PAGE 4
HERALD AND NEWS,
MARKETS and FINANCE
Stocks
By I'nlted Fmi International
Allied Chemical 55
Alum Co Am 68'.
American Air Lines 34H
American Can 43'i
American Motors 18'i
AT&T 138
American Tobacco 28J
Anaconda Copper 46
Armco M'i
American Standard 18'
Avco Corp 22H
Bendix Corp 48'.
Bethlehem Steel 30'.
Boeing Air 36"
, Brunswick ll'.i
Caterpillar Corp 48
Chrysler Corp 84H
Coca Cola 115
c.b.s. n
Columbia Gas 82'i
Continental Can 42' a
Crown Zcllerbach 35
Crucible Steel 2in
Curtiss Wright 18'.
Dow Chemical 68s.
Pu Pont 240'i
Eastman Kodak 12in
Ford 50'
General Dynamics 21'.
General Electric 84'i
General Foods 88'
General Motors 777.
General Port Cement 22'i
Georgia Pacific 51
Gt Nor Ry 56' i
Greyhound 43'
Guli Oil 46'.
Homeslake 44Vi
Idaho Power 32' j
; l.B.M. 493'i
; Int Paper 31'j
Johns Jlanvillc 49'i
Kennccott Copper 73
Martin " 20'i
Merck 106H
Montana Power 38n
Montgomery Ward S3Vt
Nat'l Biscuit 56H
New York Central 24'.
Northern Natural Gas 50'
Nortliern Pacific 51
Pac Gas Elec 31 'i
Penney J.C. 43'i
-Penn IIR 23'i
..Permanenle Cement
; Phillips 48
J Procter Gamble 70V4
: Radio Corp. 95'
; Richfield Oil 43 'a
Safeway 57'i
Sears 97n
Shell Oil 46
Socony Mobil Oil 71-4
Southern Co 53',j
Southern Pacific 36
Sperry Rand 20'i
Standard California 60
Standard Indiana 64' i
Standard N.J. 74'i
' Stokely Van Camp 23'4
Sun Mines 10',i
Texas Gulf Sulfur 2Hi
-Tex Pac Land Trust . 22'i
.";ThiokoI 19',i
'Trans America 49
Trans World Air 28' j
Tri Continental 45"i
Union Carbide 120'j
Union Pacific 39'i
United Aircraft 43'i
United Air Lines 43
U.S. Plywood 6Mi
U.S. Rubber 44H
U.S. Steel 53
United Utilities 3!M4
West Bank Corp 39'i
Wcstinghoiise 33n
Weyerhaeuser 32'.
. Youngstown 125
LOCAL SECURITIES
Bank America 64"i
'Boise Cascade 34
Cal Pac 26
' Con Freight 10
Cyprus Mines 22
Equitable S&L 29
1st Nat'l Bank 78'i
JanUen 26'
Morrison Knud 27'i
Mult Kennels 3'i
NW Natural Gas 34'.
Oregon Metal 1
PP&L 25-H
PGE 24'i
." U.S. Nafl Bank S7n
: Tektronix Ifi'i
West Coast Tel 23'.
67i
36
28
10'i
23'i
39'i
821.
2H'i
29-H
4.1
36'
in
27n
26'
flt'i
20i
25' 1
Grains
J CHICAGO (LTIl - Grain
range:
; High Low Close
, '. Wheat
;Mar 2.20'i 2.19'i 3.19'.-2.20
:.May 2.15'i 2.I4Ji J. 15-2.15
Jul 1.77U 1.761 1.77-1.77'.
Sep 1.79'i 1.78Ji 1.78'i
Oats
Mar "lTi ,71' .71.
May .72'i .71'. .72
Jul .118 ,67'i .68
Rye
Mar 1.52, 1.51'i 1.5H..
May 1.54n 153', 1.53'i
Jul 1.49'i 1.48 1.48'.
Sep 1 47'i I 47' i 1 47'?
TODAY'S POTATO MARKET
KLAMATH BASIN I CKNTRAL OREGON'! IDAHO
"DEMAND Moderate Fair Moderate
"MARKET I .steady I Mrniiv Steady
F.O. b7 VrTcES-P E RTWT UnVlled : ' I
IS! A t in or 4 01 mln TTvj'S j ;.3;'.r. I.9O.2.I0
6-14 01 lTs-!.75 j 2.40 ? SO 2 X0-5.75
baled 10 Ih sks g.5;.60 2.4iV3.5tl 25Tfl
"US2" 1VI.70 1.4(V1.50 1.15.1.25
rRlCE TO CRW'R BULK PVT. '
"LSI 1.55-1.75 j 1 , NVL65 , f.lrM.SS
l'S2 " .7(Vi j ..VWa I .10- .SO
KLAMATH BASIN CARtOTPiSTS
RAII; TRUCK TTL TO DATE TTt, A YEAR AGO
OREGON n 1 7K I i UM
"CALIFORNIA 1 '5 Im i 1077
' f 4
Friday, December !7, 1961
Klamath Falla. Ore.
WALL STREET
NEW YORK llPIi Stocks
closed with a modest gain to
day. Steels were mixed and most
ly narrow. Chrysler and Gen
eral Motors retreated but 1'ord
was firm. Chemicals were high
er with Du Pont up around l'j
and Eastman Kodak and Union
Carbide up fractions.
AVC Corp., which made a ten
der offer which includes Monsan
to Chemical stock, made some
progress. (Monsanto also fared
well.
Xerox was higher through
most of the session, but turned
near the close and finished
slightly lower.
Mall Street Chatter
NEW YORK (UPII G. S.
Colby of Colby St Co. Inc., says
it is only prudent to recogniie
that the market is vulnerable
to additional near term irregu
larity. However, Colby doesn't see
the present trend developing into
a serious decline, but rather as
a prelude to a substantial ad
vance. Ho recommends waiting
for the situation to clear a little
mora before "jumping tile gun
with a hard and fast convic
tion either way.
Kenneth Ward of Hayden,
Stone & Co. suggests investors
be patient with depressed, dor
mant Issues. Ward feels that as
long as the favorable outlook
which prompted the original
purchase remains unchanged,
they should continue to be held.
Livestock
PORTLAND (UPI) (USDA) -
Weekly livestock:
Cattle 450. Good-most ly choice
steers 21.75-22.25: slandard-mnst-
ly good Holstcins 18; good-
choice heifers mostly 19-20;
standard cows 15; canner-cutter
8-12.50; cutter-utility bulls 16.50-
18.50.
Calves 50. Few high g 0 0 d-
choice slaughter calves 28;
standard-good 16-22.
Hogs 600. 1 and 2 barrows and
gilts 16-16.25; sows B-13.
Sheep 250, Jew leeder iambs
mostly 23c lower; few mostly
choice woolcd 15.75.
Potatoes
PORTLAND (UPII - Potato
market steady; 100 lb sks
washed Russets U.S. No 1 un
less otherwise stated; Oregon
2.50-3.00; 6-14 OZ 2.75 - 3.00;
bakers 3.00-3.10; U.S. No 2 1.00
1.03; few lower; U.S. No 2 bak
ers 2.2J-2.40.
Stocks
MUTUAL FUNDS
Prices until 10 a.m. PDT today
Bid Asked
Affiliated Fund 8.11 8 77
Atomic Fund 4.73 5 17
Blue Ridge 12.12 " 23
Bullock 13 49 14 79
Chemical Fund 12 43 13.59
Colonial Fund 11.39 12.45
Conw Inv XD 9 HI 10.72
Diver Growth 9 .01 9 87
Dreyfus 18.67 20 29
E i 11 Stock 14 18 15 32
Fidelity Capitat 10.10 10 98
Fidelity Trend 16119 18.33
Fundamental 10 26 11 24
F.I.F. 4.37 4.78
Founders Fund 6 61 7.22
Group Sec Com 13.30 14.56
Gr Sec Avia El 6 76 7.41
Incorp Inv. 7.33 8 01
ICA 10.98 11.93
Investors' Group
Intercontinental 6 26 6 77
Mutual 11.39 12 53
Slock 18 91 20 47
Selective HUt 11.14
Variable 6.74 7.29
Keystone S-l 22.62 24 18
Keystone S-3 15 23 16 62
Keystone S-4 4 33 4 73
M i .T. 13 38 16 81
M.I T. Growth 8.31 9 0S
Nafl Inv 15?2 16.99
Nat'l Sec Piv 4. .19 4 .70
Nat'l vSec Growth 8 34 9 11
Nafl Sec Stock 8 09 8 64
Putnam Growth 8R2 9 64
Selected Amcr 10 13 in ;
Shareholders 1122 12 26
TV und 7 36 R '.M
United Acrum 14 66 16.02
United Canada 18 62 I
United Income 12 xi 1.1 47
United Science 7 m; 7 72
Value Lines 5 to 5 79 j
Wellington 11 37a 15 s j
Windsor It n !." w I
My
. . .
WE
mas
who
Left
HELPED TOO This foursome, members of Cub Scout Pack 2, Den 6, took Christ
decorations and favors to the Klamath Nursing Home to help make the folks
live there happy. They are third grade students at Altamont Elementary School,
to right are Casey Ross, Wayne Haynes, Terry Morris and Gary Conley.
Car-Trailer Accident Among Four
Reported By Oregon State Police
A southbound car and trailer
wont out of control and veered
into an embankment on the
west iilp of Highway 97, near
Collier Park, yesterday after
noon, after the driver attempt
ed In swerve around an auto
mobile parked along the road,
Oregon State Police reported
Friday,
State police also investigated
three other two-car collisions
Thursday which resulted in no
injuries hut caused minor to
moderate damage to the ve
hicles. The accident near the state
ASC Reminds
On Marketing
All dclails of marketing cith
er wool or lambs will have to
he completed not later than
Dec. 31 in order to receive pay
ments for the 1963 marketing
year, ASC spokesmen point out.
Marketings completed alter Dec.
31, 1963, will he eligible for pay
ments for the 1964 marketing
year, however.
As announced by the U.S. De
partment of Agriculture last
fall, the 1963 marketing year
under the wool payment pro
gram has been shortened to the
9-month period from April 1
through Dec. 31, 1963, 111 order
to shift the wool marketing year
to a calendar-year basis. There
fore, if a pail of a sale of
lambs or wool is not .settled by
Dec. 31. the sale will not lie
considered as one taking place
in the 1963 marketing year.
This means that all Uic infor
mation needed to complete the
sales documents and show the
net sales proceeds for wool has
to be determined and available
by Dec. 31 in order to be eli
gible for wool program pay
ments for the current (1963
marketing year.
Farmers have until the end of
January to file applications for
1963 marketing year payments
under the National Wool Art.
First Family
For Visiting
JOHNSON CITY, Tex. tUPD
To serenade West German
Chancellor Ludwig Erliard this
weekend, President Johnson has
booked a Texas musical cast
ranging from classical pianist
Van Cliburn to a master of
ceremonies named "Cactus."
The "Cactus" involved Is Cac
tus Pryor, described in the Tex
as While House's program as
a "central Texas personality."
He is a folksy local entertain
er who will emcee the enter
tainment at n dinner honoring
the visiting German loader at
Johnson's ranch Saturday, and
a barbecue lunch at neichbor
iug Stonewall. Tex., Sunday.
Miimc at those lvo fiinclions
Pi
t . . h I I 'rt
t
park developed as Michael Law
rence Crane, 20, of Box 3233,
Kingsley Field, parked his car
along the west side of the road
and stepped outside to deter
mine why his tire was scraping
against a fender. As Crane did
so, he observed a car and a
trailer, operated by George
Mark Thomas, 64, of Box 2212,
OTI, approaching from the rear
and attempted to flag it past.
Thomas lost control of the car
and it veered into a hank, while
the trailer jackknifed and
upset on top of Crane's automo
bile. The laller's vehicle was
Of Deadline
Information
Jan. 31, 1964, will be the last
day for accepting payment ap
plications in connection with
marketings of cither wool or
lambs during 1963.
Earl Wilson, chairman. Agri
cultural Stabilization and Con
servation Committee for Klam
ath County, urges that produc
ers avoid possible confusion by
filing their applications on com
pleted sales as soon as possible
at the County Office, 6350 South
Sixth Street.
Theft Nets
20 Cents
A thief operating in the vici
nity of Merit's Coin-O-Malic
Laundry, 333 t!ast Main Street,
last night was probably disap
pointed alter surveying the con
tents of a purse he stole from
an automobile registered to Mrs.
Kathy McDonald, Old Fort
Road.
Mrs. McDonald parked her
car near the self service laun
dry and was away a short time
when the theft occurred.
The purso belonged to her
school age daughter and con
tained 20 cents.
Plans Entertainment
West German Leader
will ride a tonal range from the
classics to hootenanny.
German Snngfcst
High school students from
nearby Fredericksburg, w hich
was settled more than a cen
tury ago by German immi
grants, will sing songs to re
mind Erhard of the Rhine while
he dines on the banks of the
Peilcrnales.
Mrs. Lyndon R. Johnson was
busy Thursday preparing for
tlie chancellor's Saturday
Sunday visit. She told her ranch
staff she wanted to "give him
a most wonderful welcome in
the Texas-German flavor."
"She worked on the menus
for the chancellor and found an
old family recipe for German
chocolate cake for dessert at
lunch Saturday," said a report
from Mrs. Johnson's staff direc
tor and press secretary. Eliza
beth Carpenter.
Gathers Texas Folklore
Johnson's 19-year-old daugh
ter. Lynda Rud. spent the day
TO '' "","ml
NEWSPAPERS 'J
. V'" 1
damaged on its top and left
side, while damage was also
to the left side of Thomas' car
and trailer.
An automobile parked along a
road was also blamed for anoth
er collision which resulted in
moderate damage to the two
vehicles involved, about 3 a.m.
Friday, near Washburn Way
and Laverne Avenue.
The collision occurred as Har
old Hicks. 39. of 4337 Arthur
Street, was driving south on
Washburn Way when his car
struck the rear of a parked au
tomobile which was partially
extended on the highway. Hicks
told police that he was unable
to pass the parked car because
of approaching traffic.
The operator of the latter ve
hicle, William Osmcr Stephen
son, 21, Rlc. 3, Box 46, was
asleep' inside the car at the
lime of the accident and was
cited for parking on a highway.
Stephenson said he became
sleepy while driving south on
Washburn Way and drove onto
the shoulder of the road to rest.
In one of the other two acci
dents, an Oregon State Police
car struck the rear of an auto
mobile driven by Karol Jean
Schiro. 20, of 2345 Nile Street,
when the latter stopped sudden
ly to avoid colliding with anotli
rr car, about 1:25 p.m.. at the
intersection of South Sixth
Street and Lark Street. Damage
was moderate to the police car,
hut minor to the other vehicle.
The police officer had been
transferring a d r u n k to the
county jail when the rear-end-er
occurred.
In the remaining collision.
Jerry Nolan Barnette, 18. of 3111
Laverne Avenue, was cited for
failure to yield the right of way
after he slopped his car at an
arterial sign and then turned
into the path of an automobile
proceeding southbound on Sum
mers Lane. The operator of the
car was Derward B. Hac
an, 42, of 3125 South Sixth
Street.
Damage was minor to both
vehicles, police records indi
cate. selecting books on Texas and
regional folklore from the fam
ily library and placing them in
rooms at the LBJ ranch where
the German visitors will stay.
Erhard will occupy the "num
ber one guest room" on the sec
ond floor of the ranch house,
with a southern exposure fac
ing the Peilcrnales River that
npplrs placidly beside John
son's proieity.
Obit
uarics
SMITH
Hi G Smith, ri.d p-r V.
Surv.va-d bV Niifir-a, Harry H. SmifM,
mam f-a.ni; two ion. Virgil
Hpadqiiajrif m
r I I i I,
1(10.-
t 10 m .n O Maj , Vr -noriajl CMP
l Irttf rrMf-it Vciuntn.fi V t Ctmtry,
AiNlajna, 0'
Insure Your
Happy
Holidays!
DRIVE
CAREFULLY!
Bob Jontt'
Southern Oregon
Insurance Agency
So. 6th I ihaiH War 2-4671
Storm Fails To Disrupt
Area Flow Of Traffic
Highway traffic was proceed
ing without chains along a num
ber of roads in the county this
morning, despite a storm which
deposited from six to 12 inches
of snow last night, the local of.
ficc of the State Highway De
partment has reported.
Packed snow and overcast
skies were reported at Willam
ette Pass. Chemult and Dia
mond Lake West, but traffic
was flowing without chains at
those points. At the latter sta
tion, 12 inches of new snow fell
last night, increasing the road
side pack to 45 inches. Mean
while at Chemult, six inches of
fresh snow built up the roadside
pack to 11 inches. The snow
pack was 18 inches at Willam
ette Pass, where no new snow
was reported last night.
Chains were required at Dia
mond Lake East, where eight
inches of new snow hiked the
pack to 32 inches, and at Cra
ter Lake, where nine inches of
new snow and 45 inches of road
side snow were noted.
Ground fog was reported on
the Green Springs Highway, but
otherwise driving conditions
were listed as good in view of
reports citing bare pavement
and little roadside snow.
LOUIS F. WALKER
L. Walker
Rites Set
Funeral services for Louis
Frank 'Walker, Klamath Falls
businessman, will be held from
Ward's Klamath Funeral Home,
Saturday, Dec. 2lt. Final rites
and interment will be in Klam
ath .Memorial iPark. Rev. ftor
bert K. Dey. pastor of Zion Lu
theran Church w here Mr. Walk
er was a member, will officiate.
Pallbearers will be Ron Schill,
Ernie Hedlund, Otis II i s k e y,
Ben Kielmeicr, Wesley Smith,
Ken Briccn.
Mr. Walker, 61, who had been
ill for several months, was born
Dec. It. 19fi2. in Lola. Key. He
came to Klamath Falls in 1919
to engage with .Mrs. Walker in
the restaurant business. They
operated Vallicr's Diner, the
Chicken Shack and the Clar
Ixiu Diner, on South Sixth
Street, now the lloiise-O-Bur-gcrs.
Survivors include the widow,
Clara, this city; one brother,
James H. Walker, G c r b e r,
Calif.; sisters. Ida Williams and
Dora Campbell, Lola. Ky., and
Alma Millhollin. Fort Wayne,
lnd., who will attend the serv
ices. Student Dance
The Midland Grange is spon
soring a fix?e dance lor all high
school and college students in
the area on Saturday, Dec. 2a,
from 9 p.m. lo 1 a m. The af
fair will be held in the Mid
land Grange Hall, with music
provided by the Soundmasters.
Funerals
HALVORSEN
r-u'l frviCi lor Hfnrv Edfd
HAlvO'ien f Sflfl from ln chrl
ol w-d' Klmath Funeral Homt Fr,.
flay. Ote I?. ' ? P m. Conclufl.r'a
iervcM Mm'h Vemor al Park.
Hard of
Hearing!
Zenith Hearing Aid
For Only $50
full Powtrtd 4 TrinslitOfS
Dr. J. L. Lawson, O.D.
OPTOMETRIST
AND
HEARING AID CONSULTANT
ONLY LOCAL FULL-TI VE
HEARING AID CONSULTANT
715 Mo.o St. Klomoth Foils
TU 4 83:2
HOURS 9AM -5PM.
MON. . SAT.
LrAs1 Pr.cfi Htar.no A d
Wt Vail Aairrt AnvMh.
irl?'"
V W
A trace of snow was record
ed at Bly and Adel, but one
inch was measured at Lake
view, and Adel reported bare
pavement.
3 Autos Hit,
No One Hurt
No one was injured Thursday
afternoon in a three-car smash
up at Broad and Main streets,
but one driver was cited for
failure to yield the right-of-way.
Thomas Dean Carnes. 17, 1803
Carlson, was handed the cita
tion alter the 12:42 p.m. colli
sion which resulted in non-serious
damages to his 1953 conver
tible, a 1939 sedan and a 1963
sports car.
Police said Carnes was south
bound on Broad and pulled out
into the intersection, striking
the sports car, xvestbound on
Alain, and spinning the small
auto into the third car, east
bound on Main.
The sports car was driven by
Thomas Andrew Osa Jr., 16,
4S19 Bristol, and the sedan was
driven by iDale Lee iMcCulloch,
27, of Eureka, Calif. There were
two other passengers in the Mc
Culloch auto.
B-B Pellets
Ruin $300
In Windows
A B-B gun sniper who has de
stroyed hundreds of dollars of
windows in the past week has
continued his campaign by
shooting holes in two windows
valued at $300.
Smith-Bates Printing Com
pany, TI2 South Fourth, report
ed to city police Thursday that
four holes were shot in its two
plate glass windows, apparently
Tuesday or Wednesday night.
At least four other cases of
similar vandalism have been re
ported to police in the past
week. Three other businesses
and a home have been hit, all
apparently by the same person.
Windows were shattered at
S t i t e s Plumbing, House of
Rocks iMolel, Long-Bell Lumber
and the George Bose residence.
Mrs. Kennedy
Given Mansion
PALM BEACH. Fla. (L'PD
Princess Lalla Aicha of Moroc
co had a two-hour visit with
Mrs. John F. Kennedy Thurs
day and presented the former
First Lady with a century-old
mansion in the Middle-East re
sort of Marrakesh.
The mansion was a gift from
King Hassan of Morocco, broth
er of the princess.
M. A. Bcnnouna, a spokes
man for the princess, said Mrs.
Kennedy accepted the gilt and
indicated she and her two chil
dren may spend a vacation at
the mansion next autumn.
The princess will fly to Wash
ington today and visit the grave
of the assassinated President,
then fly to New York for the
trip home Saturday.
Udall Drops
Water Plan
SACRAMENTO ( LTI '-James
K. Carr, undersecretary of the
interior, revealed Thursday
Stewart L'dall has decided to
abandon his idea of sending
Northern California water lo
Arizona as part of a Southwest
regional water plan.
Thla advertisement w not an offer to aell or an offer to buy any of lhe ecunue.
The offering is made only by the Prospectus.
OREGON FREEZE DRY FOODS, INC.
Common Stock
(Par Value $1 Per Share)
Copies of the
of
B. W. PRINSEN
WAbaih 6-5127
234 Calpttoi
Albany, Oregon
ROBERT H. MIKKEISON
WAnoth 8-3485
143S C.tr Vw Plgct
Albany, Ortfon
re
tv
1
K
50-YEAR PIN Right Worshipful Brother Earl T. New
bry, Ashland, deputy grand master, presents a 50-year
pin to Worshipful Brother Arthur Leavitt of Medford,
past master of Klamath Lodge 77, AF4AM, as Worship,
tul Brother Gene Byrnes of Klamath Falls looks on. The
pin was presented in Klamath Falls at Past Masters' Night
at Klamath Lodge 77.
Man With Rifle Arrested
After Threat On Student
A 22-year-old man was ar
rested for assault with a dan
gerous weapon Thursday night
after, police said, he threatened
an Oregon Technical Institute
student with a semi-automatic
rifle on a downtown street.
Know lton M c r r i 1 1 Jr. was
booked at city jail after his ar
rest in a motel following the in
cident. A search warrant was
obtained and the rifle, a 30-cali-bre
Ml carbine containing 15
hollow-point cartridges, was tak
en from tMerritt's wife, xho had
refused to surrender it to police.
.Police said the student, Ed
win IMguma, and another stu
dent, Sissoko Sounkoun, were
walking on South Seventh Street
between Klamath Avenue and
Main Street when .Merritt and
his wife emerged from a restau
rant. Officers said IMerritt became
belligerant towards M g u m a,
then walked to his parked car
and came back with the rifle
and pointed it at the student.
Mguma and Sounkoun ran
around a corner and when they
saw Mcrritt's wife get her hus
band into the car and drive
off, the students called police,
who quickly located Merritt at
the motel.
'When Merritt was taken into
Belt Rejects
Allegations
PENDLETON (UPI-Chargcs
of giveaway in the lease of the
Boardman park site to Boeing
Co. of Seattle were refuted here
Thursday by William H. Belt of
Hermiston, president of the
Space Age Industrial Park Asso
ciation. .
Belt said such allegations are
as empty and lacking in sub
stance as the present state of
the land itself.
He described the Boardman
acreage as "sub-marginal land
of shallow light soil and bedrock
only a few feet from the sur
face." He said detractors of the
lease had typified the arid land
as "another Yakima Valley" in
its agricultural potential.
The site is not now farmed,
has never been farmed and in
all probability would never be
farmed, Belt added.
Price: $1.00 Per Share
Prospectus may be obtained from any
the officers listed below:
DR. ROBERT L. SMITH
PLi. 1.4119
20S Wh,t.i,d. Dn.t
Conollii, Ortfon
HAMILTON GRIFFIN
WAbaih 8-9142
628 S. F.rr,
Albany, Oregon
W-M JWITH
6-4241
13 V. lit Strati
Albany, Ortaon
I : '
TJLA-J
custody, he had another clip
for the rifle in his pocket, con
taining nine cartridges.
Mcrritt's wife refused to give
up the rifle and drove off from
the motel. With a search war
rant, police stopped her and
took the rifle, loaded with the
15-shot clip.
Thieves Loot
Firm's Safe
Burglars broke into a safe at
Klamath Ready Mix Inc., Wash
burn Way, sometime Thursday
night and escaped with $100 in
coins, in one of two burglaries
reported to Oregon State Police
Friday.
The incidents represented the
11th and 12th break-ins report
ed in Klamath Falls and the
suburban area since Monday,
records at the Herald and News
indicate.
The thieves entered the estab
lishment through a bathroom
window at the rear of, the build
ing and then broke open the
safe by "peeling off" its top,
police reported.
Burglars also used a rear en
trance to enter the Summers
Lane Tavern. 3541 Summers
Lane, during the same evening.
Investigation by police early
Friday indicated that nothing
had been stolen. Police are con
tinuing their investigation in
both cases,
Callahan Starts
Another Term
SALEM (LTD - William A.
Callahan, chairman of the State
Industrial Accident Commission,
was to be sworn in for another
four-year term this afternoon.
Next year will mark Calla
han's 10th year as a commis
sioner, representing labor, and
the 50th anniversary year of the
commission.
VERLAND ERNSTON
WAbaih 8-8157
1023 W. 37th A.eout
Albany, Oregon
ELLIS BYER
WAbaih 6-2618
Bo 666
Albany, Oregon
T