Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 01, 1954, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
FRIDAY, JANUARY
HERALD AND NEV'S. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
McCarran Takes Slap At
McCarthy's Red Probes
WASHINGTON Sen. Mc
Carran tD-Nevj said Friday the
Senate Investigations Subcommit
tee headed by Sen. McCarthy (R
Wis), in lis lar-ilung Red hunts,
"has ttepped over into a field
where it was not intended to func
tion at all."
"I don't say it hasn't done good
work occnuse 1 think it has,"
lcCarnm said, but he added in
an interview that the Senate In
ternal Security Subcommittee "can
ao all the work necessary on the
Senate side'' in investigating sub
versive activities.
McCarran headed the Internal
Security Subcommittee until the
Republicans iook comrol ol Con
gress last January and Sen. Jen
ner R-Ind, became chairman.
The Ncvacmn still is the senior
Democrat in the group.
At Miami, Sen. McCarthy said
he had "no argument whatever"
with Sen. McCarran's statement.
But he said his subcommittee
has been very careful to check
with the Senate Internal Security
Subcommittee so there will be no
duplication of effort.
"Our committee, it is true, was
nofset up to investigate commu
nism," said McCarthy, vacationing
with his bride at the same Miami
hotel where Vice Pres. Richard
Nixon is staying.
"And digging out communism
is not our primary purpose. If In
our investigations we find subver
sive elements In government which
would prevent the government
lrom operating properly, and no
other congressional group is in
Mother of Returning POW
Has Happiest New Year's
KERMIT. Tex. lfl A Kermit
mother's Christmas prayer for a
miracle to return her POW son
has been answered to make today
the happiest New Year's of her
life.
"I've Just got to cry a little bit,"
the mother of Cpi. Claude J.
March Of
Dimes
To Be Held
The dime the smallest coin In
si7,e in United Statps currency
' starts its annual march for the'
prevention of polio Saturday, Jan.
2. '.'.''.
Last year the local chapter spent
SIO.OOO on Just one case nlone in
Xlamuth Falls youna Dorthclla
Rose, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Orval Rose, 2318 California Ave.
Compare that figure with the $12,
000 contributed to Infantile
Paralysis last year, half of which
goes to the national foundation.
March of Dimes research in the
.past has proven the value of
gamma globulin as a temporary
protective against paralytic polio;
has developed a polio vaccine that
will undergo extensive field studies
during 1954, and the March of
Dimes continues to give help to
victims of the crippling infantile
paralysis.
The .1954 drive has been broken
into three segments, according 4o
W. A, Huggins, Klamath County
campaign chairman. Proceeds from
the drive will go for patient care,
rehabilitation and research.
This year, from tho dimes.
1,250,000 youngsters all over the
nation will be inoculated, in an ex
periment which will cost about $29
million. If the experiment is suc
cessful, the vaccine will be on the
market next year to satisfactorily
slop polio, as vaccines have done
with diphtheria and Rinattpox.
Tlic local drive will be conducted
through five channels; u ad
vanced gills, under the chairman
ship of Elton Smith; (21 special
events, headed by Bob and Tom
Perkins; (3) direct mall, Dick Gal
lagher, who Is also Klamath Palls
City drive chairman, and Alice
Vitus; (4) coin collectors, which
will be distributed by Explorer
Scouts and American Legion Post
No. 8, under the direction of John
llcllbronuer and Dwight Curran;
(5 Mothers' Mnrch, chairman of
which will be announced later.
Allan Rineharr
Death Reported
PORTLAND 11 Allan Rinc
hart, 47, school board member and
engraving company cxoeulive, died
at his home hero Thursday after
being suddenly stricken with a
heart attack.
Rlnchart, an Oregon State Col
lege graduate, was named Port
land's Junior first citizen in 1937.
He was serving his second term
on the school board.
Survivors include the widow; a
Ron, John; a sister, Mrs. Lucille
Moore, Princvllle; atl a broth
er, Grant Rlnchart, Nyssa.
Two Drop Dead
At Rose Parade
PASADENA, Calif. IJI Two
men drojiped dead Friday while
-watching the Tournament of Roses
parade. '
They apparently suffered heart
attacks.
William Lcdbctler, 79, Fresno,
Calif., rancher, was stricken while
seated In a grandstand.
The other victim was Richard
Keith Prank, 62, of south Pasa
dena.
DIVORCE
LOS ANGELES tfl Minna Com
bell, movln character actress and
former Broadway leading lady, is
seeking a divorce from, Joseph W.
Sefton Jr., San Diego bank presi
dent. 8h0 Chal'QCri crtlpltv In hrr
suit yesterday but mado no spe-
1 vino accusations.
vestigating, then we go ahead.
"1 have no argument with Pat
McCarran. Pat is one of the great
est senators we ever had and I
have unlimited respect for him
The Internal Security Subcommit
tee under Pat and Jenner has done
fiood work."
In the new session of Congress
starting Wednesday, both the Mc
Carthy and the Jenner investigat
ing units will be forced to see
uaditional funds from the Senate.
Their spending authority will ex
pire Jan 31.
McCarran said nothing about at
tempting to place any curbs on
the activities of McCarthy, with
whom he oltcn has swapped comp
liments, and emphasized there was
nothing personal in his remarks.
He said his Interest was in see
ing that the Internal Security Suo
committee is adequately financed
and staffed for the job assigned it
by the Internal Security Act of
i950 a law which he sponsored.
He dismissed as impractical a
proposal advanced by some mem
bers of Congress for a joint Senate-House
committee to handle all
investigations of subversive activi
ties. "Joint committees never get
anywhere, and I am opposed to
them," he said.
"There is plenty of room for ac
tivity by committees of both
houses in the internal security
field."
"If something should be done
about McCarthy, why don't the
Republicans do it? It's not our
problem."
Batchelor said when newspaper
men told her that her son was
ready for repatriation. .
"It's the best news I have ever
heard," the Jubilant father said.
Both wore reached at a bus sta
tion in Odessa, Tex., last night
where the west Texas oil well drill
er has gone to meet his wife, re
turning home here after a visit.
Batchelor was one of 22 POWs
who had steadfastly refused repa
triation during the 90-day explana
tion period. He said he had feared
for his life, that many of the other
21 prisoners carried daggers.
At the little frame house here
where the Batchelors live, nobody
was at home yesterday but 11-year-old
Kenneth, the POW's young
brother, when newsmen delivered
the news.
"That's really good news," said
the little boy. "I sure am happy.
I want him to come home real
soon."
On Christmas Eve, Mrs. Batche
lor tearfully had said that "only a
miracle" could bring her boy
home. The Batchelors spent a sad
Christmas with the belief their son
had chosen communism, instead of
repatriation.
"I Just feel like shouting here in
this bus station," Mrs. Batchelor
said last night after her bus ar
rived in Odessa and she was joined
by her husband. "I didn't know a
thing about what happened. It's the
answer to my prayers. I Just thank
God."
She paused a minute, and then
told a newspaperman by tele
phone; ,
"My husband and I are Just
standing here bawling like kids."
Ski Report
Issued
B.v Till! ASSOCIATUIJ 1'ItESS
The Portland Wenther Riii-abm le-
sued the following skt area report
New Year's Day:
Timberline Chains needed, total
snow 78 inches. S new nnwrloi-AH
on old pack; 8 a.m. temperature
23, n northwest wind 15 miles an
hour, rope tows operating. Forc-cnst-Partly
cloudy, few snow flur
ries, snow nnd windy Friday night;
snow showers Saturday; Sunday
ouiiook, snow; good visibility at
nines.
Crater Lake Snow 41.50 inrhp:
total, 1 inch new; powdered; good
skiing. Forecast Partly c 1 o u dy
with snow flurries, winriv hv ntcht-
occasional snow Saturday; Sunday
outlook, snow, visibility good at
umes; nign temperature Saturday
32-37 degrees.
Willamette Pns Mn vnnnv.
Forecast Partly cloudy with a few
snow uiirrics, mixed snow and rain
and windy by night, occasional
snow Saturday; Sunday outlook,
snow, visibility good at times; high
temperature Saturday 33-38 de
grees. Honest Work Held
Longevity Answer
GREAT FALLS, Mont, lfl While
most people start out today on a
new year, Jacquc French Celestlne
will have a firm grip on a new
century.
Celestlne, a bachelor, who re
tired from shepherding 10 years
ago because he was "getting a lit
tle old," turned 101 as 1954 began.
The slight, mentally spry cen
tenarian told a reporter his recipe
for longevity is honest, hard work.
"Ood turned Adam and Eve out.
He told them to go out and work
the rest of their days." he said,
adding wistfully: "I wish I could
still work."
Visitor Gets
More Than Visit
PUEBLO. Colo, m A visitor to
police headquarters Joined a line
of men and wound up In Jail.
It was a line of prisoners march
ing back to their cells from police
court.
Once inside the cells, the visitor
protested loudly. Officers finally
counted noses and turned the visi
tor loose. -.,
Ha explained he had wanted to
go to the rest room.
(Continued from pais 11
with the statement that it can't
happen, It could happen. With wa
ter the VITAL INGREDIENT in
the West's future, there is nothing
that won't be done to get water.
But
If v.e put our water to complete
use, if we grow crops with it and
process our crops t including our
timber! with it and bring payroll
industries here to use the power
that will be made from it after it
has first been used for irrigation
and finally use it to create recrea
tional facilities for man's use and
enjoyment, nobody is going to be
able to take our water away from
us.
That Is the Job that lies ahead of
us.. It MUST.be accomplished. It
is unthinkable that we should per
mit this valley of the Klamath
river to be destroyed by our own
failure to WORK TOGETHER in
telligently to save for ourselves
and our posterity this great re
source that is ours.
..Weather ? ;
Northern California Fair Fri
day night and Saturday except in
creasing cloudiness with occasional
Slightly cooler today, westerly to
northwesterly winds of ol 10 to
20 miles an hour near coast.
Baker and Vicinity Thickening
cloudiness Friday night, with snow
beginning late at night and oc
casional flurries Saturday. High of
34 Saturday. Low Friday night 27.
Western Oregon lip Occasional
rain Friday night. Saturday most
ly cloudy with showers. Slightly
warmer. Highs 49 56 Saturday.
Lows Friday night 36-42. Winds off
coast becoming southwesterly or
southerly increasing to 35-45 with
stronger gusts by night. Winds will
diminish slowly Saturday.
Eastern Oregon Increasing
cloudiness with rain or snow near
Cascades Friday night, spreading
to extreme east by Saturday morn
ing. Partly cloudy with widely scat
tered showers Saturday. A little
colder Friday night with lows from
24-32. Highs both days 35-45.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Friday.
Max. Jlin. Peru.
Baker 31 23
Bend 50 32 T
Eugene 44 37 .03
Klamath Falls 42 25 T
Lakeview 48 . 28
Medford 32 30 15
Newport 49 43 .44
North Bend 50 46 .28
Ontario 35 23
Pendleeton 50 41 .01
Portland (Airport) 49 42 .14
Koseburg 45 36 .27
Salem 48 38 .18
Boise
Chicago
Denver
Eureka
Los Angeles
New York
Red Bluff
42
- 40
58
54
71 '
40
60 ,
57
49
41
33
28
45
42
24
32
43
36
35
San Francisco
Seattle
Spokane
Clocks Sound
New Year In
JUNCTION CITY, Ore. lfl John
Wells had a clanging good time
as tlie New Year came in.
Ordinarily his wife will allow
the 67-year-old retired farmer to
have only two clocks going. But
what the heck, New Year's is only
once a year, so she told him to go
ahead and start them all New
Year's Eve,
Wells began winding and setting
the 125 clocks he has collected In
the past four years. Midnight ar
rived In whirring, ringing, clang
ing, coo-cooing confusion.
Now Wells will wait for next
New Year's, collecting more clocks
in the meanwhile, of course, in
pursuit of the hobby that started
when he found a man who'd swap
a clock for a lawnmower.
Good Advice Given
For Hangover
SAN FRANCITRnn ia-lln ir ti
Isn't too late for you. Is a little
New Year's flrivlm (mm n, win-
Sox. city hcolth director:
uou 1 leei too sorry lor yourself;
lots of folks have hangovers.
Drink lotS Of milk- nrnlaln
soothes alcohol-Irritated stom
achs. Eat as much as von want nr
high protein foods, but avoid
Take an aspirin or two.
ODen vour winrinwa w-l.ri.,. vrtn
spent too much time in smoky
rooms.
Go back to bed: vnu need mnrp
sleep.
If you slill have that desert
thirst when you reawaken, try a
mixture of tomato Juice and beer
half and half.
Shooting Victim
Held Critical
Mcminn ville in miin t-
Rlggs. 30. wounded hv twn vuin
bullets Wednesday, was reported
In worsening condition here earlv
Friday.
He Was strurlr In Mia Wt iu
and the left side of the body by
.22 caliber rifle bullets In Grande
Ronde.
His brother-ln-lnw .tnhn d.....
47, was charged with assault with
Intent to kill, and held at Dallas
With hond spt at. 9 Finn
... v,vwv, vautu
waivca preliminary hearing.
EGG BURN
PORTLANn 11 A trn.vlnA r
eggs got burnt Thursday. The driv
er 01 a semi-trailer pulled the big
rig off the Columbia River High
way east of Cascade Locks to fix
a flat tire, then th hl k-Ab.
out. The truck and Its load of
eecs were destroyed.
Revelers Storm Fun Spots
To Usher In New Year As
Hopes For Peace Gain
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tnat brand new 365-day wonder.
"Kid 1954," got a wild welcome
Friday as he leaped Into the world
arena with everyone admiring his
"peace" punch and praying he
could keep up the promising pace.
At any rate, the kid kayoed "Old
Man Blues" with a flurry of horn-and-cow-bell
blows, socking spirits,
and rights and lefts to the pocket
book. In New Years' messages, t h e
police-estimated million revelers,
five times the number of last year,
milled along the Great White Way
and cheeied In the new year. Both
the 20-degree cold and the excite
ment kept the gay throngs moving.
For 25 minutes before 12, and a
half hour after midnight, traffic
was slopped in the square and the
merrymakers allowed to surge
through the streets. It was au or
derly crowd.
Bars, restaurants, theaters and
night clubs did a booming busi
ness throughout the nation. Tariffs
ranged from "no cover" at all to
S25 a person in the swanky Man
hattan night spots and hotels.
Thousands also celebrated in at
home parties.
The devout crowded into church
es and parish halls for traditional
watch night services.
In Augusta, Ga., President El
senhower attended a small party
at the Augusta National Golf Club.
London's famed P.Ccadilly Cir
cus drew the usual mass of mid
night revelers. The statue of the
Cupid Eros got a protective wrap
ping against the usual pranksters.
Hotels and night spots through
out the continent reported sellout
business at very high prices.
In New Year's messages, the
statesmen of Europe voiced hope
for future peace. On both sides of
the Iron Curtain people jammed
churches and prayed for a peace
ful 1954.
Form Riots Flare In Old
Mexico; Two Agents Hung
GUATEMALA riitafomala tn
New violence in which a band of
60 farm workers attacked two de
tectives and two farm owners with
clubs and machetes and hung them
from a tree was brought to light
by police today.
Orle of the detectives died. The
other three werp in r rorintie nn.
dition.
The violence heightened anxiety
In the state of Escuintla, where
mobs have attacked a number of
Local Pilots
Stage Fly-In
Fourteen nlanee with mcmhapc n.
the Klamath Air Search and Res
cue unit as pilots took part in a
fly-in Sunday morning to the new
air Strin at. T.inrnln ahnnt at..
miles west of here.
The new landing strip has been
constructed by Ned Putnam, local
logging contractor, who cleared a
path 200 feet wide and 4300 long
in the timbered area. The strip has
been deeded to the State of Ore
gon who will do additional im
provements of leveling, drainage,
adding base rock and eventually
applying a penetration coat v or
paving. '
Taking part in the early morn
ing flight were: James and Del
bert Woster, Ed and Cleta Scholar
Doug and Helen Howser, Ivan and
Bonnie Kestcrson, Clayton and Pat
Hlllhouse, Ben and Laverne Bur
gess and two children, Marlon
Hardman, Frits Markwardt, H. O.
Juckeland, Jim and Eldon Alt,
George McCann, Ned and Leonard
Putnam, Pop Newlun, Earl Scher
er, Fred Hadlock and Russel Av
ery. After a breakfast, at R, M. Mc
Valgh's Mountanwiew Restaurant
at Lincoln eight of the planes flew
to the Redding Sky Ranch for a
short visit with Ed Garrett, opera
tor of the ranch.
Out of the hundreds of hours and
thousands of miles flown by
KASRU members no accidents
have marred their record, accord-
inc tn RtlSQ AvPrv manon-m- nf ,1...
Klamath Falls Municipal Airport.
RIRTHS
PEEL Born to Mr. nnd Mn. Ed
vvarcl Reel. Jan. 1 at Klamath Valley
Hospital, a girl weighing 6 lbi. IP,
oz.
W"-DE Born t0 Mr, and Mn. Hank
Wilde. Dec. 31 at Klnmalh Vallev Ho.
pital, a girl weighing 7 lba. 2'a ol
Emergency Water
Line Run To Town
BEDFORD, Pa. lfl Volunteers
have completed a pipeline to put
an emergency water system Into
operation In this southwestern
Pennsylvania community of about
4.000. where some water taps al
ready are dry.
The 3.700-foot pipeline rum from
the town reservoir to the Wolfsburg
Dam on the Juniata River.
Tlie reservoir Is practically dry
because of an acute drought.
The CLOTHES MART
125 S. 9th
OtMH 1:00
Prim Minister Vitiun
Churchill broadcast to Biivmis thl
free world strrnsth and the dejir
to "reach Just and honorable agree
ments" has reduced the possibility
of international conflict.
Soviet Premier Georgi Matenaov
told INS Correspondent Kingsbury
Smith he believes there are la
vorable opportunities for reducing
International tension in 1M.
French President Vincent Auriol.
who bows out for the new year as
chief of state, said "it ts not talk
alone" that cau bring peace
the world.
In Moscow, champagne sales
tripled over last year as the Rus
sians celebrated the start of their
holiday seasou.
With bars in the United States
open later and people drinkmg
more, safely oificials stressed cau
tion on the highways and elimina
tion of the alcoholic "one for the
road."
In Hackensack. N. J., police took
away car keys from tipsy patrons
in bars,' promising to return them
later in the day.
In Colorado, fireworks hailed the
new year from atop 14.000-foot
Pike's Peak.
San Francisco's Market Street
was barred to traffic as pedestri
ans whooped it up.
Miami welcomed the new year
with a mass turnout along B:s
cayne Boulevard.
In Michigan, the village of Mem
phis became a city as the old year
ended, and celebrated into the
small hours.
In Kermit, Tex., it was the hap
piest new year for Mr. and Mrs.
O. L. Batchelor. They celebrated
the news that their son. Claude. 23,
an American POW of the Reds in
Korea, had changed his mind
about refusing repatriation and
was turned over to the V. N. Command.
farms not affected by new land
distribution laws passed by the
leftist Guatemalan government.
Under the law the government
can expropriate private and government-owned
lands which are not
being tilled and divide die holdings
among landless peasants.
Police gave this version of the
latest violence Wednesday:
Adrian and Aristedes Calderon.
two iarm owners near tie town of
San Vicente Pacaya. complained
to police of cattle stealing. When
police agents arrived to investi
gate, they were attacked by the
mob.
The Calderon brothers and the
two detectives were brutallv beat
en with machetes and clubs. They
were hung from a tree for six
hours and beaten some more. They
were cut down and forced to walk
shoeless on rough, rocky terrain.
One of the detectives, Jose Antonio
Alvarado, collapsed and died. The
other "three were rushed to an Es
cuintla hospital.
Police said they had no clue to
the identity of the mob.
MilkluiT
May Change
PORTT.ANn in Th.
versy between Elmer Deetz, the
Canby dairy farmer who sells milk
directly from iha .. j . 1. .
state milk authorities might result
"i teviaiuii oi uregons milk sani
tation code.
O V noa1- w.r . .. ... .
. "-j. wuci ui uie oiaie
Department of Agriculture s foods
nu unuies uivision. said Thurs
day a hearin? nn nrnnn,
probably will be held next month.
me aepartment might
establish R n m o tnri -r i- -
classification covering sales of
whole raw jnilk at farms. Accord
ing to Beal.J, Deetz Is not the only
dairyman Ah the state selling milk
oi.aiBui. -irom tne cow.
Deetz applied Wednesday for a
license to sell milk alter being
fined S50 for not having one. '
Even if the department changes
its sanitation code to clear farm
cents . a gallon Jug still would
sold raw milk, Deetz' sales at 70
run counter to state milk control
pricing, butterfat and licensing re
gulations. Deetz has a suit on file at Ore
gon City attacking the constitu
tionality of the entire milk control
law.
Drunken Man Shot
By Stepson
TILLAMOOK, Ore. w, A 35-year-oid
man who began drinking
earlv New Year'a rr.va u,a. -h, .L
death by his 13-year-old stepson
"cic muisuay nignt.
The bnv t Rill,, rh.i.,..
said he grabbed a .45 caliber pis-
..uni s gun case and shot
Charles Wagner, a sawmill worker
when Wagner began beating
Billy's moLher and hi ia.v.aui,t
sister.
The mother, ntith it u...
husband came home drunk and
started a quarrel.
No charge was filed against the
boy, who was taken to a police
man's home Instead of to Jail.
All Winter
Garments
Vi PRICE
Coniigiwri nor ilhing Ihilr win.
Itr gormtntt told Ipr half prlca
' adViied to pica 'thorn up.
'HI 1:00
rTifsY j
... 0J TX N0XWtY$7&EA$iE$T CREDT rXMT
Reg. 248.00 Diamond Bridal
Reg. 444.50 Matched Bridal
Reg. 310.00 Yellow gold matched bridal pair
Reg. 225.00 Gents ring with large sparkling center diamond
Reg. 250.00 Gents diamond set
Reg. 97.50 Gents diamond set
Reg. 120.00 Diamond set ruby
Reg. 97.50 Diamond set earrings in 14K gold mountings
Reg. 975.00 Gents 3 diamond ring
Reg. 275.00 ladies 8 diamond watch attachment
Reg. 600.00 Diamond bridal set. Large center diamond with
Reg. 95.00 Gents diamond dial 17 jewel wrist watch
Reg. 49.50 Gents 17 jewel dress watch with expansion band
Reg. 42.50 Gents 17 jewel dress watch with leather strap
Reg. 59.50 Gents 17 jewel calendar wrist watch
Reg. 59.75 Ladies 17 jewel rhinestone watch
Reg. 40.00 Ladies rhinestone. lapel watch
Reg. 42.50 Ladies 17 jewel lapel watch ...
Reg. 71.50 Ladies 17 jewel diamond set wrist watch
Reg. 33.75 Gents 17 jewel
Values to 59.50 Assortment
Values to 9.95 Gents wrist watches, your choice only
Value to 5.00 Large ass't. costume jewelry sets. Necklace, earring, broach sets 1.91
Values to 1.95 Box earrings, necklaces, etc. each 98c
Reg. 1.95 One group of assorted costume jewelry. Your choice each 59c
Reg. 2.95 to 19.95 Assortment of better costume jewelry Half off
Reg. 2.50 Imported table lighters. Your choice 49c
Reg. 1.98 Automatic pocket lighters 99c
Reg. 14.95 8-piece dresser sets
Values to 29.95 Men's jewelry sets. Key chain, tie bar, collar bar, belt ;
Values to 8.95 Ladies or gents strtch watch bands J
1
Reg. 29.95 "Radiance" silver-plated flatware, 54-pc. service for 8 . .. i
Reg. 89.95 Silver plated 5-piece coffee set, made by Oneida
Reg. 12.50 Assortment of silver plated hollow ware "Avon pattern" ....
Reg. 7.50 Silver plated 3-piece sugar, creamer, and tray set
Reg. 11.50 Wm. Rogers 15-inch silver plated round serving tray
Reg. 3.95 Heavy silver plated sugar and creamer tray
Reg. 3.50 Sterling silver 4-piece individual salt and pepper shakers
Reg. 6.00 Silver plated Bon-Bon Dish by Oneida
Reg. 5.00 Community 2-piece serving sets
Reg. 2.98 8-piece tool set with ratchet and brace .....
Reg. .75 Metal waste baskets
Reg. 1.95 Stainless steel mixing spoon or spatula
Reg. 1.95 5-piece popcorn bowl set
Reg. 3.50 Hammered aluminum tray with 6 tumblers
Reg. 1.75 8-piece decorated tumbler sets
Reg. 1.95 4 quart aluminum covered sauce pan
Reg. 1.95 Decorated metal serving trays
Reg. 9.95 3-piece chrome skillet set
Reg. 1.95 14 inch pottery chop plates
Reg. 19.95 Sheffield steel steak set
Reg. 17.95 3-speed electric hand mixer ..
Reg. 3.95 Plastic medicine or utility
Reg. 6.95 7-piece pottery salad f
Reg. 17.95 Copper chafing dish
Reci. 1.95 9-inch aluminum skillf
Reg. 10.95 Mahogany mirrored
Reg. 1.95 All metal smoking
Reg. 18.95 6-way floor lamp w
Reg. 4.95 Hurricane type boi
Reg. 36.95 6 tube General E
Reg. 29.75 6-fube Westinghi
Reg. 39.95 Philco table rad
Reg. 42.50 Sylvania clock r
Reg. 38.50 Hallicrafter do
Reg. 34.95 Clinton 3-way
Reg. 24.95 Stewart-Warnc
Store Hours:
9:30 o.m. to S:30 p.m.
1 a m
"1
Pair
Pair with large center diamond
onyx ring in yellow gold mounting 1 75,00
garnet ring 49,50
bridal pair 79.75
pocket watch
ladies or gents fancy and plain
175.00
269.50
159.50
169.50
?. 49.95
549.95
;.. 187.50
16 side diamonds 350.00
59.50
28.88
14.88
27.50
39.75
21.88
13.88
39.88
19.88
wrist watches, ea. 14.88
each 4.!
rhen. 334