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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 18, 1963)
PACK 4 MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks NEW YOrtK STOCKS By United Prru International Allied Chemical Alum Co Am American Air Lines American Can American Motors AT&T American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Armco American Standard Santa Fe Bendix Corp Bethlehem Steel Boeing Air . Brunswick Caterpillar Corp Chrysler Corp foca Cola CBS. .Columbia Gas Continental Can Crown Zellerbach Crucible Steel Curtis Wright Dow Chemical Du Ponl Eastman Kodak Firestone Ford General Electric General Foods General Motors General Portland Cement Georgia Pacific Greyhound Gulf Oil Homestake Idaho Power I.B.M. Int Paper Johns Manville Kennecott Copper Lockheed Aircraft Martin Merck Montana Power Montgomery Ward Nat'l Biscuit New York Central Northern Natural Gas Northern Pacific Pac Gas Elec Penney J. C. Penn Rrt Perma Cement Phillips Proctor Gamble Radio Corporation Richfield Oil Safeway Sears ShcU Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Co. Southern Pacific Sperry Rand Standard California Standard Indiana Standard N. J. Stokely Van Camp Sun Mines Texas Co. Texas Gulf Sulfur Texas Pacific Land Trust Thiokol Trans America Trans World Air Tri-Continental Union Carbide Union Pacific United Aircraft United Air Lines U.S. Plywood U.S. Rubber U.S. Steel West Bank Corp Westinghouse . Youngstown 44'i S3 18H 45 19 120' j 31'i Wi 32'.i 14 27H SO'i :io". 16'-) .15. 92H 51 27H 44" 49'. m. 21 57' i 238. 1144 33V, 43H 72',i 79 62'. !8Vi 44'i 35. 41 28 44H 70. 52H 204 82 3814 33'4 48 '4 19i 43 33 46!i 15 15 m 58'A 43 48 37 64'4 53 V 28'i 131'4 65 Vi 53 62 20 64' 14 ',4 2im 24'4 47. 12 44'i 105H 34si 4H 33 $2V 43 45 331. 32' 89 ','4 LOCAL SECURITIES Prices Until Noon Today Bank of America 60'4 63H Calif Pac Util 26', 28Ji Con Freight 13' 14 Cyprus Mines 21'4 22J4 Equitable S & L 34 3l4 1st Nat'l Bank 64 68 Jantzen 25'i 274 Morrison Knudsen 2!i'4 31 Mult Kennels 4' 4 4'i N.W. Nat'l Gas . 3-t'j 36i Oregon Metallurgical l'i Wi P P 4 L 26'i 28',i PGE 374 29', U.S. Nat'l 74 77'.i United Utilities 36' 4 38'i West Coast Tel ai 2;i4 Weyerhaeuser 27"4 29,i Potatoes P0RTL.ND (UPII - Potato market: Steady: Ore Russets U.S. No 2 3.O0-3.5O; some best 4 00; sized 2 oj spread 4.50-4.75. few low as 4.00; bakers 3.7S-4.25; 6-14 (it 3.60 3 85; bakers U.S. No 2 2.75-3 00; 50 lb sks No 2 2.50-2.65. Crlspus AttiH-ks, a mulatto, was a leader of American patri ots in the Boston Massacre and one of the first tn lie killed. DAILY KLAMATH BASIN SHIPMENTS Rail Truck Combined Rail k Truck Ttl Oregon I California 14 F.O.B. I GROWER PRICES Klamath Baste Demand fair Market steady 100 lb sacks Russets I S No. 1A 6 to 14 ot. . 110-3.25 some best 3.50 Bakers 12 tvs, nitn. . 3.25-3.50 Baled 10 lb. sacks 1.60-1.70 IS No. t l.M-2.00 Net price to rwers at cellar bulk tut: I S No. 1A lew sales I.70-I.I0 I S No. J .90-1.00 COMBINED RAIL TRUCK UNLOADS Oregon it Total All Other Stales Hi On Week Age Oregon 40 Total All Other Slates (21 Moodiv. Mart-h If, 193 LIVESTOCK PORTLAND (UPD-iUSDAl - Livestock: Cattle 1300; good choice steers 24-24.23; standard-good 21 23.50; cutter - utility Holstein cows 15 15.50; utility commercial bulls 19.50-20. Calves 150; good . low choice vealers 33; few good-choice feed crs 28-30. Hogs 600; 1 and 2 butchers 16. few 2 and 3 grade 14 14.30; sows 1-3 grade 300-440 lb 12-14. Sheep 250; choice wooled lambs 86-103 lb 19-20. Grains CHICAGO IUPI '-Grain range: High Ixiw Close Wheat Mar 2.08'i 207'4 2.07' May 10Sn 2.04 2.IMl,-2.04 Jul l.tW. 1.88'i 1.89 Sep 1.91 1.90''4 1.91 Dec 1.85V. 1.94'i 1.95 Oats Mar .73'. .72'i .73.72', May .70 .70', .70'j Jul .69' .68'i .69 Sep .68s. .67. .68 Dec .70' 4 .70'.' .70' 4 Rye Mar 1.33 1.304 1.32'.-1.33 May 1.29'i 1.28 1.2!P. Jul 1.27'. 1.25'i 1.27 Sep 1.27',2B Dec 1.29 1.29 1.29 Stocks MUTUAL FUNDS Prices until 10 a.m. PST today Bid Asked Affiliated Fund 7.80 8.43 Atomic Fund 4.50 4.94 Blue Ridge 11.25 12.30 Bullock 12.62 13.83 Chemical Fund subj 10.57 11.56 Comw Inv 9.56 10.45 Diver Growth 8.00 8.87 Dreyfus 15.93 17.32 E 4 II Stock 13.17 14.24 Fidelity Capital 7.90 8.59 Fidelity Trend 12.43 13.51 Fin Inv Fund 4.11 4.50 Founders fund 5.76 6.26 Fundamental 9.29 10.18 Group Sec Com 12.63 13.83 Gr Sec Avia El 6.57 7.21 Hamilton H. D. A. 4.87 Hamilton C-7 4.98 S.44 Incorp Inv. 6.79 . 7.42 ICA 9.59 10.48 Investor's Group Intercontinental 5.70 6.16 Mutual 11.06 11.96 Stock 17.73 19.17 Selective 10.32 11.04 Variable 6.32 6.83 Keystone B-l 23.11 26.20 Keystone S-3 13.68 14.93 Keystone S-4 3.99 4.36 M.I.T. 13.96 15.26 M.I.T. Growth 7.65 8.38 Nat'l Inv. 14.44 15.61 Nat'l Sec Div 3.92 4 28 Nafl Sec Growth 7.74 8.46 Nat'l Sec Stock 7.81 8.54 Putnam Fund 14.51 15.77 Putnam Growth 8.24 9.96 Selected Amer 9.14 9.89 Shareholders 10.71 11.70 TV Fund 7.12 7.76 United Accum 13.71 14.98 United Canada 17.49 19.01 United Continental 6.67 7!29 United Income 11.83 12.93 United Science 6.28 6.8(1 Value Lines 5.111 5.ti Wellington 14.07 15.34 Whitehall 13.13 14.19 Obituaries TAYIO Wlnlrd Vtnttncll Taylar, 45. alH In Mrrlll. Ort , March II, 13. Survlvon: Hubnd. Euoent H., Mtrrlll; brother, Harlty P. Brewer, Aptos. Celll. Ftmnrel service! will be announced by Ward'a Klemalh Funeral Home. KIMI Thomet Robert Kemp, 74. died In Wlnnemucce, Nov., March 13. IW3. Sur vlvora: Sitter, Mrs. Mae K. Short! niece. Mrs. Waller P. Hannon, bolh ol Salem. Gravetlde tervlcet were held In Ml. Cal vary Cemetery Monday, March 18, al II a.m. Ward'i Klemalh Funerel Home In charge. DAVIS Vernelta Riddle navli, SS. died In Chll- oquln Merch 15. I3. Survlvori; Huihand, Edgar, 01 cniloquini aaugntera, Lavma McKmney, Portland, Laverna Jordan, Roeburo. Theodorne Wrlaht. Chiloquln. and Feydeena Hall, Klamath Fallal olto 19 oranden Idren. Funerel service win he held from the Chitoquln Assembly of God Church Tuesday. March 1. al II am. and 1:30 p m. Concludine services and vaulf Interment In Chief Schonchln Cemetery. Word's Klemalh Funeral Home In charge. Funerals JOHNSON Funerel services for Merole Lee John son will be held from the Cooper. sorrelh Funeral Home. Honey Grove. Ten., with Interment In Shrlo Cemntery at a later date Ward's Klemeth Funeral Home in charge. HASKINS Funerel services lor Veiton M. Havslns III be held Tueidev, March if. al pm In the Merrill Presbyterian Church iterment Merrill IOOF Cemetery O Hair's Memorial Chapel In charge 12 !l 16 30 mm FIRST EXPOSITION TICKETS Col. Edwin J. Witienberger, commanding officer of Kingsley Field, receives the first tickets for the 1063 Annual Scout Exposition from Scout Frank Cavarretta, Troop 101 and Cub Jason Smith, Pack 101. Ralph Ovgard, exposition promotion chairmen, looks on. The event is slated for April 6 from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Klamath County Fairgrounds. Tickets can be purchased from any Cub, Scout or Explorer. j Teacher Pay Increase SALEM (UPII - The Senate voted 16-13 today to kill a pro posed Increase in minimum pay lor teachers. The bill called for increases of from $3,700 to $4.0(10 for teachers with bachelor's degrees and from $4,000 to $4,400 for those with master's degrees. Both proposed figures had been cut $400 by the Senate Education Committee. The minimum pay bill, similar to one (he senate passed in the closing days of the 1961 session. would have affected only 12 teachers. Sen. Al Flegcl, D . Roscburg. strongly urged passage of the in creased scales because "it could V.Haskins Dies March 16 MERRILL Vel ton Merle Has- kins, 61, well-known Merrill ranch er, died at Providence Hospital in Portland on March 16. He was a native of Boise, Idaho, born Oct. 11, 1901, the son of Nancy and John W. Haskins who came to Merrill in the fall of I'.tOH to arm. He was married In Klamath Fulls in 1921 to Vivian Hcdgcpcth and moved to Roseburg where he was a mechanic until tlie fall of 1924 when he engaged in farm' ing until his death. He was the last of four suns. Mrs. Haskins was a member ol the Merrill Presbyterian Church and of the Merrill Oddfellows Lodge. Survivors include the widow. Vivian Haskins, Merrill; sons, Lee, Delmer, Merle and Wcslev. Merrill; two daughters, Mrs. Vir ginia Moore, Merrill and Mrs. Velma Phels, Madias; a sister, Mrs. Pearl Moore of Morrill; also 13 grandchildren. A son Dale died in 1943. Funeral services will lie at 2 p.m. Tuesday, March 19, in the Merrill Presbyterian Church with Rev. Lloyd Henderson officiating. Final rites and interment will be in the IOOF Cemetery at Merrill, Cancer Bowl Tourney Set Klamath Falls will participate in the slatc-wiflo Howl Down Cancer Tournament," to be held in 13 towns and cities, starling March 23 and concluding April Only scores bowled in league. or open play in an OSBI'A estab lishment will be .recognized. All proceeds will go to the American Cancer Society. Play ers may enter as often as liked, to qualify for the semifinals. Rowling in Klamath Falls will be at both alleys with Joe Tumul ty as general chairman; Ed Hick man. Lucky Lanes chairman, and Jim Mnsley in charge at Holiday Howl. Scniilinals will be rolled April 13. the finals. April 21. Prizes will range from a 1963 Chevrolet Corvair. 4-dixir sedan, a 1.1-foot deluxe upholstered ruii nliout Ixwt. electrical household appliances, vacations for to at hotels and motels to trophies. All howlers arc invited to lake part in the tournament. LeaOlie MeetS crn Cahlonna. Mrs Langslet was la third grade Icaclier at Fairview The regular monthly meeting School, of tlie Taxpayers' league of Besides her husdand she is sur Klamath County will lie held vived by two daughters. Mrs Wednesday. March 20, at 7:30 Sondra McHnde of Klamath Falls p.m. in the courthouse Tlie pro gram will be concerned with pending legislation, school proh leiiis. and lurther inlormalion on the Intercommunity Hospital. The public is invited. I. fi .? . - . '" J Hi' result in pressure to increase all teachers' salaries in Oregon." He said it would indicate 'o prospective teachers that Oregon was willing to provide adequate pay. Also speaking lor the bill was Sen. Andrew Naterlin, D-Newport. He said his only regret was that the bill had been shaved in com mittee. Sens. Ward Cook, D - Portland. and Walter Leth. R-Salem, voiced opposition. Cook said the bill wouldn t ac complish anything and Leth sai-1 it would take authority from local school boards. Voting against the measure in addition to Cook-and Leth were Sens. Eddie Ahrcns, R - Salem; Harry Boivin, D-Klamath Falls, R. F. Chapman, D - Coos Bay, Robert Elfstrom, R-Salem; John 'iffy. 'r - k,4 MRS. VERNETTA DAVIS Mrs. Davis Death Told Mrs. Vernctta Kiddie Davis, member of a well-known Chilo quin family and a granddaughter of Winema (Toby) Kiddle of Mo doc War fame, died at tlie family home in Chiloquin March 15. Al though she had been in ill health her death was unexpected. Hei husband, Edgar Davis, was with her at the time of her death. She was a native of Klam ath County, born Aug. 18, 1!KM. and had lived in Chiloquin for many ,-cars. Sho was the daughter ol Emanuel George Riddle. She was a member of the As embly of God Church where serv ices, in charge of Ward's Klam ath Funeral Home, will be held at 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.. Tues day, March 19. Concluding serv ices and vault interment will be in Chief Schonchin Cemetery in Sprague River. Mrs. Davis, talented in art, is survived hy the widower, Edgar of Chiloquin; four daughters. La vina McKinney, Portland, Laver na Jordan, Roseburg, Thcodorna Wright, Chiloquin and Faydeeni Hall of Klamath Falls; also 17 grandchildren. Mrs. Langs. et Death Reported Mis. Gladys lngslct. wife of Postmaster Chester L a n g s I e t, died unexectedlv Monday morn ing in Apple Valley, Calif., accord ing to word received by friends) here today. I The l.angslcts h.id Iclt Satur- Hnv nn n v;iralton Inn Irs South. and Jana Langslcl of Menlo Park. Calif. Funeral arrangements are H"iid ing e.t S meela e, iWy l.e o-ltMi isa. D.lllhtrilllr tlellrloua gltm-MInt r help, control Appetite. I ay tseiSM U.kee reducing susfer, '' ' ' '-1-...IT. moras enjoy VeVMrWraW ,Me. At drufritat. ft j?fV . . r i itTliatr,eel ' . Voted Down Hare, R-Hillsboro; Glenn Huston. D-Lebanon; John Inskeep, R-Ore-gon City; Thomas Mahoney, D Portland; L. W. Newbry, R-Ash land; Boyd Ovorliulse, D-Madras; Walter Pearson, D-Portland: E. D. Potts, D-Grants Pass; Daniel Thiel, D-Astoria, and Ben Musa, D-The Dalles. Sen. Arthur Ireland, R Forest Grove, was absent. Two Jailed By Police On Weekend The Klamath Falls Police lodged two Klamath Falls' men in jail over the weekend, one for drunk driving, failure to remain at scene of accident and no operator's li cense, and tlie other for drunk and disorderly conduct. Bail was set at $407 on Ed ward Bryant Jr., 23, 734 Lark Street, after he was charged with traffic violations resulting from an accident he was involved in Friday at 8.10 p.m. on South Sixth Street near Martin. Mrs. Crete Robinson, 73, 1433 Homedale lioad, a passenger in the other car, driven by Mcl- vin J. Robinson, 37, 2125 Home- dale received minor injuries. Robinson told police he was driving south on South Sixth when his car was hit from behind by the Bryant vehicle. Robinson said he pulled over to (he curb, but Bryant failed to stop. Robinson then pulled out from the curb and followed the Bryant vehicle sounding his horn in an attempt to stop Bryant. Both vehicles were stopped on Sixth Street by a city paUolman and Bryant was arrested for leav ing the scene and not having a li cense. At the police station Bryant asked to take a blood test, which resulted in a .20 reading. A read ing of .15 is considered evidence of intoxication. At this lime Bry an( was arrested for drunken driv ing. The damage to both vehicles was moderate, citv police report ed. Zelma Ochilio, 335 Commercial Street, called cily police about 4:50 a.m. Saturday and said her husband, Burdette, was causing a disturbance. Ochiho resisted police when they attempted to lake him into cus tody and he had lo be put into the squad car forcibly. He was placed in jail on charges o( drunk and disorderly conduc! and his bail was set at $300. f ' 4..'..; I D. Liggett Rites Set A former resident of Klamath Falls, Donn P. Liggett, 74. died Sunday. March I", in Paradise, Calif. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday from the Hose Chapel at Paradise, and inter ment will lollow in the Paradise Masonic Cemetery. Rorn Sept. 13. mat. I.igcett was1 Mrs. Duane Karnes of Reno and graduated from Ohio Northern Mrs Ted Coker of Klamath Falls. University. He was married Sept. (lour grandchildren; and numer a. to Bessie Wolilvr ot Great, oils nieces and nephews. A son. Falls. Mont., while employed bviWillutm. was killed in Korea in the Southern Oregon Hardware Company o( Klamath Falls. They resided in tlie old Evans Apart ments. Liggett was later yard man ager lor Big Bain and Sub urban Lumber companies, and on Ins retirement in I'AVi moved with his wife to Paradise. Mrs. Liggett preceded him in death in WVt. Do FALSE TEETH Rock, 5!ide or Slip? rU-lVMH an l:i.irr.,srt p.w.if t,i he nr.iikic l on .','i-er or ' T plates do ,!.. (,.e iffli n ore r-r ill In p'., e M i l o' ...c ,r or rock No mi:r.MV v"oe i-st. tate or leelliu l .tslfl. 1 H l4lk.tllltc i non .iiti tVe not sour Clie, ks oiete otor breath (let FAr-1 l.k-'TH at drui counters eiertehere siWooly West Horse Slated For Action In Circuit By I)K K BR IOCS A horse stealing case with a.l of the dramatics of a TV sior of the old West was to have come to a climax in Klamath County Circuit Court at noon, to day, when Judge David R. Van- aenoerg was ..,...,,.. ... IL II. At a.w4 IWr. Chocktoot, 30. on charges of Ur ceny of livestock. The defendants were anwni various others named on ers indictments returned by the stand Friday. Three of thoe cited. eluding Hickon. were apfirehriKi ed by sheriff's de(xities lx-t wif k end. Tlie other two were inipli- cated in two unrelated shooting . Hum. Vux- s-nd l!ut he ami and are J. D Kness. about 8" ! drinking with of Beatty. and Robert Hunt, cu Agency, both charged with as sault with a dangerous weapon ii,ti 1 inriirvcilv mvolted in the horse larceny case, is ac cused of wounding Howard Wise in the thigh with a bulWt Iired from a large caliber rule last March 1. Kness was indicted (or wound ing his estranged wife. Gloria. three or four times with bullets discharged from a .22 caliber pis tol and also for tlie beating of the victim's mother. Mrs. Doris Bell, during an incident at the latler's home in Beatty. reb. 26 The story of the horse steal ing incident developed Oct. ! when Monroe Faithful and La- vina Henrv. both of Beatty. re ported to Sheriff Murray "Red" Britton that two colts had been stolen from their property, Sheriff Britton said Monday that Chocktoot and Hickson, both of whom have served prison terms for murder, were suspect ed of the theft at the time it was committed. The report sent sheriff's depu ties to remote parts of Indian Reservation Lands and public grazing lands in Klamath Coun ty, as well as other areas in the county and Northern California to seek the missing colts. Meanwhile, the stolen animals were grazing unnoticed amon, other livestock about eight miles north of the scene of the theft. Late this winter, as sheriff's deputies extended (heir search into Deschutes County in the north and Anderson. Calif., to the south, Chocktoot moved on: of the colts to his residence a! 1243 Kane Street and transport ed the other to the property of Bob Huitt at Agency, according to the sheriff. The first break in the case oc curred about (he end of Febru ary after Chocktoot, Hickson, and three others had been named on two indictments charging them with the larceny of two saddles and the beating of Francis Hutch inson of Beatty. At that time the sheriff's office was informed that Hickson and Chocktoot, accompanied by four others, had stolen the colts and relocated them north of Beatty, before later transporting them elsewhere. Acting immediately on the tip, deputies traced one of the ani mals to the Bob Huitt home at Agency and located the other at the Chocktoot residence on Kane Street. Huitt told the sheriff that Chocktoot had presented him with the colt. To later interrogation by the sheriff, Chocktoot stated that he had purchased the ani mals in Idaho but was unable tn name the seller. Two days later, according to the sheriff's office, a shooting at Agency led tlie sheriff to believe that Chockloot had dispatched a killer to slay Huitt for implicat ing him in the theft of the colts, but a subsequent investigation by deputies proved otherwise. Huitt, indicted for assault with a dangerous weapon as a result of tlie shooting at Agency, stated that he was in his Kitchen when he observed a man, later identi throuch a window frnrn niiKiHe Active in lodge affairs, Liggett was honored as a 50-year mem ber and presented a life member ship in the Pueblo. Colo.. Lodge. AFJcAM, in liKil. He was also a member of the Ohio Northern Uni versity Alumni Association. Survivors include two daughters t!54 Friends may contribute to the Intercommunity Hospital Me monal Fund Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch Relieves Pain s.w T-fk, v v. ,Pn - For th ArM tim urifnc hfti found nw hraling ur.tnct with th ton ntninr ability to ihnnk h'mor rhfudi, top itch i nr. and relitvt Pm ithout iurtry. In ci afttr ta. hilt ftntly rflitving pain, actual reduction lisUinkap 1 took pUc. Moil amaung of all-rtulu wr of the Ivhim- tin itt mkI he picked up hi tV .15 caliber rille and tired thiwih the wuiw at ie. who then lUitcd (mm Uw As Vi h-mi! tlie vicini ty ivt tu!e lluill appeared . . . ' tvi:luii iv al tl runner. IV rni'.itS liiK'l Wis" in tlie li atl he w ivmnvni hy his Avx4iUnt to tV Huitt house. ?vi he irnwitHsl until a Chilo gu:n AtutHiUtHY tiinpi ted him to the K:nulh Valley IKv-pital the tollowinj; U . W Mi told by Wis was at ar:ivr with tlw one related by ,"'' ' '"'T ' '""""s Jstalci that Huitt ordered him to (l fmw me trom eise- where in the house. He did so. I .V. I 1 i rW'iTVv;-. STOLEN COLT RECOVERED Sheriff's deputy Alvie Younqblood I left, foreground!, Chiloquin, works with Bob Huitt (on ramp), Agency, in shoving a colt that was re ported stolen onto a truck. The colt was one two horses reported missing by a Beatty man in October end was located at Huitt's residence in Agency last month. Others pictured left to right, are Gordon Gibbons, operator of the truck; Everett Malone, state brand inspector, and R. W. Wheeler, livestock officer for the State Department of Agriculture. The Klamath County grand jury has indicted Perry Chocktoot of Klamath Falls and Wilbur Hickson of Beatty for the larceny of the colts. Huitt said Chocktoot had given him the colt. Licensed Practical Slate Seminar For Oregon Licensed Practical Nurses Association, Inc., has planned a seminar to be held in the Osborne Hotel in Eugene March 27-28. The third annual meeting wil be under the direction of Don Low, coordinator of Statewide Ex tension Service, University of Ore-, gon campus. Purpose of the seminar is to present information and to pro vide an opportunity for exchange of ideas to meet the increasing re sponsibilities of the Licensed Practical Nurse as an individual and also as a member of the or ganization. Many issues such as economic, security, mandatory law and group development will be ex plained by some of the foremost authorities from the University of Oregon faculty. Questions will be encouraged: City Police Investigate Weekend Burglary Tries A break-in at tlie Pacific Linen- Mechanics Uniform Service, the theft of an automobile and a case of robbery by force were report ed to the city police over the weekend. Police reiwrted ' that the back door of the linen cleaning service, 525 Market Street, was kicked in late Friday night or early Satur day morning and the office safe was broken into. ' Apparently nothing was taken, however, police said. There are ino suspects in the case so far Bryon Hall. 320 Upham Street. notified police that about 85 rec ords valued at $ni were stolen from him while he was on his way home from a dance at the' Klamath Auditorium at 9:45 p.m. Friday. j The robbery occurred on South; Tenth Street, between Main and Pine streets. Hall said two young men wearing OTI letterman jack ets jumped out of a 1!4!) or 1050 light green or yellow Hudson and threatened bodily harm if he didn't turn over the records City police are investigating the case, but have not made any ar rests yet. Loe'w. Klinuer. 4147 Douglas Street, reported to police that his l!i5t two-door green Chevrolet was slolen from tlie Juckeland Used I to thorough that iuffrcrs made atomhing tatrmntj like "Pile ! havp reai4d to he a problem!" The ecrl i a tipw healing tub j itanre i Bio-P ne l discovery of j a norid-famniit research mMituta. Thia tubitance 11 now available in ennpoetlery or emtmt form un.fr the name r'fmra(a W. At all drug counter. Rustling but not quickly enough to suit Huitt. who beg.in firing (lie rifle .it tlie floor near Wife's (ret. W ise rushed out of tlie house and seconds later Huitt appeared on the front po'" "hci'c ,no shooting occurred, according In the victim's statement. Meanwhile. Chocktoot had come lo believe that his ex-wife. Joyce, and her mother, Mrs June Dunn, had been the informants who im plicated him in the horse lar ceny case, the- sheriff said. Two days after the shooting incident at Agency. Chocktoot. along with Hickson, appeared at tlie home of Mrs. Dunn, 1226 Kane Street, and threatened her with, "I'm going to kill you." Chocktoot allegedly forced his wav through tlie front door of the house and began struggling with Mrs. Dunn, who finally broke awav and ran to her neighbors' - JtV rats tntsl. in" Those attending will receive a certificate of completion from the General Extension Division of Oregon State System of Higher Education. Attending from Klamath Falls will be Mrs. Helen Dwyer, state president of LPNA, Hclon Bates, Area 8 president, and others. Mrs. Dwyer is at present visit ing cities and towns in Oregon in the interest of House Bill No. 1360, passed by the 1961 legisla ture, relating to labor relations involving licensed professional and practical nurses employed in health care facilities. Under the new law Oregon en courages the practice of collective bargaining between employers and employes of health care fa cilities in both public and private health care facilities. Both li censed professional and practical nurses performing services for Car lot at South Eleventh Street and Klamath Avenue, sometime last week. The car carried a state of Ore gon license numbered 5P-7428. Now at Miller's! Waitress Skirts Black Nylon Stratcjhr 1 Flair Sitts 8 to 1 8 5.98 Alto in stock - a complete selection of UNIFORMS by: Bob Evoni Barco White Swan Tiffeny All Waitretl Apreni nd Bells in our Notions Dipt. Charge Court Lome. Georce and Jim Phillips. 1216 Kane Street. Chocktoot caught up with Mrs. Dunn in front of the Phillips' Ivome. knocked her down, and be gan kicking her. sheriff's deputies related. Meanwhile, the Phillips rushed from the house and pulled Chockloot from the beaten wom an, alter a struggle during which the interccders struck the attack er with a shovel. Hickson en tered tlie melee and soon after state police arrived and took the latter and Chocktoot into custody Mrs. Dunn at first declined lo receive treatment (or her injuries but later went to the Klamath Valley Hospit'l where she was diagnosed as having a broken jaw. As a result of the beating. Chocktoot and Hickson were also indicted by the grand jury for assault and battery by force and violence likely to do great bodily harm. J 't 2 ' -4 -tr-nwr. 1 Nurses Eugene compensation except members ol a religious order assigned as part of obligations to the order, are in cluded in the bill. ; The bill stipulates that it will be an unfair labor practice for an employe or representative of an employe to encourage, participate in or cause a strike or work stop page against or directly involving a health care facility. Disputes will be under admin istration of the labor commission er and will be publicized by local news media. Speakers at the seminar will be Dr. Edwin Beal, on the staff of the University of Oregon, "Eco nomic Security"; Dr. Scott No bles, on "Communications"; Miss Guhli Olson, professor of nursing education, on "Group Develop ment"; Dr. Lloyd Lovell on "Dy namics, and Arthur Miller, in dividual Leadership." Briefs MR. ANI) MRS. WILLIAM L. GIBSON and children, formerly of Klamath Falls, are now resid ing at 2022 First Ave. N. in Pay ette, Idaho. He is associated with the First National Bank of On tario. Ore. I 4 vi V I