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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 11, 1963)
PAGE 4 HERALD AND NEWS, MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks By United Preti International Allied Chemical 443 Alum Co Am 54 American Air Lilies ISii American Can 46 American Motors 20H A.T&T 120H American Tobacco 30-' Anaconda Copper 44' Armco 52H American Standard 1334 Santa Fe tlx Bendix Corp 51 Bethlehem Steel Boeing Air 37Ji Brunswick 17' Caterpillar Corp 36 Chrysler Corp KWi Coca Cola XD 93 C.B.S. Sli Columbia Gas 27Vi Continental Can 44?i Crown Zellerbach ' Crucible Steel 18'i Curtis Wright 21 Dow Chemical 59 Du Pont 238'i Eastman Kodak lH'a Firestone 33'i Ford General Electric 75 General Foods 79'. General Motors 62' General Portland Ccmet Georgia Pacific 45'i Greyhound 36' Gulf Oil 42 Homettake 50 Idaho Power 33',i l.B.M. 8'A Int Paper 28 Johns Manville 44 Kennecott Copper 7Hi Lockheed Aircraft 53 Martin 20" Merck B2'i Montana Power 38V Montgomery Ward 337. New York Central 17V Pac Gas Elec 32Ti Penney J.C. 4GVj Penn P.R Perma Cement 15V PhiUips M Radio Corporation 61 Iliclifield Oil 43U Safeway 47',i Sears 78 SheU Oil 35H Spcony Mobil Oil 1"! Southern Co. 53',i Southern Pacific 29'i Sperry Rand 13 Standard California 84 Standard Indiana 53 Standard N. J. 2; Stokely Van Camp 20'i Sun Mines 10Va Texas Co. 63". Texas Gulf Sulfur 14'. Texas Pacific Land Trust 22Va Thiokol 28'.. Trans America 46 Trans World Air 12V. Tci Continental 43 United Carbide 105 Union Pacific 34'4 United Air Craft 48'. United Air Lines 32 U.S. Plywood 52 U.S. Rubber 43 U.S. Steel 43U West Bank Corp 34Ti Wcstinghouse 33 Youngstown LOCAL SECURITIES Prices Until Noon Today Bid Asked Bank of America 5S' 62 Calif Pac Util 26 28V Con Freight 13 14 Cyprus Mines 21 1 a 23. Equitable S & L 33 33' 1st Nut'l Bank W 68' j Jantzen 25' 27' a Morrison Knudsen 29'. 31' Mult Kennels 4' 4 N.W. Nafl Gas 34'. 36 Oregon Metallurgical l' 1 PIP & L 26'i 27 PGE 27'j 29'i U.S. Nafl 75 78'i United Utilities 36'. 38 West Coast Tel 21 'i 23' i Weyerhaeuser 27"? 29' Grains High Low Close Wheat Mar 2 08 2 07' 2 0a'i- May 207 2.06' 2.07-2.07 Jul 1.90 1.89'i l.)- Sep 1.91 191 191 Dec 195 1.95 195 Oats Mar .74 .74 ,74'j- May .71 .70'. .71 Jut .9' .68 .6i)-'i Sep .68 ,6B .68'j- Dec .70 .70 .70 Rye Mar 1.31 1.30 1.31 May 1.29 1.28 128 Jul 1.26 1.25 126 Sep 1 27 1.26 1.26 Dec 1.29 1.28 1.28 DAILY KL AM AT ft BASIN SHIPMENTS Rail Truck Combined Rail ft Track Til Oregon 10 27 37 CalUornia 18 16 it F.O.B. GROWER PRICES Klamata Bast Demand I S No. I good others lair Market about steady 100 lb sacks Rutseta US No. 1A I" or 4 ot. nUn. . 2.75-1. M 6 to 14 ot. 3.00-3.25 tome best 3.50 Bakers 12 oz. niln. J.:s-3.50 Baled 10 lb. sacks Z.50-2.70 motlly J. 70 US No. I 1.90-Z.00 Net price to growers at cellar bulk cwt: IS No, 1A 1.70-l.M I S No. 1 .00-1.00 COMBINED RAIL ft TRUCK UNLOADS Oregon 40 total All Other States 821 Oae Week Ago Oregon 31 Total All Other States .'6 Monday, March 11, 1963 Klamath FaUi, Off. WALL STREET NEW YORK rUPD Stocks moved irregularly higlier in an other slow session on the "Big Board" today. But brokers took little comfort in the market's sixth consecutive modest advance, since both the rails and steels, threatened with possible strikes in the months ahead, were on the soft side Traders have been hoping these sections would lead the market forward. Kodak and Union Carbide uerc firm but Du Pont turned down around a point in the chemicals, Chrysler firmed in a steady mo tor section and Texaco rose in an "iilarly hieher oil group where Indiana Standard bucked the trend with a large fractional loss. Woolworth took the honors among the miscellaneous blue chips with a rise of around Hj. American Telephone gained a fraction on its choice as "stock of the month" by a big advisory service. General Electric added a point and Johns-Manville came back (or a fractional gain after selling down a big block sale earlier in the day. LIVESTOCK PORTLAND (UPU USDA - Livestock: Cattle 1 100; mostly choice steers 24.50; mixed good-choice 24; heifers good - choice 22-23; standard good 20; utility cows 13.50-15.50; canner-cutter 12-14.50; utility bulls 19.50. Calves 150; high good-choice 260- 275 lb vcalers 33; few standard 27-28; feeders medium-good 200 350 lb steers 24-27. Hogs 600; 1 and 2 butchers 16- 16.50; 2 and 3 grade 180-250 lb 15-15.50; sows few 1, 2 and 3 grade 395-480 lb 12-12.50. Sheep 600: woolcd Iambs scarce early; part deck mostly choice to end of prime 112 lb shorn lambs 2 and 3 pelts 18.50; ewes cull- good shorn 5-6.50. Potatoes PORTLAND (UPI) - Potato market: Steady; Ore. Russets U.S. No 2 3.00-3.50; some best 4.00; sized 2 oz spread 4.50 4.75, few low as 4.00; bakers 3.75-4.25; 6-14 oz 3.60- 3.85; bakers U.S. No 2 2.75-3.00; 50 lb sks No 2 2.40-2.75. Stocks MUTUAL FUNDS Prices until 10 a.m. PST today Bid Asked Affiliated Fund Atomic Fund Blue Ridge Bullock Chemical Fund Comw. Inv. Diver Growth Dreyfus E & H Slock XD Fidelity Capital Fidelity Trend Fin Inv Fund Founders Fund Fundamental 7.74 4.52 11.25 12.51 10.49 9.52 8.05 15.81 13.09 7.86 12.30 4.08 5.71 9.21 12.52 6.60 4.82 4 93 6.76 9.59 5.68 11.03 17.65 1030 627 25.09 13.56 3.99 13.75 7.59 14.36 3.90 7.73 7.75 14.43 821 9.12 1068 7.11 13.60 17.42 664 11.73 6 25 5.16 1.199 13.20 8.37 4.94 12.30 13.71 11.41 10.40 8.8: 17.18 14.15, 8.54 13.37 4.47 6.21 10.0) Group Sec Com Gr Sec .Avia El Hamilton H.D.A. Hamilton C-7 Incorp Inv. ICA Investor's Group 13.71 7.24 5.39 7,39 10.47, International Mutual Stock Selective Variable 6.14 11.03 19.00 11.01 6.78 28.19 14.80 4.36 15.14 8.30 13,V. 4.26 8.45 8.47 15.68 8.92 fl 87 11.67 7.75 14.86 18 9.1 7.26 1262 6 8.1 5.64 15.25 1424 Keystone B-l Keystone S-3 Keystone S-4 M.I.T. M IT. Growth Nat l Inv. Nat'l Sec Div. Nat'l Sec Growth Nat'l Sec Slock Putnam Fund Putnam Growth Selected Amcr Shareholders TV Fund United Accum United Canada United Continental United Income United Science Value Lines Wellington Whitehall WOltlfS OHIllIN Viking warriors originated our word "berserk. ' Those warriors who fought with fiviuied aban don were known as "berserkers" in reference lo their bear coats. Burglars Get $2,500 In Fort Klamath Act Burglars broke into the room i his room had been broken open of C. A. Coleman at the Fort Klamath Hotel, Kort Klamath, early Friday morning and es- caped with a desk containing mon ey and property valued at ap proximately $2. 500, the sherilf's office disclosed Monday. Stolen was a coin collection in eluding 32 2 bills, a solid gold tie clasp and chain valued at $500, a pair of black onyx cuff links with diamond insets valued from $700 to tl.CMJO. and about $1,200 in coins and currency, according to sheriff's deputy Lou Bogart. Coleman, owner and operator of the hotel, told the .sheriff that he had shown his coin collection and other items to three people before he departed from the hotel for Klamath Falls, about 1 a.m., Friday. He returned two hours later and discovered the door to City Police Weekend Theft Series Klamath Falls police are invest! gating five weekend thefts includ ing the theft of a car, and t h e fourth theft of beer from Klamath Falls distributing com pany truck. A 1948 blue Oldsmobilc owned by Roger Wermer, Box 4308, Klamath Falls, was reported stol en by Clyde England of Clyde's lowing. South Eighth Street and Klamath Avenue. The vehicle apparently was stol en Friday night from a parking lot on Market Street. It has the Oregon license plate number 6P- 9296. A patrol car on a routine check early Saturday morning noticed thai a padlock had been broken off a distributing company beer truck again. This is the fourth such occur rence in as many weeks. It was not immediately known how much was missing from the truck. Henry Lew, owner of Wong's Cafe, 421 Main Street, reported $150 stolen from a locked desk drawer in the cafe between 5:30 and 10 a.m. Sunday. Lew said the screws were re moved from the lock on the drawer and the thiol apparently knew where the money would be. Ihe owner said he thought some-l one had been stealing from his cafe quite regularly. I no screws on the lock were well worn, he said, as if some one had opened the drawer the same way on other occasions. Mrs. Fay Durhin. owner of the Federal Agents Slap Gamblers WASHINGTON ( UPD Internal Revenue Service agents swooped down on gambling operations in 52 cities Thursday night, arrest ing 1.11 XM'sons who failed lo pro duce federal gambling stamps. I He agents, striking simultane ously at M9 bookmnking and numbers parlors, seized 11 auto mobiles, 37 slut mid pinball ma chines, and confiscated $25,000 ill cash. Raids were conducted in cities in l slates New ork. Tennes see, Massachusetts, Rhode Island. Connecticut, Kan sas. Missouri. Pennsylvania, New Jersey. Mary land, Michigan, Illinois, South Da kota, Kentucky, Ohio, Loui.sianii. Texas, Utah, and California. An IliS spokesman said it was part of tho agency's "systematic. periodic raids. rue last one came in December. Atlas Missile Test Explodes VAXDEXBKRCt AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (UPI - All Atlas Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (1CBM1 exploded Saturday night shortly after it was fired in a test launch, Ihe Air Force reported. i Me debris landed on land. within the compound, and no one was injured, an Air Force pokesman said. Cause of the explosion was not known. Various versions of tlie Atlas have been fired from this West Coast base in tests down the Pa cific missile range Atlas ICBMs have been located Ihtc since the noisy giant was declared oper- .ilmn.il. Obituaries HOOVI I'MI Jlru Hoover. 74. 4'4 hr Mtrrfi f. 1H1 St It turvlvtil by hr riult4d. Willitm O. Hoovr SI MonUOk. Cl'it Funttal lrvci. Ward's Klamath Fu. ntral Hrwna Wtcmttday. Marco II, at p.m. Crematton to lotto One glass of milk provides 163 calories. CANCIL YOUR MORTGAGE Tbr trttnlUhl'. I,.tln I rt it) r !- John H. Houiton 'tl l t !"! and tne desk and its contents stol Sheriff's deputies, acting on the assumption that tne desk was loot ed and discarded, searched the Fort Klamath area for the miss ing desk but were unable to find it. Evidence indicates that the bur glars broke the door by running at it and smashing it with their shoulders. Coleman's room is lo cated adjacent to the bar, closed at the time of the burglary, on the first floor of the hotel. No other quarters are situated on that floor. A woman who resides on the second lloor of the iiolel reported hearing the motor of an automo bile outside of her window about 2:30 am. Friday. The sheriff's oil ice is continuing its investiga tion. Investigate Royal Arms Apartments, 524 High Street, reported that someone broke into the washroom in the building Saturday night and re moved a coin box on a washing machine that contained about $4 A neighbor told police her dog started to bark about 11 p.m. or the same evening and it was as sumed the theft took place at this time. During investigation city police found a shoe print in the wash room that the thief might have left. The print was made by about a size nine shoe. Zelma Ochiho, 336 Broad Street, reported the theft of a spare tire and wheel from her car late Friday night or early Saturday morning while the vehicle was parked in front of 337 Commercial Street. Miss Ochiho estimated the loss at $.15. 3. A. Crittenden Death Reported Bradley A. Crittenden, 4-ycar-old son of Dr. and Mrs. R. Claude Crittenden of 16B39 S. E. Powell Blvd., Portland, died March 8 af ter a short illness. He was born in Portland Dec. 5, 1938. The parents lived in Klamath Falls for three years before re turning to Portland where Dr. Crittenden opened his dental prac ticc. Resides the parents the child is survived by a sister, Terrie D and brothers Daniel E. and Ricky Scull. Funeral services will be held Tuesday. March 12. at 10 a.m. at St. Luke's Episcopal Church with vault interment at Lincoln Memor ial Park. Play's Author, Composer Visit Here As Benefit Production Nears Date By MRS. KOItKRT DrltOSIER The author and composer of the musical, "Eliza and the Lumber jack." being produced as a hos pital benefit by the Klamath Play, en April 4 and 5 al the OTI Little Theatre, were in Klamath Falls this week to supervise pro duction, according to Ellen Miller. director of the presentation. Ihe musical resulted tioin a meeting between Patricia Camp hell, author of tlie novel "Eliza," and Helen Davis, composer of the play form. Both women are Wash ington state residents, with Mrs. Campbell making her home in Port Ludlow and Mrs. Davis ra iding in South Bend. They met in 1947 at a writers' conference which Mrs. Davis was attending and at which Mrs Campbell was lecturing. Mrs. Davis received permission lo compose tlie song, "Eliza," based on the novel's heroine. This work led to the composition of the production which will be seen here. Both women have been interest ed in preserving the logging folk lore and tlie Indian lite of the northwest. According to Mrs. Da vis, the Library of Congress ha on record only one authentic song of the state of Washington. She believes that "Elua and the Lum berjack." which has been pro duced some twenty times during the past sixteen jcai s, has a fu ture because so little has been written that deals with the life of the logger. Commented Mrs. Davis, "I am happy lo see adults doing the show, becau their maturity gives it a real place in the com munity. "This is as it should be." she continued. gig: . 'jr.VVi:i ' C&ji-Ar - 2- BRIDGE GOING UP Construction workers today began driving concrete pilinqs which will support a bridqe that will carry vehicular traffic proceeding between Washburn Way and Alameda Avenue. Work on the new bridge, being constructed by the Inter-City Construction Co. of Eugene at a cost of $29,504, was started last Wednesday when the firm began hauling in materials for the job. Above, workmen begin moving a part of the crane into place before fitting it into the crane housing. The crane is in operation on Washburn Way, across from Alameda Avenue, located on the other side of the canal. Two Convicted Slayers Transferred Two Klamath Falls men con victed by Klamath County juries of two unrelated slayings were transferred from the counly jail to the Oregon State Penitentiary by Sheriff Murray "Red" Britton last Saturday. Bureau Fires Ex-Senator PORTLAND I UPU Former State Sen. William Crcnfell Jr., 37, Portland, was dismissed today from the Portland Fire Bureau. Grenfell last week was lined $250 and sentenced to two years' probation for failure to remain al the scene of a fatal automobile accident. Grenfell, whose father is a re tired lire chief, was notified of his dismissal in a letter from City Commissioner Stanley Earl Garage Burned A garage (ire at the Rosemary Witherspoon residence, 231 Broad Street, destroyed a davenport and some boxes of clothes, city fire men reported. Firemen were called to the fire at 3:08 p.m. Saturday and were able to put out the flames be fore the garage was endangered The cause of the fire was unde termined. The usual college group which has performed the musical lacks not only the maturity to handle Ihe work, but also creates a false situation in that the college group is not truly a part of tlie com munity. A show suc)i as "Eliza" finds its worth in bringing to adults the too-oflen forgotten lore which is a part of our heritage, Mrs. Davis explained. A trained musician, Mrs. Da vis is the composer of three other full length shows, including the 'Dedication Pageant" for Fort Co lumbia, a national shrine near Astoria. "Eliza." however, is her first composition done in musical play form. She is the composer of the of ficial slate song of Washington, which has been orchestrated by Stuart Churchill of tlie Fred Waring group, and Bert Christen son from Central Washington Col lege. The song has been done in many arrangements, including scores for symphonies and bands. "The songs in 'Eliza.' " said Mrs. Davis, "arc rather fragments or adaptations and extensions of melody from available Washing ton folklore and history." For example, the song, "Blue Columbine," a nostalgic number sung by Eliza, is based on the old lime Washington custom of neighbors exchanging the seeds ol the blue columbine, a flower which was brought west in many cases i prllirmanl My false teeth were killing me. pad Same old Irouhlr! Roci.in and tltppinf made my mouth orf and made me irritable then 1 tpote lo my denliil ... he told me ahoul ( IMIION. Ihe aoh-novtint plastic thai mold lo the nmi. Now I eat hal I want enioy what I eat and mv iiimt leel ao ood CUSHION Itayi toft . . . that a in aeviet . . and that ftat mv relief Mildly meditated to heal fum toienetv pleasant mintv flavoe guards sour hrealh. .sk your diutjitl for CI SHION, ou must he unshed cm sou pet yeur morse ha.A 1 one. -latimi suppls only Jl a irl,. Si.- To Salem The slayers are Herbert Floyd .Mitchell, 41. condemned for the firsl degree murder of Dmitre Dan Yerkovich in a local theatre last Sept. 28. and Jerry Richard Haines, 24, sentenced lo serve a term not to exceed 10 years for the involuntary manslaughter of his wife, Christine, at the victim's home, 3863 Clinton Avenue, Dec. 17. Haines, as Mitchell, had been on trial for first degree murder but Ihe jury sitting in judgment of the cae decided in favor of the manslaughter verdict. The de fendant had been accused of slay ing his pregnant wife with a bul let fired from a .22 caliber pistol. A jury of seven women and five men deliberated more than five hours before voting 10-2 that the shooting was accidental. Mitchell, a party in a triangle involving his ex-wife, Rosalie, and Yerkovich, was convicted of the murder charge by a six-woman six-man jury New Year's Eve and received the death sentence from Judge David R. Vandenberg 10 days later. The Supreme Courl will review the transcript of tlie Mitchell case as it does in all cases where the death sentence is imposed. The date for Mitchell's execu lion has not been set. Sheriff Britton transferred the prisoners to the state prison by commercial airlines Saturday morning and returned to Klamath Falls later the same day. in covered wagons by their ances tors, she continued. A catchy number in the show which begins "Hemlock, fir. spruce and cedar" is based on a high school pep yell, which, in turn, came from regional folk lore. Tlie song, "All Around My Hat, 1 Wear a Green Willow," a number which is danced by the square dance group, was first heard in fragmentary version in Oystervillc, Wash. Research for "Eliza and the Lumberjack" continued for two years, w ith Fr. William Dickerson, St. Martin's College, directing the music and theatre departments in the work. The musical was then put in its present form and pre sented as tlie official musical of the Washington State Centennial. The character of Old Bullwhack er Joe in the musical was added by Mrs. Davis to the cast; refer ences to this logging figure are found in Stewart Holbrook s books on the northwest. Mrs. Davis stated, "Klamath Falls is an ideal place to present this musical. It has the musical ability to perform the score, it has the logging background, and it has the Indian culture as a part of the region." Mrs. Campbell, author of tlie novel on which the musical is based, has authored live other Tense Nerves Block Bowels New laxative acts on colonic muscles.,. de-constipates overnight. Th muHiiUr of your colon con lams nmt known io methane a Aktrbt. h' plexus. In regular people, he ncre lell the colon muscle 10 propel and expel aie .'rom the rvdy Bui iene nere or emotional upel can hkx'K our normal rve( hjpnv Nour colon munle impuitc ate no longer ttrong enough to eliminate aie which ijric and hnnts., further itiraiatiii( the condition 1 he nwi ertevme renei, man doc tor! a, comei from a hulknf ictton comhirtetJ ith a cdonit n't Mtmu Ittmi action. Of all leading laxatives Two Long-Sought Fugitives Captured By State Police Two fugitives sought by thel FRf anri mlipp in various uest ern states were apprehended by: the Oregon State Police early Sunday night and are being held in the city jail, state police report ed Monday. In custody awaiting release to the FBI are B c n a 1 d Jamesjed on the "wanted list. He was Schnepp, 37, and Iris Jane Schnepp, 28, sought by police ofj numerous western states Knife, Fork Club Meets Klamath Knife and Fork Club members will hear Madame Su zanne Silvercruys. one of the world's great artists, during the dinner meeting Monday night al Ihe Winema Motor Hotel. Serv ing time will be at 6:45. The Belgian . born sculptor saw during World War I as a child the horrors and atrocities 'which the Germans committed in her na tive Belgium. Escaping their clutches when they sought to cap ture her as a collaborator of Edith Cavell, she came to this country and proceeded to arouse America to a realization of what war meant. An American citizen since 1922 and the wife of a former officer in the United States Army, she is famous sculptor, a well-known author and a brilliant lecturer. She is a graduate of the Yale School of Fine Arts, and has had the honorary degree of Doctor of Humane Letters conferred upon her by Temple University. From a life crowded with exciting experiences, an outstand ing record of achievement in the arts, an intimate association with the great in the world of art. literature and diplomacy, Madame Silvercruys has developed a phil osophy of life and living which has comforted and inspired hun dreds who have heard her speak. Trailer Rig Hits Canal A teamster fell asleep while op- crating a highway tractor and trailer on Highway 97, near Wor- den, about 3 p.m. Sunday, and the rig rumbled off the road into six feet of water in a nearby ca nal, state police have reoorled. The driver, Richard Woodworth Jr., 29, of Seattle, and his pas senger, Roy Scholl, 45, of Albany, left the vehicle after it plunged into the canal and returned safely to shore. Neither was injured, state police said. Woodworth was northbound with two trucks on the trailer when the accident occurred. Local towing firms were still attempting to remove the truck and loaded trailer from the canal early Monday morning, state po lice reported. books, all dealing with the Puget Sound locale. She began writing during tlie second world w ar w hen her son was in the service. "I lashed myself to the type writer and wrote," she said. Mrs. Campbell's interest in logging is the result of living in the middle of a logging region and listening to men talk on the sub ject. "I feel that the musical has excellent direction in Klamath Falls," she said, "and am very happy with it." Both Mrs. Campbell and Mrs. Davis plan to attend the perform ance in Klamath Falls in April. Joining Mrs. Davis will be her two sons from San Francisco, neither of whom have seen the composition in its present form. Tickets for the hospital benefit performances are available from John Sandmeyer, 623 Pine, tele phone TU 4-8822. or at the cham ber of commerce office. KAKTH-LIKK Mars is more like the earth than any other planet. Men have studied it ami wondered about it more than any other and wheth er there is any living thing on Mars still is a question to be settled only new tahtel edited CoiONun gie sou ihtx recial combination lor ,.iiv, o-ermghi relief: ( 1 ) On os on Mimuliie colonic nerxe network, to lunher activate and rrgutirie 119 muscular "movement". ilt Coion MD'a. unique re-bultunt; action help? re-lone ien colon muvlev 1 M Guns tin moiMunre for ea pavvice without pm or train. Gm on Mie-en rel resev chronic con ttipatioa overnight. et it is clintc.!. proved entle ecn for expectanl mother, lie I Cotosto today. IM'KOIH CrORY MZfc 4M. charges of writing fictitious - 'checks. Schnepp was apprehended while driving his automobile between Klamath Falls and Merrill about 6.30 p.m. Sunday, when a state po lice officer noted that the license of the fugitive's vehicle was post- alone at the time of his arrest Subsequent investigation by Weather By United Press International I Northern California: Mostly fairl through Tuesday with variahlejlow normal. Precipitation light.- louds and few showers north. The Dalles and Hooa liiver: Cloudy We3iie;,djy with a few- scattered showers; cooler. Lows tonight 35-38. Gorge winds wester ly 20-30 and gusty. Bend, Baker and La Grande Scattered showers Tuesday; lows tonight near 35. Portland Vancouver, Willam ette Valley: Mostly cloudy with few showers; lows 38, highs 45- 50. Western Oregon: Few light showers; windy and cooler; highs 43-50; lows 32-40. Eastern Oregon: Few light snow showers; cooler; highs 35-45, lows 25-35; gusty northwest winds be coming northerly Tuesday. Western Washington: Partly cloudy, windy, cooler; few light showers; highs 40-45, lows 32-39; gale warnings displayed along coast and through Strait.. Eastern Washington: Partly cloudy, cooler with few snow showers: highs 30-38; lows 23-33; northerly tonight. Tatoosh to Blanco: West to northwest winds 25-40 knots with higher gusts becoming north to northwest Tuesday; partly cloudy; few light showers. The five-day weather outlook through Saturday: Western Oregon: Cooler with temperatures below normal. Pre cipitation light. Highs mostly 44-54, lows 25-40. Arthur Godfrey says "To look SMART Be smart Insist on Sanitone Drycleaning" You'll agree with Arthur, as he tells millions on his CBS Radio program, once you've tried our Sanitone dry cleaning service. Give us a test with your finest, most fragile garments. Find how we restore fashion-fresh smart ness . . . prolong wardrobe life. Special finishes are added for softness and body . . . spots removed scientifically . . . mi nor repairs made . . . and an expert, )'ofsso)!-rated press given. Call on T0DY!''0'e than JUSt drycleaninS! CASCADE LAUNDRY and Dry Cleaners Opp. Posr Office Ph. TU 4-5111 NEW METHOD CLEANERS Gold Bond Stamps 1453 Esplonade Ph. TU 4-4471 BROADWAY CLEANERS S&H Green Stamps 4615 So. 6th TU 4-6403 And Village Cleaners al fhe Town & Country Shopping Center Trucks Rodio Diipotched For Fastest Possible Service. state police indicated that Mrs. Schnepp was residing in Tulelake. Later that evening, state police located the woman in Tulelake. and went with sheriff's deputies of Siskiyou County to apprehend her. She waived extradition and returned with Oregon police o Klamath Falls, where she was lodged in the city jail along with Schnepp. Roundup Eastern Oregon: Cooler with temperatures below to much be- Highs mostly in the 30 s and 40 s, lows 15-30. Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PST today. High Low Astoria 53 43 Baker 48 34' Brookings 02 42 Medford 54 35. Newport 52 43 North Bend 56 4$ Pendleton 54 43 Portland 55 45 Redmond 52 40 Salem 55 45 The Dalles 58 43 Chicago 34 25; Los Angeles 65 50 New York 52 p San Francisco 60 51 Washington 58 3'(x Tea Planned BONANZA The Bonanza Brownie Troop will give a tea a.t; the Bonanza Library on Saturday, March 16. for the benefit of the library. Mrs. Howard Schmidt and Mrs. Hugh Lee are the lcadr ers. Scheduled from 1 to 4 p.m., the tea will feature a display of the girls' foreign dolls and boxes: Many of the dolls will later bs. sent to children's hospitals. Every one is invited to attend. i