PAGE (A
HERALD AND NEWS,
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
NEW YORK STOCKS
' By United Press International
Allied Chemical 58
Alum Co Am el't
American Air Lines 35'i
American Can 42l
American Motors 18'i
AT&T 139'i
American Tobacco 23' '
Anaconda Copper 43'.
Armco 68
American Standard 17',i
Avco Corp 22'.
Bendix Corp 47?i
"Bethlehem Steel 30U
Boeing Air 36
Brunswick Vfk
Caterpillar Corp 47i
Chrysler Corp 94'i
Coca Cola 108'i
C.B.S. 79
Columbia Gas 29
Continental Can 42
Crown Zellerbach 55'
Crucible Steel 22U
Curtiss Wright 18'
Dow Chemical fiiHi
Eastman Kodak 120'
Firestone 38H
Ford SO'-i
General Dynamics 24
General Electric 851.
General Foods 87H
General Motors 8H
General Motors M-1.
Genl Port Cement 22'.
Georgia Pacific 52
Gt Nort I(y 56V.
Greyhound 45:ii
Gulf Oil 47'i
Homeslakc 43 ta
Idaho Power W
I.B.M. 48J'.j
Int Paper 32 li
Johns Munville 4!)
Kennecolt Copper flWi
Lockheed Aircraft M-l.
Martin 20:!
Merck 103 li
Montana Power 36'i
Montgomery Ward 33'i
Nat'l Biscuit 57 .
New York Central 24:!i
Northern Natural Gas 52
Northern Pacific M':.
Pac Cas Elcc 1111.
Penney J.C. 44
Penn Kit 24'i
Pemancnto Cement Ifl
Phillips 4i
Procter Gamble 7!)3i
Radio Corp Oltt.
Kiclificld 42
Rears 1181a
Shell Oil 44'j
Socony Mobil Oil 7111
Southern Co Boli
Southern Pacific 38
Sperry Hand 20U
Standard Callforiu'a BOlj
Standard Indiana
Standard N.J. 75
Slokoly Van Camp 22'i
Sun Moines noli
Texas Co. 67
Texas Gulf Sulfur 21
Tex Pac Land Trust 22 li
Thiokol oj
Trans America 50
Trans World Air 27'i
Tri Conlinwit.il 45;,i
Union Carbide 1201k
Union Pacific 40:!i
United Aircraft 41?.
United Air Lines 401-j
U.S. Jlywood IB-Ii
U.S. llubber 48
U.S. Steel saw
United Uiililics 39'i
West Bank Corp 39
Westinghouso 33'
Youngslown 12BU
I.orAL SKCL'
Bank America
Boiso Cascade
Cal Pac
Con freigltt
Cyprus Mines
Equitable S&L
1st Nat'l Bank
Jantzen
, Morrison Knud
Mult Kennels
N.W. Natural Gas
Oregon Metal
PP&L
IXiE
U.S. Nai l Bank
Tektronix
West Cuasl Tel
nnuc!
H4Ji
33
2(i't
.
22H
29
78'i
2t
28
Vi
34'.
I'll
28'.
25'a
88
19'.
7',i
35
28
10'i
25'i
39'i
82
28'.
29'.
4.
30'
l'l
27a,
27'.
!M'a
21'4
25' j
Potatoes
PORTLAND (UPI) - Potato
market steady; ion lb sks
washed Russets U.S. No 1 un
less otherwise stated; Oregon
150-3.00; 614 m 2.75 3.00;
bakers 3 00-3.10; U.S. No ! 1 00
1.05; lew lower; U.S. No 2 bak
ers 2 25-2.40.
KLAMATH BASIN CKNTnXlToREGON IDAHO
DEMANfl Moderate Fair MmlrMtc-
JtlARKET Mrxly Fwir HvimlTrate '
F.6.B. PRICES PER CVif. "
CS1A t In nr 4 oi mln 8.10-3. IS iisiW.M Tso-jTlO
8-14 OS 2.SO-2.75 TtO 2SoTj.75
haled 10 lb nks C.SO-J.KII 2.40-2.50 jT'S-lTio
t'SJ 1.50-1.81 M0-I.M l.ln-l.l5
PRICK TO tiRWR BULK CrYT. I
J-:SI 1.50-1.73 KfW i.M l.M-l.M j UtM.50
u-s .70TT7S 1 Tm73 I Tto-.so""'"
KLAMATH
RATL TRUCK TTL TO DATE TTL A YEAR AGO
OREGON 8 IKI im
CALIFORNIA 1 II 1854 M
Tuesday, December 17, 1963
Klamath Falli. Ore.
WALL STREET
NEW YORK (UPI) Stocks
rallied sharply in heavy trading
today and closed at a new rec
ord high.
The Dow Jones industrial av
erage broke through its old clos
ing record of 763.86 early in the
eession and kept on going.
Rails paced the advance for
the ninth consecutive session.
Norfolk & Western. Chicago,
Great Western and Delaware &
Hudson were up large fractions
to a point.
Chemicals moved sharply
higher. Kodak, American Cyana
mid, Allied, Dow, Union Car
bide and Witco were among the
leaders. Chrysler was up around
6 at one point and General Mo
tors more than 2. Steels were
firm.
By United Press International
Slocks higher in active trad
ing. Bonds irregular.
U.S. government bonds firm
in quiet trading.
American slocks irregularly
higher.
Livestock
KLAMATH FALLS
LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET
DK. U
RecelDli: All Caltl. 5 (Includiru
400 c.lvesll Hogs 34; Sheep 13.
Last week: Catll. 1062 (including
500 calves). Hons 81; Slieep 0.
Compered last Monday calves and
tight feeder steers 1.00 lower; leeder
steers over 700 lbs., steady; feeder
heilers 1.00 lower; slaugliler sleer and
heifers .50 lower; slaughter cows stea
dy to weak; hogs .50 higher.
Slaughter Cattle: Steers: Gnod
Cholce, 900-1100 lbs., 19. 00-20.50; Sld.f
1000.1200 lbs., 17.tXMI.50.
Hellers: Good-Choice, SOO-1000 lbs.,
19.0-20.60.
Cows: Cmcl.StrJ., 14.70-16 10; Utility,
13.00-15.00; Cutlers, 10.00-12 00.
Bulls: Utility & Cmcl., 16.60-11 70.
StocKers & Feeders: steers: Good
Choice, 575-665 lbs., 21.00-22.10; Good
Choice, 700 lbs.. 19 25-70 BO; (201; 900
1100 lbs., 17.50-19.00; Holstelns, 450-850
lbs., 16.25-17.75.
Heifers: Good-Choice, 550-650 lbs.,
17. 50-19.00; Medium, 500-700 lbs., 16-18.
Sleer -Calves': Good-Choice, 350 - 450
lbs., 74 00-25.60; Gowt-Cholce, 480-550
lbs., 22.00-23.50; Medium, 300-500 lbs.,
19 00-21. SO.
Heller Calves: Good-Choice, 350-400
lbs., 21.00-22. 10; GOod-Choice, 450 500
lbs., 18.60-20.60.
Cows: Medium-Good, pairs, 152.50
191; Common-Medlum, aged cows, SO
US per head.
Hogs: U.S. 1 fc 2 Barrows B Gills,
200-730 lbs., 14 50.15.30i Sows. I and .1,
8.50.9.60; Weener Pigs, 7.00-8.00 per
head.
sheep: Slaughter lambs, Good
Choice, 95-110 lbs., 13.30-14.60.
Reported by Ray O. Petersen, coun
ty extension egenl.
PORTLAND (UPI) -(USDA)
Livestock:
Caltle 150. Load mixed standard-good
1 15ft lb Ilolstein steers
17.75; one lot good 1230 lb 20.50;
lew mostly good heifers 17-18.
Calves 50. Few good vealers
27-29; small lot choice 440 lb
sleer feeder calves 23,
Hogs 150. Few lots 1-2 grade
barrows and gilts Hi.
Sheep 100. No early sales.
Stocks
MUTUAL FUNDS
Prices until 10 a.m. PDT today
lllil Asked
Affiliated Fund 8.18 8.83
Atomic .Fund 4.79 5.23
Blue Bidge 12.11 13.23
Bullock ' 13.48 14.78
Chemical Fund 12.28 13.45
Colonial Fund 114.0 12.48
Comw. Inv. 10.08 10.99
Diver Growth 9.05 9.92
Dreyfus 18.77 20.40
E & II Slock 14.19 15.33
Fidelity Capital 10.10 '.il0.95
Fidelity Trend 10.80 111.20
Fundamental 10.27 11.25
F.I.F. 4.39 4.81
Founders Fund 6.BI 7.18
Group Sec Com 13.23 14.49
Gr Sec Avia Kl 6 112 7.48
Hamilton II. D A. 5 09 5 57
Incnrp Inv. 7.29 7.97
ICA 10.84 11.85
Investors' Group
lntercoiillnciiLiil 0 22 6.72
Mutual 11.57 12.51
Stock 18.93 20.48
Selective 10.39 11.11
Variable 6.70 7.30
Keystone S-l 22.41 24.43
Keystone S3 13.311 Hi 78
Keystone S-4 4 37 4.78
M.'l.T. 15.40 10.83
M.I T. Growth x 8.33 9.10
Nat'l Inv. 15.73 17.03
Nat'l Sec Div 4.29 4 09
Nat'l Sec Stock 8 07 8 82
Putnam und 13 30 lti.?2
Putnam Growth 8.85 9.67
Shareholders 11.22 12.28
Sup Inv. Ser 7.60 8 28
United Accum 14 04 18.00
United Canada 18 53 ....
United Incomo 12.38 13.51
United Scienco 7 07 7.73
Value Lines 5 27 .5.76
Wellington 14.30 13.67
Windsor 14 30 15.54
Whitehall 13 02 14.72
TODAY'S POTATO MARKET
BASIN CARLOT
Elementary Board Picks
Pair To Attend Hearings
City Superintendent of Schools
Ray llunsaker and Jake Itenie.
chairman of the city elementa
ry school board, Monday night
were directed to attend all three
hearings next month on the
County Court's plan for re
organization of county schools.
Director Itollin Cantrall
moved that tlie two men at
tend the hearings and live rest
of the elementary board
agreed.
The hearings will be be held
Jan. 6. 7 and 8 in Merrill,
Klamath Falls and Chiloquin
respectively.
In oilier business, Mis. Edna
Killmcyer of Klamath Falls
was appointed to the school
budget committee for the term
ending June 30, 1904.
Mrs. Barbara Henad submit
ted her resignation as sixth
grade teacher at Roosevelt ef
fective Dec. 31 and Mrs. De
lores Gandce was appointed to
replace lier.
Directors approved the plac
ing of board minutes on show
in Ibe oflice of clerk Harold
Ashley. The motion formalized
a past policy of leaving t h e
minutes open lo the public,
even though they migiit be ten-
7,000 Men
Guard LBJ
During Trip
NEW YOHK (UPI I - New
York gave maximum security
lo President Johnson today for
the second time in 10 days w ith
the additional aid of the United
Nation's 230-man supranational
security force,
Probably no visitor to the
United Nations even Soviet
Premier Nikila Khrushchev
has been so carefully guarded
as the successor to assassinat
ed President John F. Kennedy
was today.
So complete was the shield of
city police, federal agents and
Secret Service men that few
New Yorkers got a glimpse of
the Chief Executive during his
four-hour visil.
An estimated 7,000 men, in
cluding the U.N. guards, were
assigned to protect Johnson.
More than 6.000 had guarded
him on his first visit here as
President Dec. 8 a normally
quiet Sunday.
The presidential plane put
down this morning with Pres
ident and Mrs. Johnson and an
ll-man congressional delegation
at an isolated hangar used by
Khrushchev when he cante to
address the United Nations in
19(10. The route from the airport
to the United Nations was not
announced in advance.
Two police helicopters fol
lowed tho presidential plane
through its final landing pat
tern, hovered over the hangar
and later provided aerial escort
for the- presidential motorcade
on its t'oule to the United Na
tions. Police were posted atop stor
age tanks near the hangar and
manned bridges and overpasses
and other strategic points along
Van Wyck Expressway leading
into the city past the world's
fair site.
An enormous motorcycle es
cort surrounded the motorcade.
A new precaution, added
since President Kennedy's as
sassination, was the placement
of a Secret Service agent in the
follow - up car so that ho faced
(lie rear, keeping an eye on
buildings and the crowd after
Hie President had passed. The
measure was taken because
Kennedy was shut from the
rear in Dallas.
Burglary Try
Not Successful
The attempted burglary of
CoH'land Lumber. 88 Main
Street, was reported to city po
lice late Monday morning.
Police found that the burglar
broke out a rear window pane
and reached through lo get two
tubes of painl, but did nol enter
the building. The paint tubes
were recovered nearby. The
attempted burglary apparently
occurred Sunday night.
SHIPMENTS
tativc and not yet approved.
Superintendent Hunsaker in
formed the board that he was
postponing the spending of $18,
790 in various budgeted items
this year. The largest Hem is
$8,000 for textbooks. The board
concurred.
Fish-Game
Council
Re-elects 3
The Klamath County Chapter
of the Oregon Fish and Game
Council re-elected all but one of
its four-member slate of offi
cers to serve for 1964.
Named to serve additional
one-year terms were Bob Pyle,
president; Joe Cook, secretary
treasurer; and Arthur Bark
hurst, director. Thew officer
was Joe DeGrande of Keno who
was elected to succeed Ben
Morrison as vice president.
In other action, the council
announced two special meetings
for this coming weekend. The
first is slated for 8 p.m., Satur
day, at the Midland Grange
Hall where the council will sub
mit nominations for officers lo
serve on the state board of the
six-county sportsmen's group.
The other session is scheduled
for Grants Pass, Sunday, when
members of Ihe local chapter
will meet with representatives
of other chapters to discuss the
state-wide distribution of ini
tiative petitions. The council is
seeking to initiate a referendum
calling for the election of com
missioners to the Oregon State
Game Commission. The posts
are now filled by appointment.
At its last meeting, the coun
cil appointed a committee to ar
range for the erection of a high
way billboard ivhich is to read,
"The Oregon Fish and Game
Council is Dedicated to Restor
ing Our Deer Herds in Ore
gon." Ullman Bill
Approved
WASHINGTON D.C. (Special
to the Herald and News) The
House of Representatives today
approved by unanimous consent
a bill sponsored by Congress
man Al Ullman which approves
charges against non - Indian
owned land under the Klamath
Indian Irrigation Project.
Ullman's bill, HR1713, was
introduced early this year and
was reported on Dec. 2 by the
House Interior Committee.
The bill now goes to the Sen
ate where tho congressman ex
pects action lo he taken dur
ing the early weeks of next
year's congressional session.
Ullman states that by this
cancellation the Bureau of In
dian Affairs has terminated nil
of ils responsibilities for Ihc ir
rigation project and that the
program may then continue on a
self-sustaining hasis.
Grains
CHICAGO (UPI-Grain range
High Low CV'sc
Wheat
Dec 2.17". 2.16'. 2.16-n
Mar. 2.18' 2.1(it 2.17'4-a
May 2.124 2.11j 2.11V,i
Jul 1.74s. 1.73 1.7P.
Sep 1.75!. 1.74'i 1.75',
Oats
Dec .08'. .88 .R8-1.
Mar .71 "O'i .71
May ,71'i ,71'a .71'Ra
Jul ,67:,4 .67. .B7J4
Rye
Dec 1.47 I.4.V4 1.45i
Mar 1.50'. 1.49 1 .50' 1 '4
May 1.53 1.51 152
Jul 140'. 1.45'j 1.48',
Area Roads Remain Clear
Except For Ice On Passes
Temperatures were just be
knv freezing, skies were over
cast, and state highways
throughout the county were
clear of snow early tins morn
ing, according to a report Ironi
tlie local oflice of the State
Highway Department. Motorists
driving through mountainous
areas were cautioned to be
alert lo icy patches along the
road.
The warmest point among sta
tions reporting to the highway
department was Crater Lake,
where the temperature was
noted at 30 degrees and road
side snow measured at 28 inch
es. Willamette Pass reported a
temperature of 28 degrees with
Obituaries
H.IOUHK
Arni. Mst.t Haiovtet. SI. oirrl sr.
Ok 'i. lsj sur'vKS: HwiOai'd.
William. Tuiti.kp Cant ; sen. law
rtca, AManl, Ora ; dautjMar. M.s
Jovta Cellattqa. Comtnq. Cant i bf-p'l
rs. Kill Soot... Vann. Gaa'Qt Sr
Vwl, 0 . Fit a.l F'.t SDO'r-i,
TulsMak., Calif. Cna'its Swat. Pas
co. wrt 1 its, M-s Ma-v Tavior
t'4 V-s Errrnia h.cnoti. Tultiala.
v.. Purtaa. Auburn, Calif,
a. I''tn Tlwnton. B-99S. Calif ,
.J lif t Hamnlo. C 1 1 y,
iTtil sli flraiwktMktr.. .i.naral
sarvlSM Ward s Mamati f unt'll
Haft. TSursoav. D I, at I P
CorKlwfin. St'VKSS, Malxt Carrftfry.
1 i4$
I1 I.
5JJT
SANTA'S HELPERS Altamont Junior High School Homemaking Girls, under the di
rection of their homemaking adviser, Mrs. Jack Wright, planned and completed dainty
wardrobes for 24 dolls to be given to the Christmas Store. The store, included in the
Christmas giving program which is in charge of the Christmas Center, gives parents
of needy children an opportunity to buy both toys and clothing for their families on
the point system. Left to riqht are Lynn McCullough, Jennifer Hagel, Margaret Mc
Dowell and Diane Vanderhoff.
Youth Tells I
Al yearodyolhldrfm
ath Falls police Monday eve
ning he was jumped by sever
al other persons in Bcatly and
knifed severely in the abdo
men, leg and shoulder.
Dwayne Foster of Bcalty said
the incident occurred Sunday
night, but he didn't report to
Klamath Valley Hospital un
til Monday evening.
Police said Ihe leg and shoul
der wounds weren't serious, but
hospital authorities told them
the stomach cut was "quite se
rious." Foster at first insisted I h e
cuts resulted from an accident,
but later said that he was walk
ing in Rcattv Sunday night
when several persons jumped
him. pulled his hair and slashed
at him with a knife.
He refused lo indicate who
his attackers were. An inves
tigation is continuing. Police
were culled to the hospital by
authorities there after Foster
came in for treatment.
Big School
Destroyed
BEND (UPD Fire early to
day gutted tlie Herbert E. Allen
grade school here with esti
mated loss of $200,000.
H was the largest of eight
grade schools in the city and
was attended by 700 students.
Cause of the fire was not im
mediately determined, although
it was believed to have started
in tlie furnace room.
Assistant Fire Ciief Dick Wal
ters was treated at a hospital
for flesh burns.
The fire was discovered by a
police patrol car at 2:56 a.m.
and firemen battled the flames
throughout the night.
The school, of frame construc
tion, was built in the early
1930s.
School officials said the stu
dents would get an extra four
days of Christmas vacation and
then would attend another grade
school on a double shift basis.
Program Set
MAUN The Malin Kindergar
ten will hold its annual Christ
mas party and program on
Thursday. Dec. 19. Refresh
ments will he served and a gift
exchange is planned. Parents
are invited to attend.
six inches of roadside snow , the
same amount noted at Chcmult,
w hich had a temperature of 27.
Skies were overcast along
highways Diamond Uike East
and West where roadside snow
was between 18 and 21 inches.
No report was available Irom
Green Springs.
Fast of Klamath Falls, at Bly,
Adel and I-akcvicw. tempera
tures ranged between 23 and 28
degrees and skies were clear.
Insure Your
Happy
Holidays!
DRIVE
CAREFULLY!
Bob Jonti'
Southern Oregon
Insurance Agency
So. 6th & Shott. W.T 1.4671
street Vacating Ordinance
RCatl At COUSlClS S6SSI0I1
Klamath Falls city council
men Monday night heard the
first and second readings of an
ordinance vacating a portion of
Willow Street for Dugan and
Mest Chevrolet after no oppo-
Nepal Fall
Kills Youth
ROSEBURG (UPD A young
Roseburg adventurer was killed
Dec. 4 in a fall cn the ap
proaches to Ml. Everest, his
parents were informed today.
The victim was Dave Wyatt,
20, a student al the University
of Chicago, who left Oregon
last September with two com
panions on a trip to Nepal.
The parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Wyatt, received a telegram this
morning from Wyalt's two
young companions. Steve Mc
Carthy and Gary Payne, both 20,
telling tiicm of the tragedy.
In Washington, the Stale De
partment said the U.S. Embassy
at Katmandu. Nepal, reported
the youth was killed in the Tesi
Lapacha pass area. McCarthy
and Payne, who reached Kat
mandu Monday night, said the
body had been buried at the
site Of the -fall.
The State Department had no
further details.
Wyatt was a biology major at
the University of Chicago. Mc
Carthy was born in Seattle but
attended schools in Roseburg.
He and Payne are Reed College
students in Portland.
Honor Among Thieves
SAN MATEO, Ralif. (LTD
San Mateo County Sheriff Earl
Whitmore announced proudly
Monday that 70 inmates at tlie
couiity honor camp have prov
en Ihey know Ihe meaning of
the word "honor."
Whitmore said he planned In
review the sentences of all 70
to determine if "some paroles
might be in order."
The sheriff said early Satur
day morning the 70 inmates
were filing out into the chill
air for muster, when deputy
Owen Bell the only officer
at the camp between midnight
and 8 a.m. fainted and struck
his head on the pavement floor.
Bell, 30, was carrying the
keys to all the remote Laguna
Honda camp's facilities, plus
the keys to three vehicles at
the camp.
However, three of the prison
ers ran to the camp radio to
ONAIPS
K rll I J MEMORIAL CHAPEL
iki niiom
01 IHl
PIIVATt
PACING
'i,
sition In the move was
expressed at a public hearing.
The firm sought the vacation
for construction of a new auto
showroom. The portion of Wil
low is between Seventh and
Eighth streets.
Balsiger Motors was the low
bidder for two new police cars.
City Manager Robert Kyle was
given authority to proceed with
the assessment rolls for the
Worden Avenue street improve
ment project and the Mountain
View storm sewer project.
Tlie Seventh - day Adventist
Church was given permission to
conduct Christmas caroling, as
long as funds weren't solicited.
Jury Selected
To Hear Case
A jury of eight men and four
women were selected before
noon today as the trial of Col
leen Crume, 23, and Darlene
Sanchez, 22. opened in the cir
cuit court of Judge Robert H.
Foley.
The defendants, indicted Oct.
22 on a charge of assault with
a dangerous weapon, are ac
cused of acting together in
shooting at a Klamath Falls
man with a gun and attacking
him with a meat cleaver.
The jury was scheduled to
view the scene of the alleged
crime later today, followed by
the opening statements of the
attorneys for the defense and
the slate.
inform the sheriff's office of
Bell's collapse, a few others
gave emergency first aid to the
deputy, and the rest went about
their regular work assignments.
None of the prisoners at
tempted to escape.
Off-street Parking
The fomily in fact all who
come to attend a service or pay
their resDecfs at O'Hair's Memor
ial Chapel moy park with ease.
We provide on illuminated, black
topped parking area for your con
venience. "Scminj the Entire Klamath Basin"-.
ttAM.tH SA!H Otfr.OM
Time-Of-Death Dispute
Marks Trial Opening
Testimony opened today in
the first-degree murder trial of
Archibald Foster. 23. of Salem
with a controversy over the ex
act time of the death of his al
leged victim, Mrs. Eunice Biss
of Beatty.
The prosecution contends the
woman was shot in Beatty late
in the alternocn of April 22.
19S3.
But the defense, with the aid of
an assistant medical examiner,
contended today that the deilh
occurred about 10 o'clock that
night, and the defendant was in
Klama:h Falls at that time.
Both defense and prosecution
delivered their cpening state
ments this mcrning to a jury of
six women and six men, chosen
Monday afternoon. The jury
traveled to Beatty later Monday
afternoon for a view of the
scene.
The prosecution's first witness
was William Kendall, an em
ploye of Ward's Funeral Home
and a deputy medical examiner.
On direct examination, by
Dist. Atty. Dale Crabtree, Ken
dall said he first saw the body
of Mrs. Biss about 2:45 a.m.
April 23, sitting in the back seat
of a ear next to the Biss home.
Rigor mortis had set in, but
was not complete, he said.
Kendall said that he took a
blood sample later at the mor
tuary and turned it over the
patlwlogist Dr. George Nichol
son. When he did that, he said,
about 7 am. April 23, he also
took the dead woman's body
temperature.
On cross - examination. Fos
ter's attorney produced a photo
static copy of a report prepared
by Kendall and signed by the
medical examiner. Dr. .Martin
Adams. The report listed the
time of death as 10 p.m. Ken
dall said he established this
time from a statement by Mar
vin Thompson of Beatty that he
heard the shots that apparently
killed the woman in front of his
liouse at 10 p.m. April 22. Ken
dall said the condition of tlie
body was compatible with that
lime.
The defense apparently
brought this out to support its
opening statement that Foster
was in Klamath Falls at that
time and therefore couldn't
have killed Mrs. Biss.
On rebuttal, Crabtree d r e w
from Kendall tlie statement that
it was impossible to establish
the exact time of death from
the condition of the body, and it
PORTLAND, ORKCON
uemntwr 11. 196:1
Insure With
I V
ancfotf, Ga.
THE
LIABILITY
Paul Q. Landry
V. T. Johnson
419 Main Street Ph. TU 2-2526
AUTO PROPERTY
could have been earlier than 10
p.m.
Testimony was expected to
continue this afternoon in the
Circuit Court of Judge Donald
A. W. Piper.
Pioneer
Succumbs
TL'LELVKE Mrs. Annie Ma
bel Halousek. 61, resident of
Ta'clake for 53 years, died in
Hillside Hospital, Dec. 16. She
had suffered a heart attack and
was taken to the hospital Fri
day. Her family was the first
to homestead in the Tulelake
country, taking up land on the
old Alturas Highway. She was
a member of tlie ZCBJ Society
and of the Seventh-day Advent
ist Church.
Mrs. Halousek was born Dec.
27, 1901, in Gannsvalley, S. D.
Survivors include the widower,
William, Tulelake; son, Law
rence, Ashland; daughter, Mrs.
Joyce Colledge, Corning, Calif.;
brothers. Bill Spolek, Malin.
George Spolek, Adel, Ore., Ed
and Fred Spolek, Tulelake,
Charles Spolek, Pasco, Wash.;
sisters, Mrs. Mary Taylor and
Mrs. Emma Nichols, Tulelake,
Mrs. Carrie Purtee, Auburn,
Calif., Mrs. Lillian Thornton,
Biggs, Calif., Mrs. Irene Kib
bey, Hamilton City, Calif.; also
six grandchildren.
Funeral services will be from
Ward's Klamath Funeral Home,
Thursday, Dec. 19, at 2 p.m. fol
lowed by concluding services
and interment in Malin Ceme
tery. Elder Manley Miles of the
Klamath Falls Seventh-day Ad
ventist Church will officiate.
Tools Taken
Oregon State Police are In
vestigating the theft of a box
of tools which was stolen from
a pickup truck while parked at
the residence of the owner, Ith
el Chapman of Merrill, last Sat
urday night. Chapman esti
mated the value of the tools at
approximately $150.
Dividend Notice
Quarterly dividends of $1.25 per share on the 5 preferred
stock, $1.13 per share on the 4.52 serial preferred stock,
$1.41 per share on the 5.64 serial preferred stock, $1.75
per share on the 7.00 serial preferred stock, $1.50 per share
on the 6.00 serial preferred stock, $1.25 per share on the
5.00 serial preferred stock, $1.35 per share on the 5.40
serial preferred stock, $1.18 per share on the 4.72 serial
preferred stock and 25 cents per share on the common stock
of I actfic Power & Light Company have been declared for
payment January 10, 1964, to stockholders of record at the
close of business December 26, 1963.
H. W. Millay, Secretary
23 yeaM Afa
Monday, December 16, 1940 John Sandmever was
chosen president of the Klamoth Falls 20-30 Club for Ihe
coming term, last night ot its regular meeting at the Wit
lard Hotel. Sandmeyer has been secretary ot the local or
ganization (or the past yeor and has been especially ac
tive in the club's service program for several years.
Tuesday, December 17, 1940 Eight rangy Pelicon bos
keteers were nomed by Heod Coach Dutch French as o trav
eling squad for the opening road trip of the 1940-41 Klam
alh hoop season. Starters will be Bob Erlandson, Marion
Reginoto, Pat Moses, Eugene Love and Jim Bocchi. T
Wednesday, December 18, 1940 Mrs. Warren Brondon,
the former Margaret Ruth Jolly, was morried in a beauti
ful service read Sunday ofternoon in the First Presbyter
ian Church before 0 number of friends. Following o wed
ding trip in the South, Mr. and Mrs. Brandon will be ot
home before Christmas.
Thursday, December 19, 1940 Mrs. Arthur Bryant en
tertained for her bridge club Tuesday evening. High score
was held by Mrs. Herbert Hemmgsen, second high by Mrs.
John Holzgong. and Mrs. Edward Hickman received low.
Friday, December 20, 1940 Members of the Klomoth
Falls Lions Club and Lionesses will sponsor a joint Christ
mas party. Ernest Mul'is is chairman.
55 Years . . .
The Landry Co. offers 55
years of experience in serv
ing the insurance needs of
the Klomath Basin os back
ground to provide insurance
service for YOU.
FIRE