Former Nazi Prison Gamp Guard Shouts Innocence at Trial
rip
Rogue Valley Edition
iMEDFORD,
MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1963
Irregular Market
Drifts Lower in
Moderate Trading
; kvw vnr?K (I!P1 Stocks
jridnA irrneularlv lower todav.
' Sleds were mixed with Beth
lehem, Republican and U.S. Steel
Ion the downside wnue noungs
.lown Sheet & Tube and Jones
Xaughlin managed small gains.
;g;iins. , ,
Chrysler backtracked in a
Harrow motors section. Du Pont
sank more than 2 In an other
wise steady chemicals group.
-L DOW JONES AVERAGES
-' NEW YORK UPI - Dow
r Jones final stock average": 30
- industrials 759.90, off 3.05: 20
irailrnads 177.23, off 0.05: 15
futilities 137.90, off 0.46, and
::iiS stocks 26B.75, off 0.B0. Sales
- Monday were about 4.93 mil--lion
shares compared with 4.38
r. million shares Friday.
Monday1! Prc" on ,electcd
.Jvnird Chemical J
.Alum Co Am
American Air Line.
Anierlran Can - Vr
American Motors
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper
-American Standard ..
'Avco Co
. . in
22'.B
4B
30i
Brlhlehrm Steel
:BoelnB Atr
ill!
nn
4g:,
: w,
114 'i
'Caterpillar Corp
'Chrysler Corp ..
Coca Cola
7.V
Columbia Can "
IConlinenlnl Can a
Crown Zcllerliach ;
Crucible Sleel f '
funis. Wrlnht ''
Dow Chemical
nu Ponl SJJ
Enslman Kodak (xdi
Flrfslonc (xdi 3r?
AUDI0T0NE
Hearing Aids
of Medford
Presents
Th.lr
1963
INVENTORY
CLEARANCE
SALE!
Priest ftiductd
t Much ii Vi
All Typti of Hearing
Aids & Hearing Gliutt
Aik About Our
Quality Fidelity Aids
$89.50
AUDIOTONE
HEARING
AIDS
1507 W. Main
773-4173 or 773-6511
aHaMHaaBflaaapMaMBfaVaHMaaal
MEDFORD'S YOUNG
PEOPLE OF ACTION
Enroll in Business Course for Highor Pay.
SECRETARIES and ACCOUNTANTS
NEEDED NOWI
Winter Cla sscs Begin
JANUARY 6, 1964
Enroll Early
Robertson
School of Business
Phone 773-4264
40 N. Riverside, Medford, Oregon
Page 2-A
Tribune
Ford . .
(General Dynamic
General Electric
General Foods
General Motora
General Portland Cement
Georgia Pacific
Great Northern Railway ....
Greyhound
cult on
Homcaiake
Idaho Power
I.B.M
Int Paper
Johna Manvllle
Kennecott Copper
Lockheed Aircraft
Martin ...
Merck
Montana Power (xdi
MonlKomerv Ward
National Biscuit
New York Central
Northern Natural Gas
Northern Parillc
Pac Gaa Elec
Penney J. C
Penn nit
Permancnte Cement
Phillips
Procler At Gamble
nadln Corporation
Richfield Oil
Safeway .
Bears
Shell oil
Sncon.v Mobil Oil
Southern Co
Southern Pacific
Sherry rtand
Standard California
Standard Indiana
Standard N. J
Slokely Van Camp
Sun Mines
Texas Co
Texas Gulf Sulfur
Texas Pacific Land Truat ..
Thlokol .
Trans America
Trans World Air
Trl-Contlnenlal
Union Carbide
Union Pacific
Unlled Aircraft
Unlled Air Lines
U. S. Plywood
U. S. Rubber
U. S. Steel
Unlled lllllitles
WeKl Hank Corp
Wcsllnithouae
Weyerhaeuser
Younastown
. MI'a
.. 2111,
... S.V,
.. BHj
.. 7,
.. 22'.
. .11',
.. M',
.. 411".
.. 4II1,
... 4.V.
.. :12',
..41111
.. Si's
.. 4:!
.. 72
.. .1.1 i
.. 211
..107
.. :in
.. .13 ',
.. .in',
.. 24',,
.. .Ill
.. .11',
.. 31',
.. 411',
.. 2.1',
1.13.
.. 4a 'a
.. 711',
11.1 ',
.. 427,
.. fln'.
... 117",
.. 411 ',
.. 71 I,
.. M.
.. .ill'',
.. 21',
.. .IIP,
.. M'.
.. 71',
.. 2.1',
.. III'.,
.. 70
22',
.. 22
.. in.
.. 4fl.
.. 2fl',
.. 414
.120',
.. 40
.. 421,
. 41
. 7',
.. 41',
.. .12 n
.. .10 i
.. 3"',
.. .13 U
.. 33
.124!,
Portland Livestock
POnTLAND (UPIl USDA Cat
tle 7110. lllsh ffiind-mnstlv clloice
steers 22.2.1.22 .10; standard-Rood
lfl-2l: helfera rholce mosllv jnnrl
20: standard-low flood 17-10; can-ner-ruller
cows 10-13.
Calvra loo. Vealers and slaush
ler calves 1.00-2 00 hlcber; snorl
rholce vealers 20-30; good alaunh
ter calve, 10-21.
Hons 0(10. I and 2 butchers inn.
240 lb. IB 25; mixed 2-3 made
1V7.1; sow, 1 and 2 grade 400-475
lb. ll.fi,
Sheep .10(1, Slaushler lambs
cnoice wiin enn nl prime 07-1113
lb. wooled and (all shorn pells III
IA2.1: ctill-ulllily ewes .1.2.1; Riiori
cholce fcecr lamhs 00-7.1 lb. 13-10
One Song Pleases
Johnson, Erhard
STONEWALL, Tex. (UPI) -
The chorus from St. Mary's
parocniai scnool In rrcrlicks
burc, Tex., had the assignment
Sunday of pleasing both Presi
dent Johnson and West German
Chancellor Ludwig Erhard with
a song.
"Deep In I he Henri of Tex
as," was sung, in Gorman,
Four Fishermen Held
With Smuggled Gold
I BOMBAY, India (LTD-Po-i
lice held four fishermen today
: in connection wilh the seizure
of smuggled gold worth a quar
Icr of a million dollars.
The gold and other smuggled
j articles, Including 500 watches,
were found Sunday in a truck
on Hie offshore island of Mnclh.
! Police believed the contraband
i was smuggled from the Persian
Gulf in boats, transferred to
fishing vessels near Bombay
and brought ashore.
21 Others Being
Tried on Mass
Murder Charges
By ZANDER HOLLANDER
United Press International
FRANKFURT, Germany
(UPI) A former guard at
the Auschwitz Nazi death camp
shouted his innocence today be
fore a court trying him and 21
other defendants on charges of
mass murder.
Oswald Kaduk, 57, accused of
breaking prisoners' necks with
a mountain-climbing pick, said
he would have remained in
Communist East Germany if he
had known he would face trial
on the charges in the West.
He appeared on the witness
stand as West Germany s big
gest war crimes trial resumed
following a 10-day Christmas
recess.
"If I had known there was so
much injustice here, I would
not have come," Kaduk shouted
defiantly.
"Honorable court I have al
ready been sentenced and par
doned. I stand here innocent,"
he reported.
Pardoned by Soviets
Kaduk, a heavy-set former
butcher and hospital attendant,
said a Soviet army court sen
tenced him to death after World
War II but then pardoned him.
He said he was released from
East Germany's Bautzen Prison
in 1056 and fled to West Berlin.
Among the accusations
against Kaduk is the charge
that he selected 40 children for
burning and made Russian pris
oners stand naked in the snow
until they died.
Christmas trees and card
board cherubs still flanked the
doors of the Frankfurt city hall,
where the defendants were be
ing tried in the council cham
ber, the only city facility big
enough for the trial.
The 12 men were charged
with participating in the mur
der of an estimated 2.5 to 4 mil
lion persons mostly Jews dur
ing World War II in the camp
at Auschwitz, Poland, now
known as Oswiecim.
Appear Nervous
Most of the defendants ap
peared nervous when today's
session opened. Their hands
fidgeted and some had visibly
twitching muscles. Many gave
excuses (or their conduct and
one did a little boasting.
"f was responsible for pre
venting escapes and while I
held that job Auschwitz had (he
lowest escape rale of all Ger
man camps," said Wilhelm
Hoger. 5li, (he former Nazi Ges
tapo (secret police) agent de
scribed by Ihe prosecution as
tne camp s crudest guard.
Boger said he (ell soirv (or
the inmates of Auschwitz how
ever. Robert Mulka, (ill, a former
SS (lilile Guard) captain, told
the court thai when he became
adjutant In cnmmnmlnnt Rudolf
I loess In 1042, "1 did not know
it was an extermination camp."
llocss and two oilier former
Auschwitz commandants are
dead. On trial now are their
subordinates, (he "little help
ers nl Killer.
Ilntl Kmc Injury
Karl Hoecker, 51, another
llocss adjutant, said he served
at Auschwitz "only because a
knee injury kept me from serv
ice at the front.
More than 250 witnesses from j
15 nations have been called In
testify at Ihe Irial, which is ex-!
peeled In last six lo eight
months. I
The llirec professional judges ;
and six lay judges waived Ihe j
reading o( the full indictment, '
which is four times as long as
Ihe Bible.
Tile (rial is the largest ever
staged by West Germans. In
IMS, an international military
tribunal tried 22 lop Nazis at t
Nuremberg. It sentenced 12 lo '
death, 7 lo prison terms and
acquitted X
Investment Funds
Nnnn Quotation., on
stork
I mill
Hulli'ck 1
l hrmii-rt, Knnd 1
Column I Encr I
AvKftl
It H2
lit lilt
i;t n
n ;t7
in 7
ii 2n
Katun Mow ai d Stk
Kirtrhtv
Kimrinnif ntAl lnvrst
4 'J.'
7 IS
II 211
(roup sre Ann
Croup Sot- I'oin Stk 1
lUmilloii HM,
Kiilone 11-3 .
Kr stnnr R-4 .
Koslimr K2 . .. .
KcMnne S-1 .
Kr lonr s-a .
Krymonr S-.1 .
Kf.vt.tonr S-4
MN.ft Inv fiiowlh Slk
Nrttionni (irmvih . .
Moitt
I'nttf d AiTiim
I'nitrrl Ituomr .
I'nitfd Si-irncr , .
Il X2
0 2.1
nil
i T2
14 01
111 (Itt
t 7.
1 1
! I I
20 ,Vt
Hi HI
1 .1 Ml
7 74
ni
7 .1.1
15 70
2B
4 .(A
ft II
7 (IH
uur l.litf inr .
Van
WrlliiiBton 14
Over-the-Counter
Western Stocks
Bv l nllrd Prc lnl
mail
ntri
mil
nnk America
l 1 Par . .
Con Krr icM
( v t iin Minm
Fmi'i.Mf KM.
1st Nation Hunk .
.litutrrn
Mon .son Kntidtfn . ...
Mull Ki.nrl
NW NMtimi (; . ,.
Oi rirnu MrUl
ITrL . .
P(iC
1' S Nihimal Bunk ...
Th-rpni
Wi Count 1I
2T,
.11
J v
tmtamimmmmmmummr A- aV
RESCUED FROM FIRE Donna Axum, 21-year-old
Miss America ol 1964, smilingly re
ceives a kiss from Bill Ficlden who rescued
her from her holel room at the Roosevelt
Hotel in Jacksonville, Fla., Sunday when the
Miss America Didn't Expect
To Escape Hotel Flames Alive
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI)
Miss America of 1DB4 her
honey-brown hair covered wilh
grime and her eyes reddened,
said it with stark simplicity: "I
didn't think that we would get
out of there alive."
Clad in a while hospital gown
and sitting in a wheelchair,
beautiful Donna Axum, told
newsmen how she was rescued
from the Roosevelt Hotel after
spending more than an hour in
a smoke-filled mom on the 10th
floor Sunday.
She met wilh newsmen only
Magazine Honors
Negro Leader
NEW YORK (UPI) - Civil
lights leader Martin Luther
King Jr., was named by Time
magazine as its Man of (lie
Year (or
Time editors, in announcing
Ihe selection Sunday described
King as the "symbol n( the Ne
gro revolution in lilfi.1." The Ne
gro clergyman is president of
the Southern Christian Leader-
shin Conference
The magazine selects as ManlMiss s, J!
of Ihe Year the individual it
Ihinks "dominated the news of
lliat year and led an indelible
mark for good or ill on his
tory.
Time said lhat King "posses
ses nn inexpressible capacity
for cinpathv lhat is the touch
stone for leadership" and add
ed that he "made himself the
unchallenged voice of (lie Ne
gro people and Ihe disquieting
conscience o( Ihe whites. That
voice in turn has infused Ihe
Negroes themselves wilh Ihe fi
ber lhat gives their revolution
its true stature."
King, described as having
"stirred in Irs people a Chris
tian forbearance that nourishes
hope and smothers injustice,"
is Ihe magazine s 117th selection
fur Man or Woman of the Year,
Pope John XXIII was the
choice in l2. and (he late
President John V. Kennedy was
chosen in
STAR
-Br CLAY R
H Vour Daily Activity Guict H
According lo lh SfoM. I"
To develop message for Tuesday,
read words ,-erresnond'nq to numbers
of our ZaJioc birth sign.
I Wr,,'.,! .51 'v 'v 61 S'e
' 68-75-79 89
.1 Sn.-.l
.1 1 '
i
; 01-04-J
GIMINI
ST,,..
'0 ,Vo,
i Nil-17-25 3:1
I 51-768I-S8
CANCtl
4 6 lp II 3Sj
110
' (. ALV :
....
.'2i 3( . 41
V43-70 74
:i p.
i T. ;
NOTICE
To All of Our Customers!
Garbage tchodulad to b pickod up Jm. Ill (New
Year's Day) will b pickod up Monday or Tuesday
(Dec. 30-31) Instead. There will be no New Year's
Day pickup.
CITY SANITARY SERVICE
a few hours after her ordeal.
"The first thing I heard Sun
day was Ihe telephone ring
ing in the living room of
our suite," said the 21-year-old
University of Arkansas student
from El Dorado, Ark.
"We just thought it was the
telephone operator trying to
wake us early, so we ignored
it. But then I heard the sirens
and smclled the smoke."
Forced Back To Room
Miss Axum said she woke her
chaperone, Miss Lucille Prcvit
li of Lynwood, N.J., and they
donned bathrobes and slippers
and tried to enler the hall.
"The smoke in the hall was
terrible so we went back into
our room," Miss America said.
"We tried to stay at the win
dow but Lucille passed out and
dropped to the floor." she con
tinued. "I could tell she was
still breathing so I didn't wor
ry about her. . ."
Miss Axum said she was able
to carry on a shouting convor
salion with Bill Cashnnn, Ihe
man in charge of her Gutor
Bowl appearance, as he stood
in the street below.
Asked what she said to him,
Miss Axum said that after
she and Miss Previtti had been
Portland Produce
PORTLAND lUPli Dairy mar
kci Ecus To rptatkrv AA fxtia
iMrKi' 40. .e; AA lal'Rf 47-.Mlc; A
Inmr 4.V47c: A A medium 41-4.V:
A small 23-3I2c; carton 1 cent
hiclirr. . . ,
nutter To retailers: AA and A
prints K7c; cartons 3c hifiher; B
prints fiiic
Cheese (medium euredl To re
tailers 4fi-49c: processed Ameri
can 5-10 lb. loaf. 43-48C
PORTLAND ilIPl' tlresed
chickens No. 1 grade drCM-ed to
relailers: Fryers, whole drawn
J'j-3"c lb. mosllv l'S-;10c: cul-un.
31.40c Ih : hens, lisht tpe. whole
drawn. U0-4c lb : liphl lype hen,
cul-up. 'Jo-aoc lb ; heavy whole.
33.30c lb.
EXCLUSIVE UTILITY
SALEM (UPI) The Cla(-
i skanie Peoples' Utility District
. today was named the' exclusive
electric utility for Ihe area il
' has been serving in Northwest
I Oregon.
GAZER0
POLL.W
UIU
tar. a
2i ri-i
OCT
4- 5-13-16. C
hl-49-57
icoirio
ov. :j
U-27.J9-5JJ
69 81 87
6 R3",0"LI
r-ic ll fa
2-IH5.20 j
14jW-8384
CAHKOKN
?K 1J .
AS VvX
k777;84-0vi'
AOUAIIUl
men
ii t;
Mt.vi.
lcVS-7J.7S W
hotel became smoke-filled from a fire which
started from undetermined causes. Twenty
one persons died in the fire, most of them
from smoke inhalation. (UPI)
in the room an hour William
Ficlden Jr., 19, son of the pub
lic relations man from Miami
who has been handling her
Florida appearance, kicked
down her door.
Carried Across Hall
Ficlden then carried the two
women across the hall to the
room where he, his father and
brother were staying
"I didn't know who il was at
first," Miss Axum said, "but I
recognized him after he came
into the room. After I saw Bill
I just know everything was
going to be all right."
The elder Ficlden said there
was little smoke in his room
and that they waited there
quietly until two firemen came
and led Ihem down 10 flights of
stairs and out of the hotel.
Doctors said they planned to
release her today. After her re
lease she is to go to Miami to
take part in the Orange Bowl
Parade on New Year's Day.
Doctors said her condition
was excellent and they do not
expect her to oxperience any
ill effects from tho heavy
smoke.
Foreign Briefs
CIIOU SIGNS AGREEMENTS WITH MOROCCO j
RABAT, Morocco (UPI) Visling Communist Chinese Pre-'
mlrr thou Eti-Iai has signed several trade agreements wilh
Morocco's King Hassan II, informed sources said today.
With negotiations wilh Hassan concluded, Choti planned to
lour more of Morocco's commercial and industrial (acilitics, in
cluding (he business center of Casablanca, before leaving Tues
day (or Albania. 1
LIONS ATTACK EACH OTHER IN CIRCUS REHEARSAL I
CAGLIAR1, Sardinia (UPIl Two lions bit and clawed
each other lo death Sunday in a tight over a lioness during a
circus rehearsal.
13 VACATIONERS KILLED IN BUS ACCIDENT
DURBAN, South Africa (UPI) Thirteen European vaca
tioners were killed and 28 others were injured seriously Sunday
when a bus tumbled in (ret off Ihe Naglc Dam Road lo a mud
stretch along Ihe Umsimlusi River, annul 10 miles Irom here.
RADIO WAVES SAID BOUNC'DI) OIT JUPITER
MOSCOW (UPI) The Soviet Union says il has bounced
radio waves o(( Ihe planei .lupilrr and recorded them on Ihe
rebound (or the first lime in hislnrv.
KHAM'irS NO. I SOLDIER SAID 'PRECARIOUS'
PARIS (UPI) The condition of .Marshal Atphone Juin. 7.1.
France'!. No. 1 soldier, was listed as "precarious" today, near
ly a eek after he was hospitalized with a hrain circulatory
ailment. He is France s only living marshal.
BECAUSE OF A PUBLIC NEED
FOR ADDED NEIGHBORHOOD
BANKING SERVICE IN MED
FORD, FIRST NATIONAL
HAS OPENED A TRAILER
BRANCH ON
SOUTH RIVER
SIDE AVENUE
. UNTIL A PER
MANENT NEW
BUILDING IS .
BUILT. COM
PACT, COM
PLETELY SAFE
ITWILLOFFER
A NEW BANK
ING CONVEN
IENCE TO THE
RESIDENTS
OFTHE MEDFORD AREA.ALL DEPOSITS ARE
INSURED TO THE LEGAL MAXIMUM BY THE
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. YOU
ARE INVITED TO VISIT THIS NEW BRANCH
OF FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON.
Pair Hospitalized After Two
Nights Stranded in Snow
DENVER (UPI) Kenneth
Stauffer lay seriously ill at a
Denver Hospital today, his hands
and feet blackened during a
two-night ordeal stranded in the
mountains at 15 below zero.
Slauffer, 27, took a turn for
the worse Sunday night but his
friend, James Corbin, 32, re
mained in "fair" condition. The
two were rescued Saturday ly
ing in the snow marooned in the
rugged country 75 miles west
Rescuers Locate
Bodies of Father,
Son on Mountain
EVERETT (UPI)-A 25-man
rescue party, working in relays,
Saturday recovered the bodies
of a Seattle man and his 12-year-old
son from the slopes of
Ml. Index where they died ear
ly Friday morning of cold and
exposure.
Foggy conditions prevented
the use of a helicopter in re
covering the bodies of Horace
Gates, 41, and his son, Frank.
Sheriff's officers said it was
"a long, slow process" in get
ting the bodies down the moun
tain. Two other sons who survived
the ordeal on the frozen moun
tain with their father and broth
er were recuperating at their
Seattle home.
The two survivors, William,
16, and Louis, 13, were returned
to their home Friday afternoon.
The bodies of Gates and
Frank were found earlier in the
day abo"! 50 'ar(ls trom where
I T onic haH lain thrnnoh the nirht
huddled next to a fire.
Louis was taken down the
mountain, about 40 miles .east
of here, by a helicopter from
Paine Air Force Base.
William walked out, for Ihe
second time. The older boy
made the same hike early Fri
day after his father and broth
ers became too tired to make
it to safely. William then led a
31-man search party to the area
in time to save Louis' life.
The hiking expedition began
Thursday morning, when Gates, i
an experienced mountain climb
er and his three sons drove to
Ml. Index from Seattle.
They missed a trail while
scaling the peak and night j
closed in on them on an icy
slope at the 3.000 foot level of
the 5.36!)-foot mountain.
of here after Corbin's new four-wheel-drive
vehicle slid off an
icy road.
Stauffer got through the acci
dent in better shape than Cor
bin, but he sacrificed his cor
duroy coat to keep his buddy
warm.
"I thought he would need it
more because he couldn't move
around," Stauffer said.
Walked In Circle
A rescue team found Stauffer
incoherent in a foot of snow.
He had set out for help, hob
bling along with a stick for a
cane, but apparently just
walked around in a large cir
cle. "I lost my glasses so I
couldn't see too good," he told
the rescuers. "But every time
I fell down I just swore a little
bit and got up again."
When he failed to find help,
he said he "just lay down in
the snow and went to sleep."
Corbin was found semi-conscious
under a clump of bushes
near his overturned vehicle.
Both men, who live in Fris
co, Colo., and work at the Big
Climax Molybdenum Co., plant
near Lcadville, suffered from
severe frostbite on their hands
and feet. Stauffer also received
a fractured leg and Corbin a
broken pelvis when the vehicle
plummeted 200 feet down a
steep slope off the road.
The accident happened lale
Thursday afternoon and Stauf
fer started for help Friday
morning. Corbin spent Friday
and Friday night alone, huddled
in a tarpaulin which had been
in the back of the vehicle.
"Saturday morning I tried to
STARK'S GIGANTIC
AFTER-CHRISTMAS
CLEARANCE
CLEANING HOUSE
YEAR ARRIVES...
MONDAY
30TH
I ONLY
2
DAYS
VACUUM CLEANERS AND
POLISHERS GALORE!
NEW USED REBUILT
FULLY GUARANTEED
HcRC ARE JUil A
FEW EXAMPLES
Rebuilt
FILTEX
ONLY $49.95
New lewyt Reconditioned
Model 2304 KIRBY
JUST 39.88 ONLY $24.50
Door Buster Special Misc. Rebuilt!
EIECTROIUX AIRWAY 59.95
RECONDITIONED KENMORE 29.9S
$13.95 ?n
f Get here early lor belt
Pint came First
Phone
622 N.
YOU CAN'T (TFTfTTSSX
AFFORD TO W gftlWA ABVt
miss this cfWfiwy
HURRY!
Something out of place
In America
?
Yes , . . collegs shortages which have no place
in a country that's dedicated to progress!
We need top leaders in quantity. Higher edu
cation develops them. But the cost of leadership
has skyrocketed. Colleges feel the rise. Many
lack classrooms, laboratories and competent
teachers.
As a world leader we cannot afford college short
ages. College is America's best friend.
HELP THE COLLEGE OF YOUR CHOICE NOWI
To fd out how the college crisis affects you, write to HIGHER
EDUCATION. Box 36, Times Square Station, New York 10036.
crawl on my hands and knees
through four to eight inches of
snow to a house I thought was
about a mile away," he said.
He held up his hands, puffed
and blackened. "This is how
they got so frostbitten," he said.
"I could only go about 100
feet, before I had to turn
around."
The men were dressed in cot
ton shirts, jeans and denim
jackets. Corbin was wearing
loafer shoes and Stauffer had
on boots and the corduroy jacket.
' '
' NEW YEAR
jsftCARDS
A tasteful way to say
"thank you" or to an
swer last-minute
Christmas cards.
Swem's
217 E. MAIN ST.
BEFORE THE NEW
GET YOUR SHARE!
TUESDAY
3IST
Si
MT-1 2-30-63
BRING
New G.E. I ONLY
166 BISSELl SWEEP & .
Cleaner SCRUB MASTER
$28.88 24.95
1 ONLY-RebdHt
HAMILTON BEACH
Model 3SB
ONLY $34.95
choice .
serve!
772-4998
RIVERSIDE
,'t. Tt.. Mv.rl.l.
-f II, r-
STORE HOURS
9 TO 6
Including Sit.
T