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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1958)
FAG15 4 A MARKETS and FINANCE STOCKS WALL STREET NEW YORK (AP) - A late ral ly by rails rescued a declining itoek market late Thursday and put the market up sufficiently to reach another new high for the year. Key stocks showed gains or losses of fractions to around a point. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks closed with a gain of 40 cents, putting it at a new 1958 high of $172.30. The industrials rose 40 cents and the rails $1.60, both to new 1958 highs, while util ities edged off 10 cents. NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation 9 Allied Chemical '76 Allis Chalmers 23 Vi Aluminum Co. America 67 A American Airlines 19 'i American Can 49 Vi American Cyanamide 44 Vt American Motors 13 t American Tel. & Tel. 177 V, American Tobacco 86 ',4 Anaconda Copper 45 Armco Steel 50 tt Atchison Railroad 22 V4 Bethlehem Steel 42 Boeing Airplane Co. 40 Vt Borg Warner 29 Burroughs Corp. 34 California Packing 8V Canadian Pacific 27 V Caterpillar Tractor 63 Celanese Corporation 17 Chrysler Corporation 45 Cities Service 54 Consolidated Edison . 55 14 Crown Zellerbach 53 14 Curtiss Wright 25 V4 Douglas Aircraft 59 M du Pont de Nemours 179 Eastman Kodak 106 El Paso NG 33 V4 Emerson Radio 6 Ford Motor 41 !i General Dynamics 58 General Electric 60 V4 General Foods 59 General Motors ' 39 Wt Georgia Pac Cp. 38 14 Goodyear Tire 77 International Harvester 34 Ik International Paper 99 V Johns Manville ' 37 Kaiser Aluminum t 25 Kennecott Copper ' 89 'A Libhy, McNeill 9 V4 Lockheed Aircraft 47 'i Loew's Incorporated 16 14 Montgomery Ward 35 14 Northern Pacific 39 14 Pacific Gas & Electric 58 Pacific Tel. & Tel. 134 Penney (J. C.) Co. 93 14 Pennsylvania .Railroad 12 It Pepsi Cola Co. 24 14 Philco Corp. 15 Polaroid 60 14 Puget Sound P & L 30 li Radio Corporation 34 Rayonier Incorporated 17 14 Hepubllc Steel 47 V4 Reynolds Metals 40 Richfield Oil 76 V Bafeway Stores Inc. 29 ' St. Regis 33 14 Scott Paper Company 66 Sears Roebuck It Co. 29 H Shell Oil Co. 72 Sinclair Oil 56 Socony Mobil Oil 49 14 Southern Pacific 45 li Sperry Rand 18 Vt Standard Oil California 51 Standard Oil N. J. 54 V4 Studebaker Packard 5 Swift i Company 35 li Thompson Products 48 Union Oil Company 49 Union Pacific 30 United Air Lines 27 United Corporation 8 United States Plywood 29 United States Steel 65 V Warner Pictures 19 Western Union Tel. 19 V Westinghouse Air Brake 22 14 Westinghouse Electric 57 Woolworth Company 45 lai r . v. ,"v m 111 "Mr. Hicks said if Danny stays return an xnai sugar ana nour WINDFALL LOUISVILLE, Ky. IAP1-A Cir cuit Court jury awarded Mrs. Mcttie R. Ferguson $fi,275 because a man fell through a ceiling and landed on her two years ago. Waverly Waters said ho was in specting a sprinkler system when the roof gave way. He wasn't hurt. Ml'Tl'AI, DIVOKCE HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Rhonda Fleming's stormy marriage to Dr. Lou Morrill is headed tor divorce. The actress and Morrill isjurd a Joint statement saying: "Unfor tunately we have mutually de cided to end our marnase..." The couple married six years ago. They havt no children. Editor Note: The market re ports listed below we yester day's markets, not today's, and are carried as a service to those subscribers In early de livery lonei which make pnbll catloB of dally markets impos sible within the route schedule. LIVESTOCK PORTLAND (AP) (USDA) Cattle salable 100; trade steady in cleanup of bids; utility steers 20.00-22.00; utility cows 17.00-18.00, canners and cutters 14.50-16.00. Calves salable 25; good-choice vealers steady, 25.00-9.00. Hogs: Salable 100, steady; No. 1 and 2 grade butchers 24.50-25.00; sows 18.00-21.50. 25 head good and choice 105-lb feeder pigs 25.00. bneep salable 150; spring lambs 25-50 cents lower; choice spring lambs 21.00-21.75; good spring lambs 19.00-20.50; cull-good slahgh ter ewes 3.0097.50; good-choice 7.50-9.00. STOCKTON (UPI-FSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 25. Market un tested. Calves salable 25. Market un tested. Hogs salable 25. Market un tested. Sheep salable 25. Market un tested. CHICAGO (AP) - Butcher hog prices were strong to 50 cents higher Thursday. One very small lot of 195-220 lb No. 1 grade sold at $23.75. Prices of slaughter steers grad ing average choice and below were weak to 25 cents lower. There were a. few loads and lots of good to average choice grades at $25-28.25 and a few utility and standard kinds at $23.50. - Vealers were steady to $l lower with good and choice selling at $28.31. The market for slaughter lambs was steady and active with good to choice spring lambs bringing $22-23. Salable receipts 7,000 hogs, 1,500 cattle, 100 calves, 1,000 sheep. GRAINS CHICAGO (AP) Grain futures traded within a steady to firm price range most of the time Mursclay on the Board of Trade but soybeans came under moder ate selling. Wheat closed "yi-1 cents a bushel higher. July l.MH-14: corn 'VIV4 higher, July l.i-34; oats - higher, July 62; rye -lH higher, July 1.2514-Kr, soybeans V4- lower, July 2.26; lard 5 to 23 cents a hundred pounds lower, July 12.27. WHEAT Open High Low Close Jly 1.84 1.84 1.83 1.84 Sep 1.86 '. 1.87 1.86 14 1.87 Dec 1.92 1.93 V4 1.93 1.92 14 Mar 1.95 1.97 1.95 1.96 May 1.94 1.95 y4 1.94 1.94 14 POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO (UP-FSMNS) Potatoes Long Whites U.S.1A 2-inch min imum 100 lbs Kern County 3.25 3.35. LOS ANGELES (UPI-FSMNS) potato market slightly weaker. Sales too few to quote. Arrivals: Rail 1, truck 1,200. CHICAGO (AT) Potatoes ar rivals 119. on track 357: total U.S. shipments 840. Old: Steady, car lot track sales: Idaho Russets 4.15-4.50. New: Steady; car lot track sales: California Long White 3.55-3.85; California Round Reds 3.60. B TM. tag V. f.i O. mi M t -we to lunch you don't hafta nnu aiun jwu uunuwou. SHE HEARD IT FIRST LOUISVILLE. Ky. (API-Paul Salee heard a police broadcast by short-wave radio that his daugh ter. Mrs. Marie Coleman, had been robbed. He rushed to tele phone his wife the news. Mrs. Saire already knew. She and her daughter were talking on the telephone when a man entered the loan oflice where Mrs. Cole man works and demanded the nionev. The bandit took WOO and left his rifle. TO HELP BOXERS ROSTON tl'Pi The Massachu setts Legislature has set up a fund for needy boxers. The fund will he financed by a one per cent tax on gate receipts of boxing matches, and will be administered by a five-man state board. NAACP Aide To Give Talk Kenneth Lambie. legal redress chairman of the National Associa tion for the Advancement of Col ored People in Klamath Falls, will present a report on racial and religious relations in this area Sat urday, at a public forum at Port land State College. The forum Is part of the annual civil rights meeting sponsored by the Oregon Bureau of Labor, to which Mark A. Smith, state civil rights administrator, is attached. During the forum, regional re ports will be presented by repre sentatives of other Oregon commu nities, and Labor Commissioner Norman O. Nilsen will appraise the operation of Oregon s civil rights laws. For the first time, civil rights administrators from the state of Washington will take part in the annual review of dis crimination problems. Gov. Robert D. Holmes will deliver the key note speech, and Associate Justice George Rossman of the State Su preme Court will deliver a lunch eon address on "Breaking the Barriers," the forum's 1958 theme. Purpose of the meeting Is to co ordinate efforts of organizations trying to deal with discrimination. Business, labor, education, religion and government will be represent ed, and the general public is in vited to attend. Needy Thief Hits Laundry Police officers at 1:30 a.m. to day observed the safe door ajar at the Cascade Laundry, 330 South Seventh Street and went inside to investigate. Except for -an open alley door they found all in order, locked the door, assuming it had inadvertent ly been left open, and departed. They had no way of knowing that a determined burglar, appar ently badly in need of clothes, had already done his evening's work before the police arrived. The thief escaped with a pas sable wardrobe, to wit: four shirts, six pairs of pants and a sport coat to go with them. He was also fortunate in finding a suitcase to put his loot in. The burglary was not reported until work-time this morning by Cascade employes. Investigating officers said the burglar entered the establishment from the ventilator on the alley side of the building. He managed to force the blade of a ventila tor fan to one side and crawl through, police surmised. He evidently left by the back door and forgot to close it. It was the third time in recent months that the laundry has been looted. t,, Quota Exceeded By Blood Donors Klamath Basin blood donors sparked by Masonic bodies which sponsored recruitment of the June donors for the Red Cross Bloodmobilc, exceeded the 400-pint quota by 10 pints on Wednesday and Thursday operation. The Klamath Falls visit brought 251 pints. The Merrill-Malin-Tule- lake visit gathered 159 pints to total 410. Tulelake gave 65 pints. Merrill, 85, Malln, seven, Midland one and Medford one at Merrill Thursday. The Merrill recruitment was headed by Wilbur Bnckner assisted by members of the Mcr rill Lions Club. Mother, Young Son Hurt In Auto Mishap A Santa Barbara, California, woman and her young son suf fered minor injuries Thursday af ternoon when the car in which they were riding collided with an other vehicle near the Weed Junc tion on U.S. Highway 97 immed iately south of here. Treated at the Klamath Valley Hospital were Mrs. Frances Ochoa, 31, and her son. Anthony. Investigating state police said that the vehicle driven by A. R Ochoa was southbound when a ve hicle driven by Richard H. Gal lagher pulled in front of the Ochoa car while making a turn off the highway. Gallagher was treated at Hillside Hospital for minor in juries. Police said that no citations have been issued. Siskiyou Artists Plan Exhibition YREKA Artists wishing to show their pictures and other phases of art work at the first annual art exhibition to be staged by the Sis kiyou Artists Association in Yreka for three days, June 13, 14 and 15. are being reminded by Mrs. Roy Dunham of Yreka, chairman of the receiving committee, that entry date for all phases of art work is set for Saturday and Sun day, June 7 and 8. at the Yreka Inn, between the hours of 2 and 4 r m. Plans for the art show were dis cussed at the meeting of the Siski you Artist's Association. Sunday afternoon, June 1, at the Yreka Inn. ELECTRIC MOTOR FIRE A fire in an electric motor at Walt's Tasty Foods cafe. 1029 Main Street, resulted in a run for the city fire department early this morning. Only the motor was dam aged. O Newspaper SPOT ADS are inexpensive repeated daily Me HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON A SCHOLARSHIP at Reed College, Portland, awarded to Orpha Hudson, will train her during the coming summer session for the Ford Foundation program1 for accelerated students. Miss Hudson has been a member of the Klamath Union High School faculty, teaching English for 22 years. She has accepted a position on the faculty of Washington High School in Portland. Miss Hudson has been feted with breakfasts, dinners and luncheons prior to her leaving Klamath Falls June 7 for a vacation in the South before re turning to Portland. During her years in Klamath Falls she has been active in numerous social groups, serving as pres ident of the American Association of University Women, as president of Chapter AU, PEO and as a member of the Great Bookj groups. Canine Used As Lookout WESTHAMPTON BEACH, N.Y. (AP) A young airman has been accused of using his German shep herd dog as a lookout while he committed a series of burglaries and a holdup. Charged yesterday with first- degree robbery was Airman l.C. Richard Weinert, 25, attached to the Suffolk County Air Force Base here. Weinert was one of a dozen man-dog teams which patrol the base. About three weeks ago, he reported that he and his dog chased a safe cracker. Authorities became . suspicious and began questioning Weinert. They said he admitted burglar izing quarters at the base and holding up a gas station at nearby Laiverton. total toot was put at about $1,200. Weinert assertedly taught his dog to maintain watch while he wont to work. Weinert was held in $2,500 bail for grand jury action. He has a wife, Joyce, and a small daughter in Carnegie, Okla. Driver Receives Painful Injuries A driver whom witnesses said was apparently in too big a hurry received painful injuries Thurs day when his car went out of con trol at Sixth and Broad streets and rammed into a parked truck trailer. Nicolas T. Murillo, 1317 Adams Street, was taken to Klamath Val ley Hospital by Peace Ambulance and treated for a dislocated right hip. Police investigating the mishap said bystanders told them Murillo. driving a 1951 sedan, turned off South Sixth Street onto Broad Street apparently in too big a hurry. ' The right front of his car crashed into the left rear of a trailer operated by O.N.C. Fast Freight. The trailer was damaged only slightly, police said, but Mil rillo's car may be a total wreck. Transient Said Heart Victim A li?.t'nspj,M IraneiAnl ...... I......,! dead in the Southern Pacific yards by employes Thursday morning. 1 viivu who investigated ine rirrnmctanrnc eaiH lharn n.nD evidence of foul play. Death could nHve come irom a neart attack or other natural causes, they added. ine deceased was identified as BraXtOn Rrfl(- n natit-o nf T.,n. He was found by Solomon Alvard. 4550 Winters Street, between two rail cars just south of the overpass. HOME BURGLARIZED On Thursday afternoon the state police took into cuslndv (urn youths who reportedly broke into ine nonie ot thanes R. Clark. 1864 Gary Street. The material taken was not immediately known. The two youths. 12 and is old. were turned over to county ju.riiutf nwnoriucs. AUCTION SALE Buildings June 10, 1958, at 9:00 A.M. Th Kill Hlthwtv ramtnUil.n will ttlrr fr U VMt tin ! Jn 111, lt it im A M. lh former Os nlU rlih in 9 mnH mmt liH-alrtl it tti Junction r The nIUt-rtlifrli Hlfhwiy in lh Crtn Kprlnc Hlfhwav, ipprailmattlr thru- mlltt talh ( Kltmtth Fall. flrr. The ) will b htlJ U premises. TIKM OF SAI.Er rh ! Mm ( ail. AH f W rmranT lh irrMt(ul Msj. The ahava bUdlnn b tU t lh hltb- l tlr at pahltr a art I an with th rlfhl rrf4 ! rajwl anr or all MU RalltJint mnt h rvmavrtl within M 4ar f ilf. ( antall ymr matar prlar la the tal date rfar4ln( permit far FOR INFORMATION: W. H. Hatkin. Property Mgr., Star Highway Blrfg., Sattm. Weather Table By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Friday Max. Min. Prep. Baker 83 54 Redmond 79- 53 .40 Eugene 74 55 .05 Lakeview 73 48 .03 Medford 81 57 .04 Newport 63 56 .10 North Bend 68 57 .04 Pendleton 89 64 Portland Airport 92 61 .14 Roseburg 79 57 .03 Spokane 83 65 Oregon Weather Western Oregon Partial clear ing and a few scattered showers Friday night. Cloudy Saturday morning, becoming partly sunny during afternoon with a chance of a few light showers. Low Friday Bight 50-56. High Saturday 65-75. Mostly westerly coastal winds 10- 20 miles on hour. Eastern Oregon Partly cloudy through Saturday with a few aft' ernoon showers or thundershow- ers. Cooler Friday night with low 45-55: high Saturday from 70-75 in south to about 80 in north. Northern Oregon Beaches Scat tered showers and partial clearing periods through Saturday, temper ature range 53-67. Southerly to southwesterly beach winds 8-16 miles an hour. Fire Weather Partly cloudy to cloudy with a few showers Fri day night and scattered showers Saturday. Humidity 40 to 50 per cent Saturday except mostly above 50 per cent in the north. Grants Pass and vicinity Most ly cloudy with occasional showers Friday nieht and Saturday. Low Friday night 47-52; high baturday 70-75. Baker and vicinity Partly cloudy with scattered showers Fri day night and Saturday; thunder- showers Saturday afternoon and evening. Low Friday night 42-50 high both days 68-76. Vote System Scored By State Secretary SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) California's ballot counting sys tem is archaic and should be over hauled, says Secretary of State Frank M. Jordan. It is pitiful that in a mechan ized age, days must go by before the public knows the outcome of an election, said Jordan. He singled out Los Angeles County, where only half the bal lots had been counted 36 hours after the polls closed. Voters there and in most of California, hand mark their ballots. CAMPING' EXPEDITION A rnnn!(i nf nnrps nf crass, north ,,.ccl nt rlnrnmnnt Street, hltrned nftprnnon as a result of a "camping expedition by two r,.iii hni-c top ruv nrp depart ment put out the blaze which started when the boys' campfire got out of control. The only dam age was to ine ooys equipment BUHACH Best for nsecf Pests Aon, RoicbH, Btdtmits or MoiquitM ground lh houK Fkji 00 cat ot dot ucc on pliotl or oirai. toil or birds. BUHACH B Sun You Cf Wiy T Wit fcoaenrltal Wilson Trial Starts Monday Trial of suspended Klamath Falls Policeman John Wilson, 26. accused of assault with a danger ous weapon, gets under way in circuit court here Monday. The first day or two in the court room will be consumed with selection of a jury, with District Attorney Arthur Beddoe and De fense Counsel Pete Driscoll ques tionine DrosDective veniremen. Wilson has been indicted by the grand jury op charges he beat a 51-year-old man on the KFJI hill during the late evening of rovem- ber 3. The man, Clyde Cloud, was found on the hill the next morn ing and taken to Klamath Valley Hospital where he was treated tor shock, a broken arm and broken Wilson and another policeman, Floyd Pierce, admitted taking Cloud up to the hill "so he could leave town," but denied beating him. No charges were brought against Pierce. Wilson, suspended from the force pending outcome of the trial, has been free on $2,500 bail. His trial originally began Jan uary 8, but ceased the next day when his attorney, Ben Goddard, died of a heart attack. Tax Return Expenses Cut SEATTLE (AP) Uncle Sam figures he has lopped nearly four million dollars off the amount he spends each year helping taxpay ers prepare their income tax re turns. O. Gordon Delk, deputy com missioner of internal revenue, said today the saving has been made possible through a program of tax payer education. In a speech prepared for the Western Regional Conference of the Controllers Institute of Amer ica, Delk said: "In the 1955 filing period, . 14.600.000 individuals sought Internal Revenue Service help in making out their returns. For the 1958 period, the figure dropped to 11 million." Three years ago, he added, the service spent an estimated $6,800, 000 in assigning 12.000 employes to help taxpayers. This year, he said, only 7,300 employes were needed for the job and costs fell to less than three million dollars. The educational program has uv eluded books, pamphlets, publicity and the assistance of lawyers, and accountants in telling in simple language how to file tax returns. Pedestrian Hit By Automobile A 45-year-old Grants Pass man was struck down by an auto at Sixth and Lark Street yesterday afternoon. Taken to Klamath Valley Hos pital by Peace Ambulance was C. A. McFarland, who was later transferred to Hillside Hospital where his condition is good today Arrested by police was Sherman M. Carter, 40, a switchman of rural Klamath Falls, who was driving the car. He was charged with failing to yield the right of way to a pedes trian and is scheduled to appear in municipal court this afternoon He was freed on $50 bail. Crash Victim Continues Gain A "slight improvement" in the condition of DeWayno Pruett, 5, Searcy, Arkansas, was reported this morning at Klamath Valley Hospital. DeWayne is the youngest victim of Monday morning's truck auto crash on Mt. Hebron, that cost two lives. The condition of Don W. Baker, 40, 735 North Second Street, who was run over by a truck Tuesday morning, was reported "about the same" today at Klamath Valley Hospital. Yesterday. Baker showed "slight improvement" over the "fair" condition ascribed to him previously. Good Reading for the Whole Family News Facts Family Features Th Chriition Scttnct Monitor Or Norway St., Boston 15, Most. Send your ntwipoptr for tht tima ehecktd. Cncio4d find my hek or monajy ordtr. I ytor $18 Q 6 month S7 3 months $4.50 Slot Fl-lf Obituaries Funeral arrangements are pend- Klamatn fans "' .Miller, resident of Ashland, who died June 4 in that cuy. "' ors include his widow, Mrs. Jenny Miller, Ashland; a son, Jack, in Greenland; d a u g h t e r s, Betty. Great Falls. Montana, mcia Alice in Ashland; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Miller: a broth er Flovd Miller. aU of Ashland; and a sister, Thelma Hollenbeck, Fort Dix, New Jersey. Farigrounds Dance Slated vDt-ifA A naceant and dance scheduled for Saturday. June 7, at the Siskiyou County r airgi uu..u. in Vrpta will he highlighted with the appearance of 14 of Siskiyou's loveliest girls, one of whom will be chosen as "Miss Siskiyou. Thi event annually sponsored by the coordinating council of the Siskiyou County Chamber of Com merce, will be held in the Arts and Crafts Building at the fair grounds starting at 8 p.m. The ad mission fee being charged will be used towards transportation costs to send Miss Siskiyou to compete at the California state fair in the "Maid of California contest, held in Sacramento later tnis summer. Those who have already eniercn to represent their area in the coun tv anH their sDonsors are: Pat Ynuns. Dunsmuir Chamber of Commerce; Barbara Franklin, Etna Lions Club; Edith Muma, McCloud Service Club; Dee Salan ti, Mt. Shasta Chamber of Com merce who are also sponsoring Prudence Penny, and Barbara Day. Linda Rawhauser, Hornbrook, sponsor Company L, 184th Infan try National Guard; Rita Cross, Weed, Sons of Italy; Lorna Andre atta, Weed Chamber ot Com merce: Susan Sura. Tulelake Vet erans of Foreign Wars; Barbara Manney. Yreka Chamber of Com merce; Linda Veale, Fort Jones, Scott Valley Boosters; Evelyn De- Soza, Grenada, Yreka Hign acnooi student council; and Norma Stru ble. Dorris VFW Auxiliary. Contest chairman, Charles O'Donnell of Yreka, stated that tickets to the pageant and dance may be obtained .cither at the Red Cross Office on Miner Street, Yreka, or at the Yreka Chamber of Commerce at the Yreka City Hall Longtime KF Man Dies Suddenly A longtime resident of Klamath Falls, Walter F. Bethune Sr., 75, died unexpectedly about 3:30 p.m. Thursday, June 5. Mr. Bethune became ill at the family home, 529 North Ninth Street, was taken to Hillside Hospital by Peace Ambu lance but was dead upon arrival. He had not been previously ill. He had been employed for many years in the lumber industry and was associated with J. W. Fisher, logging contractor, prior to his death. He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church and of the Masonic Lodge of Glenmora. Louisiana. He was a native of Aberdeen, North Carolina, Survivors include the widow, Mrs. Hazel Bethune, this city; two sons, Lauchlin W. Bethune, Red ding, and Dr. W. F. Bethune Jr., Qswego. Oregon: one daughter, Mrs. James M. Hunt, Medford: a sister, Mrs. W. H. Huntsberger, Marshall, Texas, and seven grand children. Mr. and Mrs. Bethune had planned tojnove in the near future to Oswego. Funeral services will be an nounced by O'Hair's Memorial Chapel. Model Cl-1358 116 lb. FREEZE 11 w.(t. TOTAL STORAGE U----r:.--- -- Huge Trade-in Jamboree! This Week Only NORGE PROMOTION 3 STAR PLAN NO DOWN PAYMENT NO PAYMENTS FOR 90 DAYS 36 MONTHS TO PAY Payment Protection Bond Protects You J. W. 734 So. 6th FRIDAY. JUNE 6, 195a Ex-Con Draws 8 Year Term An ex-convict who has snout more than half his life in prison for writing bad checks drew another eight-year stretch here yesterday in circuit . court for the same of. fense. The confessed forger, Denver R. Fitzgerald, had pled guilty to writing a bogus $47 check and cashing it here in 1955. He could not be held to answer for his crime until he had com pleted a term in the Nevada Stan Penitentiary. Authorities brought him back here from Carson City June 2. Fitzgerald, who is 47 'years old, began his check writing career in Louisiana and received his first prison sentence there in 1927. Since that year he has been in and out of penitentiaries constantly in such states as Texas, Montana, California, Nevada and Oregon all for the same crime, forgery. Also sentenced by Judge David R. Vandenberg yesterday was Don. aid Teague, who confessed to cashing a $20 check at a local gas station in May, 1957, on a non existent account. Teague, who was returned hen from the Nevada prison with Fitz. gerald, received five years in the Oregon penitentiary at Salem. When he is released from there, authorities in Lane County, Ore gon, and the state of Utah hare warrants for his arrest on check writing charges, authorities said. By Jock Myers It Don Robin From all reports, the pickings may not be quite so easy for this year's graduates as they have been in the past few years. How ever, that's no reason to head for a hideout. Opportunity still exists . . . as it always has. Like a fellow sorting blackberries in a coal mine, you just have to look a little harder. There is always room at the top . . . only you have to start at the bottom to get there, unless you happen to have a relative who owns the business. Anybody who hit the pavement from high school or college during the Big Depression will tell you that times are still plenty good compared to those days. If you're willing to work and jletermined to get ahead, nothing will stop you. Good luck . . . and good hunting! See the all new Austin Healey Sprite on display now in our show room . An old Chinese proverb says: "Those who have free seats at the play hiss first." It might be well if a lot of us remembered that before we criticize someone else. Of course it's wise to be critical in the selection of products to know why we prefer certain goods. iou can be sure of getting the quality you want when you come in to see us for that new car in your life. We feature the Morris Minor 1000, the MGA, the MG Magnette, and the Austin-Healey 100-6. If quality of workmanship and econ omy of operation add up to pleas urable driving to you, come in and talk with us . . . test drive one of these wonderful cars. We carry a complete stock of parts to avoid delay in service. ROBIN & MYERS 1200 East Main Ice Dispenses Automat ically! Clear, dry cubes drop into handy basketl Shelves and Crisper Swing Out I Put all food at your fingerfipsl Shelves Adjust Even Whan Fully Laadedl No need to remove, unload. KERNS Phone TU 4-4197 il