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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1952)
t 'fAGK FOUR IIFRALI1. AND NKWS. KLAMATH FAIJS, OKKGON TUESDAY, JUNK 10, 1 nr2 MARKETS and FINANCIAL Stocks NEW YORK W The stock mar- kot declined Tuesday, with steels ind railroads heading the r.ac- aon. The retreat cam on the heela K the collupsa late Monday o( De foliations to end the steel stnko, Losses In the two major dlvt lions extended from fractions to Between 1 and I points. Volume came to an estimated 1. 100,000 shares as compared wilt) l,270,ooo shares Monday. -. It was boosted substantially by movement of a huge block of 17,300 shares of Benguest Consols' dated Mining:,' unchanged at 1 ft, 1 Br The Associated Press Admiral Corporation . Ml led Chemical Mils Chalmers lArnerlcan Airlines 'American power & Light American Tel. & Tel. American Tobacco Anaconda Copper s Atchison Railroad ' Bethlehem 6teel Boeing Airplane Co. Born Warner Burroughs Adding Mach. California Packing Canadian Pacific Caterpillar Tractor Cehinese Corporation Chrysler Corporation Consolidated Edison , Consolidated Vultee Crown Zellerbach Curtiss Wright Douglas Aircraft duPont de Nemours . Eastman Kodak ' Emerson Radio . General Electric General Foods. General Motors " Georgia Pac Plywood Goodvear Tire Homestake Mining Co. International Harvester Internationa Paper Johns Manville .. Kennecott Copper Libby McNeil Lockheed Aircraft' Loew's Incorporated Long Bell A Montgomery Ward Nash Keliiivator New York Central Northern Pacific . Pacific American Tislv . Pacifie. Gas & Electric - - Pacific Tel. A- Tel. '.; '.; Packard- Motor Ca? ' "' Penney (J. C.) Co, Pennsylvania R. R. Pepsi Cola Oo., PhilCd Radio : Radio Corporation Rayonler Incorp ' Rayonier Incorp Pfd Republic-Steel Reynolds Metals Richfield Oil Safeway Stores Inc. Scott Paper Co. Sears Roebuck & Co. Southern Pacific Standard Oil Calif Standard Oil N.J. Ctudebaker Corp. Sunshine Mining 'S, Swift & Company Transamerica Corp. Twentieth Century FoiV ' Union-Oil Company . TJnlon Pacific ; ' - -United Airlines .!; ,i -United States Plywood . ' United States Steel Warner Pictures Western Union Tel , Westinghouse Air Brake Westinghouse Electric Woolworth Company 25 i 73 , ' 49 13 Ik 26 155 i S6 43 , 84 49 34 no i 17 s. 35 . 52 K 41 75 Vi 18 S 51 Vi 8 60 8 4 43 H 13 Vi 59 Yt 44 H 55 V 19 42 H 36 4 32 H 47 "a 77 S 76 Vt TH M 13 Vi 62 V 19 V4 20 Vs 80 33 V. Ill sa Vi 68 19 io y4 10 25 V. 27 GRAINS CHICAGO Pi Soybeans and rye managed to hang onto some of their early gains Tuesday at the board of trade. Grains generally slid below the previous close in fairly steady selling toward the finish.. Wheat failed to make any pro gress during most of the session. The new ctod contracts were un der some hedging pressure, the result of heavy new crop arrivals at southwest points. At the finish wheat was 4 to 1 cent lower than the previous close, July 3.S2-S3 i. Corn was to 1i lower, July 1.8 -84. Oats were unchanged to H lower, July 76 77. Rye was V4 higher to 1 H low er. Soybeans were unchanged to' 1 i higher. Ju'.v $3.26 ' '-' and lard was 15 to 20 cents a hundred pounds lower, July $12.10. WHCAT Open High LowClose" Jly 2.32 i, 2.33 2.32 2 32 Sep 2.35 H 2.35 2.34 U 2.34 Dec 3.40 t 2.40 ',3.39 4 5 39 i3 Mar 1.43 V . 2.43 Va 2.43 S 3.42 S May 2.42 H 2.42 Vi 2.41 2.41 PORTLAND VP Coarse grains. 15-day shipment, bulk, cast de livery: Barley, No. 2, 45-lb B. W., .00. Wheat bid to arrive market. basis No. 1 bulk, delivered coast: Soft White 2.48: Soft White (ex cluding Rex), 2.48; White Club 2.48. Hard Red Winter: Ordinary, 2.51: 10 per cent 2.51; 11 per cent 2.51: 12 per cent 2.51. Hard White Baart: Ordinary 2.48: 10 per cent 2.48: 11 per ce.it 2.48: 12 per cent 2.48. Car receipts: wheat 19: barley Hour 1; corn 6: mill feed 17. Dike Show Plans Set Mayor Robert Thompson, City Recreation Director Bob Bonnrv and Frank Tucker, OliainlKv ul Commerce manager, will select the winners and award the prires in the Blcvcle Safety Parade to be held In Klumatli Falls Friday, June. 20. Howard Stroud malinger of Mont gomery Ward sponsors ot the event, said that entries hare been coming in fast. Alrenolv there are 160 contestants i(hu 1nil Kl.(HHrii Or'ifllih hv the for the parade, and at least o00 i. ,,,,..,, h,.i n.,H wmim,. more are expected before the dead- , P,k ...... W1ii,,,m Harris, radio and I1I1C Ml U.-JU IF. ill. VII Mill It IV. nti contestants must register vvitli Chuck Smith In the sport. nit poods department of Wards store. The awarding pn?ns and speclie on sair mc-vcle ririinR will (or parochial M-hool ur ui iuiul.im ui'iii nit- iuii"-s miiii at Monicomerv Pine. Board Names HeW'Teachers Two tcai-lier-slatf resignations were received anil live appoint motifs were made at last night's joint meeting of the Klamath Kills school bonnlii at the high school. fuel Ward, an eighth grade science Instructor, and Carllne Want, llbiuiv instructor at Mills, tendered resignations to tlio ele mentary school boam. eieeiea were Louis starosclak. Careen Mol- Council Action (Continued from Puiie 1) yard to Sacred Henri, lor tin np praised price ol S'J.tilu. but the Recreation Committee is ugiiuisl 11 for two principal reasons: 1. The price, say member, ol uie committee, is too low. 2. . Bale to Sacred Heart would cut the City's ret-reuliun program one Held snort at a time wnen 1110 recreation program Is expanding. rne Keereatioii uonimuieo eiaiins It has need for the field right How. even though It is in rundown con dition, and feels that beloie the ball flekl Is sold away the Illy at least should provide another plot, ol similar sine and value and contniHicd location for recreation. Such plots nro hard to find. The price ol 2,til0 was estab lished 111 1049 by a really appraisal board that has beon pricing city owned property lor several years. and the Council nag sieatliiy loi Tempo Up In Korea War LIVESTOCK machine shop instructors resiwo- tlvelv, bv the hiuh school board. School board No 1 approved a lisi of textbooks for the Sacred Heart Academy, the ooaro 6 joo under state Tl,n llri,..iu lu,H . ...... Nil UIC V.UUNIU III Iv .rH n th . rt 1,,w- ' 1,1 r,,v.r" 1". "... I lowed the board's recommend Ilia allll' MIUMIH'iii'Ii himi. ',,. , lhnu itr,u,i-IV No 3 gave approval ol changes . "0"-' " nln ,. . , .h., ..:, :.. , , s,riv m Knebsh Only lew days ago that, board ,V,rf ,,i ii. hieh sch.Hil heard reileraled its 1!M appraisal, say that :f) students were enrolled in summer school under three Instruc tors; and heard renorts on athlelic assignments and llnances. The loint committees heard a re port on the school elections for the two hoard set June 16 and 23. To be oualified voters must have regis tered 30 diivs prior to the election lor six SEOUL. Korea 'f SweUed rAra. nl 11, Viti..,,,.- ., . . nese Red troops clashed Tuesday i'"1, "v' bcfn In the fourth day oi a sharp finlu l'1'1"''5 iwsilion on the uneasy Korean i mJ CLf irtrlOl Western Front ! WT JMIlllCI A V. S Eighth Army briefing officer said "activity has in creased" all alone the Western Front and that patrol actions are "longer and more intense. Loses Fingers still Is worth iA 20-year-old Caterpillar driver. Keilo Hardv. 2425 Hope, received a Fighting and shelling increased I . '"J"1?' 10 1,15 . r,'Bh.1 and on the Centrol and Eastern Fronts, ' thts atternoon wmie Rorauig Uie officer said in the woods north ol here The Eighth Aririv snid at least He as brought to Klamath two companies of the U. N. troops Valley Hospital by Kalers oin- about 400 men skirmished with 1 bulance. The two middle fingers of Reds Tuesday m the friction spot his hand were crusnea ncn area near Chorwon. icaugnt m a came omo. U N. IrooDs killed 40 and wound- ! Hardy worked lor the Ned Pul ed 100 of 250 attnekini! Reds that : nam logging outfit. tried vamly for 3 'i hours Mon- He was brought to Algoma by CHICAGO Ufi Pressure of the biggest hog supply in 2 months forced prices 75 cents to $1.00 a hundred pounds lower Tuesday. ai tne new levels mese values , t. . ..- .. .i.-.. i.,.., : ni.i.,, ..i, imiuipn.i ,n ih " .. i were the lowest since mld-Mav. ' .u"." ----- disposal win oe niai.r c.; Cattle were steady to weak and rT' . C Z.. .u . . h mm,l .rf1: .l,hK hirt. nrefM on e inn m u i ...r,, w ,tr i Reds m 24 hours. ing the property JJ.iiHi. But an appraisal made by the Klamath Hoard of Realtors set llio value at $5,000. That appraisal was made lor Roiaiy Club a lew weeks ago. Rotary figures m because the club gave the city the properly III the first place. Members ol the Recreation Com mittee voiced suspicions that Hit City's appraisal board price Is loo low and that I noes not lano unci consideration money that has been spent on the property in recent veins, particularly the grandstand which cost $1.81)0 lo construct iseven years ago anu is sun unnuie. Councilman Dancll Miller, who luvors Ihc sale lo Sacred Heart. said he understood the appraisal wus Just on the land, not on Im provements, and that since llio Cltv has been governed by Its a piaisul board's valuation of prop erly lor several years It could horrilv turn Iho other way now because someone said a certain piece of property is worth more Ulan the board's appraisal. The perogatlve of deciding what Wcallioi Western Oreiion Mostly cloudy won M-niirrru snowors Tuesday and Tuesday night and In north poit Ion Wednesday: purlly cloudy south portion Wednesday; bliel periods of sunshine Tuesday and In north portion Wednesday; coo. er north portion Tuesday; highs both days 62 to tj n,i..n,,r ,i 60 to 65 on roust: Low Tuesday night 40 lo -50; westerly to nnrlli westerly winds of 12 to 25 miles nn hour off llio coast. Euslern Oregon 'iirllv eloiiHv with scattered showers through Wednesday; eooler Tuesday: highs both days 66 to 76: low Tuesday night 38 lo 48. Grunts Puss and Vlrlnliv Mostly eloudv and cool with necn. aloiial showers Tuesday; partly cloudy Tuesday night and Wednes day; wuriner Wednesday. High Tuesday 73; low Tuesday night 40; lugb Wednesday 76. Ily The Associated I'rrsa 24 hours lo 4:30 a.m. Tuesday max. nun. I'ri p. County CD Set For Test ding was around 50 cents lower on old crop lambs. Barrows and gilts generally sold l a i l front 617.50 to (20.75. a few of- NO 0 IT) TIGHT ferings topping at $21.00. Sows were $15.75 to $18.00 for the most ' . , . par. . On Bia Catch Good to prune steers, yearlings, J -.. and heifers sold from $30.00 to! . iffiin whit. row. fnni t 25 50 kmj.xville; lenn. i.t Butcner Obituary Ncllir Z. MrC.r. S2. native of Oak land. Oregon and a resident of Klamath Counu ior H vears. died here June 10. l&U. Survivor include: five daugh ters. Agnes Crleve. Lucille Griffith and Clara Redford ol this city. lnes. Cole rttnn oi OAkLaftd. Calif., and Nellie Glas gow of-.Alaska: also 10 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements will be announced latex a hw nnm. min. l.mh IJOHll snerroo nearly secica over : hv wards Klamath Funeral Home. mni in ui mil miMi cnrinerf-rs jjuhubj n..., ........ . .... were hi the $29.00 to S31.00 range i -?,'? v"' """- for good to prime offerings. 40 58 ' 3 31 51 44 53 M 79 56 V, 78 H KYt 31 M V 16- 4i y. 11 26 si : 38 t4' 12 y 41 26 37 44 Vt British End Russ Seige BERLIN OH British troops re moved their barbed wire barri cades from Russia's Radio Ber lin headquarters early Tuesday, ending a dramatic seven - day siege which won several conces sions from the Soviets. The British said they lifted the blockade on the station inside their zone because it had served Its pur pose. Under its pressure, the Rus sians loosened their squeeze on West Berlin to the extent of yield ing several border areas they had seized. West Berllners were disappoint ed. The Communists made it clear they would claim a victory for tnemselves and not for the British. Allied officials took the -view the siege, if continued too long, might have boomeranged. They felt the Allied - occupied part of this Com munist - surrounded city Is too vulnerable to invite heavy repris als for slight gain. "We must show moderation as well as firmness so as not to bring down further difficulties on Ber lin's head," one official comment ed. The Communists still held West Berlin in a potential strangle grip that could be turned any time into a new blockade. Zonal borders be tween East and West Germany, and even street boundaries be tween East and West Berlin, have been turned into fortified frontiers like those between warring na tions. The Reds have cut all but four of Berlin's highway lines to the West. Allied military patrols still were barred from the single Al lied road passageway through the Russian zone. Irv Noren, recently obtained by the Yankees from Washington, hit safely in 11 of 14 -games against the Yankees last year lor a .345 batting' mark. PORTLAND 11 fUSDAl Cattle salable 150; moderately ac tive on small supply: consisting mostly of cows and stockers; largely steady: few good 1.030 1,060 lb steers 31.25 - 32.00; utility and commercial 25.00 - 28.00; heifers scarce; few commercial 27.00; odd head weighty utility cows 14.25: others 20.00 . 22.00; canners and cutters 16.00 - 19.50;. few down to 14.00: utility to com mercial bulls 27.00 - 28.00; odd cows with calf at side 260.00 a pair. Calves salable 25: vealers rather slew on weighty offerings; weak to a shade lower than Monday's 1.00 or more lower close; choice and prime vealers 34.00 36.00; commercial and good 27.00 - 83.00; utility 22.00 - 25.00: sows down to 18.00; odd common to medium stock calves 22.00 - 27.00. Hogs salable 2S0: butcher bogs and sows opened about steady; closed weak to a shade lower: choice No. 1 and 2 butchers from 180-235 lbs 22.50 23.00: lew 250 265 lbs 20.00 - 22.00; choice sows 280-450 lbs 18.50 - 18.00; odd bead up to 18.50: weighty sows over 100 lbs down to 15.50; odd stags 17.00 down; few good feeder pigs 21.00. Sheep salable 500; slaughter spring lambs active, steady to weak; good to prime springers 26.00 . 26.50: utility to good 24.50- 25.50: market very uneven on shorn yearlings; some late sales l.oo - 2.00: lower; few utility to good 100-125 lb shorn yearlings 15.00 - 17.00; 1 sizable lot No. 3 pelt averaging 114 lbs 14.2S; odd head good and choice 130 lb wooled slaughter ewes 9.00; utility to good shorn ewes 4.00 - 6.00; few new crop feeding lambs 23.00-24.50. pike weighing 32 pounds, seven ounces. She said she had' pulled the monster from nearby Noms Lake last Saturday. Sherrod explained to her that she probably had hooked the world's record walleye and urged her to save it and have it weighed offe5 daily for the record. Miss Poff put the1 fish ' away m her home freezer and declined to discuss the matter further. IS LAST MILAN. Italv W An explosion flattened a three story apartment building in Milan's industrial out-, skirts Tuesday, killing li persons, and injuring five othersThree chil dren were .amonj th,e dead.' n.M.i. Emma Ball. 92. native and lifelong resident of Klamath County, died in Medford June 8. 19Sa. Survivors Inrlude: three grandchildren. Greta Swatsfager. Williamson River. Lavina and Frank Ball, Sprague River, Funeral services will talte place from the Williamson River Methodist Church. Wednesday. 1:30 pnv The Rev. Harley Zeller nfliclating. Commitment service and In terment In Hill Cemetery. Ward a Klamath Funeral Home in charge. ATOM BOMB, PORTSMOUTH. England I The aircraft carrier Campania, with Britain's first atom bomb aboard, sailed Tuesday lor Cibral- : tar en route to Australia. J The bomb will be assembled and , set- off late this summer or in j early, .autumn at a testing ground j in the barren Montebello Islands, ' off Australia's northwest coast. Hon Field remains with the Council. The Recreation Committee was as sured Us objections would be taken Into consideration before anything final is done. A resolution lo resonr properly around and Includuig Recreation Field was adopted by Uie Council, and a public hearing on the re- zoning Is slated for July 7. Tlie property in question, extend ing from S 6th to East Main along the west side of Owens now is Class II residential, but much ot II particularly in tho vicinity ol the old ball field Is city-owned. The rezoning would make It Class IV industrial, opening up vacant properly for use by light Industries. Sale of a good deal of that prop erty is virtually assured If It Is rezoned. Troy Cook, feed and lm- lement dealer, has already of fered to buy six lots for a ware house site. The rezoning would classify as tinker Eugene La Urande Lakevlew Medlord North Bend Ontario Pendleton Portland tAlrp) Koscburg Salem Boise Chicago Denver Eureku Las ngeles New York Red Blulf San Francisco Seattle Spokane 01 60 H8 74 70 65 US 90 75 tt:i 74 83 93 54 70 90 66 70 71 88 47 47 48 :i 60 45 61 47 49 4H 47 66 6.1 61 41) 64 tlH 66 41) 46 46 The lop echelon of III Klumatli Cmiuiv Civil Dcleimo progruni inel yesterday In an oiKanlrutloiiiil "gel rciidv" Hireling lor a trial lost run In n simulated emergency some time next inoiiUi. Director Joe LaClnlr said nil ho knows Is a lest Is to be held un expectedly next month In Klumatli Kails wilh slate and federal Civil Defense officials making all deci sions ns to when, where and how. Local defense measures have pro gressed ! where coiniminlcntloii" nro all bill ready lo operate, need ing onlv a nluce to liislnll some enuipinent. Thai was Inkon care ol duiiiiu yesterdays tesiion, firm at the Wlnema hotel. A need lor volunteers 111 the aid nnd service division was reported bv Personnel eiv. Dlreci Ouv llirkrr nnd Welfare and Aid Dir ector Alllia Urnuhart. Volunteers have been nuked lo contact the lornl employment ol- flc. T All divisions Indicated progress 17 lownrri readiness, iiwii lo greater T' degrees than olhera. .05 . .18, .1)7 ' Tl T ' T Legal Notice NUTIf OF ANNUAL-"" (M'liuni. si.n iKin i Nollte Is t lieteliy given. In euJuui, anre with aWtlini I ll imih tic I, a iq Die legal vnleis of Niinml District T4U of Klamalli County, Oiegon the) all annual school election of said ,i dlslllct will be held al Fielnonl hVI I f IS High Street, Klamath rails, tlieg,,,,' In said srhisil ilunlet, on the lath da, of Jlitia, IUM. Iielween the hours ,,r 1 DO i liuek pin statutory sIsuiIsmi tune, and IK) o'clock p ni , alalulnr, slamlMitl lime, for Ilia purpose r alerting one director In serve for a ot live years coiiiinelirliig II B ASIII.kV J.J 10 No. ell, NlTlt-r OF IIFAIIINO Nolle Is herehv given of a puhli, Itrailllg In lie held al ttl INI a in June ill. IUA1I. In Itooni .111 luasenienl , ' Slate Office nmlillng, Hon a w ruin' Avenue. 1'ortlaitd. Oiegun, liy the stale Industrial Accident t;miitnlsslin for I he lull pose of llelel milling whether or mil log and llimlier tmck-li mler Itlliiie now in use ur piuposed for use itirei the standards and specifications estah ll-lied by the Coniiiilssloii Angus! 1 Inn. Slate Industrial Accident CoiiiniUslon I'aul K flurske, Cheliman June-!. a No JM Kin Marion County Offices Moving industrial all the territory from the in west aide ol Owens back to tho southern Pacific trucks. .SALEM I Minion County -1' ofllccs have almost completed moving out of the ancient county iHitirtlintise Into the old high school 36 ' building. i The courthouse will be torn 78 , down In three weeks and a new 11 one built. County Jul! prisoners serving T senlencus ol 30 days or more will irj 1 be tl nnMcrcd to the Linn County .lull nl Albany. The other prisoners will be housed In the Salem city Oilier City Council business Mon. day Included: Approval ol 137.750 In buildlnu pernills, Includlhu two new resi dences. Receipt of Just one bid lor board of prisoners lor the next fiscal yeurs. Irom Mrs. Winnie Hank, who has led city prisoners lor years, at 60 cent a meal. Receipt of bids from Flying-A. Signal and Shell for gasoline and oil. Receipt ol just one bid lor auditing city books or Uie current year, that from J. Paul Matthews for (1.525 Instruction ot the Slrect Depart ment to Install short fences nl tho approaches lo bridges over the canal at Wall. Esplanade and Main costing about VI a llneol loot lor materials, and lo proceed with plans lor establishing clty-operitled off-slreet parking lots at 5lh and Walnut and 5th and Klamath IlfMltimc Snnck hoIvi'k liiviitivr problem '1 Imve had great success with ili-ssan." writes Pnterson, N. J., man. "Alter years of constipation, t am now regulnr. Thanks to my tj cup of ALi.-ae.AN every duy'" II you sutler from Irregularity due to lurk of dlrlnry bulk, try a bowl ful of this tasty cereal every night oefore bed .11 may bring bark the youthful regularity you thought long lost, all-bsak Is the only type rendy-lo-eat cereal that supplies all the bulk you may need. It's high In cereal protein, rich In Iron, provides essential B and D vitamins. Not habit-forming. If you're not tatliflrd after 10 days, send empty carton to Kellogg's, Battle Creek, Mid)., and gel dousli momxt sack I Log Buying Reported Slow CORVAl.LIH I - The wetklv fin in lotos! report from Orruofi Slain College Tuesday said thrte wna cautious log buying bocnusa nl slow demand lor lumber ship ments, Douglas 111 anwloga were about at- dy In the Willamette Vnllrv. I lie report suld, but the iinuket undertone wns weuk I SWINO CUT OF IAW, 10 overeat with steal frame, hanaeri team tylinder lead central, belt, etc. I SWING) CUT Oft SAW. TO" vercul with steel frame, neftgeri learn (yliadei leed fonttal. feelt. ale. I SWINO CUT 0 SAW, 40 0ercvl. Model 16. wild MP. G. t. Motor, anegnolic Iwitck. elf. else available OGII CAIBIAOI. ttlAM INGINIl, sTI AM PUMFV COMPfimoil. OUI. SOU CAIII, ItC. Telephone: Did Glsrer it Cottage Grove 756R. (Oregon) Of Wrlle Wleei DULIEN STEEL PRODUCTS INC. OF WASH. 9265 Esit Marginal Way Seattle I, Washington People DO TOO read small space ads - you are! ihaf sings on West- Russ Veto Arms Plan UNITED NATIONS. N.T. Russia Tuesday relected a em plant for voluntary ceilings on the armed forces of the big pow ers. Soviet Delegate Jakob A. Malik told the TJ.N. Disarmament Com mission the proposal of the. United States, Britain and France was designed to prevent a real re duction of arms and to avoid pro hibition of atomic weapons. School Teoctoer Spurns Ail Bottie Dangers "No more harsh liquid bfosch for me. I cherish my nice lingerie and my cashmere sweaters, so I'm really grateful y Vano Powdered Bleach for the fine Job ft does in safely whitening and brighte-nrrtg my Wrings," says Helen P. . Vano chemists Drove that X voa can wash it Jvtf can Vano bleach it with complete safety. New Holsum bread is in tune with your demand for more flavor a melody of appetizing fresh-baked flavor Holsum gets from better baking. It's yours to enjoy in harmony with other foods every day ... try Holsum today for flavor ! rM 7, 1 : , s,rMV -zzzzzz xizx-mw v vu&m sso i ir-r-'irTw. in elastic wratter ur i ... -vzs&zzn-sm'ii mm mm esa asi .aw mmi I m m atk m sasaaaj aaa aaer m arm w m. aw al a sag at at w Ml W W Ml Ml W s " TTI js jg' '". --m.l II m mrmrwrm wrwrnrwrm IB 120 Main ol a,70 Yes... Dad's eyes will "pop out" Father's Day when he sees a new SPORT SHIRT from his favorite store for men ... HARDY'S SHORT AND LONG SLEEVES GALORE! "V f 1 Switch to Vane for whiter. Motifer nylon, silk, cotton, linen, wool or othor color-fast washablts. Yours at lastl All-round, all purpose Vane Powdered Heath . . . completely tale, magically efficient. No Odor. No Mcisy Botiles, No Danger. With Vano, you bleach au you waih, Dingo3 lingerie comet sparkling fresh, grimy toweli come clean, clean, dean. Yet, anything you can wash ' you can Vano bleach . , Van owd.r.d Heath h nty to mom, easy to pour. . POWDERED BLEACH AT VODft 0R0CERS A). - (TORISIASItV, rouas lAIIIV ravVWraXt Some Dods like their sporfV shirts loud as a brass band . . some like 'em quiet as a summer breeze. One thing's ure, we've a sportshirt for very Pop in town in this wonderful collection. Eco nomically priced, too. Come choose several for the Man of the house, todayl and up 1