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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1960)
Ir. MARKETS and FINANCE STOCKS WALL STREET NEW YORK (AP) - American leiepnone soared more than 7 points in response to news of a dividend boost while the slock market as a whole closed mixed today. Trading was heavy. Volume for the day was esti ' mated at 3.7 million shares com pared with 3.34 million Tuesday. AT&T raced ahead more than 4 points as news came that direc- tors plan to boost the dividend next July to 90 cents from the present quarterly rate of 821 cents. At the same time the com pany announced that shareholders would be issued rights to purchase J.l:.: I i . .. . uuuiuiidi snares, presumaDiy at price neiow tne market level at the time. The rest of the market contin- tied narrowly mixed, receiving noi480 lbs., 25.50-27.50; Medium, 22.- Immediate inspiration from the news. Steels showed hardly any change. Motors continued moder ately lower,, with Ford down more than a point. Chock Full o' Nuts continued to hold a gain of bout 2. Commercial Solvents, Certain- Teed, Radio Corp., Texaco and; DuPont were up about a point, U.S. government bonds drifted gently downward. Corporates were mixed. ' NEW YORK STOCKS : By United Press International Allied Chemical 54 Allis Chalmers 23H American Car 33'i American Motors 17li American Smelting 54T4 American Tel and Tel 102'4 Ampex 23U Anaconda 44 Associated Dry Gds 75 Bethlehem Steel 38 Boeing Aircraft 38V Bordens 55V Brunswick Balke 93V4 . Calif. Packing 404 Caterpillar Trac. 301! Celanese 22': Chicago Rock Island 20 . .' Chrysler 38 , Crane Co. 47 Crown Zellerbach 524 ' Crucible Steel 174 How Chemical 754 Du Pont 1864 Eastern Airline 23 Eastman Kodak 1134 Fairchild Camera 150 Fibreboard 264 Food Mach 624 Eord 644 General Elec 74 General Food 71 General Mtrs 41 General Tel. 28 Georgia Pac. 534 Goodyear 34 Granite City SU. 374 Greyhound Corp. 204 International Bus. Mach. 589 International Harvester 42 Tx International Nickel 59 International Paper 92 Johns Manville 564 Jones Laughlin Steel 544 Kaiser Alum Chem. 404 Kennecott 74 Kroger 314 Libby 10 ' Libby Owens 50 Liggett and Myers 81 Lockheed 28 Magma Copper 39 McKesson - Robbins 37 Montgomery Ward 26 Morrell 34 National Biscuit 71 National Distillers 244 National Lead 85 4 New Vor Central 15 4 Olin Mathieson 43 Pacific Gas 71 Pacific Lighting 524 Pacific Tel. 29 Packard Bell 234 Pan Amer. World Airways 17 J. C. Penney 434 Penn Railroad 11 Pepsi Cola 444 Philco 18 Phillips Pete 534 Polaroid 197 Proctor and Gamble 1374 Radio Corp. 544 Republic Steel 534 Rcxall Drug 44 ' Reynolds RJ Tobacco 914 Rhcem Mfg 134 Richfield Oil 874 Safeway 374 . Sears Roebuck Co. 56 Shell Oil 38 Sinclair Oil 36 Socony Vacuum Oil 38 Southern Calif. Edison 684 Southern Pacific 19 Standard Oil Calif. 454 Standard Oil Indiana 43 Standard Oil Jersey 404 Stanley Warner 25 Studebaker Packard 6 Swift and Co 46 Texas Co. 81 "tidewater Assd. 204 Transamerica 274 Union Carbide 1254 Union Oil Co. 42 Union Pacific 264 United Aircraft 364 United Airlines 364 United Slates Gypsum 110 United States Rubber 45 United States Steel 774 Varian 49 Western Union 404 ttestinghouse Air Brake 214 Westinghouse Elec. 514 Youngstown Sheet and Tube 88 Woolworth 694 TEETOTALERS . first temperance society in the United States was founifcd in 1789 by 200 Connecticut farmers who pledged "not to partake of al coholic beverages during the bar. et season." LIVESTOCK KLAMATH FALLS LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET Dec. 20, I960 Receipt: Cattle 363. Hogs 29 Sheep 71. Compared last Tuesday stocker and feeder cattle .50 higher; Mar. ket on fed cattle not established; hogs .50 lower. Cows: Utility, 13.70-14.00; Can. ners and Cutters, 11.70-13.70. Bulls: Utility it CmcL 19.00 ;20.25 Veal Calves: Good, 23.25-23.50 Baby Calves, Beef, 35; Hoi- steins, 25.00-27.00 per head. Stockers and Feeders: Steers, Good-Choice, 570-750 lbs., 22.60- . . ' a,26.80; Common-Medium, 550 -.700 lbs.,. 20.00 . 23.25. Heifers, Good Choice, 600-750 lbs., 21.00-21.20. Steer Calves, Good-Choice, 300 25-24.50. Heifer Calves, Good, 300 380 lbs., 22.40-23.90. Stock Cows. Medium-Good, with age, 165 - 173; Common head. 125 per.BrooKings Hogs: U.S. 1 & 2 (180-220 lbs.), 17.60; U.S. Medium. 16.10. Sows. 12.25 Weaner Pigs, 9.00-11.00 per Feeders, 16.50. head Sheep: Fat Lambs. Good-Choice. 16.00-16.70; Feeder Lambs, Good- Choice, 13.60-14.70; Medium, 11.70; Ewes, Slaughter, 1.50-1.60. Reported by Ray Petersen, county extension agent. RED BLUFF (UPI-FSMNS) Weekly livestock auction: Cattle salable 456, including around 250 calves. Moderately ac tive. Slaughter classes steady; stockers and feeders, 50-1.00. Slaughter cows: Commercial and standard 16.50-17.90; utility 15.10-16.60; canners and cutters 10.70-15.10. Stocker and feeder steers eood and choice calves 335-500 lbs 25.70-28.75; medium and low good 21.25-25.50. Good and choice 600 785 lbs 23.80-24.50; medium low good 500-725 lbs 18.00-23.35. Stocker and feeder heifers eood and choice calves 300-475 lbs 22.00-25.00, bulk 23.25-24.00. Good choice heifers 485470 lbs 18.00 22.00, medium 16.50-18.50. Stock cows medium and eood. calvy, 160-177.50 each. Pairs 210 215 each. ' : r PORTLAND (AP) - (USDA1- Cattle salable : 250; slaughter steers and heifers barely' tested; i lots cutters and utility 14.00- 17 HA- .QnnnB J-...- , An . few sales utility cows 14.50-15.00; i vomica uuwu lu ll.w-ll.au: canners and cutters 10.00-12.50: early bulk 11.00-12.25, Holsteini cutters 12.50-13.50 early. Calves salable 50; market not well tested early; few good and choice vealers steady at 25.00 28.00. . Hogs salable ,400; market mod erately active, steady with Tues day; U.S. 1-2 butchers 190-230 lbs mostly 19.00; No. 2-3 180-240 lbs 18.00-18.50; few lots No. 2-3 265- 295 lb 16.50-17.50. Sheep salable 200; bulk supply expected to arrive; small lot good and choice 75 lb feeder lambs steady at 15.00. . STOCKTON (UPI . FSMNS) Livestock: Cattle salable 25; hogs salable 25; calves and sheep salable none. No price tests. GRAINS CHICAGO (AP) Prev. High Low Close close Wheat Mar May Jly SeV 2.07 2.06 2.07 2.064 2.044 2.024 2.04 2.02 .that sang on Dec. 18 will sing 1.86 1.85 L86 1.85! again. There will be no choir 1.894 1.884 1.89 1.884 .practice Thursday, Dec. 22, but Corn Mar 1.10 1.084 1.094 1.08 1.134 1.124 1.134 1.12 l.lfi 1.14 1.15 1.14 1.154 1.144 1.15 1.14 May Jly Sep Oats Mar .65 .67 .67 .64 .66 .664 .674 .65 .67 .67 .684 .644 .66 .664 .674 May Jly Sep Rye Mar May Jly 1.15 1.13 1.15 1.084 1.184 1.17 1.18 1.13 1.194 1.174 1.194 1.17 Sep 1.20 1.20 1.20 - Soybeans Jan 2.234 2.214 2.234 2.214 2.274 2.254 2.274 2.25 2.30 2.29 2.30 2.28 2.314 2.304 2.31 2.30 2.22 2.21 2.21 2.21 Mar May Jiy - Sep POTATOES SAN FRANCISCO (UPI FSMNS i Potatoes unchanged. LOS ANGELES (UPI-FSMNS) Potatoes: Russets Central Oregon U.S. 1 6-14 oz one mark 5.40; 50 lbs 3.10. CHICAGO (AP) Potatoes ar rivals 40; on track 185; total U.S. shipments 348; market firm to slightly stronger; carlot track sales: Idaho Russets 5.00-5.10; Idaho Bakers 6.00; Minnesota North Dakota Red River Round Reds 2.30-2.45. POTATO SHIPMENTS KLAMATH BASIN Seasons St-60 60-6I Daily Truck. Ore. IS 11 Daily Rail. Ore. 8 Dailr Truck. Calif. S 14 Daily Rail. Calif. 21 IS Daily Total Ore. k Calif. 4 48 Monthly Total M2 C17 Season Total K5T 71 HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Several Lawsuits Filed Over Collisions In Area Collisions Involving trains. trucks and motorcycles provided the causes for lawsuits filed re cently in the county clerk's of fice. The Great Northern Railway Co. is suing Ned Putnam, owner of the Ned Putnam Logging Co.. for a whopping $208,777.26 as a result of a collision between a train and a loaded logging truck. The- collision occurred Oct. 31. 1959. Four diesel engines and 36 railway cars were derailed at the Oregon Weather By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours lo 4:30 a.m. Wednesday Max. Min. Prep. Astoria 47 31 37 24 55 41 40 24 41 36 49 33 39 29 52 35 53 39 39 30 45 28 63 M 45 26 45 37 43 31 38 30 Baker Bums Eugene Lakeview Medford Newport North Bend Pendleton Portland Red Bluff Redmond Roseburg Salem The Dalles Western Oregon Partly cloudy through Thursday with patchy fog on coast and considerable fog in interior valleys night and morn ing hours. Fog persisting through the day in interior southern val leys. Little temperature change. Low tonight 30-40; high Thursday 44-52 except in the 30s in foggy areas. Variable coastal winds 5-15 miles an hour tonight, becoming southeasterly 16-26 Thursday. Eastern Oregon Partly cloudy through Thursday with fog per sisting in some valleys. Little change in temperature. Low to night 18-28; high Thursday 35-45. Northern Oregon Beaches Fair through Thursday except shallow fog in morning. Light var iable beach winds. Temperature range 35-57. Grants Pass and vicinity Mostly cloudy or foggy through Thursday. Low tonight 25-30; high Thursday 43-48. A m iSUSPCIlClGCl TGrfll VlVefl I OUTI1 A 30-day sentence for petit lar ceny was suspended by District Court Judge Joseph J. Thai- hofer Tuesday afternoon after 18- year-old Ronald Marvin Malson agreed to admit himself to Ore gon State Hospital in Salem. Malson, who lives m an East Main Street apartment house, ad mitted stealing two cartons of cigarettes from the Oregon Food Store on South Sixth Street Satur day. Malin Church Choir To Sing MALIN Special Christmas mu sic, the antnem, Birth ot a King," Nedlinger, will be pre sented by the choir of the Malin Presbyterian Church, Sunday, Christmas Day.' Soloist will be Mrs. George Fabianek. By special request a double trio the choir will practice briefly at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 25, at Gray's Music studio. Regular practice will resume at 7 p.m., Dec. 29. There will be special music also on Communion Sunday, Jan. 1. The meter is the basic unit of length in the metric system. It is equal to 39.37 inches, i CITY THE YOUTH FELLOWSHIP of; the Church of the Brethren will present a Christmas play Friday,! Dec. 23, starting at 7:30 p.m. at: the church, 4273 Bristol Street. The public is invited to the serv - ice. ROYAL ORDER OF THE MOOSE annual Christmas party Klamm Pftfll, Ort&ofl Serving SOuthtrn Ortgnn nd Northfrn California Publlihed dally laxceot Sat.) and Sunday "l , Mam at Etplsntdf w. ffiStILm lemarad ai ttund clan mattar at ttw poll omc ! Kiamain ram. union, en AimuM 20, i. wwar act 1 Con- I tat paid at Klamath Fain. Oregon areu. March t un sacona-ciaiv (wit ind at additional mailing ottieta. SUiJCKIPTION RATES Carrier 1 Month I 13 '. Montltt IIO.K 1 Year M1.M Mail in Advance) I Month I II 4 Month VO tt 1 Year HI M Carrier and Deelera weekday a Sunday, copy it UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS audit sureau OP CIRCULATION SubecrlBrft receiving delivery f ffwir Herald an Gen Carpenter : Newt, mm ptn TWxM Mill Falls, Oregoe Wednesday. Dee. 21, IK Tionesta grade crossing in Modoc County, Calif. Great Northern asks compensation for damages to the engines, cars, the expense of clearing the track and the commodities being transported. The truck driver, John R. Dris coll, died in the crash. i A motorcycle-pickup truck col lision on June 9, 1960, is the basis for a $56,837 lawsuit brought by Eugene F. Miller against the Klamath Gas Company and Wil liam A. Down. The collision between Miller's motorcycle and the pickup truck, driven by Down, occurred in front of 1003 East Main Street. Miller suffered a fractured left hand and arm and injuries to his left leg. face and teeth. Fred S. Dunn is asking $48,904.- 99 from Lee Mount for injuries he suffered in a truck crash 14 miles north of Chemult on Jan. .9, 1959. He swerved his truck to avoid a wrecker being operated by Mount on Highway 97. Dunn's truck plunged over an embank ment. Molesting Charges Are Filed MOUNT HEBRON - Siskiyou County sheriff's deputies have charged two men with molesting a child and a couple lor con tributing to delinquency of a min or. All are horn Mount Hebron Deputies Friday arrested Isaac Leonard Skidmore, 62. He was arraigned for child molestation charges bclore Judge Les Chase of Dorris Justice Court Monday. Bail was set at $10,000 and Skidmore was remanded to cus tody of the sheriff in lieu of bail. He was taken to the county jail in Yreka. A preliminary hearing for Skid more was set for Jan. 11. Judge Chase appointed J. H. Messner, county public defender, as Skid- more's attorney. Deputies then arrested Richard Joseph Morgan, 22, and Mr. and Mrs. Marland Francis Kusick Tuesday night here. Morgan was charged with molesting a child and the Kusicks with contribut ing to delinquency of a minor. They were taken to the county jail. AH three were arraigned in Dorris Justice Court Wednesday morning. Deputies said two girls were involved in circumstances that led to the arrests. One was 10 years of age and one 11, they said. One girl was taken into pro tective custody and the other was released to her parents. Officers said they first re ceived child molestation reports I,.,. .i. j Cl:he should not accept the post un- -tvw, DS been investigating the charges since. Investigation is continuing, they said, and further charges may be filed. KF Exhibitors Among Winners Two Klamath Falls exhibitors at the Rogue Valley Art Associa tion art competition were among the numerous winners. A third place ribbon went to Lyle F. Matoush with an Intag lio etching, "Apparitions." How ard Hall, art director, Klamath Union High School, won honorable mention with an oil, "Forest Pat tern." The competition was open to artists in several media from Roseburg south to Mount Shasta and Ihe coast to Klamath' Falls. Of 127 pieces submitted the jury selected 48 for the exhibit which will continue through Dec. 27. BRIEFS for families and children will be held Thursday, Dec. 22, at 7 p.m. at Moose Home, 1010 Pine. MERRY MIXERS will not , dance this week. i DEOLA WRYN, 4525 Anderson Avenue, will be the host of the Carnation Club meeting Wednes day, Dec. 21, at 8 p.m. There will be a gift exchange. PETERSON-SCHOOL will pre sent its annual Christmas pro gram Thursday, Dec. 22, at 7:45 IP-"1 The public is invited. ' ' I ,M E R.R Y. XERS .in.ner5 class scneouieo to meei weancs- ij r - haK been changed aaJ' L,ec- " nas Deen "langea to meet Wednesday, Dec. 28. KLAMATH STAMP AND COIN iCLl'B will meet Wednesday, Dec. 21, at 8 p.m. in the Moose lodge. Visitors are welcome. MAVERICKS will hold a Christ mas party and square dance Wed ncsday, Dec. 21, at Summers Lane acnoui at a p.m. inere viu uc ex r. I ..a wi ill rhanp nf nlft. and women art ; " , i reminded to brine salads cr sand- ' wiches. PAGE J-AI Kennedy's Chum Will Be Senator nnCTnV fAPl Rnninmin A Smith lli 43. a former Harvard,0'01""''1 on Unemployment Com roommate ol President-elect John pensation recommended today F. Kennedy, has been tapped to that the legislature make no fill out the two years remaining changes in the jobless benefit pay of Kennedy's Senate term. !mcnl; and payroll taxes paid b smun, a lormer mayor oi uiou- coster and currently a manufac turcr in that seaport city, was notified of the appointment Tues day night by Kennedy himself. Democratic Gov. Foster Fur- colo announced late Tuesday he would name Smith to the U. S. Senate "at the suggestion of Pres ident-elect Kennedy." Smith said the first word he had received of the appointment was a direct telephone call from Kennedy from his winter head quarters in Palm Beach. Fla. Smith said Kennedy will resign his Senate scat Jan. 3 and that Smith would take over on the samp Hav. civinn him spninrilvia over other freshmen senators due to be sworn in a day later. Furcolo said it was his under standing Smith would not seek a full six-year term to the U. S. Senate in 1964. However, Smith refused to spec ulate on his political plans of two years hence. Israel To Use A-Reactor For Peaceful JERUSALEM (AP) Prime Minister Pavid Ben-Gurion told Parliament today that the atomic reactor Israel is building in the Negev desert will be "dedicated entirely" to research for peace ful purposes. Ben-Gurion said the reactor Israel's second would not be completed for three or four years. When completed, he said, "it will be open to students from oth er countries as well." He said it would have a capacity of 24,000 Say Dillon Was Urged Not To Bite DES MOINES, Iowa (API-Re publican Douglas Dillon, secre tary of the Treasury in the Ken nedy administration, was told in forceful language by President Eisenhower not to accept the ap pointment, two Midwest newspa pers said today. The Des Moines Register & Tribune and the Minneapolis Trib une & Star said in a copyright story from their Washington Bu reau correspondent Richard Wil son: It is learned that both the President and (Treasury Secre tary Robert) Anderson told Dillon in a forceful and firm fashion that , u. . r. less IMS KUl a 111111 iuhiuiuimi,,. from Kennedy that the president elect was repudiating the Demo cratic platform and statements on fiscal policy made during the campaign." The story said the acceptance by Dillon, Undersecretary of State in the Eisenhower administration, came as a surprise to the Presi dent, to Anderson and to Vice President Richard M. Nixon. Dillon, a New York investment banker, reportedly was told that unless he got such commitments he would end up as did Lewis Douglas of Arizona, President Franklin D. Roosevelt's first di rector of the budget. Douglas broke with Roosevelt on spending policies early in the New Deal. Earlier this week White House press secretary James C. Hagerty declined comment on a report that Eisenhower was annoyed be cause Dillon accepted the incom ing Democratic administration job. ; Transient Gets Six-Month Term Loyce Edwin Fitch, a 39-year-old transient, was sentenced lo six months in the county jail af ter being found guilty of petit larceny by District Judge Joseph J. Thalhofer. Fitch was convicted of steal ing four rolls ot copper wire from the Southern Pacific Rail road on Friday. Hemorrhoids Cured Painlessly By Non-Surgical Method The non-sari ieal, electronic method for the treatment of Hemorrhoids (Piles) devel oped by doctors at the Dtan Clinic has been so Mccettfu! and permanent m nature that the following policy i offered their patients : "After ail symp toms of Hemorrhoids . . , have subsided and the patient has been discharged, H he should ever have a recurrence, all Council Recommends That Oregon Not Change Jobless Pay And Taxes By PALL W. HARVEY JR. AI I.-M (API Tl, A.M.rt,.., ' "'""J employers. The council's labor members, however, said they want more lib eral benelits. The council, appointed by Gov. Mark O. Hatfield, consists of four representatives of employers, four of labor and three public mem bers. The 1959 Legislature increased employer payroll taxes and tight ened up on benefit payments. The council said this system is work ing well. The emploer and public mem be voted to keep the 1959 provi sion for maximum benefits of $40 week. A workman must earn $20 in each of 20 weeks during a year in order to be eligible for benefits. Two labor members favor rais ing the $10 to half of the average wage paid in the stale. All four labor members oppose the $20-20 provision as being too restrictive. The majority of the council said Purposes kilowatts, far greater than the U.000 kilowatt training reactor b"'" 'n the Reliovoth area with U. S. help. Ben - Gurion's statement was prompted by newspaper reports published in Washington and Lon don that Israel, with French aid, was secretly building an atomic reactor that would be used to pro duce an atomic bomb. Both the Israeli and French governments denied the report, saying their nu clear cooperation is entirely to peaceful purposes. Worker Tells Of His Ordeal Aboard Carrier NEW YORK (AP) - Six hours alone, trapped in a ship that had become a steel furnace. That. says John Woytovich, 57, is being "very, very alone. Woytovich, a chunky electrician from Brooklyn, Tuesday told the story of his ordeal Monday aboard the aircraft carrier Constellation. When fire broke' out he was three decks below with a crew working on a refrigeration unit. He helped the other men out of Ihe compartment first, then be came lost in the blinding, chok ing smoke as he tried to follow. "Somehow I ended up in a chain locker," he said. "I felt a draft around my ankles. There was air' down there, so I lay down on my Ui,.k ...:ik f i.. ,u- a.uiiiaii, ni.iiitij ihlc auauiai Mils vent. That's what saved my life. "I wanted to be home for Christmas and . . . I'm going to be now. It's just a miracle. Lord knows, I lay there and prayed for one." By the time rescue workers got Woytovich out, he was purple in the face from the heat, but Tues day night his condition was de scribed as good. Crosby's Son Can't Remember LOS ANGELES (AP) - Bing Crosby's son Dennis was too much under the influence of liquor to remember details of a romance with a divorcee, says her attor ney in a paternity suit. Nine women and three men jurors were picked Tuesday to hear Marilyn Miller Scott's ac tion against the crooner's singing son. The tall divorcee, 28, wants Dennis, 20, declared the father of her daughter, Dcnise Michelle, 3. He says he isn't. Mrs. Scott s lawyer, Milton Zcr in, told the jury he expects to present evidence showing that when she and Dennis met in 1956 Dcflnis often drank more than 15 cocktails or highballs an evening. Dennis was married in 1958 to former showgirl Pat Shechan, 28. They have a son, Dennis Jr., 20 months, and Crosby adopted her son, Gregory, 9, by a former marriage. further treatment! win be fiv en absolutely free." The Dean Clinic has been serving the Northwest for fifty years. Their treatment requires no hospitalisation and does not employ drugs or injections. Write today or a descrip tive booklet, yours without obligation: The Dean Clinic, Chiropractic Physicians, 2026 N. E. Sandy Blvd. Portland 12, Oregon. ;i moderate liberalization of clicl - uility requirements could be an Jiwning wedge lo lower standardsjder which Social Security nav- even further. Labor members probably will take their proposals to the legislature. hmployers now pay 2.7 per cent of the first Sj.800 of each work - cr's animal wage to finance Ihe program. The council said pros ixiits are good that the uiicmplov incut fund will grow large enough iiy law to permit a rate schedule ol 1.2 to 2.7 per cent to go into ellcct tor that year. "These adequate financing pro visions, the council said, "are based on the premise that no sub stantial increase in the costs of the program w ill occur." The council recommended that the legal term "unemployment compensation be changed to 'un employment insurance" because it really is an insurance .prouram. a. uliH. callmg 11 comPsa- uon makes it sound like a dole or welfare program. BELLS HARDWARE Appliance Smbeahi fepsffi AUTOMATIC Z. 'i-SKf' CAM OPENER I -pSpA Teaiter L 22.06 (TA h I Stond Model VCP 7 Jt' R9- 25.95 yjjgr ' A hA afoiAi EXTRA 9m GRILL AND f?j) w mmx waffle mmw popcorn KER ,ra- P0PPR jcraKsllflf tjy Auto malic Electric . SHARPENS" 995 KNIVES - SCISSORS PENCILS FREE GIFT WRAPPING I l The council also rn-nnimpnH Retain Ihe nreseni nrnvkinn i,n. nunls are not iii-Hm-il (mm ,,. -employment benelits. I Denv bcne(j(s , g missm) from hie inh - jting a felony, r , n lj.,lui , f, ...,: Do not give coverage to other trawler employes. Grant hearings to employers who object when charges arc made aRainst their accounts. Provide more money for fraud investigations. Allow state employes of the stale Board of Higher Education and the state schools for the blind and deal to continue to draw ben efits in the summer months. Disqualify women who leavj work to get married and then move to other states. Women now are disqualified for four weeks when they get married. 088 WITHOUT CONTROL AND . LID SALE SUNBEAM HAND MIXER 1866 Rej, 21.95 CaZiDEiUMj Fire Threatens 1 Famous Clinic ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) - A spectacular fire swept the 75-year, old unoccupied Damon Hotel early today threatening the new Mayo Clinic building and the Kahler Hn. tel across the street. Fireman fought the blaze in 10-below zero weather. The three-story bulding, one of the oldest hotel landmarks in southeastern Minnesota, is being mm uuwn 10 extend clinic parking facilities. The blaze broke out shortly be fore 4 a.m. wind sent embers over the area. Heavy smoke engulfed the area. By 7 a.m. only the south wing of the old structure of brick ve- neer with wooden frame interior was still standing. CLOSK SHAVE CHICAGO (UPI) A bomb squad gingerly opened a ticking Christmas package at the p o s t office Tuesday and found a bat-tery-powered electric shaver, bus ily working away. The bomb squad men turned off the shaver, rewrapped it, and sent it on its way. d. RC Reg. 17.M. Control Intra General Electric All Electric Appliances Salt Priced For Chrittmat rj a STEAM