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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1960)
PAGE TWO Record Cranberry Crop Available Says Agency HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Tuesdgyjoyembef. 1360 , ' Ithe Agriculture Department has paid out between $9 million and $10 million to cranberry growers lor unsold 1958-59 crop cranber ries. A department spokesman said cranberry growers realized about siu a barrel irom last year s crop compared with an averace of 13 a barrel previously. That was a decline of nearly one-third. The Food and Drue Administra tion has cleared this vear's crnn of any suspicion of taint and Ag riculture Department experts ro port it is of excellent quality. Police Mull Unexplained WASHINGTON AP) Am-inil. hire Department spokesmen taid Monday a record crop of cran berries of high quality is avail able this year for the Thanksgiv , ing-through-Christmas season. At the same time they said sales so far have been slow compared with previous years even though government omcials have at tempted to blot out the cancer scare in this specialty crop last year. Sales suffered sharply last year when the government cracked down just before Thanksgiving, the peak of the -season, on cran berries tainted with a weed killer that was reported to produce Cancer in test animals when used. In large quantities. Extensive campaigns by federal agencies and the cranberry indus- frtr ore OvmurfnJ tr. kiwt r -In. f the turkey garnish during the next Jl t 1 la A I" two months. j 163 111 Ul J The department estimated this vear's crop at 1 344 000 harrels PIKPVII.I.IT v imdti each baiTel having 100 pounds of thorilies today refused to accept cranberries. That is 8 per cent any explanation but murder for aoove me crop lasi year ana 35 me deatlis of four men and per cent aoove uie recent. iu-year average production. Because of the big crop this time, retail prices for fresh ber ries are reported about 2 cents a pound lower than a year ago. The prices of canned cranberry sauce and other products are slightly higher. Last vear. Secretary of Welfare Arthur S. Flemming startled the public witn an announcement by the Federal Food and Drug Ad ministration that some eranher- ries might be endangered by the weed Killer Onlv a small part nf the mis crop was rejected as contamlnat-l eu, dui mo tears ot consumers damaged the cranberrv market. A special indemnity program by Keep Trap Shut, Gabby Hubby Au- Aid Health Center Bv THE ASSOCIATE n PRESS The Public Health Service has authorized a $71,290 grant to Clackamas County to help finance construction of a public health center, the office of Sen. Maurine Neuberger, D Ore., announced Monday. The total cost of the project Is estimated at $215,760. - ROCK 'N ROLL I DANCE featuring music by THE CHECKERS . Klamath Falli AUDITORIUM , SAT., NOV. 26 Dancing 9-1 $1.00 Until 9 . $1.25 ofUr 9 rArrrrvW youth whose , bodies, horribly Durnea. were tound sitting in a burned-out car on a remote dead end road. But one maior nucslinn re. mained. If it were murder, how were they killed? The bodies, discovered Knndav by a little girl, were sittinc up right, In natural positions-. The doors of the car had buckled in the intense heat, but had not jammed. The car apparently had run off a dirt road into a creek bed, but had halted without turn ing over. Traces of Gas Autopsies performed Monday disclosed traces of poisonous car bon monoxide gas. which Is rnn tained in auto exhaust fumes, hut it could not be determined wheth er the gas was the killer. State Police Sgt. James Cox said he was continuing the investigation on tne assumption the deaths were no accident. Two of the charred bodies were sent to Kettering Crime Labora tory in Cincinnati, Ohio, for furth er examination. "I have never seen bodies burned so badly as these were," said Pike County Coroner Ray mond S. Call. The fire had burned the head off at least one of the victims. By A.V.N LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: Mv hus band and I went together a vear and then we became engaged. The engage ment lasted al- m o s t six months. I'm ashamed to tell you that during the en gagement the pressure of his much for me sua i seem to think they are excused from tipping just because they're in school. A -waiter can handle just so many tables. In our club when one waiter gets four or five ta bles of college kids he knows he's going home with empty pock ets. Is this fair? D.D.W. Dear D.D.W.: No it Isn't fair and I agree that college kids who can scare up the loot for a night out would do well to order one drink less and leave a waiter something. In fact, they could or- der several drinks less and do themselves a favor. Report Election Expense Details Senate Race Cost Dear Ann Landers: My hus band and I are having n misun derstanding concerning a relative. Please settle it. Mv sister' hus band brags a lot and gets on my husband's nerves. I say the guy is a brother-in-law to my hus i i .. . '. udiiu. my nusoand says he is THIS DANCE WILL Bl THE LAST DANCE UN TIL THE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS pleadine was Ion and I gave in to him We have been married four months and are happy, except for one thine. Whenever we are among friends lie gets on the sub ject of virgin-brides. When he in sists, vehemently, that there isn't a girl in the whole world who waits till marriace. I want tn crawl into a hole and die. I've tried to explain to him that when he talks like this he advertises the fac that he didn't get one. He says I'm wrone and that peo ple always assume "present com-l pa.ny is excluded." How about this? RED IN THE FACE Dear Red: Your husband should stay off the subiect and keen hli big trap shut. Of course he places you In a terrible position when he makes these ugly comments. I hope all you single eirls are listening. This is another strong argument in favor of holding the fort. Many a guy who puts on a big pitch Is disappointed when he wins The Great Debate. He be comes disillusioned about wom anhood in general, and his own girl In particular. He may tell you it will never make a differ- self-addressed envelope ence out loo ollcn when the great love begins to tarnish a little, the past is used as a club to beat you over the head SALEM (AP) Reports filndl I. S Russell .Ir Pni-tlanrl l . (with the secretary nf state's nf. nnn If ice showed today that the fight Friends of Maurine Neuberger, I tor uregon s U. S. Senate seat headed by Oscar Chapman, Wash was the most costly of all in thelington, D. C. $11,600. Nov. 8 election. Sidney Leiken. Rosebure. Si.. There were numerous hie con tributions to both Maurine Nen bereer. a Democrat u-hn wnn anrt Republican Elmo Smith, her op ponent Mrs. Neubercer had 2a contri butions of $500 or more. Total contributions listed by her com mittee were $96,208. Smith's Campaign committee reported spending $84,612 and re ceiving $89,944. The chief contributions tn Mrs iNeubereer were 110.000 from the nothing. Who is riPht'swnRrvc 0rcgn AFL-CIO Committee on POINT Political Education, and $ll,BO0 irom the Friends of Maurine Neu- Dear Point: You both couH he right. The guy may be nothing ircai nothing, that-is) but men are brothers-in-law when ihev marry sisters. Are you going steady? Makine- marriage plans? If so, send for Ann Landers' booklet. "Befnre I You Marry Is It Love Or Sex?", enclosing with vour re quest 20 cents in coin and a long, berger, Washington, D. C There were four cnntrihitttnnc of $1,500 each to Smith's commit tee from J. Howard Pew. J. N Pew Jr.. Mary Ethel Pew and Mabel Pew Mvrin. all memherc of a wealthy Philadelphia, Pa shipbuilding family. Mrs. Neubereer eat 15 nnn frnm tne Fennsv vania Demneratin IV i a ITI - u ul tuui aim a long, i-mante vuiiuiiiuee. - Iself-addressed, stamped envelope. Here is a list of the major con Ann T anrin. I -I-J . U:L.-, . . J ...ii, uajjucia win ue v an in Limmnre unn mua cum m...... 000. Harold Zellerbach, San Francis co, $500. International Brotherhood Electrical Workers, $1,000. International Ladies Garment Workers Union. New York, $1,500 Oregon AFL-CIO, $10,000. of help you with your problems. Send them to her in care nf thie newspaper enclosing a stamped, Dear Ann Landers: You would be doing a lot of working people a favor if vou'd publish this Many college boys need to see it in print neiore tnev 11 eivb it a thought. 1 m a niEIlt club waiter in a city where there are many cnllene students, i know many of these kids aren't rich in fact some struggle to get by. But, it seems unfair to take a date tn a Huh and sit there a whole evening, getting service, and then leave nothing for the waiter but a mess to clean up. Most of these kids come In four and six together. You'd think they could order one drink less, and scrape together a dollar to cive to a waiter or a waitress whn serves them for three hours. They Trial Dated 'I believe that such intense heal could not be developed merely by the burning of the interior of an I. . . . automobile." Call said. "I believe MUTCier ChCtrCie the fire uo fn,! ' . - 3 Robbery Possible Motive Stato police indicated robbery was a possible motive. Thev said jonn Yates, lather of one of the victims, told them his son had ihad more than $200 In his wallet when he was last seen Saturday night. . The victims, all coal miners ex cept the youngest, were identified as Harmon Robinson, 42; Denver Yates. 25: Hnrvev Ratliff. 24. the driver; Bob Hopkins Jr., 22, and his brother, Louis, 10. State police said the five were last seen Saturday night, and that witnesses indicated they had been drinking. "We have so very little to go on. Cox said. "We all have our theories, but they are merely theories and we can't disclose those." NEWPORT (AP)-Jerrv Wavne UlOSOh. 21. IjCPannn. waived nre. liminary hearing Monday on a first' dcaree murder charoe Ho will go before the Lincoln County grand jury acout Nov. 2B. Gibson is accused of slaying Lawrence Bruce Ludahl. IB when iLudahl intervened In an argument dibson was having with his es tranged wife. Gibsen was trying to persuade his wife to return to him at Lebanon. She had refuser! They had been married only since October. Gibson was ordered held with. out bail. ih :x , . , v -cr. I J n , r II II 1 . .- 'Ml -;! -'.V'V' ' 0 T P ? F Y niutictti,. 145 j Seeks Romance LONDON (AP) Actress Shel. ley Winters flew into London over the weekend all set to make a movie and "fall in love with an Englishman." Miss Winters, who divorced ac tor Anthony Franciosa Friday, came to Britain to nlav the rnle of the mother in "Lolila," t'ae film of the novel by Vladimir Nabokov. I m seriously considering com ing to live over here," she told newsmen. "The pace is so much slower in Britain than In Amer ica. "You've got so many intellectu als," she added. "And another thins. I'm smule and I'd like tn fall in love with an Englishman." Hut sue ruled out aclors "I think they do not make good husbands." Suspension Hits Clubs NEW YORK (AP)The nir,U club where Sophie Tncti lormeo witnout a valid entertain er's license lias been si a four-day police suspension, be ginning Wednesday. police added the name of Sher man Billingsley, owner of the Mork Club, to their urnwino lid of violators of cabaret licensing Miss Tucker recently saner at Jack Silverman's Intnrnoiinnni restaurant with an eynireri li. cense. The suspension means that the establishment may serve food and drinks, but cannot offer en. tertainment. , Comedian .Inev Art. ams was to have begun an en gagement at the club Wednesday. Billingsley and three of his I waiters were found to have n identification cards when nnli) inspected the Slork Club Monday. Under a 1941 ruline. all employes and performers miKil nave identity cards in effect, li censes to work. They must photographed and and pay a $2 fee. A citizens' committee touched otf investigations when It chared mat ponce corruption was in. volvtd In the Issuing of the li- censes. A hearinc was scheduled inrlau for Jules Podell. owner of the Copacabana where Frank Sinatra has admitted singing without li-cense. Police said Ihev found violations of work, state liquor or health laws at El Morocco, the Emhers Armando's and many other of the city's 1,200 cabarets. M. Kaplan, Mrs. Neuberger: Mr. and Mrs. J New York. $1,000. Mrs. Marshall Field. New VnrU $500. Mrs. Eugene Mever. Washino. ton, D. C. $500. Dr. Julius F. Neuhe rtfer Von, York, $500. Mr. and Mrs. Heiherl Tehmon rvew york. $1,000. Mrs. Gilford Phillinc Tn, A,. t.t wo ruigc les, $500. George D. Pratt Jr.. BrirW water, Conn., $500. Study Denies Aid To Chief WASHINGTON (APlA study savs there is nn nlao ; U.S. governmental machinery for a m st secretary to aid the president. Proposals which would Drovide for out-ranking other Cabinet mem bers and supervising major oper ations of the government. "The president of the United States eannnt he relieved r k:- burdeps hjy supplying him with a 'depUlV' (O do What nnlu he - ne vein be do, said a staff rennrt frnm ik fingerprinted Senate subcommittee on national jpolicy-making machinery. Its chairman. Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., expressed the personal view that creation nf the new post might add to the presi dent's policy-making burdens rattier than reducing them. President Eisenhewer has hecn expected to recommend some such proposal as part of his promised plan for reorganizing the covern. mcnt. The idea came frnm w lork Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, wno headed a presidential advis ory committee on the subject. Jackson issued his statement in making public Mon day night the report of his sub committee staff. But his position as Democratic national chairman gives at least some indication that his views coincide with those of President-elect John F. Kennedy. Rockefeller had suggested that a first secretary could exercise del. legated presidential authority on an national secun v afla rs Police Jail Novelist NEW YORK (AP)-Author Nn'r man Mailer, 37, whose latest book is Advertisements for Myself," has been arrested on a charge of stabbing his wife. Adele. durinp a party in their Manhattan apartment. Mrs. Mailer. 35. in critical cnn.i dition with a knife wound in the stomach and one in the back, told police: "He didn't sav anvlhino He just looked at me. He didn't say a word. He stabbed me." Mailer had a penknife when de- tectives arrested him Monday night when he arrived at Univer sity Hospital to visit his wife. He ;was booked on a charge of feloni ous assault. He refused to discuss the slah. bin'g with newsmen. Later, his at torney, John Cox, told detectives ilhat when he conferred with Mailer he had "encountered dif ficulty in talking" with him. Police ouoted Mrs. Mail saying her husband had "hnmi. cidal tendencies" and that hi family had been I suade him to see a psychiatrist. Mrs. Mailer showed nn at tha hospital about 8 a. m. Sunday, three hours after the stahhi nn Mhe lirst lOld dOCtOIS She had slinned at a party and fallen nn hrnL-en glass. They doubted the story and notified police. After an emergen cy operation she told officers of tne stabbing. It was the second ii me tn eio,t Idays that Mailer had been ar rested. A week ado Monday he was arrested at Birdland, a jazz nightclub, on a disorderly conduct charge after he argued with the management over a $7.60 bill. A hearing was scheduled today. "mi june, jviauer, acting as his own counsel, was found guilty of drunkenness by a Provincetown, Mass., judge. Mailer was acquit- ira, nowever, on a charge of rude oiiu uiwrueriy conduct. Harold J. Schnitzer, $300. Committee for Good Govern ment, Detroit. $3,000'. National Committee for an Ef fective Congress, $2,000. Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, New York, $1,000. Amaleamaled Political Educa tion Committee. New York, $1,000 Communications Workers of America. $1,000. Pennsylvania Democratic State finance Committee, 55,000. Mr. and Mrs. Bart Lytoon, $2, 500. Textile Workers of America, $500. Roger L. Stevens, New York, i$i,ooo. United Steelworkers Union. Pittsburgh, $3,000. William H. Vanderbilt. Chest nut Hill. Mass.. $500. Political Action League. Sheet Metal Workers, $500. Albert D. Lasker, New York, $500. Here are those listed as eivine Sooo or more to the Smith cam paign: Edmund Hayes, Portland, $1,000. Republican National Senate Committee, $7,500. C. H. Wheeler, Portland, $1,500. James P. Buckley, Portland, SL OW). Paul McKee, Portland, $1,500. Ralph Williams Jr.. Portland. $1,000. Better Business Climate Com mittee, $1,000. Jack Kronenburg, Bandon, $500. 1. W. Collins, Portland, $750 Paul Neil, Portland. $500. M. K. Mclver, Portland, $600 J. Howard Pew, Philadelphia. $1,500. J. N. Pew Jr.. Philadelphia. I$l,500. Mary Ethel Pew. Philadelphia. $1,500. Mabel Pew Myrin. Philadelphia. $1,500. H. Loland Jacobsmuhlen. Cnr. nelius, $500. Richard C. Gearhart. Portland. $1,000. Walter J. DeLons. Tacoma Wash., $1,000. Howard S. Somers. Portland. $600. D. P. Ostensoe, Portland, $300. Morris Schapiro. Ballimnre Md.. $500. Good Government Success Com mittee, $3,325. i?fTsTiVR GAZEIQ By CLAY R. POLLAN 1 TJJJ yfj JI. 2! JK Tour Daily Activity Guid Q I EPT. a r, 4-1S-29-3J - 42-53 87-89, TAUIUS APR. 21 W MAY 21 ,17-20-36-57 V7 1-74-88-90 GEMINI J- J j june zr v i n '135 37 40-45 r'A07375 CANCER ? JUNE 23 i 710-13 31 :'52-5566 JU-Y2. tjfaii AUG. 23 1122638 49 1451 -76-79 86 , according IB inw jiuh. -rn Jn,.lnn ms&cnne inr Wednesday read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac Dirtn sign. VIRGO J ,y AUC. 54 M1.16-lB46l 48 5863 I Doel 2A . 3 Ken 4 Inspiring 5 Ben 6 Inl.TWtR 7 Imporlont 8 Day 9 For 10 Persons 11 II 12Tol. IJ Tom 14 For 15 Oaf I6VOU 17 Don't '8 Nd 19 btrels 20 Let 21 Vu.t 22 To 23 Todov's 24 Newcomers 25 Be 26 Core 27 Yourself 28 Love 29 Conducive 30 Dates 31 Nol.ct 32 Attention 33 Too 34 To 35 Settle 36 Negoiive 37 Proo.emi 28 01 39Airects 40Witn 41 in 42 Showing 43 And 44 Moke 45CDnt.dence 46 Mone 47 tour 48 A,k 49 Neglected 50 You 61 Work 52 01 53 Otf 54 And 55 Your 50 Romance- 57 Emotions 58 For 59 Forcetul nOAnd bGoorj nbt)Aiivcrse nl Re 62 Appointment 63 It 64 In 65 Vicinity 66 Personality 6 Be 68 With 69 Restless 70 And 71 Lead 72Sociabl 73 Finolity 74 You 75 Today 7oOr 77 Promoting 78 Smart 79 Health 80 Your 81 Proresstonol 82 Plans 83 Somewtiot 84 Discouroged 85 People 86 Conditions 87 Your 88 To S9 Tolervts 90 Mislokes A 1123. 3 JNcutul SCORPIO OCT. 24 JV, NOV. 22 2- 8-14.O0 . J 32 4J 56 OCT. 1-25-33 59 A 64-77-80-82VJ SAOlTTARiOs "EC 22 f-i 3- 6-19. 27-61-78 CAPRICOIN 'an! 20 v-i. : 5- 9-30 544 62-68 81-85 AQUARIUS MN 21 '' " .s hscn 20 V.. I'- : '4AR 21 123-39.44 SO dt (69-70-83-84 S AF Successfully Tests Space Capsule Ballufe WASHIMRTOV ( AP) The Air Rnrne han ftafplv hrniirjht back to earth a 500-pound space capsule Insin? a combination of a drag i balloon and a parachute. The device, called a ballute, was tested successfully for the second time Monday at Santa Rosa Is land, Fla. The capsule was shot !o a height of 32 miles by a three- stage missile. Four other rockets wore launched during the day in re entry tests at the Eglin Air Force ase site. Three of these also in volved balloons. The ballute system, developed by Goodyear Aircraft Corp., worked this way: As the third stage of the rocket eached 75.000 feet, still eoastina lupward at 1,100 miles an hour, a nine-foot balloon was released from the latl sertinn The balloon ooorted into shape in a tenth of a second and was reeled out on a cable to stahilizn the 500-pound capsule and slow it down by atmospheric drag. A strain trance measured the amount of drag and radioed the information to the ground, wluls a camera recorded the balloon's performance. The capsule eventually reatlu rl la height of 170.000 feet. When ths balloon bad slowed it to less than the speed of sound (760 miles an hour), a parachute pooped nut :mH lowered the package into the Gull ot Mexico test range. ENDS TONIGHT ! A Lovely Lady BEAUTY LOUNGE .Aero it From FMt NltW """" Jo Ann Jnhnn nvrly Hott-hst.M Lap Reynold! 805 I. Main - TU 2-6063 No Appointmtnr Nactisary ""H-aMHrHrrsH Cheap Power Step Taken mCHLAND. Wash. (AP) - Sri. enlists here have taken an ear vr slop toward possible development of low-cost nuclear power. The Atomic Energy Commission said Monday a new $15 million Plutonium recycle test reactor had gone Into a controlled, self-sustained chain reaction for the first time. In Washington. D. C, Sen. Hen ry M. Jackson. D-Wash.. said the successful test "should open the door to uliliiation for peaceful civilian purposes" of plutoniiim. Jackson, a member of the Joint Committee on Atomic Encrcv. said the nuclear product has so far been limited to military uses. I Tests ; w, l continue at (he AECs DKPOE BAY (AP)-Whcn Mr. ... ttiuiu pian. near ne e. jand Mrs. Harlan Losey heard rsr.v, u.m-mis 5i,u, ,c recycle , noises as they arrived at their process, if proved feasible by tavern early Monday, they invest further tests, should ho much ugated cautiously. He went to the uieapcr man uie so caiica gaseous n out door, she to the back. aiuusion process usen oy tne all at its Oak Ringe instnllnlion seciiritv affairs "at the prime ministerial level." The staff study said such a plan would appear nt first glance to lighten the Inart nn Ilia , But it said putting a first serre. bul falled to Pene'rate. tary between the president 'and his v-aninel member "unnM inn.,11. ably generate friction and resentment." Son Shoots Robber WILSONVILLE. Die iapia 30-year-old Hubbard man was shot ill an attemnterl nmR. ,., holdup at this community on the Portland-Salem freewnu lata . mit 1T1U1I- day night. Police said two nther men a caped in an automobile, wrecked it against a pole a shnrt ri;ct away and fled on foot into farm liclds. Police spread over the area in search. The man shot at Ijiutie'e Market was Donald William Far- roll. He was taken In st vir, Hospital in Portland. His condi tion was not determined at once. Police Said lie and nnnther man grappled with the stnre mm.r William Gilbert Lowrie, 45, but a nuu oiim ii-om a oandit's gun alerted Lowrie's son. Tcrrv. in who ran to his father's alri uiti. a .22 caliber revolver. Yonno ly-. rie said he wounded Farrell and put a couple of bullets into the fleeing car. Police said the bul lets hit window glass on the car, Murder Trial Postponed MEDFORD (AP)-The first de. gree murder trial of Keith Duane Adams was postponed Monday by a circuit court judge until Dec. 12. Adams, 32. had been scheduled to go on trial Monday. He is ac cused in the falal beatinc of his former wife. Hazel Jean Adams, at her home Aug. 4, three days after they had been divorced. His attorney told the court a psychiatrist he had hired will be unable to come to Medford be fore Dec. 4 to make a osvehiatric .examination of Adams. THE NEW SCREEN MUSICAL BY THE COMPOSERS OF "MY FAIR LADY" The Picture I of the Year with I 1 The Picture of the Year with the love songs ' you hear everywhere! Box Openi 6:15 Features - 7 8:30 10 une terrifying mile straight Mown into a canyon bf destruction! wur m If -it BRIAN KEITH-JOHN BEAL-JAMK DBURY it uwwi mm mm . u b m tui InrttRHUWRIJlW S WH1 DiMCY nwtiMJ Arriving Pair Nip Burglary In Fine Whiskey... FLEISCHMANN'S is the BIG buyl 90 PROOF is why I DIAMOND LECTURE A man suddenly darted out the rear. He got away although Mrs. Lose clipped him on the head with a pistol as he fled. They notified sheriff's deputies who a short time later arrested Hawaiians Visit Salem SAI.EM (AP)-Fnnr Ha.r,ii officials visited the Oregon capitol Monday to cet ideas fnr capitol in Hawaii. In the group were Leo C. Prit- cnard, Hawaii s administrative di rector, state Rons. Gent-re k'nm and William Bains - Jordan, and Cyril Lcmmon. architect. Oregon was (he last stop on a tour that took them to New Mex ico, Nebraska, North Carolina. Georgia, Louisiana, Texas and Arizona. 'The best was the last." said 'Plus 2nd Hit I " " "DON'T GO NEAR ' tiS-SS THE WATtW" JjJig Doors Open 6:45 Sea it fMM d r f Storting Times: 7:25 and 9:50 f la man walk in.? nlnti i? rn.iH sniith!Lpnimon Hp s.iiH Orrnnn'o n3r.i rtf O.... II. l.J - I I. -I .J l . . jRrt iiitu a Ulimp iwi pi taviuvu uic ucm an ancc rtra ttit Amrlrin titm Jf.rltr hv svaltthla im "Th HlytttAUd llltmond l,i'lurr." i-nmpll llh tm IfiKnc InMrumrnti, and tlldri tn hutl(ut rlr. Ihli ltdatt cottr ill phrt of h hlit err, mining, diilrllMitlnn nd Ihr 4 i thai dlrmlnf dUmond quality. Kiprciallv drlmd fr arhat.lt, club and lhr rupa by ihr Amrtlran li'tn arlrlr uht nan-frafd rfanliatlan tprtnllnf lha ntlamrri Intaratll Ihla prairarn haa barn t nlhUtilraUt raraitrd lhruhaul lha 1 N. Thli Itrtura la val1ahlt a at puhllp afrtlrt ( J. 1'. Rnlf, JawtWr and Itaa Amtrlran (irm Saclal. J. C. RENIE, JEWELER 1021 M.ln TU 4-460 LEND. (in WHIAUPV OA PIRnntT 1 fr, AtAlt4i urnrri.i n,H..a THI FLEI8CHMANN DI8TILHNQ CORPORATION. NEW VORIX CITY j AjtcUAAA AAAAA A V V'on his head t ? ? T V ? ? ? ? ? v the sheriff said. Iments of any they had seen. CABINETS Factory Made . . . Factory Finished CHOICE OF NINE WOOD FINISHES See Our Display at 1960 So. Sixth (Klom.th Voll.y Lumbtr Bld9.) Compl.t. Kitch.n Strvic a ltningi By Appsinlmtnr Kkunaih Jdlclwu i960 So. 6th St. Horn than TU 2-2820 Phone TU 2-4778 .J; i ' ii tuiH if f4 r - 4 c- 1'3 DORIS DAY-REX HARRISON JOHN GAVIN 11055 HUHTtf tllWIH P10DUCTI0H ' MYRNALOY-RODDY .McDOWALL HERBERT MARSHALL NATASHA PARRY JOHN WILLIAMS HtRMlONE BADDLLEY hmr'u H tut w w li nmtt . l