PAGE 4-A Wednesday, January 23, 1963 HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks NEW YORK STOCKS By Untied Press International Allied Chemical Alum Co Am American Air lanes American Can American Motors .AT&T ' American Tobacco '. Anaconda Copper '. Armco : Santa Fe C Eendix Corp ; Bethlehem Steel ; Boeing Air ; Brunswick ; Caterpillar Corp Chrysler Corp Coca Cola C.B.S. Continental Can Crown Zcllerbach Crucible Steel ; Curtis Wright ' Dow Chemical Du Pont . '. Eastman Kodak 'Firestone I Ford ! General Electric ', General Foods ! Georgia Pacific ' Greyhound Gulf on Homestake Idaho Power I.B.M. Int Paper Kennccott Copper Lockheed Aircraft Martin Merck , Montana Power k Montgomery Ward ."Nafl Biscuit ': New York Central ; Northern Pacific ;Pac Gas Elec i Penney J. C. 1 Penn RR Perma Cement Phillips Proctor Gamble Radio Corporation Richfield Oil Safeway Scars Shell Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Co. Southern Pacific i Sperry Rand : Standard California , Standard Indiana i Standard N. J. iStokley Van Camp JSiin Mines "Texas Co. Texas Gulf StJfiir Texas Pacific Land Trust Thiokol Trans America Trans World Air Tri Continental United Carbide Union Pacific United Air Craft United Air Lines U.S. Plywood ;U.S. Rubber 'U.S. Steel :est Bank Corp IVestingbouse lYoungstown 4374 59 19 41 20'. 120l 23M 44i 55 26 58-4 31 39 18 37' 80 88 48'A 46 49' 18 18 240 1144 44- 78 83 46 34 40 47s,: 33 414 287: 70 50 21 83.i 377! 3.1 . 45 15 40 34 WALL STREET NEW YORK (UPD-Steels. rails and chemicals led the stock mar ket a short distance higher today. Strength In the steels and rails was apparently triggered by sur prisingly high fourth quarter and annual earnings for Youngstown Sheet and Atlantic Coast Line both of which gained over a point Auto shares remained active but made little progress. The leading oils were small fractions higher and chemicals showed gains rang ing from fractions to as much as 1 in Du Pont. Wide movements were few In number in the rest of the list a! though a great majority of general issues were in the plus column DATELINE SALEM By Bob Bruce Capital News Bureau 14 15 48 73 6.1 41 46 76 36 59 54 30' 14 63 49 59 21 LIVESTOCK KLAMATH FALLS LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET Jan. 22, 1963 Receipts: Cattle 391. Calves, 110. Hogs 8. Sheep 25. Last week Cattle 411. Calves 139. Hogs 17. Sheep 5. Compared last Tuesday, 400 to 500 lb. steer calves .50-.75 lower; Slaughter Cattle: Cows: Utility. Cmcl., 14.70-17.90. Bulls: Utility & Cmcl., 18.30- 18.90. Calves: Choice 260-325 lbs. veal lers 27.00-28.25. Stockers & Feeders: Steers Good-Choice, 570 - 730 lbs., 24,10- 27.00; Med.-Uoofl, 700-840 lbs., 23.. 6O-25.00; Holsteins, 465-978 lbs. 20.00-22.90. Heifers: Good, 525-625 lbs., 22. 50-23.25; Com.-Mcd., 510-685 lbs, 18.60-21.70. Steer Calves: Good-Choice, 442- 468 lbs., 28.20-28.40; Com.-Med., 340-450 lbs.. 23.00-26.60. Heifer Calves: Good, 300-490 lbs., 24.50-26.60; Medium,- 23.10- 23.70. Cows: Good Pairs, 226.00; Preg nancy tested cows, 195. per head; Medium bred cows, 140-185 per head. Bulls: Feeders, 15.70-17.70. Hogs: U.S. 1 & 2 Barrows & Gilts, 220-233 lbs., 17.10-17.25; Sows, 520 lbs., 12.50. Sheep: Aged ewes, $10 per head. Reported by Ray O. Petersen, county extension agent. PORTLAND (UPI) (USDAI - Livestock: Cattle 300; mixed - good choice 'p4 mixed good-choice 24.75; few cut- tcr-ulihty cows 14 50-16. Calves 50; gnod-choice vealers 30-32. Hogs 200; 1 and 2 butchers 220 lb 18.50. Sheep 200; no early sales. 61 14' 19' 27 46 II 45 108 35 31 31 47 44 48 32 35 Stocks MUTUAL FUNDS Prices until 10 a.m. PST today Rid Asked Affiliated Fund 7.63 Atomic Fund 4.51 Blue Ridge 11.72 Bullock 12.54 Chemical Fund Sub 10.48 Grains CHICAGO (ITI Grain range: Wheat Mar May Sep iJec Oats Mar May Jul Sop live Mar May : Jul :.vP High Low Close 2.10 2(9 1.93 1.98 .73 .71 .69 .68 1 39 1 34 I 29 128 206 2 07 192 1.98 .71 .69 .67 .67 1 39 1.33 1.28 1.27 J 10 209- 1 93- 1.98 .73- .71-.71 .69 .68 1 39-1.39 1 34 1 29 l.M'.s.V Potatoes PORTLAND (IT1 Potato market-. Stradv; Ore. Russets U.S. No 1 3 23-3.75. few low as 3 00; 1 mark (me qual. 4 10, sized 2 02 spread 4.50-4.75; bakers 3.7.V4.25. few low at 3 23; 6-14 ol 3.75 4 00; bakers U S. No I 2 75-3 00. 50 lb sks U S No 2 2.60-2 65. Weather Five Day Weather Western Oregon: Seasonally liulit precipitation: hislu 35-48 low 2V35 northwest, 18 28 KHitli -interior and 40-45 coast. r.astcrn Oregon: hew snow flurries; highs 3040 by weekend. lows 15 25 by weekend. SALEM (Special) The second week of the 1963 legislative ses sion finds the lawmakers gath ered in groups in t h e cor ridors, the capitol coffee shop and, in the evening, at dinner in one of Salem's restaurants. Wherever they are, they are talking business, for this is the time in the session when it seems every lawmaker has a bill or two that he would like to intro duce and is lining up support. Since our legislators have no of fice other than the desks on the floor of the Senate and the House, privacy for such dicker ing is hard to find. Not only the lawmakers, but: lobbyists as well are doing busi ness all over the capitol building. Some 90 lobbyists, who are known as "the third house," are here to protect the interests of the or ganizations they represent. The question of whether these people should be required to register andl put on record who they are repre senting arose this past week and both House Speaker C 1 a r e n c Barton and Senate President Ben Musa defended the lobbyists and indicated that no such registra tion was necessary. Actually, the lawmakers them selves are best qualified to judge whether any action is necessary so far as lobbyists are con cerned. Many lawmakers look to the lobbyist for information and background on a particular piece of leeislation. If pressure of any sort is brought to bear, could very well react against the lobbyist and that s a chance lew, if any, of them would care to take. No lobbyist would ever offer a lawmaker money or any oth er worldly Eoods. for then he might put himself in a position of paying more and more until he was completely out ot business So it is doubtful that any legis lation to control the lobbyist will come out of this session Sen. Anthony Yturri, Republi can from Ontario, must have felt considerable satisfaction this week when Gov. Mark Hatfield invited him to attend the gover nor's weekly press conference and hear the governor explain in some detail why he had vetoed Senator Yturri's trucking bill m the 1961 session and why he was now backing that very same legisla tion. The governor explained that at the time of veto, he felt that the results of the Illinois road tests should be concluded and an alyzed before truck tax refine ments should be made. The re sults of these tests were, an nounced at the press conference and a proposal for the legis lature's consideration is forthcom ing. In effect, it will cut the tax es for larger trucks and raise taxes on medium size trucks. Sen ator Yturri had reason to smile. There seems to be no ques tion about legislative ' salaries being raised to $3,000 per year with $20 per day expenses for the first 120 days ot the session. The latter was an amendment by the Ways and .Means Committee which approved the bill this week is hoped that perhaps this Comw. Inv. Diver Growth Dreyfus E & II Stock Fidelity Capital Fidelity Trend Fin Inv Fund Founders Fund Fundamental Group Sec Com Gr Sec Avia LI Hamilton 11 D.A. Hamilton C-7 Incorp Inv. ICA Investor' Group Intercontinental Mutual . Stock Selective Variable Keystone B-l Keystone S-3 Kevstone S-4 V I T. M I T. Growlli Nafl Inv Nat l Sec Div Nat'l Sec Growth Nafl Sec Stink Putnam Fund Putnam Growth Selected Anter Shareholders IV Fluid United Aocum United Canada United Continental United Income I'nilcd Science Value Lines Wellington Whitehall 951 8.19 15.78 13.19 7.82 12 26 4.14 S.79 9 21 12 50 695 486 4.96 973 579 wm 1777 1027 6.14 24 98 13 57 40R 13 81 7.65 1444 380 7.9.1 774 14R5 R28 9 (VI 10 57 7 27 1.1 50 17R2 661 11 68 6 38 5.08 14 08 13 09 826 son 12 82 13.74 11.40 1 10.43! 898 17. IE 14 V 8.50 133.1 4 53 829 10HO 13 69 762 542 10.63 6 27 118J 19 22 10 99 685 is.or 14 81 4 4'i 15 01 8 Ot? 1561 4 15 8 67 8 4 16 14 9 no 9 77 II 55 792 14 75 19 17 7 22 12 77 6 97 5 55 15 35 14 15 1 . ' . FUNERAL Services will be held at 2:30 p.m. Thurs day, Jan. 24, in Ward's Klamath Funeral Home for Mrs. Lora Lucille I Decker I sen, who died Jan. 19 in Sunnyvale, Ualit. She was the wife of George L. Jensen and a former resi dent of Klamath Falls. Final riles and interment will be in . Eternal Hillt Memorial Gardens. Mrs. Osborn Funeral Held Funeral services were held from the chapel of Ward's Klam ath Funeral Home Wednesday. Ian. 23, for .Mrs. Jacqueline Wea ver Osborn, 77, who died Jan. 21, following a lone illness. She had lived in Klamath County since 1921. Mis. Osborn was a native of Vandera, Tex., born Feb. 5, 1886 She was married to Otlis H. Os born in October, 1924. She was employed at one time i the Golden Rule Slore. Fol lowing her marriage the couple ranched at Spracue Itivcr until iT? 3 . Lfc j; ' Ii i THIS IS THE DOG SUIT Pat Bradshaw and Tom Mann, members of the Klamath Civic Theatre, enact a scene from the "The Man in the Doq Suit" which will be pre sented by The Players for the first time at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in the Pine Grove Room at the Willard Hotel. The play will run Jan. 25, 26 and 31 and Feb, I and 2. Tickets may be purchased at the Klamath County Cham ber of Commerce, Bob's Town and Country Jewelers or at the door as long as they last. The price is $1.25. Beating, Looting Suspect Picked Up By Sheriff u will encourage the lawmakers to go home after 120 days. The way things are shaping up, however, they won't make it this session, for such things as con stitutional revision and taxes arc going to consume a lot of time and if controversies are going to emerge-in this session, these two issues could well do it. Rep. Kath- erine Musa of The Dalles has introduced a new tax measure with her husband. Senate Presi dent Ben Musa. as co-sponsor. Governor Hatfield's net receipts tax measure .has been introduced. Both call for a broadening of the Lax base to gain more revenue. Senator Musa has been highly critical ol the governors net rcceits tax saying that it Is really a , gross receipts tax for at least 85 per cent of the tax payers. He points out that while it is called a net receipts tax, it in effect taxes income on a gross figure before deductions. It will be interesting to see how these lax measures fare in the Taxation Committee of the House. Lawmakers arc split in several issues on constitutional revision. The biggest issue seems to be that portion ol the proposed new constitution which would make Ihe governor the only elected of ficial in state government, delet ing the board of control and Hie offices of slale treasurer and sec retary of state as elected old- ciais. .Numerous Hearings are scheduled on the entire issue o( IKW. then homesleaded at Tiile-r,"llner wp nec1 a mw cnsiitu lake. They lived at Bly and Mid- tlon or a Ial--lirk Job on Ihe old land, where the family resided at (lie time of her death. Mrs. Osborn transferred her membership in the Eastern Slar from Texas to Tulelake. She was a charter member of the Bly Grange which she helped organ ize in 1930. and translerred to Ihe Midland Grange. She was a mem ber and past president o( Ihe American legion Auxiliary. Post No. 8. Klamath Falls, and a member of the Baptist Church ol Hock Springs. Tex. Survivors inrlude the widower, Ollis H Osborn, Midland; brother, Barney Weaver. Kalinr. Tex.; one sisler. Cnssie Cross. Newell, Calif., and several nieces and nephews Walt Henry Funeral Set Martin Lloyd Strachan, 23, 1919 Wantland Avenue, one of four men and a woman implicated in the beating of a Bcatty man and the looting of the victim's home Monday afternoon, was appre hended by sheriff's deputies Wed nesday morning and released on $3,500 bond following his arraign ment in district court. Funeral services for Walter Herbert Henry, 60. who died Jan. 22 at his home following a heart attack, will be held at 2 p.m. Friday, Jan. 25, from the chapel of Ward's Klamath Funeral Home. Dr. Ralph Richardson, pastor of the First Methodist Church, will officiate. Final rites and interment will be in Klamath .Memorial Park. Mr, Henry was a native ol Weber County, Utah, born Oct. 28. 1901. He came to Klamath Falls in 1923 and was employed during the years he resided here as manager of the Pelican Bay Lumber Co. Club, with Ed Law rence of the United Cigar Store, tlie Mecca. Smoke House, the Pel ican Cafe Wing and the Blue Ox. He had belonged to the Klam ath Falls Lodge. No. 1247 BI'OE. and the Eagles for many years. He was a member of the LDS Church. He was married Feb. 7, 1931, to Elvira Eittram, who survives him. Olhcr survivors arc one son. Davis, sohnmprc at Klamalh Un ion High School: brothers. Jack. Klamath Falls. LaMar, San Jose. Merlin. Stockton; sisters. Dona Meyers, Klamalh Falls. Lucille Marine, Oi:den. and his father. Thaddeus Henry. Ogden. The victim is Francis Alvin Hutchinson, 40, who was listed in good condition at the Klamath Valley Hospital Wednesday. Two otiiers sought by Ihe sher iff in connection with the beat ing appeared with their attorneys at the county jail Tuesday after noon and surrendered to the sher iff. The pair. Thelma Aileep .Hu itt, 25, Chiloquin, and Perry Chocktoot, 30, Klamalh Agency, were the third and fourth persons taken into custody by the sher iffs office in connection with the incident. The other two, arrested by city police Monday night, are Wil bur Gordon Hixson, 41, Bea'.iy. and Evert Ray Decker, 19. 804 North Second Street. Decker was apprehended in a local tavern while Hixson was arrested at his mother's home in this city. All four have been arraigned in dis trict court anf) released on $3,500 bond each. While law enforcement officers were seeking those involved in Ihe beating Monday. Hutchinson was removed to the Klamath Valley Hospital, where he under went surgery the following morn ing. In a statement made to the sher iff, Hutchinson said he was ihe victim of an unprovoked attack fter the party of five entered his house, beat him frequently with their fists and a gun, and then looted his home. Strachan had been out of jail on a charge of pointing a gun at a person before the attack on Hutchinson. TU 4 8173 rkj GILL art PITP rt 410 MAIN STREET DAILY KLAMATH BASIN SHIPMENTS Rail Truck Combined Rail k Track Til OrrRnn California 21 21 3 IS 15 6 F.O.B. GROWFR TRICES Klamalh Basin IH-mand f lr Market barely steady In slightly weaker 100 lb sacks Russets I S No. l. 2" or 4 ot. mln. few ale J. 90 6 to 14 os. 3.25-3.50 lew higher Bakers 12 of. mln. . J.4J-3.50 oee. 3.75 Baled 10 Ih. sarks 2.70-2.SO few 2.90 om mln. le low an 2.50 US No. 2 1.85-2.(10 ore. 2.10 Net price to growers at cellar bulk rwt: US No. 1A 1.95-2.25 occ. higher mostly 2.00-!. 10 t S No. 2 .M-l.Ofl orr. 1.10 COMBINED RAIL TRUCK UNLOADS Oregon 18 Total All Other States 585 One Week Ago Oregon 41 Total All Olhcr Stales 659 Pike Johnson Funeral Set Funeral services for F. H i Pike' Johnson, 56. (ornicr resi dent of Klamath Falls, who died Jan 21 in Miluaukie, Ore, will he held al I pm Thursday. Jan 24. (rom (lie Pcake Funeral Chap cl Mr. Jolmsnn. a brollier of Mrs Willard Ward, this city, died fol low ing a heart attaik Man Stricken TULKLVKE -George But wisile. Tu!elake rancher and in surance man. is in a Phoenix. Arir. , hospital in criln-a condition. He was present tor a conven linn of the Slale Kami Insurance Company when he was stricken wiih a cerehial heninrrhace. Mrs tnlwi-l!e is wuh luni Ask about daily "Business CarJ" SPOT ADS TU 41111 BASIN BUILDING brings you This Week's Roedals ' II THIS WEEK ONLY AMOS DOLLARD, our yard foreman offers: Prc-tinishcd. Reg. $7.95 Seconds, 4'x8' NOW 1 Va" birch r Prcfinishcd 1 Reg. $4.50 Va" MAHOGANY Imperfects, 4'x8'. NOW 3" AMOS DOLLARD NAILS Va" BIRCH 4 x8'. Ideal for Cabinet Work! Special 13 50 In 50 Lb. Kegs. Some Sixes and Types. Valuci to $21.50 54 CABINET HARDWARE 10 to 50 OFF! RON WORDIN Ron Wordcn Our estimator and draftsman offers you SPECIALIZED PLAN SERVICE Specialist in Kitchen Design! p i i Jack Gann'i Special: Pine and Cedar SHIPLAP Si 8-inch and 10-inch Now, Per M 50 I i JACK GANN When you think of building in the Basin, Think ot Basin Building! USE YOUR BILD-A-COUNT HERE! BASIN BUILDING MATERIALS 4784 So. 6th Call Your Lumber Number 2 2363 Record Cold, Snow Numb Mid-Nation By United Press International One of the country's worst win ter onslaughts numbed the Mid west with record cold and up to a foot of snow today and headed south, leaving death and misery in its wake. The Weather Bureau forecast more of the same for at least five more days. Nearly 100 deaths were blamed on the series of Arctic-like out bursts of cold since the weekend. bow temperature records top pled in many areas. Chicago had its second coldest day since 1900 when the temperature reached 18 below zero. Klkader, Iowa, had an unofficial low of 32 below zero. Waukon. Iowa, had a Jan. 23 record of 30 below. It was 29 below at Inter national Falls. Minn., 28 below at Minneapolis, 37 below at Bozcman Mont., 20 below at Princeton, Mo. 26 below at Green Bay, Wis. Scores of schools closed in Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky. A four-inch snowfall in southern Ohio fanned into two-foot drifts, creating traffic jams a mile long The snow pushed into West Vir ginia late in the morning with the cold close behind. The temperature dropped 22 de grees in seven hours at Cincin nati. It fell 21 degrees in an hour at Jackson, Miss. Indiana counted 23 deaths due to the cold; New England 15, Illi nois 12, Texas 10, Oklahoma 8 Michigan 7, Colorado 5, Missouri, Iowa and Wisconsin 3 each, Min nesota and Montana 2 each, and New York 1. three mammoth ice jams on the Mississippi isolated four tow- boats and 20 barges. Another ice jam was located two-thirds of the way north bo tween Cairo, where the Mississip pi joins the Ohio River, and St Louis, Mo. The Cairo Terminal and Fleet ing Service said the crafts could be marooned a long time because of tlie low temperatures and low level of the Mississippi. About three-fourths of the surface of the river consisted of jagged pieces of ice frozen together. GENE FAVELL C. B. 'BUZ' LARKIN Gene FavcII and Charles !"Buzz" Larkin will co-chairman the Memorial Gifts Division of the Intercommunity Hospital Fund drive, it was announced by Jim Stilwell, chairman. Volunteers in this division will solicit contributions from individ uals or companies from $5,000 and up. ' AKnul fJ nmcniwk will hf Sft- licited in the Memorial Gifts Divi sion and activity in this division will commence on Thursday, Feb. 14. Favpll. owner of Gene's Men- store, has been a Klamath Falls Obituaries HOMER C Alvin Ertrty Homer, 53. rfiad h"f( Jr. 21. 196 Survivors: wife. Oneta iorv C Alvin Edqr, both of Ihli city; duahterj, Barbara Bryant, F r n d a 1 1, Wash., Margartt Gregory, CoquHle, Ore. Dorrls Martin, city; brothers, a. p. Ho mer and W. R. Homer, this city, E. L. Homer, Medford; idlers, Lillian Thqrpe and Alma Johnson, Oklahoma City, Elsie Northcutt, Lexington, Ok la., and Eloyle Tumui, Norman, okla.; mother, Mar tha Homer, .Norman; also nine grand children. Funeral services will be an nounced by Ward's Klamath Funeral nomt. OLSON Ethel May Olson, died Jan. J3, 163. Survivors: Husband. Andrew Olson, Klamath Falls; daughter, Marilyn Van derbesen, Seattle, Wash.; two sons. Wes ley Olson, Richmond. Calif., Dr. Wavnt Olson. Kennewick, Wash.; four broth ers, four sisters, jeven grandchildren. Fu neral services will be held Saturday, Jan. 26, at 1 p.m. In the Klamath Lutheran Church. Interment at Carlstad. Minn. Friends may contribute to Klamath Lutheran Church Memorial F u n d. O'Hair's Memorial Chapel In charge. Favell, Larkin Accept Hospital Drive Posts Sister City Films Slated Four color films of Rotorua and New Zealand will be shown free to the p u b l'i c tonight, Jan. 23, at Fremont bchool, starting promptly hI 8 o'clock. Everyone is invited to Rotorua naaius, "Maori Songs and Dances," "Past Portals to Pleasure," a film for sportsmen, and "N e w Zcalanders." Cliff McDonald, in the United States from New Zealand, and Mrs. Marshall Cornell., a recent visitor to Rotorua, w ill be present for remarks. The film is shown as part of tlie program for Sister City Week, Jan. 20-26. Other observances of the bond between the two cities will in clude a film during the Thurs day, Jan. 23, luncheon at the wi- nema Motor Hotel for members of the Soroptimlst Club and tel evision broadcasts, Jan. 19 and Saturday,. Jan. 2fi, over KOTI- TV, both at 6:30 p.m. Exhibits of the Maori culture are on display in the windows at the Klamath County Chamber ol Commerce and the First Federal Savings and Loan Association. resident for the past 12 years. He graduated from Lakcview High School, and in 1950 from Stan ford University with gradual work at the University of Oregon in 1951. Favell received the Jaycee Dis tinguished Service Award in 1960, was president of the Klamath Falls Kiwanis Club in 1960-61, lieutenant governor of Kiwanis District 15-A in 1962. , He is pasi president of I h e Klamath Falls Little League, and the Knife and Fork Club. Favell has served on the Park and Recreation Board since 1960, and has been Klamath County chairman of the Savings Bond program since 1961. Larkin, owner of the Larkin Insurance Agency, has resided here for 18 years. A graduate ot the Universityof Oregon, Larkin is a past president of the Klamath Falls Kiwanis Club, is a member of the Elks Lodge, the Shrine and Masonic Lodge 211. '. These two men will head a force of 15 men who will canvau for contributions in Ihe Memorial Gifts section. Since opening of the St. Law rence Seaway, Toledo. Ohio, is :loser to Stockholm. Sweden, than are the Atlantic ports. Hospital Happenings ; Thursday. Jan. 247 p.m. Pelf can Cafe. Campaign Cabinet, di vision chairmen and vice chair men organizational meeting. Monday, Jan. 288 p.m. First Presbyterian Church, Board of Trustees regular meeting. Tuesday, Jan. 29 7:30 p.m., First Presbyterian Church, Me morial Gilts Division. Saturday, Feb. 210 a.m.. Chamber uf Commerce, Speak ers' bureau meeting. Fresh Flowers "So it sweetly" on her anniversary. Phone NybacVs Flower Fair. We deliver. man utui&m meet the-beautiful brute.. Mt the 'Jeep' Oladlator. th f irt 4 -wheel drie truck to offer rawn&er car raooth neta en the hijthway. sure-footed 'Jerp' traction off the road. Tha Oladiator'a 140 hp. Tornado-OHC ragine ii Ammcn'i only automotive overhead camahaft enRine. It producet higher torqus at lovn angina ape eda. coata leaa to oper ate than comparabla conventional engines. Other Oladiator featurea include: 'Jeep' 4-wheel dxiva with aimpliflad. ainRle-ahift knob control and, for tha first tim in any 4-WD rehicla, optional automatic trans mission and independent front suspension. Sea tha Oladiator- J-20O with ISO-inch wheel bas and ' inch wheel base and 8-ft. box. OVWs up to 8800 Iba. ft. box. J. 300 with ISA- Step In. Size It up. Try It out at your Jeep Dealer' foUlww W1U.TS MOTORS. WORLD'S LASOMT BlANTTFACTCJlER Or 4-WHF.EL CRIVS TOHICLES. JOE FISHER 677 So. 7th St. Klamath Falls, Ors. KAISER-WILLYS PRESENTS THE LLOYD BRIDGES SHOW Friday, 10:30 p.m.