PAGE I HERALD AND NEWS. MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks NEW YORK STOCKS Bv I'nltrd Pre si International Allied Chemical Alum Co Am American Air Lines American Can American Jlotors ' AT&T American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Armco American Standard Avco Bendix Corp Bethlehm Steel Boeing Air Brunswick :' Caterpillar Corp :: Chrysler Corp ; Coca Cola CBS Columbia Gas ; Continental Can Crown Zellerbach '.Crucible Steel ' urtiss Wright " Dow Chemical "Du Pont Eastman Kodak Firestone Ford Gen Dynam General Electric General Foods Gcn'l Port Cement Georgia Pacific Greyhound Gulf Oil Homestake Idaho Power I.B.M. Int Paper Johns Manville Kcnnecott Copper Lockheed Aircraft Martin Merck Montana Power Montgomery Ward Nat'l Biscuit New York Central Northern Natural Gas Northern Pacific Pac Gas Klcc Penney J.C. Penn Rlt , Permanente Cement .Phillips Procter Gamble Radio Corp ; Safeway ' Sears Shell Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Co Southern Pacific Spcrry Rand Standard California Standard Indiana Standard N.J. Stokely Van Camp Sun Mines Texas Gulf Sulfur Tex Pac 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 United Utilities West Bank Corp JVestinghouse Youngstown 53 M'i 32H 4Pi Wt 132 26' 474 fiO'i 17 22H 30 3W 11 46 M'i 105li 78'ixd M'i 42'ixd 5l3i 22'i 18'i 63' i 256 lll'i 37 son 24'i 78'i 85Ji 221i 52'i 4BH 43si 46i 34 472 'ft 32sixd 47 76-H 37H 20H 104 36'4 32'i 5Wi 21'-j 524 4ll',j 31 '4 44'i 2k 15 47H 78'i 93'-i 59 94' i 43 63 53'i 354 17'i 59' i 57'i 67 22::i 9aixd 18' 24'j 20-li 51', 28 4SH 113-H 40'i 44'i 4H'4 62? 46 51 38'i 39' l 35 la 125 LOCAL SECURITIES Bank America 63'i (Wi Boise Cascade 31 'i 331i Cal Pac Util 25'i 27V Coo Freight B'a in Cyprus Mines 22 23H Equitable S&L 2Usi 31J 1st Nat'l Bank 72 . 75'i Jantien 25'i 27'i Morrison Knud 29 31 Mult Kennels 3'i 4'i N.W. Natural Gas 32'4 34 Oregon Metal l' l'i PPiL 24i 2SH PGE 24' 4 25"i U.S. Nail Bank 87', 9H, Tektronix JO-ti 22'i West Coast Tel 22'i 24H Weyerhaeuser 33'i 34'i Potatoes PORTLAND (UPIl - Potato market about steady; 100 lh sks washed Russets U.S. No. 1 un less otherwise stated; Oregon 2 50-3.10; 6-14 oz 2.70 - 2.93; sized 2 02 spread 3.75-4 00; U.S. No 2 175-200; V. S. No 2 bakers 2.4M.50. Wall Street Chatter Ralph Rotnem of Harris. Up ham & Co. says a more specu J.ilive year-end rally would not 1 surprising after tax selling is over. Rotnom points out that in nine of the past ten years, (he Pecember closing level has been above both November and October. KLA L T 1 1 R A S 1 N 4'KNTRAIOltKCON IH.MIO "DEMAND Moderate Light " lair MAHKET narrly.Slrail.v Dull Weaker fTo.b7i'kicesper"cvt. j j USi A I liTor 4faimTn 2,70-2,50 j So l!i-in'r J.OO-J.M e)-14 2.70.2.75 j N Uenm! I.6.V2.M Jialrtf 10 lh k 'tM-tM I 2. 40-2.50 " 1 2"9K. USJ 1.3M.60 I 1.50 "l.00 l.l3 " TRICE TO C.RWB BULK CWT. ) ! I'M i7n. j KevTsalrs j 1.40-l.tSA US irSTlW j Krer's.ilrs .SO-.R0 KLAMATH rail truck i oregon i m "caTikornia 11 10 Tuesday, Navrmber 19. IMS Klamath Falli, Or. WALL STREET WALL STREET NEW YORK (UPi Stocks rallied most of the session to day but backed down from their best levels in t tie final hour as profit takers stepped in to take advantage of the higher prices. Du Pont, which boosted its dividend Monday, kept just about all of its three point gain. However, Sears Roebuck, anoth er of the issues, responding to favorable dividend action, moved down from its high and closed with only a slight frac tional gain. Livestock KLAMATH PALLS IIVISTOCK AUCTION MAUKET Nov. II. Ill RKtpli: All Ciltt ml (incl. 5 eilvts). Hogs V. Lsl wtck: All C4t tit IMS find. 500 Cdlvts). Hogs II. Comp'ld lait Wondy SlMr Calvts under 475 lot. iltaOy: titer ctlvei ovtr 475 IM. tnd light tttdtr titers .50 nigrrtr; Htiftr ctlvtt wtaktr to 50 lower; lltuflMtr heileM .50 loer; iltughltr cowt 1.00 lowtri hogi .5 lower. Slaughter Cttlle: Heifers: Good Choice. 770 1000 Ibj., 70 10 . 31. 10; Sttndtrd, 17.40.11 601 Cows: Cmcl.. HM-liMi Utility. 1i.IO.ll40; Can-nerl-Cullers, fl.10.12 40; Bulls: utility & Cmcl., 17.00-1100. Stocktrs S, Feeders: Sleers: Good Choice, 540-475 lbs., 20.10; 71 70; Good Choice, 700-900 lbs.. II 50-30 25; Com., Vedlum, 15.00-11.00; Holtliini. 600 00 lbs., 15-50-16 30; Hellers: Good Choice. 550-640 lbs., II 50-20.00; Com Medium, 50O-650 lbs., 15.00-1100 Sleer Ctlvts: Goodholct, 320 575 lbs., 25.10-26.70 Good-Choict 350- 300 lbs., 66.00.77.50 ptr heed; rtdi um, 300-500 lbs., .22.00-24.00. Htiftr Ctlvts: Good - Choict, 3'0 440 lbs., 21.10-2315; Good-Choict, 500 530 lbs., 21 20-21.70; Good-Choict, 250 300 lbs.. 47.00-76 00 Der heed; Medium. 300-500 lbs . 11.50-21 .00. Cows: Mtd.-Good brtd cows, 130 141; Common, 171 ptr heed. Med.. Good ptlrs, 150-217; Common, 113; Btby Ctlvts: Medium, 20-3 per httd. Hogs: U.S. 1 I. ? FJtrrows a Gills. 200-2I5 lbs , 14.33-15 40; Sows, I. 450 lbs., 9.00-9.25; Weentr Pigs, 4 50-13.50 per need. Reported by Ray O. Petersen, coun ty extension tgenl. PORTLAND (UPH (USDA) Livestock: Cattle 200. No early trade lest. slaughter cows occasional can- ner-cutter 8-9; bulls occasional canncr-cutter 900-1150 lb 13-15; medium-good slock cows 12-13. Calves 50. Good-choice vealcrs 27-28. Hogs 150. No early sales. Sheep 400. 33 head choice wooled feeder lambs 74 lb steady at 16.75. Grains CHICAGO (UPH-Grain range High Low Close Wheat Dec Mar May Jul Sep Oats Dec JMar Jul Rye Dec Mar May Jul 2.13'i 2.11H 2.12'4-Ji 2.14?. 2.12H 2.134 J.11 2.0U"4 2.0D 1.73 1.71',, 1.72'i 1.74U 1.72'i 1.73'a .697 .riii'i .ssi'.-'a ."-'a .68i .68'. .68 1.50 1.49 lAV,-'t 1.54'i l.M'a 1.53-VI.54 1.55'i 1.53'i 1.54'j 1.4714 1.46'4 Mi Stocks MUTUAL FUNDS Prices until 10 a.m. PST tnilav Ilitl Asked Affiliated Fund 7 97 8 62 Atomic Fund 4.73 5.19 Blue Ridge 11.89 12.92 Bullock 13.16 14 42 Chemical Fund 12 23 13.37 Colonial Fund 12 27 13 41 Comw. Inv. 10.01 1094 Diver Growlh atw 9.73 Dreyfus 1822 19 80 K & H Stock 14.17 13.31 Fidelity Capital D.68 in.r.2 Fidelity Trend 16.35 17.77 Fundamental 10 04 1100 F.l.F. 4.3.1 . 4 75 Founders Fund 6 4H 7 04 Incorp Inv. 7.17 7 84 1CA 11.05 12 08 Investors' Group Intercontinental 6 22 6 72 Miiliu.1 11.41 12.34 Slock 19.6.") 2U 17 Selective 10 52 11.25 Variable 7.(19 7.66 Keystone S I 22 no 21 no Keystone S-3 15.04 16.41 Kevslone S-4 4.111 4 74 MIT. 13.07 16.47 M I T. Growth 8 4.1 9 21 Nat'l Inv. 13 83 17.14 Nat'l Sec Div 4 21 4 62 Nat'l Sec Growth 8.19 8 93 Nat'l Sec Slock 7 88 8 62 Putnam Fund 15 24 16 61 Putnam Growth 8 77 9 33 Shareholders 10 97 11 99 Value Lilies 5.28 5 77 Wellington 14 61 13 95 Windsor 11. in 13 33 Whitehall 13 74 14 83 TODAY'S POTATO MARKET BASIN CARLOT TTL TO DATE lO.1 Mil Concert To Open The Paul Kuentz Chamber Orchestra. Paris assembled and trained, will open Die 1963 1964 Community Concert season in Mills School Auditorium to nisht. Nov. 19. Doors will open at 7.15 p.m. Tlie concert starts at 8. Soloists will be Monique Fras-ca-Colombier. violin; Christian PAUL KUENTZ Lanle. (lute, and Cabin Lauri don. contrabass. The program opens with Con cert No. 1, Jean-Philippe Ra meau (1683-1764), for the or chestra, followed by Bach's Concerto in E major for violin and orchestra: Concerto in D major, Franz Josef Haydn, for flute and orchestra. After intermission, Karl Dit tcrs von Dittersdorf (1739-1799) Concerto in E major for con trabass and orchestra: Prelude and Fugue, Jacques Castercde, considered one of the most re markable of modern musicians, and Bcla Bartok's Rumanian Folk Dances, (1881-1913), as the finale. Press acclaim from Europe and North America has been uniform in the praise of this chamber orchestra, which has discipline, balance, depth, at tention to detail, perfection of style, and individual excellence of each instrumentalist. The all-embracing repertoire of t h e Paris Chamber Orchestra fit to WW' 1 $ Jfo-i vi'r-rf''' Council Okays Purchase Of Two Mew Police Cars (Continued from Page 1) and second readings of an or dinance accepting the revised City Code as the law of the city. The third reading of the ordinance will be at the next meeting. City Attorney Perkins told the council that the code, recently Solon Receives Petitions Requesting TV Translators Acknowledgment of petitions containing more than 3.1)00 sig nature s, sent to U.S. Sen. Wayne Morse, in Washington, DC, by Bill Golden. TV & Electronics, Klamath Falls, has been received from t he Oregon legislator. The petitions signified re quests for consideration by the Federal Communications Com mission of applications filed by Video Utility t'oi'ixiration. So- Police Locate Stolen Pickup A pickup truck slolcn nt Fifth and Main streets Monday eve ning was found later by a po liceman at Eighth Street und Klamath Avenue. lleihert Riggs of Klamath Falls, a rancher, reported the truck was stolen after he parked it at Filth and Main at 5:10 p.m. Wlien he returned 45 minutes later, (lie truck was gone and he callrd olice. A policeman tuuml the mising vehicle at 7 13 p m , wiked at Eighth and Kl.imalh. Kigs said nothing was jipp.irently taken from the truck. He said he had loll the kc- in the elncle SHIPMENTS TTL A YEAR AGO 651 S7I Season Tonight spans three centuries of mas ter works for small orcliestras. The Paris Chamber Orchestra comes rightly by its designa t i 0 n. for Conductor Paul Kuentz and all of his y 0 u ng players are Parisians. Crash Takes Man's Life CF.DARV1LLE - Ronald Comtock. 21, of Lake City died Monday from injuries sustained in a collision with a truck owned by Joe Parman. also of Lake City. The accident oc curred that morning approxi mately six miles north of Ce darville. In its report, the California Highway Patrol stated that Parman's tract; was parked on one side of ths road and anoth er truck, driven by his brother, was stopped on the opposite side. Indications are that Comstock tried to avoid the second truck, which he was following, and struck Parman's vehicle when he attempted to pass between the two, according to the in vestigating officers. Comstock was taken to t h e Modoc Medical Center with a concussion and died that after noon. He is survived by the wid ow and one child. Board Studies Two Items The Klamath Falls Elcmen School Board Monday studied two items class loads in excess of 30 students and vision test ing. School directors took the matters under advisement for further study. Means are being sought to alleviate those class es that go over 30 students. There was no appointment to the Budget Committee, which was an item on the agenda. completed by (he Michie City Company of Los Angeles, would become effective Jan. 5. He es timated that a supplement to the code will be printed about the middle of next year to in corporate general ordinances passed by the council since January, 1963. attic, which seeks to establish television translators in the Klamath Falls area. Such translators would pro vide televiewers in the e n 1 1 r e Klamath Basin with a choice of national broadcasting pro grams, now limited to one sta tion. Applications filed come months ago, have as vet not been acted upon by the com mission. In his reply to Golden's re quest for interceding with, the commission for action as soon as possible, Senator Morse wrote. "I have asked the com mission to give consideration to these applications as promptly as possible, consistent with the rules and regulations appli cable to cases of this type. I am glad to have the petitions as an expression of strong lo cal interest in the three appli cations. 1 slwuld point out, how ever, that the final decision in this case must be rendered by the commission, without prefer, enlial treatment to anv appli cant. " The letter was dated Nov. 9. A formal petition to deny these applications has been filed by Southern Oregon Unuilcasting Company, licens ee of Television Station KOTI 111 Klamath Falls, according to Senator Morse. He furter stat ed, "I am advised that there are a number of applications ahead of the above applica tions. For this reason it ap pears that it may be some time belore the commission consid ers these applications and the objections tliereto." FRIENDLY HELPFULNESS To Every Creed and Purse WARD'S Klamath Funeral Horn Marguerite Ward and Sons 21 Hiah S. TU 1-4404 A A A) Jt-rJI ml; j j Ji ' ; STAGE WORK STARTS ON PLAY Pete Lunqresn and Nancy Jackson, production staff members of "Blithe Spirit," prepare stove pipes to be used as barrels for over head flood lights for the forthcoming production of the play, scheduled for Nov. 22 through 24 and Nov. 29 in fhe Pine Grove Room of the Willard Hotel. Noel Cow ard's popular comedy is being staged by tSe Klamath Civic Theatre amateur group. Klamath Postmaster Urges Early Mailing Klamath Falls Postmaster Chet Langslet today called on local residents to cooperate dur ing the Christmas season by mailing packages as early as possible. He said Christmas 3 is cer tain to set an all time record for mailing of cards and gifts and said the situation locally will be aggravated by the post office being housed in tempor ary quarters at 734 Klamath Avenue. "Our quarters are small and will undoubtedly be congested at Christmastime," Langslet said. He reminded the public that mailings do not have to be made at the main post office branch. He said both cards and packages may be posted at Ca- Fire Report (10 a.m. Monday to 10 a.m. Tuesday) Suburban Fire Department 4: 13 p.m. Monday 4 3 0 0 block of Shasta Way, fire on carburetor of automobile be longing to Jim Crutchficld, 4OT Cleveland Street, minor dam age. Klamath Falls Fire Department 6:30 p.m. Monday 414 North Sixth Street, smoke caused by an overheated trash burner at residence of E. J. Dowty, no damage. 9:13 p.m. Monday North 11th and Washington streets, flare pots on street set tar paper afire, no damage. Fire pots had been placed on top of tar paper. 10:58 p.m. Monday North 11th and Washington streets, more tar paper afire. Firemen removed paper from beneath other pots in vicinity. 11:09 p.m. Monday Linkville Cemetery, pile of burning leaves being scattered by wind, no damage. Insiiiufe In Australia Seeks Museum's Help The Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies has sought the assistance of the Klamath County Museum to obtain the names of residents of this area who have in their possession aboriginal material of that con tinent. The institute does not seek to recover such items but desires the information to compile a list indicating where the ma terial may be found. The list is to be provided professors, scholars and researcliers study ing the Australian aboricinees. FREE DELIVERY SERVICE ON ANY ITEM IN THE STORE Pliant Ui Your N tea's Deliveries Each Day at 11:00.2:00-4:00 IN THI VILLAGI COURT ttfc 4 Mahe w 1.1471 Of Packages nong's Variety. South Sixth and Shasta Way; Town and Coun try Shopping Center; Buy-Low Market, 1338 Oregon Avenue; Oregon Technical Institute; and Kingsley Field. In recent months. Hie post of fice main branch has been closed to window service on Saturdays, but beginning ear ly next month, Saturday window service will be available at the main branch during the holiday season As a general rule, Langslet advised the public to mail pack ages and cards going to t h e most distant points before Dec. 10. Foreign - bound parcels should already have been mailed. Packages and cards going to nearer points should be mailed as soon as possible after Dec. 10. He mentioned five other points for the public to follow to insure packages and cards reaching their destinations be fore Christmas: Check card and gift lists carefully, making certain each address is complete with full name, street and number, city, state and zone or ZIP Code Stock up on sturdy packing materials for packages, includ ing heavy wrapping .paper, car tons, strong cord and paper ad hesive tape; Buy postage stamps early. The lobby in the temporary quarters of the post office is small and will be congested. Use Christmas tree stamps on cards; Use free post office labels reading "All for Local Delive ry" and "All for Out-of-Town Delivery." These labels will be delivered about Dec. 1 to all residences. The labels are to be used for sorting Christmas cards into two groups, thus in suring fast delivery; Be sure your full name and address are on all Christmas card envelopes and packages and include your ZIP Code number 1 97601) in return ad dress. One such item, a boomerang, was donated to the museum by the Klamath Falls Unit of the National Guard and is on dis play hi the war trophy case there. The unit acquired the weapon while on active duty in the South Seas during the Spanish-American War in 1898. People having similar mate rial are urged to contact Mrs. Llovd Soelv at the museum'. Edmund E. Hass Vice-President PACIFIC NORTHWEST CO. Inveitment Securities Since 1921 Will be at the Winema Motor Hotel Thursday and Friday Ttlephon TU 44181 to consult with Mr. Hon on in vestment ond retirement programs using the securities of utilities, bonks, insurance, industrial, ond Mutual Fund shares. 302-3 Fluhrer Bid., S So. Central, Medford 773-7319. Other offices in Portland, Salem, Eugene, Seattle, Spo kane, Tocoma, Aberdeen, Beilinghom, Yakima, We natchee, Walla Welle, Kennewftk, Boise and Lewiston. Rcific Northwest Company Members: Midwest Stock Exchange Correspondents of . . . Kidder, Peabody ond Company Members: New York Stock Exchange Thief Fails In Break-In Klamath Falls police are in vestigating the attempted bur glary of an Applegate Avenue house Sunday night or early Monday morning. Mrs. Geraldinc Austin, 2145 Applegate, said she discovered the attempted break-in at her house Mlnday morning when she returned from work. She said the burglary occurred be tween 11:30 p.m. Sunday and 9:05 a.m. Monday. Police found that a small .piece of glass had been broken from a rear door by a burglar who cut a strip of wire screen to get to the glass. But he was not able to get into the house because he could not reach the door's latch from the hole in the glass. Trial Here Postponed The second - degree murder trial of William Unsworth was postponed indefinitely Monday afternoon after Unsworth's de fense attorney asked for time to file a writ of habeas corpus with the Slate Supreme Court. Circuit Court Judge Donald A. W. Piper gave the defense two days to file the writ, but excused the jury panel until Monday morning. Unsworth is accused of shoot ing Tony Moore in Beatty in March, 1962. He was original ly convicted of second-degree murder, but the conviction was set aside by the Supreme Court. He was reindicted, but the indictment was faulty a n d a third indictment was necessary. The trial was to have begun Monday. Unsworth has been imprisoned for more than a year and a half since the shoot ing. It was not known when the trial might resume. New Mark Set SALEM (UPD - The legisla ture has established a record. Sen. Edward Fadeley, D-Eu-gene, pointed out the legislature has been in session this year longer than any other in the stale's history. Monday was the 149th legisla tive day HI for the regular session, and eighth for the spe cial session. Israeli Emissary Invites Oregonians To Jerusalem Amnon Gil-Ad, a 32-year-old emissary of the Israel govern ment, paused briefly at t h e Herald and News Monday to in vite people of Klamath County and elsewhere to make a mod ern pilgrimage to Jerusalem the Holy Land for three reli gions. Assistant tourist director of Western States for the Israel government, Gil-Ad is on a two-week tour throughout the principal cities of Oregon to tell the public what they might expect to observe in the n e w Holy Land. Although one of the youngest among the modern family of nations, Israel is probably the best known c 0 u n t r y in the world, he said. Everyone has learned something about the Holy Land through the Bible, he explained. But as the result of those readings people usually form some mental impressions of that country which are incor rect. Modern Israel is consid erably different in appearance today than it was some 2,000 years ago, he appraised. Gil-Ad expressed the view that a sojourn through Israel would make readings of t h e Bible more meaningful to read ers of that book. Modern highways permit motorists to travel distances in hours that camel drivers and wayfarers required days to negotiate in the time of Christ. A leisurely tour by automobile through the arid, desolate land provides the tourist an appreciation of the hardships and inconveniences endured by travelers as they trudged great distances by foot in those ancient times. The representative of the Is raeli tourist bureau then told of the progress made by the young nation despite some mod ern hardships. He remarked that despite set backs the nation endured through war, economic instabil ity, and the lack of a common language in its brief 15-year history, it has proceeded to im prove its citrus fruit industry and has made large strides in utilizing its meager supply of water to its fullest potential. - Water is so scarce in Israel that sewage is used for irriga tion; however, a new project involving the Jordan River is underway and will offer some respite, he said. Gil Ad then acknowledged that the people of Oregon are fortunate because of the abun dance of natural resources with in the state, such as water and timber. The Israel government is striving to replenish one of those two resources in its own Obituaries FOSTER John Carl Potter, 25. ditd here Nov. H, 1943. Survivors: Sisttrj. Anna Fos ter end Jo4n Chock toot, this city, Win nie Henthornt of Chiloquin, Ore., Judy Berney. Sisters, Ore.; brother, Alex, Bly, Ore. i great-aunt, Sarah Weiser, end an uncle, Wernie Foster, Beatty, Ore. Funeral services Wednesday, Nov. 20, Beatty Methodist Church at 11 a.m. Vault interment in Piute Cemetery. Ward's Klamath Funiral Home in charge. KELLEY John B. Kelley, 80, ditd In Red Bluff. Calif.. Nov. IB. 1963. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Ray Johnson, Ger ber, Calif.. Mrs, Lewis Dodgens, Gur don, Ark.) sons, H. B. Kelley. Klam ath FaHs, and Roy Owens. Gurdon, Ark., also three grandchildren and three great-qrandchildren. Funeral services Klamath Memorial Park. 23 yeai Ac Mondoy, November 18, 1940 Mr. ond Mrs. Andrew Collier moved this past week to their recently completed country home near Olenc. The Colliers have chosen the old Scotch name, "Anabaghsh," (with an accent on the "glish") for their home which is one of the most attrac tive in the bosin. The nome was that of the old McCornock family home in Scotland. Tuesday, November 19, 1940 All men in the city, in terested in group singing, are invited to attend a meeting of the Kiwanis Civic Chorus to be held tonight at 7:30 in Klamath Union High School. The Chorus is starting work on o Christmas progrom and the appearance of the group during the holidays will be the first since the chorus dis banded three yeors ago. Wednedsay, November 20, 1940 Despite odverse M weather and wet, "slow" snow conditions, numerous Klam. oth winter sports fans visited Crater Lake National Park over the weekend. Thursday, November 21, 1940 Eleanor Collier has been pledged to Mu Phi Epsilon, notional honorary tor uo percloss women in music, at the University of Oregon. Friday. November 22, 1940 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond H. Reeves and two daughters ore now occupying tVieir new home on Lakeshore Drive. Iniurt With andup THI LIAIILITY Paul O. Landry V. T. Johnson 419 Main Street Ph. TU 2 2526 AUTO PROPERTY country with a tree planting program that calls for the planting of nearly 9.000.000 seedlings annually. Another problem is the ex ploding growth of population which has increased from 600.. 000 in 1948 to two and one quarter million, due primarily to what Gil-Ad terms as a "re gathering of the exiles." He al ludes to the many Jews throughout the world who have moved from their homelands to live in the Israeli nation. The coming of so many diver gent linguistic groups to Israel has posed a problem to the young government in that there is no common language. Gil-Ad commented that Israel is prob ably the only nation in the world in which parents learn t h e "mother language from their children." f z? Z AMNON GIL-AD The emissary has offered to merchants and churches a re production of a Nazareth street scene suitable for display dur ing the Christmas season. Those desiring a copy should write to him at 615 South Flower Street. Los Angeles. 17, Calif. Repro ductions will then be sent to the local chamber of commerce in Uie names of the people who request them. Gil-Ad, whose permanent res idence is Tel Aviv, was born in Czechoslovakia and is tour ing this state with his wife, Ta mar, and their 6-jcar-old son, Giora. Couple Returns From Midwest Mr. and Mrs. William E. I Helen I Dwycr, Klamath Falls, have returned from a trip to the Midwest. Mrs. Dwycr, state president of Oregon Licensed Practical Nurses, with Mildred Livcsley, Bend, state treasurer, and Ale tha Parson, Portland, editor of the OLPNA magazine, attended Hie week-long meetings of the National Federation Convention of Licensed Practical Nurses in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Dwyer then vis ited families and friends in South Dakota where a reunion was held with a daughter, Mrs. Robert Small, and family in Winner, S.D. Mrs. Dwyer's father, J. G. Wagner, of Winner returned to Klamath Falls to spend several months. 55 Years . . . The Landry Co. offers 55 years of experience in serv ing the insurance needs of the Klamath Basin as back ground to provide insurance service for YOU. till 6a. FIRE