Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 31, 1958, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    SUNDAY. AUGUST 31. 1958
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE 3 A
! I . ' ' viv
t I y ' J
l ;
SUSAN PERRY. 16. a junior at Tulelake High School is
In the running for the erown of the 1958 Tulelake-Butte
Valley Fair, and only contestant with red-gold hair. She it
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Perry, Tulelake. Her
sponsor is the Newell Grain Growers Association. She
will be present with the other three entrants at the free
dance sponsored by Tulelake Post VFW on September I
where the new queen will be crowned.
Tree Planting
Signup Slated
By JACK C. MACE
Service Forester
Oregon Slate Board of Forestry
Farmers planning to plant for
est trees in 1959 under the Con
servation Reserve Program, must
sign up Between the dates of Sep
tember 2 and October 3.
Rates have been substantially in
creased for 1959. Farmers retir
ing cultivated ground for the pur
pose of planting forest trees, may
receive up to $25 per acre per
year for a period of 10 years. The
annual rate received by the farm
er will depend upon the produc
tivity of the farm.
This program gives the farmer
an excellent opportunity to start
a young forest, be it for timber
or Christmas trees, receiving a
reasonable rental for the land dur
ing the 10 year contract period.
Upon expiration of the contract.
the farmer may manage his for
est as he sees fit.
Many tree plantings established
in 1957 and 1958 under the Con
servation Heserve urogram, are
making satisfactory growth. Own
ers realize that trees, like any
other crop, require reasonable
care for survival.
Farmers interested in convert
ing land, now growing crops, to
trees should contact their county
agricultural stabilization and con
servation manager. Farmers are
reminded that the final signup
date for 1959 planting is October
3, 1958. The ASC office for Klam
ath County is located in the Tow
er Theater Building. South Sixth
Street, Klamath Falls: the Lake
County office is located on the
Klamath Falls highway, west of
Lakeview.
Business News
By FLORENCE JENKINS
John F. Moehl, local manager of Only one bid received by Rich-
Car-Ad-Co Company here for the
last 10 years, has resigned from
the firm and announces his asso
ciation with Modoc Lumber Co.,
112 No. 5th St., Klamath Falls.
. . . Moehl started with Carr &
Young Co., at Des Moines, 24
years ago and moved to Klamath
Falls 10 years ago in March.
. . . Richard L. Wendt, who came
to Car-Ad-Co a year ago last Feb
ruary from Carr, Adams & Col
lier Co., Dubuque, Iowa, and has
been manager of the Car-Ad-Co
frame factory, will replace Moehl
as Car-Ad-Co manager ... the
Moehls are on vacation at the
Oregon Coast this week.
Fremont Grocery is moving
from 18 Nevada to a brand new
brick building at 224 Nevada. . . .
Harvey and Edna Bowman, own
ers of the market, say the new
retail grocery will carry a com
plete line of picnic supplies, meats,
groceries, beverages and fishing
tackle and ammunition ... the
building will occupy 1700 square
feet and C. C. Fraley is adapting
Bowman's plans ... the market
is the last stop for picnickers.
campers and fishermen driving to
Upper Klamath Lake spots and
serves the north end motel and
residential area . . . ample black-
topped parking will be a feature
and the grand opening is slated
for about Sept. 20.
Major Car Maker Planning
Small Car Model For 1959
By JACK VANDENBERG
UPI Automotive Editor
DETROIT (UPI) At least one
euto maker will be partly tooled
up for "trial run" production of
an American small ear by the end
of December, according to auto in
dustry suppliers.
The men who supply machine
tools to the automobile manufac
turers reported that the Chevrolet
division of General Motors already
has placed orders for equipment to
First Fall
Meeting Set
The first September meeting of
Klamath Falls Soroptimist Club
will he held on Thursday noon,
September 4, in the Camas Room
of the Winema Hotel.
Jim Bovle. Oregon Tech instruc
tor who was named early this year
as Oregon Centennial chairman for
Klamath and Lake counties, will
sneak on Klamath's part in the
100th anniversary of the state,
An original Centennial song,
composed by Marie Obenchain, will
he snne hv James Chance, prin
cipal of Merrill High School, ac
companied by Miss Obenchaim
At Thursday s meeting, Edna Al
brecht, president of the Klamath
Falls club, gave highlights of the
Soroptimists' national convention
held early in July at Houston, Tex
as. One of the things specifically
stressed at the convention was the
Importance of the exchange stu
dent program and its effect on
harmony among nations. Another
speaker discussed world peace and
cited constructive efforts of some
organizations toward that goal.
Sue Thompson presented three
vocal numbers, accompanied by
her voice teacher, Eloise Mclntyre.
be used in production of a small
car. Chevrolet asked for delivery of
the equipment during December,
they said.
This Indicates Chevrolet could
kick off the 1960 model year with
its small car at a date much ear
lier than had been previously reported.
These reports had said the auto
companies might introduce small
cars in the fall of 1959. But the
machine tool suppliers said their
orders indicated Chevrolet will not
wait that long,
Ford also is getting ready to
turn out a small car, the suppliers
West Coast serves 44 cities in
Washington, Oregon and Idaho.
Highway Suit
Tops Docket
The State Highway Commission
has filed another condemnation
suit for property needed for the
west side bypass of U.S. 97. The
latest suit filed with the county
clerk is for a corner of a lot at
250 Conger Avenue owned by Ju
lian and Peggy Eceles.
Other suita on file:
Dorothy M. Waldo seeks $1,000
cioneral Hamaces and $123 special
damages allegedly incurred when
she was knocked down and bitten
by a dog owned by Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Johnson.
Jess W. Bailey seeks from F.1-,
mer Choules and wife, Kenneth E.
Bailey and Helen C. Bailey one
half of the profits and rentals from
a five-unit motel of which Jess
Bailey alleges he is part owner.
Carter's Collection Agency vs.
Doris F. Cluff, also known as Dor
is F. Vernon, for $91.77 allegedly
due 10 city business firms and
doctors.
Airline Talks
Are Resumed
SEATTLE (AP) Negotiations
between representatives of West
Coast Airlines and the Air Lines
Pilots' Assn. continued Saturday
under the direction of Federal
Mediator Robert O. Boyd.
ine talks in the long running
dispute were resumed here Thurs
day, just days short of the dead
line of the 30-day cooling off"
period which began when the com
pany rejected arbitration upon
breakdown in negotiations Aug. 1
Boyd said the current negotia
tions were "progressing" and
probably would continue next
week.
At issue in the dispute are
wages, hours, working conditions,
pensions, and the operation of six
F-27 turhft-nrnn let Airliners which
said. But it is not as close to the the company plans to put into
production stage as Chevrolet, service soon
Chrysler seems to be making no
overtures toward the small car
field, apparently content to let its
wealthier competitiors take the ini
tial gamble.
Not even Chevrolet and Ford are
fully convinced yet that an Ameri
can small car will be a success.
But an economist for one of the
"Big Three" said:
"It's beginning to look as if we'll
build the thing even though we ex
pect a flop."
Ford and Chevrolet are trying to
keep costs low on the "trial runs"
of small cars by reclaiming old
machines from stockpiles. Both
plan to limit initial production until
the small cars prove salesworthy.
Suppliers reported Chevro
let's small car engine lines at Mas
sena, N.Y., will be tagged for pro
duction of about 70 units per hour.
Ford plans production of about
150,000 units annually at its Lor
ain, onio, assemmy piani, mey
said.
Chevrolet s all-aluminum engine
will have six cylinders in a hori
zontally opposed position, three
on each side, a system which is
more efficient but less powerful.
It will be air cooled, eliminating
the need for a heavy water jacket
and further increasing economy.
On the Chevrolet the engine will
be in the rear but the Ford will
keep its in front, the suppliers reported.
This means cnevroiet styling
will resemble the Renault Dau-
phine while Ford will use Thun
derbird styling.
Both models, if they reach the
public, will be larger and plusher
than European small cars but
smaller and more stripped down
than current American models.
The wheelhase of the Chevrolet
will be about 104 inches, almost
a foot and a half more than the
Dauphine, and Ford will build on a
106-inch wheelbase. Both will ex
periment with g'eatly simplified
two-speed transmissions.
Suppliers report that the manu
facturers are likely to make their
final decision on whether to actual
ly produce the small cars after
they get the public's reaction to
new styling and some small econ
omv moves in the standard 1959
models.
A quarterly cash dividend of 30
cents per share on its common
stock, payable Sept, 29 to stock
holders of record at close of busi
ncss on Sept. 3 was declared last
week by the board of directors of
Fibreboard Paper Products Cor
poration ... the regular quarterly
dividend of $1 per share on the
four per cent cumulative conver
tible preferred stock was also de
clared, payable Oct. 15, to stock
holders of record at the close of
business Oct. 1.
Specialized Service Co., 1434
Main St., will hold a series of in
formation sessions for the men
who sell the lines wholesaled by
Specialized ... on the theory that
the bosses usually get the free
eats and entertainment and the
sales force gets information on the
products secondhand (besides
missing the feods) . . . better in
formed salesmen will mean better
service to the public and, natur
ally, more profit for the bosses
. . . the first meeting will co
incide with the regular Sept. 5
ard Schulte. purchasing and con
tracting officer, 408th F i gh te r
Group. Kingsley Field, Friday at
10 a.m. for applying asphalt stabi
lized sand seal to P.O.L. diked
areas at Kingsley Field, lnv. No.
59-3. . . . A. H. Patterson entered
a bid of $13,324 . . . award is
under advisement.
Bids will be opened at 7:30 n.m..
Sept. 8, by the Klamath Falls citv
council for improvement of Van
Ness and Hawthorne, Improve
ment Unit. 143 .. . plans and spec
ifications with Police Judge Frank
A. Rlackmer.
Bid opening will be 2 p.m.. Sent.
18, by Dale Goode, clerk of Klam
ath County school district, Veter
ans Memorial Bldg., for installa
tion of approximately 700 lineal
feet of 42-inch either concrete or
steel pipe at the Stearns School
site, at Crest and Laverne streets,
Klamath Falls.
Medo-Land Creamery Co.. has
been named an authorized distrib
utor by Golden Guernsey. Inc.,
here. . . . Walter T. (Bud) Frank
lin, local manager, signed a con
tract with Golden Guernsey after
me dairy quaiuied to sell Guernsey
products under the two national
trademarks, Golden Guernsey
M-V and Gurn-Z-Gold. . . . Golden
Guernsey. Inc.. is a milk market
ing organization established by the
American Guernsey Cattle Club,
non-protit agricultural registry as
sociation. Oregon Agricultural Chemicals.
Inc., Tulelake, is taking the lead
in developing brush and weed con
trol programs in Alaska . . . the
firm already has nroirrams
mrougnout Northern California
Oregon and Washington. . . ,
W. E. Greene, president accom
panied by his son, John Greene,
is back from three weeks in Alas
ka .. . surveys were made of the
White Pass & Yukon Route Rail
road, the Alaska Railroad and cur
rent projects under construction by
the Bureau of Public Roads at
Juneau, Fairbanks, Anchorage,
Glennallen and Cordova. . . .
Greene was guest speaker at the
annual meeting of the Alaska Tel
ephone Association at Juneau and
at a meeting of the Alaska Rural
Llectric Association at Homer.
Crash Ruined
Explorer V
By ALTOV BLAKESLEE
Associated Press Science Writer
AMSTERDAM (AP) - A high
aijtj'je collision between parts of
its rocket units ruined the launch
ing of Explorer V. Dr. Wernher
von Braun reported to world
astronauis today.
The first stage booster rocket
had separated after burnout when
gases and liquids remaining in it
expanded in the vacuum of space
and gave it a little extra thrust,
Von Braun said.
This sped it up so it hit the in
strument part of the rocket,
knocking the final stages off in the
wrong direction from an orbit. All
three remaining stages of the
rocket had fired perfectly.
Von Braun, the German-born di
rector of U.S. Army rocketry, said
special precautions were being
taken to avoid recurrences of
this most unlucky incident."
Explorer V was sent aloft from
Cape Canaveral, Fla last Sunday
morning. The military usually
does not announce the technical
reasons for failures and has dis
closed nothing on this one up to
now. But it sent word to Von
Braun, who has been in Amster
dam all week.
He presented a 90-minute de
tailed and technical report on all
phases of Explorer satellites at
the closing day of the 9th annual
assembly of the International As
tronautic Federation.
r.j . . j
I i ) -
w S
Demos Launch
For Hatfield
A "Democrats For Hatfield"
group has been launched in Klam
ath Falls with the naming of
Fred Lewis as chairman and G. B
Leach as vice chairman. Both are
active in Democratic circles.
Lewis, who is president of the
South Suburban Sanitation District
is a member of the Klamath
County Chamber of Commerce
Board of Directors. He has been
active in the grange and other lo
cal organizations and is associate
owner of the Lewis Manufacturing
Company.
The new vice chairman is own
er of the Leach Service Company.
In a joint statement, they com
mented, "After long and careful
consideration we have decided that
Secretary of State Mark O. Hat
field is one ot the most outstand
ing candidates ever to run for the
office of governor in Oregon. His
experience and record In the House
and Senate and more recently as
secretary of state has proven that
Mark Hatfield is truly a states
man. He has further shown his
ability to economize and at the
same time run an efficient gov
ernment as secretary of state. He
has also shown complete equality
in distributing taxes. We publicly
endorse him for governor of Ore
gon." The spokesman for the "Demo
crats For Hatfield," state that
there will be further announce
ments made by Democrats wish
ing to work for Republican Secre
tary of State Hatfield.
A new divisional organization of
Weyerhaeuser Timber Co. called
Silvatek Products Group comes
into being on Sept. 1 ... its func
tion includes distribution tn and
meeting of the Klamath Falls Gas- servicing all customers of hard
oline Dealers Association. . . . board, particle board, olv-veneer.
Area Enjoys
July Gains
July was a good month for build
ing and banking in Klamath Falls,
the University of Oregon reported
today.
Building permits for the month
amounted to $199,949 worth of con
struction, compared with $148,325
for July 1957, the university said
July 1958 figures included $169.
314 for non-residence construction.
$21,500 for now homes, and $9,135
for additions and repairs.
Five banks in Klamath and
Lake counties reported $31,017,550
in debits for July, an increase of
6.6 per cent over last June. The
figure, however, was 4.6 per cent
down from debits -in July 1957.
Over the state, the university
noted an increase of 13.7 per cent
in building permits, comparing
July 1958 with July 1957, and a
similar increase of 4.4 per cent in
bank debits.
SHARON ANN COMER, 15-year-old daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon Comer of Dorris, is a candidate for barley
queen of the Tulelake-Butte Yalley Fair, which will be held
from September 6 to 8. Sharon ii sponsored by the Butte
Valley Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary.
Forest Sale Program Set
YREKA William Gcrson, tim-lBukor Point, North Scott. S: West
ber management officer, reported Branch. Happy Camp, 14: and Doe-
Specialized will put on the dinner
and after the dealers business
meeting, a specialist from out of
town, Harry Kraus, from Du-
Pont s Portland office, will nis
cuss the need for winterizing au
tomobiles in this area and will
hold a question and answer pe
riod. . . . Robert E. Rutler, sales
man for Specialized, will introduce
the speaker.
Ed Lyon, who came from Ne
braska to Klamath Falls in 1940,
is a new salesman with Southern
Oregon Realty Co., 119 So. 6th
St., according to Bob Jones, own
er of the firm. . . . Lyon pre
viously was with State Farm
Mutual Insurance and has had
automotive and realty selling experience.
William A. Wlcst Jr., of Chilo-
quin, is a new field representative
for Loyal Protective Lile lnsur
ance Co., and has just returned
from Loyal s home office in Bos
ton where he attended a week's
underwriting conference ... the
firm has been a member of the
insurance industry since 1895. .
Wiest was formerly an assistant
to the Klamath Indian Manage
ment Specialists.
THEY BECOME PATIENTS
PATTERSON, N. J. IUPH The
maternity wing of St. Joseph's Hos-
piiai is losing lour nurses but get
ting them right back again. The
obstetrical nurses begin maternity
leaves over the Labor Day week
end nut all plan to have their ba
bies at St. Joseph's.
LIBRARY HOURS
End of summer hours at the city
lihrarv has been announced by Ad-
die Mae Nixon, librarian. Effec
tive Tuesday, the library will close
at 9 p.m. daily, instead of 8 p.m.
Opening hours will continue to be
in a.m.. Monday through Satur
day, and 2 p.m.. Sunday. The li
harv will be closed Labor Day.
THEY GOT LOST
JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) News
men who went along on a moon
shine raid Friday had as much
trouble as the moonshiners. A pho
tographer got lost in the woods
and it took officers two hours to
find him. A reporter was so un
sure where he got his story that
he datclined it "Somewhere in
Hinds County."
KLAMATH
KINDERGARTEN
ENROLL NOW!
Dtllr, W'tklr. r Monthly Rbicb
211 ait Moin
IU J..w, Til 4-Mlt. ar
TU -
Frank Gilchrist, Gilchrist Lumber
Co.. is new district vice president
of the recently formed Associated
Oregon Industries ... the 12 busi
ness leaders from the Eastern Ore
gon district No. 2 will serve with
48 others representing 500 busi
ness firms in Oregon . . . districts
are 6et up to correspond with con
gressional districts. . . . Columbia
Emnire Industries and the torest
industries group merged to form
the new association. . . . AOl
will represent Oregon industry
generally in governmental and
public relations . . . local director
is William Whelan, Klamath Ma
chine & Locomotive Works .
two directors named from Bend
are William Niskanen, Oregon
Trail Box Co., and Freeman
Schultz, Brooks-Scanlon Lumber
Co.
silvacon and Silvacel ... in fact.
all those products outside the tra
ditional fields of lumber, plywood
pulp, paperboard and containers.
Ground will be broken Tues
day for the initial $2 million
phase of an eventual $15 million
petroleum refinery at Van
couver, Wash., by Pacific Cooper
atives, wholesale supply organiza
tion for 70.000 Pacific Northwest
farm families in 120 local mem
ber associations in Oregon, Wash
ington, Idaho, western Montana
and Utah ... the refinery, with
a capacity of 15.000 barrels daily,
will be of the latest engineering
design for efficient processing of
petroleum, according to Charles
Baker, Walla Walla, general man
ager . . . site is a 110-acre tract
the pipeline system will car
ry crude oil from the tankers to
the refinery and petroleum prod
ucts back to the Columbia River
for barge transportation to inland
points.
Oregon has no finalists in Pills-
bury's 10th annual Grand Nalional
Baking Contest to be held in New
York City's Waldorf Astoria Hotel
on Sept. 22. . . . Irene Dunn, film
star, will present the $25,000 prize
and name the Cook of the Year
0
Today's typical housewife has 25
or more electrical appliances
worth more than $3,000. according
to a Sears, Roebuck & Co. sur
vey . . . that company spends ap
proximately $52 million nationally
to maintain 7500 service technicians
in some 1200 locations and has $25
million worth of repair parts on
hand to back up and supply ils
service organization. . . . "The
quiet hum of a motor in the homo
of 1958 means less work and more
leisure time for the homcmaker
. . . for the retailers of the nation,
it means that their responsibility to
service the goods they sell will
continue long past the date of pur
chase," the report concludes.
-0
In the same mail comes word
that the average American family
buys about 3.5 pairs of shoes
Tuesday Opening
For Happy Camp
HAPPY CAMP Registration for
the Happy Camp High School will
begin at 8:30 the morning of Sep
tember 2 and the cafeteria will
open September 3, according to
William Freeman, principal of the
school.
New teachers at Ihe high school
are Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bice, who
are from Oklahoma. Bice will be
head basketball and track coach
and assistant football coach. He
will Iso instruct social studies.
Mrs. Bice will be the now home-
making instructor with additional
courses in girl's physical educa
tion and public speaking.
Elementary school will also he-
gin on September 2, but only for
one half day, starting at 9 a m
Lunches will pcgin to be served on
September 3 also.
Tentative schedule for grammar
school teachers is as follows:
.Mrs. Lucille Freeman, kindergar
ten; Mrs. Juno Long and Mrs
Genevieve Gordon, first grade:
Mrs. Aurelia Fowler, second
grade; Mrs. Bea Filzer, third
grade: Mrs. Anne Lawton, fourth
grade; Mrs. Josephine Aubrey,
filth grade; Mrs. Lve Copeland
sixth grade; Wesley Morgan, sev
enth grade; and Lloyd Tucker,
eighth grade.
Mrs. lone Roth and Mrs. Cody
Atleberry will be in charge of the
cafeteria.
New teachers are Mr. Tucker
and Mrs. Long, who came to Hap
py Camp from Chico; Mr. Mor
gan, Los Angeles; and Mrs. Law-
ton. Hayfork.
Any child who has been unable
to register prior to this time will
be able to register tho first day
of school.
the Klamath National Forest Serv
ice budget will not allow a calendar-year
1958 sale program of 200
million board feet, and the forest
will have to revert back to a 1958-
59 fiscal year quota of 170 million
board feet.
During a timber operator's meet
ing earlier in the year the officials
of the forest had expressed their
hope for a 200 million sale quota
lor the calendar year,
In spite of budgetary curtailment
this leaves the sale program about
as it has been the past two years.
According to Gerson. the actual
cut in the fiscal year ending June
30 had. at 153 million board feet.
been the highest in the history of
the forest, climbing steadily from
a 10 million cut in the fiscal year
ot 1B48.
As of July 1, Gerson said, the
forest also had 221 million board
feot under contract for culling un
dcr accumulated past- bid awards,
In preparation for timber sales
in fiscal 195!), July 1, 1958 to June
30, 1959, the forest has been a!
lowed $34,000, or 22.1 cents per
thousand board feet. The budget of
$93,000 is set for administration of
sales program, and includes check
ing out the logs, as they are cut.
and supervision of conservation
practices.
Sales to be made during the cur
rent fiscal year include (in mil
lion board feet): Fall season
Ti Creek No. 3, Somes Bar work
ing circle, 21.7; Dry Lake, Happy
Camp, 15; Jessup No. 2, Salmon,
15.
Late Fall Elk Branch.
Camp, 15; Schutts Gulch,
Creek, 5.
Spring Grider No. 3
gett, Yrcka, 7.
June Iamup No. 1, Salmon,
15: Willow Creek, Ball Mountain,
12; and Mill No. 3, Happy Camp,
6.
Units sold since March 24 meet
ing include Besa No. 2. Low Gap.
Carter Meadows, West Fork, Clear
Creek No. 2, Milk Creek, McKin.
ney No. 2, Canyon Creek, West
China, Rock Creek No. 1, Ball
Mountain. Copco Salvage, Malone
No. 1, Fish Lake, Bull Meadows,
No. 1. Two units are substitutions,
and additional insect salvage and
other unscheduled units have been
sold, according to Gerson.
The average, low and high
prices received for the various
species in that order were ponder-
osa pine, $17.60, $6.35 and $33.65;
sugar pine, $18.30, $8.90, and $34:
white and red fir, $5.65, $1.75 ana
$14.30; Douglas fir. $14.95, $3.95,
and $27; and incense cedar, $2.85,
$1.75 and $6.25.
Happy
Horse
Seiad,
15; Dona No. 1, Horse Creek, 4;
World's Only
Fully Auto.ni tic Cleonei
ELCT3U1X'
Factory-Aiithorttfd An lei arid Harvlot
TARKEL TWEET
Ph. 4-7167 2550 Whit St.
Based on total miles traveled.
three times as many highway fa
talities occur at night as during
daylight hours.
In this push-button age your child
nec-di a challenge . , a goal t
work f or . comothlng to stim
ulato hl Industry and inltla'-ve.
We are propartd te provo to you
that music It the porfoet chaU
longs-, an open door to discovery,
advonturo and achievement, with
pleaiuret that start at once and
loil a life-time. Let's talk It ever
by phone or In person.
towhtjsHmicCo
126 No. 7th
O Newspaper
SPOT ADS
are inexpensive
repealed tUj Me
Text Books
II AND II
V SUPPLIES I
year. . . . Jack Maddan of the
ioeal J. C. Penney shoe depart
ment, says family shoe purchases
in Klamath Falls are considerably
above the national average . . .
up to double, he estimates.
THE WIRETAPPER
The filmed life story of Jim
Vaus, Mickey Cohen's
right-hand man
TONIGHT - 7:30 P.M.
American Baptist Church
Altomont Junior High School
GUARANTEED FINEST
MAJOR GASOLINE
JONES' Office Supply
629 Main Formerly Voiaht'i TU 2-4408
. 6th
USE ANY MAJOR
OIL CREDIT CARD
Aeron From Leo's on So.
CGHK ticket:
FREE FORD
NEXT FREE BOAT SEPT. 24 . . . FORD OCT. 22
FOR