Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 08, 1963, Page 4, Image 4

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    PACE 4 Friday, February t, 1963
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falli, Ore.
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
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 Fe
Bendix Corp
Bethlehem Steel
Boeing Air
Brunswick
Caterpillar Corp
Chrysler Corp
Coca Cola
C.B.S.
Columbia Gas
Continental Can
Crown Zellerbach
Crucible Steel
.Curtis Wright
Dow Chemical
DuPont
Eastman Kodak
Firestone
Ceneral Electric
General Foods
General Motors
General Portland Cement
Greyhound
Gul Oil
-llomestake
"Idaho Power
.I.B.M.
Int Paper
Johns Manville
Kennecott Copper
Lockheed Aircraft
Martin
Merck
Montana Power
INat'l Biscuit
Standard Califrnia
.Standard Indiana
-Standard N. J.
Stokely Van Camp
;Snn Mines
Texas Co.
Texas Gulf Sulfur
.Texas Pac Land Trust
Thiokol
Trans America
Trans World Air
TrI-Conlinental
Northern Pacific
;Pac Gas Elec
Penney J.C.
Penn B.R
I'erma Cement
Phillips
Proctor Gamble
Radio Corporation
Richfield Oil
Ralcway
Scars
Shell Oil
Socony Mobil Oil
Soutlicrn Co.
Southern Pacific
Sperry Rand
Ucion Carbide
Union Pacific
United Aircraft
United Air Lines
U.S. Plvwood
U.S. Rubber
U.S. Steel
West Bank Corp
Westinghouse
YoUngslown
mi
55'.
19i
46"4
214
1231
46Vi
53
56J
mi
3914
18
36?i
si
27Vi
n'k
IBS
19H
59
243'.
78H
84
18
34
43 14
5114
420
454
73
534
21'.
88t
38
4774
85
52H
60
9'i
60i
14l4
I9'i
27(4
4S'in
ll'i
44H
4.1'i
34"4
46i
15
1.M4
4!)
73'i
f,2'
47
62'.
294
I.V4
11014
35k
49
33.
49' 4
44'i
44'4
33s4
M'k
91'i
LOCAL SECURITIES
Bid Asked
Rank of America 61'. M'
Col Pac UU1 2fiU 29'.
Con Freight 13' 14'4
Cyprus Mines 22 23'i
Equitable S & L 33 35t
1st Nat l Bank 62't W
Jantzen 26 271.
Morrison Knudsen 31'j 33
Mult Kennels 3'. 4'
NAY. Natural Gas 34S 36'.
Oregon Metallurgical l' 1H
I'PA-L 2fi4 7V,
l'GE 27 28",
U S. Nat l Bank 75 79'i
Unilcd Util .w, 38'.
West Coast Tel 20. 22
Weyerhaeuser 26i 28'.
Dank Employe
Given Sentence
PORTLAND (LTD - A former
employe at the Citizens Bank of
Oregon at Lake Oswego was sen
tenced to 30 days in prison for
embezzlement by Federal Judge
John F. Kilkenny Wednesday.
Frank H. Yoaul, 30, Newberg.
was charged with taking $5,501
during a three-month period. The
shortage was discovered last Dec.
10. Judge Kilkenny ordered two
Cuirs probation for Yoast follow
in; the prison sentence.
DAILY KLAMATH BASIN SHIPMENTS
Rail Truck Combined Rail k Truck Ttl
12 12 24
12 1 15
F.O.B. t GROWER PRICES
Klamath Basin
fair
Oregon
(altfomla
Dfmftnd
Market I S No. 2 steady others .lightly weaker
100 Ih sacks RucU
IS No. 1A 2" or 4 o. iritn. 2.7S-2.SO
tn 14 ol. . 3.00-J.sn we. higher
Bakers 12 oi. mln. . 3.25-3.541 ore. higher
Baled 10 Ih. .arks . 2.80-2.80 mostly 2.70-2.80
I S No. 2 1.90-2.00
Net price to growers at cellar bulk cwt:
I S No. 1A too few sales to f.lahll.h market
I S No. 2 loo few .ale to establish market
COMBINED RAIL It TRUCK UNLOADS
Oregon 22
Total All Other State. S3
Oae Week Ate
Oregon 15
Total All Other Slates SM
WALL STREET
NEW YORK IUPI) - Stocks
drifted lower today.
Autos weakened. Chrysler eased
on profit taking.
Steels were narrowly mixed and
Du Pont dropped roughly a point
in a soft chemical section. IBM
Beckman and International Tele
phone weakened in the electron
ics. Kern County lost about l'j
in the oils.
General Foods and Armour lost
around 1 apiece in the food group
and Panhandle and Houston Light.
ine softened in the utilities.
Glidden, National Lead, and Po
laroid lost 1 or more.
LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND (UPI) (USDA) -Weekly
livestock:
Cattle 1950; high good - choice
steers 26.50; standard-good Hol
steins 22.50; choice heifers 909 lb
25; canner-culter cows 11-14.50;
utility bulls 19-21.
Calves 325; good-choice vealers
30-33, some 34 Monday; standard
good 25-32; good - choice feeder
steers 24-27.
Hoes 1125; 1 and 2 butchers late
17.50 to mostly 18; 2 and 3 grade
17-17.50; 1-3 grade sows 300-550 lb
11-15.
Sheep 550; choice-prime 107 lb
wooled lambs 18.75; shorn 13-
18.50; ewes cull-good 5-8.
Potatoes
PORTLAND (UPD
Potato
market:
Steady; Ore. Russets U.S. No 2
3.40-3.65. some best 4.10; sized 2
oz spread 4.50-4.75; bakers 3.75-
4.25; 6-14 oz 3.65-3.90; DaKers U.S.
No 2 2.75-3.00, 50 lb sks No 2 2.60-
2.65.
Grains
CHICAGO (UPI-Grain range:
High Low Close
Mar
May
2. IIP 4 2.10'.
2. 10?i 2.09'i
1.93U 1.92'j
1.95 1.94'i
2.10Vi
2.0Mi-'i
1.92H-14
1.95
1.99'i
Jul
Sep
Dec
2.00
.71'i
.69'j
.7i
.67t
1.99
Oats
Mar
May
.70',
.69
.674
.67'.
.71'i
Jul
.67.
.67',-!
Sep
Rye
Mar
1.34'i
1.32i
1.32',i
l.:il'4
1.3.1
1.31
May
i.l ul
t.IS 1.28V. l.W.-'
1.29U 1.28 1.29'.
Sep
Wheat
Stocks
MUTUAL FUNDS
Prices until 10 a.m. PST today
Bid Asked
Affiliated Fund 7.74 8.3H
Atomic Fund 4.57 4.99
Blue Ridge 11.28 12.33
Bullock 12 56 13.77
Chemical Fund 10.55 11.47
Comw. lnv. 9.61 10 50
Diver Growth 8.20 8 99
Dreyfus 1591 17.229
E it H Stock 13.25 14.32
Fidelity Capital 7.89 8 58
Fidelity Trend 12.34 ' 13 41
Fin lnv Fund 4.16 4 56
Founders Fund 5 80 6 30
Fundamental 9 30 10 19
Group Sec Com XD 12 54 13.73
Gr Sec Avia El XD 6 90 7.57
Hamilton H.D.A. 4 90 ...
Hamilton C-7 5.01 5.47
Incorp lnv 6 89 7-53
1CA 986 10.78
Investor's Group
Intercontinental S.74 621
Mutual 1106 11.95
Stock 1786 19.31
Selective 10.35 1107
Variable 11.23 12 27
Keystone B-t 1V01 26.10
Keystone S-3 13.66 14 90
Keystone S-4 4 07 4 4."
M.I.T. ' 13 95 15.25
M I T. Growth 7 70 8 42
Nat l lnv 14.53 15.71
Nat l Sec Div 3 89 4 25
Nat l Sec Growth 7 89 8 52
Nat'l Sec Stock 7 76 8 48
Putnam Fund 15 itt 16 36
Putnam Growth ( 33 9 05
Selected Amer
Shareholders 10.84 116,1
TV Fund
United Accum 13 6 14 93
United Canada 17 55 19 or
United Continental 6 63 7 .25
United Income 11 86 12 96
United Science 8.95 6 94
Value Lines 5 14 5 62
Wellington 14 19 15.47
Whitehall 13 15 14.22
State Halts
By McKnight Witness
The trial of Sammy McKnight,
33, accused of robbery by force
and violence not being armed
with a dangerous weapon,
sumed in the circuit court of Judge
Donald A. W. Piper Thursday,
after it had been continued from
the previous day so deputy district
attorney Sam McKeen could inter'
cept the state's key witness who
had departed unexpectedly for
Southern California.
Elmer Ward of Lakeview, the
complaining witness who has
charged that McKnight and anoth
er Klamath Falls man threatened
him and removed $1,300 from one
of his shoos one night last No
vember, left this city unexpectedly
after the first day of the trial
Tuesday to take a job in Blythe.
As the district attorney's office
sought Ward to testify at the
trial the following day, it was
learned that he was en route to
California by bus. Judge Piper
continued the case until McKeen
and sheriff's deputy Del Summers
could depart by aiipiane for Red
ding, Calif., to inte.cept the bus
and return Ward to this city.
In testimony Thursday, the prin
cipal witness for the state was
city police detective Walter Con-
radv. who related the substance
of two conversations he had with
McKnight following the defend
ant's arraignment.
Conrady stated that McHnigni
I admitted that he and an accom
plice robbed Ward of the $1,300
and then divided the money equal
ly among them.
McKnight said later tnal ne sent
most of the money to his daugh
ter and used the remainder ol it
to pay some bills, Conrady testi
fied.
Ward testified earlier that he
had been drinking with McKnight
and the lalter's companion in a
local tavern during the night
preceding the robbery. After mid-
niaht that evening. Ward, in the
company of the two men and a
woman, went to a motel near Link
River. It was at the motel that
McKnight and his companion are
Rotary Notes
Anniversary
TULKLAKE The 25th anniver
sary ot the Tulclnke Rolary Club
will he observed with a dinner
Feb. 14 at the Tulclake-Butte Val
ley Fairgrounds when past presi
dents will be honored.
Invitations have been sent to nu
merous previous presidents now
elsewhere and to all Hotary Clubs
of Northern California and of
Klamath Falls.
Among those expected are Hugh
Brnnsnn. Hallway, Ore., former
pastor of the Tuleloko Commu
nity Presbyterian Church; Jake
Prior, former manager of the
Hank of America. T u I c I a k e
Branch, now president of the Se
curity National Bank. Reno; Floyd
A. Boyd, owner of the Floyd A.
Boyd Implement Co, Fresno;
Dick Moore. Carmel, onetime
druggist here, and fried McMur
phy. Past President Tom Wallers ot
the Klamath Falls Rotary Club
is also expected.
Chester J. Main, past president,
is in charge of the dinner. Ernest
Lindsay is president.
The club has sponsored the Tule-
lake 4-H Club and ruture Farm
er of America Junior Livestock
Show and Sale since 1949.
Obituaries
HANKS
W.Ufn H.nht. M. fli.d F.A S In EtC-
Iftn. C.lif. Survlvtd by wldflw. Elli. V..
Ele.lfln. rs.llr.n. Aldtn Krl. H.nkv
Calvin K H.nhi. Mrt C.rl Pt.v. L.t.
vltw, VvlA K H.nkt. Mfrnfor.
V' J A .lurfchurn. Vale I ttto
Wl. Kn.iH B'QQV L.htvltw, Hrtld
n09t. EtcatAn StrvK.I will b. held
S.'urclnv, Ffti .,1pm In Ihi Church
at Jn C"',l n l.ltr1.v S.intv
I .k.vir lntrm.n! Wrt'tkl. Cmrt.ry.
Omlty Oil.rm.n In Cri.'O.
SPARKS
Wilfurn l. toy SfArkv ll. flid n...
n .. HM Survival tty wil. Emlty.
city. Funr.l t.rvlrr will n. n.
n nerd hy W.rd . Kl.m.lh Fwn.r.l
Mom.
WOODS
P C vVlvrH rtM in L.V.vl.w h I
H. piacrrttd In devn by hii v.i,
JtMi. V.y. who di.d J.n 31. mj. Sur.
vurd by 1w nn, Prlm.r W And Af.
'hur C . holh ol L.h.vlrw. Fun.f.l ...
'nnf-mrnt ill hr .nnouncrd 11. r by
Oml.v O.t.rm.n Ch.p.l nl L.k.virw.
!ryJ. I rue
OTC Trutut rt mod by
P'ti . , . ciptrfi ho hoo
bttn makmq body apphoncti
tor more than 60 wart. Thy
or comtoftoblt, wl fittm),
tur holdma. and yy ft ti.
pft fittmq hart.
BRODERICK'S
PHARMACY
121 J So. tth TU J 4613
Trip South
alleged to have threatened Ward
and stolen his money.
The trial continued today
Judge Piper's court.
Reno Police
Hold Hoover
A man who fled Klamath Coun
ty last December to avoid pros
ecution for the larceny ol an
automobile has been apprehended
in Reno and will be taken into
custody by sheriff's deputies Sat
urday, the Klamath County Sher
iff's Office reported Friday.
Sought by the sheriff's office
on the larceny charge is Ray
mond Hoover, 30, Chiloquin, who
forfeited $3,000 bail last Dec. 10
when he failed to appear in cir
cuit court to stand trial for the
alleged iheft of an automobile
belonging to Jim Easley, 1919
Erie Street.
Hoover was arrested by Reno
police on a tip they received
from the Klamath County Sher
iff's Office.
Incidents relating to Hoover's
flight to escape justice have been
somewhat unusual. On the day
scheduled for the trial, Hoover's
attorney received a telephone call
from someone in San Francisco
who stated that the defendant was
in a Los Angeles hospital with
a head injury he received from a
bottle wielded by an assailant.
Some days later the Klamath
County Sheriff's Office received
another long distance telephone
call in which an informant said
that Hoover had been killed in
an automobile accident in Modes
to, Calif. Subsequent investigation
oy sherllt s deputies proved the
story to be a hoax
Macdoel Woman
Dies In Yreka
MACDOEL-Mis. Ethel Grace
Goode, 76, Macdoel, died early
Wednesday morning in the Sis
kiyou County General Hospital in
Yreka where she was admitted
on Feb. 4, alter suffering a
stroke at her home in Macdoel.
Born at Roseburg, Oregon on
March 13. 1886. she was married
to Wilmer Ellsworth Gowle
1905 and had lived at -Macdoel
for the past 52 years.
Survivors include her son. Har
old E. Goode. an employe of the
California State Highway Depart
ment at Grass Lake, a grandson.
Stephen Kane Goode of Macdoel
and two brothers. J. C. and
James Wright of San Diego. Her
husband preceded her in death
last April 23.
Funeral services will be hold
Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock
in the Butte Valley Community
Church at Macdoel. Joe Allen
will officiate and burial will be
in the Lakeview Cemetery near
Macdoel under the direction of
Girdner's Funeral Chapel of Yre
ka. BP A BJBk BV
i n u an in
1 1 TIT I
OLDS
f Ami i hr
It's The Short
with the
Deals at Millers!
YOUR PRESENT CAR WILL NEVER BE WORTH
MORE THAN IT IS RIGHT NOW!
Come in Look over the complete selection of new Oldsmobiles
in stock and get our L-O-N-G appraisal on your car You'll deal!
DICK B. MILLER CO.
7h & Klamath
a ' D! f WA ' m ' L3:0
INTERESTED AUDIENCE "Art Forms of the Theatre," sponsored by the Klamath
Art Association each Sunday afternoon during February, drew many interested per
sons on the opening day, Feb. 3, at the Klamath Art Museum on Riverside Drive.
Here, a member of the Klamath Union High School Little Theatre plays a bit from a
seen played for an audience at some previous time. Hours on Feb. 10, 17 and 24
will be from 2 o'clock to S p.m. for the exhibition by the KUHS Drama Department
and Mrs. Roberta Blomquist, head of the drama department. The public !s invited.
There is no charge. -
Selzmck Jewels Sfoen
By Hotel 'Cat Burglar1
NEW YORK (UPI Cat bur-
Iglars stole jewelry valued at near
ly $300,000 from the Hotel Pierre
apartment of Broadway producer
Irene Mayer Sclznick in the heart
of the nation's prime jewel theft
area, police reported today.
Thursday night's theft brought
to nearly $1 million the total value
of jewelry stolen in the posh
neighborhood around Central
Park's southeastern plaza in the
past three months.
The theft, of 30 pieces of dia
mond, ruby and emerald jewelry
from Mrs. Sclznick's bedroom.
while she was out for the eve
ning, followed a pattern that has
marked a long series of jewel
thefts in New York's luxury ho
tels since World War II. The rob-
Squirrels Out
At Crater Lake
There is summer weather at
Craler Lake and to prove it a
squirrel showed up from winter
quarters Friday to size up the
prospect for an early spring.
Maximum temperature Thurs
day was 50. minimum was 38
and a light rain fell Friday morn
ing until shortly before 11 a.m.
Usual roads to the lake rim
are open with no snow or ice
and park rangers suggest a trip
to the lake to view it under un
usual conditions. It is warm
enough to picnic, parking facilities
are open and tlie eolfee shop will
provide light lunches and hot
coflee.
To date during February there
has been 6'i incites of rain but no
snow. Snow depth is 32 inches
in comparison to 86 at this time
last vcar.
ir.V WBk
ymik
1
V - 4&
'V r
is now in high gear!
Month
OLDS CADILLAC
'" 1 " '""v M.r- rn -' 1 in .i.nii. 1 1 J
beries have totalled an estimated
$20 million and almost none has
been solved.
As usual, there was no trace of
forced entry into the Selznick 10th
floor apartment overlooking Cen
tral Park. Most of the jewelry
was insured.
Mrs. Selznick, 51. daughter of
film pioneer Louis B. Mayer and
former wife of producer David O.
Sclznick, told police she discov
ered the jewelry missing early;
today when she returned to the
Pierre after an evening at the
theater.
Mrs. Sclznick described the jew
elry as a $150,000 diamond ring.
$60,000 diamond bracelet, $20,000
diamond and ruby clip, $10,000
opal and emerald eornings, and
other smaller pieces. Mrs. Selz
nick often wore Ihc jewels to
glittering first nights on Broad
way, where she had produced such
hits as "Streetcar Named De
sire," "Bell Book and Candle"
and "The Chalk Garden."
In recent months notable jewel
thefts have included a $27,500 raid
on film star Dolores Del Ilio's
suite at the Hotel St. Regis and
a $50,000 burglary at the Central
Park south apartment of actress
Joan Fontaine.
Kim Novak was robbed of $100,.
000 worth of jewels. Jerry Lewis
of $200,000 and playgirl Linda
Christian of $125,000 in hotel
heists. Actor James Mason, ten
nis star Margaret Osborne du
Pont, film star Rosalind Russell
and a number of prominent so
cialites have been burglarized.
Jewel thieves also have preyed
on jewelry stores and gem display
cases in hotel lobbies in the area.
Tiffany's lost a $163.0(10 window
display lo thieves in 1958 and
Hotel Plaza and Waldorf Astoria
Vitrines have been tided of $91,
000 worth of jewels
1 T-
af..- r - . .saJS'
3 carloads of new Olds in stock
and more on the way forces
this drastic "Savings Spree"
Sell-Out! Plus Our used car
inventory is way down so we
need your car and we'll deal
L-O-N-G to get it!
Ph. 4-4154
Knife, Fork
Deadline Set
Reservations for the Klamath
Knife and Fork Club at the Wine
ma Motor Hotel should be in the
hands of the secretary not later
than noon, Monday, reb. 11. Mem
bers will be billed for $1 for un
used reservations if not cancelled
by phoning TU 4-8331.
Bob Mcst will pres-de. Chaplain
Jeticrson Davis, hr.gsley Field,
will give the invocation.
A daring, small craft skinner
son of a leading English indus
trialist. Patrick Eilam, who
crossed the rough Atlantic in
a 19-foot "sailboat" will be the
speaker.
Now established in the U.S.. El-
lam has a unique business, the
personal delivery of yachts from
port to port, ranging from Cana
da lo South America. He has been
at sea since he was two and
at 16 was crossing and sailinn
the English Channel alone.
He served in the Royal Artil
lery in World War II and volun
teered for Special Operations, res
cuing American and British pilots
who were shot down over ene
my territory.
He will bring his audience high
auveniure on land and sea with a
wealth of anecdotes to spice his
rare thrill storv.
The March date for-the anDear-
ance of Madame Suzanne Silver-
cruys, has been changed from
March 14 to March 11. I
r
otor
M
SERVING THE PEOPLE OF KLAMATH FALLS
OVER 33 YEARS!
r
CHUCK BAILEY
General Monogor
Dependable, Frfendfy Service
We Take A Personal Interest In Your
Money Problems. QJJg on
4ufo Trailer House Ar Persona Furniture
Boats
Y TO Matcl PVMtNTS
PYM!NTS
I VOUR CAO.
wmoui ir.yiwf youh CAM
-if-.
Rfl i 1 Jr
o ... .. i ,
Judge Arraigns Four
Following Indictments
Martin Lloyd Strachan, 23-year-old
Lane County ex-convict on pa
role from the Oregon State Peni
tentiary, was one of four men ar
raigned by Judge David R. Van-
denberg in circuit court Thursday
afternoon after they had been
indicted by the grand jury the
previous day.
Judge Vandenberg set Thursday,
Feb. 14, as the time he would
receive entries of plea from those
arraigned, including Henry Luther
Cole, 18, assault and battery by
means of force likely to do great
bodily harm, released on $2,500
bond; Donald Bailey. 23, larceny,
bail set at $3,500; Russell Loren
Obremski, taking and using an
automobile without authority, bail
set at $3,000; Strachan, charged
with larceny on one indictment
and assault and battery by means
of force likely to do great bodily
harm on another, held without
bail.
Strachan was among the same
five people named on two secret
indictments returned by the grand
jury. The group of four men and
one woman were cited lor the
larceny of two saddles, clothing
and other property belonging to
Louis Hutchinson on one of the
charges and for the beating of
Francis Hutchinson in his cabin
at Beatty on the other count. Both
incidents were alleged to have
taken place Jan. 21.
Strachan, who faces the pros
pect of being returned lo the peni
lentiary for violaing the terms of
his probation, has been in the
county jail since Jan. 27 when
he was arrested for carrying a
concealed weapon. While the felon
was being arraigned Tnursday
sheriff's deputies were continuing
in their quest for the other four
named on the two secret indict
ments.
Also named on a secret indict
ment was A.2.C. Donald Robert
Bailey of Kingsley Field who was
arraigned on a complaint charging
him with the larceny or a ring
and about $110 in currency from
Patricia Cortcz, 2418 Reclamation
Avenue.
The airman admitted to police
that he had removed tlie ring
from the finger ot Miss Cortez
while she was dozing in his car.
Friday night, Feb. 1.
At the time of tlie incident, the
Delay Predicted
For Revision
SALEM (UPI 1 - Senate Presi
dent Ben Musa said today he
doubted if the proposed new Ore
gon Constitution wou.d he able lo
get through the House this session.
He added, "II will have rough
going in the Senate."
Musa commented the State Bar
was pushing for a two year delay
in adopting the constitution.!
Investment Co.
Klamath's
LOCALLY
OWNED
Drive-In
FINANCE &
LOAN CO.
INVESTMENT
COMPANY
TU 4 -
531 South 6th
airman was taking the girl home
from a dance. Upon his arrest.
Bailey denied taking the money,
but later went to police with an
envelope marked Pat Cortez and
which contained three $20 bills.
The airman said he found the en
velope under the right visor in
his car.
Henry Cole, accused of assault
ing. Talmadge Eugene Strickland
as the latter was going home from
work Jan. 15. was released on
bond after Judge Vandenberg re
duced bail from $3,000 to $2,500
upon the request of (he defend
ant's attorney.
Judge Vandenberg also reduced
bond in the case ol Russell Loren
Obremski, charged with taking
and using an automobile without
authority, but as of early Friday
morning the ' defendant was stiil
in the county jail.
The jurist reduced bail from
$3,000 to $1,500 at the request of
tlie defendant s attorney when the
latter disclosed that the car
Obremski had taken was valued
at $73.
Fall Injures
Lewis Pohll
A Chiloquin man was in critical
condition in the Klamath Valley
Hospital early Friday as the re
sult of injuries he received when
he fell from his pickup truck after
its brakes failed on the Sprague
River Highway, about 4 p.m..
Thursday.
In a coma at the local hospital
is Ix'wis R. Pohll, 33. who was
operating the tmck occupied by
his wife, Marie, at the time of the
accident. Mrs. , Pohll received
slight abrasions but was not tak
en to the hospital.
The accident occurred after the
brakes on Pohll's truck failed as
it was proceeding downhill toward
tlie Chiloquin dump, according to
information received by the Her
ald and News.
As the car sped downhill it
lurched suddenly, opening the
door on the driver's side of the
truck and spilling Pohll onto the
highway. Mrs. Pohll remained in
the vehicle which went off the
nad and slopped moments later
after rolling through an area of
mud.
Pohll is a member of the Chilo
quin Volunteer rire ucpartmeni
and an ambulance driver.
Don't lep in tht "doi
hou.s" again this year!
Send frcih tlowtr. tor your
anniver.ary. Call Nyback'l
Flower Fair to deliver.
TOM MOORE
Office Manager
7783