Wall Street
Chatter
New York - (l?D - A special
report on the chemical in
dustry by Shear-son, Hammill
& Co. recommends a cautious
investment nnli
a rather flat profits picture in
iigm Dotn this year and next.
With most chemical sharps
selling at 20 times or more
estimated ihbu earnings, the
report believes that chemicals
on tne wnoie are likely to be
relatively dull market per
formers for some time to come
and that better invpstmpnt nn.
portunities are available else-
wnere.
Holdings br Institutional
Investors, it says, are sub
stantially larger than was the
ease before the industry en
tered the J 958 recession so
little new buying support can
be looked for from this area.
It notes, however, that in
dividual earnings perform
ances are apt to vary consid
erably. Union Carbine, Allied
Chemical and Air Reduction
should benefit from the re
bound in steel and metal
working while National Dis
tillers & Chemical, Dow, Mon
santo and Foster Grant should
benefit from the continued up
surge in plastic demand.
Gary Cooper Given
Hospital Treatment '
Boston - IUPD - Actor Gary
Cooper, 58, was under treat
ment at Massachusetts Gen
eral hospital today for a pros
tate gland condition.
The two-time winner of the
Academy award was expect
ed to undergo surgery when
tests are completed. The hos
pital said he was In satisfac
tory condition.
Boston -UPD- John D. Black,
72, a professor of economics at
Harvard University from 1927
1953 and a world authority on
agricultural economics, died
Tuesday.
Try and
-By BENNETT CERF-
yA DISTURBED CITIZEN in San Diego, note Neil Mor-p-
gan, called up the police to report the greatest traffic
Rani in the city's history. "Cars are jammed up lor blocks
En every direction," he
concluded. "Have you
sany idea what's causing
toe trouble?", asked a
police inspector. "Yes,"
paid the citizen, "automo- j
feiles."
All o which brings to
fmind a reporter's, state
sment on auto traffic: "I
have seen the future, and
It doesn't work."
b
tMt la how they do
things in the exclusive resi
rlential section of La. Jolla,
Calif. On Easter morning,
rone indulgent father threw a couple of down decorated eggs Mo
fiis swimming pool. His three kids then donned diving masks
rid dove Into the pool to find them.
And when another Junior La Jollian tost a toy airplane he had
een guiding by remote control, his father chartered a real plane,
gnade a search of the surrounding hills, and retrieved the toyl
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29 North Ivy Street Robert t. Kyle, Manager
In the Day's News
By FRANK
This modern world note:
A factory in Munich, Ger
many, which ones was de
voted to the making of hum
ble sauerkraut is today turn
ing out some of the haughtiest
ski apparel worn on snow
slopes all the way from Squaw
valley to St. Mauritz - which
you should pronounce Sangt
Mo-REETZ if you hone to
move in the best ski circles.
WHIS modernized sauerkraut
factory is owned and oper
ated by Maria and Willy Bog-
ner, a husband-and-wife team
of skiers and manufacturers
credited in many sports circles
with a whole revolution in re
cent yean - since they aban
doned sauerkraut - both in
color and in construction of
ski wear.
Away back in 1952, they
invented "stretch pants,
which is a generally used
term for ski trousers made of
a combination of wool with
elasticized nylon. In the case
of stretch pants, they were
aiming more at speed than at
sex appeal. These garments
are now known as Bogners.
Explaining them, Willy says:
"The less wind resistance the
better. Ski pants need to be
close fitting for downhill
where every second counts."
tiROM stretch pants, the
Rnpnprs upnt nn in Hractif
changes in color. No more
dark blues and blacks and
browns. The Bogners brought
in all the colors of the rain
bow. They use some 40 hues,
some of which they developed
themselves and have made to
their order.
They also took the ancient
coverall, which Winston
Churchill made famous dur
ing the war as his "siren
suit," and glamorized it into a
Stop Me
with
CONFIDENCE
at
JENKINS
ski uniform that was worn by
the members of the German
ski team this winter at Squaw
valley.
llfME. BOGNER (it would
have been Frau Bogner
back in the old sauerkraut
days) does the designing. She
also does her full share of the
skiing. She says: "You can't
design ski wear unless you
ski."
So she skis - AND HOW!
some of the skiers who watch
her exclaim, partially In ad
miration and partially in
envy. She has just turned 45,
and at that crucial period of
life when the middle - age
spread is supposed to be get
ting in its deadly work she
has the lean shape of a teen
ager, the snowy hair of a
grandma and a wind-tanned
face thai deepens the blue of
her eyes.
BACK in the sauerkraut
days, her figure would
have had its full share of what
the French cautiously de
scribe as "embonpoint," which
comes from too liberal in
dulgence in sauerkraut and its
natural companions, pig's
knuckles and beer.
Her clothes, in those days,
would have been adapted to
her shape - which is to say
that stretch pants and rainbow
colors would have been out of
the window so far as she was
concerned.
And
She would have spent her
time on the sidelines, un
observed, instead of out on
the ski slopes, the cynosure
of all eyes. Along with the
rest, the sauerkraut factory
has been transformed from a
drab, smoke - darkened brick
building in the factory district
of Munich to an elegant glass
and steel structure set in the
countryside and surrounded
by gardens and trees.
AH, WELL.
The world rhanffps. and If
we are to keep up we must
change along with it. Mrs.
Bogner says she ADORES
change.
Treasury Holding
Tax Refunds for
Many Taxpayers
Washington - IUPD - Here's
news bigger than man-bites-
dog: The government wants
to pay $20 million to the tax
payers:
The money is in the Treas
ury, waiting to be claimed by
about 400,000 taxpayers who
failed to receive their income
tax refund checks over the
years.
The government will keep
the money available "for
ever," the Treasury told Unit
ed Press International.
This information was dis
closed as time drew near for
taxpayers to file their 1959
Income tax returns.
In 37 states, the deadline is
the usual midnight, April 15
-Friday. In the other 13 states
the deadline has been pushed
back to midnight next Mon
day, because' April 15, Good
Friday, is a legal holiday
there.
Virtually all the 400,000 re.
funds were unpaid because
the Treasury's checks could
not be delivered. The tax
payers forgot to put their ad
dress on their tax return, or
they moved before the check
came and left no forwarding
address, or their handwriting
was hard to read and the
check was misaddressed.
Officials conceded that in
some cases the Internal Reve-
I nue Service made an error
of its own and the check never
found the taxpayer. '
Some Refunds Old
Some of the refunds are
many years old. They average
$45 to S50. There is no dead
line for claiming the money.
"The records are kept for
ever," an IRS spokesman said.
"We never dissolve an obliga
tion like that."
Persons who believe there
is an old refund they never
collected should inquire, by
mail or in person, at their
district Internal revenue of
fice. Usually, if the claimant's
signature matches the one on
the return the IRS will make
the payment, a spokesman
said.
The 13 states and three U.S.
possessions in which the fil
ing deadline has been extena
ed to April 18 are Connect!'
cut. Delaware, Florida, Ha-
waii, Illinois, Indiana. Louis
iana. Maryland, Minnesota,
New Jersey, North DakoU
Pennsylvania. Tennessee, the
Canal Zone, Pureto Rico and
the Virgin Islands.
Mr. Angel Alan Dies
When Struck by Snag
Eugene (CFD Daniel Hack
ett, 22, Mt. Angel, died Mon
day In a Eugene hospital of
injuries suffered when a anag
fell on him in the Deer creek
Five Killed in Head-On Crash
Aliquippa, Pa. - (UPO - Five
persons, including an attor
ney's wife and two of her
four children, were killed
Tuesday nieht in a
collision here.
The other two children of
Beaver Falls, Pa., attorney
John CartwriDht ra,t,lnri
critical injuries.
The accident hanrwnoH
about 8:30 p.m. when one
of the drivers, possibly a
heart attack victim, lost con
trol of his car. It struck four
parked vehicles before slnm.
ming into the Cartwright au-
lomooiie on the three-lane
Whatever make or model car you drive
enjoy the savings of Boron. Power!
In only three years since its introduction to western
motorists, Richfield Boron gasoline has created a success
story of unequaled public acceptance.
Richfield Boron has passed the test where it counts
most: on the streets and highways under all types of driv
ing conditions. Tested, not in a laboratory, but in more
than 100 million car miles of actual driving by motorists
like you. That's where Richfield Boron gasoline has set
new records for smooth, knock-free performance.
Not so dramatic but equally important to money
conscious motorists -is the extra mileage enjoyed by
users of this motor fuel. This mileage bonus comes from
Boron's ability to control engine combustion, to prevent
pre-ignition which wastes gasoline... and thus to utilize
to the fullest every drop of clean-burning Richfield Boron.
And many owners of the new compact cars are finding
they get "big car" performance by switching to Richfield
Boron -plus the built-in mileage benefits of this
advanced motor fuel.
If you haven't tried Richfield Boron, give yourself-and
your pocketbook-a treat with this new type of gasoline.
It's over 100 octane.
MAKERS OF
Aliquippa-Monaca blvd.
Mrs. Connie C?rtwright,
20; her daughter Jane, 4: John
Durish, 50. South Heights,
Pa., and William J. May, 25,
Carnegie, Pa., were pro
nounced dead on arrival at
Aliquippa hospital. Susan
Cartwright, 21, died shortly
after being admitted to Mercy
hospital in Pittsburgh.
Debra Cartright, 6. and her
infant brother John, 6 months,
were taken to Mercy hospital
In critical condition with head
injuries. The father, who ac
companied the Injured young
sters on the ambulance trip
RICHFIELD BORON PREMIUM AND RICHFIELD
COUNT 97 MILLION
Washington -ll'PH- The Cen
sus Bureau has counted more
than 97 million Americans
since April 1, about 54 per
cent of the estimated popula
tion of 180 million. The bu
reau expects to be finished
early next week.
BANS BINGO GAMES
Chicago -ill'lu Unman rath.
olic Archbishop Albert Cardi
nal Meyer has ordered pastors
in Chicago to stop sponsoring
bingo games, it was learned j
Tuesday night. I
to the hospital, was placed
under sedation for shock.
MM
Windows Broken at
Lincoln School
A number of windows were
broken, apparently with a pel
let gun, at Lincoln school last
week end. according to Med
ford police.
Police said a total of nine
second-floor windows were
broken. They were told the
Windows Would pnsl Hnnpnvi.
mately $4.50 a piece to repair.
OUR "GOOF"
li Your Gravyl
BE A K-BOY
Blooper-Snooper
"Boron" is not a gimmick or coined word invented
by some pseudo-scientific publicity man. Boron is
one of the natural elements of the universe. It
appears on the atomic scale as do gold, silver,
platinum, hydrogen, oxygen and other natural
elements. Boron has over 200 industrial and
scientific uses. Its most spectacular use has been
in the improvement of high-energy fuels for
rockets and missiles. Its most important use for
you is in the gasoline tank of your car.
PLASTIC SURGEON DIES
London -IUPD- Sir Archibald
Mclndoe, 59, a pioneer in skin
grafting and plastic surgery,
died Tuesday.
F MCHFIclD RICH FIELD I
1 1 BORON hwctak I I
I 1 JL I I
HI-OCTANE REGULAR GASOLINES
MAIL TRIBUNI, Medford, Or. I
Wadntldtr. April 1 3, 1 960 A '
Brazil comprises about one
half of South America's area.