Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 01, 1963, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE 4A
HERALD AND NEWS,
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
I NEW YORK STOCKS
I By United Press International
Allied Chemical 53',.
Alum Co Am 67'
American Air Lines 3ttfi
.American Can 42H
'American Motors 21'
'AT&T m't
'American Tobacco 28
"Anaconda Copper
Armco 64 xd
American Standard 1B?
Bcndix Corp 49Vi
Bethlehem Stool 31'.
Boeing Air ' . , 34?
Brunswick 1H4
Caterpillar Corp 46?.
' Chrysler Corp 82? xd
" Coca Cola 104
C.B.S. - 7914
Columbia Gas 28'i
Continental Can 4174
-Crown Zellerbach 52
; Crucible Steel 22'i
'Curtiss Wright 19
Dow Chemical 61
Du Pont 250V4
Eastman Kodak 11414
'Firestone 38
Ford 53
- General Dynamics 26'
General Electric S2'i
General Motors 86'i
Gen'l Port Cement 22
, Georgia Pacific 5374
: Gt Nor Ry 52 k
Greyhound 45V4
I Gulf Oil 46T4
' Homestake 47'
I. Idaho Power 33?4
i I.B.M. 4881a
v Irrt Paper 34
1 Johns ManviUe 483,i
Kennecott Copper 75?.
Lockheed Aircraft 35'4
, Martin ISfis
Merck 1051i
Montana Power 37?4
Montgomery IVYard 36'j
Nat'l Biscuit 59
New York Central 20
Northern Natural Gas ' Wik
Northern Pacific 46'i
Pac Gas Elcc 31
! Penn ER ' l'J's
! Permancnte Cement 15
; Phillips 50
Procter Gamble 79V4
t 'Radio Corp 92
i Richfield Oil 44'A
5 Safeway 61
; Scars i 98
'Shell Oil 45
, Rocony Mobil Oil 67
Southern Co 52
Southern Pacific 34
Sperry Rand 17
Standard California 64
Standard Indiana fil'i
Standard N. J. 71
Stokely Van Camp 21V4
Sun Mines 10
Texas Co 66
Texas Gulf Sulfur 17
Tex. Pac. Land Trust 27
Thiokol 23
Trans America 5114
Trans World Air 26
Tri Continental 46
Union Carbido 112T4
Union Pacific 4014
United Aircraft 41
United Air Lines 36
U.S. Plywood 60
U.S. Rubber 47
U.S. Steel 53
United Utilities 40
West Bank Corp 42
Weslinghouse 37
Youngstown 126
MUTUAL FUNDS
Prices until 10 i
I a.m. PDT today
' Bid Asked
Affiliated Fluid 8.43 0.12
Atomic Fluid 481 5.25
Blue Ridge 11.99 13.10
Bullock 14.03 15.37
Chemical Fund 12.42 13.25
Colonial Fund (xd)11.32 12.37
Comw lnv 10.12 11.06
Diver Growth 6.1)8 9.84
Dreyfus 18.45 20.05
E it H Slock 14.31 15.46
Fidelity Capital (xd 19.75 10.60
Fidelity Trend .d9.84 10.70
Fundamental 1024 H.77
F.I.F. 4.38 4.80
Founders Fund 6.60 7.24
Group Sec Com 13.74 15.04
Or Sec Avia El 7.20 7.90
lncorp lnv. 7.28 7.91
Investors' Group
' Intercontinental 6.23 7.73
Mutual 11.46 12.39
Slock 19.33 20.89
Selective 10.48 11.21
Variable 7.10 7.65
Kcy.stono S I 22 50 24.55
Keystone S-3 15.15 16.54
Keystone S-4 4.34 4.74
M.I.T. 15.41 16.84
M.l.T. Growth 8,47 9.26
Nat'l lnv 15.97 17.26
Nat'l Sec Div 4 24 4.63
Nat'l Sec Growth 8.33 9 10
Nat l Sec Stock (xd '8.03 8.78
Potnam Fund 15.32 16.74
Putnam Growth xd 8.04 9.86.
Shareholders 11.13 1216
Sup lnv Scr 7.93 8.63
United Accum 15.13 16.54
United Canada 18.23 ....
United Income 12.71 13.B9
United Science 7.17 7.84
Value Lines 5.33 5 81
Wellington 14.86 16.20
Windsor 14.38 13.63
Whitehall ' 13 94 15.07
1
Potatoes
PORTLAND UPI - Potato
market steady; 100 h sks
washed JUisseU U.S. No 1 un
less otherwise stated: Size A
Wash. 2.40; Oregon IAV3.00;
few higher; bakera 2.762.85; 6
14 oj 2 60-2 85: sized 2 oz siread
3.30-4.00; US. No 3 bakers
E.J5-3.35. ,
Friday, November 1, 1963
Klamath Fall, Ore.
WALL STREET
NEW YORK (UPI) - Stocks
backed and filled throughout the
session today.
Losses ranging from large
fractions to a point in Ameri
can Telephone. General Motors
and General Electric .featured
the downside. RCA lost around
2.
Wall Street Chatter
NEW YORK (UPI) - Vanden
Broeck, Lieber & Co. notes that
the performance of the stock
market in the last two months
is causing a combination of
satisfaction and anxiety to close
observers.
"There is satisfaction to once
again see this impressive dem
onstration of the willingness of
owners of capital to aggres
sively place their money in the
equities of the most successful
companies of the moment, it
says. "However," it adds,
"there is anxiety because of an
apparent follow-thc-leader mode
of selection which has tended to
make the market abnornally se
lective." Kenneth Ward of Haydcn,
Stone & Co. says t at nrrrrrrr
Kennety Ward of Haydcn.
not indicated as yet. He
says investors should continue
to maintain long term commit
ments "while bearing in mind
that a large short position, tlic
attractive profits outlook for
1963 and first quarter of 1964,
and the prospect of a bumper
year-end dividend crop consti
tute important stabilizing fac
tors." Reynolds & Co. says that
while K is on its guard, "we
still feel that worthwhile prof
its can be made in technically
strong issues backed up by sol
id fundamentals."
Investment adviser Ralph E.
Samuel says that it is his
rock-ribbed conviction that the
American economy is going to
continue to move forward and
wcll-ciioscn equities probably
provide the one best way
of participation."
Livestock
PORTLAND (UPI) (USDA)-
Weckly livestock:
Cattle 3270. Mostly choice
steers 23.75-24; mixed good-
choice 23-24; standard - good
17-20; mixed good-choice heif
ers 22.50-23; standard 15-19;
utility cows 11-13.50; canncr 7
10; cutter-utility bulls 14.50-18.-50;
good-choice heifers Monday
,19.
Calves 510. Good-choice voal
crs mostly 25-28, standard 21-25;
cull-utility 10-18; good - choice
feeder steers 20-23.
Hogs 1370. Barrows and gilts,
1-2 grade 16.50-16.75; sows 1-2 at
300-550 lb 10-14.50.
Sheep 3700. Moslly choice
wooled slaughter lambs 17.50
18; mixed-choice prhno 18-18.23;
ewes 4.50-5; feeder lambs 16
'16.50. Stocks
' LOCAL SECURITIES
Bank America
Boise Cascado
Cal Pac Util
Con Freight
Cyprus Mines
Equitable Sib
1st Nat'l Bank
Jantzcn
(Morrison Knud
Mult Kennels
N.W. natural Gi
Oregon Metal
PP&L
PGE
U.S. Nat'l Bank
Tektronix
West Coast Tel
Weyerhaeuser
63 68
32 3414
23 27
9 10
22 23
2il 30
72 75
24 26
211 31
4 4
i 32 34
1 1
26 27
25 27
88 92
22 2414
23 25
32 34
Groins
CHICAGO (UPU-Grain rang
High Low Close
' Wheat
Dec
Mar
May
Jul
Sep
Sep
Oris
Dec
Mar
May
Jul
Rye
Dec
Mar
May
Jul
2.16 2.14 2. 16' (-
2.17 2.15 2.17-
2.13 2.12 2.13-
1.77 1.75 1.76-
1.78 1.77 1.78-1.78
1.78 1.77 1.78-1.78
.71
.71
.71.
,74
.74-
.67
1.58-
160-1.61
1.59
1.50
.74 .73
.74 .74
.68 .67
1 60 1 58
1.(2 160
1.60 1.J9
1 53 1.49
DEMAND
"KlARKElT
K.O.B. PRICKS PER CVT.
I SI A t In or 4 oj min
6-14 ot
baled 10 lb sks
ISl
PRICE TO GBWIt BI LK CWT.
Tsi
l'S
KLAMATH
RAIL
OREGON
CALIFORNIA
Jury Convicts Dean
In Slaying Of Brother
John Wesley Dean Thursday
night was convicted of second
degree murder for stabbing his
brother last July 8 during a
scuffle in front of a Fifth Street
residence.
The jury of nine women and
three men voted 11-1 to convict
Dean after 2' j hours of deliber
ation. He had contended he
stabbed his brother in self-defense.
Dean, 57, will be -sentenced
Monday by Circuit Court Judge
Donald A. W. Piper. '
Dean's brother, Hagan, 37,
Jackson Urges Facilities
To Reach Crater Water
SALEM (UPI - In today's
tense push-button era, there is
need for the urban resident to
get away from it all, Gov. Mark
Hatfield said today.
In an address to the Oregon
County Park Association, Hat
field said "we are moving to
ward a reduced work week, both
in Oregon and nationally."
"With more leisure time, more
park and recreation facilities
will be needed. We must recog
nize the technological changes
that are being made, and begin
planning now," he said.
"If we are careful in planning
our park and recreation pro
grams, we need not fear indus
trial growth."
At the conclusion of his ad
dress, Hatfield presented a mer
it award to Highway Commis
sion Chairman Glenn L. Jackson
Four Tots
Die In Fire
LA GRANDE (UPD-Flamcs
raced through a two-story home
here early today and took the
lives of four small children.
The victims, the children of
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Mann, were
identified as Robbin Marie, 4;
Timothy Ray, 3; Sonora Grace,
2; and Brian Scth, 1.
Mrs. Mann said the children
were asleep in two upstairs bed
rooms when the blaze broke out
about 7 a.m. Mrs. Mann was
asleep downstairs and Mann
had left for work.
Firemen were seeking t h e
cause of the blaze.
Mrs. Mann said she awoke
after 7 a.m. and saw the flames
roaring around a chimney in the
kitchen and the stairwell leading
upstairs.
I She said she ran to her broth
er's home nearby for help when
site was unable to get through
the flames to the children's
rooms.
She said her brotlier, Nick
Schooler, tried to enter the
house four times but was driven
back by the flames.
' When firemen arrived t h e
whole house was aflame.
Wage Hike
The joint Army - Air Force
Wage Board announced today
in Washington. D.C., that 67
Wage Board employes at King
sley Field will receive a pay in
crease of approximately nine
cents per hour beginning the
first pay period after Nov. It,
Little Folks Enjoy Making
Rounds On Halloween Night
By RUTH KING
The Halloween moon was big
and bright and round. Across
town and down the roads and
up the lanes they enme the
witches and the black cats, the
clanking skeletons and the awe
some owls, tlie boys and the
girls, swathed in sheets and
masked, eyes bright in anticipa
tion. Tliey carried "store kind"
bags, huge enough for duffel.
Others, the shrinking violet
kind, back in (lie shadows, of
fered smaller paper sacks.
They all, every one, had a
common thought, "T r I c k or
Treat."
Some plucked daintily at the
offered loot. 01 hers grasped a
TODAY'S POTATO MARKET
KLAMATH BASIN CF.NTRAL ORKCtON IDAHO
Fair
Stratlv
2.40-2.10
2.65-2.(l0
2.50-2.60
I.63-1.7S
r
1.65-1.75
.70-.M
BASIN CARLOT SHIPMENTS
TRITK
20
I
died five days after the stab
bing. Medical experts said two
blood vessels that had been
nicked by Dean's knife ruptured
as Hagan regained his health m
Klamath Valley Hospital and
his blood pressure rose.
The trial began Wednesday
morning. Dean had been
charged with second - degree
murder on a Grand Jury in
dictment. The jurors retired to
their deliberations at 5.-30 p.m.
Thursday, were out to dinner
from 6 to 7:30 p.m. and re
turned with the verdict at 9:30.
of Medford, "for his outstanding
contribution to outdoor develop
ment and recreation." -Crater
Lake Liked
Jackson told the group that
some means should be provided
to get visitors to the water at
Crater Lake National Park. He
said that half of the 592,000
visitors to the state's only na
tional park in 1962 stayed less
than an hour.
"Crater Lake is an outstand
ing national park The unfor
tunate part is that it is a huge
picture with no animation."
Jackson said if people could
get to the surface of the lake
easily it would open the way for
boat trips, fishing and other re
creation. "If we provided something to
do and facilities to get people to
the lake it would increase the
number of people visiting the
park and the length of their
stay," Jackson said.
"I don't think it would be out
of line to ask the National Park
Service to design some kind of
service to get to the lake which
would not destroy its scenic
values," he said.
Previous proposals to provide
mechanical tramways from the
edge of the one-time volcano to
the water have met with strong
opposition from outdoor groups,
who fear the lake's beauty
would be destroyed.
Jackson said Oregon now has
more parks than any other state
and noted that 60 per cent ot
the visitors are from out-of-state.
He said California parks "are
rapidly becoming coney islands"
and that Oregon is "gradually
falling heir to the recreational
responsibility" for many Califor
nians. 35 Youngsters
Help UNICEF
Thirty five young people of
Peace Memorial Presbyterian,
First Methodist and Congrega
tional churches, soliciting for
one hour Halloween night, re
ceived contributions for
UNICEF totaling $114.28.
A second smaller group of the
Girls Friendly Society of St.
Paul's Episcopal Church tallied
$6.38 for the UNICEF fund.
The larger group was under
the direction of Gary Collvcr of
Kingsley iFicld.
UNICEF funds are distribut
ed throughout the world to aid
under-privileged children.
double handful. Some said
"thank you" and disappeared in
the darkness to invade the
house down the street. Others
scuttled away without a spoken
word or a backward glance . .
The visitors ranged from a
few, four or five, to hundreds
in the "morning after" reports
that came to the Herald and
News.
Out at Kingsley Field, the
wife of an Air Force officer
counted 250 before she closed
the door on the last arrival.
These were mostly small tykes,
chaperoned by their elders.
At the home of Mrs. Helen
Thomas on Pacific Terrace, a
unique check has been kept of
(he voting visitors since 1940.
Moderate
Sinn
Steady
Mcdv
210-2.15
2.10-2.25
2.504.75
2.40-1.50
1.40-1.50
oi. mln.
1.J0-I.M
1.55
I 1.50-1.63
.65
.50-.6A
TTL TO DATE TTL A YEAR AGO
661 I 424
1
ON THE AIR Assistant FAA controller Dick Shine speaks on the radio to a plane dur
ing one of the more then 66,000 operations performed by the FAA at Kingsley Field
each year. This total makes Kingsley the third busiest airport in the state. Shine looks
ouf over the field from a 64-foot-tall tower in the center of the installation.
Fall Hurts
KF Woman
Mrs. Frances Miller, about
60, of 3419 Granite Street
slipped off a stool at the First
Presbyterian Church late th i s
morning and suffered a possible
fractured left arm.
She was taken to Klamath
Valley Hospital by Peace Am
bulance after the 11:20 a.m. ac
cident. Church officials said she was
climbing onto a stool to set a
clock when the stool slipped out
from under her and she fell to
the floor. The church is located
at 601 Pine Street.
Obituaries
PAGE
William Waller Page, 55. Sled Oct.
31. Survived by the widow, Ruth Page,
Klamath Falls. Funeral services will
be held Monday, Nov. A. 10:30 a.m. in
O'Heir's Memorial Chapel. Interment,
Klamath Memorial Park. O'Hair'j Me
moral Chapel In charge.
Halloween Destruction
Covers Most Of Town
(Continued From Page 1)
i Calhoun's Floor Covering, 357
East Main, four plate glass win
dows and two glass doors brok
en; ' Shondo's Drive-In, Main and
Martin, 18 windows broken;
' Car at Main and Martin, win
dows broken;
Long Bell Lumber, Main and
Spring, 10N8-foot window valued
at $100 broken out;
Coca-Cola Bottling Company,
105 Spring, 6x8 window brok
en; Divens' Sporting Goods, 123
Spring, 4x6 window broken;
Mrs. Dale Snow, 715 Jefferson,
rotten eggs thrown at porch;
Fenton Mahrt, 320 North
Fourth, car sprayed with red
paint;
Jack Sturgen, 234 Riverside
Drive, car window broken, up
holstery ripped and slashed,
car scratched and smeared
with shaving cream and tooth
paste; Mrs. Emma D e r r a h, 1343
Crescent, red paint bomb
thrown at front door, breaking
glass;
Cobo's City Center, two-pound
rook thrown through window:
This year the number was
swelled to 155, largest since her
husband, the late Bert C. Thom
as, invited the Halloween
sprites in to sign a guest book.
The lowest (ally was in 1943,
the year of tlic war blackout.
Because Mrs. Thomas was re
sponsible for two homes this
year, she enlisted the aid of
two retired touchers. By tile
time the last small "spook" had
retired inlo the darkness they
had retired to tlie comfort of a
soft davenport and a waiting
chair.
These groups of Halloween
revelers did little damage to
homes or streets or family fenc
es. They sen! frightened pooch
es skittering lo safety in light
ed rooms, chased big-tailed cats
up leafless trees and trailed
traditional rolls of toilet tissues
through hedges and a c r os s
lawns then went home to sam
ple fruit, eat loo much candy
and chew cheeks full of bubble
gum.
Another Hallow-even, a rel
ic of pae.im limes, was history.
STORE HOURS
Store hours for Oregon Food Stores were incor
rectly stated in Thursday night's od in the Her
ald & News.
CORRECT HOURS ARE:
WEEKDAYS: 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
SUNDAYS & HOLIDAYS. 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
OREGON FOOD STORES
FAA To Mark
At Saturday
The Federal Aviation Agency
today celebrates its fifth anni
versary and the Kingsley Field
branch of the service is prepar
ing for an open house Saturday
at its tower.
The public will be welcome all
day Saturday at the tower
which is the third busiest in Ore
gon. During the fiscal year which
ended June 30, the Kingsley
Field tower handled a total of
66.689 takeoffs and landings
from the field.
This is third only to Port
land (151,220) and Troutdale
dale (70,411) and tops such oth
ers cities as Medford and Pen
dleton. Of this total, 38.455 of
Fremont Grocery, 224 Neva
da, rock thrown through win
dow; ' Floyd DeVall, 419 North
Tenth, car window broken;
' Jack Fricsen, 1717 Main, four
holes jabbed through windshield
of car;
Builders' Supply, 345 East
iMain, 3x3 window broken;
' E. F. Kielty, 1965 Manzanita,
obscene word painted on ga
rage with red paint;
Sacred Heart School, large
, "KU" painted on building;
3729 Altamont Drive, rock
thrown through front window;
1 Rock through gas s t a t i o n
window on Highway 97 south of
city;
1 Klamath View Auto Court,
rock thrown through window;
MoGaughey's Second Hand
Store, Altamont Drive, rock
through window;
South Suburban Sanitary Dis
trict, rock through office win
dow; Rainbow Tavern, Keno, beer
bottle thrown at building.
Funerals
MAHAN
Funeral services tor Charles C Ma
ban will bt hald Saturday, Nov. 3, at
II a.m. In O'Halr's Memorial Chapel.
Interment, Eternal Hills Memorial
Gardens. O'Hair's Memorial Chapel In
charsa.
KENDALL
Funeral services lor Frank Laurnnce
Kendall will ba held from the chapel
01 ward's Klamath Funeral Home Sat
urday. Nov. 2, 1963, at 2 p.m. Conclud
ing services and vault Interment in
Klamath Memorial Park.
WILSON
Funeral services lor Dennis Lee D.
Wilson will take place from the Bible
Baptist Church on Saturday, Nov. 2,
193, at 10 a m. Concluding services.
Eternal Hills Memorial Gardens. Ward's
Klamath Funeral Home In charge.
Rctchal Draws
2-Year Term
Cecil D. Radial, convicted by
a circuit court jury of conceal
ing stolen property, was sen
tenced by Judge Jeff D. Dorroh
Jr. today lo serve a sentence
not to exceed two years in the
Oregon State Penitentiary. The
jury deliberated briefly before
returning a unanimous verdict.
Rachal was arrested by city
police last August after he tried
to sell a radio which had been
stolen from an auto supply
store on Main Street.
Aik OeMMt dairy
"BuiinMi Card"
SPOT ADS
TU 4-1111
5th Year
Open House
tlie Kingsley operations were
classified as "itinerant" mean
ing they involved planes which
were traveling through this
area and not planes which both
took off and landed at Kingsley.
In this category, Kingsley
ranked second in the state,
second only to Portland.
The nerve center of the FAA
at Kingsley is a 64-foot-tall tow
er in the center of the field.
Actually it is a combined
tower and station a tower
which controls aircraft and a
station which advises pilots.
There are only 71 combined
tower-stations in the nation op
erated by the FFA, plus 203 in
dividual towers and 337 individ
ual stations.
A large chunk of the tower's
duties concern the Air Force
planes that are stationed at
Kingsley, but civilian traffic
is a far greater share of the re
sponsibility. It is the tower's duty to act
as a "traffic cop" of the air,
directing planes so that their
travel might be smooth and
troublefrce.
Saturday Meet
1 Mu Chapter of Alpha Delta
Kappa sorority will meet Sat
urday, Nov. 2. at 1:30 p.m. at
the home of Mrs. C. F. Harris,
457 Laguna Street. Co-hostess
will be Mrs. James Lear.
Plans for the rummage sale
on Nov. 16 to raise money for
the scholarship fund arc on the
agenda.
Let Us Appraise
Your Car . . .
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Our
Appraisal!
Result - A new Mercury
Or Comet for you at a
Surprisingly Low Price!
Now in Stock!
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'64 COMET CAUENTE 2-DOOR HARDTOP
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64 COMET CAUENTE 2.DOOR HARDTOP
Cyelont Supor 289 V8 tngina, Mtrc-o-moric
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'64 COMET 404 SEDAN. 7:0014 tires, ra
dio, htortr, courttsy lights, seat belts, tinted
vjt. 2683.05
Charlie Ramp Says: "Come in and take
a test ride in a new Comet!"
Lincoln
677 So. 7th
'Flying' Deer Smashed
Into Car, Driver Hurt
A forked horn deer that wan
dcied onto Highway 66, near
Milepost 55, was blamed for an
automobile accident that demol
ished one car, damaged another
and hospitalized a motorist,
about 6 p.m. Thursday, Oregon
State Police have reported.
Two persons who also were
hospitalized with injuries they
received in one of two other ve
hicular accidents in the vicinity
of Klamath Falls Thursday are
in "satisfactory condition," the
Klamath Valley Hospital report
ed today.
In fair condition at the same
hospital is Lawrence Morris
Kline, 27, formerly of Klamath
Falls and now of Tigard, who
received a head injury when a
deer, struck by an oncoming
automobile, was thrown into the
path of his car as he was east
bound along the highway.
The deer went through the
windshield and out the rear
window of the car, police said.
'Kline's car was demolished as
it went off the north side of the
road, across a ditch, and
through a fence.
The accident developed as the
buck jumped into the path of a
westbound car operated b y
George Arthur 'Reed, 37, of Cen
tral Point. Reed's car piled into
the deer, throwing it up over
the hood of the automobile
where the buck's antlers shat
tered the windshield. The im
pact of the collision flipped the
animal across the road and into
Kline's car as it approached
from the opposite direction.
Reed was apparently not in
jured, police reported.
' In an accident that occurred
near the Westside Bypass about
5 p.m., two women were in
jured when the automobile in
which they were passengers
was struck in the rear by a car
operated by Sam L. Scherer, 51,
of Vanzant, Mo.
The injured were Delia Mills,
77, who sustained fractured
ribs, and Erma Clark, 71, who,
received minor injuries and
was to be released from the
hospital later today. Both vic
tims are from Bremerton,
Wash'., as is the driver of the
car, 'Lillian Christina Baker, 63,
and her two other passengers,
Hazel Binnis, 65, and Agnes
Hall, 70.
' Scherer, cited for following
too close, was not injured, nor
were his passengers, Pauline
Scherer, 49, and Gail Scherer,
19.
While You
Appraise Ours!
H
Well Like
Your
Appraisal!
W COMET CAUENTE
Those Hot '64 Comet Calientes!
'64 COMET CAUENTE 4-DOOR SEDAN. Cy
elont Suptr 289, V8, Mtrc-o-matlc transmis
sion, power stttrtng, 1C
seat belts, etc 34,30, 19
'64 COMET 404 STATION WAGON. VB en
tint, ell vinyl inttrior, back-up lights, cour
tesy lights, luggagt carritr, powtr stttrtng,
powtr rtor window, IT A
belts, etc 3 I 7.3V
64 COMET 202 4-DOOR SEDAN. 6 cylinder
engine, :S0il4 tints, electric wipers, heater,
acrrosrer, courresy
etc.
in
iru
Mercury Comet
The victims of the collision on
the bypass and the accident in
volving the deer were removed
to the local hospital by Peace
Ambulance.
' Another rearend collision in
volved two pickup trucks and
resulted in moderate damage
to one vehicle but no injuries
to either of the motorists.
The accident developed as
Robert R. Dorey, 22, of 3710
Lakeport Blvd., reduced his
truck'3 speed as he was east
bound on Lakeport Blvd. about
7:25 a.m., Thursday. As he did
so, his truck, was struck in the
rear by a vehicle driven by Ed
ward J. Dorscher, 31, of 703
Hemlock Street. Dorscher was
cited for violation of the basic
rule. The latter's vehicle sus
tained damage to the radiator,
grill and headlights. Damage to
tlie other truck was minor. '
Rains Cut
Danger
In Forest
LAKEVIEW Fire danger has
practically been eliminated on
the Fremont Forest by recent
storms, with Silver Lake the
only district reporting moder
ate fire danger.
Bird hunting is fair to good
in the rim area of the Silver
Lake district, and fishing at
Thompson Reservoir is fair.
Some reconstruction is under
way at the reservoir tamp
ground, and parents are cau
tioned to watch their children.
All main roads into Si 1 v e r
Lake have logging traffic.
All trails are open in the Pais
ley district; main roads are
open and passable but getting
muddy; all campgrounds can
be used. Fishing season closed
as of Oct. 31.
Bird hunting is fair in tlie Bly
area. All roads are open but
users are cautioned to look
out for logging trucks on the
Fishhole roads, the county road
to Camp Six, and road No. 345
to Sycan siding. There will be
some logging traffic on tlic Dai
ry Creek road from the Lee
Thomas Meadows area to Bly.
MEANS BIG-CITY
CONVENIENCE IN
2-Door Hardtop
sfer, courtesy lights, lio AF
Special 30.79
Jeep
Ph. 4-8104