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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1961)
PAGE 4 Monday, March 30, HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls Oregon 1961 MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks By United Press International Dow Jones 2 p.m. stock aver ages: 30 industrials 679.30, up 2.82 : 20 railroads 145.72. up 1.05 15 utilities 111.06, up 0.66: and 65 slocks 227.90, up 1.18. NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AJ Ir.dust Alcoa Prod Allied Ch Allis Chal Alcoa Alum Ltd Amerada Am Airline Am Can Am Cyan Am M&Fdy Am Motors ; ' Am Smelt ; ' Am Tel & Tel . Am Tob ; Am Viscose ; Anaconda ; Armco Stl ; Atchison ; Avco Bendix Beth Steel Boeing Air Borden j Borg Warner Brunswick Burroughs I" Cal Pack '. - Cdn Pac ; Cater Trac ; Celancse . ' Chrysler ; Cities Svc ; Colum Gas - Con Edis ; ' Cont Can : Corn Pd -: Crown Zell : Curtiss Wr Decca Bee i ; Doug Aire Dow Chem duPont East Kod ! WPaso NG . Evans Pd ; Firestone Firstamer Ford Mot '. Forem Dairy Gen Dynam t Gen Elcc ; Gen Fds ' " Gen Mtors t; GTLE&E1 Gen Tire : ' Ga Pac Cp ; Goodyear ..Gt Ny By -'.Gt Wests : Gulf oil t Idaho Pw ;1U Cent lnt Bus McVi' .' Int Harvester " ; Int Nick ' Int Paper , 'Int Tol&Tel ' Johns Man ; Kaiser Al ' .' Konnecott .'LibMcNil, -; 1Mb Aire .' Lorrilard .' ' Merck Minn M&M "- Monsan Ch , NY Central ' Nor Pac Olin Math ' Outb Mar . Owens 111 GI . Pac Am Fish ..' Pac G&E1 Pac T&T - Pan AW Air ; . Parke Da Penn Dix '. Penney JC ::PaRR :: Pepsi Cola ' Pliier '..Phllco :;Phill Pet '. Polaroid ;'Pug Sd:&L :rca ; ' Jtayonier ; ; Raytheon Repub Stl ", Reyn Met : Roy Tob j : Richfield Oil : Safeway St ' ; St Reg Pap ; Schcnloy ; Scott Pap I Sears Roeb .'; Shell Oil '. Sinclair ; Socony ! ' Sou Pac ;' Spcrry Rd ;: sidou ci : StdOil NJ ; : Stud Pack ' Sunray ' Sunsh Mn Swift & Co Texaco Thiokol ThompRW . , TidewatOil TimkRBear ; Trnnsumer . Twen Cent Un Carbide Un Oil Cal : Un Pac I . ' Unit Aire ' " United Cp . I'S Plywood : US Smelt ; US Steel ; Varlan As ; Vendo Co ' Walgreen Warn B. Pie WashWat Pow West Auto S , West UnTel WcstgABk Westg El Wheel Stl ' Woolwofth 4V4 16 Vi 58 26 Vi 76 35 75 23 38 49 113 20 62 112 74 46 53 74 25 19 64 46 45 66 42 66 37 47 24 36 35 44 53 24 - 76 37 91 57 20 35 36 .76 211 114 28 14 40 32 78 13 40 67 82 46 29 64 65 38 49 31 36 63 39 V20 49 67 32 58 73 45 85 13 40 48 87 83 47 10 48 46 27 102 17 84 40 20 42 31 41 14 49 37 22 59 189 36 584 20 37 62 60 114 99 44 36 27 106 60 45 43 43 23 28 51 45 Wall Street NEW YORK (AP) The stock market held the better part of its gains as trading slackened late this afternoon. Turnover heavy. Volume for the day was esti mated at 5.8 million shares com- pared with 5.96 million Friday. The market reached its peak within the first hour, then profit taking began to nip at some of the best gains. Advances of key stocks ranged mostly from fractions to about a point. Rcvlon spurted about 8 points, National Lead more than 3, Ryan Aeronautical and Lockheed more than 1 and Western Union and Union Carbide about 2. Steels were irregular as the up turn in orders was reported slug gish. Motors, up unanimously in early trading, trimmed their gains. The awful truth behind the headlines: 'enodde. Inc.: Fichmann Story Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Adolf Eichmann, by his own ad mission, is responsible for the murder of millions of Jews. Some was, caim that two-thirds of European Jewry perished in the gas cham bers under Eichmann's control. Yet, as he faces trial for "crimes against humanity" in an Israeli court, Eichmann, the for- Livestock PORTLAND (AP) (USDA) Cattle salable 1,300; trade on all classes opening slow, early sales mostly steady; supply includes 28 loads slaughter steers, four loads, heifers, balance mainly cows; two loads high good and low choice; slaughter steers 85-1,000 lb 25.25; one load choice 1,147 lb also 25.25; good steers 23.00-24.00; small lot slaughter heifers 800-850 lb high good and low choice 23.50-23.75; few high utility and low commer cial slaughter cows 18.00;, most utility 15.00-17.00; canncrs and cutters 12.50-14.00; cutter and util ity slaughter bulls 17.00-21.00. Calves salable 150; trade about steady, moderately active; good and choice vealers 29.00-32.00; standard 24,00-28.00; utility down to 17.00. Hogs salable 900; slow; slaugh ter barrows and gilts 50-75 more; early sales sows mostly steady; U.S. 1-2 190-230 lb butchers 19.50- 20.00; 2-3s 1(10-240 lbs 19.00-10.25; most sows 14.50-17.00 but individ ual 250-260 lb 17.50-18.00. Sheep salable 70; slaughter lambs steidy-75 higher; ewes steady; feeder Iambs scarce; most choice and mixed choice and prime wooled and shorn slaughter lambs 17.00-17.50; small showing mostly good 15.00-16.50. of all are these of Eichmann: "1 am no anti-Semite; I was Just politically opposed to the Jews." And again: "It was not a matter of emo tion." What sort of man is this who with five million deaths on his conscience, claims that he will mcr SS lieutenant - colonel andjhave the last, hyena-like laugh? head of the Gestapo's Jewish de parlment, shows no signs of re morse. There is a word for the crimes of which Eichmann stands ac cused: "genocide," defined as, "The deliberate extermination of a race." "f shall leap into my grave laughing," Eichmann once boast ed, "because the fcaling that I have the death of five million people on my conscience will be for me a source of extraordinary satisfaction Five million victims. . . . The mind rejects the statistic, the pho tos of the stiffened corpses piled like cordwood in the death camps of Auschwitz, Bclscn, Dachau, Bu chenwald. Somehow death seems robbed of lis meaning by sheer numbers. A single crime of passion is comprehensible. Men kill in mo ments of folly for love, jealousy, greed, hate. But theso victims were m u r- dered merely because they hap pened to be born of a particular race. The most chilling admissions 26 7 46 100 44 79 26 53 32 52 13! 53 31 44 8 45 30 88 ' 62 66 Vt, 71 ! 22 83 39 53 25 44 51 70 STOCKTON (UPI - FSMNSI Livestock: Cattle salable 900. Slaughter steers low choice 975 lbs 25.00, high good with few low choice 1,002 lbs 23.75; high good and 1,200 lbs 23.00, standard 1,250 lbs 21,00. Slaughtor cows commercial 18.00-19.00, mixed utility and commercial- grass cows 17.50-18.00, Utility 16.00-18.50, cutters 13.50- 16.00, canners 11.00-14.00. Slaught er bulls utility and commercial 1,250-1,000 lbs 19.00-21.00, utility 1,000-1,250 lbs 18.00-19.00. Stockcr and feeder steers good and choice mostly good, 575-700 lbs 23.50-25.50 medium steers 600-800 lbs 18.00 23.00. Stocker and feeder heifers good and choice 500-700 lbs 20.50- 23.00, medium 17.00-20.50. Calves Billable 150. Slaughter calves mostly choice 300-500 lbs 24.00-26.00, good 23.00-24.50. High good to low choice 200-260 lb veal ers 25.00-28.00. Good and choice' 350-475 lb Blocker steer calves 26.00-28.00, medium 14.0O-28.00. Good and choice stock heifer calves 23.00-25.00. Hogs salable 700. Barrows and gilts No 1-3 190-240 lbs 19.00-19.25. No 1-3 240-260 lbs 18.50. Sows No 3 300-400 lbs 14.50-15.50, 400-600 lbs 12.50-14.50. Feeder pigs good and choice 50-80 lbs 23.20-27.00. under 50 lbs 28.00, 80-120 lbs 21.50- 24.00. Sheep salable 300. Market not established. Train Kills Bakery Man SALEM (AP) Robert Lewis Williams, 40, Portland, was killed today when the Southern Pacific's, Shasta Daylight passenger train struck his bakery delivery truck just north of here. Williams' body was tossed more lhan 250 feet by the speeding train. Wreckage from the truck was strewn along two miles of track before engineer Emery Mc Phcrsdn, Eugene, could slop. Traffic on the rail line was held up more than two hours while a crew repaired the damaged locomotive. Firemen Edward Klingforlh of Portland said Williams stopped for the crossing, started again, then slopped his truck on the tracks. Tho train was going 79 miles an hour at the time of impact. It would be helpful if Eichmann resembled the conventional film monster. But there is no visible mark of Cain on his brew. One would pass him in the street with out glancing back, stand next to him in the subway without notic ing his features. He is non descript. Of medium height and a slim, wiry build, Eichmann, like many men his age (54), is growing bald on top. His nose is long and fleshy. The thin lips appear to be permanently twisted into a wry smile. . "The mouse that roared like lion," a reporter quipped when Eichmann made a brief appear ance in court to plead not guilty last May. "He .might have been clerk in an office" is the descrip tion furnished by Joel Brand, the Hungarian who bartered with Eichmann in 1944 for Jewish lives. Only the eyes are unusual. They arc deep-set and steely-blue (The left one looks as though it had been countersunk to hold a monocle.) "They seemed to bore right through you," Joel Brand recalls. Since his arrest last May Eichmann has been a model pris oner of the Israelis. He makes his own bed, keeps his cell tidy, When his warders enter the cell, he springs to his feet, clicks his heels. The old Nazi habits die hard. . Eichmann's prison is one of the square, brown forts built by the British in northern tsrael between 1036 and 1039. His guards arc carefully chosen from among young Israeli policemen whose rel atives have not suffered personal ly at his hands. Elaborate precautions have been taken to prevent a suicide at tempt. Eichmann is tieless and his shoe laces have been taken away from him. He is never left alone day or night. When he shaves, a guard checks the safety razor' after each stroke to that it is tightly screwed. For about four hours a day, Eichmann is cither interrogated or he writes his memoirs. Every thing he says in response to ques tioning is recorded wilh his knowl edge; the microphone is clearly visible in front of him. The Israeli government is bending over back wards to give him a fair trial. It is even paying the trial expens es of his lawyer, Dr. Robert Serva tins of Cologne. The memoirs are largely a jus tification of his past actions. "I repent nothing," he has said. Beneath the mousy exterior shooting, gassing o there still beats the heart of the The "Final Solution,' dedicated bureaucrat. Perhaps: Eichmann is that dangerous com. bir.ation, the efficiency expert wedded to the fanatic. For when his trial opens the world will learn how Eichmann organized murder on a mass pro duction basis and ran it himself1 as a one-man show. It was Eichmann who ordered full automation for the extermina lion camp at Auschwitz, where! 2,500,000 Jews were put to death, mostly by gas. It was he who arranged for them to be trans ported from the gas chambers to t h e crematoria by conveyor belts. It was Eichmann who estab lished the time-tables of murder. set the production targets, ranged for the transportation of the human raw material. And it was he who canvassed the German chemical factories for. a cheaper, more efficient gas to kill "large animals. No detail was loo small. He even invented a pseudo- technical jargon. Human beings were units, and if they were Jewish they were to be proc ;cssed" i.e. run through the gas chambers. "Demographic plan ning" referred to forced deporta tion of Jews, and "resettlement" meant sealing them up in ghettos. A "special action" was any thing from an organized pogrom to the execution of a group by drowning. of course, referred to the extermination of the race. But Eichmann did not concern himself solely with the produc tion side of Genocide, Inc., he also headed a giant sales organi zation. "I was in effect a traveling salesman for the Gestapo just as I had once been a traveling sales man for an oil company in Aus tria," he remarked. From a four - story office build ing at No. 116 Kurfurstenstrasse, Berlin, Eichmann directed a net work of "salesmen" that spread throughout Nazi-occupied Europe. Director of Amt IV. 4 (b) was his official designation (the Amt IV stood for Gestapo, while the 4 re ferred to the investigation of re ligious organizations, and the (b) to the -supervision of all Jewish affairs. No territory was too far distant for Eichmann's claws to reach Jews were even brought from North Africa and from Rhodes in the Mediterranean to the Nazi extermination camps. i.... ' vs o It f , At riJil Wt" W.VA'. V.., A STATISTIC that lived just long enough for liberation! "Five million victims . . . jom.. how death seems robbed of its meaning by sheer numbers." . . . ; Police Discover Body Amid Burned Trailer Chiloquin First Aid Unit Gives Operations Report Grains CHICAGO (API- Wheat Mar May Jul Sep Dec Corn Mar May Jul Sep Dec Oats Mar May Jul Sep Dec Rye Mar May Jul Sep Dec High Low Prcv. Close close 2.07 2.06 2.07 2.07 2.06 2.05 2.05 2.06 1.89 I.88V4 1.88 1.88 1.92 1.91 t.flt' 1.91 1.97 1.97 1.97 1.97 1.13 1.12 1.13 1.13 1.16 1.15 1.15 1.16 1.19 1.18 1.18 1.19 1.20 1.18 1.18 1.20 1.17 1.15!, 1.16 1.17 CHILOQUIN - The resuils of. three years of operation of a first aid slation at the Volunteer Fire Department, Chiloquin, reported to Red Cross headquarters in Klamath Falls, show department members giving immcdiato and temporary assistance to victims of 151 accidents, 63 of which were from motor vehicle incidents. When Hie first aid station was established March 27, 1057, all volunteers were trained in first aid by the Red Cross, and the local chapter provided Identifica tion signs and supplemental equip- nient. Volunteer teams were es tablished and round the clock cov erage established so that a first aider was available whenever needed. The (iro department also oper ates the community ambulance and disaster car for civil defense. All first aid service given on ei ther highway or at the station is provided without charge. The nmbulnnco has made 2116 runs piling up over 16,000 miles. Bel vie Dlllstrom and Aubrey Star key, department members, have progressed in their first aid train-! ing to tho instructor rank, and have received their traininn in ing donations from Klamath Agen cy. I Red Cross leaders consider the Chiloquin Fire Department first aid station outstanding in the area, and welcome inquiries from community groups in other areas of the Klamath Basin regarding methods of establishing commu nity service first aid stations. Oregon Weather By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Monday Max. Mln. Prep. Bond Lakeview Newport North Bend Portland Airp't 53 45 .54 60 55 27 .04 .55 46 1.28 57 2!l .10 54 3 .84 50 26 T 59 35 .02 54 42 1.30 53 44 1.79 61 39 .20 54 43 .34 53 39 .27 59 31 .04 53 40 .47 53 40 .46 The badly burned body of a man, tentatively identified by state police as Eugene Dcbbs Mc- Farland, 48, was found about 10 a.m. in the ashes of a trailer house at the South Sixth Street! Wrecking Yard. The business is owned by Wal ter C. Badorek and William A. Bcdorek. ' Investigating state police said the fire, apparently unseen, oc curred sometime Saturday night or Sunday morning. The trailer house in which McFarland had lived for some time and a 1950 Ford convertible were consumed in the blaze of unknown origin. The fire was reported to state police headquarters shortly after: 10 a.m. Sunday by Bobby Lee Perkins, 18, 5112 Bryant Street and . Raymond Barnes, 18, who had made two trips to the wreck ing yard In search of an auto mobile muffler. The trailer and car were intact day morning, found evidences of the fire and left. McFarland is reported to have lived in the trailer for some time. He was a native of Grady, Okla. born Augsut 28, 1912. Other de tails of his family or the time he had lived in Klamath Falls are nol known. The body was taken to Ward's Klamath Funeral Home. Crash Hurts 5 Persons A headon collision between cars driven by Mrs. Barbara Ruth Mc Neill, Ashland, and D. A. Scholer, 1118 Laurel Street, about eight miles west of here on Keno Road resulted in minor injuries to five persons Sunday evening. Peace Ambulance Service re late Saturday afternoon but thejP"1 'hat Mrs. McNeill and her youths left after finding no one about tho premises. They re turned on the same errand Sun- Western Oregon Partly cloudy Klamath Falls Ihrouch tho local 1'onigm ana early Tuesday; in- .61 .64 .66 .69 .71 .60 .62 .65 .67 .70 .60 .63 .65 .67 .71 Vi .62 .64 .67 .69 .72 Red Cross chapter. All members of tho department arc provided continued training by these voltin. teor Instructors to keep their cer tificates in force and 1I10 volun leers' training up lo date. The department is financed bv! support of the community includ-i Soybeans Mar May Jul Sep Nov Jan 1.24 1.22 1.22 1.24 1.26 1.23 1.24 1.26 1.28 1.23 1.28 1.28 1.20 1.27 1.28 1.30 1.31 1.30 1.30- 1.32 KLAMATH Sugar Beet Meet Set TO LE LAKE A meeting of prospective sugar beet growers has been called by the Tulelake Growers Association for 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 21, in the Sports man's Hotel banquet room. The meeting follows announce ment that applications tor sugar beet production m the Tulelake area have been accepted by the. Spreckles Sugar Beet Company, Woodland. Association Manager Cliff Jen kins, In announcing plans for the meeting, reports that used sugar beet machinery, planters and thin rers, in good condition at reason able prices is available at Wood land. Six planters may be bought for $275 each and six thinners at $325 each. It Is suggested by the associ ation board that growers combine funds and buy the machinery. The association will distribute the seed as a service to growers, payment to be made later. Information pertinent to the suc cessful growing of a sugar beet daughter, Dcbra, 9. m one car, and Scholer and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Speelman, 1820 Riverside! Street, in the other received in juries that appeared to range from lacerations to bruises and shock. All were taken to Klamath Val ley Hospital for treatment. State police said Mrs. Mc Neill's car apparently began to slide on a skiff of snow left by a squall. She was not able to avoid striking the Scholer car, e a s t bound, they said. Police List Car Crashes A hit and run snow squall Sun day evening left roads slickened in the Klamath Falls area and caused, indirectly, a series of ac cidents that produced some injuries. Cars driven by David Lee Ken- yon, 16, 2004 Ogden Street, and Gary Clarence Howton, 1524 Gary Street, collided at 7:30 p.m. as iteuyun aLieiupieu iu pctas nuvv-. ton and went into a slide on Route 97 just south of the city, said state police. Kenyon's car ....... inU JltnU n n A wda fwiiumcu imu a uu.,i a u u damaged slightly. Neither man was injured. A similar accident occurred be tween cars operated by Robert Darele Kirk, 753 McGuire Aven ue, Falcon Heights, and wimert Evert Reed, Central Point, on Route 66 at 7:15 p.m. Police said Reed started to pass and lost control on slick pave ment. Both cars were damaged slightly, but no injuries resulted. And a car driven by Jack Dee Fields, 22, 2043 White Avenue, slid into the rear of one operat ed by William Francis Price, 42, 2839 Vermont Street, at South Sixth Street and Homedale Road at 2:30 a.m. Monday, officers stat ed. Price stated he stopped for a pedestrian and was moving slow lv again when the other car struck. Both were westbound Fields' passengers, Karen Ester Fields, 18, and lona May Fields 30, were taken to Klamath Valley Hospital for treatment of injuries. The first two were released, but the latter kept for observa tion and further treatment. 1 xi-r v & U 1 &J BARNEY CAVANAUGH, has been named a division chairman for the 1962 United Fund campaign to beqin next fall. He has worked each year with UF since its inception here in 1953, including duty as di vision, unit, publicity and promotion chairman and a solicitor during the past three years. t.92 2.84 2 88 2 90 2.08 2 86 2 91 2 04 2.98 J87 Potatoes CHICAGO (AP) - Potatoes ar- ing. BPW Meeting Slated Today creasing cloudiness Tuesday with rain by evening; cooler. Highs 48 56;low tonight 32-40. Coastal winds westerly to northwesterly, becom ing southerly, 25-40 m.p.h. Tues day afternoon. Eastern Oregon Clearing to night; mostly sunny Tuesday with increasing clouds in afternoon; cooler. Highs 42-52; low tonight 24.35. MOUNT SKASTA-nr. Donald Ilalley will speak of the bcautifi cal 1011 project begun by the city at I lie north end of the communi- , v, n ,r .oiai u.a.,o( Mmm, siKlsla Busincs5 ana shipments for Friday 732; Salur- rrofcssiona Women at the Ski day 479; Sunday none; market Ko I Cnffee Shnn Skv Room. !1r n.ttlpv will hnw cliHf nho. Bromii 01 Do-n, .m Lkmi Rrn.ntn.firm; car lot track sales: Idaho in, 0i,. ,'t n, f 11,. r-, 4.10-4.60; Idaho bakers and no(hcr at East Alma and Pure Water Earns Honor of reference. The city's water supply met the states standards for sanitation during all months of 1960, John Voth, manager of Oregon Water: Corporation here, learned Monday. Voth received a letter from Dr. Richard H. Wilcox, state health uiui-ei, cuiiimuimnig me linn. - "A review of bacteriological LGUTrl KcpOrTeu tuuius ui water puiuy in ure- KU Girl Wins 1 Scholarship Patricia Anderson, a senior at Klamath Union High School, has Boy Emerges From Slopes PORTLAND (AP) - A 14-year-old boy walked out of the woods near Government Camp Sunday1 morning after spending the night on the slopes of Mt. Hood. The boy, Roderick Stuart Mao Millan, a freshman at Portland's Lincoln High School, said he had gone the wrong direction while skiing down Mt. Hood from thej 10.000-foot level. Six men, who had started a J. Thackara Rites Dated DORRIS Funeral services for John E. Thackara, 92, who died March 18 in Hillside Hospital, will be held in O'Hair's Memorial Chapel Thursday, March 23, at 1:30 p.m. Bishop George M. Shaf fer Jr., of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, will olliciate. Final rites and inter ment will be in Picard Cemetery, Dorris. Mr. Thackara had been in fail ing health since last September. He was one of the early home steader settlers in Siskiyou Coun ty. He was born in Sumner, III., Feb. 9, 1869, and came to Cali fornia in 1876 lo settle in Te hama County. In the spring of 1890 he came to Siskiyou County looking for a homcsite and adventure. He ar rived at Montague on a wood burning train and with $5 in his pocket walked 100 miles to Okla homa Valley near Dorris. Mr. Thackara helped build the first fence in the valley at a time when there were only nine homesteaders. He was employed by many ranchers including Na than Merrill who helped establish 'he present town of Merrill and was a friend of many of the Mo docs who returned from Oklaho ma after the Modoc Indian War. He was married in 1900 to Anna Bell Luckett of Chicago. The cou ple continued to live on their homestead and in Dorris after retirement. He was a member of the LDS Church and of the Siskiyou Coun ty Historical Society to which he contributed a wealth of historical information on the early days in Butte Valley. Survivors include daughters. Mrs. Lcona Andrus, Dorris, Mrs. Inez Nichols, Milwaukic, Ore., and Mrs. Luceille Pettis, Klamath Falls; a brother, Wal lace Thackara, Dorris; five grand children and nine great-grandchil dren; 'also a cousin, Earl Brown- ell, Dorris, and a cousin, Lloyd Browncll of Grenada, Calif. search for the boy when he was reported missing, encountered bad weather and did not come out of the mountains for some time after he was reported safe. One of the rescuers injured an ankle and slowed that group s piogress. MnnM Ulan cai'r! ha marla received a scnoiarsnip iromh-rf , ... hn,, niah, Our Times, a Wesleyan Vniversi-Lnd found hs way back Sm(ja'l IV uuUlltmiUII, lui O mu,b " mnrn nrf h ..cinrt lha cm fa- Ai word editorial on current affairs. rccijon She was among 29 students 1 from the nation to win the schol-l arships of $200, $100 and $50.. BADGE STOLEN Judges also considered honorsj CHATTANOOGA (AP) During He was charned with the bur received, scholastics and letters funeral services for veteran hu-lslaiy Feb. 26 of the Ideal Cafe Given Sentence DORRIS Robert James Scha- low, 21, Klamath Falls, formerly of Macdoel, was sentenced to j spend 90 days in Siskiyou County , Jail Thursday by Judge Les iChase of Dorris Justice Court. jmane officer John Henry, who at Macdoel. George Thoma ,v,on for 1960 indicates yours has! met bacteriological standards for purity of drinking water every month during the year," the Id ler stated. NEW HAZARD CLEVELAND, Tenn. (AP) Piano tuner Richard Burger. crop is to be given at the meet- 25, discovered a new hazard for spent most of his adult life help ing neglected or abused children, 'burglars looted his home taking the gold badge he wore for 34 iyoars with the Humane Education al Society. 2 M'i 2.47 2.394 2.38 2.43?i 1.40 292 2.'i 2.48 2.53 2.37i 2.39i 1,41", 2.43i Potatoes SAN FRANCISCO FSMNS) - Potatoes: Russets Klamath U.S.I A 5.25; U.S.I 6-14 OI 6.50-5.75. 5.00- LOS ANGELES (UPI FSMNS- Potatoes: Russets Central Oregon U.S. 1 6- 14 01 f 25. Obituaries THACKARA JOHN f. THACKARA, 97. dlJ at Hill aid Hotpltal March 11. ha Is aurvlvcd bv Ihraa dauohtari, lucallla Patm. Klam ath Falls. ItonA Andrgi. Oorrli. Call lornla. and Inti Nichols, MHwauhla, Ort- ooni a rroihar. wallaca ThacHara d Dor- r. ij ,.. ..j j . ; taniornla. Also Iwo cousins. Earr1"' iuuiiu is.-ua and nln flraal-arandchlldrtn. Funaral .nissets sarvkas will b hald In O Hair's Memo rial Chapal Thursday. March JJ. al I 30 p m. Inttrmanl Picard Camattrv. Dorris. California. his profession when a golf ball ex ploded in his face. Burger found the ball in an upright piano he was repairing. It blew up when he lifted it. Burger, who said he had grandchildren. George Andrew Thoma, 84, died at the Klamath Nursing Home March 20. He had been a resi dent of Klamath County for many years and at one time owned and operated a creamery at Mer rill. Mr. Thoma was well known for his ability as a butter maker. He suffered a stroke several years ago. Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Pauline Kaylor, this city; a son, Walter of Tacoma. Wash.; seven grandchildren and two great- Schalow was in violation of pro bation, authorities said. An ori ginal complaint filed by District Attorney Albert H. Newton Jr. was reduced lo petty theft. Scha low pleaded guilty. fiedical Mirror CBB Low-Salt Diet no idea how long the ball had been in the piano, was treated at a hos pital for face and eye injuries. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Ward's Klamath Funeral Home. THOMA GEORGg ANDREW THOMA. I, died har Marcr. 30. 1941. Survivors! Daoohrar. Mrs. Paulina Kaylor. this city; son. Wal ter, Tacoma. Wanhlnolom seven grand children, two great grandchildren. Funeral arrangements will he announced bv Wards Klamath Funeral Heme. 3.30: Minnesota North Dakota Red Rimer Valley round reds 2.25-2.60: new No car lot track sales reported. Funerals HATFULO llacltatlon ol the Holy Roserv far Ron ald Joseph Hettield will take place from in chapel ol Ward's Klamath Funeral Home Monday, March lal. at p.trt. Requiem mail Tuesday, March II. al to JO a m. Our Lady ut Mt. Carmel- Chlloouln, Oregon. Vault entombment In Wilson Cemetery. Ward'a Klamath Fu neral Homo In Char gam Ski Bowl Drive. Dinner reservations are request ed for those interested. The public is invited. POTATO SHIPMENTS KLAMATH BASIN Seasons 59-60 60-61 Dally Truck, Ore. 14 17 Dally Rail, Or. 23 4 Dally Truck, Cullf. S 5 Dally Rail. Calif. 20 7 Daily Total Ore. Calif. 62 33 Monthly Tnlal 744 448 Sranoa Total Kii 6169 How To Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly In Place Do your flt twth annoy tnd m burr by ilipplnfr. dropping or wob bling when you fftt, Uuph or tnlkf Jut sprlnklr a little PASTKBTH on yourpUtM ThlKklknllnf (non-told) powder hold (nine rtth mot firmly and more comfortably. No jiimmy. goo y. paitv Ustf or frellni Do not our Checka "platf ortor'r (rifntunt breath, Get rASTFETH today at drug counter vrywhart. MATERNITY FASHIONS! A LOVELY COLLECTION AT BUDGET PRICES .. . Smocks Bras 0 Lingeri Suits Slim Jimi Ptdol Puihars 0 Gortatr Ro)rf t Tubal Pregnancy Polio Discoverer Humiilily Q. Arm rnan tflrteMpt tult ahlr or ptrtant on a lotr-saf olifl? A. Some are others may not he. Brine is used in preceding some froen vegetables, especially peas and lima beans. This adds a substantial amount of salt lo the vegetables. (?. rTtril rouses tuhal prrg. naney and hnie it it trrated? A. Previous inflammation of the pelvic organs is one cause but in many cases the cause is unknown. Tubal pregnancy requires surgery and it is often necessary to re move the involved luhe. Some limes it is possible to surgically remove the product of concep tion without removing the tube. It has been slated that a woman becoming pregnant following tubal pregnancy risks a recurrent tubal pregnancy in 50 per cent of cases. (. i Dr. Sahin, the aritinalnr of fa narc orrtt atir rareine, mn Amerimnf A. Dr. Sahin v. as born in Bialv alok. which is now a part of Poland, but was Ihen under IrllrrHeillk j ES1P UnTaWTIl IT Carist Russia. He came to the United Slates as a youth and has been a U. S. citizen since 1930. (.'. Would kemping a pan of iratrr on thr. radiator help moulrn bedroom air? A. It wouldn't do much good. It may lake as much as a quart of water to moisten the air in a closed bedroom of ordinary sire. This amount of water is supplied by a boiling tea kettle in 30 minutes or by an electric steamer in an hour or so. The humidifi cation produced bv pans of water, even on Ihe radiator, is hardly worth mentioning. Even when bedroom air is comfortably moist. Ihe moisture escapes when the door is opened and the humidiiy prompily falls lo that of other rooms of ihe house. Sole lo readrrs: At many quft tions as possible will he answered in this column, hut for ehvious reasons replies must be brief. fc1