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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1958)
PAGE 4 A HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY. MAY 22. 1953 MARKETS and FINANCE Editor's Note: The market re port! lilted below ere yester day's markets, not today's, and are carried as a service to those subscribers in early de livery tones which make publi cation ol dally markels Impos sible within the route schedule. STOCKS WAIX STREET NEW YORK tfl The stock market pursued an Irregular course Wednesday with slecls ac tive. Trading was moder a t e 1 y brisk. Gains and losses of key stocks ran lrom fractions to about a point. Most of the major steels and motors took losses The Associated Press average of 6(1 stocks was unchanged at JIGS 60 with Ihe industrials down 40 cent6, the rails up 60 cents and the utilities up 10 cents. Volume was 2.580,000 shares compared with 2,500.000 Tuesday. NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation 9 Allied Chemical Allis Chalmers Aluminum Co. America American Airlines American Can American Cyanamide American Motors American Tel. & Tel. American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Armco Steel . Atchison Railroad Bethlehem Steel Boeing Airplane Co. Borg Warner Burroughs Corp. California Packing Canadian Pacific Caterpillar Tractor Celanese Corporation Chrysler Corporation Cities Service Consolidated Edison Crown Zellerbach Curliss Wright Douglas Aircralt du Pont de Nemours Eastman Kodak El Paso NG Emerson Radio Ford Motor General Dynamics General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pac Cp. Goodyear Tire International Harvester International Paper Johns Manville Kaiser Aluminum Kennecott Copper Libby, McNeill - -Lockheed Eircraft . Montgomery Ward New York Central Northern Pacific Pacific Gas & Electric Pacific Tel. & Tel. Penney (.1. C.) Co. Pennsylvania Railroad Pepsi Cola Co. Philco Corp. Puget Sound P & L Radio Corporation Rayonier Incorporated Republic Steel Richfield Oil Safeway Stores Inc. SI. Regis Scott Paper Company Sears Roebuck k Co. Shell Oil Co. Sinclair Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Pacific Sperry Rand Standard Oil California Standard Oil N. J. Studebaker Packard Sunshine Mining Swill & Company Thompson Products Transamerica Corporation Twentieth Century Fox Union Oil Company Union Pacific United Air Lines United Aircralt United Corporation United States Plywood United Slates Steel Warner Pictures Western Union Tel. Westinghouse Air Brake Weslinghouse Electric Woolworth Company 75 22 67 ' 17 46 3, 47 13 h 177 i 87 . 43 'i 47 i 20 3k 40 , 40 26 i 31 45 25 , 60 U 16 'i 46 1. 53 54 47 1 24 4 fin -Ts 175 1113 H 32 68 39 56 74 58 U 57 '. 37 36 ' 73 34 s 95 ' 37 l 25 V 87 9 47 "4 35 14 H 38 56 li 129 V4 94 12 24 Mi 14 -V 29 H 33 15 44 "i 71 h 30- 33 64 -li 29 73 ,4 54 H Mis 44 18 4811 S3 ik 7' 33 i, 45 39 'i 29 48 i, 29 'j 24 J4 62 8 29 H 62 18 h 18 i 21 H 57 , 44 . Two Youths Held For Auto Theft Police Tuesday arrested two teen-age boys in connection with thefts of auto parts. A 17-year-old laken into custody at KUHS admitted stealing a set of racing heads from a hot rod owned by Leonard Ferguson at 11146 Johnson Street. The 17-year-old also confessed he stole a gear shilt mechanism from another machine several months go, police reported. No One Hurt As Plane Crash Lands JvvLhM ..T , Iwo-rnKinc plane carrying three persons crash landed at the S.ilem An port late uiesnay. me trail shiucicn sxm teel across the airport, but no one was in juiorl. The plane, owned by the Civil Aeronautics Administration, was on a training (light. The pilot said ne was William r arris of Seattle, POPPY DAY DORRIS-Hoh Kdsar. mayor of Horns, has proclaimed Mav 24 as Buddy Poppy Day in the citv of Dorris. In making the proclama tion. Mayor Krisar reminds the citirens to join with Hie Veteran of Foreign Wars in exemplifying its motto. "We honor Hie dead bv helping the living " The mavor also asks Dorns citizens to wear 1 Buddy Poppy as cwdencc of our gratitude to the men ol this na tion who risked tlicir lives in de fense of the lieerioms which we continue to enjoy as American citizens. LIVESTOCK KLAMATH FALLS LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET May 20. 1958 Receipts: Cattle 173. Hogs 38. Sheep 47. Compared last Tuesday all cat tle classes steady considering quality: hogs 1.00 higher. Fed steers: li neaa. oooa 27.wu, Std. 21.00-25.00 Fed Heifers: Sid. 2.1 10-23 ,35. Cows: Std.. 21.60-22 50: Cmcl.. Heavyi 18.00-20.10; Utility 18.10- 204O; Canners and Cutters, 12.35- 17 00. Bulls: Utility, 23.10-24.80. Stnckers and Feeders: Steers, Good 24.10-26.90. Steer Calves, Med-Good 25.80- 28 00 Heiler Cahes, Med-Good 25.30- 28.00. Feeder, cows, 16.10 - 19.70. Stock Cows, pairs, 192-226. Hogs: U.S. 1 & 2 U 80-220 lbs.) 22.40-23.60: Sows 16.10-17.80. Sheep: Ewes with lambs 19.00. Reported by Ray Petersen, County Agent STOCKTON (UP - FSMNS) - Livestock: Cattle salable 25. Commercial cows 20.50, cutter and utility cows 17-20. Common 600 lb horned stocker steers 21. Calves salable 10. Market un tested. Hogs salable 50. Market not es tablished. Sheep salable 150. Choice 90 lb wooled slaughter spring lambs 21. Good shorn old crop slaughter lambs 13. Cull to good shorn slaughter ewes 3-6. Good and choice feeder spring lambs 18-20. CHICAGO m Butcher hog prices were steady to 25 cents higher near Ihe close of trading Wednesday after running as much as 50 cents higher earlier. The top of $23.75 was paid for only about 100 head 195-225 lb mostly No. 1 grade. Slaughter steers were slow and weak to 50 cents lower with the bulk of the choice grade selling at $28-30 and the high choice and prime at $30.50-33.50. Mixed good and choice went at $27.50-27.75 and Ihe standard and good at $24.50 27.25. Vealers were steady at $32.35 for good and choice kinds and $23-32 for standard. The sheep market was ahout steady. One load of No. 1 pelt 106 lb high choice slaughter lambs brought the $21.75 top. Salable receipts- 7,500 hogs, 16, 000 cattle, 200 calves, 1,500 sheep. GRAINS PORTLAND iffi Coarse grains, 15-day shipment, bulk, coast delivery: Oats, No 2. 38-lh white 54.00-54.50 Barley. No.2. 45-lb B.W. 47.50 Corn, No.2, B.Y. sh'p't 62.50-63.oo Wheat i bid i to arrive market hasis No. 1 bulk, delivered coast: Soft White . . 2.10 Soft White (excluding Rex) .. 2.10 White Club . 2.10 Wednesday's car receipts: Flour 21; wheat 67; barley 3; corn 1. CHICAGO Ifl A moderate de mand lifted most of the grain fu tures a cent or more higher shortly before the close of the Board of Trade Wednesday. Export business was light but there was some expectation in the trade that wheat buying would be started toward a large shipment to Poland. Japan bought about 700.000 bushels of Pacific Coast white wheat for shipment in July hut went to Ihe Canadian market for another million bushels. India bought 4.850.000 bushels of wheat in Canada. At the finish, wheat was l'i-l'i cents a bushel higher, July 1.85': corn higher, July 1.26V27; oats unchanged to 'i lower, July Rlla: rye 2'2-3'a cents higher. July 1.19'i-iO soybeans ll-I-,i higher, July 2.28L-: lard un changed to 13 cents a hundred pounds higher. July 12.45. WHEAT Open High Low Close .!! 1 83 1.85 1 S3 . 1.85 ' Sep 1 86 1.87 ' 1.85 J 1.87 Dec 1.91 "( 1.93 'l 1.91 1.93 ' Mar 1.95 H 1.97 1.94 U 1.96 POTATOES S.W FRANCISCO (UP'FSMNS) Potatoes: Russets U.S. 1A 2-inch minimum 100 lbs Klamath 4.00-4.25. Long Whiles Kern County 3.75-4.00. Round Reds Kern County 4.25-4.75. LOS ANGELES (UP-FSMNSI- Potato market dull. Russets: Klamath one-mark U.S. 1 6 oi, min. 3 25. Oregon arrivals: Rail 1, truck 380. CHICAGO lH - Potatoes arri vals 104: on track 228: total U.S. shipments 707. Old: Steady: car lol track sales: Idaho Russets 3.40 3.50. New: Supply moderate: de mand slow: market dull: car lot track sales: California Long White 4 .MM 75: Calilornia Hound Reels i 4 N: Arizona Round Reds 4.40- 4 50. Bus Line May Abandon Service Abandonment of service between I.akeview and Rurns by Red Ba' Stage Line. Inc.. will he the sub- .leci oi a neanng weonesnay. .iiine, t b . i nn r, ... in Ihn I .L. I'mintf fnurthruse, I.akeview. Howard .Morgar, public utility commis sioner, announces. The Red Hall line al present operates as a common earner in Ihe transportation of passen-l gers, baggage, express, mail anil newspapers between Ihe two cities, over Highways 3!'.i and 20. It filer! an application to abandon this serv ice, under Hie provisions of the motor transportation Qlc, on May 13. Pair Rescued In Accident WEED Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Carlton of Montague were rescued from Dwinnel Lake Wednesday af ternoon after the nine-foot boat from which they were fishing had been upset by wind and waves about 1:30 p.m. The couple and their little dog were brought to shore at 4 20 p m. The ttr-cd Police Department learned of the upset boat at 3 p m. from Lester Wilson of Dunsmuir who was at the dam fishing at the lime. Chief Dave Dawson and his assistant, Roy Andrealta, went to the lake, about three miles north west of Weed, after calling the sheriffs office at Yreka for a boat. They met Raymond Slingsby and Bill Houdashelt, both of Duns muir, coming in from fishing alter their boat had run out of fuel. The man siphoned gas from the patrol car, mixed it with oil, refueled the boat and went after the Carl- tons, both of whom were in the water. Mrs. Carlton was wearing a life preserver and her husband was hanging onto the part of the boat which had not submerged. After the couple and their dog had been brought to shore, Al Hen ry tii Weed went out in his boat and brought the Carlton's boat safely to shore. Carlton told offi cers that they floated toward shore for a while after being dumped into the water. However, the wind and current changed and they drifted back to the middle of the lake which is about one-half mile in width at the lower end. The Duiismuir men who were on the lake had heard voices, but the wind was blowing the waves too high lor them to locate the over turned boat or the people in the water. Burglar Sets Type Of Record Something of a record in swift justice may have been set here yesterday with the sentencing to Ihe stale penitentiary of Fred Hood, confessed Cmloqiun burglar. Hood managed to break into a tore, elude authorities for 12 hours, appear in court twice and end up with a two-year prison stretch all within a period of three days. He pled guilty yesterday to breaking into the Golden Rule Store in Chiloquin Sunday night via a skyli-ht. Before the ex-convict could steal anything. Propri etor Vernon Norval happened in and a short struggle ensued with Hood escaping, only to be ar rested Monday morning. Missing Youths Return Home Two ndvontunuis 13-year-old hoys fhanaed their minds about running away yesterday and re turned home with promises nev er to do it again. Charles Boleyn, 3713 Summers Lane, and Raymond Colter, 3547 Crest Street, had both local and state police looking for them dur ing a 24-hour period beginning Tuesday afternoon. Ihey had last been seen at Al- tamont School. Press and radio co operated with authorities in the attempt to locate the youths. Mrs. Boleyn. to whose home both returned yesterday afternoon, noti fied police that all was well. Pants warmings were indicated. ' She said the boys spent Tues day night in Klamath Falls. They intended to journey to Weed and join two friends there, Mrs. Bol eyn told authorities, but finally agreed it wasn't such a good idea after all. Judge Grants Youths Time District Judge D. E. Van Vac- tor this morning Rave two teen age youths until Monday to make up their minds whether to plead innocent or guilty to charges Ihey were in possession of heer. Ihe pair, Douglas Schuey, 18. and his companion. 17. were ar rested April 2fi. Their attorney is Rohert li. Danielson. In addition to Ihe possession charge. Schuey is also accused of reckless driving on a local high way April 14. Authorities charge he was driv ng a IMil sedan at 50 miles per hour without head lights in an at tempt to elude pursuing officers. Schuey s bail was set at S150 by .lodge Van Vactor, while that of the 17-year-old was set at $30. TOOLS STOI.KN Calin I.ees. rural Klamath Falls. told police last night that $150 worth of tools, including two drive socket sets, were stolen from his car parked in front of 2404 South Sixth Street. The tools were in a box and most were Craftsman make he aid EVEREST & JENNINGS B91 whul ad -WAIKMS 'lacsf AM far th Hmmdkapptd ttardilf cailrv.td ina1 aaaihf oasrollad, lTrM Jaaatosi Fol'iinjt Th( Qiairl lad walkari M4pr .ump4 l conSidaM fin la.( J J- slsli li Iks kaodinppad. Awtfiarftad Da Rentals an Sales Currin's - tor druas 9th & Main Ph. TU 2-3&S P rle fipj -i xTWMAvA. MR. AND MRS. JOHN HENRY of Lincoln were shopping at the Town and Country Shop ping Center on Wednesday, making the 35-air-mile trip in just over 12 minutes. At left is Robert Murray, pilot of the Bell Helicopter which was transportation for the shop ping trip. Murray, a Bonneville Power Company employe on vacation, has 6,000 hours of helicopter flying jnd is acting as pilot on the present trip being made through the Western States by M. C. Zeigler, West Coast sales representative for Bell Aircraft out of Burbank. Earlier in the week, Ned Putnam, president of the Sportsmen Pilots, set down in the helicopter back of the Town and Country Shopping Center to keep a luncheon ap pointment there. Photo by Kettler Pool Opens Saturday Saturday at 1 p.m., someone' and we bet he won't be over 10 years old will break the cool green waters at municipal pool and become the first official swim mer of the 1958 season. Recreation Director Rob Bonney said today the pool will also open Sunday at 1 p.m. and gave this schedule for the remaining days of next week: Monday, 4 to 9 p.m.; Tuesday 4 to 9 p.m.: Wednesday, 2 to 9 p.m.; Thursday, 2 to 9 p.m.; Fri day (Memorial Dayt, 1 to 9 p.m. and Saturday, 1 to 9 p.m. Thereafter until June 9, the pool will remain open daily from 1 to 9 p.m. Beginning June 9, Instruction classes in swimming will be held in the mornings beginning at 7 o'clock, with the pool going into regular service in the afternoons at 1 o'clock. It is necessary to register in advance for instruction. Registra tion commences at the pool May 30 at 2 p.m., Bonney said. Admission prices leash) are 20 cents for children, 35 cents for adults. Instruction fees are 5 for a 10-class course. Boys and girls suits may rented for 25 cents and men women's for SO cents. Women's caps may be rented for 15 cents and towel rent is 10 cents. California Weather By UNITED PRESS San Francisco Bay Area: Most ly cloudy with scattered showers through Friday: little change in temperature: high today v San Francisco 66, Oakland 70. San Mateo and San Rafael 72: low to night 53-58: winds lighter than normal: rain prohahality 60 per cent through Friday. Northern California: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers and widely scattered thunderstorms through Friday: cooler inland to day: variable winds 8-18 m.p.h. near coast. Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Most ly cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms through Fri day : cooler. Sierra Nevada: Cloudy with scattered showers and thunder storms through Friday: cooler. Sacramento Valley: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers through Friday, chance of thunderstorm; cooler: high both days 73-83: low tonight 57-65, var iable winds 7-15 m.p.h. Northwestern California: Most ly cloudy with scattered showers and widely scattered thunder storms through Friday; slightly cooler inland; high today and low tonight Napa 72-54. Santa Rosa 70 50; variable winds ,8-18 m.p.h. near coast. RAN LIFTED PARIS i.ri U.S. military au thorities Thursday lifted all restric tions on servicemen and their lamilies visiting Paris. The re striction was imivosed Saturday because of the Algerian crisis. Rev H. C. Bresler. rt Weather Table By VNITEI) PRESS Temperatures and rainfall for 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. High Low Rain Albuquerque 85 SO Atlanta 83 60 Bakerslield 93 65 Boise 84 GO Boston 71 51 Brownsville 77 65 Chicago 69 58 .02 Denver 85 55 Detroit 71 51 El Cenlro 106 Fairbanks 69 39 T. Fort Worth 84 60 Fresno 91 64 Helena 86 49 Kansas City ' 86 70 .05 Los Angeles 79 Miami 84 76 Minneapolis 80 49 New Orleans 81 71 New York 71 56 Oakland 72 63 .02 Oklahoma City 84 60 Phoenix 102 72 Pittsburgh 70 46 Red Bluff 90 64 Reno 85 48 T. Sacramento 85 60 .03 Salt Lake City 86 San Diego 73 60 San Francisco 65 57 .02 Seattle 81 57 Spokane 89 61 Stockton 86 61 .03 Thermal 104 79 Tucson 98 ' ' Washington 76 51 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a. in. Thursday Max. Mln. Baker 88 49 Redmond 89 52 Eugene Lakeview . 79 50 Medford 90 58 Newport 60 50 North Bend . 58 53 Pendleton 90 60 Portland Airport 85 60 Roseburg 88 56 Salem 90 55 On The Record Don Hid ft ThornM, v. Mary E. Thornnrs. sek divorce. Frnnrefc Smith v. David Smith, seek divorce. r.iRi.s OWENS Born In Mr. and r. Bus ter Owens Moy 20 tn Klamath Val ley Hospital a trl weighing, 8 lbs., 10 ou, hoy ft BRt'NEB -Born to Mr. and Mrs Frank H- Bruner May 20 in Klamath Valley Hospital a boy wenching 8 lbs., V-i "TS SOUERS Born to Mr. and Mrs. DwtaTht L. Soucra Jr., May 20 In Klamath Valley Hospital a boy weigh ing 7 lbs.. a'i on. WATF.RBURY Born to Mr. and Mrs. Brure Waterhury May 20 In Klamath Valley Hospital a boy weigh ing 9 lh . 12 or TOCKEY Born to Mr. and Mrs .Tames Torkev May 20 In Klamath Valley Hospital a boy weighing 8 lbs.. 6 ou. tft.Mt ROI NIHT Girli 1H3 Boyi 193 SisKlvnr roi NTV HIRTHS SABTOR Born to Mr. and Mrs Rov P. Sartor, Weed, May 15, in Mount Shasta Hospital, a son. lA'DPON Born to Mr. and Mrs. James R Luddon. Mount Shasta. May 17. in Mount Shasta Hospital, a son. K1RKHAM Born to Mr and Mrs Phillip R Klrhham. Mount May 19, In Mount Shasta H son Shasta ispital, a ATTEND THE SOUL-WINNING REVIVAL WITH EVANGELIST -R. S.OSBORN - Every Nite 7:30 Except Saturday See Hear Believe God's Word Deliverance for You A messoge for all people of all Churches Pentecostal Church of God 4637 Shosto Way Poster Cleric Said Resting Well ROME IN) Samuel Cardinal Stritch showed a slight improve ment today but still was in seri ous condition. The condition of the cardinal is stationary with a tendency to ward improvement." said the brief bulletin from his doctors. The 70-year-old cardinal Roman Catholic Archbishop of Chicago, suffered a stroke that partially paralyzed him three days ago. He had been recovering from the am putation of his right arm April 28, Ihe result of another blood clot which threatened him with gan grene. Dr. Filippo Rocchi of the Vati can medical staff said the cardinal had rested well during the night and had been able to take a little nourishment. There were no signs of the slight fever he had yester day and he was able to receive communion more easily this morn ing. His speech still was limned to a whispered yes or no to ques tions. But Dr. Rocchi said the pre late had passed the initial "pre occupying" phase of the cerebral thrombosis. Dr. Rocchi did not explain his terminology but the doctors had indicated earlier Ihey considered Ihe first 43 hours after the stroke now past as an especially crit ical period. Group Votes Full Aid Bill WASHINGTON Wl The Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted tentatively Thursday to re store in full the 339 million dollars the House cut from President El senhower's $3,1)42,0112,500 foreign aid program. The committee, in actions sub ject to later reconsideration, voted to raise President Eisenhower's emergency fund for use in extin guishing "brush fires" from the ton million dollars voted by me House to the 200 million dollars Ihe President requested. It also raised lrom Ihe 185 mil lion dollars voted by the House, to the 212 million Kisenhower asked the allotment for his use in provid ing special economic aid to meet special situations. These actions, coupled with ten tative votes Wednesday increas ing House figures for military as sistance and defense economic supports by 220 million dollars, brought Ihe tolal in new and car ryover authorizations to $3,950. 092.5IMI. That is eight million dol lars more than the President orig inallv asked. Sen. II. Alexander Smith 'R XJi pushed the drive to give Ki senhower the full 200 million dol lar emergency fund. "The anti-American incidents in Latin America. Algeria. Lebanon and Indonesia emphasize the need fur an adequate emergency fund for the President's discretionary ue." Smith said. Ph. 2-47 1 9 Nation's Governors Head For Home After Meeting MIAMI BEACH. Fla. OH The nation's governors headed home ward today from their golden an niversary conference without hav ing pegged any star perfurmer for the 1960 Democratic and Repub lican presidential nominations. In four days of meetings, the governors covered subjects rang ing from the size of the National Guard to a proposal fur a White House conlerence un the reces sion. They heard Secretary of De fense McElroy and Secretary of tho Treasury Anderson explain Police Quiz Ex-Grid Star TOKYO li The Tokyo prosecu tor s office today began intensive questioning of former Yal6 foot ball star Joseph P. Crowley about the death of his brother-in-law T. A. D. Jones Jr. Crowley was questioned all aft ernoon by Prosecutor Kenjiro Fu- rukawa at metropolitan police headquarters, where he had spent the night in a cell. Crowley, a 48-year-old native of Milwaukee who had come to lo kyo with Jones to buy an oil tank er, can be held for 20 days with out charge. Police Inspector Tsu netoshi Shirakawa said he was arrested yesterday "on the suspi cion of having inflicted the injur ies which caused Jones' death.' Crowley's Japanese lawyer Ar thur K. Mori has quoted him as saying. "This whole thing is ridic ulous. ..I don't know how such a thing could happen." Jones, 45, was found dead May 8 in the hotel suite he shared with Crowley and Frederick M. Kis singer, a Maryland accounlanl. Kissinger also has been questioned at length by police. An autopsy showed Jones died from a cerebral hemorrhage linked to contusions on the left eye and near the left ear. Chief of Detectives Goroku Furuta said the body "was covered with black bruises, both eyes were blacked and his lip cut." He was the son of the late Yale Coach T. A. D. Jones and headed a New Haven business firm. Crow ley set the modern Y'ale single game scoring record of five touch downs in 1931. UAW, Clergy Hold Meeting DETROIT OTU-The United Auto Workers held a daylong meeting with seven prominent clergymen yesterday to discuss the ethical and moral aspects of the union's new contract demands, including its profit-sharing plan. - The clergymen are members of a panel invited last December by American Motors Corp. to weigh the ethical and moral principles involved in the then-upcoming ne gotiations between the UAW and that company. The clergymen said in a state ment 'incorporated in Ihe union re port of the meeting only that they appreciated the opportunity for such a meeting. Chief spokesmen for the UAW were President Walter P. Reuther and Leonard Woodcock, vice preS' ident and director of the union's General Motors Department. The discussions covered all major auto company negotiations now in prog ress. Clergymen attending the confer ence included: Rabbi Morris Ad- ler, Detroit; the Rev. Robert Fran cis Allen. Detroit: the Rev. Cam eron P. Hall, New York; Ihe Rt Rev. Msgr. George G. Higgins, Washington, D.C.: Dr. G. Merrill Lenox, Detroit; Rabbi Eugene J, Lipman, New York: and the Rev. G. Paul Musselman, New York. CANCELED TOKYO Wi The Japanese gov ernment canceled plans to imnor! 150.000 tons of soybeans from Red t hina and may buy them from thi United Stales. YOU AUTO-BUY NOW! 4 ONLY DEALERSHIP " " Executive Cars These eors are all low-mileaqe, 1958 models, equipped with Ford-O-Maric transmission, radio and heater, plus various comfort ac cessories, and different color combinations. They are being offered at EXTRA SPECIAL SAYINGS! Bring in your present car and Let's figure a deal for YOU! Ford Fairlona Club Sedan (2-door) Ford Fairlane 500 Town Victoria (4-dr. hrdtp.) Ford Fairlane 500 Club Victoria (2-dr. hrdtp.) Ford Fairlane 500 Town Sedan (4-door) BALSIGER MOTOR CO. Main ot Esplanade See or Call one of the following BALSIGER REPRESENTATIVES RESIDENCE PHONES Bill Udb.tter TU 4-744 Hugh Kidd TU 2-3265 Larry Klohn TU 4-8305 Jack Millar TU 4-4202 Mickay Cart TU 2-0475 Pat Johnion TU 4-6B49 Bob Bergman TU 2-0489 Richord Dick TU 4-J470 Al Aldrich TU 4-7424 what the federal government Is doing and why it hasn't done more to combat the business slump. But behind the scenes governor! who consider themselves available for their parly's top nomination two years from now maneuvered for position and publicity to help their cause The general opinion among those who had no national ambitions was that none of those who dis. ayed their wares made much headway in a field from which the parly nominees traditionally are chosen. Democratic Gov. Rohert B. Meyner of New Jersey, who would like to be the 1960 Democratic nominee, stumbled over a coali tion roadblock in his efforts to win the chairmanship of the confer ence. Southern Democrats and conservative Western Republicans gave the plum to Democratic Gov. Leroy Collins of Florida. This helped Collins in his ob vious bid to become a compro mise representative of the South on a I960 Democratic ticket that would avoid any showdown stand on the school segregation issue. In the Democratic ranks. Gov ernors Abraham A. Ribicoff of Connecticut and Averell Harriman of New York generally were cred ited with outshining their col leagues. Neither is considered presently available for the I960 presidential nomination. Gov. A. B. Chandler of Ken tucky said that after looking over the field of availahlcs, he is not at all embarrassed to be running openly for the I960 nomination. On the Republican side, mere was an admitted lack of presiden tial talent among GOP gover nors. They seemed generally to take it for granted that Vice President Nixon will be their parly's 11160 nominee. Republican Gov. vviiuam tr Strallon of Illinois, the retiring chairman of the conference, put out some tentative feelers for the vice presidential nomination. Al most no other Republican even touched a toe in the national waters. The cross-section feeling among the governors seemed to be that current economic conditions make it likely the Democrats will lit crease their margins in nom houses of Congress in the Novem ber elections. The governors passed up their chance to question McElroy and Anderson about economic meas ures in favor of a vigorous attack the administration's proposal to reduce the level of the National Guard from 400.000 men to 360,000. For that wonderful 21 year old feeling! If you ifeed vitamins reriwgi your system with these high-potency vfrtmini and minerals only hi doyl You must havt rich, rtd blood to fI bettor, work btur, sletp bettor. Ml bettor. If your trouble ie not (uno tiooel, but duo to vitimin or iron de fieiency pley aefe! 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