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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1962)
PACK 4 Tuesday, Drnmbtr IS, 1962 HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath FalU, Ore. MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks Stock List Needs Asked If there are other stock quo tations you wish 'added to this list, please write to the Herald and News, Stock List. If enough requests are received for a certain stock, every effort wfU be made to obtain quotations m it. NEW YORK STOCKS By United Press International Allied Chemical Alum Co. Am American Air Lines American Can American Motors AT&T American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Armco Santa Fo Bendix Corp Bethlehem Steel Boeing Air Brunswick Caterpillar Corp Chrysler Corp Coca Cola C.B.S. Columbia Gas Continental Can Crown Zellerbach Crucible Steel 51' 16V 116- 40 50' 24 1i 53' 29(4 36 17' 36 72 86 "! 44 Vt WALL STREET NEW YORK IUPII - Stocks moved slightly lower today. Blue chip movements were nar rowly scrambled. The only heavy weight showing a definite trend was Du Pont with a loss of l'j Steels were sizable fractions lower in some instances, oils little changed, chemicals irregularly lower, and autos steady. Group trends were absent in the general list with metals, drugs, stores, finance shares, aircraft and electronics all narrow. Curtis Wright Dow Chemical Du Pont Eastman Kodak Firestone Ford General Foods General llotors Georgia Pacific Greyhound Gulf Oil Homcstakc Idaho Power I.B.M. Int Paper Johns Manville Kennecott Copper Lockheed Aircraft Martin Merck Montana Power Montgomery Ward Nal'l Biscuit New York Central Northern Pacitic Pas Gas Elcc Penney .1. C. Penn RR Perma Cement Phillips Proctor Gamble Radio Corporation Richfield Oil Safeway Sears Shell Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Pacific ! Sperry Rand Standard California Standard Indiana Standard N. J. Stokely Van Camp Run Mines Texas Co. Texas Gulf Sulfur Texas Pac Land Trust Thiokol Trans America Trans World air Tri Continental Union Carbide Union Pacific United Aircraft United Air Lines U.S. Plywood U.S. Rubber U.S. Steel West Bank Corp Westinghousc Youngslown 44 Vt 45 a 15Vi 17V4 56 234 107 34 45 77 57vi 43 31Vi 39V4 43 324 382', 26 41 65T 53 78 35"4 33V4 LIVESTOCK KLAMATH FALLS LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET Dec. 17, 196J Receipts: Cattle 784. Calves 145. Hogs 40. Compared last Monday Stocker and Feeder cattle steady Slaughter cows steady to .50 higher; hogs .50 lower. Slaughter Cattle: Cows: Cmcl Std., 16.80-17.90; Utility, 14.80-16, 70; Cutters, 13.50-14.60; Canners, 9.10-12.00. Bulls: Utility & Cmcl., 18.10. 19.10. Calves: Good . Choice Vealers 26.30-27.50. Stockersi Feeders: Steers Good-Choice, 600 lbs., 25.80-26.30; Good-Choice. 705-915 lbs.. 23.B0- 24.30; Com.-Med., 550-750 lbs., 20. 50-24.00. Heifers: Good. 530-742 lbs., 21. 70-23.00; Com.-Med., 550-750 lbs, 18.00-21.90; Holsleins, 500-750 lbs. 18.00-19.00. Steer Calves: Good-Choice, 300-, 485 lbs., 28.80-30.10; Good. 347- 500 lbs., 27.10-28.80; Com.-Med. 300-500 lbs., 23-25.50. Heifer Calves: Good . Choice, 305 - 471 lbs., 25.20-25.35: Com. Med., 300-500 lbs., 20.0-24.00. Cows: Com.-Med. Feeders, 104- 136 per head. Medium, bred, 136- 157.50. Medium-Good Feeders, 13.- 00-16.25. Hogs: U.S. 1 & 2 Barrows & Gilts, 181-204 lbs., 17.00 - 17.50: Sows, U.S. 1, 400-440 lbs., 13.00; Weancr Pigs, 7.00-10.50 per head. Reported by Ray O. Petersen, county extension agent. 38V4 1W, wa 12'. . 40V4 71 '.'4 56 H 44 767. 35 57 28'4 12 60 47' 57 PORTLAND (UPI)-(USDA) - Livestock: Cattle 200; few standard dairy bred slaughter heifers 17-18; can- ner 11-13.50: canncr 10. Calves 50; few good vealers 29- 30: tew choice 485 lb 26.50. Hogs 500; no early sales. Sheep 200; few good to mostly choice wool slaughter Iambs 18.75- Mitchell Trial Jury Selection Bogs Down The selection of a jury to sitlof Dmitre Dan Yerkovich, 35, in judgment ot Herbert Floyd while the victim was observing iit,-hrll 41 rharoed with the a motion picture with the de- first degree murder of a Klam ath Falls man last Sept. 28, prob. ably will not be completed be fore Wednesday Those were the indications fol lowing proceedings in the cir cuit court of Judge David R. Van- denberg Monday afternoon. denuty district attorney Sam Mc- Keen and the attorney for the defense approved one juror for cause Irom tne regular venire of Klamath County jurors. Of the regdar 40-member pan el. seven potential lu-ors were excused by the court Monday seven others are serving on the grand jury and therefore are not available, and various otner jur ors had been excused before the impaneling began. The attorneys representing tne state and the dclense began in lervicwing prospective jurors from a special venire ot 40 names in court Tusday morning. If 12 members are selected from that list to sit in the jury box, the attorneys may then begin exercising their privilege of dis qualifying a total of 18 jurors, if they choose. The state allowed six preempts; the de fense 12. During the procedure to im panel a jury Monday, the defense attorney spent considerable time querying potential jurors as to their attitude on insanity as line of defense. The defense has indicated it will attempt to estab lish that Mitchell was the vic tim of mental defect when he fired three bullets into the head Teens Face Theft Probe 59'i 14 28 45' 4 10 40' i 100 33 50 32'3 46 40 43's 33' 4 31 19; few prime 104 lb shorn 10.25 LOCAL SECURITIES -Prices until 11:30 a.m. PST today Bid Asked Rank of America 55 58'j Cal Pac Util 25 27 Con Freight 12 i:i' Cyprus Mines 22 24 Equitable S & L 29 ,11 1st Nal'l Bank 59'j 63 Janlicn 23 25 Morrison Knuds.cn 28 Mult Kennels 3 N.W. Natural Gas 31 Oregon Metallurgical PP&L PC.E U.S. Nat'l Bank United Util West Coast Tel Weyerhaeuser 24 24 tifi'i 29 19 23' 30' i 4s, 33 1'. 25'i 23', 73 31', 20' 27 Stocks MUTUAL FUNDS Prices until 10 a.m. PST today Bid Asked Affiliated Fund 7.31 Atomic Fund 4.37 Blue Ridge 11.21 Bullock 11.93 Chemical Fund 10.14 Comw. Inv. 9.43 Diver Growth 7.90 Dreyfus 15.28 & H Stock 12.51 Fidelity Capilal 7.54 idehty Trend . 11.71 Fin Inv Fund 3.92 Founders Fund 5.47 Fundamental 9.08 Group Sec Com 11.76 Gr Sec Avia El s.KR Hamilton H.D.A 464 Hamilton C-7 4.74 lncorp Inv. 6.71 ICA 9,41 Investor's Group Fund Intercontinental Mutual Slocks Selected Variable Keystone R-l Keystone S-3 keystone S-4 MIT. M.I.T. Growth Nat l luv. Nat'l Sec Div National Growth Nat'l Sec Slock Putnam Fund Putnam Growth Selected Amer Shareholders TV Fund United Aocum United Continental United Income United Science Value Lines Wellington Whitehall 5.39 10.73 17.03 10 21 608 24. 83 1291 3.89 13 46 7.33 13,73 7.59 14,36 7.91 8.93 1050 6.95 1289 6.31 11.17 6.13 4110 1370 12 112 7.91 4.77 12.25 13.08 11.02 10.31 8.66 16.61 13.52 8.20 12.73 4.30 5.95 9.95 12 88 7.33 4.64 5.18 7.33 10.28 604 11.60 18.41 10.91 6.57 25.94 14011 4.2li 14.71 801 14.84 8.30 15.61 8,60 9,69 11.48 7.S7 1842 6.90 12.21 670 5.36 1493 13 64 Two teen-age boys were told to appear Tuesday before juve- ile authorities in connection with the recent rash of thefts from cars from the Tower Theater and Lucky Lanes Bowling Alley parking lots, and shoplifting. Two other teen-agers who were pprchended at the Tower The ater parking lot Thursday night iter going through several cars, implicated (our other youths in the recent rash of crime that in cluded siphoning gas from school buses at hummers School. Two ot the other boys implicated were sent back to MacLarcn School for Boys, Woodburn, for parole vio lation. One 16-ycar-old will appear at 3 p.m. today. Upon questioning by Ray Howard, city police ju venile officer, the boy admitted being involved in the theft of gas from school buses three weeks ago. The other boy. 14 years old, will appear at 4 p.m. He admitted taking three records from B and B Radio and Electric on Dec. 12, fendant'i ex-wife and daughter at a local theater, Sept. 28. Yerko. vich was taken to the Klamath Valley Hospital where he died soon after. Udall Given Green Light To Intervene WASHINGTON lUPIi-The Fed eral Power Commission said Mon day it has permitted Interior Sec retary Stewart L. Udall to inter vene on a limited basis in the High Mountain Sheep project on the Snake River. The FPC said Udall will be at lowed to file exceptions to ai FPC examiner's decision that the Pacific Northwest Power Co Portland, Ore., he allowed to build the project. The agency said Udall also will be able to partici pate in oral argument if the com mission schedules such argu ments. Udall is seeking to allow the federal government to develop the high Mountain Sheep Dam. On Oct. 8, FPC Examiner William C. Levy recommended that Pacific Northwest build the project, and he decided against the alternative Nez Perce project proposed by Washington Public Power Supply System. The FPC said that under normal conditions, Udall's participation hould be limited to the pro-hear ing stage as specified in agency rules. But in view of the impor tance of this case the commission said "it would not be inconsistent with the public interest to grant limited intervention to the secre tary." The FPC extended time for fil ing exceptions from today to Feb. and will allow replies to the exceptions to be filed up to March 11. Oregon California DAILY KLAMATH BASIN SHIPMENTS Rail Track Combined Rail A Track Ttl 7 13 20 6 12 18 F.O.B. GROWER PRICES Klamath Basin Demand best quality good others slow .Market fairly steady 100 lb sacks Russets I S No. 1A to 14 oi. 3.15-3.50 mostly 3.25-3.30 Bakers 10 ol. niln. J.25-3.50 lew 3.15 Haled 10 Ih. 2.50-2.70 few 2.80 I S No. 2 1.751.90 Net price to growers at cellar bulk cwt: I S No. 1A 1.80-2.00 some best 2.10 I S No. 2 .85-1.00 COMBINED RAIL TRUCK UNLOADS Oregon 42 Total All Other Stales 838 One Week Ago Oregon 40 Total All Other Stales 693 Grains CHICAGO (UPI '-Grain range: High Low Close Wheal Pec 2.10 2.03 2.08'i-2.O9 Mar 2.11 2.10 2.10- May 2.08 2.07 2.07V2.08 Jul 1.89 1.811 1.88 Sep 1.92 1.91 1.91 Oats Dec .76 .73 .76-.75'4 Mar .71 .70 .71 May .69 .68 .68- . Jul .67 .66 .67 Sep .68 .67 .67 Rye Dec 1.36 1.31 1.36-1.35 Mar 1 29 1.27 1.28 May 1.27 1.26 1.26 Jul 1.23 1.23 1.23 Heat Bathes Mid Hation My United Press International The nation's midlands basked in record-setting, mid-December heat wave today. Cold rain and snow fell along the coasts. Sioux Falls, S.D., had 56 Mon day, breaking by one degree the previous high set in 1927. Spring field. Mo., which less than one week ago set a record low of 5 below, had 68, equalling the pre vious peak for Dec. 17 set in 1939. Records were set from North Dakota to Texas Sundav. To the west, nine traffic deaths the San Francisco Bay Area were blamed on rain, and mud ind debris closed two main high way arteries in San Francisco sub urbs. Potatoes PORTLAND il'PIl - Potato! market: Steady: Ore. Russets U.S. No I 3.25 3.30. few 2.75-3.011; 1 mark tine qunl. 4.00, sized 2 o?, spread 4.50 4.75; round reds 1.70 50 Ih sacks 1.25-1.65. 1.75; .. " "- ' Mi r 4 . I , , ' NEW AGENT ARRIVES New agricultural agent with the Klamath County Extension staff, Wilbur Reil, is shown here as he gets the feel of his new job. He will assume responsibility for work with city and suburban homeowners. He was formerly with USDA's Plant Quar antine Division at Nogal'es. Aril. Rites Set Reil Fills on Thursday Extension Staff Post Funeral services for Mrs. Rich ard Hocflcr of Bonanza will be held Thursday, Dec. 20, at 9:30 a.m. Irom hi. Pius X Catholic Church. Recitation of the Holy Rosary will be at 8 p.m. at the church Wednesday, Dec. 19. Final rites and interment will be in Ml. Calvary Cemetery. Mrs. Hoefler died Dec. 16 from injuries sustained in a two-car accident on U.S. Highway 97. Beef Gift Certificates Available Klamath County Cow Belles have announced that the down town U.S. National and First Na tional banks now have available Beef Gift Certificates issued by the National Livestock and Meal Board, to be used tor Christmas giving. Due to delay, the attractive gift certificates were available only by order in Chicago with a definite time lag involved. To fa cilitate the sale of the certificates the Oregon Beef Council is underwriting a limited number of these NLMB certificates in $5, $10, and $15 denominations for direct sale here in Klamath Coun ty only. The supply is limited and the time is short tor such pur chases (or those friends who arc hard to buy for. Beef gift certificates are also available locally from meat mar kets, redeemable only at the store of purchase. There arc attractive gift envelopes for each certiiicate. Juveniles Allowed Shoes The slatcmonl in Sunday's Her- aid and News that juvenile au horilies removed the shoos of juveniles when they are taken from the juvenile home lo ap pointmcnts downtown is fallacious The newspaper was misin formed regarding the practices of the juvenile counselors. Francis Mathews, juvenile home director, told the Herald and News Tuesday that the youth who ran away from a counselor Friday morning lost his shoes as he (led. Obituaries HAINES Chrutlrw Vlrt Mmnci. .11, dlfrt hert Pm. II, 191 Survivor: husband. Jfr ry. mother, Bryl Dflvicl; sons, DiMi and Lorpn Manning; daughlfri, Gaylfnc 4d jAnrtl Vanning, all ot Ihlt Clly; Prplhpr. Ciwdon Pavid. U S. Army; vi- If r, CIamc Ki f Mil. Sacramento. Bfv erlv and Linda David ol this city Fu ll ifvtcps vtM announced bv Ward l Klamath Funtral Horn. 9HADRICK Grate Ann Shadncfc. 14. died hfrt Pet tf. t6J Survivon: husband. Jhtrman of Knft: onv t and Darofd S . Denver. Colo ; daughters. GlartvJ Haln, Vedlord. Ha 11 Hatmlto", Po'trenllov. Chili, GPrtfudr PoH. ken. Pearl At hm, Denver, Dorothy Deardotf. Lo An fie let, Ri,fh ,crrt fc rx a mpmertt. Wvo no U gr andt inidren and three great grandrhiiden HinrM ervltes at How ardt Berkeley Park Chapel, Denver, and interment n Fraier. Colo, at a later date Ward t Kimth Funeral Home, in charge.. UN Christmas Cards On Sale There arc a lew United Nation Christmas cards, notes and l'.itil calendars remaining at the I'eli can Cafe lo be sold for the bene- fil of children o( all races through' out the world. The paintings are hy many fa mous world-known aiti.-ts and the items would make attractive Christmas gilts. Bethel Plans Installation Nancy Nichol. honored queen of Bethel No. 6. Order of Job's Daughters, will be honored during the Dec. 20 meeting in the Mason ic Temple when she will officiate at the last meeting of her ad ministration. Installation plans and line offi cers for the next term will be recorded. New officers for the coming term arc Patty Bratton. honored queen; Laurie Brims, sen ior princess; Marynnno Gallagher, junior princess; Sally Bratton. guide; Susan Learning, marshal. Installation will he at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Pec. 2H, at the Masonic Temple. A reception and semi formal dance will follow in Ihe lower banquet room. AU officers and members are urged lo attend the Dec. 20 meet ing and lo take all money lor projects completed during t h e present term. You'rt the mott! The greatest! Tht best! . . . When you remember her anniversary with flowers. Phone Nyback'i Flower Foir New agricultural agent with the Klamath County extension staff is Wilbur Reil. Reil fills a staff vacancy which has existed since July 1. His du ties include seed certification and urban service. He assumes responsibility fori work with city and suburban homeowners previously serviced by J. D. Vertrees, county agent. His training in irrigation and drainage at the University of Cal ifornia at Davis should prove help ful here. Reil was reared on his family's diversified farm near Oroville. He has been employed with USDA's Plant Quarantine Divi' sion at Nogales, Ariz. Mr. and Mrs. Red and infant daughter. Marie, live at 4377 Me- morie Lane. Con's Escape Sparks Tour SAN FRANCISCO fUPD- Fed eral Prisons Director James V Bennett toured Alcatraz today to check security and morale" at the island prison in the wake of the second multiple escape in six months. Bennett flew from Washington to San Francisco Monday, less than 24 hours after a Kentucky bank robber became the first known escaper to survive the treacherous waters which sur round "The Rock" in San Fran cisco Bay. The convict. John Paul Scott, 35. was taken inlo custody on the rocks under Ihe soul!: end of Gol den Gale Bridge about three miles from Ihe prison, less than three hours after he and a com panion made their escape. Scott was nude and numb with cold from his ordeal in the rain-swept waters. His companion, bank robber D. Lee Parker. 31, made it only as far as Little Alcatraz. an out cropping of rock about ion yards frorr the mam island. He was back in custody in 28 minutes. Scott and Parker cut through a barred window in tne prison base ment . went 30 feet across the yard and climbed over a 14-foot fence topped with barbed wire to reach Ihe water. Oregon Republicans Ask 'Statesmanship1 By Barton SALEM i UPI i - A call for a "bi-partisan approach" to House! leadership based on "experience and ability" was voiced today by House Minority Leader F. F. Montgomery. R-Eugene. Montgomery said Republican House member's caucused here Monday night to reiterate their plea for "statesmanship" on the part of House Speaker-designate Clarence Barton, D - Coquille, in1 appointment of committees in the House. Montgomery also announced that Republicans selected Rep. Victor Atiyeh. R-Porlland. and Police Probe Three Thefts Klamath Falls police are in vestigating three thefts of goods valued at over $260, including thej theft of an antique bowl from the Pelican Restaurant. The bowl was reported stolen Dec. 10. 1U value was set at $150. Police are looking for a man suspected ot taking a $75 watch from under a mattress in the bed room at the home of Katherine Hope, 549 Commercial Street. The theft occurred between 10, p.m. Monday and 1:50 a.m. Tues day while Miss Hope was stay ing overnight at a friend s house. A lock on Miss Hope's bedroom door had been pried off. Miss Hope said the suspect knew that the watch was hidden under the mat tress. Mrs. H. M. Mallory, Route 2, Klamath Falls, reported 15' sheets of hardwood was stolen early this month from 2514 South Sixth Street. Mrs. Mallory said t h e wood was worth $37. YMCA Dates Ed Butler Eddie Butler, famed organist who is currently played at a local hotel, will be a special guest at the YMCA Family Night, Dec. 21, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., according to Leon Clark, YMCA general secre tary. Butler will present a short pro gram of Christmas numbers on the organ, including carols ol com munity singing. Mrs. Elaine Murrell and Mrs. James Gavin will be hostesses for the event. Each family is asked to bring a hot dish plus salad or dessert, table service, and a bev erage for the children. Coffee will be provided. Following the potluck and pro gram, a variety ol activities m eluding volleyball, basketball, ping pong and pool will be offered Robert Smigh, R-Burns, as minor ity floor leaders. John R. Dellenback; R-Medford. was named liaison officer lo the governor's office; Ken Maher, R Portland. liaison to the secretary of state; and Joe Rogers. R-ln-dependence, liaison lo the Repub lican State Central Committee. Democrats hold a .slim 31-29 lead in the House. Montgomery said "the change of 1,000 votes could have given the Republicans leadership. "We want what is best for the people of Oregon. It is our belief they want a bi partisan ap proach." Montgomery said "we have call ed upon the Democrats in the House for a show of statesman ship and concern for the real wel fare of Oregon" in committee ap pointments.. 'To date we have wailed in vain for such statesmanship to become evident. We have offered our party's full support in helping to measure up to Ihe level of leadership and performance the people of Oregon rightfully expect of their legislature. 'To dale that off has been rejected," Montgomery charged. Montgomery said both parties have an obligation to the people of Oregon. He explained the 19H3 session will be a crucial one with key decisions to be made, and ;aid neither party has a monopoly on experience. He charged "The House should Crume Said Not Guilty A jury of eight women and four men deliberated one hour and 12 minutes before returning a unanimous verdict of not guilty in the case of the state of Ore gon vs. Colleen Crume, accused of assault with a dangerous weap on, in the circuit court of Judge David R. Vandenberg Monday afternoon. Miss Crume, 22, had been charged with striking a 16-year-old Klamath Falls girl on the head with brass knuckles during scuffle at a public dance in the Klamath Auditorium, Oct. 27. The trial started Thursday and ended at 1:24 p.m. Monday, when the jury began its deliberations. The jury returned to the court at 2:40 p.m. and announced its verdict to Judge Vandenberg. not be organized on a partisan po litical basis, but rather at this crucial time the most able people in both parties should be called upon to share the load of leader ship." When Barton was chosen speak er-designate' at a Democratic cau cus last month, he said he was appointing a "committee on com mittees" to set up committee as signments. , Salary Hike Proposed SALEM (UPD-A 3.3 per cent salary increase for classified state employes July 1, 1963, was recom mended today by Melvin H. Cleve land. State Civil Service Comis- sion director. Cleveland addressed the second day opening session of the three day legislative fiscal orientation conference here for members of the 1963 Lcgslature. ; An additional 1.7 per cent sal ary hike is recommended for July I, 1964, Cleveland explained. The increases in pay would cost an estimated $7,686,8o9. Ol this $4.073,006 or 53 per cent would come from the general fund, and the balance from other sources Cleveland explained the proposal would give 67 per cent of the clas sified employes a pay raise during 1963. ; He said 6,278 employes would get no increase, 9,896 would get a one-step increase, 2,548 would get a two-step pay raise, 23 would receive a three - step raise, and two employes would be raised four salary steps. Idaho Requests Udall Stay Out BOISE lUPP-The Idaho Public Utilities Commission Monday ask ed Interior Secretary Stewart L. Udall in effect to stay out of the Federal Power Commission's de cision lo grant construction of the High Mountain Sheep Dam to Pa cific Northwest Power Company The replav was made to Udall who has recommended Ihe dam be constructed by federal funds. The Idaho Public Utilities Com mission questions the authority ol the secretary. . . to intervene in a proceeding before the Fcdera Power Commission, the letter to Udall said. TU 4-8173 Vj BILL ar,4 FITQ 430 MAIN STREET Funerals HOf FIE Fl-n'l It'.Kfi tpr Rost Hoflltr l he'd Thursday. 0t 10. f JO c m. I St Pun X Church OtttUtien ol Ih Holy fioiiry VSrar40y ivfiinq. odCK "i the church Intfr rttfrtl. Vt Cttlvnr Cmlrv. O Hair's Vtmori Chjpfll i charge ,1 Dividend Notice Quarterly dividends of 11.25 per hnw on the S preferred i.h k, $1.1.1 p.r hiir on the 4.5:." P urnsl preferred utm-k, l .i4 per hnre on the S lb''r wnul preferred lic k $141 per hnre on Ihe ,S.ti4 ''r nerinl preferred mock. $1.75 per hum on Ihe 7.1WV wrial preferred flin k. $1 ;0 prr shure on the tvOO'-, ertnl preferred to. k. 1 p,.r ,,Hr, on the 6.00'';. erwl preferred Mock, $l.;l5 per hrv on Ihe ft 40'V orwl preferred Mock, mid i!4 eenln nor fhnrr on Ihe common - - l ; hi i hi me l ower cv i,ibih i ompnnv have been de- ftrtAfi cl"Ti ,or jwyment Jnnuarv 10. 19H.I. lo Mockholden of to-p - I record nt the i-lctae of busineM Dec-ember 2n. lioi. Xom vrTcrru I r? h. w. m,hy, n, BATTER V. . O HAIR'S MEMORIAL CHAPEL e S39 PINE KLAMATH fAUS, OREGON Perhaps you don't live within Klamath Falls' city limits, but that doesn't mean that our service would be any less prompt, any less efficient. Whenever we are called, whether the family lives a block away or many miles, our service is immediate. Store Speeds Yule Shopping Those persons who plan to use the Christmas Clearing Bureau Store located in the Klamath County health building at 1949 Main Street will enter the build ing through the door to the left of the main entrance. In order to speed up the shop ping program tor parents who will buy clothing and toys for their children on the point sys tem, the store committee has ar ranged for them to shop in al phabetical order. Parents whose last names be gin with letters A through H will shop Wednesday, Dec. 19; I through R, Thursday. Dec. 20 and S through Z on Friday. Dec. 21. At Shaw Stationery you'll have time to enjoy your own party when you use mix aw MSilctt ONE STOPSHOPPINC FOR YOUR PARTY NEEDS r STATIONERY CO. 729 Main TU 2-2586 ".Vruinn the fntire Mcimarh Rjjin" 3 1eaM Aqa Monday, December 16, 1939 Weekend sports enthu siasts were advised late Saturday that skiing would be possible "if skiers pick the open slopes,'' occording to the chief ranger of Crater Lake national pork. Snow was re ported at 24 inches on the level ond still foiling. Tuesday, December 17, 1939 Mrs. M. P. Lavenik en- terfatned at ner home on East Street Friday cventnq tor members of the Gaiety club ond the Birthday club. There wo; o Christmas tree, gift exchange and several hours of bridge with high score held by Mrs. David D. Vondcn burg. Wednesdoy, December 18, 1939 Klamath Foils mer chants wore a 'big grin Monday as they reviewed the pre ceding week's holiday business. All store operators agreed it was o "whopping big day," one of the larger stores maintaining business was doubled over lost year. Thursday, December 19, 1939 L. F. Pcpple of Bonanza has a Leghorn pullet with a production record all wrap ped up m one egg. This pullet laid an eqg which weighed 4 1 4 ounces. The ponderous spheroid was brought to the News and Herald office for inspection. Friday, December 20, 1939 Mr. and Mrs. Scott War ren and daughter Jona from Paisley ore visitors in the city for the Christmas holidovs. Em 53 Years 53 The Landry Co. offers years of experience in serv ing the insurance needs of the Klamath Basin as back ground to provide insurance service for YOU. Insure With THE Jlandnif, Go.. LIABILITY FIRE Paul O. Landry V. T. Johnson 419 Main Street Ph. TU 2-2526 AUTO PROPERTY TT