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Albany Democrat-Herald from Albany, Oregon • 7
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Albany Democrat-Herald from Albany, Oregon • 7

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Albany, Oregon
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7
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Monday, July 20, 1970, Page 7 BID ASKED Admiralty Gr. 4.99 5.47 Admiralty Inc. 3.43 3.76 Admiralty Ins. 6.22 6.82 Affiliated Fund 6.17 6.68 Bullock 11.44 12.53 Chemical Fund 14.87 16.25 Colonial Equity 3.07 3.36 Colonial Fund 9.00 9.84 Dreyfus 9.75 10.68 Enterprise Fund 5.15 Equity Fund 7.58 8.28 Fairfield 7.66 8.37 Fidelity Capital 9.69 10.59 Fidelity Trend 19.04 20.81 Group Sec Com 11.16 12.20 Hamilton HFI 3.61 3.95 Investors' Group Mutual 8.34 9.07 Stock 14.76 16.04 Selective 8.68 9.33 Variable 5.61 6.10 Keystone S-3 601 6.57 Keystone Sp4 3.44 3.76 Keystone B-4 7.79 8.51 Manhattan 4.15 4.54 Mass Growth 9.48 10.36 Mass Tr 12.31 13.45 Natl Inv. 5.98 6.54 Natl Sec Div 3.48 3.80 Natl Sec Growth 7.37 8.05 Natl Sec Stock 6.73 7.36 Puritan Fund 8.42 9.20 Putnam Equity 5.99 6.55 putnam Inv 5.82 6.36 Putnam Growth 8.28 9.05 Putnam Vista 6.74 7.37 Salem Fund 4.49 4.91 Security Eq 2.50 2.73 Selected Amer Sh 8.02 8.68 Selected Spec Sh 12.31 13.46 United Funds Accumulative 5.65 6.19 Income 11.04 12.10 Science 5.85 6.41 Value Line Inc.

4.08 4.47 Value Line Special Situations 3.90 4.27 Wellington 9.97 10.96 Whitehall 10.57 11.55 Winfield 3.50 3.83 Corvallis livestock The market was steady to weak on most classes of feeder cattle. Slaughter cows weak to 50 cents lower. Sheep about steady. Feeder Cattle Good steer calves, 300-450 lbs per cwt $32.00 37.75. Good calves, 300-450 lbs per cwt 29.00-33.00.

Good yearling steers, 450-650 lbs per cwt 28.25 30.50. Good yrl heifers, 450-550 lbs per cwt 26.50 29.00. Holstein steers, 500-850 lbs per cwt 24.50 25.75. Holstein steers, lightweight per cwt 27.00 31.00. Slaughter Classes Cows, utility commercial, per cwt $19.00 21.75.

Cows, canner cutter, per cwt 17.00 19.25. Steers heifers, cwt 24.00 27.25. Slaughter calves, per cwt 27.75 32.00. Bulls, utility commercial, per cwt 24.00 28.70. Sheep Hogs Feeder lambs, $22.00 24.25.

Slaughter lambs, per cwt 24.50 25.75. Ewes, slaughter, per head 4.50 11.00. Buck breeders, per head, 27.50. Lester to face pollution unit SALEM Lester Shingle Co. of Sweet Home was nearly destroyed by fire last week, but Tuesday the owner, Melvin Lester, is scheduled to appear before the regional air authority on a pollution violation charge.

The Mid-Willamette Valley Air Pollution Authority meets at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in the commissioners' room of the Marion County Courthouse in Salem. In accordance with legal notices published before the Sweet Home mill burned, the regional air authority is charging both Lester Shingle Co. and Stiller Bros. sawmill in Yamhill County with failing to NEW YORK (AP) The stock market gave up most of modest early gains today in moderate trading.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks was up 0.20 to 735.28 at 2 p.m. Earlier the average had been close to 3 points ahead. Advances continued to outnumber declines by better than 2 to 1 among the issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Brokers said profittaking was chiefly responsible for the erosion of early session gains. They said the current consolidation phase was normal and constructive after a long period of strong gains such as last week's threesession rally.

Prices on the Big Board included: Becton Dickinson, off at Pillsbury, down at 46; Loew's Theater, up at FAS International, down at Chrysler, ahead at RCA, up 1 at and Texaco, ahead to 29. Overcounter PORTLAND (AP) National Associatio of Security Dealer quotations at noon Monday. They do not include retail markup, markdown or commissions. Industries Bid. Asked Albany Frozn Food Bohemia Lmbr 16 Cascade Corp Columbia Nye Foamat Hyster Kaiser Steel 56 57 Lamb- West Fred Meyer 18 19 Morrison-Knudsen 12 13 Oregon Freeze Dry Ore.

Metallurgical 7 Ore. Port. Cement Pakwell Payless Drugs Precision Castparts Rem Metal The Rainier Co. Smoke Craft William. Ind.

Banks First Nat'1 of Ore 24 25 Seattle 1st 34 U.S. Bancorp 26 27 Utilities Calif Pacific Cascade Nat'l Gas 9 N.W. Nat'1 Gas Telephone Utilities Insurance American Guar 8 Local Mutual Funds Columbia Balanced Fund 9.60 Columbia Growth Fund 9.72 Mutual NEW YORK (AP) The following quotations, supplied by' the National Association of Security Dealers, are the prices at which these securities could have been sold (bid) or bought Friday. sign a schedule for bringing wigwam waste burners into compliance. The authority now will consider an order that the wigwam burners be shut down.

Also on the meeting agenda are public hearings concerning extension of permission to burn at the Holley and Stayton dump sites. Both dumps are operating under extensions of previous orders to stop open burning. Both operators, Lester Weld of Sweet Home and Utah Crowson of Stayton, are experiencing difficulty meeting the requirements for converting the present dump sites to sanitary landfill operation. Benton probes three crashes CORVALLIS Benton County sheriff's deputies investigated three traffic accidents involving Albany residents during the weekend. In Indpendence woman and an Albany man are in Corvallis' Good Samaritan Hospital with injuries received in a single-car accident.

The mishap occurred Sunday at 3:45 a.m. at the intersection of Independence Road and Highway 20 about four miles west of Albany. Benton County sheriff's deputies say the driver of the car, Carman Marie Fitzgerald, 31, Independence, did not see a stop sign at the intersection. The car, southbound dependence Road, continued across Highway 20 and down a 40-foot embankment. The automobile remained upright throughout the incident.

Both Mrs. Fitzgerald and her passenger, David L. Holmes, reported in satisfactory con- 'Keep them cool' Legs are secret to frog success By DAN JONES Democrat-Herald Writer JEFFERSON What's the secret for selecting a winning frog? "Pick a good mature one, with strong legs. Keep them cool and don't handle them any more than you have to," says John Hand of Brownsville. And Hand should know.

Of the five frogs he brought to Jefferson on Sunday, four made the finals and one set a new Oregon Frog Jump championship mark of 18 feet inches. It was a frog named "Johnny Crank," jockeyed by Hand's wife, Mary, which made a triple-jump of 18. feet 5 inches in the preliminaries of senior division and did half an inch better in the finals. The jump eclipsed the former Oregon record of 15 feet inches set in 1962 by a frog from Scotts Mills. In fact four of the frogs entered in Sunday's competition surpassed the old mark, two of them doing it twice.

Left unchallenged is the world frog-jump mark of 19 feet inches set in 1966 at the Jumping Frog Jubilee at Angels Camp, Calif. About 200 frogs were entered in Sunday's competition, sponsored by the Jefferson Jaycees. The weather was a sunny 87 degrees. Winning frog jump competition at Jefferson is nothing new for the Hand family. This is the third time in five years someone from the family has been in the finals.

In addition to Hand's wife winning the top prize, his brother, Stanley Hand of Brownsville, entered the frog LBJ and placed with a preliminary jump of 15' and final round mark of 15' a cousin, Eddie Pitts also of Brownsville, whose frog jumped 16' the first time but only 11' in the finals; and Pitts' wife, jockeying "Daddy Long Legs" to jump of and 14' Rounding out the senior division finalists was Corey Brown of Jefferson, whose frog got into the finals with a jump of 16' 5" but jumped only 14' 914 in the finals. Hand's own entry jumped only 14' 1" in the preliminaries, so didn't make it to the finals. An uncle, Lloyd Hand, jockeyed a frog to a jump of 14' but that wasn't good enough to enter the finals. Shortest jump of the day was 2' by a frog jockeyed by Paul Jellison of Jefferson. Largest bullfrog entered in the competition was one of 2 pounds 3 ounces entered by Jack Johnson of Albany.

Entry from furthest away was "Sebastian Thorndyke" from Vancouver, B. C. Last year's champion, Mrs. Jacob (Sue) Claasen of Brownsville, was back with a younger frog, Armstrong but it managed a jump of only 5' Her son, Randy, did better with a frog named after his high school band director, Ted Marshall. Young Claasen's frog jumped 14' In the junior division, for grade school age youngsters, there were lost of laughs for the audience, but few lengthy jumps, and in only one case did the final jump surpass the preliminary jump.

Junior division finalists, with the preliminary jump listed first, were frogs of Shawn Center, 14' 9" and 10' Mike Bryant of Jefferson, 13' 9" and 3' Janet Westberry of Brownsville, 13' 1" and 10' Jim Bryant of Jefferson, 12' 5" and 6' and Greg Jellison of Jefferson, 12' and 14' Adding a little of his philosophy on selecting winning frogs for the competition, Hand said he hunts for sloughs or farm ponds with high shores, where the frogs are, of necessity, experienced in long, high jumps. He also suggests waiting till the day of competition to remove the frogs from their native habitat and then avoiding unnecessary handling. That's why he used a fish net to remove his family's entries from the jumping circle following their preliminary jumps. "The more you handle them, the more domesticated they get. You want them wild," Hand said.

The laughs in the junior division came from frogs that got away from their masters, little tykes obviously squeamish about handling frogs and the unusual variety of containers ranging from milk cartons to burlap bags in which the frogs arrived on the scene. A crowd estimated at more than 500 sat in the Jefferson High School athletic field grandstands to watch the 14th year of Oregon Frog Jump championships. They passed the time eating barbecued chicken and cold refreshments being served by the Jefferson Lions and auxiliary. But for many families, the dinner menu called for frogs' legs. Big bullfrogs don't jump very well, discovers Jack Johnson of Albany as he pounds the ground and blows in a vain attempt to encourage his entry in the Oregon Frog Jump championships at Jefferson on Sunday.

Even though this frog's jump of 5 feet 5 inches was far from being a record, its weight of 2 pounds competition saw a new Oregon 3 ounces made it the heaviest record set at 18 feet inches. frog in the competition. Sunday's Mid-valley obituaries Leah Jarvis Leah B. Jarvis, 79, 1746 S. Main, died Sunday morning at Albany Mennonite Home following extended illness.

Funeral service will be 10 a.m. Tuesday at AAsum Funeral Home with Dr. Morton Booth officiating. Burial will be in Fairview Cemetery at Bismark, N.D. She was born July 16, 1891 in Austin, Minn.

She grew up in North Dakota, last living in Bismark, N.D. before coming to Oregon in 1951 and to Albany in 1965 from Eugene. She married Arthur Jarvis on Sept. 6, 1911 in North Dakota. He died in 1949.

Following his death she had worked as a sales clerk. She was a member of the United Presbyterian Church. Surviving are two sons, Willis of Seattle, Wash. and Ralph of Albany; a daughter, Mrs. Richard (Mary) Carr of Junction City; a sister, Mrs.

Harriet Staberg of Stillwater, eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Two brothers preceded her in death. Lysle Matheson LEBANON Hazel Marie Lollar, 48, 360 Central died Friday at her home of an apparent heart attack. Funeral will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Huston Funeral Home, the Rev.

Lynn Sparks, officiating. Burial at IO0F Cemetery. She was born Oct. 19, 1921 in Poteau, Okla. She lived in Oklahoma and Arkansas and moved to Oakland, in 1945.

She came to Lebanon in September 1949. She married Ellis M. Lollar March 16, 1938 in Willburton, Okla. In addition to her widower, she is survived by four children, Dale and Don, both of Lebanon, Dean of Salem and Mrs. Carolyn Slyter of Albany; her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Etcyl Brown of Sonora, three brothers, Homer, Brady and Bill Brown, all of Sonora; two sisters, Mrs. Sue Warren of Ontario, and Mrs. Sylvia Lee Lollar of Talihina, and by seven grandchildren. Hazel Lollar LEBANON Funeral for Mrs.

Lysle I. Matheson, 70, 520 Crowfoot Road, will be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Jost Funeral Home with the Rv. Oscar Luchs officiating. Burial will be in Twin Oaks Cemetery.

Mrs. Matheson died Friday afternoon in Lebanon Community Hospital following a lengthy illness. News briefs briefs principle involved is that any bomb set to go off in a flying aircraft will explode before it is placed in the plane. Names new head ATHENS (AP) Premier George Papadopoulos will act as foreign minister until a successor is named to fill the post left vacant by the death of Panayiotis Pipinelis. Fires contained The forest fire situation in Washington remained tense Monday, with blowups plagueing fir fighters although most burning areas were under control by Sunday night.

The most serious blaze, which had covered 40,000 acres in the Omak Fire District, was contained in the northern portion of the area, but two "large blowups" in the central part were reported Sunday by Forest Service officials. Wind fanned the Safety Harbor blaze late Sunday, and about 400 men were trying to quell the fire in north central Washington, on the west side of Lake Chelan. More than 3,000 men, many of whom have been brought in from other western states, battled the blazes through the weekend. Ray Steiger, public information officer for the Okanogan National Forest, said 11 of 93 reported fires were listed as dangerous, 42 others were in the mopup stage, 25 had been contained and 10 were manned but out of He said several others were burning unchecked. A fire fighter, Leroy Pennock, 53, of Twisp, died of a heart attack Saturday at the Eight Mile Ridge fire north of Winthrop.

The Department of Natural Resources reported mopup operations were underway at the 762-acre fire along the Teanaway River near Cle Elum. Seven lighting-caused fires in Skagit. County were also in the mopup or patrol stage, officials said. to Democrats Straub speaks Sheep buyers during picnic increase bids BROWNSVILLE Six state and county candidates for the Nov. 3 general elections shared platform time during the annual Linn County Democratic picnic in Brownsville city park Sunday afternoon.

Heading the list was State Treasurer Robert Straub, who will oppose Republican Gov. Tom McCall for the governor's chair. "I think the tide is moving our way. There are too many people an disappointed with the present administration," said Straub. Truck in crash near S.

Home A one-vehicle accident was investigated by Linn County deputy sheriffs on the Green River Road at Rt. 1 Box 324, Sweet Home, over the weekend. They said Clarence Benjamin Harnden, 53, Route 2, Philomath, driver of the pickup truck, complained of injuries. He told deputies he was traveling eastward when he met a car in his lane of traffic. Harnden put his vehicle in reverse in an attempt to get out of the way, Prices paid for rams at the 30th annual Willamette Valley Ram sale here Saturday ranged higher than 1969 sale bids but still fell short of the 1968 showing.

Auctioned Saturday were 196 rams which brought a total of $31,840 at an average price of $162.45 per animal. Highest price paid was $1,300, offered for a yearling Hampshire ram by Willima Haggemeir of Kirkland, and consigned C.M. Hubbard and Son of Junction City. This was $475 higher than the top price of $825, paid by Larry Ford of Arcata, Calif. last year to Albart Bogel of Eugene for a Suffolk but far below the all time high price of $5,200 paid for a ram at this sale, bid in 1968 by Mrs.

Amie Wilson of Plano, Texas. The 1969 sale netted in all $25,830, which was $6,010 less than the 1970 total. At this year's sale the Hubbard rams commanded the highest average attained by consignor. Another Hibbardo Hamsphire brought $1,050, paid by William Matthews, Ovid, Idaho and a third brought a winning bid of $1.000. Transfers work WASHINGTON (AP) President Nixon will transfer White House operations to California Friday, with a stop on the way to confer with five governors at Fargo, N.D., on rural development and other subjects.

Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said today the President is planning a full working schedule at the western White House at San Clemente and probably will spend about 10 days there. Claims ships EATONVILLE, Wash. (AP)-, Four space ships hovered over the ninth annual UFO Space Symposium here late Saturday and early Sunday, claimed Wayne Aho, president of the New Age Foundation. Aho had told the Foundationsponsored symposium earlier in the two-day meeting that he had "definite information" the saucers would appear.

About 300 flying, saucer enthusiasts were on hand for second day of the symposium held at the Flying Ranch-site two weeks ago of the Buffalo Party affair. Mrs. Dewey dies NEW YORK (AP) Mrs. Thomas E. Dewey, wife of the former New York governor and two-time Republican presidential candidate, died Sunday night after a long illness.

She was 67. Born Frances Eileen Hutt in Sherman, Mrs. Dewey came to New York in 1920 and met Thomas E. Dewey, then a Columbia University law student, while studying at a voice academy. They were married in 1928, after Dewey had entered law practice in New York.

Urges support SALEM (AP) State Treasurer Robert Straub, Democratic candidate for governor, urged Sen. Mark Hatfield and Robert Packwood today to support military aid to Israel. He also urged support of direct negotiations among the parties to the Middle East conflict. Straub sent letters to the two senators asking them to "join the 70 U.S. senators who signed the Tydings-Case resolution favoring direct unhampered negotiations among the parties to the Middle East conflict and adhering to the principle that the deterrent strength of Israel must not be impaired." System improves SALEM (AP) The state government's new telephone system appears to be working.

better, a telephone company official said today. State workers had the same old problems when offices opened, but within a few hours the improvement was noticeable. David Underhill of the Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone said technicians installed additional equipment over the week-end. They were on hand when offices opened today, discovered some remaining faults and made corrections that brought improvements. Installs alarms TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) Bomb detectors will be installed at Tel Aviv's International Airport to check packages and air cargoes, the Ministry of Transport announced Monday.

The Israeli-made detector consists of a large tube -big enough to place a jeep inwhich reduces air pressure to that of a plane in flight. The Bean parade entries include Albany units STAYTON Two Albany units are entered in the grand parade of this year's Santiam Bean Festival. The parade will be in downtown Stayton beginning at 5:30 p.m. Aug. 1.

Entered from Albany are the Scottish Bagpipe band and Woodpeckers. Grand Marshal of the parade will be television comedian Joe E. Ross, better know as Officer Toody on the "Car 54, where are you?" series. A chicken barbecue, beginning at 4 p.m., will precede the parade. Coronation queen will take place July 24.

Princesses are Kathy Fletcher, Pam Daron, Donna Bartosz, Chris Hance and Barb Schoppert. dition in Good Samaritan Hospital. A South Beach man is in Albany General Hospital following a car-motorcycle accident one mile northwest of Albany on Quarry Road. The collision occurred Sunday at 6:15 p.m. Benton County sheriff's deputies say the cyclist, Joseph E.

Nibler, 18, South Beach, apparently crossed into the lefthand lane and was struck by an automobile driven by Gary Aldon Wych, 29, 1136 NE Cloverdale, Albany. Nibler is reported in fair condition with a fractured right leg. No citations were issued. An Albany driver failed to negotiate a curve on Seavy Road eight miles west of Albany and escaped with bruises. Benton County sheriff's deputies said Ronald F.

Handy, 20, 3410 S. Pacific Boulevard, lost control of his car due to an oil-slick surface, Saturday at 7:30 p.m. SAVE ON OUR SUMMER SHOE We Need Room for Fall Shoes Our Entire Stock of Sandles Summer Shoes are being Drastically Reduced To Clear. One Group Childrens SANDALS and 88 CANVAS SHOES 2 to 5.99 HURRY NOT ALL STYLES IN ALL SIZES Womens ALL SHOES SANDALS Naturalizers to $22 Values 1199 to 13.00 Values 488 THE SHOE HORN 732 MAIN 258-7322 LEBANON.

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