Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 07, 1963, Page 2, Image 2

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    Travel Modes-
ACROSS
lWmllyvehlcb
4Ttxil
8 Hortcmui'l
' travel mode
12 Mohsnunedsli
title of ref pect
13 Oriental nurse
14 Presently
15 Hawaiian
' wreath
16 Pronted
18 Thawing
30 Faultily
21Wle of Aeglf
, (myth.)
"22 Burden
24 Book of the
-. Bible
2ft feed vessel
(ab.)
37 Horae color
39 Remain
40 Savin (s
41 Encountered
42 Domestkator
45 Noisy ones
46 Milky liquids
61 Knock
62 Feminine
appellatioB
U OrienUI
foodstuff
64 Age
65 Card
M Japanese)
outcasU
57 Low haunt
DOWN
1 Peaceful
' if u.toh nf Inrils 2 Awrv
-SOCudgeler 'SPennsyind
32 Fastening
othera
device
34 Senior!
36 Attack
4 Rude domicile
( Church
response
e
i " j ji "1 U IS- li 17 la "la 1 116 In
12 n' ft
13 n
fiT 19 ""!3T
; ' si a-b 1
JTET-""" "b" STpTT
33 Si - J2
3? 1 !3S
35 71 37 iT" "33
' ' ' 1 1 w isr
42 W3 K4 ""l4 47 (43
a ST sr
sr 53" 5?
55 55 5T
I I I I lit!., I I I 7
Stocks Hit Record
r r sT II
mqns in big Kaiiy
NEW YORK (UPI) Slocks
glittered for the new year last
week, smashing through to new
recovery highs on the biggest pro.
longed rally since the Cuban
ririsis.
;Jfler inching ahead despite
ljeavy tax-lo;s selling in the final
sejsion of 1962, stocks reopened
far the new year on Wednesday
ijth a dull, selective decline cen
tered on high-riding blue chips.
:jrhcn, with the tax pressure re
moved and first-of-the-year profit-taking
lilted, the market went1
l!ew Controls
PORTLAND (UPIi - The Stale
Sanitary Atitnority was loin rn
day that new control equipment
has reduced fluoride pollution nt
the Harvey Aluminum Co. plant
at The Dalles by 50 per cent.
The Authority, however, turned
down a request that it dismiss
show - cause proceedings against
the company. Richard Hatchard,
chief of the air pollution control
division, said air snmplinq should
be continued Into the spring and
summer growing seasons to deter
mine if any damage was being
done to plants and Iruit trees.
Harvey also was ordered to
grant free access to air quality
control inspectors without advance
notice.
Charges of "dictatorship" ech
oed at another point in the Au
thority's meeting here when the
town of Sherwood asked for more
tithe to present engineering and
imnncing plans lor a sewage
treatment plant.
Kenneth 11. Spies, deputy stale
sanitary engineer, suggested the
Washington County lown ol 7.12
persons he given until July 1 to
submit the plans. Sherwood City
Atly. Fred Anderson called the
(leadline "unreasonable" and said
it would kill the whole project.
"This thing has been going on
for 10 years and it doesn't seem
unreasonable to have plans by
July I," Dr. R 11. Wilcox coun
tered The Authority then ap
proved the deadline and threaten,
ed a court complaint if Die ton
doesn't meet it.
FIND RIGHT fl RE
BUDAPEST i ITU - Hungar
ian newspapers claimed today
they have cut traffic mishaps by
women drivers by printing both
Ihe names and ages of the women
invi-ilvivl
The newspapers said that, where
women are concerned, vanity
works better than logic.
Ends TUESDAY!
m
limr.s Hotter
kTECHiftC01.0R TtCHHMM.'i
. FCTTI'RIRIU P 1
: :.-ji.,J"An intense
-7 I eiperiencel"
frsTTvjihhrn
AmwM to Pravlotu PuiiU
7 Pronoun .20 Depend
8 Mangles 31 Mistakes
Against 33 Property item
30 Fun eggs (pL) 3fl Ingenious
11 Termini 40 Waylay
17 Fillings 41 Biblical
IB Sample character
23 Hebrew month 42 Canvas shelter
24 Brother ol Win 43 uve goo
(Bib.)
44 Prospector's
25 Dissolve
20 Mallclouf
burning ,
57 Splashed
travel moat
48 Indian
47 Uncommon
48 Bridge
Zfl Lamb
w Anger
inlo its steepest upward spiral
since Oct. 24.
When the industria1 average es
tablished a new recovery peak
from the big break of last spring,
additional buying and short cov
ering developed and carried
through Friday when trading was
so heavy that tickets sent "flash"
prices for the first time since the
exchange installed Its faster sys
tem of recording transactions on
Nov. 1.
In the Dow averages, indus
trials gained 10.80 to 662.23, rails
rose 7.S1 to 147.51, utilities tacked
on 103 to 131.01 and 65 slocKs
rose 5.44 to 234.30. !
Trading over the abbreviated
(our-day period totaled 17.M4.486i
shares against 14.359.6:10 in Christ
mas week and 15.796,810 in New
Vear's week of 1962.
The week's most active issues,
in order, were Brunswick up "i.
Spcrry-Rand up , American &
Foreign Power up . Chrysler up
i and General Motors up 2'a.
Cains in the top two were at
tributed to reinvestment demand
and covering following relief from
tax-selling pressure. Chrysler and
UM rose on a huge increase in
December auto sales and the ulili-
ly responded to a special offering
for its shares.
The powerful surge in rail
sliares on the heels of ICC appro
val of the B&O-C&O Merger fea
tured the market. These two is
sues, plus Pittsburgh & West Vir
ginia, Atlantic Coast Line, Louis
ville It Nashville, Southern and
Seaboard Air Line gained from
three to seven points while many
others rose two or more.
Dine chip industrial highlights
were Anaconda up 3V Bethlehem
Pa. Proctor ft (iambic 2. U S
Steel 2j, Union Carbide 3lt, and
Alcoa l'a and American Tobacco
l'i. Big Du Tout dropped two
against the grain.
Tony Confirms
Wedding Story
HOLLYWOOD IT! - Actor
Tony Curlis conlirmrd rumors
Saturday that he plans to marry
German actress Christine Kauf
mann. "hut not until she is 18
years old "
Miss Kaulmann, romantically
linked with Curtis since the pair
co-starred in a movie last year,
will celebrate her 18th birthday
Jan. II.
A friend said it was probable
Curtis would marry Miss Kaul
mann belore the month u out.
The 37-year-old star was divorc.lurdav. causinc an estimated IS
ed earlier this year in Juarpz,
Mexico, by actress Janet Leigh
who since has remarried
Klimtth rtt, OrttM
Puellthte tally ((pi Sal I an tMf
Sarvlnf SMitharA OrfM
4 Narlhtrn Olifnrni
r
Klematfc PvlitMnj (imMf
Mat at tUnada
ptwn Tu oam
W. fwHa-4, pvti'fhtr
Mar) a xtewKittt matitr at
(MMt HKe at KlamaMt Mlti, Oraton,
mi Atffvtt H. 1H. mtftr act 1 -frttt,
March J. IIT lexaM-cuiii at
aa MM at Kiamatu ran, Ortaan
ne at aMittanal mnit affttai.
SUftKftir-T.ON HATIt
tarrtar
I want. tin
I MrtM HIM
1 Vaar Ul M
Mail .a. Atvanca
I Maftto , I 1 T
I Mantfit : iM
1 Yaar Hit
Cart-tar arttf Oaalan
WMtar 4 tvMffV. 1c
UNITIO PRItt INTi NATION L
AUDIT tURIAU OP CIRCULATION
I SubHriatn nal raraivifta, trr a
tXtir HrH and Ntwt. r'itl aftftt
I TUiao HI aafara I P.M.
Adenauer
Observes
M
BONN I UPI I - Chancellor Hon
rad Adenauer turned a lively 87
years old Saturday, chipper as a
cricket as he sipped champagne
and shook hands with well-wish
crs. It probably was his last birth
day as head of the West German
government.
Adenauer, oldest living govern
ment head, began the day by at
tending a mass said by his son
Paul, a Roman Catholic priest.
and then for six hours received
a stream of Germans from all
walks of life who came to the
chancellory on the banks of the
Rhine to pay their respects.
The ordeal which would have
tired a younger man did not ap
pear to faze him and throughout
he exchanged witticisms with his
callers. He was on his feet from
early morning until he sat down
to lunch with his family of seven
children and 32 grandchildren.
President Kennedy headed
long list ol world leaders sending
congratulatory messages to "der
altc," the old one, as he is called
behind his back. Kennedy told
him:
"Few men of such an age carry
the burden of high office with
such strength and energy and no
one has done more for the cause
of freedom."
'Both Adenauer's friends and po
litical enemies called at the chan
cellory to shake his hand and
pass on gifts.
Economics Minister Ludwig
Erhard, the man most likely to
succeed Adenauer, presented the
Cabinet's gift of two 18th century
silver candlesticks. Japanese Pre
mier Hayato Ikeda sent a gift of
three 200-year-old swarf pines.
The Free Democratic Party,
Adenauer's often-rebellious coali
tion partners, presented him with
20 bottles of one of Germany's
best wines.
Adenauer has announced his in
tention of making way for a young
man next fall, probably in Sep
tember, just short of 14 years as
chancellor. During that 14 years
he brought Germany from the
ruins of war to a position as one
of the richest countries in West
Europe.
Mother Held
For Murder
ESCONDIDO, Calif. tUPP An
autopsy disclosed Saturday that
Steven Potter, 2. Escondido. died
of a beating Friday at the hands
of his mother. Deputy Coroner
M. T. McKisic reported.
Mrs. Jerry Potter. 25, a mother
of five and the wile of a post
off uc employe, is being held in
San Diego County Jail on a mur
der charge.
Escondido Police Capt. George
Pierce said records show that an
other of Mrs. Poller's children.
a-monin-oin vetie. ciica ot
hull praciure in r.i.i aner a
beating by the mother while the
family 1 1 cd at Gages Lake. HI.
Pierce said Mrs. Potter struck
Steven repeatedly with her hand
and a 14-inch long willow switch
in an effort "to houscbreak" him.
He said the child, who wore only
a blood-sottcd undershirt and
tennis shoes, was found lying face
down on tnc lioor ol tne Denroom (
ny a me ocpai uuem ic.mhc ,
squad
He was pronounced dead on ar
rival 15 minutes later at Palomar
Hospital.
McKisic said there were bruises
on the child's face. neck, groin
and back and the autopsy showed
his heart and a lung were punc
tured. He said Ihe death was
caused by internal bleeding of the
organs ruptured by the heating.
Pierce said he planned to go to
Ihe district attorney's ollice Mon
day to seek a murder complaint
Fire Gufs
Warehouse
PASCO ilTI'-A lire of unde-
jiermined origin gulled a (ertiluer
company warehouse at Burbank.
it m,ies east of here, early Sat-
million worth of damauc
The hrp in Ihe (1. W. Chemco
Inc. warehouse and laboratories
broke out about 3 a m. Flame
ix-nMimed the entice interior of
the metal building and a portion
of the exterior walls collapsed.
Tlie warehouse was built about
Ifl months ago at a cost of MO,
000. Company olficials said about
t&o.ono worth of fertili7er was
Mored in the building. The fue
Mo dotroyed sccul compan
cars and truck-trailer units.
Fire Department official Mid
the bla;e apparently started in the
laboratory or at a nearby furnace
About 50 persons were employed
in the warrhoie.
WANTED!!
( omit 4
pat (,in hpa
na ttrh I i hlnp
t Ni tftasiiitfi Kltmtttt
Boss Irks Secretary
3y Childish Farewell
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Recently
you had a letter in your column
from a church secretary who com
plained because
the minister
wore his hat in
the office.
I was glad
when I saw that
letter because it
gave me tour
age to write to
you about a tee
ny weeny gripe which is driving
me nuts. My boss is a top execu
tive. He is bright, attractive, well
educated and going places. At the
close of his conversations with
other business men he invariably
savs. "bye bye."
I don't know what they think ol
State Plans
To Dig Well
SALEM (UPI) -
Plans to drill
demonstration
an experimental
well at Champoeg Park were an
nounced Saturday by the Oregon
Walter Resources Department.
The department said the experi
mental well will be designed to
demonstrate modern construction
methods and materials to show
the well drilling industry and the
public a method of constructing
efficient sand-free wells.
The demonstration will be con
ducted next Friday and Saturday
at Champoeg Park, in the heart
of the sand-troubled area of the
Willamette Valley.
Materials, equipment and serv
ices are being furnished by firms
and agencies interested in proper
design of wells, the state engineer
said.
A new rotary drilling machine
will be used, a plastic well casing
is being provided, a well screen
will be installed, and special drill
ing mud will be used.
Technical services are being
provided by the ground water
branch of the U.S. Geological Sur
vey and the state engineer.
Drilling will begin at 9 a.m.
Friday, and the well will be
drilled to a depth of 160 feet.
Drilling of the last 30 feet will
begin at 9 a.m. Saturday.
Water-bearing sand strata will
be developed by use of a high
velocity water jet, then a pumping
test will be held.
Champoeg slate park is located
on the south bank ot the Willam
ette River 10 miles west ot the
Willamette River bridge on the
Baldock Freeway between Port
land and Salem.
Last Chance
Plan Urged
PORTLAND iL'Pli-The Legis
lative Interim Committee on Ical
Government has recommended
legislation that will give local
u.iits ol government one more
flianr In rnntVM-.ltf. " Stall Hon
l-j,.j u-u-i-n n.PHUmt .in
Fridav.
In a speech to the City Club
here. Ihe committee chairman
said local taxing districts have
grown into an almost intolerable
hodge-podge. He said city dwell
ers, especially in Portland, are
paying an unfair share ol service
costs in fringe areas.
Mcdford has taken the right
c hy rofusinf, ,0 p,ov,te any
s.rvl0 outsld(. the citv hmits
W'hclan conlcndcd
One proposed law would pro
hihit incorporation of auv n c w-
cities within six miles of a present
city of 5.000 or more people and
within three miles of a smaller
incorporated city. Whelan said
such a law would prevent the de
vice of incorporating to escape
annexation.
FREE 1963 DESK CALENDAR
Owl SigLJbtkL
HARD OF HEARING
At a thank you to our many patienti and to
make new friends for our Heoring Aid Depart
ment, we have these beautiful easel type
plastic desk calendars yours for the ask
Ing. Just drop Into any one of our 10 Con
venient Locations
COLUMBIAN
730 Main
tuts, but to me It sounds like a
small child. I have discussed tliis
with other secretaries in the of
fice and they agree it's terrible
Should 1 come right out and
tell my boss "bye bye" is no
way to end a business conversa
tion? READY TO FLIP
. Dear Ready: Greetings and
farewells are highly personal. If
your boss wants to express his
own personality rather than stick
to conventional phiases, why
sho-ild you become unhinged
Say nothing. If you just can't
hear It another minute, pi to his
office and tell him "bye bye.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a boy
17. a high school senior and very
miserable. I wish you'd print this
ettcr so my mother will see it
She is wrecking my life but it will
sound different if you tell her.
My father left my mother four
years ago lor another woman.
My mother told me I would have
to take my father's place in her
life and make her happy. At first
it made me proud. 1 was only 13
but now I'm sick to death of it
My mother won't let me talk to
sirls on the phone. A date for a
school party is out of the ques
Hon. She tells me that girls will
get me into trouble and trap me
into marriage.
She talks about the evils of sex
until I'm ready to jump out of
my skin. If I tell her I'm going to
the library she says. "Wait, I'll go
with you." She begs me to hurry
home from school because she's
lonesome.
I told her last week I want to
live with Dad for awhile but she
says she'll kill herself if I leave
her. Please tell me what to do.
SEVENTEEN YEAR OLD
WRECK
Dear Seventeen: Your mother Is
mentally disturbed and needs pro
fessional help. Discuss this prob
lem with your principal or your
favorite teacher or your clergy
man. When you graduate from high
school 1 recommend that you go
to a city where you have rela
tives. Find a summer job a n d
plan to attend college away from
vour mother.
Dear Ann Landers: A dis
appointed mother of three lovely
daughters wants to know why
she is now the mother-in-law ol
three bums. Another woman with
lovely family is afraid she
will talk while under anesthesia.
In Ihe same column you tell a
woman about your lovely round
dining room table on winch your
sauare tablecloth looks lovely.
There is no word in the tngnsn
language more meaningless than
"lovely." A word which means
many things to many people has
meanine at all. Lovely Ills
just lovely into any round waste
basket.
A person who continually uses
trile. tired words has a limited
vocabulary, so take your punish
ment honorably and gently apply
that lovelv wet noodle to the
top of your lovely head. DE
TROIT '
Dear Detroit? Thank vou for
vour uh Interesting letter.
t uh cood nf ynu to
write.
Are you tempted to smoke be
cause Ihe crowd noes: n so.
send lor Ann lenders' booklet
"Teen-age Smoking." enclosing
wilh your request in rents in
coin and a long, self-addressed.
stamped envelope.
Ann Landers will be glad to
help vou wilh your problems
Send them to her in care ot this
newspaper enclosing a stamped.
self-addressed envelope
EMERGENCIES
and
ESTIMATES
BUD KENNEY
Plumbing & Heating
in an. nth rr 41; ntiim
At
OPTICAL CO.
TU 4-7121
wrests
Completed
By Rocket
PT. MUGU. Calif. (UPI) -Searcher,
a rocket launched vehi
cle that can vastly extend the
search range of Navy vessels, has
successfully completed its first
series of drop tests, it was an
nounced Saturday.
Searcher will provide ships at
sea with the capability of locat
ing nose cone beacons, downed
aircraft or personnel within an
area of 125.000 square miles with
out the use of search planes.
The drop tests were conducted
at the U. S. Navy's Pacific mis
sile range headquarters here.
.Searcher resembles a bullet
with helicopter rotor blades.
Its bullet-shaped payload, 18
inches long and 5 inches in dia
meter, is mounted atop a Side
winder class booster rocket for
launching. The payload has four
rotor blades, each 5 feet long,
designed to slow iu descent to
earth.
Contained in the payload arc a
transmitter, receiver, magnetic
heading reference generator and
antenna.
Drop tests were conducted from
a helicopter. However, in actual
operation, the Searcher will be
launched from ship deck straight
up in a vertical trajectory.
When the vehicle reaches 43.000
feet, tlie blades spring open and
a tumble occurs to cause booster
separation. Once free, the payload
rights itself and the slow spinning
descent to earth begins.
As it descends, it receives sig
nals from downed objects and
transmits them to the ship provid
ing an accurate fix for pick up
or rescue.
Two Strange
Deaths Eyed
SYDNEY, Australia IUPD -
The bizarre New Year's Day
deaths of a brilliant physicist and
Ihe wife of one of his coworkers
remained a puzzle to Australian
police today.
Authorities said preliminary
medical examinations indicated,
that stiychnine poison may have
killed Dr. Gilbert S. Bogle. 38.
and Mrs. Margaret Chandler, 29.
Hut they remained uncertain
whether to label the strange case
a double murder, accidental poi
soning, murder-suicide, or possi
bly, the result of a suicide pact.
The bodies of Bogle and Mrs
Chandler were discovered on a
river bank in a Sydney suburb
after both of them left a New
Year's party at 4 a.m., police
said.
Bogle was clad only in a shirt,
lie and socks and police said the
clothing on Mrs. Chandler's bodv
was disarranged. Three flattened
beer cartons were lying on her
body. I here w as no open Indira
tion of violence.
Police said the scientist, em
ployed by the Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Research
Organization, had known Mrs
Chandler only for about two weeks
Mrs. Chandler's husband had
been at the party. He left before
she did lo pick up their two chil
dren, who had spent the evenin
in tlie homes of friends.
Mrs. Bogle, who recently gave
birth to a child, slaved home.
Police said a pathological exam
ination indicated Mrs. Chandler
did not have sexual relations tlie
night of her death.
Now at Miller's!
Waitress
Skirts
lack Nylon
SlriM ft Flair
Sims t t. I
5.98
Also in stock - a
complete selection of
UNIFORMS by:
9 Bob Evan
Bares
White Swan
Tiffcny
Alt WittrtM Aprvns
.a tflts in r Ntini Dtpr,
HERALD AND
i w" 57Ac VaT vessel .s
HOMES DEMOLISHED BY SLIDE A Brentwood, Calif., water inspector uses cau
tion at he peers from cliff-hanging sidewalk into gaping hole left when two homes
were demolished due to landslides. One of the homes was owned by TV personality
Jack Leseoulie. No one was hurt as the homes had been evacuated earlier. With the
earth slippinq about two feet per hour, fears were expressed for other homes below.
H y UPI Telephoto
Educators
Tour Salem
SALEM I UPI i Seven educa
tors from seven countries toured
the city Saturday before set
tling down in Oregon communi
ties to study public education.
The educators, participants in
the International Teacher Develop
ment program of the U.S. Ollice
of Education, arrived here Thurs
day for meetings with Dr. Leon
Minear, state superintendent of
public instruction, and other state
education personnel.
Each educator has been as
signed to a local school system
and will live in that community
for five weeks to observe and par
ticipate in the school program, ac
cording to Dr. John S. Conway,
director of secondary education
and coordinator of the foreign ed
ucators' visit.
Tlie visitors and school systems
assigned them include Miss Maria
Mendcnez, Peru, assigned to
the Lake Oswego schools: Miss
Atifa Arslan Senno, Lebanon. Da
vid Douglas High School in Port
land; Hussein Nassif. Cyprus. Mil
waukie Union High School in Port
land Nolan Scalv from Barbados,
Monmouth - Independence schools-
Gabriel Soties Picrrcs, Mexico.
Eugene schools; Marcel Hofiman
Luxembourg. Corvallis schools;
and Ingvar Kristinn Thorarinsson.
Iceland. McMinnville schools. Both
Hofiman and Thorarinsson are
accompanied by their wives.
Idaho School
Sale Rumored
l.EWISTON. Idaho I UPI 'Offi
cials of Cascade College of Port
land. Ore., visited Lewis - Clark
Normal School here Friday.
It L reported that the Portland
liberal arts and science college is
considering buying the two year
Idaho normal school.
Included in the delegation was
Thomas Leupp. president of Cas
cade and Dr. Charles Fogg, chair
man of the Cascade's board of
truslces.
Eiclusivt! Fast!
Polaroid Reprints
2 for 25c
LEO'S CAMERA SHOP
836 Main Ph. 2-3331
l Sir- ,x - i . : J
VI
tl .. 'J ... fl
ll
NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon
. ... . .... ..w - t- H'....r.w ms.-hkmmk '-i li lyvaSHasnaavV
V.' ji.'rtn.i .am i ill i ion li Mi amsi. iniiiiiiiiifti '' ''- 8
Shifting Hill
WEST LOS ANGELES lUPD-
crash sandbagging program
was under way Saturday in the
exclusive residential Brentwood
area where a shifting hill already
destroyed two $60,000 houses and
threatened others.
More than 100 residents have
volunteered to (ill the bags and
lay new flood channels to protect
against further damage in case
of heavy rains.
The houses on Kenfield Avenue
were destroyed early Friday.
Houses below the shifting earth
area have been evacuated while
precautionary actions were being
taken, police said.
A spokesman for the residents
said a citizens committee was
making "rapid progress" in lining
up most of the 50 housenwners in
Early Woman
Printer Dies I
PORTLAND i UPI i - Mrs. Lu-'
cia Elizabeth Clemens, a pioneer
member of the International Ty
pographical Union and veteran
Northwest newspaperwoman, died
at her home here Friday. She was
86.
Mrs. Clemens started as an
apprentice typesetter on the Pen
dleton East Orcgonian at the age
of 15 and later became the first
woman member of the ITU in the
Northwest.
vvPWPwei 'ffwi'i 'I'M!
SAVE
I r: U.S.-Treasur7P3TS:ne"1 j -I .
'- lateuy!Rfvenu8 Service
Announcing...
tW A SIRVICI TO TAX PAY IB.
Tvfr wih, at income tax time, that you had a com
pleie rciord of eveiy cent you spent for drug and drug
prnduiK iliroughnut the year and how much of it ai
Irgallv clccluc tililr? i
That kind of a record rould save you money. And
that kind nl a record can now be yours, every year, aho
luiclv free of charge.
This new service is called DrugTax. We are making
it avail.ihlr lo all of our rusiomers immediately, free of
chaigc, as another way of saying "thank you for their
patronage.
on would he surprised at the number of drug and
medical supplies that can lie of a deductible nature
items such as amisepiics. aspirin, cough and cold prepa
rations, and hiindici's of others.
Indeed, the American taxpascr has been losing mil
lions of iloll.us aiinuallv because he hasn't been aware
of how mans ding items aie legally drdm liblc.
Hut sou must be able to offer proof of purchase in
order to claim suih items in pieparing sour federal
income tax leinrii. And when sou buy from us, sou get
that proof in the foim of an annual record, mailed in
Februaiy.
Osme in today nd let tii tell srmt more about
PrugTax. And from now on, bus- nil of your drug and
medical supplies from the store that gisei you the free
DrugTax lecoid.
Open Week Days 9 a.m.
Monday, January 7, IK
Sandbagged
the area to carry out a $75,000
rehabilitation project.
ECONO-CLEAN
DRY CLEANING
PROFESSIONALLY
cleaned and spotted
eanei
4
LBS. I
I
1(K2
If you brinf In and pickup.
Pick-up and Dtlivtry Scrvkt
50c per order itro.
QUICK SERVICE!
Any Garment
beautifully finished
out of the above
service at regilor
charge.
CASCADE
Laundry & Cleanen
Opp Post. Office
Ph. 4-5) 11 er 2-2531
BROADWAY
CLEANERS
So. 6th Ph. 4-6403
NEW METHOD
CLEANERS
14S3 Eiplonsdc Ph. 4.4471
-9 p.m. Closed Sundays
I