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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1952)
Y PAGE FOUR ilKHALl) MONDAY, .UTS 30, 1052 MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks ' WALL STREET NEW YORK M The stock market advanced Monday to its fourth atraight new high for 1953 with major groups taking the lead. Most of the strength In the list was maintained right to toe close. Leaders were In steels, motors, rails, rubbers, and lrcrafts with support coming from a number of other areas. tween 1 and 1 points while losers Oalns ran from iractions to De Were small. Volume stepped up to an esti mated 1,300,000 shares '' ' " By The Associated Press i Admiral Corporation 27 i Allied Chemical 74 H Allls Chalmers 61 b v American Airlines 14 . American Power & Light 37 American Tel. Ss TeL 154 H American Tobacco - Anaconda Copper v Atchison Railroad ' Bethlehem Steel Boeing Airplane Co. ' Borg Warner . Burroughs .Adding Machine California Packing . Canadian Pacific ', Caterpillar Tractor : Celanese Corporation : Chrysler Corporation ' Cities Service ' Consolidated Edison . Consolidated Vultee Crown Zellerbach Curtlss Wright Douglas Aircraft i Dupont de Nemours Eastman Kodak Emerson Radio ; General Electrio General Foods General Motors Georgia Pac Plywood , Goodyear Tire , Homestake Mining Co. . International Harvester International Paper Johns Manvllle Kennecott Copper Llbby, McNeill Lockheed Aircraft Loew's Incorporated . Long Bell A Montgomery Ward ! Nash Kelvlnator , New York Central ; Northern Pacific . Pacific American Pish Pacific Gas tt Electrio Pacific Tel. & Tel. Packard Motor Car Penney (J.C.) Co. Pennsylvania R.R ' . Pepsi Cola Co. : Phllco Radio i Radio1 Corporation Rayonler Incorp . Rayonler Incorp Fid ' Republic Steel Reynolds Metals Richfield Oil Safeway Stores Inc Scott Paper Co. Sears Roebuck & Co. " Socony-Vacuum Oil Southern Pacific Standard Oil Calif. Standard Oil N. J. . Studebaker Corp. Sunshine Mining .'Swift & Co. TTransamerics Corp. . Twentieth Century Fox Union Oil Company ; Union Pacific . United Airlines United Aircraft .United Corporation 'United States Plywood United States Steel -Warner Pictures Western Union Tel. Westlnghouse 'Air Brake Westinghouse Electric Woolworth Company M 45 91 4 51 V. 35 73 H 25 li 35 4 40 78i 105 H 34 19 54 64 86 43 'i 12 H 63 6V, 58 18 46 37 ' 33 47 74 77 7 S 24 1, 13 Ml 37 64 Ml 19 20 81 33 110 4 V 70 20 14 10 32 V4 36 30 GRAINS CHICAGO Lfl A strong demand developed for corn on the board of trade Monday and prices ran up nearly 3 cents before the gains were cut down by late telling. Buying appeared based mainly on a belief movement of cash corn to this market will be curtailed In July. The trade did not hear of any notices of intentions to de liver cash corn on July contracts Tuesday, and that also was a firm ing Influence. s Wheat slipped to new lows on the 1952 corp in early dealings. Later, the bread cereal rallied in sympathy with corn, but failed to get back to Saturday's close. Oats were firm with corn. Wheat closed lower. July $3.25 -lfc, corn 1 t.-i higher.' July $1.81. oats 1,- higher. July 77 V.-li. rye 1 cent lower to 1 Is higher, Jul)' $212 i-Vi. soybeans 1 lower to 1 cent hiuher. July $3.26 V-3.26. and lard 10 to 13 cents a hundred pounds lower, July $11.57 Wheat Open High Low Close 2.26-25 2.36 ' 3.35 l 3.35 3.29 Kt 3.30 V 3.29 , 2.29 3.35 3.35 4 2.34 S 2.34 - Jly Sep Dec Mar May FPC Hearing (Continued from l'age One I since 1918 nnd 1925 respectively the same flow of water the com pany now asks to be allowed to use a lew miles upstream. And. Harrison said, the compnnv Farm Women Study Needs Farm Bureau Associated Women believes there will be ample water i lunched toitnv with Frona A. Yeng both for Copco power and for those jer, rural health educallon special ist Ol the State Extension Service. at the Wlnema Hotel. Miss Yeniter Is here In the role of consultant on plans (or a health survey in Klamath County cover ins medical nnd hospital needs of rural areas, livestock diseases that effect humans, control of food hand ling and meat insiwctlon. presently uslnu Klamath River wa ter for Irrigation. John Boyle. Copco vice president and Rener nl manger, was the first company witness called to testify. High points of some of the open ing arguments heard Include: Arthur O. Wires, Oregon assis tant attorney Kcneral The stale's position Is that the protect will be detrimental to production of trout on the river, might Inundate the Spencer Creek egg taking station, and that the company wasn't plan ning to have enoiivth minimum stea dy release of water down the river channel to maintain fish life ade quately, RKfLAM ATION E. K. Da vs. Bureau of Recla- sniney snrrriu, a Koine till gin. nation The application should be was hospitalised here last night denied, or at least suspended, tin- with injuries suffered In an nuto til the Dcnartment of Interior com- mobile crackun near the Henley prehenslve study of resources and ! school. Klamath Valley Hospital potential development of the en- ! said today the girl had only lacera- tire Klamath Bnsin is compicieo tions ana onuses and was being (scheduled for 19541: granting the discharged today. license now might prejudice the According to an accident report whole economic development of the filed at the state's Motor Vehicle basin: maximum benefit to the office this morning. Miss Sherrlll community might come through j was injured a lien a car driven by Finn Denies Latfimore Tip SEATTLE t - A Finnish vol- cran of the Husso-Flnlah War pleaded Innocent Motidnv to two charges of giving federal agenls uuse mini milium that Owen l.all. more wan plannliui n trill to Rus sia. ll.tci-u A I,,,.,.!,,,.,, qii...H.vi.j Thunderstorms struck New York n....ni .,-i , :, City about midnight, dissipating Hnv. Uio "not uulltv. vour honor" Temperature Tops 100 , (Continued from Page One) cury climbed higher hitting 108, Die lop mark posted In the U. B. Weather Bureau's map. Kansas City stayed In the weather hot-box with a lop of 103. It was 104 In Chanutc, Kan., 103 In Nashville, 101 In Wichita. 100 In Memphis and Toledo. 99 In Columbus. UH in Clncliuiall nnd Oklahoma City and in upn ninnies. TlUNl.KK.STOKMS Weal her lly The Arniuelaleil I'rrat 34 hour, lu 4:31) a.m. Munilayi Mas. Mill. Tree Car Upsets, Girl Injured 2.38 V. 2.38 3.37 3.37 i 2.38 3.38 4 3.37 n 3.37 n j federal development (USBR also has power plans for the Klamatn PORTLAND W Coarse grains unquoted. Wheat (bid) to arrive market, basis No. 1 bulk, delivered Coast: Soft white 2.33: soft white Rex cluding Rex) 2.33: white club 2.33. Hard red winter: Ordinary 2.33: 10 per cent 2.34; 11 per cent 2.35; 12 per cent 2.36. Hard white baart: Ordinary 2.37: 10 per cent 3.37; 11 per cent 3,38; 13 per cent 3.39. Car receipts: Wheat 27; barley I: flour 25; corn 11; oats 7; mill feed 19. SEATTLE GRAIN SEATTLE I Sept wheat: Open 2.34 high 3.34 W, low 3.34 Vi, close 2.34 b. Cash wneai; son wnite i.u, nara winter 2.34, baart 2.34. Yellow corn, bulk no. a, eu.ou bid 81.50 asked; oats. No. 2, 38 lb sack, 65.00 bid, 70.00 asked; bar ley. No. 3., 45-lb sack, 65.00 bid, TO.oo asuea. Puget Sound car receipts: wneai 24, oats 8, barley 7, corn 6, flour 3. Boys' Trip Cut Short Frank Jenkins. Chamber of Com merce The moving consideration or steering mechanism (ol cnamocr water policy is mai unless our water Is all used in telligently. It will be taken else where. All water above Keno shelf should be used for agriculture, be low the shelf down the canvon for power, with development by pri vate enterprise. HI Robbins. Klamath Indians No one has determined what amount of water may be surplus. The Klamath Indians will be able to use a lnrsre amount of the waters of the Williamson. Sprague and oth- reservallon tributaries to tne Klamath In expanded Irrigation on the reservation. the threat of Immediate hot weather. The forecast was for tail- and pleasant weather Monday. Ul'lef but violent electrical storms lashed western New York from Bulfalo to Jamestown, snapping power lines, uprooting trees and blocking several highways. Similar storms hit Washington, D. C and various nart.i of Mnrv- land, which has been hard hit by I ''' Knstern the hot spell, winds up to 5 miles an hour swept Baltimore and In the Chesapeake Bay area. AF Plane Lands Here One of the balloon-chaser planes of the Air Force landed here Sun day when It developed some minor response to each of two count at his Federal Court arraignment. One count In the grand Jury In dictment charged hlni wllh giving false Information to the Central In telligence Agency; I ho other In volved Ihe FBI. Lntllmore, controversial Johns Hopkins University specialist on uffnlrs. has denied any plans lor such a trip. Alter Jarvlnen's Indictment Frlduv the Stale Department apologised lo Latllmore lor lis issuing ol ad vices against his departure from the country, on the busts of Iho "tip." . rvlne.n told reporters after the short court appearance that the Mnlcnieut about Lattlmuro was made to a C.I. A. agent who was u "very close" friend, at a dinner parly at which they were drinking. Jarvlnen's attorney continued to decline to let him discuss the mo Hint live lor the original statements. The government iitlorneva LIVESTOCK 42 M , 57 S 69 n 32 53 Vi 54 u, 39 H 83 V 59 81 37 9 31 25 15 V2 42 114 29 13 . 8 30)4 40 12 39 26 39 V 44 POTATOES ' CHICAGO Mt Potatoes: Ar rivals 41, on track 408; total U. S. shipments Friday 621, Saturday . 356, and Sunday 19; supplies mod erate; demand fair; market slight ly weaker for Whites, unsettled for Reds; track sales per 100 lb in cariota; Arizona Pontiacs '15.75; California Long Whites $5.65-5.75. '.Triumphs $6.75. Street sales per 1 100 10; Arizona Triumph type $6.25-6.75; California Long White so.uv-s.au, fontiac type so. 25-7. 00. Obituary FRANKS - taste loros Franks. S3, vativs at ' KsteUina, S. D.. and a resident mi Klamath Falls for etsht vears. died here June 29, 1952. Survivors include: the . widower. Don Franks of this city; four daughters, Mia. LaVon Sladich and Mrs. . Vivian Hartley, of this city, Mrs. Bev erly Matney, Henley and Mrs. Evelyn Casper, Eureka; and a son Donald , Franks, of the U.S. Navy. Funeral serv- ices will take place at the graveside in Klamath Memorial Park on Tues day, July 1 at 2 p.m.. Jehovah's Wlt- nesses in charge. . Want's Klamath Funeral Home in charge of the arrange ments. 7 PORTLAND 1 (USDA) Cattle salable 1,600: only moder ately active; fed steers unevenly weak to 50 cents lower; other classes steady-weak with some late bids lower; around four carloads choice 955-1,125 lb fed steers 33.00 75; several loads held around 34.00; good 31.50-32.00; commercial 28.00-31.00; utility 24.00-27.00: .odd head utility - commercial heifers 23.-28.; one load 1.020 lb utility cows 22.00: bulk utility 18.00-20.00; few commercial 23.00: canners cutters 15.00-17.50; utility-commercial bulls 26.00-28.00. Calves salable 300; vealers very slow; bids, sales 50 cents to 1.00 lower; few commercial-good veal ers 28.00-31.00; no choice or prime sold. Hogs salable 1,000; butcher hogs and sows steady to 25 cents higher; choice No. 1 and 2 butchers 180-230 lbs 23.00-25: choice lots No. 1 23.50; 240-270 lbs 21.50-22.35; heav ier and lighter weights 20.50-21.50; choice sows 330-500 lbs 16.50-18.00; choice lots 30 lbs 18.00: few good- choice 10O110 lb feeder pigs 21.00-50. Sheen salable 1.200: spring lambs steady to 25 cents lower; many late sales at full decline; good-prune springers 24.uo-2a.uu; few utility 23.00-50; around one deck good-choice No. 3 pelt shorn yearlings 17.00; other utility-good lots 14.00-15-50; feeder lambs around 1.00 lower; largely 21.00; few small lots choice lightweights 22.00. SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO 11 (TJSDAt Cattle 700: receipts in- Drunk Charge Nets $100 Fine Mildred Marearet Scott. 48 Oak Street, was arrested Saturday night at 7th and Walnut Streets by City police on charges of drunk driving and driving during revoked period. In municipal court today she paid $100 fines on each of the two counts. She is employed as a wait Dale Clelii- Route Two. went out nf pnntrnl nnH nvrrtin-i.rt Tti r. mm hhmw.rl ollhnr f.uillv hrnke 'magneto trouble rewiueu wuutu say ouiv they were connected with Project Moby Dick. But at Bnltlmore. the haven't all the facts in this case' Air Research and Development Attorney Gerald Sliueklln ex Command said Project Moby Dick, plained. "Ho will tell his story at taken out of secrecv some months the trial." ago. had to do with sending bnl-1 The court Indicated llw ease loons Into the atmosphere and re- would be set for trial tn September, trievlng them by plane to col- lect weather data picked uo by instruments on the balloons. Baker HA 34 ciiM'iic 07 4i Lu Grande 118 41 liikevlew Ml 41) Meilftird 117 h North Bend Ml 50 Ontario 711 41 Pendleton 118 A3 Portia, ml (A ll )t.) 05 112 Roseburu 65 51 Salem 67 45 Holne (19 44 Chicago OH 66 Denver 111 63 Eureka ul Los Angeles 71) 57 New York 87 65 Red Bluff 74 63 M. Louis 1115 79 San Francisco 67 Seattle 61 54 Spokane 87 49 Prison Riot In California Western Oregon Partly cloudy along const anil In north, inil clem In southern Interim Mnnilny lilghl nnd Tuesday. Low Mnmlny night 46 55; high Tuesday 70-80 In Inter ior and 60-115 un cousl. Winds olf coast northwesterly, 10-30 ui p h. Tuesday. Eastern Oregon Hiinny and war mer Tuesday. High7O-80 Tuesday: low Monday night 42-52. drains Pasa and Vicinity Fun and warmer through Tuesday lllh'h Tuesday BO; low Monday night 48. PICNIC T1MK Vickers' Irons Wins Golf Title LAFAYETTE. Ind. Wt The Col legian with the better iron shots defeated the boy with the superior woods in the championship match of the 55th annual NCAA golf tourn ament at Purdue University. Jim Vickers. 23, oi the Univer sity of Oklahoma was short o!f the tee 23 tmes Saturday in his Jo hole title match with 19-year-old Eddie Merrins of Louisiana State University. Three youngsters who ran awav from their vacation home here Sat urday didn't exactly burn their bridges behind them . . . And they were salcly back with their parents yesterday. The Robert Fortenbcrry fumlly has been vacationing in their trail er at Klamath View Auto Park. Saturday morning, Mr. and Mrs. Forlenberry came up town to see the Roundup Kids Parade. The three boys. Garlnnd, 14, Randall, 11, and Theron Wayne, 9. decided that was an opportune time to strike out on their own and seek 830 their fortune. When the parents returned to the auto park Saturday, they found a note from the three boys. The youngsters said they were leaving home to trv and make some monev iBut they cautiously added that If mey weren t successlul they would return in a couple of weeks. And they added a request that their bi cycles not be sold during their absence. Saturday mcht a little after 9 o'clock. Deputy Sheriff Jim Snipes removed the three boys from a Great Northern freight train at Bteber.. Snipes notified Sheriff Red Britton here, Britton notified the Fortenrjerrys and the father drove to Bieber to end his sons' adven ture. As for the boys' goal of making some money ... Deputy Sheriff Snipes said that each boy had a fishing pole and wanted to know where the best fishing holes were. On The Record HIKT1IN SC.iWKIt.KRT Uorn M Mr mnti Mr. DcnnU Schwlerl. Ttllke, Calif . l KUmalh Vllcy HoipH-1 June M. 19M. a irl. Weight: 1 pnuncU 3 Stevenson Denies Bid There's a new picnic sire can ol ripe olives on the market -vhleh will be a perfect site to lake along wllh your other goodies for outdoor meals. Be sure to remember a can opener so you can open the onvea at eating time. HOUSTON. Tex i,H Gov. Adlali E. Stevenson of Illinois said Mon- 1 110 he btson Born lo Mr .nd Mr. ' day he will decide later what to do Ki'berl Robertson 1135 Alanilale. I in inc unlikely" event thai a move Klamath , Vailej Hoapiui "J11- I develop, to draft him lor the Dem-pAW?HS??N-BoVn lo m", .nd Mr. cratlc presidential nomination. Tom Patterson. Jan iiomenaie. i i iie uunois governor, cousiflered Klamath Valley Hospital June as, IB33. . by many in his party as one of the s'ri-.r.'it"' J00. ..... (likeliest orosnects for nm.onmimi and Mr. Phillip Ande'r.m. Malm. ore . ai Kiam- at the Clilcugo convention oenlng alh Valley llo.pllal June as. toil. July 31; told a news conference ,iri. wfiam: a puuim. i. u there he still is runnlne onlv for SHF.L1 H1.IHN- Ur lo Mr snri Mr. " nw" ln I uuiiimk vuiy lui Raymond Sh.iihom. Keno. Ore at j re-election as governor. Klamath Valley Hospital June 18. 1033. But he left tile door Open to What ,n?R,rBo?nP.rM;4 ZT'Mn , I " move to i,ni.. ie.rhri tttua Ivory, ml Klinum ....... umiuMnii lie nuiu nv V Uey HopiIil Jim " Weight: B poundi74 ounca. LIVESTOCK CHICAGO tfi Hogs started the new week Monday at prices which were steady with last week s clos ing rise. Receipts were about nor mal for the day and season. Cattle and sheep were steady to 50 cents higher in an active trade through most of the list. Most butcher weight hogs sold from $20.00 to 321.75. the top touch ing $22.00. Sows took $16.50 to $19.00. Clearence was good early in the session. New Equipment To Be Shown KLAMATH AGENCY A fire school for Indian Service foresters and all other Interested person is slated to start tomorrow with tfl demonstration of a new resusclta- tor from 9 to 10:30 a.m. Dc. F. W. Wilder Is to conduct the demonstration of the breathing apparatus, which will be available on call for all emergencies. The fire school Is to continue for two days, and following It the en tire Indian Service lookout force Is to be activated all across the sirl would not parUclpnte either openly or secretly in any such move. Here lor the annual, novernors conference. Bievenson anticipated questions of reporters about the presidential situation. He read to a news conference a typed state ment which concludedC: EVANSTON 1U. UP California ' "I will not participate openly or schooH walked olf with NCAA ten- . covertly In any movement to draft nls honors Sunday, taking the me. Without such participation on team title as well as the singles my part. I do not believe llmi any on doubles crowns. , '" "r. u'vciup. Top-seeded Hugh Stewart Stewart NCAA Net Winner In the unlikely event that It Soumern Callforma" senror whowas j . J M ousted In the sml-flnals last year, hat lime In the light of conditions monsmrf VeaC'cnd.' i When had 'finished readlnw hU Seeded o! Iera" ."ndly S". "m,lcf ' .sophomore, 6-4. 6-3 6-3. ' .. d ,..,,. Hugh 'SEter" k'doubreshonoVs i, to ask any further question. " by downing perry anu i.arry nu ner, 7-5. 4-6. 7-5. 6-3. The team title went to UCLA with 11 points while California and USC, the 1951 champion, tied lor second with five points each. The term "potato" was Urst ap plied to the sweet potato and later transferred to the white potato, al though the two plants are only dis tantly related, says the National Geographic Society. 20 Miles Afoot By (lea. N. Taylor Torllnnd, Oregon A blind woman came 20 mllen aloat nnd was all bruises from falls. Others came six day alooia. One man hobbled nuoul 50 miles At dnwn Sunday, 62 wer bap tised, inclduliiK two bcKitnni and some opium sots. A few had heard the gospel lurough famine relief wurk. But all were new creature through Christ Je.iu9. Yes Clod sent Clvlat to seek and save the lost. O o d wanted these for hlmjelf and he bridged the gulf between hla hollncu and their sins. It was that Ood had put their sins on Christ who died for tlumt. They snw Jtidg. mcnt Day out and eternal life In. And with the Gee. N. Taylor new life came heaven's pence, cheer and hotc Such hope aa this world can never know or give. Now hear them UU others of the new life and hear them pray ;tisl like First Century Christians. (Adv.) laosltscol-'n- BOl.KDAD, Oalll, 11 I'llsunoia III Ihe medium acuurlty block at Soledad Hlale prison staged a riot during the nlghl which was bmken up early Monday by guards shout ing tear gas Into two wings of tile new building. The two wings house about loo in inonern. None ol the prison of. flrlals was Injured, and the con victs got no hontagea, , But there was scarcely a window Jolt unbroken In elthar wing. ' Tho trouble started about .;sn p m. The eonvlcla were In complete control nf the two wings until about 12:12 a.m. Monday. Acting Warden C, J. Fllrharna said a "group of young hoodlums" alarlecf the riot. Three prison officers ware in the Wing where the riot started. , One gnl out aa the convicts leached the main electrio switches and darkened the whole Institution. Guard M. Davis tossed his keys out a window so the rioting con victs couldn't get thorn. Than ha and Guard Frank Rogers fled Into a day room and barred tha door. Prison olllrers. led by Capt. Ray Rollins, climbed to the roof and fired tear gas sheila directly at the Ihrce-tler wings. Shortly alter midnight the prison ers were driven back to Ihelt.-cnll. blocks and locked In. I Can you hear NORMAL SPEECH at30ft.-20ft-10ft? Jin! how tlo.e to normal IS your hearing? You'd be wits lo And out. Anil )ou rnn-pfivilely, and without ro. r olillgation. We're srirnliliially tqulpned to measure your hearing's lerniiess - lis ability to gif nfi llir ItillrM enjoymenl ol inti.H-. ils Yi ami tticsat life. Tills Iree Sonolone Service li yours for the asking. Avail yoursrll ol it. Come in and see ' us-or mail coupon today, tort BAJKMM Will TMM MUMt "S0N0T0NE"" )t I. J.ckioa, M.,.rd, Ore. far as lltts as US - " mm (ansa S0N0T0NE: n. ..? ( m "sm ! rwi a.wa Wwt tm Ser . SMftM " HEARING CENTER WINIMX HOTEL -vj All DoyWdnp.doj, Jtilf ' ' 1 Good to prime steers sold from , Klamath Reservation. $29.00 to $36.00. to prime loads topping at $36.25. Choice to low-prime heifers were $32.00 to $34.75. one load getting UD to $35.00. Cows toooc" at 23.00. eluded about six loads steers, three sausage bulls at $27.50. beef bulls at loads heifers, balance mainly cows. market slow; about steady; load commercial - good 880 lb steers 28.00; part load 890 lb heifers 28.50; canner-cutter cows 14.00-18.00. - Calves 25; no early sales. Hogs 200; butchers 25c higher; sows steady; 180 lb butchers 22.50; choice sows 15.00-16.50 one lot good-choice 108 lb feeder pigs 24.00. Sheep 4.500: no early sales; late last week closely sorted choice wooled sprint lambs. 26.50: good- choice shorn spring lambs No. 2 pelt. 2S.50-26.00. , About 99 ner cent of U. S. chil dren between the ages of 6 and 13 were enrolled in schools during the 1950-51 term, says the Enclyclope- dia Americana. $26.00, and vealer calves at $34.00. Old-crop lambs showed the price Increase, choice to prime kinds ranging from $24.00 to $25.50. Native spring lambs were $27.50 to $28.00 on choice and prime Wllh good offerings getting $25.50 to $27.50. Ewes were $6.50 downward. Estimated arrivals included 10, 000 hogs, 11,000 cattle. 400 calves, and 800 sheep. Victor Sissen If fire control of ficer on the reservation. LETS YOU HAVE; A MEW The ancients thought sulfur was a symbol of hell because its fumes had a suffacatlng. choging effect when tt was burned. Are you in trouble? NEED A FRIEND? CALL 5473 B06C0 PAYING INC. Phone 8789 or Jovhawk Petroleum at 788, DRIVEWAYS PAVED or RESURFACED With Asphott Black Top F.H.A. TERMS FREE ESTIMATES GLADLY NOW in STOCK!! Tht New . .. POPULAR CohmAia-matic "FRAMELESS" . Aluminum Screens For the Home with the Famous Lock-Tite Tension Ai Advsrtked in "Good Housekeeping" rxf other horn magazines Attractive Prices!! KLAMATH MILLWORK and FACTORY DEMONSTRATION lo) f MRP- M,LL YOUR UWN DIMENSION STOCK Mspars Ptaasi p to PsactssM Smd Wosk MOLDER-PLANER MR. HAGSTROM: FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE IN OUR STORE TUES. JULY 1st -12 Noon To 4 m. TO DEMONSTRATE THIS NEW VERSATILE, REVOLUTIONARY PLANER. YOU'LL BE AMAZED AT ITS PERFORMANCE. , On the job moulding and planing Utilizes woste lumber Takes slock up to 4"x6" (4'xl 1" by Reversing) Eliminates chatter marks-gouges ROBERTS HARDWARE ONLYv I LETS YOU HAVTA HEW j ! L IN YOUR OWN KITCHEN j 1 inwMi 1 WUXAZAm ff-M J SUPERIORITY . I r r " " : mmJj JlJtT MOT IN 0 MlON B U. t hr1( Of On. dsgrt. tt j . ZZ?g3 1 T'" yoo ut ntw 8ER" pratur fUrU tha frwtlnC f.aanini ill lililiiiiillllsCjiTp . ' VEL In your kitthan. Wa'll iction. And thart'i nethlnS . tj iMilily 'jllll " dliver It, yoo hand u. on. mechanical about SERVIIU'J ' ISSL' ' amall dollar and we lr y. Frwuns; Syslam notmnas imiwa, i -- mum i ( i vnot ot SERVEL'8 am- to wear, ataya pannanentlS j n . . . 7 parlorlty squarely up to you I silent. m ,'rSiiY"- . L ', , I It'i tht no-, moving prt Prov. to Jrouraelf thiaj flgj I ' rtfrlirarntor tht mfracl. 8ERVEL It bft lot mW . iMififlfl"""' '" r""'I"T" refriirerator with tha Poima- on. dollar. Com. In. hunr" f p.; i - Colo PrMiing Syatam, Evan in DO IT NOW I Z ft-ij' SIMPLE SILENT P ;r' 111 ' V ' ' oi o Percolatorf , at a Uah) Bulbil : JLIJIIMIM ! "lorlrif part, h Ih. amsrlnf hrmannlb aflasiti And M '.-i Wm9vwrmr 1 mMlnl aTstsca maaaa-noUiau ooastant, too. Glvas ima wofld'a fe p 1 1,,,!! sisial 1 to wear Dsaaa noise - aver I . moat constant, aafaMd I 901' vft ntikioii riATumi 1 rTSST mmm """""i . MODIl til-Ill I'l Je.laneaa01s.lt T Tj 1 II r BtwWUHea tVsaliiai. I f fit I J OMtWIaaa lailil I fiMtZVsM 1 Or Phont 7415 Todoy! V,r'' H S j ( HTM itu "'WtSf nrni fi w 1 I UIIU1T WotriVlUt OAUipoRNiA-pAoino W Utiutibs Company YOUR GAS COMPANY TWVna plorx, tniaS ear barbae a Mold anion or slandord potMrai ' Wgt. 70 lbs., toU on fob w yo SsxiUd bad bnrtnos ' Sofd Sural Rugs idcoi. SUPPLY M IprHif Phone e7l 127 So. 6h Phone 6006 1011 Main St. Klamath Falli Phon 741S . J .illaliaj IMsWIIIMIIIMtsiiMw,