rPAGK JOUR
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
ii iiulViwi i "'7""" "'
WALL STREET
NEW YORK UP A few trong
points stood out Wednesday in s
steady stock market.
At the best, some gains went to
around a point in key sections.
Most price movements were rath
er smBll.
Prices and volume gained to
gether, and the trading pace
slowed when prices stood still or
backed down. There were 620,000
shares traded In a llrm first hour,
and the total for the day ap
proached two million shares.
Tuesday's total came to 1,840,000
shares. '
NEW YORK STOCKS
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Admiral Corporation
Allied Chemical , y
AUIs Chalmers : ',
American Airlines " :
American Power Light
American Tel, & Tel,
American Tobacco. -Anaconda
Copper
Atchison Railroad
Bethlehem steel ,'
- Boeing Airplane Company
Borg Warner . .
Burroughs Adding Machine
California Packing
Canadian Paclflo .
Caterpillar Tractor .
Celmese Corporation
Chrysler Corporation
Cities Service:.'.' !
Consolidated Edison ."
Consolidated iVuItce , "
Crown Zellerbaeh ,
Cuitiss Wright
Douglas Aircraft :; ' '
du Font de Nemours ,
Eastman Kodak .,
Emerson Radio . .
General Electric , '
General Poods . "
General Motors
Georgia Paclflo Plywood
Goodyear Tire
30 '
11
48
12
62 'A
31 ',t
49 -
n ii
17
23 IS,
23
40 o,
19 r
60
83 V,
42
. 36
' .
85 !i
107
49
11
so ?i
59 i
63
11
66
Homcstake Mining Company 34
International Harvester
' International Paper ,; '
Johns Manvllle : . '
Kennecott Copper V.-' '
Llbby, McNeill ' i. .
Lockheed Aircraft , . '
Loew's Incorporated '.
Long Bell A i. . ;.' "
Montgomery Ward ".
Nash Kelvlnator " ;;
New York Central
Northern Pacific
Paclflo American Fish -Pacific
Gas as Electric .
Pacific Tel, ti Tel.
Packard Motor Oar
Penney (J. C.) Co.
Pennsylvania Railroad
Pepsi Cola Co.
Philco Radio
Radio Corporation
Rayonier Incorp.
Rayonler Incorp. Pfd
Republic Steel
Reynolds Metals
Richfield Oil
Safeway Stores Inc.
Scott Paper Company
Sears Roebuck ti Co.
Socony-Vacuum Oil
Southern Pacific
Standard Oil California
Standard Oil N. J. '
Studebaker Corporation
Sunshine Mining
Swift it Company
Transamerica Corporation
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.
Westinghouse Air Brake
Westinghovse Electric
Woolworth Company
29 V
67
69 li
68
'. 9
27
13
, 23 y,
61
' 17 V,
20 '
66 "4
' 7
40
117
3
wr,
17 ?i
14
29
23
28
49 V'2
66 V,
63
40
11 1i
61
37 V,
39 V,
66 12
75
21
8 Vk
44 Vi
26 Vi
21
40
112
22 ?i
47
Hi
26
40 ',4
13 ?ii
41 V,
24 A
64 -ll,
45 V,
CHICAGO un Hogs dropped 25
to 75 cents Wednesday with most
sales around 60 cents lower. Buy
ci8 paid (26.26 to $26.00 for choice
180 to 230 pound butchers.
Price trends in cattle were
mixed. Good to low prime steers
sold steady to 50 cents lower while
average prime to high prime
types, as well as utility and com
mercial grades, held steady. High
choice and prime steers brought
(25.60 to (31.00, the top.
i.amDs soia sieaay to 20 cents
higher in an active market. Good
and choice wooled types brought
(20.00 to (21.00.
Salable receipts were estimated
at 10,000 hogs, 13,000 cattle, 400
calves and 3,000 sheep.
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND MV-(USDA) Cattle
salable 350; market active, strong
to 60 higher; part load good-choice
1,087 lb fed steers 24.00, trucked
lots 1,160 lb 23.50, load average
good 1,097 lb 23.00: scattered lots
commercial-low good 19.00-22.50,
utility down to 14.00; part load com
mercial-good 711 lb heifers 20.00
lightly sorted, few utility-low com
mercial heifers 13.00-18.00: cariner-
cutter cows mostly 0.00-11. 00, shells
down to 7.50 and below, utility
11.50 - 14.00,' commercial grades
14.50-16.00; utility-commercial bulls
steady at 14.00-16.50.
Calves salable 60; market about
steady; good-choice vealcrs 20.00
26.00, prime i;rades to 27.00; size
able lot good-choice 510 lb slaugh
ter calves 19.76, utility-commercial
CHlves 11.00-17.00, few head choice
400 lb stock calves 19.00,
Hogs salable 200; market active,
strong to 25 higher; choice 180-235
lb butchers 28.75-29.25, one lot
choice No, 1 butchers 29.60, few
choice 240-280 lb 26.50-28.50; choice
350-535 lb SOWS mostly 24.00-26.50.
Sheep salable 150; slaughter
lambs around 50 lower, other
classes steady; good-choice wooled
lambs 18.50-20.00, few head choice
prime grades 21.00, choice 70 lb
feeders 16.00; choice light ewes
6.00.
Teamsters
Eye Switch
BELUNQHAM W Action on
the Teamsters Union's decision to
withdraw from the Paclflo Coast
' District Metal Trades Council was
ahlgh on the agenda Wednesday as
the council's annual convention
went into the third day.
Delegates, hoping to adjourn the
convention by Thursday night, also
scheduled action on a stack of
resolutions, Including 10 dealing
with health and welfare issues.
The teamsters' decision to with
draw from the council was dis
closed In a letter read to the con
vention Tuesday. Tho union said
it will conduct Its own negotiations
with West Coast shipyards when
current contracts expire June 30.
Thomas A. Rotell, San Francis
co, council' secretary, said the ac
tion was not a surprise. He said
the teamsters were a "cooperat
ing" union and no( a council affil
iate and that less than 100 team
sters are involved In West Coast
shipyard contract negotiations.
Two Western labor leaders cri
ticized the national Republican
administration " in convention
speeches Tuesdayi i r :
Ed Weston, president of tho
Washington. Stale Federation of
Labor, and Dan . Flanagan, San
Francisco, AFti western area di
rector, blamed the Republicans
for what they said was a nation
wide increase in unemployment.
Mining Firm
On 5-Day Week
KELLOGG, Idaho Wl Tile
1,800 employes of the big Bunker
Hill : Sullivan Mining and Con
centrating Co. and the Sullivan
jilnc plant were told Wednesday
that all operations will go on a
five-day week starting Feb. 1.
J. B. Haffncr, the general man
ager, said the cutback will go Into
eflect because of increased stock
of pig lead and slab tine, and a
new drop In the price of those
metals.
Printed notices were given to
workers Wednesday morning ad
vising of the change. The company
has operated six days a week
since July 1, 1949.
CHICAGO GRAIN
CHICAGO W Feed grains drew
some support on the board of trade
Wednesday while wheat and soy
beans rested after their upward
surge of the previous session.
Dealings slackened from Tues
day's rapid pace and gains in corn
and oats never went above' frac
tions. The upturn brought out a
substantial increase in offerings of
cash corn by the country, bookings
being placed at 180,000 bushels.
An easier trend In wheat and
soybeans was viewed by brokers
as mainly technical, representing
some profit taking by short term
traders.
Wheat closed unchanged to l'i
lower, March 2.12:)i-'a, corn Vt
lower to higher, March 1.53a',,
oats i-l'a higher, March SO.'n-l'i.
ryo -li'a higher, March 1.22,
soybeans 3 cents lower to A high
er, Jan 3.104-3.11, and lard 5 to 42
cents a hundred pounds lower, Jan
10.90-15.60, ,
Wheat
Open High Low Clone
2.14 2.14 2.12 if, 2.12 $
2.13 2.13 2.11 2.12
2.04 2.04 ii 2.03 2.03 'a
2.06 !, 2.06 ia 2.05 11 2.05 -
2.09 . 2.09 J', 2.08 2.09
Western Oregon Continued
cold. Increasing cloudiness follow
ed by occasional snow beginning
in the northwest by Wednesday
evening and spreading to the ex
treme south by Thursday, Lows
Wednesday night 1 16-30. Highs
Thursday 25-35. Winds off coast
southeasterly Increasing to 25-40
Wednesday night and Thursday.
Eastern Oregon Fair and con
tinued cold through Wednesday
night. Thursday fair except mostly
cloudy near the Cascades with
scattered snow flurries. Highs 15
30 both days. Lows Wednesday
night 10 below sero to 10 above.
Grants Pass and Vicinity In
creasing cloudiness Wednesday
night with occasional snow Thurs
day. High Thursday 37; low Wed-
nesaay n:gnt 25.
Northern California increasing
cloudiness Wednesday night with
occasional rain and snow in ex
treme north Thursday. Southerly
to northerly winds near coast.
Baker and Vicinity Clear and
cold ' through Thursday. High
Thursday 20; low Wednesday night
zero.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
24 hours to 4:30 a. m. Wednesday
Max. Mln. Prep.
Baker 27 4
Bend . , , 28 0 '
Eugene 38 20
Klamath Falls 31 15 T
Lakevicw 33 18 T
Mcdford I 42 27
Newport ' 46 26 .01
North Bend 47 30
Ontario - 40 16
Pendleton 20 -6 T
Portland Airport 35 21 T
Roseburg 44 28
Salem 40 19
Boise 37 14 .02
Chicago 45 41
Denver 52 3 T
Eureka 47 34
Los Angeles 57 47 .71
New York 37 35 T
Red Bluff 67 38
San Franclsc 53 45
Seattle 28 16
Spokane 13 -9
Potatoes
IDAHO FALLS POTATOES
IDAHO FALLS 11 (USDA)
Potatoes: market about steady:
Russets No. 1A 2-ln. min. 15-20
nernent 10 n7. anri larnov 1 ni;i as.
25-30 percent 10 oz. and larger L85-
.w, wo. 1 extras 2.00-2.15:
sixteen cities arrivals 359, track
1,071.
SAN FRANCISCO POTATOES
SAN FRANCISCO I41 tisnA
Potatoes: 26 cars on track; arriv
als Oregon 1' mnrlrnf lfVttlr
weaker: Klamath RnssetA Nn. i.a
2 in min, 2.40.
LOS ANGELES POTATOES'
T.ns lunirr rc in hot. a
Potatoes: 111 cars on track; arriv
als Oregon 3, Idaho 14, Utah 4;
market dull: Trinhn ' T?ikaa Hn
1-A, 2.65-2.70.
v
CHICAGO POTATOES
76, on track 313: total u. S. ship
er; Idaho Russets (3.35-40. bakers
$4.25-30.
Mar
May
Jly
Sep
Deo
reckleai drlv-
15 or 7'
MUNICIPAL COURT
Robtrt Blckham, drunk, 13 or 7 It
an vs.
Hohrrt Bickham, vagrancy, $100 and
O. T. 'Widcnstrom, drunk, $13 or T.
do vi.
Roy William Murphy,
Paul Zupchan, ' drunk,
days.
Clprlano Correa, drunk, I5 bail for-
Aaroti Tliomaa Hoffman, failure to
yield right of way to motor vehicle,
nleaded not guilty, hearing 4 p.m. Jan.
John Raymond Schulte, contempt of
James Herbert Hensley, hit and run,
$25 ball forfeited.
Aliens To Gel
Aid In Filing
Aliens ftesfrlrip; to file petitions
for naturalization will be ottered
assistance by Acting Naturalization
Examiner Roland . L. Johnson,
Thursday, Jan. 28, according to
word received from the Depart
ment of Justice.
The meeting, starting at 8:30
a.m. will be held In the County
Court room where Johnson will as
sist in preparing petitions to be
presented to the next naturaliza
tion hearing which will be held by
the Circuit Court of Klamath Coun
ty March 4, at 2 p.m.
Jury Clears Baker
Man Of Murder
BAKER (?) The Bnker County
Grand Jury has cleared Alfred
Monroe Stalcy of a second degree
murder charge. . .
The Jury returned a not true bill
in the case of the 70-y car-old un
employed Sumpter carpenter, who
had been accused of shooting a
drinking companion Inst month at
the Slaley residence.
The case was the only one con
sidered by the Ornnd Jury, stalcy's
nttorney in earlier court Rctlon
had pleaded innocent for his client
by reason of self defense.
If TIM:
THATUeitm wp
yavr cua frm
cel i very
much qulcktr
i?i -tlivi
fif in
A Imail Initontly
4 -chfttki coughing
r-.ll.yi th Hchlt
THi WOUlD't HIT COUOH SYHU)
lllKTllfl
COLSON Born lo Mr. find Mrs. El
mer Cotaon, Jan. IB at Klamath Valley
Hospital, twin boys weighing 7 lbs. 8
ox and 11 lbs. 1' oz.
DIXON Born lo Mr. and Mrs. Orlnnd
Dixon, Jan. 19 at Klamath Valley Hos
pital, twin girls weiuhlng 6 lbs, 14 ',a
oz. and 6 lba. ll'.'a 02,
RIl.EY Born to Mr. and Mrs. John
J. Riley, Jan. 19 at Klnmalh Valley
Honpital, a girl weighing ft lbs. 13 J,4 oz.
. HAHN Bnrn to Mr. and Mrs. Fred
W. Halm, Jan. 18 at Klamath Valley
Hospital, a Rirl weighing S lbs. 6'' 07.
MOREHOUSE Born to Mr. and Mrs.
HCS H. Morehouse, Jan. 18 at Klamath
Valley Hospital, a boy weighing 8 Is.
HUMPHREY Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Jfm Humphrey, Jan. 18 at Klamath
Valley Hospital, a boy weighing 8 lbs.
MIXES Born to Mr. and Mrs. Willis
Miles, Jan. la at Klamath Valle- Hos
pital, a boy weighing 7 lbs. 4.j oe.
. SUITS
Betty J. Snyder vs. Richard John
Snyder, suit for annulment o( mar
riage. J. C. O'Neill attorney for plain-
..fl1,1!'", E,lt,n Gregory vs. Roland
Wendell Grogory. a.uil for divorce. L.
urth Slsemore attorney tor plaintiff.
Cheron Kaye Wise vs. Donald L. Wise
suit for divorce. Edwin C. Drlscoll at
torney for Dlninlirf.
Wllma, Ellen Thomas vs. Orbalee
Thomas, suit for divorce. R. F. Mc
Laren attorney for plaintiff.
Christina N. Clark vs. Orvllle A.
Clark, suit for divorce. Clarence A.
Humble, attorney for plaintiff.
MARRIACE LICKNSrs
NELSON-BURDICK Ralph Linde
Nelson. 24. pxnard. CalH.. and Ceral
dine Carmlchncl Burdick. 2G. Oxnard.
MOOHF-ZWANZIGER- William H.
K.oore. 28, Klamath Falls and Marjorie
L. Zwanzlger. 2.1, Klnmath Falls.
B.C. Coldest
Westesrn Area
VANCOUVEIl, B. C. Wl 'Oic
wido belt of British Columbia
which runs from the Alaska Pan
handle along the Yukon border to
Alberta, was the coldest stretch In
Canada Wednesday for the second
day In a row.
Official temperature at Watson
Lake was 60 below zero. Smith
Hlver was close behind at minus
48.
In . addition, some areas of the
cold belt were swept by SO-miles-nn-hour
winds which decreased
further south. Vancouver was
clipped by tho edse of a 35-mllcs-
an-hour blow which bore down on
Gcornln Strait,
In the Vancouver area, tempera
tures dropped opernight to 13
above. '
Logger's Club
Holdup Told
Three hours after the Logger's
Club in Bly was held up at 1 a.m.
Wednesday the alleged robber who
fled with $90 in cash was captured
by Deputy Sheriff Dale Snulli.
The accused robber, Raymond
Eugene Lovelace, 21-year-old form
er Oregon State Prison inmate, is
reported to Aave menaced Martin
Cavan, proprietor of Uie club, wiui
a long-bjaded knife.
Smith (aid the robber scooped
190 Irom the casn, register and tied
into a nearby field. Three hours
later Smith arrested Lovelace m
the boiler room of the Slangier
Mill, He had 990 in his possession.
Cavan told the deputy sheriff
that Lovelace had been loitering
about the club. When Cavan stall
ed to count the cash in the regis
ter. Lovelace is alleged to have
walked behind the bar and put a
knife against the proprietor's back.
"Don't move, mac," the robber
ordered, "or I'll let you have it."
, A lew minutes after the thief
fled, Deputy Smith reached the
scene, tie started trailing the rob
ber through the snow-covered field
and finally trailed him to the mill.
District Attorney Prank Aldsrson
said a charge of robbery and as
sault with a deadly weapon will be
filed against Lovelace. The ac
cused holdup man admitted to of
ficers that he served a term in
Oregon Stste Prison for auto theft.
Postal Rate
Boost Seen
WASHINGTON 11 Key sena
tors said Wednesday Postmaster
General Summertield may well get
a postal rate increase of the size
he has asked for, but that it is
likely to be offset by a pay boost
for the B00, 000 postal employes.
This was the view of some mem
bers of the Postoffice and Civil
Service Committee which will have
to pass on both the rate bill and
the proposed pay boost. They
asked not to be named.
A rate Increase sufficient to cov
er higher pay would be in line
with the controversial report of an
advisory council to the Senate
Committee, made public Monday.
This report made many criti
cisms of postal operations and as
serted "hundreds of millions" of
dollars could be saved by more
efficient methods. Meanwhile it
said rate boosts should be held to
a minimum except lor what was
needed to offset a pay hike.
Summerfleld replied that the
claims of what could be saved
were ridiculous. He also accused
the council of dodging the chore
of trying to wipe out the postal
deficit. But he added that he had
not done so and would ' present a
financial plan to the Senate com
mittee by the end of this month.
Murder Count
Faces Soldier
DENVER m Asst. U, S, Atty.
Robert Swanson said Tuesday the
government will ask a verdict of
first degree murder without rec
ommendation for leniency against
Richard D. Smith.
Swanson, in his opening argu
ment before a federal court Jury,
said Smith, 23-year-old Army corp
oral, deliberately killed his attrac
tive German war bride, Johanna,
at Camp Carson, Colo., last October.
A recommendation in the case
would force U. S. Dlst. Judgo Les
Knous to sentence Smith to life in
federal prison. No recommendation
the course Swanson says the gov
ernment would take would lead
Smith to the gas chamber at the
state prison in Canon City. Colo,
Swanson told the Jury of live wo
men and seven men, that govern
ment witnesses would leave no
doubt Johanna's death was premeditated.
I' (
-Mi
LOFTON TATUM is here
from Portland to be guest
this evening at the annual
meeting , of the Klamath
County Chamber of Cgm
merce at 6:30 at the Willard
Hotel. He is a past presi
dent of the Oregon State
Junior Chamber of Com
merce, past national vice
president of the United
States Jaycees and past
treasurer of the Junior
Chamber of Commerce In
ternational. He is a partner
in the law firm of Wood,
Mathieson, Wood and
Tatum, Portland.
Two Kil
In Accident
mr'. - WnrHn at CdOW-
uorouer vcruuu w..
chilla Tuesday Identified two wonv
en killed in an auiumu -
.. a U. Unnrlfiii &t Mtb.
aeiu uwr ucio j - ,
Evelyn Ada Epps. about 32. and
Mrs. Emily unmui "'--"--
about 27, both formerly of Brem
erton, Wash.
.. w rnnei aHHrpss as
ne listen jwia.
Rt. 2. Box 1235, Bremerton, and
Mrs. Blackmon's as c-o Staff 6gt.
James Blackmon, McChord Air
Force Base. ,
Worden added that Mrs. Epps
.Tnhn StflSil. Of BOX
183, Monroe, Ore., told him her
aaugnier was en iuu.g
Diego. ...
... i I.I l.1,.ntirrnHnn of the
ITUIUCU BOH. tucitu.iv-.
women was established through
contact with Mrs. Stasil ana Mm.
iimmton Callcv of Salem, Ore., a
sister of Mrs. Blackmon.
Court Upholds
Assault Ruling
SALEM Wl The Oregon Su
preme Court upheld Wednesday
.i .jr..i..,nn.al, Prmniv ronviction
of E. J. Vaughn on charges of as
sault with a aeaaiy weapon.
The decision, by Justice William
C. Perry, upheld Judge E. K.
Oppenheimer's refusal to comply
with the Jury's request that the
Judge re-deflno the word "felon
iously" and to read part of the
testimony.
Justice Perry ruled that the
Judge had the right to refuse the
request, and that Vaughn's case
was not prejudiced.
WEDNESDAY. JANUABv J
Cold Grips North vest As
Mercury Plunges; Outl;
For Relief new Kemott
.ceAriiTFin PRESS t ima. Harrtnfftrt 1
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
More bitter cold en?.u''?a" Walla Walla
shivering rac ---- The Bonna.n.. . '
Wednesday - w ... near k-; y-wuw
27 below at pcwf"i
..' .v... niirflii said cnances
for immediate relief are "mo'-"
The forecast caucu .u. K...r
tures as low as 15 below Wednes
. ," u. ..stom Washington.
eastern Oregon and Idaho which
Is catching tne Drum ui u.e
winter In two years.
A low pressure area off the
British Columbia coast was ex
pected to move in slowly toward
The end of the week. The mercury
mlaht rise with a cloud cover but
more heavy snow by Saturday or
Sunday.
The low of 27 at Newport came
in a report from Dalles Menear,
weather observer for the Forest
Service. , , .
mi.. mn cinrimN at Washington
State College didn't need much
coaxing to stay inauuia .u
for weekend examinations. It was
22 below outside by unofficial read
ings, 13 officially.
Meacham, a town between Pend
leton and La Grande, was Oregon's
coldest with 2? below.
Sherman Markley, building super
intendent at WSC, said he was
using seven tons of coal every
hour to heat the campus, a new
record. . ,
Pasco, Wash., had 18 below, Yak
ima, Harrington
oeiow, umak
in Idahit;"
ton and Or.ngevuft5
D Alene. ' H
1-u.u.ua was Heioi"'
above, Ool''N
In Oregon, TherjU.,.
leton both had . I."
Astoria on the coufTSJ
for western Oreaon 1
Oregon also recordm n
death attributed to the
spell. Ambrose j nSf
Portland, died Tuesdi-Tl
it vunoge urove hosiiltil d
juries suffered when fcf'i
ded on lev hlffhuti
north of Drain. 110 c
the weather Bureau reC
pimms 10 Montana sUlk!
day and -44 at Cut Biik
Bouse, renfint.lv mi.
on a first degree murder tCI
Yf th Htot. Q... ' IT1
day was returned here fj
Orenon fitatn PnnltBni
Unemployment
Fund Okay
SALEM W! Tne Oregon un
employment Compensation Com
mission's 69 million dollar reserve
fund is big enough to meet future
emergencies, despite a heavy drain
caused by this wlntcrs unemploy
ment the commission said Wed
nesday.
The fund, out ot which benefits
are paid, is three times the high
est annual benefits.
About 13 millions Is paid into the
fund each year. Most of this mont-y
is paid bv employers, with about
a million dollars of It coming from
interest. ,
The commission is sending out
30,000 checks each week to Jobless
persons, most of them running be
tween $2n and $25.
The commission said most of this
money is paid by the Jobless to
proccrs, landlords, retailers,, and
to others who sell basic necessities.
OBITUARY
Curl Iandrr Ednrcn, 60, native at
rvlkn. Varml&nd. Sweden, rrvidrnt nf
Klnmalh County for 34 yearn, died hre
Jan. IF). Survivors include: two slstrri,
Mri. ChrtuHrin Ohon of San Pnlnt. lira .
and Mrs. Signe Hokanson of Printville,
Ore; a brother, Gunner of Sweden.
The body wait forwarded Wedneaday
morninji a mo nmnn ninnunrv, snna
Point, Ida., for final riles and Inter
ment Inter. Wnrd'n Klnmnth Funeral
Home In rhnrgc of the arrangement!.
WANTED
Ambiriout penoni to handle the wholesale distribution of
nationally advertised food product in a small way.
NO SALES WORK, NOT VENDING
Opportunity for tubstantial income for time
involved. Storage space not necessary. Re-
3uires investment of $1350. Only persons
osiring a permanent side line need apply.
Write giving name, telephone number end
few facts about yourself; Address Box 748
co Herald and News.
SAD FACE HA
IS HAPPY N(
SPECIALS
THURS., FRI.
and
SATURDAY
OPEN
9 a.m. til 8 p.m.
Every Day
Phone 4714
Right to
Limit
Reserved
Don't Miss Our Winter Sale of
risne ADutton
LEGO-
MUTTON
LOIN and RIB
CHOPS
SHOULDER MUTTON
CHOPS STEW
LIVER - 18l
NECK BONES 17l
LOCAL
FRESH
DAILY
CRATER-LAKE
CREAMED
Cottage
Cheese
5)c
pt,
Like many another man who buys the family J
ceries, ne wants m s - 1
He wants to select from big assortments to
things easily and to choose from foods of kcl
quality at every day low prices. More ond n4
men (ana ionics, tuo;, np j
they get the mostest of the bestest, for the
est! .
LETTUCE
Fresh, Solid
12
AYUldUU u "
Snoboy - Red Deliciouf
APPLES 2 - 29
Klamath U.S. No. 1
POTATOES 10
DiprTegdahTeouseVl
iACCCC . .. ... Q3
Fresh - Local - Large
"AA" Grade
EGGS
Dox.
58
Baby-size LIMA
BEANS 2-251
Royal Club - Seedless
RAISINS 2-9
j. FACIAL TISSUE. 300 size 2
t, 1 f" CHAD MAXINE FACIAL mfk
' H jUAr 10 -Bar Bag J)7C
TJ7 SYRUP 100 CA,,N 47c
i f;w Ill
1 airo fASH
2f2S
24-ox. tin
STANDBY SALE
CONTINUES
UNTIL JAN. 27
CONNIE-
(can Me it too)
3 FOR
29'