Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 25, 1963, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE 4 Monday, February 25, 19M
HZRALD AND MEWS, Klamath falls. Ore.
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
NEW YORK STOCKS
By United Press International
Allied Chemical
44
Alum Co Am
American Air Lines
American Can
American Motors
AT & T
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper
Armco
American Standard
Santa re
Eendix Corp
Bethlehem Steel
Boeing Air
Brunswick
Caterpillar Corp
Chrysler Corp
Coca Cola
CBS.
Columbia Cas
Continental Can
Crown Zellerbach
Crucible Steel
Curtis Wright
Dow Chemical
Uu Pont
Eastman Kodak
Firestone
Ford
General Electric
Genera) foods
General Motors
General Portland Cement
Georgia Pacific
Greyhound
Gulf Oil
Hnmestake
Idaho Poer
IBM.
Inf Paper
.lohns Manville
Kennecott Cbppcr
Lockheed Ail era It
Martin xd
Merck
Montana Power
Montgomery Ward
Nat' I Biscuit
New York Central
Northern Pacific
PEC Gas Elec
Penney J.C.
Penn RIl
Perma Cement
Phillips
Proctor Gamble
Itadio Corporation
fijchfield Oil
Safeway
Sears
-Sliell Oil
Socony Mobil Oil
Southern Co
Soulliern Pacific
Sperry Rand
Standard California
.standard Indiana
Standard N J.
Stokely Van Camp
Sun Mines
Texas Co
Texas Gulf Sulfur
Texas Pac Land Trust
Tjiiokol
Trans America
'Drans World Air
Tri-Continental
Union Carbide
L'nion Pacilir
United Aircraft
United Air Lmos
U.S Plywood
U.S. Bubher
U.S. Steel
West Bank Corp
Wettinsliouse
Youngstnw n
Sfi
21
122'i
2SH
44'
53:
13'.
2D'
56
.18
33".
B9'
93'
50'
27j
44h
I!)5.
22-1,
S8
241 'i
114'i
34'i
42
7.V4
18'
46'i
37"i
40' i
48'.
M'i
404
29' 4
4S'.
70'.i
53
20-1.
804
W .
48
171.
42.
Mi
4.1
IS'.
15
47i
71'j
fii'l
4.1
mt
78'j
tt'i
fit '4
5.VH
29 I
13'.
W.
!
at'.
BO'i
14H
2.1'i
47.
11'.
4.1 i
105'j
M
48'',
45
47'.
M'a
32'.
9fl5.
LOCAL SLCiniTIES
Prlies Until Noon Today
- Rid Aiked
Bank of Anienia w. 63 n 4
Ollf Pac Ltd 25 27'4
lion Freight I2' L1"
Copras Mines 22 2:)'
BnuiUble S 4 L X .16
lit Nat l Bank 64 67'i
.lant:en Iii'4 28' 4
Morrison Knud.n 28', 30'3
Mult Kennels 3'. 41.
N.W. Nat I Gas 34'i 36'i
Orefon Metallurgical I't I5"
PP & L 2' 28'.
PGE 27 28.
U S. Nat I "5 78'j
United Utilities 22 28J4
West Coast Tel 22J. 24'.
Weyerhaeuser 2V 2'.
Bill Opposed
By Welfare
SALEM 1 Urn The State
Public Wellaie Commission voted
Friday to o)po-e a legislate e bill
that would gne county wellaie
commissions hums, firing and
salary-fixing powers lor count)
welfare cmpknes.
The counties now contribute to
a;ri, but not to administrate
iSsts. Commissioner Clay Myers
said the bill. SBM, would put the
state commission in the position
n handing out administrative
money without any say in whcie
it goes.
The commission also opposed
measure. JIB 12'A v. huh would
prohibit the commission from
uung stale tax records for in
loi matron on wellaie cases
'Hie commission split on a Sen
ate bill lo require Senate confir
mation of appointments to a I I
hoards and commissions. Mjeis.
-J Portland, and Larry Aylsworth
of Gresham said Uiey had no oh
itttion to tlie hill. It was 0(xised
by commissioners Knnis Kcier of
North Rend. Kathleen Hash ol
Medford, and Ray Catcs ol Salem
11
WALL STREET
NEW YORK tUPIl Stocks
sold off steadily on moderate vol
ume today, winding up with one
of their largest losses in the av
erages so far this year.
Despite the extent of the set-
back, the loss reflected a lack of
buying interest more than haavy
selling pressure.
The Dow Jones industrial aver
age finished at its lowest level
of the day with a number of its
key components off a point or
more, among them General
Poods, General Electric, Westing
house. John.vManville. Standard
Oil of California, L'nion Carbide
and Du Pont.
LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND il'Pli - "L'SDAl-
Liveslock:
Hogs 700; I and 2 barrows and
gilts 190-230 lb 16.50-17: 2 and .1
grade 16-16.50; heavier 15.50-16
sows few 1-2 Biade .125-500 lb
11.50-15.
Sheep 600; choice- prime wonted:
lambs 1)0-105 lb 19-W.50: choice-
prime shorn lambs No. .1 to fall
shorn pelts IB-19; ewes few utility
good 6-6.50.
Cattle 1100; good-choice 1050 -
1100 lb steers 24-24 25; good 2.1-
23.50; standard-good heifers 20 -
22.50 canncr-cultor cows 11-14
cutter-utility bulls 18-20.50.
Calves 150; good-choice under
500 lb .10-3.I; utility-standard 22-
28:
Grains
CHICAGO (UPIl - Gain
anpe:
HIGH LOW . CLOSE
WHEAT
Mar 2 07 206'. 2.06'. -4.07
May 2.075 2.06' -i 2.06-
Jul 1IW' 1.92'j 1.02'.
Sep 195'4 1.94Ji 1.95
Dec l.M lOH'i
OATS
Mar .73s4 .72'. .73".
May .1H .70'4 .71U-
Jul .6tl' .69 .69'.
Sep .68'a .68'. .68-'a
Dec .70-'i .70', .70'4
RVE
Mar 1.16 1.35 1.35'j
May 1.34 l.M 1.31
Jul 1.29 1.28 1 28
Sep 1.29''4 1.28'i 1.28'i
Dec 1.304 1.30 130
Potatoes
PORTLAND 'UPIl -Potato
market :
Steady; Ore. Russets U.S. N021
3 25-3.50, some best 4 00, si.ed 2
01 spread 4 50-4.75: bakers 375-
4 25; 6-14 Ol 3.60-185; bakers U.S
No 2 2 65-2.90 50 lb sks No 2 2.40-
2.65.
Weather Table
Temperatures during the 24
hours ending at 4 a.m. Pst today.
HIGH LOW
Astoria
54
57
54
5t
56
52
66
27
82
40
65
Baker
Medloid
New port
North Rend
Portland
Redmond
Chicago
Los Angeles
New York
San Francisco
Blind Dog
Is Sought
Lulls Way Moo .lark, a regis
tered sable Pekingese is blind and
lost. Way Moo means general in
Chinese. He belongs to Mr. and
Mrs. Alexander 'Mildred' l.ufl of
422 North Third Street, but In
obeys only Mrs. Lull's commands
On Feb. 18 Jack. 9 years old.
uddenly went blind and was
taken to a veterinary at 2.2I
Hope Street. After treatment two
days later, the Inghtened pet es
caied. Mrs Uilt had not told
bun In "stay," as she usually
did when leaving him. He wa
still unable In see.
The family has advertised with
various news media without suc
cess and has searched the vicini
tv. A generous rewai"d is ollered
lor information.
He is without identification or
license He had been tied on'-
ide to a fence and pulled hl
head through his collar.
Telephone calls may he made
10 TU 4-6HHI, TU 4-5734 or Tl;
4-riM0.
March Of Dimes
Drive Reported
Tl I.ELAKE - Money for the
Mflich ot Dimes campaign is
coming in nunc slowly th.in l.il
veil , accinrting to I'h.uini.in Fie.i
Kahncr.
The Mottieis Man h rontnliu
turns totaled S79 80 compared to
Jllfi 41 in II2 Roy Seoul col
lected $.V 60 in comparison to
M last year.
A Kiwanis-Holary i;.4iiie will re
played In the Tul'lake Joint Un
ion High School Gm, Ihe night
of Feb 28 as a henelil lor March
of Dimes.
Two p40lm11n.it games will be
plajed, between Newell and tine
lake eighth giaders and two Pre
wee uads Game time will he
6 to p m.
ww-hr "r7 -v.h t"rm& I .- .y'j ' 1
LOOT FOUND NEAR KENO Thomai Sandars, left, obierves hand and power fools,
valued at more than $350, that he and Lester Martin, both of Keno, found hidden
in the brush while they were hunting antique bottles near the Keno dump Saturday.
The tools were reported stolen last December by Todd Builders and Lord Brothers
construction firms, which were on a conitruction project at the OTI campus when
the theft took place. Sander, told sheriff's deputy Lou Bogart, right, that they were
attracted to a sheet of plastic partly concealed under a bush. They removed the
covering and found the tools under it. The stolen items were returned to their owners
early Monday.
Haines Murder Trial
Hears Expert Testify
Testimony of a ballislics expert
from the Oregon Stale Crime Lab
oratory established that several
spent bullets found at the scene of
the slaying of the common law
wile of Jerry Richard Haines
were tired Irom the .22 call
bor pistol used in the killing, it
developed Monday as the first
degree murder trial resumed in
circuit court after being recessed
ince early Thursday.
Haines is charged with the gun
slaying of his wile. Christine, 30.
following a disagreement at her
home, .186.1 Clinton Street, Dec. 17.
Robert W. Pinnick. assigned to
the stale crime lab, told the jury
that he perlormod various tests
on Ihe alleged murder weapon
which established that it was the
gun used to discharge various bul
lets found at the scene of the
shooting.
Pinnick said he fired several
cartridges from the pistol at the
crime lab and then compared
the markings on the projectile:
with those found at the scene ol
the slaying.
They matched, lie testified.
Tile spent cartridges found at
Burglars
Hit Market
Rui'glais broke into Larry's
Market on Green Springs Drive
in the Slcwarl-Lcnnx addition and
escaped with cigarettes, beer.
meal, and men's and women's
hosiery, in one of three incidents
reported to Oregon Slate Police
Sunday. The burglary was report
ed by a Herald and News courier
who was passing the grocery
alxmt 4 25 a m. when he noted
th-tt a window in the front ot
ihe stoie had been broken.
In another larceny, Henry L.
Schortgen, 4176 South Sixth Street,
told polu-c that Ins automobile
had been stolen horn in front
of his home sometime after 1:15
a m. Sunday.
Later Sunday night, a motorist
and his two passengcis esraiied
injury when Ihe vehicle he was
duving went out of control and
into a ditch on the Joe Wright
Road, between Highwav 97 and
the railroad crossing. The opera'
lor was Robert Hay Kacret. Itle
I. Ro.x 10,1, Tulelake. who m
accompanied by H Caijientei
also of Tulelake, and Fern Reed
of Honann
Obituaries
VOOIL
John Vofl'l Tfl dri here Ch '
M 11 turvwed tv r' tie. A-Mitimn rti
Ou'Ch Hrni'v. WrftM Klmth t-wipr
l Hnrnt lutiv at lorn Vill Inter
mint, Mt, Clvf V (Hvtry,
FOWILL
AhMQ'it Powtll, 0 0'M In F'lirrs'
f ml . HO JJ. I'M Survives Son
toy d"rt f V'm fewN KM. O l .
(MmjKtlH M' Aiini Hes'lt. M'limarl
Mf ltM .SfifCV. thit tttv. Vn
lvi III Agm. Tlll. O'l ! M
tVnrttr"ICt'l and )4 grt Qf ir1i hmjfin
f ici' Ol Wvi f Wtviv1lv. f Pti 1 '
Airdi Klamath u'ai Hdma at if W;
am. CWKwiing wvum. ka Camatarv
Funerals
MI NOOIA
ArithfWiy VHtflflfa. 0f 0
tr- i l i' Alio,) O' t" t
,i, f r ; t O u-
al tf v 1
. 4
S ed Hf
i-tirMilutp 3ft ivr 10 nt of I In
(' S vixtul.ttK'n
Don't Neglect Slipping
FALSE TEETH
TV fUf Xtf.t rtt.-r np or wnhhta
hfn u iKik raj Unh or suftt''
Pon l tf anncixfil and f tiht f a1
hv uti-h humHiana KTH VH an
IK.dlHf I lioil-di iij 1 (Hi drr tOM'Tltl
k.f on 011r I'iatts krei-ji (ahf trftft
nior tii ri 1 v rtx di ra ci'iifiiirnt f !
In of ncuriiv and aiitlfl comivn
No Biifiimx .-)-""v piNt i tt or 'fil
ing 'AM KV1 H iixtav l drug
ctunr ttrmhttt
attialaW' If I "' 1 '" 1 '
the Clinton Street house became
the subjects of objections by the
defense attorneys when deputy
district attorney Bob Thomas at
tempted to enter them into evi.
dencc.
The defense objected that the
projectiles were being oflered as
exhibits in the envelopes in which
they were mailed lo the crime
lah, but were finally admitted
into evidence after they were
placed in plain envelopes.
IVo oilier witnesses testified
briefly in ;he trial which entered
its second week Monday. They
were Slate Police Officer Dale
Roebuck and Beverly David, 24.
Timber Tax
Bill Offered
(Continued Irom Pagf 1)
lo run for office without forfeiting
jobs or job eligibility.
A bill by Rep. Grace Peck. D
Portland, and others would allow.
entertainment and dancing in es
tablishments serving only beer
and wine, as is now permitted in
establishments serving hard liq
nor.
Other House lulls call lor a
homestead properly tax deferra
lor the elderly, a new licensing
program for Ihe sale of explosives
Hid a program of vocational train
ing for certain wellaie recipients
Rep. Dun McKinnis' bill for 1
3-cent sales tax was read for Ihe
first time. It calls lor an election
in May, 1964. Also read lor the
first time were Kymann's meas
ures to remove auditing function
Irom the secretary of state and
create an elective state auditor
position.
Crash Hurts
Local Girl
An lfl-eHi-oIH KUnwtli Kails
Rirl received minor injuries in
two-rnr -ih Saturday and 42
year-old nvsidont as arrotod b
city jwlice for drunken drivuii:
ami drixmc durmc a stopended
I jo r nid early Sunday morning.
Pete M. Cortez. Autumn
Street, was spotted weninc Irom
siiic to ide while driving ot
tire wH side ha5 near Ore
ijon Avenue at 1 .VI a m
When a city patrolman stnpd
I'orle ' vehicle he (mind the driv
er without a license.
Coiter was Madeline and
couldn't pas a tct thai the pa
Irolman gae him at the scene
of the arre-t.
Slnrley Ann Atchley. ?2.W Had
lille St i eel, complairuvl of pain
dter she was unoKed in an
accident with Kiancis IV Miller.
41. SCO Memorial Sheet, at 12 W
pin. ne.tr the intersection ot Mam
and Ninth stieets.
The vehicles, involved in a sule-
wipe tyjie ai'cident. tecetvel mod'
erale damage No cilalioiw were
Science Shrinks Piles
New Way Without Surgery
Stops Itch Relieves Pain
n t.fc, V 1. ii.,.ii - r Ihn
ftrt tim .fifnr lift, frtun.l I ftfw
hhnir ufc.tn.'f with lV tr
Lhmr At.il il V In .hrmii h.n.r
rhntH.. tlrp itrh'nc. ni rliv
In f. f I rr in. t. hil cntlr
rfhf.irir p.n. tiuil rMmn.'n
I hripAe l tivk p i,f .
Jlftitairaimspl ail-rf iilu wr i
Community
Concert Set
For Tonight
The Community Concert audi
once Monday night will hear two
of the most popular music artists
on the concert circuit, Arthur
Whitlemore and Jack Lowe. Cur-
lain lime is 8 p.m. at Mills School
Auditorium.
The duo-pianists are at the pin
nacle of their popularity and pics
lige and have run up a record of
achievement in everv medium
open to Ihe duo pianists' art.
They have appeared with many
of the great symphony orches
tras as soloists including the New
York Philharmonic.
As recitalists they arc veterans
of many highly successful New-
York appearances, and each year
thev cross the American conti
nent filling solidly-honked itiner
aries of engagements.
Admission to the concert is by
membership tickets onlv. None
are sold at the door.
The new member campaign for
ihe 1903-19H4 season will he kicked
olf Monday al 5:45 p.m. with
dinner for board members and
camoaiun workers at the Winema
(Hotel. The campaign for renewal
members was completed Feb. 21.
Campaign headquarters are at
Ace Mimeo Service, 312 South
Seventh Street.
Mrs. Howard Rowe is mem
bership chairman.
The Paris Chamber Orchestra
of 15 young musicians has been
hooked lor next season's series.
Three Killed
In Traffic
Ity I'niled Press International
Three ixrsons lost their lives
in Oregon traffic accidents dur
ing the weekend.
Itohort A Urns, 28, Aumsville.
was killed in a one-car accident
near Albany Sunday. His car
plunged off State Highway 22fi in
to Thomas Creek.
Margaret McCilvnn. 73. New
berg, was struck and killed by
a car on I'.S. Highway WAV north
of Newborg Saturday night.
Francis Burnside. 51. Veneta
was struck and killed hy a car
on I'.S. Highway I2t near Kugene
Friday night. State
John H. Carter
Services Held
I.KK IK .lohn Henry Car
tei. HI, died Feb 21 at Salem
and tunc a I services were held
Mondav. Feb 2$, at the New Tine
freek Ha;tisl Church. Interment
was in the Now Pme Creek Cem
etery, with the Hev ;nrdn Har
ris ofliciati ig
Carter u.x horn April 2. 1W1
and had livnl at Vow Pme Creek
tiir almut Idji' and a half vears
Surviving are his w:te, Verla
New Pme Cieek: six sons. Char
ley of Wa-h.ngton. Wilbur. Cor
vallis. Frnet. Hood River, llan,
Hernard. and Jne nf New Pme
Creek: a d.uiiJiiYr. Aivce Carter,
New Pine Creek, and two sister
Maiv Toim'!-:, ti it-s, and
Daisy Nukt'i. Kend
in lhcr,.ucti Ihm lufffrfr mud
tcnih i,gr M'n,ntp I'tf "Ptlt
Thp .rrrt , b'. tig 'ib
ttnr ,p n i.ti ri,,,-frv f
A nrM-fii.M,. ir.r.nn in.utmr.
1! u!. AC l ft,Jft.if
in IT""m y r n n'mtml fnr.
un-lff '.h f.rflf r-'i-rt-afi
At all drug rruntfr,
Teddy Kennedy Grabs News Camera;
Vermont Paper To File
STOWE, Vt. (UPH-A skcs
man lor the Vermont Publishing
Co. 8a id today a formal com
plaint uill he filed against Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass , for
allegedly seizing the camera of
a news photographer who snapped
his picture al a ski lodge.
Richard E. Gallagher, general
manager of the corporation, said
the complaint is being prepared
by a lawyer. He would not dis
close the nature of the complaint
Philip N. Lawson. 21, a stalf
photographer for the Vermont
Sunday News in Burlington, said
Kennedy grabbed his camera Sat
Alert Patrolman Squelches
Breakin At Bottling
A knifing, two brcakins and a
case of vandalism reported over
the weekend are being investigat
ed hy Ihe Klamath Falls Police
Department.
Sharon Delorme, I7.'i4 Lark
Street, was treated Ion knife
wound on her arm at Klamath
Valley Hospital at 3:30 a.m. Fri
day.
She told police that she was ap
proaching her car on South Sixth
Street, when someone srahhed her
from behind and stabbed her in
Ihe arm and then ran off.
Miss Delorme was unable to
identify her assailant or give any
reason for the attack.
A burglary attempt at the
Coca Cola Bottling Company, 105
Spring Street, was sqeulchcd
around midnight Saturday
when a city patrolman on his
regular beat heard an alarm at
the planl and rushed to the scene
in lime to spook the would-be
burglars before they had a chance
to open an office safe.
The police recovered a crow.
bar that the thieves apparently
dropped in their haste. T h e
thieves gained access into the
building by breaking and climb
ing through a rear window.
The theft of two chain saws
and various other tools from the
city street department garage
was reported lo city police Fri
dav.
Hershel B:.irl Holloman is be
ing held in the county jail in con
nection with the burglary. He was
found hours later near Ihe scene
(Continued from Page 1)
(lent of the United States, w ho has
just been elected to the Senate of
the United Slates, is of course
entitled to his privacy.
But-
In the white light that doth beat
iboul the While House if one
may paraphrase Alfred Ixird Ten
nvsons lines about the "white
light that doth beat about a
throne" there is no such thing as
privacy. When an American en
ters that circle, he must learn to
leave his privacy behind.
voting Ted will learn that in
lime.
I In The ,
I IV IT
nays Ms
Chi I o qui n Sets Date
For Chiliburger Event
CHILOQUN - Monday. March
II, was the dale set for the annu
al chiliburger dinner, the only
money making event Ihe Chilo-
(inn PTA sponsors during t h e
sdmol year. Mrs, Denel Wilson
and Mrs. Krank Ohlund were
named to head the planning com
mittee.
President Roger Wright con
ducted the Kehruarv meeting dur
ing which the members voted as
lavoring four of the live automo
bile saietv measures which are
coming up belore the Oregon leg
islature and voting "no" on the
proposed wording of the mavi
mum speed law.
Mrs. Bill Wanipler reported that
to that date the governors of 11
of the .V) states had rescinded to
the ('hiliKiuin apieal of native
hitibs or trees to assist with
the landscaping of the now Clulo-
iinn High School. The letter Irom
Mark Hatlield was read. Kach
stale hut Tcas had been willing
lo assist because of t h e educa
tional nature of the project. Tex
as does not irs hide lunds in its
slate hiulcel for that type of gill
Tense Nerves
Block Bowels
New laxative acts on
colonic muscles... de-constipates overnight.
TNf muvulir it ot' our voion con
Mms nfrt known to n-r.1:t;.nc
AtrSt h's Pirni In rcfular people,
lb ncne lell ihe colon mn-lev lo
frond nt1 evrel ie from th hooV
HhI lci nrf Of c 'notional ups
Af Nv.k onr normal howff haNlv
N our co'on mtivif unpiike ntt r
longer f . on tnougn to criminate
-ie hith ilnf and hnnk.
further djrujimf the condition.
The moM etleiif relict, mn dov
to av, come, irom i buikmd ciion
lompirtfd 'lh i co'omc rtere Mim
laung iviton. Ol aii trading iajuwt
urday after lie took a picture of
Kennedy in ski garb outside the
lodge at Smugglers Notch.
Lawson said Kennedy exposed
the film to light, ruining it. and
then returned the camera with its
flash attachment bent and a seam
on its leather carrying case lorn.
A spokesman for Kennedy
quoted the senator as saying.
"The story is ridiculous. It has
been distorted."
The spokesman said Kennedy
had spent plenty of time over the
weekend posing for professional
and amateur photographers and
thai when the senator asked Ijw-
of the crime with one of the stolen
chain saws In his possession.
Holloman was originally charged
with vagrancy and later with
burglary when police found t h c
tolcn saw and the one in his
possession had the same .serial
number.
The suspect claims that he pur
chased the saw in Silverton last
December.
Police found the other saw near
the scene of the breakin half bur
ied in dirt. It was determined that
Holloman had Ihe same type of
dirt all over his boots, police
said.
According to police the thief had
to climb a high fence and break
E. Krueger
Succumbs
Edgar L. Krueger, 51, 244 North
Laguna Street, died in Hillside
Hospital about 8:30 a.m. today
as Ihe result of a heart seizure
he suffered while driving In work
about 20 minutes earlier, accord
ing to information received by I
the Herald and News.
Kreuger. a local painter, was
driving his pickup truck along
Alameda Avenue when he was
stricken with a heart attack. The
car went out of control and veered
off the road into an embankment
near Beverly Drive. Krueger ap
parently then stepped from his
truck and laid down beside it,
where he was found soon after
by state police. The victim was
taken by Peace Ambulance to
Hillside Hospital where he died
soon after.
Krueger, an employe of a local
painting contractor for the past
several vears, was cHsthotind on
MamcHa Avenue when he was
stricken. The victim had lived at
the Laguna Street address with
his wile, Alice.
Hospitalized
U)S ANGELKS UPD - Actor-
dancer Gene Kelly today under-
went treatment for a slipped disc.
Attendants at Mt. Sinai hospital
aid Kelly. .SO, would remain hos
pitalized for several weeks. He
was admitted Kridav.
Dr. Cliff liohinsnn. county
school superintendent, talked In
the members about the present
inadvisahility of introducing driv
er educatiion courses in the lo
cal high school; and sxke about
the new high school building in
relation to its sie. possible fu
ture uses, and the great need to
apreciate and take the best pos
sible care of the structure and its
equipment.
Milton Ogilen's seventh grade
won the room count and refresh
ments were served hy fifth grade
mothers, alter which Mrs. Athel
lloscr presentrd material on
Founders' Day and a PTA film
was shown.
Nominating commitlee to re
port at next meeting will be Mrs.
Hubert Ioak. Mrs. William W am
pler, and Mrs. William Wiest.
PNYBACK'SS
k lovviy rrtin fiowtrt
lo lay "Thanki" thtv
.peak vaur appreciation. Sec
Nyback'l flow.r Fair. 3614
So. 6th St.
onU a nc Ubicl called ('ot n. in
uie on ihi. pci.l combination 'or
i otcrt'ifihi rc'iel
III t in on iO Mimiiljte colon .c
nere network, to Ui'thcr Kt'4U and
rcBitijne it niu-cuiar "nimen'en! ',
i'i v mowin unique rf-buiknt
Hilton helpt re-tone ien.e .olon
riii.ii t 'it. oion mo moi..lurie. lor
e.m p.t 4 je wnnoui Pin or tra n
tntsui(fn re ite e chronic con
irjnort oernigfit. et n u ciiiikjiU
pioved gentle ecn lor expecUnl
"iM hf I'Ct C in on in tod a v.
IMKODU lom Sli.
Complaint
son not to use Uie film the pho
tographer "was very cooperative
and handed over the film.
But Ihe photographer's Employ
or, William Loeb. publisher of the
newspaiier, said Ihe incident il
lustrated the "naked arrogance of
the Kennedys."
"Being a U.S. senator has ap
parently cone to Teddy Kennedy's
31-year-old head. Loeb said.
Kennedy was at the resort with
his wife, .loan, Atty. Gen. and
Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy and their
children, and Mrs. Robert S. Mc
N'amara, wife of the defense sec
retary. Plant
a rear window to get into the
building. The stolen items then
had to be hoisted back over the
fence wiin the aid of a rope.
Mrs. Albert Longmire. 235.)
W'antland Avenue, reported to po
lice Friday that the rear window
of her station wagon was broken
about 10:40 p.m. Thursday while
the vehicle was parked on South
Tenth Street between Main and
Pine streets.
Mrs. Longmire estimated the
damage at $100.
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A spokesman al the lodge said
Kennedy regretted the incident but
had made it clear earlier that he
would be happy to pose for pic
tures on the ski slopes but did not
want any pictures taken when he
was dressed in after-ski clothes.
Law son said he took his flash
bulb picture after a Montpelier
photographer had snapped the
senator without using a flash. He
said Kennedy had returned from
skiing shortly before and was still
dressed in his ski togs..
Kennedy apparently was un
aware of Uie first picture but ob
served Lawson's flash.
'He turned on me after Ihe
flash went off and grabbed my
camera." Lawson said. "He asked
me whal paper I worked for and
why I took the picture.
"Then he walked into the lodge
lobby wilh my camera, exposed
the lilm to the light and gave my
camera back to me."
The photographer said he in
formed his editor of the incident
and left without a picture. The
editor, Robert Bruso, notified.
Loch.
The publisher said. "At Stone.
they i the Kennedys' were without
their usual high-powered press
agents and for once the way
America's would-be royal family
(eels about us lesser mortals came
through loud and clear."
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