Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 29, 1963, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE IA
HERALD AND NEWS,
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
NEW YORK STOCKS
By United Presi International
Allied Chemical
54'4
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37'i
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53H
45'
43',
45
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485' '
32H
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34'
57'.
50
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514
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112
41
40
40',
A2-V4
45'i
53!t
39V4
40' i
36i
12CH
Alum Co Am
American Air Lines
American Can
American RIotors
AT&T
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper
Armco
tmerican Standard
Avco Corp
Bendix Corp
(Bethlehem Steel
Boeing Air
Brunswick
Caterpillar Corp
Chrysler Corp
Coca Cola
CBS.
Columiba Gas
Continental Can
Crown Zellerbadi
Crucible Steel
Curtiss Wright
Pow Chemical
pu Pont
Eastman Kodak
Firestone
ford
General Dynamics
General Electric
General Foods
General Motors
General (Port Cement
Georgia Pacific
let Nor Ry
greyhound '
Bull Oil
Homestake
Idaho Power
IBM.
Int Paper
Johns Manvillc
KennecoU Copper
Lockheed Aircraft
Jlartin
Jtcrck
Montana Power
Montgomery Ward
Nat'l Biscuit
Jlorthern Natural Gas
Northern 'Pacific
Jac Gas Elcc
tpenncy JC.
Penn RR
Permanenle Cement
Phillips
Procter Gamlc
Radio Corp
Richfield Oil
Safeway
Scars
Shell Oil
Socony Mobil Oil
JSoulhern Co
Southern Pacific
perry Rand
Standard California ,
Standard Indiana
Standard N.J. '
:stokely Van Camp ,
Sun Mines
Texas Co.
Texas Gulf Sulfiu
Texas J'ac Land Trust
Thiokol
Trans America
Trans World
Tri-Continenlal
Union Carbide
t'nion Pacific
t'nited Aircraft
United Air Lines
U S. Plywood
ty S- JluUwr
V S. Steel
United Utilities
West Bank Corp
Vostinghouso
Youngstown
LOCAL SECURITIES
Bank America 62' fio'i
Boise Caisciidc 30' i 32 '4
Cal Pae I'til 25'! 27'j
Con Freight 9 lO'i
' Cyprus Mines 22'j 24'i
- Equitable S&L 28tt 304
1st Nafl Bank 77 Rl'i
Jantzen 26 274
v Morrison Knud 27J4 30
1; Mult Kennels 3 4Ji
5 N.W. Natural Gas Ei 34'
Oregon Metal l'i l'i
PP&L 24'i 23.
PGE 24. 2S
U.S. Nat l Bank 90i 94'i
Tektronix 19-S 21
West Coast Tel 22S 24' 4
Weyerhaeuser 33' '
Potatoes
PORTLAND IUPI - Potato
market steady: 100 lb ski
waslied Itussels U.S. No 1 un
kss otlierwi.se stated: Oregon
k 50-3.10: 6-14 oz 2 73 - 3 .00:
tod 2 oz spread 3.75-4 00; U.S.
bakers 3.10-3.40; No 2 1.75-2.00;
U S. No 2 linkers 2 40-2 SO
KLAMATHBASINn"t K rRAlOrtKr.ON I IDAHO
I)EMAND Fair Slow "Moderate""
MARKKT Steady Steady' Steady
K.OTB. PRICKS PWCWT. "
I'SIA t in or 4 ot mln J.4O-S.50 2 20-2 :3 2.M-2.IJ
oi J.60 -2.75 2 40-2.50 2.M-2.H5
hslrd 10 lb skt 2. 30-2. Ml i 2 l 2.90-3.23
i'St i.so-i.ia 1.40 Lio
PRICE TO GRWR BILK CWT. j
CSI MH 75 Ton (ctt7iuQtioti I l 40-1 50
"Q.75 Too fewlii (jtiutp 40- 30
KLAMATH
; RAO. TRICK TTI, TO DATE TTt. A YEAR AGO
: "OHEOOV M 12.11 8.W
CALIFORNIA 11 5 1313 701
Friday. November M. 1963
Klamith Fall. Ore.
WALL STREET
NEW YORK IUP1) - Wall
Street trading showed a contin
ued vote of confidence in the
new Johnson administration to
day and ttocks rallied sharply
on heavy trading.
An editorial in a leading fi
nancial publication, Wall Street
Journal, taid: "Mr. Johnson
has sought to foster confidence
in die many millions concerned
with the nation's business.
Though few would call him a
fiscal consci-vative few consider
him antibusincss either. He has
a strong economy going for
turn."
Today's advance, the second
in the three sessions in which
stocks were traded this week,
also was aided by Sen. George
V. Smathers, O-Fla., predicting
that tax reduction legislation
will be adopted by tlie Senate
before the end of January.
Wall Street Chatter
NEW YORK lUI'H Martin
Gilbert of Van Alslync feels Uic
technical pattern has been re
paired and tlic bullish forces
have the situation well in hand.
Gilbert feels the market gave
an excellent prc-holiday per
formance Wednesday, consider
ing Tuesday's dynamic advance
which normally would have in
vited a great measure of profit
taking.
Ralph Rolncm of Harris, L'p
ham & Co. says Die market is
fortunately entering the season
ally strong period of the year
at a time when it is also get
ting closer to a short term over
sold condition. Rotncm feels
this -combination should justify
a "buy on weakness" trading
policy especially it the 715-7:10
level in the Dow-Jones indus
trial average is tested and
weakness develops.
Livestock
PORTLAND (UP!) -(USDA)
Weekly livestock:
Cattle 1080. Slaughter steers,
high good-choieo 22.75-23.75 some
1100-1200 lb 21.50-22; good 21-22;
mixed standard good 18.50;
couple lots high good-choice hci
fers 840-925 Hi heifers 21.50;
good-low choice 20-20.50; utility
commercial cows 13-14; daily
bred 11-13; cutter 9-12.50; can
ncr 7-10; cutter-utility bulls 16
17.75. Calves 250. Good-choice veal
ers 26-29, few 30; good-choice
feeder steers 20-24, few mixed
good-choic heifers 20.
Hogs um. Barrows and gills
190-230 ll 15-15.50; 2 and , 3
firado 200-300 lb 13-15; sows
350-550 Jb 10-13.
Sheep 530. Slaughter lambs
choice . prime wooled 17.75-18;
qehoice prime shorn 17-17.50,
slaughter owes cull-good 4.50-3;
choice feeder lambs 15-16.50.
Stocks
MUTUAL FUNDS
Prices until 10 a.m. PUT toilnv
Hid Asked
Affiliated Fund 7.96 mil
Atomic Fluid 4. Bit 5.13
Blue Ridge 11.7(1 12.85
Bullock 13.15 14.41
Chemical Fund 12.1(1 13.32
Colonial Fund 11.13 12.16
Comw. Inv. 9 98 (1.62
Dreyfus 18.11 19.38
E & II Stock 14 06 15.19
Fidelity Capital 9611 10.41
Fidelity Trend 16.20 17.01
Fundamental 10(11 low
Founders Fund 6 48 7.04
Group Sec Com 12 91 14 14
Gr Sec Avia El 6 81 7 47
Hamilton H.D.A. 4 !KI 5 43
Incorp Inv. 7.10 7.76
K'A 1(1 tt 1197
Investors' Group
Intercontinental 6 13 6 62
Mutual ll;ta 12 30
Stock 18 51 20 01
Selective. 1032 11.23
Variable 701 7.38
Keystone S I 22 93 23 93
Keystone S3 14 94 16 .'ill
Keystone S-4 4 24 4 6.1
M.I T. 15 07 16 47
MIT. Growth 8:13 9 13
Xal'l Inv 15 71 1698
Nat l Sec Div 4 2.1 4 62
Nai l Sec Growth 8 11 8 86
Nai l Sec Slock 7 8!t 8 63
Putnam Fund 15 15 in 55
Putnam drouth 8.62 9 42
Selected Amcr 0 88 Ulna
ShareJioldei'S 10 97 11 99
Sup Inv Scr 7.43 8 10
Value Lines 5 24 5.73
Wellington 14.60 13.90
Windsor 13 87 15 03
Whilehnll 13 73 14 84
TODAY'S POTATO MARKET
BASIN CARLOT
Vending Machines Robbed
At Mouldingcraft Plant
The Mouldingcralt plant, 320
Market Street, was burglarized,
Wednesday night by thieves
who used a fork lift truck to
smash open a candy machine.
Police said tlie burglary
Genera
Promoted
Maj. Gun. Benjamin J. Web
ster, a recent visitor to Kingsley
Field, has been promoted to the
rank of lieutenant general in
line with his recent appointment
as commander of the allied air
forces of Southern Europe by
the late President John F. Ken
nedy. Tlie new assignment will be
in addition to his present duties
as Air Defense Command Chief
of Staff.
Webster has served in the lat
ter post since 1961, having
moved to that position from the
deputy chief spot.
The general will be headquar
tered at Naples, Italy, as of next
January.
Violence Leads
To Hand Injury
One of two 13-year-old girls
who were transported to City
Jail Monday morning after they
began tearing up their room at
the County Juvenile Home was
injured Thursday at the jail.
Police said the girl smashed'
her fist through a window and
was cut. She was treated by a
doctor and taken back to the
Juvenile Home.
Fence Mishap
Fatal To Deer
A doc deer which apparently
had broken its hip while run
ning into a fence near Bonanza
before noon Thursday was re
moved from the fem e by Vei n
Fields. 2BH8 Crest Street, and
turned over to the Oregon State
Police.
State police then passed on the
animal to the Klamath Falls Po
lice Department for use in its
kitchen.
Five Day Weather
Western Oregon: Tcniieralure
slightly below normal with light
precipitation through Wednes
day; liighs 42-50; lows 28-38.
Eastern Oregon: Near normal
temperature and light precipita
tion through Wednesday: highs
35-44; lows 20-30 with 1(M5 some
nights in high valleys.
New Interpretation Of Noel Coward
Offered By Civic Theatre Players
By UAWIN IIAR.VSTni'M
Just to make sure. I saw two
performances of "Blithe Spir
it." produced in-the-round by
Klamath Civic Theatre in Ihe
Pine (irovc Room of the Wil
lard Hotel last weekend. I was
right the lirst lime.
You should see this show.
Those people can act. very
well, and you will certainly lie
entertained. There is a final
performance tonight. Co.
People who arc fans of Noel
Coward will be astonislicd at
Ihe interpretation given here,
and at the style. Coward is
astringent and lean, writes
more parody than satire, and
is tlKiroughly F.nglish in ap
proach. His pace is fast, his
substance thin.
Civic Theatre serves him up
in great thick slices, and let
tlK'ic be no mistake: Whatever
was the intent, these charac
ters are not F.nglish. They re
criminate and brawl in a thor
oughly American manner.
Judy Steams' "Madame Ar
ea ti" is excellent, although
somewhat weak in tlie fust act,
which moves much loo slowly.
Dame Margaret Rutherford
created this role, and while I
do not mean at all to imply
that Miss Stearns is better
than that groat ladv. 1 tin like
SHIPMENTS
was d i s c 0 v e red Thursday
morning by Clifton Baxter,
president of Mouldingcraft.
Officers found that the burg
lars gained entry into the plant
through a rear door, which ap
parently had been accidentally
left unlocked. The burglars
went into the lunchroom and
pulled the candy machine from
the wall with a fork lift truck
and chain. The machine was
pulled into die main plant sec
tion and the truck was used to
smash it open. The coin box
was taken.
A soft drunk machine was
taken. Baxter estimated that
each box contained $10 in
change, but damage to the
candy machine was estimated
at $230 and to the soft drink
machine at $30.
The burglars entered the
plant's office, but nothing was
apparently taken from that section.
Burglars
Vandalize
Store Here
Vandal-burglars smashed Ihcir
way into the Oregon Food Store
on Shasta Way Wednesday
night, threw merchandise
around, but apparently took only
some candy and two wallets.
The burglary was discovered
late Thursday morning by Jo
seph Fales, president of tlie food
store chain.
Police said the burglars may
have been juveniles. The thieves
smashed a hule in a glass door
of the store by throwing pieces
of earth at the door. Once in
side the store, they scattered
clothing from shelves over the
floor, ripping part of it. A Pola
roid camera was placed in a
sack to be taken, but the thieves
forgot it.
Next, the burglars broke an
other glass door into the adja
cent Fashion Villa and scattered
clothing around the store. A
mannequin was broken and its
clothes ripped off. Jewelry was
thrown about.
The Fashion Villa's ca.-h reg
ister was knocked over, but the
thieves couldn't open it. It was
later reported to have been emp
ty. Two women's wallets were
taken from tlie Fashion Villa.
Funerals
1.EAR
Mrs Inner O. Ler, 76, Ashland, died
Wednesday, Nov. 27. In Arilnnd. Fu
neral services will be held 9:30 e.m.
Saturday. Nov. JO. In Ihe Mortuary
Chapel, Hie Rev. P. Malcom Hammond,
First Methodist Church, officiating.
Commllfal In Mt. View Cemetery, Ash
land. Ashland Mortuary in charge.
JACKSON
Funeral services lor Roherl Ernest
Jackson Sr. will be held Irom the Chil
oquln Assembly ot God Church Satur
day, Nov. 30. at II a.m. and 1:30 p m.
Concluding services and vault Inter
ment In Chlel Schonchin Cemetery.
her interpretation of the role
boiler. Miss Stearns is extreme
ly funny and entirely eccentric
without any loss of femininity.
The maid, Joyce I'ryor,
comes willun an ace of walking
off with tlie whole affair, al
though she has hardly a line
until Ihe third act. She plays
the role for all it is worth, and
as it turns out, it is worth plenty-Miss
Woolschlager and Shir
ley Smith are entirely adequate
to the roles Uiey play, although
on the opening night, Miss
Smith's performance seemed to
be affected badly by her cos
tume. On llie second perform
ance, my guess was substanti
ated, because I saw a whole
new. ami much prettier cos
tume. and a very good "El
vira "
"Charles Condomine." plaed
by Tom Mann, is properly
smooth and urbane, and he and
Laurie Woolschlager as "Ruth"
seemed to catch in their scenes
together more of the Coward
spirit. Both should have had
more help with tlicir F-nglish
accents, however, and these
very talky scenes, again, move
too slowly.
Joe Rroda as "Dr. Bradman"
Is very amusing, and Sylvia
Smith as "Mrs. Bradman" is
about tlie silliest and Ituuticst
I've ever seon in an amateur
production. They gave a deli-
itr Free Delivery
KIMBALL GLASS
MIRROR QL
1 um 11 11 11 in ii iim inn limn -im-,4fci Mi-manual
CHRISTMAS 8ELLS For the second straight year,
downtown light standards have been decorated with red
Christmas bells. These bells are lit by power supplied by
business firms where they are located. The City Street
Department hung the decorations earlier this week.
Heaton Seeks
Charles Heaton, 4012 Home
dale Road, is running unop
posed for election to the three
man board of directors of the
South Suburban Sanitary Dis
trict, representative of the
district Maurice Gunderson
said Friday.
The election is scheduled dur
ing the hours of 8 a.m. through
0 p.m., Monday, Dec. 2, at the
district office, 1818 Derby
Street.
Heaton is presently a mem
ber of the board, having been
appointed by the County Court
to ill the unexpired term of
Ned Putnam, who resigned last
July because of the pressure of
business.
Meet To View
Scholarships
A "scholarship information
meeting" will be held Dec. 3
in the Klamath Union High
School library.
The meeting will start at 7:30
p.m. and will feature as the
main speaker Dave Johnson,
executive secretary of the Ore
gon State Scholarship Commis
sion. High school seniors and their
parents were urged to at
tend. Johnson will outline re
cent developments in scholar
ship programs of Ihe commis
sion as welt as various col
leges, explain Ihe considera
tions in selecting iccipients of
scholarships, and answer
questions.
nite boost to a first
was fast becoming
let which
intermin
able.
Since this somev. hat s low.
heavy quality characterises the
whole production, I infer that
this is a matter of direction.
To the eternal credit of di
rector William Hagcrman let
it be said that he has net tried
to copy anybody. Civic Thea
tre's approach and execution
are entirely their own. and
have great freshness.
The set is, I believe, unique
in arena staging. The arena
stage pulls tlie audience up to
the play, but Roger Cote, with
a system of free-standing doors
and wails, pulls the audience
into the play, right into tlie
acting area.
Tlie costuming is excellent.
Sylvia East has dressed her
people in character, and with
great humor. "Elvira." a pret
ty girl anyway, is quite glam
orous, and "Ruth" and "Mrs.
Brailman's" costumes have a
properly English leeling. Too
many amateurs simply do a
fashion show, without regard to
the characters.
3 ENTIRE
tj STOCK
i UDUCED!
Klamath Area!
O 521 Walnut
Board Post
Directors are elected to serve
a term of three years w ith the
term of one of the directors ex
piring each year.
Eligible to vote in the elec
tion are residents of the sani
tary district which is within an
area compriscd,enerally, of
Frieda Street south to Ander
son Street, and Washburn Way
east to Patterson Street.
la 1L
Day s lews
(Continued from Page 1)
It doesn't PROHIBIT the
reading of the Bible. It mere
ly prohibits a law REQUIR
ING the1 reading of the Bible.
The Bible is Great Litera
ture. No one can be anything
but BETTER OFF for reading
it. All the Supreme Court deci
sion does is to forbid COM
PELLING the .eerle to read
the Bible.
One fears tlia'. these pickets
are crackpots of whom we
have too many already.
Incidentally
It might not be a bad idea
if mere of cur people as a
matter of information and edu
ation would do seme reading
about the other great religions
of Ihe world such as Bud
dhism and 'Mohammedanism.
As literature, they're far hot
ter than a lot of the stuff that
gets read these days.
The Thanksgiving holiday's
strangest traffic aecident:
As a California highway pa
trolman started up en the Dum
barton bridge south of San
Francisco yesterday, he saw a
car lying upside down in the
shallow water. He had a hunch
that somebody might be inside
it. So lie stripped olf his
clothes, waded out through the
bone-chilling water, found a
handle, pulled a door open,
reached inside, felt a human
arm and started to pull out
what he thought was a corpse.
To his a m a z e m c n t. the
"corpse" struggled out of his
grasp, popped up out of the
water and began gasping for
What had hapcned?
The car had skidded off Ihe
bridge approach and turned
over in the w a t e r. When it
turned over, it TRAPPED A
'POCKET OF AIR. By bending
his head back, the driver was
able to breathe this air. It kept
him alive until the cop came
into the picture about 40 min
utes after tlie accident.
Truth sometimes IS stranger
than fiction. If a fiction writer
had invented that situation, his
readers would have scoffed and
said it was TOO imaginative.
PLAN HOLIDAY
FOR THE
WSLLARD
HOTEL!
Special facilities
group. Call now
tioni. TU 4-4161
for any liic
for rcscrvo-
AND REMEMBER THESE OTHER FINE ROOMS
PAUL BUNYAN
Open t um you 7:00
t).m. to 2:00 p.m. Serv
ing heertv breeltfaite and
deliihrtul lunchet. Closed
Saturdays.
WILLARD HOTEL -205 Main
4Victims x
Of Crash
Improving
Four members of a Pebble
Beach, Calif., family who were
injured in a spectacular collision
involving their automobile and a
truck and trailer near Midland
early Thanksgiving Day are in
satisfactory condition, the Klam
ath Valley Hospital reported to
day. The Klamath Valley Hospi
tal reported before noon today
that Nancy Bergcr and her
brother, Benjamin, had been
released from the hospital.
Their parents are still hospi
talized, as the result of an au
tomobile accident yesterday
in which the four people were
injured.
The accident is believed to
have developed when the car
went out of control on the icy
pavement and skidded broadside
into the path of an oncoming
truck. The impact of the colli
sion drove the front end of the
car under the truck and shat
tered many of the windows into
pieces the size of buckshot.
The most severely injured of
Ihe Bergcr family was the fath
er, John K., 53, who sustained
a crushed foot, a back lacera
tion and other injuries. He was
pinned in the wreckage for some
two hours . while a Klamath
Falls Fire Department crew
worked to extricate his loot that
had been pinned between the
door and the frame of the car.
Also injured were his wife,
Elaine. 50, his son, Benjamin,
10. and a daughter, Nancy, 24.
I All three received back and hip
j injuries. The hospital could not
say when any of the patients
! would be discharged.
Post Office
To Hire Two
Klamath Falls Postmaster
Chester Langs.lct announced to
day that examinations will be
held soon for vacanies in the
post office.
Langslet said the positions
of substitute clerk and substi
tute cariicr probably will be
open. They have starting wages
of $2.26 per hour and a maxi
mum of $3.14 per hour.
Langslet said group life in
surance, health insurance, paid
vacation and paid sick leave
are included in the positions.
No previous expeiicnce is
necessary for the jobs, but
toniotitors will be required to
take written lests each lasting
about 2n4 hours. Any citizen, 18
years of age or older, and high
school graduates 10 years of
age and older, may apply. Fur
ther information on the open
ings is available from the
Klamath Falls Post Oflice.
Hard of
Hearing!
Zenith Hearing Aid
For Only $50
Full PowirtrJ 4 Tunslstors
Come m
r phont
tot a
horn
todly
III M.II.'MIM'a
Dr. J. L. Lawson, O.D.
OPTOMETRIST
AND
HEARING AID CONSULTANT
ONLY LOCAL FULL-TIME
HEARING AID CONSULTANT
715 Main St. Klomoth Falls
TU 4-8322
HOURS: 9 A.M. - 5 P.M.
MON. - SAT.
t.ofl Pr.cs on Hearing Aid
Battened
We Mall Batteries Anywhere
PARTIES NOW
PONDEROSA
Open tram 12:00 noon
ervini buffet lunches,
tiltlint) irvak dinners,
tcmpftnf rvfrftttmtnrt.
De.nct t th muiic ot
W.lbur (net Sofch.
mi
wife
Joint Meeting Set
By School Boards
Directors of Klamath Falls
elementary schools and Klamath
Union High School will meet
jointly Monday evening.
Tlie meeting is scheduled to
begin at 7:30 p.m. in the school
administration building, 475
South Alameda Avenue.
Tlie agenda calls for the joint
consideration of the tentative
10S4-S5 school calendar. Ihe
Budget Committee schedule for
the same period and a report
from Mrs. Beulah Elliot, presi
dent of the Klamath County
Fish-Game Council Votes
To Oppose Federal Bills
The Oregon Fish and Game
Council has voted to oppose the
passage of three federal bills
which would affect public lands,
it developed during a meeting of
the council's board of directors
representing chapters in six Ore
gon counties, C. E. "fted" Mil
horn, state president, told the
Herald and News Friday.
Earlier this month members
of the Klamath County chapter
went on record as opposing the
same bills.
The proposed legislation which
is in disfavor with the sports
men includes:
Land ar.d Conservation Bill,
No. SB859. which would require
the purchase of an automobile
windshield sticker to enter gov
ernment lands.
L'dall Bill, HR255. which per-
'Kane' Film
Scheduled
WEED. Calif.-The College of
Ihe Siskiyous' fine film society
will present its second program
of the season Dec. 13 in the
John Mantle campus center.
The film. "Citizen Kane." will
begin at 8 p.m. In addition to
"Citizen Kane," a short film en
titled "A Bowl of Cherries" will
be show n.
Orson Welles directed and
stars in "Citizen Kane" gener
ally regarded as Welles' finest
film.
The 1941 film is a biography
of a newspaper tycoon, based on
(he life of William Randolph
Hearst. The film is an Academy
Award winner. Joseph Cotten
and Agnes Moorehead also ap
pear in "Citizen Kane."
"A Bowl of Cherries" is a hu
morous short film depicting the
adventures of a cowboy who
comes to Greenwich Village in
New York City to master his
technique of painting horses.
The film shows his life in a
Bohemian atmosphere.
Admission to the show will be
80 cents for adults and fiO cents
for children.
Portables,
have them all! Shop
selection!
RCA VICTOR
16" PORTABLE
$13995
. i . , . Entro)
16 inch (overall diag.)
125 square inch picture
RCA VICTOR
19" PORTABLE
195
With
Trade
19" tube (oreroll
diag.)
172 sq. in. picture
RCA VICTOR 23"
CONSOLETTE
$17095
Trodt
I Aw V h i
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10th & Main ph TU 4 8183
Chapter of the Oregon Educa
tion Association.
In addition, there will be re
ports on a proposed change in
the custodial working agree
ment, a propo.-ed amendment to
the school facilities rental poli
cy, and bus costs.
Preceding tlie joint meeting,
tlie elementary school directors
will hold a brief business meet
ing (or payment of bills and the
hearing of a communication
from the planning commission.
That meeting will begin at 7
p.m.
mils the Department of Inter
ior to sell public lands not to the
highest bidder, but to whom
they believe to be the most re
sponsible. Wilderness Bill. SB4. wliich
sets aside as a wilderness
area some 60 million acres in
lour western slates to the ex
clusion of logging, grazing and
mining interests.
The council urged spoilsmen
opposing the legislation to ex
press those views in letters to
their congr essmen.
Mayor Sits
On Bench
Hobert Veatch doffed his may
or's hat today and donned the
hat of tlie Municipal Court
judge.
Mayor Veatch sat in Munici
pal Court in the absence of the
regular judge. Clarence Humble,
who is vacationing. The mayor
has the power to substitute for
the Municipal Court judge under
a provision of tlie city charter.
Eighteen persons appeared be
fore Veatch on charges of drunk
enness, disorderly conduct and
vagrancy.
Flying Record
The 408th Fighter Group
broke its daily flying r e c o rd
Tuesday. Nov. 2f, with a total
of 61 missions.
Commenting on the achieve
ment, Col. Edwin J. Witzenbur
ger, group commander, said,
"This record could not have
been possible without Ihe fine
support of all of the mainte
nance personnel."
Bob Jones'
Southern Oregon
Insurance Agency
So. 6th
and
Shasta Way
TU 2-4671
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