Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 31, 1963, Page 4, Image 4

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PAGE-4A
HERALD AND NEWS,
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
j NEW YORK STOCKS
By United Press International
Allied Chemical 53
Alum Co Am 68Wi
American Air Lines 30'.i
American Can 43
American Motors 21'4
Tit 133V4
American Tobacco 29V
Anaconda Copper 4Hk
Armco 64H
American Standard Kit
Bendix Corp 49'
Bethlehem Steel 32'
Boeing Air 34
Brunswick 11
Caterpillar Corp 48Vj
CJn-ysler Corp 93'A
fopa Cola 103
B.S. 80
Columbia Gas 29
Continental Can 42
ij'own Zellerbach 52'i
tjjiieible Steel 22
fcurtiss Wright ' 19
Ddw Chemical 61'A
DU Pont 252V4
Eastman Kodak 1'13'A
Jestone 3814
Jjeneral Dynamics 2614
General Electric 83
General Foods 87
General Motors ' 87
Gen'l Portland Cement 22
tjeorgia Pacific 54i
qt Nor Hy 52
Greyhound 45
Gulf Oil 47i
Homestake 47',
Maho Power 34',i
tB.M. 494
Jht Paper 33'.
Johns Manville 48Vi
Kennecott Copper 76
Lockheed Aircraft 35
ilartin 19V4
Merck 105V4
Montana Power 37Vi
fontgomery Ward 36Vj
, .Nat'l Biscuit 59"
Sew York Central ' 20V4
jiQrthern Natural Gas 51
JJorthern Pacific 40'
Pac Gas Elec 3!Vi
fcenney J.C. 19
i"ermanento Cement 16
JjfiiUips 50
IWocter Gamble 79
tRadio Corp 95V4
Richfield Oil 43
;SaJeway 61V4
Sears 89
jSholl Oil 48
Soeony Mobil Oil 66
'Southern Co 52
3&ithern Pacific 33
Sperry Rand 17
Standard California 64
.Standard Indiana 62
'.Standard N.J. 71
Sun Mines 10
fexas Co. 66
texas Gulf Sulfur 17
Tex. Pac. Land Trust 26
Thiokol i' . 23
-Tjans America 51
ians World Air 26
3i-Conlinental 46
3?fiion Carbide 113
jJttion Pacific 39
JJoiled Air Lines 36
JJ;S. (Plywood 60
tJ.S. Rubber 47
J. Steel 53
United Utilities 40
tyest Bank Corp 42
rWcstinghouse 37
Jfiungstown 127
:-; LOCAL SECURITIES
2)aiik America 65 G8Vi
POise Cascade 32 34
;Cal Pac Util 24 26
JJon Freight 9 10
Cyprus Mines 22 23
Equitable S&L 30 32
1st Nafl Bank 72 75
Jantzen 23 26
"Morrison Knud 29 31
-IVTVilt Kennels 3 4
f.W. Natural Gas 32 34
kjregon Metal 1 1
SPl'&L 26 27
KlE 25 27
ar.S. Nat'l Bank 88 92
:Toktronix 22 24
:Wst Coast Tol 23 25
jWoyerhaeuser 32 34
t MUTUAL FUNDS
Prkrs until 10 a.m. TDT today
V Bid Asked
Affiliated Fund 8.42 9.10
A'tomlc Fund 4.77 5.20
JJluc Ridge 11.97 13.08
Bullock 14.01 15.35
Chemical Fund 12.38 13.54
Colonial Fund 11.70 12.79
.'Comw. lm'. 10.12 11.06
3iver Growth 8 94 9.80
3F)reyfus 18.39 19.94
IK & H Stock 14.30 15.45
fidelity Capital 9.75 10.60
;Fide!ity Trend 16.62 18.07
Fundamental 10.22 11.20
;F;!.P. 4.38 4.80
("bunders Fund 6.63 7.21
Graip Sec Com 13.72 15.02
:6r Sec Avia El 7.15 7.84
:Hnmilton H.D.A. 5.06 5.53
riocorp Inv. 7.26 7.93
:lCA 11.05 1208
; Investors' Group
Intercontinental 6 24 6 74
Mutual 11.50 12.43
t'Stock 19.44 21.01
l Selective 10.48 11.11
I Keystone S I 22.46 24 51
keystone S-3 15.08 16.45
Z Keystone S-4 4.33 4.74
;M.I.T. 15.38 16.81
:M IT. Growth 8.46 9.25
;9fat'l Inv. 15.94 17.23
; Nat'l Sec Div 4.25 4.64
Nafl Sec Growth 6.30 7.07
: Nat l Sec Stock 8.10 8 85
.Selected Amer 10 N 10 84
'Shareholders 11.13 12 16
1 8up Inv Scr 7.88 8.59
United Accum 15.11 16.51
United Canada 18 27
United Income 12.71 13.89
lTnilawf ) II ? III
Thursday, October 31, 1963
Klamath Falli, Ore.
WALL STREET
NEW YORK (UPII Stocks
failed to set a trend today.
Dow Jones industrial average
moved up from its low at the
close. Rails pulled the surprise
of the day by holding a steady
gain throughout.
Brokers had predicted that the
market might make another
break out on the upside once
the carriers caught up to the
rest of the market.
Wall Street Chatter
NEW YORK (UPII - "The
present market is highly profes
sional, extremely selective, and
no place for the amateur spec
ulator," says the Alexander
Hamilton Institute.
It says that "institutional in
vestors and mutual funds that
have been mainly responsible
for the rise in investment grade
stocks since Juno and October
of last year, are reported to be
delaying new commitments in
blue chip stocks that have had
substantial rises. Some profit
taking has been evident."
Harris, Upham & Co. notes
that most people arc not as dis
turbed about the recent steel
price increases as they were in
1962. There is a saying that the
stock market nover discounts
the same thing twice. The in
creases this time were more
carefully handled by steel com
panies, labor unions perhaps
see a chance of higher wages if
prices increase and the admin
istration is not expected to op
pose a mild inflation," the com
pany says.
Arthur Wlescnbergcr Sr. Co.
says that the present rally will
probably last as long as inves
tors feel confident of future
growth. "It will not continue In
definitely, but at least for the
present the implications for the
market generally appear favor
able." Livestock
PORTLAND (UPI) - (USDA)
Livestock:
Cattle 50. No early test.
Calves none.
Hogs (100. Barrows and gilts
steady; 80-head 1-2 grade near
225 lb bought to arrive basis
16.75.
Sheep 100. Small lot choice
woolcd slaughter lumbs steady
at 18; no other early sales.
Potatoes
j PORTLAND (UPI) - Potato
market steady; 100 ' lb sks
washed Russets U.S. No 1 un
less otherwise stated: Size A
Wash. 2.40; Oregon 2.65-3.00;
few higher; bakers 2.75-2.85 ; 6
14 oz 2.60-2.85; sized 2 nz spread
3.50-4.00; U.S. No 2' bakers
2.25-2.35.
Groins
CHICAGO (UPD-Grain range
' High Low Close
Wheat
Dec 2.15 2.11 2.14.
Mar 2.16 2.13 2.15-
May 2.12 2 09 2.12-2.12
Jul 1.76 1.74 1.75-1.76
Sep 1.78 1.76 1.77
Oats
Dec .71 .70 .71
Mar .74 .73 .73
May .74 .73 ,74-.73
Jul .67 .67 .67 .
Rye
Dec 1.60 1.57 1.58-1.58
Mar 1.62 1.59 1.60
May 1.61 1.58 1.59
Jul 1.51 1.48 1.50
Nurses To Hold
Area Institute
The Association of Operating
Room Nurses of Superior Cali
fornia has Invited nurses from
seven other states to attend its
regional institute in Sacramento
on Nov. 22-23 at the Caravan
Inn.
Tlie general chairman is Dona
Brulon of the American River
Hospital in Carmichael, with
Toodie Noxon of (lie Twin Lakes
Hospital in Folsom as chairman
of registration.
Invitations to attend tlx- first
assembly of its kind In Sacra
mento have been extended to
Southern Oregon, Nevada, Wyo
ming, Utah, Idaho, Arizona and
Colorado.
TODAY'S POTATO MARKET
" KLAMATH BASIV CENTRAL OKKC.ON III.MHI
J)EIANB Fair I Moderate Slow
MAKKET istrady 6 to 14 at. " I Steady
F.6.B. PRirES PKR nvT. j I I
US1A t In or 4 oi mln Z.I5-Z.M j iTo-jTlS i 1. 1 tvjTtJ-"
( J.5M.80 i 1.40-2.50 j J.50-2.7S '
baled 10 lb kt i Z.SOM j t.JjXsb i HoTsO
lsJ LSsTlTS j L40-L5O LJfcl.M
m. min
PRICF. TO CRWR BULK CWT.
tsl L6oTiT75 i f.wTa xrRepwV
vs .75. .90 .65 No Report
KLAMATH BASIN CARLQT SHIPMENTS
I RAIL TRUCK TTL TO DATK TTL A YEAR AOO
Jt'RKGON J 1 16 a I 418
CALlVoRNIA t It 71 4M "
ii
Session Here To Sfudy
Marketing And Grading
George Moose, assistant chief
of the plant division, Oregon
Department of Agriculture, is
chairman of the western states
standardization meeting that
will be held in Klamath Falls
Thursday, Nov. 7.
The meeting, which will be at
tended by representatives from
the western states and British
Columbia, is for the purpose
of discussing fresh produce
Fire Razes
Old Building
A vacant packing house on
Polly Drive was severely dam
aged by fire Wednesday after
noon. The plant' is the former Su
per Packing House and is pres
ently owned by the St. Pius X
Church, which reportedly is in
tending to tear the building
down.
Three Suburban Fire Depart
ment trucks were called to the
packing house at 1:07 p.m.
Firemen said the flames start
ed in a 20 x 20-foot shed and
after destroying it, spread to a
stock chute and the cast wing of
the main building. Both t h e
chute and the wing were "ex
tensively damaged."
No monetary loss was listed
because the building is doomed
to be torn dow n.
Hearing
Deferred
The date for the public hear
ing on the proposed widening
and paving of Homcdale Road
from Shasta Way to a point 260
feet north of the south line of
Lot 54, Fair Acres Subdivision,
has been deferred from tomor
row to Wednesday, Nov. 27, the
Klamath County Court an
nounced today.
The court reported that the
matter had been continued to
allow the commissioners more
time to study the proposal. At
the first reading of the propos
al Wednesday, five property
owners appeared before the
court to comment on the street
improvement work.
Plea Entered
For Unsworth
Bill Unsworth, charged with
second-degree murder in Die
shooting of a farm worker
last April, stood mule in Circuit
Court today and Judge Donald
A. W. Piper entered a plea of
not guilty for him.
Piper continued the setting of
a trial dale indicating it proba
bly would be Nov. 18. Unsworth
was re-indicted by Die Grand
Jury after a technicality ren
dered the original indictment in
valid. In other action, Dclmar Lloyd
Nash was sentenced to the
state prison for a term of not
more than two years after
pleading guilty to a charge of
forging a bank check.
Vacation Ends
For Assessor
County Assessor Clyde "Hap"
Caldwell was back at his desk
today after completing a three
week vacation during which he
and his wife, Dorothy, visited
their daughter, Rosalie, at
Pennsylvania Slate University
and attended the annual con
vention of the International As
sociation of Assessing Officers
at Chicago. Oct. 21 through 25.
Miss Caldwell is doing grad
uate work in the field of child
psychology.
Tlic assessor and his wife
were called cast Oct. 7 due to
a death in tlie family. They lat
er visited their daughter and
went on to the convention.
Funerals
KIN04LL
Funeral lervlcet tor Frank Laurence
Kenrtall will take rjlaca Irom trie crtao
I of Ward'i Klamalh Funeral Home
on Saturday. Nov. 2. teas. II 1 pm.
Vault Inltrmant In Ktamattt Memorial
Park
grade standards and marketing
order regulations.
Among the subjects covered
will be processing grades for
potatoes; the new U.S. apple
grades: watercore in apples,
the color of apples, and tests
lor determining maturity of ap
ples; minimum color for prunes
and internal discoloration of
prunes; inspection transferees
between states; Oregon grade
changes; marketing order regu
lations between states; labeling
and marketing regulations.
The department will also be
represented at the nursery and
quarantine meeting, set for
Wednesday of that week at
Klamath Falls.
Jury Panel
Selected
A jury was selected to sit in
judgment of Cecil D. Rachal,
charged with concealing stolen
property, about 11 a.m. Thurs
day, as the trial of the 48-year-old
Boring, Ore., man opened in
the circuit court of Judge Jeff
D. Dorroh Jr.
Judge Dorroh has been named
to preside on the circuit court
bench for Judge David R. Van
denberg who is absent due to
illness.
Selection of a jury started at
10 a.m. Thursday and conclud
ed a little more than an hour
later, after which attorneys for
the defendant and the state pre
sented their opening stale
ments. Rachal was arrested by city
police last Aug. 19 after he
attempted to sell a transistor
radio which had been stolen
from the Western Auto Supply,
Eleventh and Main Street. Ra
chal appeared at the Schulze
Tire Service, Main and Spring
streets, and offered the radio
for sale. An employe of the es
tablishment contacted the auto
supply store and learned that
the radio had been stolen. Ra
chal then fled from the store
and disposed of the stolen prop
erty in a nearby alley.
The stolen merchandise was
recovered soon after and Rachal
was later located by police and
arrested.
Weather
Temperatures during the 24
hours ending at 4 a.m. iPDT to
day. High Low I'qt
Astoria IK) 44 .22
Baker 55 19
Stockmen
Pick Dallas
LAKEVIEW-Clarcnce Dallas
was named president of the
Lake County Stockgrowers As
sociation at the annual meeting
held Tuesday in Lakevicw. Out
going president is Glen Harvey
of Summer Lake.
Other officers named were
George Carlon, first vice pres
ident, and Ben Vernon, second
vice president. Reelected to
tlieir positions were Oris Hudd,
secretary, and Verne Colvin,
treasurer.
There were about 75 present
at the evening dinner at Hunt
ers Lodge. Principal speaker
was LeRoy Rogers. OSU live
stock economist, who gave ad
vice on handling of estates in
tlte topic, "You Can't Take It
With You."
Members of the Lake County
Cow Belles met during a lunch
con at the Indian Village and
elected Edyth Withers presi
dent to succeed Virginia Ver
non. Virginia Chambers was
named vice president and Be
atrice Harvey, secretary-treasurer.
Special guest w as VI Goul
den of Klamath Falls, state
president.
Obituaries
WILSON
Dtnnli let D. Wilson. IT. dlarl In
Portland, Ort., Oct. 3. 1J. Survl
vort: Parenti, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Wllion, brothers, Larry, Sttvt. Robin
and Brian, and slsttrt. Linda. Brtttda,
Sherry and Tammle. all ot this city.
Funeral services Witt be announced by
Ward s Klamath Funeral Hnme
State Police
Investigate
Two Thefts
A thief entered the bain of
Clyde V. Johnson. Rle. 1, Box
553, sometime since Sunday and
fled with a saddle and other
riding equipment valued at
$195, Oregon State Police re
ported Thursday.
Missing is a tan hand-tooled
Allen saddle, white leather bri
dle, and a gray horse blanket
with black and red stripes. The
Johnson residence is located
near the south end of Home
dale Road.
Police are also seeking the
thief who stole a battery and
set of hub caps from a car
parked near the Lakevicw Junc
tion Tuesday night and then
committed vandalism to the ve
hicle. The, owner of the car, Ken
neth Mills of Chiloquin, told
police that the vandal broke
the windshield and two side win
dows on the car and then dam
aged the inside of the vehicle.
Mills did not estimate h i s
loss as a result of the damage.
Police are continuing to inves
tigate both cases.
Play Opens
On Nov. 22
The Klamath Civic Theatre's
production of "Blithe Spirit," a
three-act farce by Noel Coward,
will go on stage beginning Fri
day evening, Nov. 22, at the
Willard Hotel, with other eve
ning performances slated for
Nov. 23, 29 and 3o) Bill Hager
man, director, announced. A
matinee is slated for Sunday,
Nov. 24.
Reservations may be made by
contacting any member of the
group, headed by Tom Mann,
Laurie Woolschlagcr, Shirley
Smith and Judy Stearn.
The play portrays the trials
and tribulations of an Ameri
can novelist in England who
suddenly finds himself living
not only with his second wife
but also with the ghost of his
first wife.
Roundup
Brookings 6a
Medford 58 29
Newport 58 44 .04
North Bend 58 40 .19
Pendleton 53 36
Portland 54 35 .32
Redmond 52 22
Salem 56 37 .31
The Dalles 5S .34 .01
Chicago 58 52
Los Angeles '72 57
New York 50 42
Phoenix 86 67
San Francisco 65 54
Washington 57 40
Northern California: Mostly
fair through Friday.
Portland - Vancouver: Over
cast tonight with occasional rain
Friday; highs 52-57; low tonight
40-45.
Western Oregon: Occasional
rain on coast tonight, spread
ing over interior by Friday;
lughs 54-60; low 36-48.
Eastern Oregon: Fair tonight,
increasing clouds Thursday with
some chance of a little rain;
highs 52-62; low 22-32.
Tatoosh to Blanco: Winds off
Washington coast southeast 13
22 increasing to 32-42 late to
day, becoming south to south
west tonight and west 22-32 late
Friday; off Oregon coast varia
ble winds becoming southwest
3O-40 by tonight and west 16-28
late Friday; occasional rain.
7U
Innocent Reporter Finds
War Is For The Birds
By DAN WALTERS
Splaaat!
The air was filled with
sounds of battle as the ene
my bombers dove on my posi
tion. They hurtled one missile and
then another and another.
Splaaat . . . splaaat . . .
splaat. .
Three direct hits.
I arose from my position and
raised my fist to the air. .
"You damn birds," I yelled
at the retreating figures.
"Come back and fight like a
man."
But they slipped out of sight.
I viewed my car anxiously.
And I saw the results of a
perfect dive-bomb attack three
white splotches.
It was time for the annual
War of the Seagulls.
These mangy creatures annu
ally migrate from their salt wa
ter habitats to the peaceful
Klamath Basin to feed and
here they wage a war on the
innocent residents of the area.
This year they have come in
their usual profusion, drawn by
the small fish and other marine
life left high and dry with the
emptying of the canals.
But back to our war.
I cleaned up the ravages of
battle quickly, to avoid perma-
Officers Visit
WWI Barracks
, Mrs. Agdaline Saye, District
10 president, and Earl Saye, dis
trict commander, visited offici
ally at a meeting of World War
I Barracks and Auxiliary in the
K.C. Hall Oct. 24.
Four new members were ob
ligated. A musical program and
refreshments followed the meet
ing. The next regular meeting of
the two organizations will be
Nov. 14 instead of Nov. 28 due
to Thanksgiving falling on the
regular date.
Kingsley Drive
Hits $4,605
Maj. Curtiss H. Gruye, proj
ect officer for the United Fund,
reported today that $4,605.78 of
a $7,000 goal has been collected
at Kingsley Field. The amount
represents 66 per cent of King
sley's total goal.
The United Fund campaign
concludes at the airfield with
a Mardi Gras at the aircraft
maintenance hangar, Friday,
Nov. 1.
BEAUTIFUL
GLASSFYRE
k FRENCH FOLDING DOORS
DUAL DRAFT CONTROL
TARNISH PROOF FINISH
FREE INSTALLATION
nent damage to my auto's fin
ish. As I was scrubbing madly,
I heard a buzzing sound. At
first I ignored it, but it became
louder and louder.
I looked to the cloudless sky.
I saw a dot in the heavens get
ting closer and closer.
No, no, not another one. Here
he comes.
Splaaat.
I went into the house to get
a washrag for my face.
And to cry.
Car Bangs
Into Cattle
NEW PfNE CREEK An au
tomobile driven by Mclvin F.
iBandle of Lakeview ran head
on into a small group of cattle
on Highway 395, three miles
south of the Oregon - California
state line, around 6 p.m. on Oct.
29. Bandle was reported shak
en but uninjured.
Ray Cloud of New pine Creek
discovered the accident and re
ported it to the California State
Police, who conducted the in
vestigation. Bandle's vehicle turned "over
several times after striking one
or more of the animals and
landed sideways in the middle
of the highway. The car was
demolished.
Fire Report
(10 a.m. Wednesday to 10
a.m.Thursday)
Klamath Falls Fire Department
- 5:36 p.m. Wednesday 1543
Worden, flooded oil stove, no
damage, home occupied by
Leane Rose.
FBI And Police
Nab KF Man
A Federal Bureau of Investi
gation agent and city police
Wednesday arrested a Klamath
Falls man on a federal warrant
charging him with interstate
flight to avoid prosecution of
Jiad check charges in Denver,
Colo.
Leonard Hugh Haney, 36, was
arrested at his home at 2829
Corvallis and lodged at County
jail pending futher proceedings.
Defendant Takes Stand
In Murder Trial Here
John Wesley Dean, accused
of murdering his brother last
July, took the stand on his own
behalf today and told jurors
that he didn't remember the in
cident because he was intoxi
cated. Dean was the first witness for
the defense after the prosecu
tion - concluded its case. This
morning. the prosecution's
main witness, Angus Newton,
testified that he saw the Dean
brothers scuffling outside a
Fifth Street house and that Ha
gan Dean fell to the street aft
er the fight.
Dean is accused of second
degree murder. Hagan died five
days after the fight of a knife
wound in his lower neck.
John Dean said he had been
afraid of his brother, who, he
said, had beaten him on sever
al occasions.
The defense contends John
Dean struck his brother in self
defense. Dean said he had been drink
ing throughout that day, July 8,
and had gone shopping with his
brother. He said he remem
bered Hagan beginning to take
a shower in the house at 5044
Fifth Street, and "That's the
last thing I remember until I
was in the police station."
Newton, however, who lives
across Plum Street from that
house said he was awakened
by the shouts of a man in the
street. He said the man was
shouting to the Dean house
and then wandered away. Later,
Newton said, he was again dis
turbed by shouting and looked
out to see the man again "hoi
lering." He said a larger man, whom
he identified as John Dean,
came out of the house and the
men pushed at each other for
a while. He said he could not
hear what was being said.
Finally, he said, John Dean
turned away and walked bck
in the house and the other man,
Hagan Dean, staggered around
and fell down. Newton told the
jury of nine women and three
men that he could see blood on
the man's shirt so he called po
lice. Wednesday, the prosecution
called Mrs. Julia Bliss, who
Sponsor Feed
NEW PINE CREEK - The
Eastside Grange will sponsor a
"hot duck and goose feed" at
the grange hall on Saturday pre
ceding the meeting. Serving will
begin at 6:30 p.m.
when you
think
of a
Christmas
watch
BULOVA 23-JEWEL "LA PETITE"
Set with two diamonds. Has r Q pr
shock-resistant movement, L J O J
gold color case & dainty cord. SJ
FIRST PAYMENT STARTS JANUARY 1964.. .5.00 MONTH
"YANKEE CLIPPER'
I"
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SELF WINDING- WATERPROOF CRAFTED WITH LOVING CARE
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r cait, cryttal and crown art intact
i atxnit WiiHieH'i limit "aVoa-n, welnt. Minn-it" ane rear Match Mi'ftia.
also lived in the Fifth Street
house. She said the two broth
ers had been arguing before Ha
gan left the house, then re
turned at two different times in
the street yelling.
She said that after John Dean
returned to the house after the
scuffle, he placed a case knife
in his dresser drawer. A state
police lab technician identified
that knife as having been cov
ered with blood and having
threads apparently from Ha
gan's shirt. v
A pathologist testified that Ha
gan died .five days after the
scuffle when two blood vessels
that had been nicked by the
knife collapsed as Hagan's blood
pressure rose. The blood pres
sure rose as Hagan improved
from his wound, which at first
had not been thought to be se
rious. The collapse of the ves
sels produced massive hemor
rhaging which was the actual
cause of death.
The defense case was expect
ed to continue this afternoon.
Photo Try
Results
In Crash
MOUNT SHASTA Desire on
the part of Ronald E. Allen of
El Cerrito, Calif., to get a pic
ture of Mount Shasta brought
about an accident involving two
other vehicles on State Highway
89 Monday.
It also brought about a cita
tion from the California High
way Patrol for the El Cerrito
photographer and a logging
truck driver, M. D. Acord of
Mount Shasta.
The incident occurred at 10:30
a.m. when Allen stopped on the
highway to take a picture of
the mountain. Herbert H. Bohse
of Redding was following close
ly, and seeing trucks approach
ing in the left lane passed the
parked car on the right side to
avoid a collision.
Trucker Acord was close be
hind Bohse, and when he saw
the oncoming trucks accelerat
ed to pass the Allen car on the
correct left side. Acord made
the pass, but hit Bohse as he
came back on the highway from
the right.
Tlie Bohse automobile was
knocked down a six-foot bank
and the driver sustained minor
injuries.
think of
WEISFIELD'S
and
BULOVA
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SFIELD'S
528 Main
Ph. TU 4-5662
i' Whitehall 13 93 15.00
WEI