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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1963)
PAGE 4 HERALD AND NEWS, MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks NEW YORK STOCKS By United Pros International -.Alum Co Am 63' . -.American Air Linos 31H . American Can 41 'i . American Motors 193 AT&T 13a American Tobacco 263i Anaconda Copper 47 Armco 62 American Standard 1634 Avco Corp 223i Bendix Corp 48'i Bethlehem Steel 301. Boeing Air 3Ji Brunswick 10' Caterpillar Corp 435 Chrysler Corp 84'i Coca Cola lsi CBS. 753 ' Columbia Gas . 28'i ' Continental Can 42'i Crown Zellerbach 52 ' Crucible Steel 22'i ' Curtiss Wright 18' - Dow Chemica 623, ' Du Pont f 234'i ' Eastman Kodak H23i Firestone S15" Ford 50s. Gen Dynamics 25 General Electric 79'i General foods 8jsi General Motors W ' Gen'l Port Cement 22': ," Georgia Pacific 52 .' GT Nor Ry 53' 4 J Greyhound 48'i ; Gulf Oil 44' ; Homestake 453i ; Idaho Power 34' Int Paper 31'. Johns Manville 461i ' Keruiecott Copper 74'j Lockheed Aircraft 37'i -: Martin 203i Merck 101'i Montgomery Ward 33'j Nat'l Biscuit 57'i New York Central 21s Northern Natural Gas 49'k Northern Pacific 4G,i :. Pac Gas Elcc 31'i .Penney J.C. 44 ;rennRR 21'i ,rermanente Cement 15'i Phillips 473i ' Procter Gamble '93i iRadio Corp 94'i Richfield Oil 43 Safeway 58'i ' Sears 95' ' Shell Oil ' Socony Mobil Oil 63' Southern Co 51'.', Southern Pacific 33H Sperry Rand 17'i Standard California 591i i Standard Indiana 587 Standard N.J. l'.93i Stokcly Van Camp 2l'j Sun Mines 9't I, Texas Co. 644 I; Texas Gulf Sulfur 17'fc .'Tex Pac Land Trusl 22'i ;" Trans America 4fl1i vTrans World Air 27 v'Tri-Continental 4f.'i 'Union Carbide Ill's ' Union Pacific 41 'i I; United Aircraft 45 ' United Air Lines 39' i U.S. Plywood C2 U.S. Rubber 45' U.S. Steel S2',i United Utilities 38',. West iBank Corp 40 Westinghouse 34'i Youngstown 123W LOCAL SECURITIES Bank America 62' i 65' lioise Casrndo 30' 323i "Cal Pac Util US" 27i ifon Freight . 10' t 'Cyprus Minos 22' 24' Equitable. S&L 2!) 31' fist Nat'l Bank 77 81 Jantzcn 25't 27'a Morrison Knud 27' j 30' Mult Kennels -Vt 4'j N.W. Natural Gas K!3 343 Oregon Metal 1 l'.i PGE 2l'i 26 U.S. Nat'l Bank 90 943i Tektronix 19g 21' West Coast Tel 22' j 24'i Weyerhaeuser 33't 3o'j Grains CHICAGO (UPD-Grain range ; High Low ( ke ; Wheat Jec. 2.I3H 112 .!2V -Mar 2 16 2 14'j 2.15'-, May 2.12'i 2.12 2.11'-s. Jul 1.70'j l.d'i 1.68'e-l.K) Sop 1.71'i IS)1. l.TO'i-1, : Oats Dec .(A .67'. .67'.'. Mar .70'. .70'. .70 ', May .71'. .71'. .71'. Jul .67'j .67'. .67' 4 Rye Dec I.4m 1.44 1 44'j Mar 1.S0 4B 1 4SV1! May 1.51'j 1 4'J I.4KVI.50 Jul l.ii'i 1 44 1.44 KLAMATIMIASIN DK.MANH MwlrrMr i MAKKKT riarel7.Mi-aily F.O.n. PRICES PKR(:Xi j I'SIA 2 in or 4 oi mln 2.40-;.50 6-14 oi :.60.;.75 j baled It) Ih sks ;.4H-;.sn j i'S3 Tiii-i.t... j PRICE TO ORWR BIT.K OVT. I lS I.MM.Sfl ! "tS3 .75 i KLAMATH fc RAIL TRVCK TTL TO DATE 1 1TL A YEAR AC.O ore is 1 17 i:Ti ! 7w'T CALIFORNIA" 15 I 11 i; j Wednesday. November !7, 1963 Klamath Fitli, Or. WALL STREET NEW YORK UPI - Stocks closed lower today after a frus trating attempt to overcome profit taking. Wall Streeters felt that Pres Wen Johnson, in his address before a joint meeting of Con gress, had added little to what already had been said. Steels were fractions lower as were motors and chemicals. Du Pont bounced back from an ear ly 3 points loss and finished around Tuesday's closing level. IBM scored a modest gain as did High Voltage Engineering and Naveg. Control Data moved up from its low and posted a fair sized gain but later sold off some. Reynolds Metals. Revere Cop per it Brass and St. Joseph Lead made modest advances. American Crystal Sugar and South Puerto Rico Sugar also posted sizable gains. Wall Street Chatter NEW YORK (LPIi - Martin Gilbert of Van Alstyne. Noel & Co. feels that although the Pres ident's assassination and the subsequent changes in govern ment Ivavc created uncertainty, tliere is no reason for distur bance in the present economic situation. Gilbert feels business condi tions are strong enough to sus tain the shock, and the outlook remain highly favorable for good corporate profits and rec ord dividend payments. Gilbert says the stock market should regain most of the ground lost, then enter a period of stab ilization followed by a resump tion of a strong upward trend well into 1984. Livestock KLAMATH FALLS LIViSTOCK AUCTION MARKET Nov. U, Ull RecelDM: All call). 406 tlncl 100 celveil. Hooj 57. Sheeo 40. Compared let! Tueiday demand feed er heilere good price iteadyi feeder lleeri and iteer calves ileariy 10 week; price not established on heiler calves; feeder cows 1.00 higher! slaughter cows .50 lower. Sleughler cetlle: Cows: Ulllltv, 11 so 14 7Sr Canners-Cutlers, sno-12.60. Bulls: Ul'llly & Cmcl., 170-17.60. Slockers & Feeders: Sleers: Good Choice 5H-690 lbs., 2l.3O-tt.00i Heifers: Good-Cholc 540 650 IDs., ! 25-19 50. Sle.r Calves: Good-Choice 350 Ihs., 24.. 261 Good-Choice, 4W-S26 lbs., 22.10-23.25. Heller Calves: Good-Cholc. 106.00 per head. Cows; AAed.'Good pairs 1K-J15I med. good pregnancy tested 124-155 per headi feeder, young, I3.00-I5.l0j others, 11.50- 13 00. Hoot! U.S. 1 & t Barrows & Gilts, 110-240 lbs, 1S.I0-IV7S; No. 3. 250 lbs, 14 151 Sows, 1.360-425 lbs., 10.10-10 901 Weener Pigs, 3OO-4.50 per head. Feed rs. n lbs., 14 26. Sheep: Feeder Lambs. Good-Choice, 70-so lbs.. 13.lO-15.60i slaughter ewes, 3 30 3 60. . Ray O, Petersen, county extension agent. Potatoes PORTLAND (UPI) - Potato market steady; loo lb sks washed Russets U.S. No I un less otherwise stated: Oregon 2.50-3.10; 6-14 oz 2.75 - 3.00; sized 2 oz spread 3.75-4.00; U.S. bakers 3.10-3.40; No. 2 1.75-2.00; U.S. No 2 bakers 2.4()-2:0. Stocks MUTUAL riNllS Prices until 10 a.m. I'DT today Hid Asked Affiliated Fund 7 W, 8fil Atomic Fund 4 07 5.10 Blue Ridgo 11.77 12.R6 Bullock 1.1.13 11.39 Chemical Fund 12.13 13.20 Colonial Fund 11.12 12.15 Comw. Inv. 9 98 10.91 Diver Growth' 8.7S 9 02 Dreyfus 18.12 1970 K & It .Stoc k I I O.i 13.18 Fidelity Capital 9 .Mi 10 39 Fidelity Trend 10 16 17.51 Fundamental 10 04 ltoo K.I. P. 4 30 4 71 Hamilton II D A. 4 .98 5 44 Incorp inv 7.15 7 51 ICA 10 88 11 119 Keystone S-l 27.97 23 97 Keystone S-3 14 16.32 Keystone S-4 4 24 4 63 M.I.T. 13 09 10 49 M IT. Growth 8 34 9 11 Nat'l Inv. 15.71 lli.'.iR Nat'l Sec Div 4.20 4..9 Nat'l Sec Growth H.12 8 87 Nat'l Sec Stock 7 89 8 .62 Putnam Kund 15. 13 it; 56 Putnam Growth 8 64 9 44 Selected Amor nwi lorn Sup Inv Ser 7 44 8 It Unite1 Acciim 14 8.1 16 21 I'nited Canada 18 13 . . United Income 12.44 13 60 I'nited Science 6 85 7 49 Value Linos 5.23 5 72 Wellington 14.67 15 mi Windsor 13 89 15 to Whitehall 13.74 14 83 TODAY'S POTATO MARKET BASIN CARLOT X v . V r ' I . 1 - ' -- I' ' '"J ' KINGSLEY WINS DIVISION officer of Kingsley Field, passes a check in the amount Bartlett after the money was awarded to tne Z5th Air Division for presenting the out. standing Field Day within the division for 1963. Lt. Bartlett accepted the check for the personnel services department and has placed it in the Central Base Fund. Klamath Police Investigate Double Knifing during Fight Klamath Falls police today were attempting to unravel an apparent knife fight in a Sis kiyou Street house Tuesday night which resulted in knife wounds to a 21-ycar-old woman and a 34-vear-old man. The woman and several wit nesses have given one account of the incident and the man gives another. Police said they are inclined to believe the first account. i The woman, Carol Laniaulo, 1663 Green Springs Drive, was treated at Klamath Valley Hos pital (or a minor knife wound over her left eye. Police Hold Husband In Slaying Of Woman A 42-year-old Klamath Falls woman was killed by a gunshot wound inflicted by her husband following a domestic quarrel in the family automobile near the Klamath County Nursing Home on Summers Lane, about 10:50 p.m.. last night, Oregon Stale Police reported today. Dead is Mrs. Oliver Wendell Dixon who died moments after she was shot through the fore head with a bullet fired from a .41 caliber pistol. Her slayer, a 52-year-old unemployed laborer, was in the Klamath Comity jail this morning awaiting arraign ment on a first degree murder charge filed by the district at torney, police said. Tlvc incident marked the sec ond gun slaying in Klamath Coiuily since last Friday, when Eugene A. Bcicrle slow his 23-year-old wife in a rear room of their home at 1050 Kane Street. Bcicrle appeared before Judge Robert B. Kerr in district court yesterday for arraignment on a charge of first degree murder and in to return to that court, 3:30 p.m. Friday, for a prelim inary hearing. The shooting last night devel oped less than in minutes after a state police officer had cited Dixon or a traffic violation en Summers Lane. Police records indicate that Mrs. Dixon hail been walking along Summers Imp in the direction of her home at 1923 Ogden Street when !k came uxmi her husband be ing cited by the police ollicer. Slie had lieen stopping at a gro cery store and began walking Police Ball The annual Policeman's Rail will be bold tonight m the Na tional Guard Aimoi v on Mi.i-.ta Way Tickets to the affair aie $1 and proceeds go to the Police Rollout Association. The ball be gins at p in and ends at I a m. 1T.ursd.iv. CKNTR.M. ORIX.ON 1 Mini- Almul Mi-mlv i IDAHO Model air Meadv !.IH).;.t. 3.IV1-3.IO 1 (HI -1.13 2.2(l.?.3(l "s.iSjTsi)"" 2.t.uf I.IIM..VT loo (rs lo (til No Report SHIPMENTS AWARD C I. Edwin J. The man, Doyle Wayne Black wood, 303 Washington Street, was also taken to Klamath Val ley with a severe wound in his abdomen. Police said the wound is one and a half inches long and "quite deep." but Black wood isn't in any danger. Police said the fight appar ently occurred in the living room of a house at 1655 Siskiyou Street about 9 o'clock Tuesday night. Officers said the woman and four other persons had been drinking in the house. The others were identified as Harold Da vis, Clarence Badger, LcRoy home after failing to start her automobile. Meantime, Dixon had been seeking his w ifc in the other family car when he was stopped by police and cited for violation of the basic rule. The officer said that Mrs. Dix on entered her husband's car and tlie couple begao quarrel ing. Finally, the policeman pla cated tJic two people and he re turned to police headquarters on Altamont Drive while they drove off along Summers Iane. i About to minutes later Dixon walked into the slate police of fice and reported that his wife was outside in the front seat of his car. . "I think I hurt her," he said. Police officers rushed outside to (lie ear and discovered Mrs. Dixon bleeding from a bullet mound on her loft temple. They summoned Peace Ambulance but the victim succumbed be fore it arrived. . Police interrogated Dixon and then lodged him in the county jail pending filing of the mur der clvarge early today. Mrs. Dixon had been married 14 years and is survived by her two sons. The body was re moved to Ward's Klamath Fu neral Home where final riles are pending Obituaries PARKBX Spue. 5 JsmM D Pirktr. ?S. ft Mfrrttt, Off. 3'd Nov. Id. H i survived bv '"t wdow, RfVtir; lthrr. Ott0n PwJ PsrVpr, Ottiftio, Wash.) oiii b'oftier, MiciiMl Pa-Atv, Alhtj(linsrqii. N V ; on liMPr. Mr. Virginia Psrnti, TulelAkf , Calif. Fu neral strvic will be hHJ Friday l 10 a m. In St AuguMint Chu'Cft m Vrrriil. Recitation o' ina Holy Rojarv will ht t I P m , Triurtdav. Nov. 2t, l OH a"" Vtmftrial 0Dl In'f mtnt il bt in Mt. Calvary Cfnatary. JACKSON R,-ipfri trnfit Jrti.ki.on Sr , 30, fl url rt Mov J'. Survivftri: Son OavKj Curtn. Rpbfrt Enml Jr . VVil l'ai S'lant; daugMf . Corrtt Rfn?t, all oi cnn?auii; tuolhtri, Victor S' . Lnvrni-, Ravmood and lRov ir . Ciloqum. Norman, San Mato, Cam ; stfr, Calciioma Joii. and grand, mother, MHi Gearge. thi C'v. Pu "frnt a'ailP'iienH Mill b announced ty A if d i kiania.n runaral Homi. MtTTl Ai..a L V'H, i. 0 d Nov V Sur V'N bv Kf r hoiDa"Ct Kennfih N V'tt, Kiamati P an; tre oai'gnteri. Vr Ga-I A'ab'v, RfOd'ng. M't Jan Ha C'OAf. Ea Vr. V t'v Kiamatn fi; onf on, Ricna-d U Mitt. K attiilh FaHt; oit b'0ttr, Will im A Wraifn Vartt'ip, CatH ; on ivie'. Pearl t. B-av- Burner, i'am Funeral ite w ii M he'd Nov 50. a m in O Hair Memorial Chnt Oravanaa sti ice ad in't' ment Saturday, J p m tr litAncrfit M e m o r i . t Pflr RfOCino .nl, O Hair i Meo" a l cnMl m f4rq, NOBBS HoPti. o r,1 . NOv Jft. IH) Vr. ao V' tvi brp'f., I P e Jar ramtnto Ca V.r P'fl Hobb. tMj and J.S.0M. R?re't G . th i'ty. iacrjmantp. Cait ; i f im,ng, Ihu ((ty. tvf ifMivitt. CaM . Ce'cti1 Pabuj. Cai't. Fueai Lor- am ', -'ig San AB'fl Y. Nov St" k ama'h F-iiner a i Mivne. a l e m cone'! t'tmal M.H Mempr.al i Funerals' LANSINO fyr-ef! terv.ei ipr jKn L sy t't LAnimg wH lSe P1... t'twrc te cepei ft Aerds Keir-.th Fj-e-ei Mpn.e N. Nov I K W n. Co'i'dng se-vces t".a'h Me morlel Per. 'f T i I . Wifzenburqer. commanding of $150 to 2nd Lt. Tommy C. Moran and Linda Merrill. This is the story Mrs. Lamau to and the others Rave of the incident: They had heen drinking and Blackwood walked into t h e house and hcqan talking to the men. Suddenly he came over to Mrs. Lamauto and tried tn make advances toward her. She pushed him awav and he struck her with his fists. The woman said she fell to the floor and when she regained her senses, she was covered with blood from a slash wound above her left eye and Blackwood was standing over her with an open pocketknife in his hand. She went into the kitchen, picked up a small knife and returned to the living room. There, she said, she dared Blackwood to hit her again. He did and she slashed at his stomach with the knife in her hand. A scuffle in the living room ensued with Badger also in volved. It was broken up and the woman was taken to a tav ern, where she met her un cle and from which she was taken to Klamnlh Valley Hos pital in a taxi cab. Blackwood was taken to his brother's home. Police were informed of the affair by the hospital. An hour after the woman ar rived at the hospital, Black wood arrived in an ambulance and police were again called. Blackwood gives a different account of how he received his wound. His wife. Gloria, backs him up in this account. Mrs. Blackwood said her hus band came home shortly afler 9 p.m., intoxicated. She said he went into the kitchen and she heard him "banging around. " Then, she said, she heard a loud crash and went into the kitchen tn investigate. She said she found Blackwood lying on the floor with a butcher knife under him. She said he told her he had slipped and cut him self with the knife. Blackwood denied being involved in the Sis kiyou Street incident. No charges had been filed against any of the parlies in volved today as police contin ued their investigation. On Tl e KLAMATH FALLS BIRTHS TWINS BOYO Born to Mr. and Mr Don aid Povd in Klamath Valley Hmpilal Nov. 20 twin bovs wfignmq a lb , ' i Oil . and S l tn. i' j oi. BOYS PATTON Born to Mr n.rj Vr B l ty O PaMon m Klamath VaMfy Hospi tal Nov. 20 a boy weighing S 10. 11 CI -Bom Vr? Court Records MUNICIPAL COURT Nov. 1 Ted P WcCUer d unh a"d aiiertie-. ly conduc'. continued E'hei W'Hon. dru-u, sjj or- teven davi tt more Coon. ttrvn . :S 0'e'd. Adre Banueio!,. orunt. Mi I o r- KroltOO Verr ink. i:S forte t. C'l C Jo". (irvnn, lorte led P'ed Fi-gft V.Biae, O'lk, Hi or a 0' 10 oav lur-ev A'ei rt-ii :s 0''e'ed v.nam lalrfit Par. O'unK. US C-'f'ted Daret G'Mprd n- a, ad carder v conduct, (ocf.nrfi PA'ryl Gt" O'M. drur-k, j;s (pr- Juamt L0"i, Rab't Lvo-' Ray Pan.ei y ttvt 0 '0 dav d-unH. lorle.'td. fl-U"1 US t0rt''.1 'l1 F ard O -x)U . ea Hea'd Wetiy SV lr live or Ift (14 Patr.e a Cnati, t Jul 'ui Hamme'. fV I "0 Lirgo J' . 0' Bevmnj Jt.i0n. ivf Of If) A a "ea Lfui Lt-ao e 'ect jo-eon U ve ' 'a or 0 aayt F'"t Re?.M v J mm- itfl Vet I -u-'H. :i for'.. "V, : 'o"a 'et t $:j to-'e 'fi O-un'd iS Or rte-'oen Eggr"n. Area Churches Plan Thanksgiving Services Thanksgiving by Presidential proclamation is designated as a time to reflect and offer pray ers of thanks for the blessings of the closing year. On Thursday morning, t h e unique American festival will be observed in churclies throughout the Klamath Falls area with beloved hymns and anthems. Psalms and prayer, as it will be in all corners of the nation. .MT. LAKI PKKSBYTKRLW Members of the congregation will participate in the tradition al family Thanksgiving Day service to be held at the Sit. Laki Community Presbyterian Church, according to the pas tor Rev. Andrew A. Jams. The 10 a m. service w ill open with a Scripture reading by Merrill Bond, and Ewing Fer guson ill lead the congregation in prayer. Bcb and Audrey Scog gins will sing "Precious Hiding Place." Four members will speak on "What Thanksgiving .Means To Me" They are Don Bowman, Georgia Kiger, Carol Wynant. and Gordon Darling. ZlOX LUTHERAN Rev. Norhert E. Dey has se lected "I Will Bless While I Live" as his sermon topic for the Thanksgiving Day service at Zion Lutheran Church. The service will begin at 10 a.m. Musical tribute will include the choir singing a Pooler ar rangement of "Now Thank We All Our God." under the direc titn of Mrs. Herman Wolf. Sirs. Robert Dunlap will be the or ganic. ST. PIl'S X CATHOLIC Thanksgiving Day masses will be offered at 7 and 9 a m. in St. Pius X Catholic Church. Rev. George Murphy. Rev. Da vid llazen. Rev. Michael Reil ly. .and Rev. Eugene Van Be veren will officiate at the serv ices. ST. PALL'S EPISCOPAL Holy Communion will be ob served at 8 and 11 a.m. by St. Paul's Episcopal Church, with Rev. Robert L. Greene, rector, officiating. He w ill deliver the Thanksgiv ing message at the 11 a.m. serv ice. Special music will be pro vided by the Junior and Senior choirs. CHtRCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST A traditional Thanksgiving Day service will be held in all Christian Science churches on Thursday morning. The local First Church of Christ, Scien tist has scheduled its service at 11 a.m. A Bible lesson on "Thanksgiv ing" w ill iye read, opening w ith a verse from Psalms i:!3:l: "Rejoice in (he Lord. O ye righteous: for prai.-.e is comely for the upright." The service will also include hymns, prayer, and a special period during which church members in the congregation may stand up and express their thanks. FIRST CHRISTIAN CHtRCH The Suburban Christian Church and the First Christian Church will meet tocetlier (or their annual Thanksgiving serv ice at II a.m. in the First Chris tian sanctuary. The speaker will he Chaplain William A. Thoresen of t h e Kingsley Field Chafel. Special music will lie furnished by Sub urban Christian, as well as Thanksgiving testimonies by a youth, a teacher, a parent, and an elder. Following the service, a pel luck dinner for members of both congregations will be held in the church basement. Rev. Lee Shafer is pastor of Suburban Christian and Rev. Robert L. Jolin is pastor of First Christian Church. Records I ri'al Nov. 39 a boy we ghing J Ihs . 01 J OTONNELl. -Br.rfi tn or) Vr, Daniel J. O Connell in Klamath Val ley HoiD'tal Nov. 23 a boy weighing ft ihi , 4' on. ROLLER Bom to Mr. and -Vrv Carles Roller in Klamath Vahey Hos pital Nov. 21 a boy weighing 6 IBs . H'l ois. VcDONALD Born to Vr. and V's Wne UcDonaM m Kanian vnev Hoip-tal Nov. 22 a by weghfg a IDs - ' i 0 BROWN Bom to Vr. And Mr jAmes B'0n m Klamath Vaney Hos P'al Ngv. 21 a boy weighing I lbs , S' i OIS KIMPTON Bcwn to Mr jtrtJ -Vr VeHund Kmotoi m Kianiatn Vailev Hospital Nov. 24 a boy weighing J lb - Hi o:s PIFRCt -Horn tn r j,tV1 Vr Douglas Pterte m K imth Vailev Ho b'tii n0v. 34 a boy weighing lbs. 4' I PIS ROC K Barn tn vr Mr Le- l'id Rock in K'im'h Va:'v Her' tai Nov. 25 a boy we.ghing ip , CJS. GIRLS WOORF Bom tp vr "r V- Dove VOO'e tn KHmth Vai'ey Hos p.i Nov 2' a girl we-ghg tpt USSERv-Som lo Mr. V'j w-i. Iiatn A Usse'y in K'amati Vailev Ho. P'tai Nov. II a g r i we gr-mg 5 ibs , ' t oz RAJNUS Bjm to Mr ,nd Mm George Rark-i 'O K'rr-a1 VV ev HosOital Nov. 22 w gK.ng e lbs .4 1 oi OLTZ Rvn '9 v a-ct v- p R o 't .n KiT'h Va ev Hcs?.al Nov 22 a 0 1 we g- g 1 ihj v , ots COLE-Born to V-. or,et C?e a,l t-e i'e Jft"in,f A Coe .-i K a" vi'.e hosc'' Nov 21 a g ri we gh ng ipj , 10' ; o;s. f-ALER-Bom tp Vr Vr e't F'er in K'Amtri VaUtv Hcri'l Nov. Ji a g"l e i)h,(j ; ir. , lj' t oti, )! SUMMARY POv O r 1 aci Now It Th Tim ro Order PERSONALIZED Christmas Cards JONtS' OfFICI SUPPLY 62 Mam Ph. TU 2-4401 SACRKD HEART CATHOLIC Three Thanksgiving masses will be offered at Sacred Heart Catholic Church on Thursday morning. Mas;,es will be said at 7, 8. and 9:30 a m. Officiating at the holiday serv ices will be Mgr- T. P. Casey and Rev Charles T. Grant. FIRST .METHODIST CHl'RCH At 10 a m. the sacrament of Holy Communion will be ob served by the congregation of the First Methodist Church, said Rev. Ralph Richardson, pastor. The Thanksgiving Day service will also include a musical se lection, "Rock of Ages," per formed by a quartet composed of Waunda Shaver. Carl Hagel. Joyce Ward, and Fred Stiver son. Preceding the service, t h e Methodist .Men will meet for a breakfast at 7:30 a.m. in the church dining room. KINGSLEY FIELD CHAPEL Protestant services will be conducted at 10 a.m. on Thanks giving Day in the K i n g s 1 e y Field Chapel by Chaplain Wil liam A. Thoresen. The senior choir and junior department of tlie Sunday School will present the special music. Chaplain Francis J. Rartns will officiale at the Catholic service in the chapel. Thanks giving -Mass will be said at 11 a.m. HOPE LUTHERAN' CHl'RCH Rev. Warren Pechman w ill speak on "Let L's Give Thanks" at the 10 a.m. service of Hope Lutheran Church on Thanksgiv ing Day. The senior choir, directed by Jackie Backlin, will present a traditional anthem, "Thanks Be To Thee" by Handel. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN' Thanksgiving Day services at the First Presbyterian Church will begin at 10 a.m. in the santcuary. Rev. Robert C. Groves, minis ter, will give the meditation, and the choir will sing the an them, "Sing To The Lord of Harvest" by Willan. BIBLE BAPTIST A Thanksgiving Day service will be sponsored jointly by the Immanuel Baptist Church and the Bible Baptist Church. Im manuel Baptist will host the 10 a.m. worship hour. Rev. John Fenderson assist ant pastor of Bible Baptist, will deliver the sermon. "The Song j la Tfcs (Day's lews (Continued from Page 1) repaid at the rate of $300 a month from his $800 per month salary of a congressman 'con gressmen got less then'. That left them $300 a month to live on during the first 20 months of his term. That's the kind of woman our new President bas for a wife. One can't help feeling that spending recklessly and putting the resulting delimits on (lie cutf aren't going to be popular dur ing the new administration. Gun Wounds Bird Hunter A DorrLs youth was wounded on the hand while pheasant hunting Monday when the shot gun he was carrying discharged as he was climbing nut of a ditch the Klamath Valley Hos pital has reported to Oregon Stale Police. Tlie injured was Robert Wil liam Wonch. I", who was treat ed at the local hospital for shot gun wounds on three fingers of his left hand and then released. Worich said he had been hunt ing seven miles east of t h c "D" Ranch, between Tulclake and Durris, when his shotgun discharged as he was climbing a ditchbank to get his dog. It was the thud incident since Saturday in which bird hunters in the Klamath Rasin were wounded by shotgun pellets. Auto Accident Brings Citation A Klamath Falls woman was cited for driving without an op erator's license after her car went off the road and into a ditch near the VM) block of Summers Iine about 6 15 p m.. Tuesday, Oregon Stale Police have reported. Mrs. Bonita Rogers. 5.M1 Shas ta ay. told police that her car was forced otf the road by an other ehkie as it overtak ing her automobile. Mrs. Rog ers was not intured but her au tomotive was slightly damaged. Bob Jonei' Southern Oregon Insurance Agency So. 6th ond Shasta Way TU 2-4671 of Moses." and Dr. Freeman Schmitt, pastor, will give tlie benediction. Eugene Bailie will present a Thanksigivng testimo ny. Special music will include "We Gather Together" by the choir, a vocal duet, and tradi tional hymns sung by the con gregation. PEACE MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN "Thanksgiving In Tragedy" Services Planned Friday For Saigon Crash Victim MERRILL Funeral services for Spec. 5 James D. Parker. 2i. a native of Merrill, will be held at 10 a.m. Friday, Nov. 2fl. from St. Augustine's Catholic Church in Merrill. Father Aber crombie will officiate. Military rites will be conducted at the graveside in Mt. Calvary Ceme tery, Klamath Falls. The rosary will lie recited at 8 p.m. Nov. 23 in O'Hair's Memorial Chapel. Pallbearers w ill be Dale Rick, Jim Johnson. Ray Johnson. Rog er Dokken. Mike Pcderson and Dan Murphy. Friends of the family may send gifts in his memory to the Laos Orphanage. Vientiane, Laos, through the First National Bank of Merrill. Parker, who was on author ized leave in Saigon, Vietnam, was a passenger on a motorcy cle that was involved in a colli sion with a second vehicle on Nov. 18. He was Klamath Coun ty's first casualty in that the ater. He was on his third term of duty in the East Asia area and had been in Vietnam since Octo ber of this year, serving with the first special forces. He en Driver Cited In Accident Mrs. Mildred Polly Merrill. f8, was cited for failure to yield the right-of-way Tuesday after noon after, police' said, she drove her 1963 auto in front of another car on Kit Carson Way at Portland Street. Police said Mrs. Merrill, 19-19 Melrose Street, told them she had stopped for the stop sign on Portland, then pulled across Kit Carson in front of the other auto, a 1956 sedan, which was east bound on Kit Carson. The second auto was driven by Alvis Clayton Smith, 20, 1716 Fargo. Both autos re ceived moderate damages in the 12: 10 p.m. crash. Visit Planned Over Holiday Mrs. W. P. Myers, 879' Lake shore Drive, will spend Thanks giving weekend in Portland and Vancouver, Wash. She has just returned from a long motor trip to the Mexican border by oar with side trips to Bakersfield. Earlimart, Calif, and San Diego. She was accom panied by a daughter. Mrs. Vir ginia Harper of San Diego. A djuightcr-in-law, Mrs. Theo dore Myers, in the United States after a long period in Germany, drove the party south. Mrs. Myers returned to this country to help care for her mother. Unhappy Druggists Hear Explanation On Welfare SALEM ilTI' About too un happy druggists from through out Oregon heard State Welfare Administrator Andrew Juras ex plain Tuesday why their pay ments had been slashed 35 per cent this month. Rob Gion, president of the Klamath County Druggists As sociation, told the Herald and News today that the associa tion would meet nut later than Dec. 10 to discuss remarks made at Salem yesterday by Slate Welfare Administrator An drew Juras concerning t h e slashing of drug payments for welfare recipients. Gion also said that he had no knowledge that Malcolm Woodward, quoted in the anoe L PI press release, was a parclicing druggist in the Klam ath Kalis area. Woodward is not a monilxT of the local as sociation, but it is possible that he is a retired druggist who lues here locally. Gion said. THANKSGIVING DAY SERVICE 10:00 A.M. CHOIR WILL SING Meditation by Rev. Robert C. Groves FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 601 PINE STREET will be the title of Rev. Laing W. Sibbet's sermon for the 9:3D a.m. Thanksgiving Day service at the Peace Memorial Presbj terian Church. Tlie service will .feature a number by the choir, "Hymn of Thanks." KLAMATH LUTHERAN Thanksgiving Day services at 9.30 am. Rev. Malcolm ln seth's sermon entitled "Thank ful For What?" Music by the senior choir. listed the day after his 17th birthday, May 5. 1955, in Die paratroopers, from Merrill and was assigned to the Asian the ater. He met his w ife, w hose father was w ith the U.S. State Depart ment' in Phnom Penh, Cambod- St 'I v.a r t ' SPEC. 5 JAMES D. PARKER ia, in 1959. In 1961 he joined the special forces and was sent to Vientiane, Laos, in 1962. His last tour of duty took him to Vietnam. Mrs. Parker is making her home in San Jose. During his duty abroad, the young serviceman became deep ly concerned with the plight of children and the inadequately equipped orphanages. Survivors in addition to the widow, Barbara, San Jose, Calif.: are father, Dalton Park er, Othello. Wash.; a brother. Michael Parker, Albuquerque N.M.: one sister, Mrs. Virginia Barnes. Tulclake: grandfather, James O'Connor, Klamath Falls; aunts, Mrs. Dan Berry and Mrs. Jerry Ahern, Merrill: uncle, M. J. O'Connor, Klamath Falls: a niece and nephew, Brenda and Donald Barnes, Tulclake, and other relatives. Autos Collide At Intersection A two-car collision at Ninth and High streets Tuesday afler; noon resulted in major dam ages to one auto and moderate damages to the other. No citations were issued after the 4: 10 p m. collision. Police said a 1960 sedan being driven by Dale Eugene Gant. 43, 532 North Eighth Street, west on -Ninth struck the other care which was northbound on High. The second auto was driv en by Charles Emit Bales. 56. 723 Eldorado Avenue. Bales said he had slopped for the stop sign on High at Ninth, then pulled across the intersection. The col lision occured in the intersec tion. "I think this is a real first class bureaucratic snow job." Klamath Falls druggist Mal colm Woodward said of Juras' comments. Juras told the druggists the Welfare Department had iust $1 million lo spend on drugs dur i ing the 1963-65 biennium. He said the department had spent more than the budgeted amount for the first three months of the fiscal year, hut from here on only $39,000 a month will be paid for drugs, regardless of how large the billings. Woodward said d'rugg'sts in his area actually Inst money providing drugs for welfare re-npienls. .-?wr - 'jA o