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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1959)
AGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. Tuesdav. July 28, 1959 MARKETS and FINANCE Stocks WALL STREET NEW YORK API Steel and chemical shares spearheaded an upswing in stock market prices this afternoon. Trading ran at a moderate rate. Volume for the day was esti mated at 9.000.000 shares against 1,720,000 Friday. Pivotal issues pushed ahead tractions (o around two points. Some selected issues soared three points. i Motors, rubbers, aircrafts, met als, rails, oil and tobaccos gener ally joined the advance. Some util ities eased. U.S. Steel featured the steel group by advancing nearly 2. Bethlehem and Republic Steel climbed close to 1. , Youngstown Sheet k Tube faded a bit from an earlier high. DuPont punched ahead almost I. Thiokol added more than 2. Air Reduction rose about 1. Union Carbide gained around 2. Litton and Motorola both tepped up more than 2. But Em erson Radio and Philco each lost around 1. v Schenley pushed ahead more than 2 and Reynolds around 2. Gains of a point or more were scored by Caterpillar, Westing house Electric and U.S. Rubber U.S. government bonds were mixed. " NEW YORK STOCKS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation 22 H A. J. Ind. 5 1i Allied Chemical 12S Allis Chalmers 32 ? Alcoa 115 American Airlines 29 American Can 43 American Cyanamide M i American Motors ' 47 American Smelting 43 i American Tel It Tel 79 American Tobacco 9s American Viscose 52 4 Anaconda Copper 82 ,t Armco Steel 79 t Atchison Railroad 3Ht Bendix Aviation , 80 Bethlehem Steel 56 Vt Boeing Airplane Co. 34 H Borden Co. 84 Borg Warner , .43 ai Burroughs Corp. 35 California Packing 29 H Canadian Pacific 29 Caterpillar Tractor 114 M Celanese Corporation 33 Chrysler , Corporation 7 Vt Cities Service 54 Mi Consolidated Edison 64 '.j Continental Can 48 V Crown Zellerbach 55 Curtis Wright 35 Douglas Aircraft 46 Vt Dow Chemical 88 Vt Du Pont De Nemours 2(i0 Eastman Kodak 96 'i El Paso NG ' 32 Vt Emerson Radio .- 17 Firestone Tire y 147 Ford Motor 78 V General Dynamics .' 51 V General Electric 82 General Foods 93 General Motors 57 Vi Georgia Pac Cp , 50 Vi Goodyear' Tire V 143 Great Northern 54 Great West. Sugar . 27 Vt Idaho Power 46 Vt Illinois Cent. 47 Vi International Nickel 103 Vi International Paper 127 Vi International T 4 T -08 H Johns Manville 56 Kaiser Aluminum 64 Kcnnecott Copper 102 i Libby. McNeill k Libby 12 Lockheed Alrcrait . 29 ' Loew's Incorporated 31 ' Montgomery Ward 49 Is National Cash Reg. 61 New York Central 28 Northern Pacific 31 a: Pacific American Fish 13 Ji Paciric Gas k Electric : 63 'i Pacific Tel it Tel ' 183 Vi Pan American Airways 28 Vi Penney (J.C.) Co, 111 Vi Pennsylvania R.R. 17 Pepsi Cola Co. 31 Philco Corp- 27 H Phillips Pet. . 48 Polaroid 139 Vi Puget Sound P & L .14 i Radio Corp of Amer 67 V4 Rayonier lncorp, ' 28 Republic Steel 78 vi Reynolds Metals ' 120 i Richfield Gil 83 Safeway Stores Inc. 37 Vi St. Regis 54 Scott Paper Co. 85 Sears Roebuck k Co. 47 Shell Oil Co. 76 4. Sinclair Oil 59 Socony Mobil Oil 43'., Southern Pacific 70 Vt Sperry Rand 25 Standard Oil Calif, 51 4 Standard Oil N.J. SI Vi Studebaker Packard 12 Sunray 25 Vi Sunshine Mining 7 Swift It Company 1 46 Texaco 82 H Thompson Product 66 i Transamirica Corp . 30 V Twentieth Century Fox 37 'i Union Oil Company 50 Vi Union Pacific 34 V United Air Lines 43 V United Aircraft S3 . United Corporation 8 '1 United States Plywood 48 '4 United States Smelting 31 1 United States Steel 103 ' Walgreen Stores 49 ' Warner Pictures 47 i Western Auto Supply 37 u Western Union Tel. 43 Westinghouae Air Brakt 34 Westlnghouse Electric 95 Woolworth Company 59 V Livestock CHICAGO (API - USDA I Hogs 9.500: steady to strong on butchers under 2.10 lbs: strong to 25 higher on weights 230 lbs and heavier; 2-3 mixed grade and mixed Is 2s and 3s 190-260 lb butchers 13. 50-14. 00i mixed grade 1-2 and Is 200-220 lbs 13.90-14 00: 300 head at 14.25: mixed grade 1-2 230 lbs 14.00: few 2s 250 lbs 13.75: mixed grade 2-3 and 3s 260- 280 lbs 13.25-13.65; few lots mixed grade 2-3 and 3s 280-300 lbs 12.75- 13.40; few lots 2-3 and 3s 310-330 lbs 12.00-12.75: a smaller volume mixed 1-3 180-190 lbs 13.00-13.75; mixed grade 1-3 275-350 lb sows 11.00-12.25; 350-400 lbs 10.50-11.50; 400-500 lbs 9.50-10.50. Cattle 18,000; calves 10; slaugh ter steers steady to 5 higher: few loads mostly prime 1,100-1,400 lb steers 28.75-29.75; mixed choice and prime 1.100-1.350 lbs 27.50 26.50: good to high choice 1,100 lbs and heavier 25.25-27.75; good to choice below 1,100 lb 26.50-28.50; standard and low good 23.00-25.50; good to high choice slaughter heif era 25.00-28.00; utility and stand ard 19.50-24.50; utility and com mercial cows 15.50-18.75; few standard 19.00-20.50; canners and cutters 13.50-17.50: utility and commercial bulls 21.00-23.00: a few good and choice vealers 33.00: most standard and good 25.00' 32.00; culls down to 13.00; a part load good 50 lh short yearling stock steers 31.00. Sheep 2,500: good to low choice 80-100 lb spring slaughter lambs 22.30-23.50: 35 head choice 100 lbs 24.00; few utility to low good 17.00- 22.00; a deck of choice 90 lb shorn spring lambs No 1 pelts 24.00; three decks good and choice 115 lb shorn yearlings No 1 and 2 pelts 18.50; cull to choice shorn slaughter ewes 4.00-5.50. STOCKTON (UPl-FSMNSl Livestock: Cattle salable 1.500. High-good 800 lb slaughter heifers 26. Utili ty and commercial cows 17-19. Canners and cullers 14.50-17. Util ity and commercial 1,250-1,800 lb bulls 21.50-22. Good and choice 975 lb feeder steers 24.50-27.25. Good and choice 600-700 lb Block er and feeder heifers 25-25.50. Calves salable 350. Good and choice 300-500 lb slaughter calves 28-30. Standard 26-28. Good and choice 350 - 550 lb stock steer calves' 30-31.50. tlood and choice 300-500 lb heifer stock calves 29- 31.00. . - Hogs salable 800. No. 1-2 190 240 lb barrows and gills 15.75, No. 3 15.25. Sheep salable 400. Market not established. THRU POTENTIAL QUEENS, competing for the crown at Weed's Italian Carnivale, Sep tember 5 and 6, are, left to right, Bonnie Ganim, Lois Williams and Julie Baroglia, Weed's carnival quaan will ba chosen at the coronation ball Saturday night, September 5, to rtign over the two-day festivities. Mrs. Rena Santini is general chairman for the event. Swim Course To Be Held McCLOUD A Iwo-week' swim ming instruction program for be ginners and pre-beginners will be held at the McCloud pool starting July 27. Carol Sellstrom, Yreka, will be the Red Cross authorized instructor. Eighty one children signed up for the course: 51 be ginners and 30 pre-beginners un der 8. The McCloud River Lumber Com pany is paying the instructor's sal ary and mileage. The McCloud Junior Women's Club is assisting in the program. Judy Nelson. Mc Cloud lifeguard, will assist the instructor. "We wish every child in the com munity that has a desire to learn to swim to do so. It can mean the saving of lives," M. C. Ger licher, assistant general manager of the lumber company said. Mrs. Barrett Ray and Mrs. Bcu- lah Orlowski, committee mothers, help at the pool. PORTLAND (AP) - (USDA) Cattle salable 1.600;. trade rather slow; fed steers and heifers steady to 25 lower; instances 50 off; cows mostly steady; bulls steady to weak; several lots mix ed good and low choice 950-1,050 lb fed steers 28.25-28.50; couple lots choice 1,200-1,250 lb steers 27.00-28.00 ; 27 head load mostly average choice 1.381 lbs 26.30: good sleers 27.00-28.00; standard 25.50-26,50; 30 head load utility and standard 1,250 lb dairy type steers -22.00; 27 head load mostly low choice 785 lb fed heifers 28.25; good heifers 26.00-27.50; mixed good and choice 28.00 utility and standard 20.00-25.50 several loads good and choice 300-1025 lb feeder steers 23.00- 25.00; utility cows 16.50-17.50; can ners and cutters 13.50-15.50; heavy cutters lo 16.50; cutter and low utility bulls 18.00-23.00. Calves salable 200; vealer fully steady: good and choice 26.00- 29.50: few head choice 30.00; utili ty and standard vealers and calves 19.00-25.00. Hogs salable 1,200; butchers and sows steady with mostly last week; No. 1 and 2 190-235 lb butchers 16.00-16.25; mostly at 16.00: mixed No. 1, 2 and 3 180- 235 lbs 15.50-17.75: mostly 15.25; No. 2 and 3 240-265 lbs 14.50-15.00; No. 1 and 2 160-175 lbs 15.00: mix ed grade sows 350-550 lbs 10.00 13.00; 42 head No. 1 and 2 270 lb sows 14.00. Sheep salable 2.300; trade mod erately active; slaughter lambs mustly steady, some choice 25 to 30 higher: slaughter ewes and feeders steady; mostly choice spring slaughter lambs 19.30: 3 lots choice high yielding 20.00- 20. M; mixed good and choice 18 50-19.00; good and choice over 75 lb feeder lambs 13.30-16.50; one lot 17.00: cull to good slaughter ewes 2.30-5.00. Woman Back From Journey MOUNT SHASTA - Mrs. Anna Douglass, retired local school teacher, returned recently from a four and one-half months tour or Europe, during which time she vis ited England, Scotland. Ireland, France, Switierland, Italy, Ger many, Sweden, Denmark, Holland, Luxemburg, Austria and Norway Her companion most of the trip was Lorraine Brown, a former teacher here, who is now teaching children of United States service men in Wiesbaden, Germany. When Mrs. Douglass returned to the United Stales, she flew by jet plane from London to New York. There she met her son, Harold Douglass, principal of Price Ele mentary School. Woodland. He and his family traveled across country with his mother. On the way they visited Niagara Falls, Yellowstone and other points of interest. Although Mrs. Douglass feels that many of the countries she visited were charming. Holland in particular, she still thinks that Mount Shasta is the most desirable spot on earth in which to live. GRAINS CHICAGO AP)- Hlgh Low Close Prev.close Wheat 2 IrM Wi.V.ITftt 0 DIRK CHANDLER, Castella, a member of th. U. S. Forest Service fire suppression crew, carefully checks the wreck age of the fire-demolished heme of Mrs. Mable Benkosky in Dunsmuir. Extremely dry, hot weather makes any blaze a menace to the entire area, Paul Dryden, fire Control assis tant, explained. Mrs. Benkosky suffered second degree burns and shock when her horn was destroyed early Saturday morning. Car, Truck Hit On Road A car and a tractor . trailer collided Monday morning in the driveway of Mclita's Cafe on U.S. 97 near Chiloquin Junction, state police reported. Officers said the car driven by Glenn Hillary Goodman, 60, Issa quah, Washington, was following a truck driven by Myron C. Railey. 37, Redding, when Railey signaled a left turn into the restaurant driveway. Goodman's car left skid marks for 165 feet before it ran into the rear of the truck, police said Goodman was cited for following to closely. With Goodman was a passenger Victor J. Alvarez, San Jose. Po lice reported no injuries. Sep Dec Mar May Jiy 1960 Sep Corn Sep Dec' Mar May 1.90"l l.(gt l.Nlt 1.89 1.93H 1.94i 1.93'k-Vi 1.94'j 1.98H l.M4 1.98Vi 1.97a, 1.96'i 1.93't 196 1 954 1.82'i 1.81's 1.82 1.81'j 1.84'i 1.84i 1.84 1.8,1, 1.20'i l.lQ'i 1.19i-i,i 1.20 1.14H 1.13i 1.134-4i 1.14-13 l.f8 1.17 1.17'i 1.17 1.19 1.18 1.18 Oats (old type) Sep .67 .66 Oats (new type I .68 .69 .70 .69 .68 .69 .70 .68 .68 .69 .70 .69 1.19 .66 .68-67 .69 .70 GRAIN PORTLAND (API - Coarse grams, la-day shipment, bulk, coast delivery: Oats No. 2. 38-lh while 53.50 Barley No. 2. 43-lb B.W 45.00 Corn No.2, E.Y, sh'p't 58.00 Wheal (bid) to arrive market. basis No. 1 bulk delivered coast: Soft White . 1.93 Soft White (hard appl.) 1.93 While Club 1.93 Hard Red Winter: Ordinary l.S 10 per cent 1.98 11 per cent l.M 12 per cent 2.02 Hard White Bart: Ordinary ... , 2.01 10 per cent 2.01 11 per cent 2.01 12 per cent 1.01 Car receipts: Wheat 55; barley 4; flour 13, corn 7; mill fee 13. Sep Dec Mar May Rye Sep Dec Mar May Soybeans Sep 2.21 2.11 2.18-19 2.19 Nov 2.21 2.19 2.19- 2.20 Jan 2.25 2.23 2.23-23 2.24 Mar 2.21 2.25 2.23 2.27 Mar 2.30 2.21 2.28-28 2.29 1.30 1.26 1.29- 1.29-28 1.34 1.32 1.33-Vi 1.32 1.33 1.33 1.34 1.34-13 1.33 1.32 1.33 1.33 Potatoes CHICAGO (API - Potatoes ar rivals 290; on track 360: total U.S. shipments for Friday 272; Satur day 152: Sunday 31: Long Whiles market stronger; Round dull; carlot track sales: California Long Whites 4.15-4.30; Texas Round Reds 2.75. Men Saved On Scaffold OAKLAND (UPI) Two elec ricians clung to an up-ended scaffold 17 stories above the round for a half hour Monday before fellow workers were able to lower them a bosun's chair from the roof. The two workmen, Fred Turney. 3B, San Leandro, and Ted John son. 34. Oakland, carefully inched Ihe fouled scallold to the ground as, thousands of persons watched from the street below. The descent took almost an hour and a half. The accident occurred as Tur ney and Johnson were raising the scaffold to work on an electrical sign lor Ihe new 28-stnry Kaiser Center Building. A hoisting cable slipped, leaving the scaffold in a vertical position and both men clinging helplessly to rone rail ings.. They righted the scallold af ter the bosun's chair was lowered. then gradually worked their way to the ground as other workers shouted instructions from below. Weather Table United Press International Albuquerque Atlanta Bakersfield ' Boise ' Boston Brownsville Chicago Denver Detroit Fairbanks '. , ' Fort Worth -. Fresno Helena Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New York Oakland Oklahoma Cily Phoenix ' ,. Pittsburgh Red Bluff Reno Salt Lake City San Francisco Seattle Spokane Stockton Thermal Washington Free Fishing Bill Hears DUNSMUIR A provision that el derly people of limited income will be able to fish without having to buy a license is due to become eflective before the close of the present fishing season. Gov. Edmund Brown has signed Senate Bill 423, introduced by Sen. Randolph Collier and backed by Assemblywoman Pauline Davis. The bill provides free sport fish ing licenses for women over 62 and men over 65 with incomes of $140 a month or less. The measure is the result. of a petition circulated in Dunsmuir. sponsored by Clint Bryan, one of the community's senior citizens. Boat Ramp Job Planned ALTURAS A delegation of city and county officials and represen tatives of the Department of Fish and Game and the Wildlife Con servation Board will investigate the construction of a boat launch ing access at West Valley Reser voir Wednesday, July 29. Karol P. Woodward, chairman of Ihe Modoc County Council of the Shasta-Cascade Wonderland Asso ciation, sponsors of the access pro gram, made the announcement to day. Raymond J. Nesbit, coordinator of the Wildlife Conservation Board, will fly in from Sacramento Wednesday morning and meet with the delegation from Modoc County. He will be accompanied by John F. Reginato, general manager of the Shasta-Cascade Wonderland As sociation of Redding, and reprcsen tatives of the Department of Fish and Game. The association has designated the West Valley Reservoir access facility as one of its top projects in Modoc County," Woodward stat ed, adding that "with the increased use of the reservoir by fisher men and other water sports enlhiv s'asts, it is important and vital that a boat launching ramp, park ing area and sanitation facilities be constructed. "The association is also working to establish access facilities' of Dor ris, Big Sage, Ballard' and Fee reservoirs and on Goose Lake," Woodward concluded. Sluddtbook v LafcSiimiiaBiMia twwesiisV, m iiwhi J MRS. RUTH W. NIELSON, Mount Shasta City Hostess By J. O. McKINNEY Mrs". Ruth Nielson, in her capaci ty of city hostess meets all newcom ers to Mount Shasta, learns of their interests, and extends a wel come to the community and to its various activities. It Is she that creates an impression of the High Low Rain .92 62 .18 89 70 105 75 93 47 - 91 71 92 78 81 74 91 . 62 87 68 56 42 94 72 102 67 90 . 54 1 89 76 85 67 83 80 93 71 86 72 74 - 56 75 69 .01 103 84 ' 82 66 108 '79. 98 49 - 98 . 70 69 . 69 50 77 45 100 62 108 78. 89 76 Dunsmuir Boy Goes Abroad DUNSMUIR Tom Seed, son of Mr. and Mrs. John R. 'Seed, is spending the summer abroad un der the sponsorship of the Ameri can Field Service. He is staying with the Angus James Watt-Smith family, Sheffield, England. On the trip to Europe he shared quarters with boys from Los An geles, Salem, Pittsburgh and Min neapolis. They docked at Rotter dam, Netherlands, and spent sev eral days bicycling through the country-before traveling.on to Eng land. Tom s summer father is a partner in a paint firm and gar dens as a hobby. He also serves on a Rotary Club committee which sponsors an International Youth Camp and provides trips to the seashore for the handicapped. His "mother" is the English counter part of the American housewife, he reports. The family has two daughters. Tom has stated in his letters home that he has visited a steel plant and has also eaten his way through a candy factory. He will return to New York on September 5 and fly across coun try by chartered plane, arriving just in time to enter his senior year at Dunsmuir High School. Pair To Spend Lives In Jail SAN DIEGO (UPl-Mrs. Wan da Brogdon, 33, and her lover, Kenneth Merriam, 36, have been sentenced to life imprisonment without possibility of parole for strangling her two small sons be cause they were "a bother." The former Rockford, 111., cou ple, both found legally sane but of subnormal intelligence, ex pressed unconcern about their fate Sunday when the verdicts were rendered. '1 don't care," said Mrs! Brog don. "I don't have anyone' to live for anymore. I don't have my kids or anything." ' Each faced a possible death sentence. The same jury of six men and six women which earlier convict ed her and Merriam of the May 2 strangulation of Virgil Jr., 5, and David Brogdon, 3, Sunday sen tenced her to "two life terms in prison without possibility of pa role. ... .' i .. - But the . panel was unable to agree on a verdict for Merriam after two days of deliberation. Superior Judge William P. Ma hedy took the matter in his own hands and imposed the same sen tence on Merriam as rendered against Mrs. Brogdon. He ex plained he saw no difference in guilt between the two prisoners. friendliness of the people, and shows Ihe desirability as a resi dential spot. Mrs. Nielson is no accidental choice to the position. Past ma Iron of OES, officer in Women's Society of Christian Service, offi cer in Wesleyan Guild, she car ries into her work a knowledge of the community, and how it can serve and be served. Training for this wprk began with a degree from Stanford Uni versity. Twenty one years in the teaching profession, and several years as grecter for her banker- husband has polished the natural talents she possessed to where the chamber of commerce, and Mer chants' Association considered no other candidate. The Nielson home on Russell Avenue, a redwood structure, radiates a charm that is pleasing to all who enter it. Not the least interesting subject therein is a huge yellow cat that answers to the name of Happy. When Happy wants attention, he gets it. His method is to walk across the keys of the piano until his wishes are recognized, 'and . either complied with, or discouraged. . .' The Nielsons have lived in Mount Shasta since 1947. They like it, and the welcome extended by Mrs. Nielson to all who move here is an accumulation of what she has found here lo enjoy. Five Perish In Blaze NEW YORK fAP)-Four adults and a baby girl, all - Negroes. perished, today , as fire ' swept through two Brooklyn tenement houses. Two of the dead were women and two men. Four others jumped from 'the third floor. They were reported in serious conditions at a hospital Three policemen were injured fighting the fire. The fire broke oul shortly after 3 a.m. It was reported under con trol about two hours later. Police said the fire was appar ently of suspicious origin. The neighborhood is a tenement district, police said, predominant ly inhabited by Negro and Puerto Rican families. for Truck Strike Averted Sheep Killing Dog Hunted Monday was animal day state police here. The county pound requested an officer investigate a report that dogs had killed a sheep grazing near Klamath Lumber and Box Company. Earlier, Mrs. Ray Dorr ell, 4405 Bisbce Street, said 10, white pullets had been stolen from her hen house. But she called later to say she had found them in her barn. DAM WASHINGTON ( AP) - Con struction of Bully Crek Dam and reservoir at a cost of $3,326,000 was approved by the Senate Rec lamation Committee Monday. It would extend the Vale. Irrigation Project . in Eastern Oregon by J2.990 acres. SUIT Miriam M. Polucek and Luther and Mary Noble have brought suit in the clerk's office against heirs of K. C. Wilkerson, seeking settle ment of a property title dispute Friendly Helpfulness To Every Creed and Punt Ward's Klamath Funeral Home 92S Hiqh TU 2-4404 Marguerite M. Ward . and Sons -A IIT OF IVIRYTHING" . NIW USID SHOP The MERCHANDISE MART OfIN IVIRY DAY IUT SUNDAY 24 $.. th Klamath falls. Ota. TU 4-0 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A threatened Teamsters Union strike was averted Sunday when three Bay Area Teamsters locals accepted a new contract calling lor a 45-cent hourly wage hike over the next two years. The locals in Oakland. Contra Costa and San Jose accepted the ofler of the California Trucking Association for a 25-cent hourly increase retroactive to July 1, and 20 cent an hour wage increase next year. The strike, which would have affected some 3.000 drivers, was scheduled for Fri day. . ' The new scale will give driv ers a pay range of 521.80 to $23.80 a day. Contract terms also provide" an extension of sick leave from six to 15 days, three weeks vacation after two years and four weeks after 12 years. , San Francisco Teamsters Local to will negotiate with the Dairy man's Association for a three- year contract Thursday. School Bus Funds Found MOUNT SHASTA - Decision of the Siskiyou County Board of Edu cation to allocate funds from the sale of forest service timber to the purchase of a new school bus has been announced by I. W. Kelsbe, superintendent of Mount Shasta Un ion Elementary School District.' rhe decision comes as a solu tion to the district's school Hiu problem. Formerly two buses had been in operation, but curtailed funds for the coming school year allowed the use of only one bus. Either of the district's present buses, old and run down mechani cally, would require a large sum of money for renair. Thev viilk both be traded in on a new one. ADDITIONAL INCOME The Money You've Got "Salted Away" Will Make You 10 to 12 Income $ s $ c First Trust Deeds On lirr proved ' Homes Will Pay You 10 On Your ln: vestments. 3 . Year Due Date. . v $ $ $ -First Trust Deeds Dis counted To Yield You 12 Return On Y o u r Money. 5 Year Due Datef. $ S $ r.r.T mvn rtrr. coer or on SEW INVCSTOB'S NtWS. OVEB 113 LOANS TO PICK FBnM. THE CURRAN CO. ' 4316 4th Are. Sacramento, Calif. FIGHTS WRINKLES SOILING! Makes 01 Clothea Uk Like New 'Ml Have Year Clsriits CUanad at Cncoaa Thtre's Na Extra Ckoree Far STA.NU finiihint PACCAliE end Men's Hand Laundry WH1WMUC ,,, DRY CLEANERS llrh and JCIamath t Opo. Pott Office Pk. 4-5111 ar 2-231