'PACE 4A
HERALD AND NEWS,
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
NEW YORK STOCKS
By United Press International
: Allied Chemical 53'
Alum Co Am ' 69V
American Air lanes 29 Vt
American Can 44
American Motors 2014
2 AT & T 129
? American Tol)acco 29'4
5 Anaconda Copper 49
j Armco 64
J American Standard 17H
Bendfx Corp 49
Bethlehem Steel 32
J Boeing Air 34',j
i Brunswick 11 'A
' Caterpillar Corp 43',4
' Chrysler Corp 90
! Coca Cola 103
; C.B.S. 7914
Columbia Gas 29
Continental Can 43
; Crown Zellerhach 52
-; Cruckle Steel . . . 23
j Dow Chemical 59
i Dn Pont 248'4
t Eastman Kodak , 113
4 4&-estone 37
5 JFord 50
General Dynamics 25
j General Electric ' 80
Genera! Foods 86'4
General Motors 79H
'General Portland Cement 224
; 'Georgia Pacific 53
North Ry 53'4
Greyhound 45
Gulf Oil , 47?i
Homestake 46V4
-Jdaho Power 34
J.B.M. 483
ijnt Paper 33
Johns Manville , 48
JCennecott Copper 76'4
Jjockheed Aircraft " 36! a
JIartin 18T4
fllerck . 1034
Montana Power 37'4
Montgomery Ward 37
Nat'l Biscuit 56V,
'New York Central 2074
Pac Gas Elcc 31
Penney J.C. 45
Penn RR '20
Permanente Cement 17'4
Phillips 51
Procter Gamble , 80' i
Radio Corporation 91
Richfield Oil 45lit
Safmrav '' 't " 604
ear , 98'i
Shell Oil li
:Socony Mobil Oil 66
"Southern Co 55
-Southern Pacific 34
Sperry Rand U'.i
Standard California 63
Standard Indiana 64
Standard N.J. f9
Stokely Van Camp 2l'a
Sim Mines 10'4
JTexos Co. 67'4
frexas Gulf Sulfur 18
."Texas Pacific Land Trust 27
a-hiokol 20
iTrans America 51
Ifrans World Air 25
ffri-Continental , 47
JLTnlon Pacific 40
United Aircraft 44
IJJnhed Air Lines 34
SJ.S. Plywood 61
;U.S. Rubber .' 49
JJ.S. Steel 53
;UpHed Utilities 40
MUTUAL FUNDS
;Pflces until 10 a.m. PDT today
: Rid Asked
Affiliated Fund 8 38 9.06
-Atomic Fund 4.78 5.22
-Blue Ridgo 11.98 13.09
Bullock 13.93 15.28
:Chomical Fund 12.31 13.46
'.Colonial Fund 11.66 12.74
XComw. Inv. . 10.08 11.02
: Diver Growth 8.88 9.73
tDreyfus 18.19 19.77
tE i H Stock ' 14.28 15.43
; Fidelity Capital 9.79 10.64
;Fidelity Trend 16.71 . 18.16
Fundamental . 10.14 11.11
JF.I.F. 4.38 4.80
Founders Fund 6 59 7.16
J Group Sec Com 13.72 15.02
:Gr Sec Avia El 7.13 7.82
S Hamilton ll.D.A. 5.07 5.54
ilCA 10.95 11.97
Investors' Group
Intercontinental
C Mutual
Stock
i Selective
Variable
Keystone S-l
, Keystone S-3
Keystone S-4
M.I.T.
v M.I.T. Growth
Nat'l Inv
Nat'l Sec J)iv
Nat'l Sec Growth
; Putnam Fund
v Putnam Growth
Selected Amcr
Shareholders
Z Sup Inv Ser
United Accum
; United Canada
United Income
, United Science
? : Value Lines
Wellington
j! Windsor
A Whitehall
6.27
11.43
19.2.1
10.47
7.12
22.36
6.78
12.39
20.38
11.19
7.69
24.40
16.38
4 73
16.71
923
17.24
466
9.10
16.69
9.78
10.79
12.15
8 51
16.46
1381
7.80
5.89
16.08
1565
15.04
15.01
4.33
15.29
8 45
15.95
4.26
8.33
15.27
8.93
9.98
11.12
781
15.06
18.27
12.64
7.14
5.39
14.13
14.40
13.91
i
LOCAL SECURITIES
3 Bank America
5 Boise Cascade
5 Cal Pac Util
5 Con Frciglit
3 Cyprus Mines
$ Equitable S & L
1st Nat'l Bank
' Jantzen
Morrison Knudsen
Mult Kennels
,N.W. Natural Gas
lOregon Metal
"fap & L
7r.v.
A5
31VS,
24
10
22
30
72
24
29
4
34
I
63
33
26
10
24
32
75
25
31
4
35
1
28
28
92
23
25
32
26
26
R!
21
23
30'
VS. Nat'l Bank
Tektronix
UV..I Cnvmt Tol
' Wyrtiaeuer
Wcdneiday. Oclober 23, 1963
Klamath rallt. Ore.
WALL STREET
By United Press International
Stocks mixed in moderately
active trading.
Bonds mixed.
U.S. government bonds firm
in quiet trading.
American slocks Irregularly
lower.
Cotton futures steady.
Wheat closed off to up ;
corn up to off ; oats up
V to cent; rye off to
cent; soybeans off to 1
cents a bushel.
Wall Street Chatter
NEW YORK (UPll-Kenncth
Ward of Ilaydcn, Stone & Co.
points out that "no average
can possibly clearly reflect the
action of the many present day
cross currents, or considerably
twitching operations that have
been taking place in the mar
ket recently."
"In fact," he adds, "such an
irregular and selective techni
cal price performance, based
on sudden changes in corpor
ate and other news, has been
primarily responsible for the
difficulty of trying to pin-point
the direction of tlic averages.
It is quite interesting to note
that many of the same indivi
duals end services who have
been pessimistic toward the
market for the past six months
to a year, are now stressing
the necessity of buying careful
ly selected stocks. This has
been and still is the right poli
cy to adopt."
Standard & Poor's says that
"prospects are that the rise
will be extended under the sti
mulus of encouraging business
trends."
Livestock
KLAMATH FAL1J
Livestock Auction Market
Oct. 22
Receipts: All Cattle 230;
Calves 43; Hogs 100; Sheep 127.
Last week: Cattle 1785;
Calves 690; Hogs 22; Sheep 16.
Compared last Tuesday, a 1 1
classes cattle about steady, con
sidering quality and weighing
conditions.
Cows: Utility. 12.70-15.50; Cut-ters-Canners.
9.10-13.50.
Bulls: Util. & Cmcl., 17-19.
Stockers & Feeders: Steers:
Good-Choice, 575-645 lbs., 20.80
22.80; Good - Choice, 690 - 755
lbs., 19.10-21; Com.-Med., 17-20;
Hplstein, 17.10-18.70.
Heifers: Good Choice, 450
640 lbs., 18.80-21.10; Good -Choice,
(M0 725 lbs., 17-18.23;
Com.-Med.. 15.00-18.10.
Steer Calves: Good
400-470 lbs., 24.70-25.90.
Heifer Calves: Good
Choice,
Choice,
350-415 lbs., 21.70-23.20.
Cows: Good bred heifers, 166;
Med.-Good pairs, 197.59; Com.
Med. Cows, 101-122.50.
Baby Calves: beef, 37.50 per
head.
Hogs: U.S. 1 & 2 Barrows
& Gilts, 16-16.10; Wcaner Pigs,
4.50-11 per head.
Sliecp: Feeder Lambs, Good
Choice, 13-15.80; Slaughter ewes,
3.25-4.10.
Reiwrted by F. A. Skinner,
county extension agent.
PORTLAND (UPI) - I USD A)
Livestock:
Cattle 200. Slaughter heifers
mixed high standard-good 600
1000 lb 21; standard 17.25-18;
cows canncr-cutter 10-14, cutter
12 up; bulls single 875 H utility
16.
Calves 50. High good-choice
slaughter 250-305 lb 27-29.
Hugs 50. No early test.
Sheep 200. One lot mostly
choice wooled slaughter lambs
18; few lots choice, end o f
prime shorn 1 pelts 17-17.23;
good-mostly choice 16.50-17.
Grains
CHICAGO UPH - Grain
range:
High Low Close
WHEAT
Dec
Mar
May
Jul
Sep
OATS
May
Jul.
RYE
May
Jul
2.13 2.11 2.12
2.13 2.12 2.12
2.09 2.08 2.08
1.74 1.72 1.72
1.75 1.73 1.73
.71
.73
.73
.67
.70 .70
.73 .73
.72 .73
.67 .67
1.57 1.54 1.54
1.58 1.57 1.57
1.58 1.55 1.55
1.49 1.46 1.47
Potatoes
PORTLAND (UPI I - Potato
market steady; too lb. sks
washed Russets U.S. No 1 un
less otherwise stated: Size A
Wash. 2.40-2.73: 6-14 oi. 2.50
2.75: Oregon 2 65-3.00; few high
er: bakers 2.90-3.00, cited 2 oi.
spread 3.50-3.75; U.S. No 2 bak
ers 1.25-2 35.
Obituaries
MARKS
Prink Hurry Ml'ki. O'Kt '
Oct. 13. IW3. Sufwiverl: wlf. BIiKh
E . Of ttlit. Cllyi OftUHMtrt. Mr S. A.
Jtckten, ArcNIA. Cllll. And Mrt Jot
Crannitr. LlvUvtttt. Cullf I llfodcualv
(trt. Mr. Wllllm WtlMD And Mrs.
Lrndtrt Bigatr, both of Fvlifrton. Cn.
Alto II grAndchlklrAA. brntntr. Jrwpl
ft., KlAmttri FAllft. Funtrtl tArvlcrt
will bA AnoMirKtd OV WArd t KIAmith
PunArAI Homt.
ill ft "
f . -
THE CIRCUS IS COMING Visitors to the 27th annual Klamath Basin Potato Fes
tival at Merrill Friday and Saturday, Oct. 25-26, will find a free circus, "Yes, Sir!"
free, the Stan Kramien Circus with trained animals, lions, ponies, dogs, chimpanzees
and ToTo, the smallest known trained elephant. ToTo can do just about everything
trained elephants can do. There will be three free shows daily. ToTo charmed old and
young visitors to the Oregon State Fair this fall in Salem.
Cap. Boots
Of Airman
Recovered
The Coast Guard has found a
cap, boots and other gear which
were in a boat that was
believed to have capsized with
S.Sgt. James Morclock, 30, of
Kingsley Field, last Saturday at
the mouth of the Chetco River
The Coast Guard said the gejr
was found on the beach. The
airman is missing and presumed
drowned.
Morclock, assigned to the au
tomotive maintenance shop at
the airfield, had foreign serv
ice at Guam, England and Ger
many before he was assigned
here recently from Geiger Field,
Spokane.
He lived at 701 Division Street
with his wire, Jean, and their
three daughters.
Accident
Hurts Pair
Two Klamath Falls men were
injured Tuesday night when
their autos collided head-on at
North Eleventh and Washington
streets during a heavy rain
storm. Both drivers wore taken to
Klamath Valley Hospital for
treatment of non-serious cuts
and abrasions.
Police said the accident oc
curred at 9: 15 p.m. when a 1957
sedan westbound on North Elev
enth was preparing to turn onto
Washington and was near the
center line. Olficcrs said an
cast hound 1955 sedan was also
crowding the center line and
the two cars collided head-on.
Tlie first auto was driven by
Norhcrt Antone Schlccpcr. 47,
014 Grant, and the other vehicle
was driven by Frederick Bob
Clark, 20, 2710 Angle Street.
Both cars were sevcrly dam
aged. Police issued no citations.
House Fire Kills Three
NORWAY, Ore. (UPP-Three
persons, including two children,
died Tuesday when fire swept
through a two-story house at
this community between Myrtle
Point and Coquillc in southwest
Oregon.
The dead were tentatively
identified as Mrs. Tinnic Morton,
54, Slayton; Linda Weekly, 4,
and her brother, Darrcll, 2. both
of Norway.
Mrs. Jennie Weekly, 38, was
taken to Mast Hospital in
Mvrtlc Point with burns on the
Downtown Study Reported
Now About Half Completed
Tlie Klamath Jalls Commer
cial Study, part of the Down
town Redevelopment Project, is
about half completed, it was an
nounced today.
Rod Bell, prosklenl of t h e
Klamath Merchants Association,
released a sctvcdule showing
Weekend Visit
Mrs. William L. Garrlott and
young grandson, Billy Garriotl,
of Ihmsmuir spent the weekend
with Mrs. GrirrMt's parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Marlon Barnes of
Olene. Barnes is an ex-Klamath
County deputy sheriff. Mrs.
Garriott was raised in Klamath
County.
' i.
Busy Schedule Readied
For Festival At Merrill
MERRILL Committees for
the 27th annual Klamath Basin
Potato Festival at Merrill are
whipping last minute prepara
tions into shape for the two-day
festival Friday and Saturday,
Oct. 26-27.
The festival, sponsored by the
Merrill Lions Club, brings fun
galore, thrills and football chills,
starting with the crowning of a
pretty girl as festival queen on
Friday night.
Agricultural, potato foods and
flower show exhibits in the high
school gymnasium, community
booths and outside exhibits of
farm implements will be open
both days.
Queen Nondico McFall of Bo
nanza will be crowned and her
court of princesses, Susan Bus-'
sell, Tulelake; Dee Harris, Ma
tin; Carol Lee Haskins, Merrill;
Micki Wolff, Chiloquin, and
Cheryl Thurman. Henley, and
junior princesses Mary Ann Ste
venson and Virginia Kcady, Bo
nanza, will be introduced during
the Friday night banquet at 7:30
in the grade school gymnasium.
Runncrup in the queen con
test will be named at that time.
Banquet speaker will be S. W.
Patty, Portland, formerly of
Most Of Timber Downed
Year Ago Reported Sold
Approximately 80 per cent of
the two billion board feet of na
tional forest timber blown down
on Columbus Day 1962 was sold
during the year following the
storm, reports J. Herbert Stone,
regional forester, U.S. Forest
Service.
In the first 12 months after
lire destructive storm. 1.225
sales of windtlirown timber were
made on the national forests of
Oregon and Washington. Tho
sales involved more than 1
arms, face and head.
Reports indicated the fire
broke out between 6 and 6:30
a.m.
Also escaping Hie blaze were
Jack Morton, 19: Lester Lee
Morton, 14, and Dennis Murphy,
in his early 20' s.
Authorities said Mrs. Weekly
and Jack Morton jumped from
I lie second story to escape.
The bodies were taken to a
Myrtle Point mortuary.
Cause of the fire was un
known. most facets of tlie study to lie
mope titan half completed. The
finished in December
One phase of live study is the
model of tlie downtown area
completed earlier this month by
Mario Martin of lite Communi
ty Planning Office, which is
conducting the study.
Another pha.-e is tlie collec
tion and analysis of tlie custo
mer questionnaires from down
town merchants w hich ill map
the Klamath Falls trade area.
Other phases include deter
mination of tlie aiws of down
town buiklings, collection of
land use daNi, mapping, traffic
(titdtc and construction
The Oregon Slate Highway
entire project is expected to be
m in Estnemm.il : mumummtvvi-i
Klamath Falls, now assistant
vice president and manager of
the marketing department. First
National Bank of Oregon. Lefty
Wild Eagle Wilder of Fort
Klamath will present his danc
ers in Indian costumes.
Saturday a parade of floats,
musical groups, clowns, organ
izations, riders and other units,
will travel down Front Street
starting at 11 a.m.
The parade will be followed
by a free barbecue for an ex
pected 2.000 to 2.500 visitors at
the community hall. Kingsley
Field jets will make a fly-over.
Richard Davison and Associates
of Klamath Falls will make par
achute jumps at 1 p.m.
The Merrill Huskies and the
Bonanza Antlers will meet on
the high school football field at
2:30 p.m. A second league game
is scheduled between the Matin
Mustangs and the Chiloquin
Panthers at 7:30.
The annual Harvest Ball and
presentation of the royal court
will be at 10 p.m. in the com
munity hall.
The public is invited. Banquet
tickets at $2.50 per plate may
be had from the Klamath Falls
Chamber of Commerce. Merrill
business firms and at the door.
billion board feet of timber. An
estimated 450 million board feet
remain to be sold.
Nearly billion board feet of
tlie accessible blowdow n h a s
been logged, and H is estimated
that 75 per cent of the total
salvablc blowdown will be har
vested by May 30. 1964. if w in
ter weather is not too severe.
Tlie timber salvage program
is proceeding at a very satisfac
tory pace. Stone said, despite
difficulties encountered by tim
ber purchasers and the forest
service. A great volume of the
blowdown timber on national
forest land was in rough terrain.
This situation, coupled with the
uprooted and broken condition
of tlie trees, made sales prepa
ration and logging both difficult
and hazardous in many areas.
Found Dead
Barbara E. Moen, 60. was
found dead in her residence at
202 East Main Tuesday after
noon, the apparent victim of an
overdose of barbituates. Authori
ties termed the death a suicide.
Department is conducting t h e
traffic survey.
Don Joluison. urban planning
director of tlie University of
Oregon, has assumed overall
supervision of the project be
cause there has been no city
planner since the resignation of
Ken Blackman six weeks ago.
Martin has been collecting
tlie bulk of the material tor tlie
study.
Harvest Worker Arrested In Bend
After Slaying In Merrill Last Night
A Mexican potato harvest
worker was arrested in Bend
by Oregon State Police mo
ments before noon today in con
nection with the death of Rudy
Rodriguez, a 35-year-old farm
laborer of Phoenix, Ariz., who
was shot with a bullet dis
charged from a .32 caliber pis
tol in Merrill about 3 a.m. this
morning.
The subject of an intensive
search by Southern Oregon and
Northern California law en
forcement officers early today
was Isabel Pina Rodriguez, who
was arrested while driving
through Bend.
State police indicated that
the weapon used in the slaying
was found in the 1956 station
wagon Isabel had been driving.
Isabel is alleged to have shot
and killed the victim as the two
men were riding in a car with
five other Mexicans.
Unconfirmed reports stale
that Isabel and Rudy had been
quarreling about a food bill be
fore the shooting.
The two men are not related.
The slaying first became
known about 4 a.m. when a wit
ness of the shooting reported
the incident to a night officer,
Pete Peterson of Tulelake.
Peterson then related the re
port to Modoc County Deputy
Sheriff William Miller and he
located the body about an hour
and a half later.
Reliable sources state that
the victim was shot through the
head as the Mexicans were
drinking beer and driving
through Merrill. They continued
through that community to
ward' the Malin Labor Camp
and stopped near tlie Norman
Jacobs' ranch where they dis
posed of the body in a dry
ditch.
The group continued to the la
bor camp where Isabel fled
in an automobile belonging to
his brother, Thomas Rodriguez,
a witness of the shooting.
County Gets
Boat Money
Klamath County has received
$8,389.25 from the Oregon State
Marine Board as its share of
disbursements of fees paid by
boatowners.
The Marine Board, at its
meeting last week, authorized
the disbursement of more than
a quarter of a million dollars
to 36 counties. Klamath's share
was based on the county boat
registration of 1,459.
From the proceeds paid by
boaters, the board pays the
cost of administration and the
"tithe" to the general fund.
The balance is then returned to
the respective counties based
on the number of boats regis
tered in each county. The total
amount disbursed to counties
last week was $255,558.75. The
counties received $5.75 for each
boat registered.
Chamber Plans
Dinner Meeting
CHILOQUIN - Tlie Chiloquin
Chamber of Commerce will hold
e dinner meeting on Monday at
6:30 p.m. in tlie Chiloquin Audi
torium. Members and others in
terested in tlie chamber's ac
tivities are invited to attend.
The entertainment for the eve
ning will include a program of
slides on Alaska taken by Earl
and Mclita Hall.
Steering Failure Causes
Crash, No One Injured
Tlie steering column of a car
broke w hile a woman was driv
ing the vehicle on South Sixth
Street Tuesday evening and the
Pair Presents
Japan Program
S.Sgt. John II. Hinely and
Mrs. Miyako Haruioll gave a
one-hour speech and picture
presentation on Japan for 22
members of Die Beta Sigma Phi
sorority Oct. 15.
Sergeant Hinely. air opera
tions technician, recently re
turned from an assignment at
Misawa AB, Japan. Mrs. Hart
noil is a native of Hokkaido.
She is the wife of Chief War
rant Officer John F. Hartnoll
Jr., base communications offi-
Bob Jonflf'
Southern Oregon
Insurance Agency
Shasta Way
TU 2-4671
Meanwhile, Thomas and the
witness who reported the slay
ing to Peterson fled south
to Tulelake. Thomas left tlie
witness at Tulelake and contin
ued south toward Weed.
Asofficersofthe Oregon
State Police and Klamath Coun
ty Sheriff's Office were seeking
the weapon, a highway patrol
car of the Siskiyou Sheriff's Of
fice apprehended Thomas Rod
riguez driving through Weed.
To interrogation by Siskiyou
County Sheriff A. B. Cottar,
Thomas said that he and h i s
Mishap Demolishes Auto,
Driver Escapes Unhurt
A Kingsley Field motorist
miraculously escaped injury
early Tuesday night when his
automobile was demolished af
ter it went into a ditch along
Washburn Way, about one-half
mile south of South Sixth Street,
Oregon State Polije have re
ported. Wool Event
Still Open
Any girl who has made a gar
ment of wool since January of
this year is eligible to enter the
1963 "Make It Yourself With
Wool" Home Sewing Contest un
til the day of the judging, Sat
urday, Oct. 26, Judging will be
at the city library in Klamath
Falls. The style show of gar
ments made is planned for Sun
day afternoon at the city li
brary. Girls 13 through 21 are eligi
ble to enter in the three divi
sions. Beginning seamstresses,
13 through 15, will enter the
sub-deb class with a choice of
skirt, a skirt and slcevless top,
or jumper. In the Junior Divi
sion for girls, 14 through 17,
and the Senior Division for
girls, the entries may be a
dress, coat, suit or ensemble.
Winners at the local level will
enter the state contest to com
pete for the big stale and na
tional prizes which include a 14
day tour of the Caribbean, a
college scholarship, or a share
of the $35,000 in prizes.
Woodring Goes
To Conference
Klamath Falls Parks and Rec
reation Department Director
Gary Woodring was scheduled
to leave the city this evening
for Portland to attend the 1963
Oregon Parks and Recreation
Society Conference.
' Woodring will participate in a
panel on "Our Professional Road
Ahead Freeway or Dead End"
at the conference, to be held
Thursday and Friday at the
Multnomah Hotel.
Theme of the conference will
be "Your Professional Image."
Thomas W. Lantz, retired direc
tor of Tacoma, Wash., parks
and recreation, will be featured
as the main speaker at a ban
quet Thursday evening.
Gunshot Kills
Local Resident
Frank Harry Marks. 67. died
late Tuesday night of what
authorities termed a self-inflicted
gunshot wound in the head.
Marks was found in tlie base
ment of his home at 2105 Au
burn at 12:10 this morning. Po
lice said he had been in i 1 1
health.
auto careened into a parked
car.
Police said the driver, Mabel
Marie Bryson, 33. 2618 Board
man, was not injured.
Mrs. Bryson told police she
w as driving w est on South Sixth
and was making a lane change
from the right to left lane when
the steering wheel became free
turning in her hands.
The car made a sweeping U
turn across the eastbound lanes
of traffic and plouglied into a
car parked on tlie south side of
the street. The parked car is
owned by Larry Allen Gibbs,
4304 Anderson. Both it and Mrs.
Bryson's 1954 sedan received
moderate damages.
F
KEVSMPERSVI
sura MOST! f I
If craft an&$eto$
J
companions had been drinking
together in t h e automobile
"w h e n tlie gun accidentally
went off."
Thomas said that he and tlie
others who had witnessed the
slaying had come to Oregon
from Texas to work in the po
tato harvest. Sheriff Cottar is
holding Rodriguez as a materi
al witness for the local district
attorney's office.
District Attorney Dale Crab
tree lias filed a complaint
charging 'Isabel Rodriguez with
first degree murder.
A. l.C. Bernabe Gomez, 21, of
Box 3205, Kingsley Field, was
northbound on Washburn Way
about 7:40 p.m. when his car
went out of control on the wet
pavement and veered into a
ditch on the right side of the
street, police said.
In another accident several
hours later, one motorist was
cited but no one was injured in
a two-car collision at the inter
section of South Sixth Street
and Altamont Drive.
Cited for failing to yield the
right of way was Kenneth Lee
Hricziscse, 28of 4140 Fargo
Street, who was completing a
U-turn around the traffic island
at the intersection when he
collided with an automobile op
erated by James Daniel Story,
18, of 615 Conger Avenue The
latter had been northbound on
Altamont Drive when the acci
dent occurred.
Damage was moderate to
both vehicles, police said.
Rainstorm Fails
To Stifle Fire
Firemen are still trying to fig
ure out how it happened but
they were called out to extin
guish a grass fire during Tues
day's rainstorm.
Some way, firemen said, a
spark from a nearby trash fire
caught grass at 1906 Johnson
Street and tlie fire managed to
burn even though it was raining.
The call was received at 4:02
Tuesday afternoon.
Council Fathers Approve
Prayer Language Change
VATICAN CITY (UPD-Ecu-mcnical
Council fathers today
overwhelmingly approved a
proposal to let Roman Catholic
bishops and priests say their
daily prayers in their own lan
guage. The proposal authorizes the
bishop of any diocese to substi
tute modern languages for
Latin in the breviary or divine
office which Catholic clergymen
and religious must say daily.
A council press spokesman
emphasized that the permission
to use modern languages in the
divine office must be granted
by a bishop "in individual cas
es" and is supposed to be re
served for situations in which a
particular priest has unusual
difficulties praying in Latin.
He said tlie text of the docu
ment stresses that Latin ordi
manly will be maintained in the
breviary and indicated that
bishops were not expected
to use their new authority to
grant blanket dispensations for
use of modern languages.
The vote was 1.904 to 131,
well above the necessary two
thirds majority.
It was tlie last and most im
portant of 12 amendments to
the fourth chapter of a liturgi
cal reform document which the
fathers have been considering
on and off since the Ecumeni
FULL OF
Savings
if !EI
J FOR YOUR
I Shopping Pleasure
KLAMATH FALLS
Weather
Roundup
Five Day Weather
Western Oregon: Total rain
heavy occurring mostly on
Thursday and Saturday or Sun
day; highs 54-64; lows 34-48;
total rain one to three inches.
Eastern Oregon: Rain more
than normal, occurring mainly
on Thursday and Saturday or
Sunday; highs in 50's; low 40
42. Tlie Dalles and Hood River:
Occasional showers through
Thursday: highs 57-63: taw 45-48
Bend: Increasing clouds, oc
casional rain Thursday with
high 65-60; low tonight 43-48.
Baker and La Grande: Most
ly cloudy, showers late Thurs
day; high about 60; low tonight
32-37.
Western Oregon: Intermittent
rain with gusty' winds tonight
and Thursday; highs 54-60; lows
44-50.
Eastern Oregon: Increasing
clouds tonight, rain likely Thurs
day: highs 54-60; low tonight'f
24-46.
Tatoosh to Blanco: Small
craft warnings up for southwest
to west winds 12-24 increasing
to south 30-40 .with gusts to 50
tonight; decreasing slowly
Thursday; showery.
Temperatures during the 24
hours ending at 4 a.m. PDT to
day.
High Low Pep
Astoria 58 47 .94
Baker 70 43 .07
Brookings 61
Medford 58 43 .62
Newport 60 49 2.07
North Bend 63 47 1.63
Pendleton 71 43 .34
Portland 61 45 .58
Redmond 63 32 .15
Salem 57 48 1.61
The Dalles 56 47
Chicago 84 65
Los Angeles 80 61
New York 60 50
Phoenix 85 65
San Francisco 71 58 .07
Washington 62 54
Fire Report
(10 a.m. Tuesday to 10 a.m..
Wednesday)
Klamath Falls Fire Department
1:58 p.m. Tuesday Martin
and Shasta Way, sawdust fire,
no damage.
Suburban Fire Department
5:07 p.m. Tuesday Big Y
Market, fire in light transform
er, slight damage to ceiling.
cal Council first convened
in the fall of 1962.
After the vote, the fathers
continued debate on another
document concerning the role
of the laity in the Catholic
Church.
Sewing Class
To Be Started
CHILOQUIN - A general
meeting to organize an adult
sew ing class w ill be held Thurs
day, Oct. 24, in the home eco
nomics room of the Chiloquin
High School from 7 to 9 p.m.
Barbara Jacobson, high school
home economics teacher, w ill in
struct the course The cost for
the scries of 10 lessons will be
$10.
Tlie class meeting on Thurs
day. Oct. 31. has been cancelled,
with the next regular meeting
scheduled Nov. 7.
10ST WEIGHT?
GAINED SOME?
Get back into thos good
clothti by having economi
cal otttrationi dona quickly
and axpartly in our ihop.
WE "REBUILD" WARDROBES
(All Work Guoranteed)
In a Hurry? Wa'll Ruth Your
Ordtr!
IDA'S
TAILOR SHOP
125 N. 8th TU 4-6122
5 CARPET
IS OUT J