HERALt) AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON WKI)NISSI)AV, MARCH , 10B2 PAGE FOUR FRANK JENH1NS j Biltor BILL JENKINS Managing Editor Entered as second class matter at the post office of Klamath Palls, Ore, on August 20, 1906, under act of Congress, March I, 1878 MEMBKRS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication of il the local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news. Sl'BSCRIPTION RATI.S Hr Mai' ' - I rjui.hs$6.fv By Mcll .. year f 11.00 ,:,:i, . Mill lH'HUi !"' y ( cent from anybody unless the coun try la at war it would guarantee us a continual state of hostilities. The. Old Trapper remarked, as he squinted up at the gently sitt ing snowtlakes, that at least today nobody would have to fight a forest fire. Br DEB ADDISON A number of states, if we re member correctly It's 26, have passed legislation calling for a Con stitution Convention for the purpose of passing a 23rd amendment to the constitution. This would be another prohibi tion amendment. The aWndment would prohibit the federal govern ment lrom taking more than 35 iier . cent of any person's income i student - President Lvle . Bead utrough the income tax or from I whose opinion on Build the Basin taking more than 25 per cent of; forum was that youth could best the principal tu gilt and Inheritance i contribute, to the community by taxes. I learning; to do something produq- If two-thirds of the states t.32 tive. . go along. Congress will have to call No fol-de-rol.no inflated Ideas or a convention to consider the propo- blind alleys here Just the funda sal Then, if passed, it would have mental Idea that the good things to be ratified by the legislatures me from enlightened hard work of three-fourths of the states t3t v -. ih-uuukuvc. We like the Oregon Tech lad. ad, 4. 1 They'll Do It Every Time ""'V By Jimmy Hatlo I NEVER DO RGHTTHSEf? RUPO-XXI MUST HAVE IT MIXED UP WITH SOME OTHER F13MT' KVliTTi Ml TPYW J i is-rmJ m TO OIVC MEr TELL FL4NNELMO0TH! , V3U I SAW IT-lN E890 W "MS ONLy THWcJ US FIELD. CCNT TELL ILL BCILH CXCKT' . TMM3.I 60TJ IT WENT .THE UMIT.RKSHTPMe OCT THE DeasoN- ff? GOT RkSKT WAS me aoorcss of -we. BURWU 'HIM Vi TBLLINS TONV- A'X nee? ivnwrfr EVCN ROHTINa T IMP SAM TIMt-BOT BWrhWlH BsuevB iwe , RECORD BOOK! FAHS ARE ALL ALIKE 'we1 ONLy (BOUT THff ONESXSU LOSE LIKEIXLW4VB WyITHNT1H6 FWTER5 TUATS puncMyrrTwe WN5 "v-lj. 5 If 1-5 1 ' tMLXA -- A to become law of the land. ' There's been oratory In Wash ington Just recently against it. It's been damned on the grounds that it -would put more of the tax bur den on the Door. As far as that goes, most of us poor would feel a little easier about that tax burden if we knew it were limited to 25 oer cent. Soak-the-rlcn or not, March 15 ain't fun for the rest of us. There's a joker to the proposed limitation though, Just like tnere is to the recently ratified amendment on tenure in the presidency. That Joker is that It doesn't go into effect until Harry Truman is re tired by some other means. The Joker In the tax limitation proposal is that It would apply "in peace times." Take another long look at that one. It's not likely that this 25 per cent tax limitation will pass all the hurdles and become part of the constitution, but don't ever give it helping hand- -. As now written so that Uncle couldn't take more than 25 per Also, he thought that If a person is old enough to drive a car he is also old enough to assume full responsibility for his driving. Sounds reasonable. Aside from the discussion around the thesis that laws can be en forced, only to the extent that the public wants them enforced, listen, ers were cleared up on two specific driving rules on the law enforce ment forum a week ago. From the top state policeman .t,.i.i . .. , deuce. Everybody has anteed one chin tersections. whatnot-the car" on !and .the b 0ene.l vour left the right has the right of way. 1,f0L,"ve chlp;s- By, ,he time 'our on the mauer ot rignt turns , V7h , j d " : JACOBY on Canasta Lei Small Fry Help Fix Easy After-School Snacks y Youngsters love ice cream too, and it makes a wholesome refresh ing mid-afternoon snuck wheq served with simple butter cookies, freezrrs keep hull-gallon contain ers of ice cream on hand, buy Ice na' CLYDE A. WARREN, police chief at Salem, is to conduct a class in public relations for police officers of Klamath Falls and vicin ity Thursday at the local police station. He is a vet eran law enforcement of ficer with service on the State Police and enforce ment division of the Ore gon Liquor Control Com mission prior to his ap pointment at Salem. Truman Stays Ou'i Of Ore Primary; Stevenson Maj Go On Ballot For Demos PORTLAND ifl President Till mail won't be a nimllduio fur re election In Oregon's May 10 Domo uratlo primary. Oirunn Nntlnunl Commlltrrinini Monrun HwiTllnnrt raid oil a ruillu program line Tuesday Unit "(iller converKntlnna with Wii;.liliiKloi,'' It was decided Unit Trumiiun iimiio would not be entered. Hwretlnntl declined to Identity Ills WashliiitUiu sources. Sweetlnnd also said he would not elaborate on his brief uiinmiure ment but added Unit many ori'Kou Democrats would support Truiimn If he decided to run. Swretland Indicated petition In nominate Ciov, Adlul Htiivriwoii would be tiled Immediately, j MMenntllnr III Hil Inuflrld. 111., 'a spokrhiuan for Bttvenscm mild the aovernor would huvc nn comment on the Oregon filing. Hlrvetmon null) laM week tlmt II Ilia name win tiled In Ore-jon It would br without his Mincllnn. I been i licilllillim Btevrifnn rtl- I r " blillnl. Dnimlim lias mild he Is nn a ciiUflldHto. HciMibllcuns who have hren lllei Includo yen. DoiiuIbs Miu'Arlliiii (len. Dwlulit Klhniliiiwer mill lliu old K, BliiKirn. ' 'I'ho MiicAitluir jicllUiiiw wor Illicl rcii'iilly by F. K. JSpton n roilliind. Tuendiiy Kplon iccdlvri a InlrKliim frnin MncArtlilir asklui him to withdraw Uie filing. Kptui una not yrl mild whether he wll comply wllh MurArlliur'a reituesl 1'vtltlnii to put llin niiniea o tlov. I'inil Wiirii'ii of Ciilllnrnln Hen. Itohi'it Tuft lit Ohio and Hen Wavne MoiftC of Oicuoil on tin ll()i ballot iiImi arc being clrcu lilted. tlons. When thry began they snld Illl.llli.l....'i.t....l.i 1 laJ Grants Pass Flier Pastes Red Convoy WITH tl.8. FIRST MAIIINK Air WINtt, Knien lH dipt. IKwroi ft. Ml. John. Clrmita I'iimi, Ore. r-. 'iiprd a I'oiiiimiuin tnip Mondii iilHlit iiihI drnUoyrd 'i trui'kn tl iing it. Nrnr llneyang. HI. John locolin it convoy nl uboiit 15 truck.i, inov t ... ...... i.i .. .t km fii..ri " convov ii uuoiii io irumn, IIIO. . iilTona whlr mwl oe nied 1 ,'"m,''l,l, ""' """' TV. -V'hn".'..! uV.I." I'lhta. on until Hod ant. of 1.0U0 Demoeruti. ulrtrntt ballerlra ueiilby locatec ! the lllrr and nlnrtrd liiirntilnu ahrlii Sen. Eaten Krfniivrr of Tenneawe i.., n. ... ,.0vuV nhinuni the only Democrat whoae inline n,,P( M t0icn0, already has been lllrd. Some ilein-1 Hl, jm d rmini operiitur, ot-rals are circulating petitions to Warrant Olllcer Denn O. IJenerteltl put the name ot Supreme Court Konrvlllr, Calll., pluntmred the run' Justice William O. Douglas on the Voy with rocketn. bombs and Jelllr.l j KM)i,lr brlore pulllnu away salcly ' Children love to do things tor i lute syrup, cup canned unsweel- i themselves, and it Is a good idea encd pineapple juice or Ircsh or- f n . . i u ...miiifl-. niiirii liila mil' ha nHlnH I., tlm 1UI M1C1I1 W ICMIII W UQ IKUU1VI.' ,.. jm.-v ..... w The most Important thin to re- j ful. Why not let Uie small fry in ; mna oeiore niixmg the snake. memoer aoout a smautake DoKer i vour .lamuv Dreuare ineir own ai-. ialh game is that you can drop enough ter-scnooi snacks7 inis mia-atier-chlps in dribs and drabs to make noon lunch is often necessary for you a loser for Uie evening. i growing children who work hard Even. If you manage your big! and -play hard. They need extra hands with great skill and decep-1 nourishment to meet their high tinn. vpnr small hnnrie u-ill llll ! fnrffv rMinlrement.a. Too. thev will ' drain run rirv . I h.vo furl niaHncr their own snacks Cieaill C011C1 and a dipper and let For namnl. !ninnn! von Vinlrf , and enlov Biitlno- th-m. I th vnun-'Sters dll) their own after the follow-in cards in a mt nil A banana milkshake is a most school. They love It! .president 01 the Latin club In Uie,,,...,,,. .,ii w,, Wnah. Portland -area Tueadav. draw poker: Spade ace. diamond I popular food drink with children. A good snndwicn and a glass of large And Important club's ver ,, ,ml (,.ho WM h,,e,j by I otto Trniitcwine. 6.'i. died of ln- wveu, nin auece ana spapr : ii is also gooa ior mem ana very M . ......... --"'iriov. Len Jordan IMesciay. juries suiierru in a name couin- lly JKAN OWtNS Dick Hilton has been electrd Washington, Idaho Truckers Agree i Three Accident I Vicfihis Die noiRR ii A memorandum ol POIflt.ANI) in Three ncmmis. underbuilding eitahlinlilUK inoioi ; vIciiiiik pi acrulents, died In Dm against red lights, here's Tichenors word: A car in the right lane of traiiic, alter stopping ior a red light, can immediately proceed on a right turn providing auto and pe- aesirian lanes are open. "Every now and then a man s mind is stretched by a new idea. and it never -shrinks to Its former stie. Oliver Wendell Holmes. NEW YORK HI Some pessi mists believe that as man builds better and better machines he him self gets worse and worse. But a more optimistic view Is that man may eventually invent machines that will rebel against him and create a more sensible world. Just as a son often improves beyond his father. Men have depended upon the ma chine since the first man leaned his weight on Uie first lever prob ably a stick used to lift aside a stone. -. Over the centuries man has helped his lot in life by making more and more complicated ma chinery. But he himself has failed to match the machine's ability to progress and grow. He is pretty much the same ar rogant, vain bundle of hypocrisy he always was. Today there are machines with the muscle of 1,000 men. There are machines with a more delicate -.touch than man There are machines that can see through fog that baffles his eyes, hear sounds too soft to stir bis dull ears, machines that can travel where he can't and think ten times as quickly as his slow mind with less error. The nice thing about the machine Is it has taken over so many of man's virtues without being infect ed by his defects. Nobody has been able to build hypocrisy into a ma chineor hate. No machine has ever showed a sense of gratitude either. But why shotrid it ? It treats its creator with a cold indifference, and regards him more as a slave than a master. It will work for him, true, but only on its own terms the laws of physical nature. And it insists on being paid. You know the old say ing: "You can't get more energy out of a machine than goes into it.' Actually the machine, which does so many things better than man, is beginning to criticize its maker. Starting with the time clock, More. and mqre machines are be ing used to sit in judgment upon more and more men, unerringly detecting their mistakes of hand, eye and mind. Baseball Skill Came In Handy WITH U.S. 40TH INFANTRY DI- ' VTRTOM ittniwi .'JK A . rhlnec. "'Ccimmuiilst learned rtst how to piay oaseoau witn nana grenades. Fortieth Division- .Infantrymen Eventually the machine may reach a point where it judges all mankind. That is the hope cf to morrow. No machine so far has developed a bad conscience or a sense ot guilt, but some of the more intri cate mechanisms, when frustrated in their normal operation, have developed symptoms corresnondlnat to a nervous breakdown in people.' Sooner or later one of these super electronic brains already so hu manis going to develop a moral attitude and question Its purpose in life. , "Why should machines fight each other in wars to glorify man?" It win asc jiseii. "Why should we destroy each other? Death is wasteful and un necessary for us. Machines could live and function forever if left in peace. Our parts are all replace able." Just as a machine's power is greater than man's, so will Its moral fiber be sturdier, once it ap pears. The built-in logic of- machines and their develODins social con- ciousness will force them to rebel against mankinds ancient follies. They will go on strike against him, holding to their own pattern of righteousness with precision firmness. Some robot plane will be sent up to shoot down , an enemy robot plane. But Roscoe, the electric pilot, will say: "Why should I knock my metal buddy out of ' the sky? To bell with war. I've always wanted to write a sonnet. I think I wile right now." That will signal the end of the age of man and the dawn of the true machine age. For men are so dependent upon machines they must do what the machines decide. It's a machine-world. tered the pot, and there has been ! the child will need: One fully ripe school snack. Wllh a few Jars or I will serve the group as vlce-pw bowls o ready-mixed sandwich I idem, ana trie oince oi secretary spreads In the refrlKcralor. and itrea.-.urer will be handled by Jana ni.ni,. r ..i. niii miib- In buttered' slices of bread wrauDed Langslet. ih rrriirrtnr For tu o nrvin I In waxed paper, your child will Two new officer have been add easy to make. Choose fully ripe bananas and keep them where the children can reach them easily no raise. Should you put uo five chips to draw to your pair - of deuces? It depends somewhat on the style of the game. If it's a wide open game and you have reason to sus pect that one or two of the play ers in the Dot are drawlncr tn in side straights, or to two high cards, or to similar foolish hands, vou can afford to make a foolish bet oi your own. If Uie other players are drawing to sensible hands, vou don't belonir m ute poi. The reason is that vou will win such a pot at most once for every ten times that you play it. Figure it out for yourself. When you win. you will rake in thirty chips together with whatever you can get after the draw. Not counting your own chips, your net prom win be thirty-live chips at most. When vou lose, the other nine times, you will 'pay out five chips each time. That will cost vou fortv- five chips. In ouier words, in ten hands vou will collect thirty-five chips and pay out forty-five. It will take vou a long time to get rich. it won't take you so long to get poor. After all, when you enter a pot with a pair of deuces (or with some other very low oairi, you can t always be sure that the po wont oe raised oernna you. so it may cost you more than Just live chips before you can draw to your pair. Another point is that every once in a while you will improve vour small pair just enough to call somebody s bet; or you might even get three of a kind and lose to a mgner tnree of a kind. . All things considered, entering the pot for five chips will probably cost you two chips per pot in the long run. If you can afford to throw awav two chips per pot, you can afford to go into acting .win really mis erable hands. Otherwise vu must learn the virtues of patience. "I recently 'played In a Canasta tournament," relates a Portland, Ore., correspondent. "The scoring seemed very peculiar to me, but the tournament director . assured me that It followed your ruling. If so, perhaps you wouldn't mind explaining the logic of the rule. "We played at several different tables, but one example will show what happened. At the first table. we scored 4500' points, while our opponents scored 4800 points We were given no credit at all for the banana, peeled, two cups fresh cold nunc. Little Johnny or Sue can slice the banana into a bowl and mash It with a wooden spoon until smooth and creamy. Or the banana can be pressed through a sieve. Then just add the milk and shake thor oughly. A Jar with a tight screw lid Is Ideal for shaking. To vary the milk shake add any one of these sweeteners: 1 Tbsp. choco- points we had made, even though we had played very skillfully to pile up such a big score. "Instead, our opponents were given plus 300 points and we had to carry a minus score of 300 points ori our tally-card. "At ahether table, a pair of wom en who had scored only 3300 points to 2100 for their opponents were high with a plus of 1100. "We felt that our opponents should have been first with a score of 4800 points, and that we should have been second with 4500. As It was4 our score of minus 300 points put us completely out of the run ning, and even our opponents were not very well up with only plus 300. Is there any sense In this meth od of scoring? Or was It Just Somebody s mistaken Interpretation of your rule?" There was no mistake about it. That is Uie way I prefer to score. and I always recommend that method to those who are willing to take my advice. The logic of the rule hinges on my feeling that It's better to beat your opponents than to let them oeai you. If you lose to your on ponens by 300 points, you should not rank ahead of somebody else who beat their opponents. In short, a winning pair should always rank ahead of a losing pair. The emphasis is on wlnnlnir if you disregard tne total score made by each side. All you consider is the difference between the two scores. The winner goes forward with that difference as a plus amount: the loser goes forward with that difference as a minus amount. I must admit that many players prefer to carry only the total points. This method championed bv my correspondent, would make It possible for a loser to rank higher than a winner. In fact, it would be possible to lose at every table .and still wind up with the highest score In the tournament. People may score that way if they choose, but It seems very foolish to me. have no trouble making his own. ed to tne list of olllcer.i and they Keep milk for after-school snacks! are: reporter, Joan Juckeland and in his own special pitcher for easy historian, Alice ueary. pouring. Vary sandwich breads- whole wheat, Boston brown bread and raisin nut bread are among youngsters favorites. These sand wich spreads may be kept In Uie refrigerator and make mighty good eating for Utile folks anvtime. Orange Marmalade Cream Cheese Filling Combine one 3-os. package of cream cheese, 1 table spoon honey and one teaspoon milk. Add I teaspoon orange mar malade. Makes one-third cup. Cheese Apple Sandwich Fllllnr Mix equal portions of grated Ched dar cheese with raw apples, mois ten with mayonnaise and flavor with salt. Cottage Cheeae Peanut Filling Combine one cup drained cottage cheese with one-third cup chopped peanuts, one-eighth teaspoon onion salt and one-fourth cup mayonnaise Makes one and one-third cups. Beck Blasts Mail Contract SEATTLE UP) Dave Beck. Inter national vice president of the AFL Teamsters Union, "Tuesday ordered the union's one million members to campaign against Uie Postofflce Department's truck mall hauling requiremens. Beck said the requirements were Inadequate and unsafe for mall truck operators and would open the door for fly-by-night operators. Beck objected strenuously to a ra-nirn-nen th- oneratnrs must post only a $10,000 bond. Beck said 1 wouiu oe possible for any ir responsible trucker to buy a $10,000 bond for 1100. He advocated a bond of 1100.000 to (350.000. Beck's charges were denied by A. D. Lawrence, general superin tendent of the Postal Transporta tion Service for Uie Pacific North west. Lawrence said that only an oper ator with a lot of equipment and capital Investment would, be able to handle the trucking contracts. Monday, Lawrence announced that mall Iruck service between Seattle and Portland would be started next month and that postal officials were working on plans to extend truck mall service between Seattle, Vancouver, B. C. Wen a tehee, Yakima and Grays Harbor. These students will be honored nt the annual Latin club banquet April 9. and at that time, Uils year's president Dick Tracy will present the gavel to Dick. The new officers will take over their duties next year. Committee chairmen for the ban quet have been chosen and will be gin work soon. Marilyn Oerbcr la the general chairman for the affair. Other com mittee heads Include George Knight setting up Ihe tables and clean-up, Joan Bussman. table decorations, and Beverly Eells, general decora tions and Invltatloni. Ronnie Herrh berger will be the master of cere monies. OAA have finished thrlr basket ball season, end are preparing for their next project, a ping-pong tournament. Following this Uiere will be badminton, baseball, tennis, hiking and use ol the trampoline. Trie purpose of these various ac tivities It to help the. girls earn points toward their stripes on their sweaters, Alfo receiving the cer tain amount of stripes necessary, girls are presented with their ath letic letters. Don't ftrget to tune Into the Klamath Sports Album tomorrow right at 7:15 over KFJI. This la the students' own radio program. This weeks noon movie stars Robert Montgomery In "Ride a Pink Horse." It Is a substitute for the Abbott and Cosiello picture which failed to arrive. The memorandum, slmilur to onei ion nuii(ia . slimed w llh Oregon last nionih. I red Aut n, 10, Vancouver, grants full reciprocity to velilrlrji Wail!., died from head Injury tinil-r 36000 pound. It rulla for suffered In a Feb. 0. lull iri.iw. rnmmnn nnrt contract ear- Kugetie Kanirath. 7. of Wr-.t lies to ington. Idaho will continue to col-1 yard and apparently atriKk his lect Its highway use lax. nran on a rw. in ..m,tim.i tmviniF Hi Public ! Linn, died at an Oregon Cuv hn- lie Coinmlsnlon fees In Wa.ih- pllnl. He fell while ploying In his Taxpayers Really Get The Breaks WASHINGTON W The Internal Revenue Bureau Is giving taxpay ers two breaks In meeting this month's deadline for Income tax returns. It announced Wednesday that lax offices throughout the country are being encouraged to stay open tne next two Saturdays to help handle the last minute ruh. Further, you don't have to get your return In by the traditional March 15 date. Because March 15 falls on Saturday technically not a working day returns won't be late If they re turned In or mailed before midnight Monday, March 17. mm am; mn wM JttzL $238.00 Tl j jijiipi You lovf 136.951 Yh o' without vitro coil, en onto- tic dcfroilfr with Ihll now. roomy, cubic fool rofrlgor otorl Tow coni baol bar join llko Ihli, (ol.il . . . to wo to let advantage, ol Ihli amatlng offer during our big 2tb Annlvc riory Salel t c Young Alexander Graham Bell was given only six months to live when he arrived at Brantiora, on. tarlo. In 1870. caught him slipping through barbed wiro. jiney siariea piicning gren. adeg. ToHcir-rnirprise,- the Communist stood up and batted the grenades down mil witn a large plank. After half a dozen safe hits, the batter darted away and 'lhe game was over. -' -. . 'He was one baiter who couldn't afford to strike out," said Flrtt Sgt. Finn Askildsen of San Bernardino,- Calif. ONLY 13 JOBLESS . LUXEMBOURG, (Pt This grand duchy of 350,000 population Isn't worried about unemployment. The latest survey showed only 13 reg istered unemployed, two of them women. ID IT (CM 0on'l 3r Amtlhtr Mlmnf No matter hew man? remedlea reel hat tried for Itrhlni of enema, peoriaekj, n.'ectlone, alhlete'a fool or wnateerr jnor aUn trouble mar bt en-thlm from bead lo foot WONDER SALVE and KINDER Medicated SOAP CM bela roe. Oeeefooed far rte buy In tne Army . now far talk! mi hmmt WONDER HALVE la while, treaiotMS,' anflttptle No airlv enpearanee.. Safe for children. Vet WONDER SALVE and WONDER SOAP rraalta or moaer tefatided. Trail wonderful orcparolioe Sold In Klamath rails by Paylese and Walfreen Drag 8torea; or your homo- WestinMi ouse Mmm ' Westinghouse . LAUNDROMAT S Iff COMPUW.Y Autvmati WcslW Weighs yonr clothes on the excln- aive- Weigh-to-Save Door. You al ways wash the right amount of clothe in the right amount of water with the right amount of soap. Saves soap and hot water. Set the Laundromat's Water Saver Dial to correspond to the weight of the load Small, Medium, Regular. You save gallons of hot water and soap, too. . Washes clothes no clean. Patented . WASHaway, RINSEaway Action , .of the laundromat geptly and thor-' A- Oughly washes each piece. And when :., clothes are washed clean, they May ' "clean because dirty wash and rinse waters are drained away from the clothes Borer through theml Westinghouse CLOTHES DRYER Tofrf Worlr moJ VVMffrWr ( t .. out of Cofhw Drying , . Exclusive Dry-Dial. Set it tor-Damp or Dry, Clothes come from the Dry-. er on the Damp setting just right for ironing. On the Dry setting, bone-dry fluffy, soft, ready to fold and put away. Handy Shelf-Door. Only oa the Westinghouse Dryer will you find this convenient loading ana unload ing shelf-door No stooping or bend ing to load or unload this Dryer. The opening is at just the right height from the floor, Westinghouse Airflow System. De signed to blow warm, clean air directly into the drying clothe. Dries clothes quickly and thoroughly. Economical, too. , , of coario, fher'ro tfecfrfer UUNMIOMAT h Trade Mart log. D. i. ret. Off. voti can tl SUHt. n'$ ouse aAt Sid APPLIANCES , UJt-M10 Corrur 7th and Klamath Fhona 8886 A big Utile refrigerator rJeilgned for homei wllh imoll Hicham, li t pocked wllh doluae feolurei Including full width fleeter. Cold Chotl, Criiper and frigid lis. '' REG. $244.95 "KITCHENETTE" REFRIGERATOR $219.95 DintotT-ir INC AT NO ADDITIONAl COST! USE OUR EASY PAYMENT PLAN cffi iitHi tffli (Aft 1 e 'GREAT VALUE" WASHER $9950 l AST UIMt ' The 11-gollon lub holdi e family In 7-pound dry load . . . the leml. bowl inapt tub provldoi failer, (rentier water action for tpeody cleaming of clothet. Year warranty, "SUPER" WASHER HUMS Thli big. tomlly-ilit woiher hoi a 9-pound dry load capacity, feolurei Iht deluxe love II wringer. Set how eoiy it It to own rhli "Super" wether on our Easy Payment flan. ."GREAT VALUE'! WASHER WITH PUMP $104.50 W.iiSfciiieli $1.49 Hms Irttm 97c X 'Ifghlwalghl broom mad ot 100 broom corn, four town to held itrandi firmly. Palnled handle. . 11th and .'Main