn and Long had pulled out to pass. Both cars re ceived minor damage. No one was injured. vine, OTI director. The request would cover esti mated cost of construction of big classroom and laboratory build ings. The classroom building would contain a library seating 160 students. It would also house a lunch counter. The space would be converted to classrooms and faculty offices when the final buildings, including separate library and student un ion facilities, would be built la ter this decade. - The officials , "asked lots of questions" during their visit, said Dr. Purvine. They were briefed concerning OTI's curricula during the afternoon by the school's de partment heads and deans. In the evenine. the officials gathered for a reception planned for them by the Klamath County Chamber of Commerce Education Committee In the Pelican Cafe. They arrived here by train late Friday evening and left again by train early Sunday morning. They were accompanied by Dr. John R. Richards, state System of Higher Education chancellor. Members of the committee who attended were Sen. Dan Thiel, Clatsop and Douglas counties; Al Flegel, Douglas County; E. D. Potts, Josephine County; Reps. 'Allison Clarence Barton, Coos County; George J. Annala, Hood River; Carlton Fisher, Lane; Stafford Hansell, Umatilla, and Ross Mor gan, Multnomah, all committee members. Carrol Howe and George Flit craft, representatives from Klam ath County; Freeman Holder, di rector of the state System of Higher Education Department of Finance and Administration; Rob ert Bauck, management consul-, taht for Holmer's department; Kenneth R. Bragg, state System " of Higher Education legislative fiscal officer; H. A." Bork, comp troller, and J. I. Hunderup, as sistant to the comptroller. Court To Report The public is invited to hear a teport concerning overnight camp site development in Klamath Coun ty by members of the county court during a dinner meeting of the Klamath County Democratic Club Tuesday evening at Shasta View Community Building, Shasta Way and' Madison streets. A spaghetti dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m. by women of the club. Members of the county court expected to be pres ent are Frank Ganong and Ken NEW LOW RATES GO GREYHOUND TO LAKE TAHOE AND NEVADA FUN Meet Scheduled Peterson Patrons Association will meet at 7:45 p.m. Tuesday. March 7, at the school for an Interesting and informative talk by Mildred Lowden, psychiatric social worker of the Klamath County Health Department. She will lend a group discus sion on "Child Development." The sixth grade choral group directed by Mrs. Patricia Turner will sing. There will be a complete report of the recent successful school car nival. Harold Putnam was carni val chairman. The Ohio-Indiana line through Harriscn, Ohio, was named lor William Harrison. passes which Henry AMIDON'S BUSINESS MACHINES 4S3S S. 6th Rentals - Salts Strvlct itnlfit to lh fc.rl t kin.u Attention! SEWER HOOK-UP Btat tfct Dad lintl Ltctmcd 4 Son (it d Compltt Installations Fm ItHmottt N. R. KIMES,Plbg. . Ph. TU 4-8620 i! 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