Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 10, 1963, Page 20, Image 20

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    One-Time Naval Officer
Wins Air Force Scroll
For Liaison Effort Here
(Continued from Page 1)
.shops, supply depot, and motor
pool, to care for the needs
; Jleet air personnel arriving daily
: By late fall of that year, with run
; ways completed on land that had
once been cattle range, around
.';t!ie clock operations were in full
.-suing and an auxiliary air facil
'Uy had been established at what!
1; Is now the Lakeview Airport, with
: 'to runways. Eighty men were
; $latloned at that facility.
; Quarters for enlisted men and
; - tlie big hangar in use today at
Kingsley Field were built
I he Marine barracks for person
'nel returning from combat, now
the present Oregon Technical In
- stitute campus, were built and
i filled . . . among those Marines
. was Marine Ace Major Joe Foss
. - who later became governor , of
South Dakota . . . the Klamath
Falls Naval Air Station became
one of the largest staging areas
on the West Coast before it was
decommissioned in 1946.
The memories of those days still
linger ... of the unfamiliar afr-
' ' ' craft and its youthful crews
challenging the skies, preparing
- for the unknown, hoping for the
. f . war's end . . . their exuberance
- . . . the official check rein
j the hand at the helm . . . Klam-
o ath Falls' welcome.
Thus was Lt Cmdr. John Stor-
ling, veteran of Wcrld Wars I
' and II, Navy instructor, squad'
ron commander, remembering the
' Marshalls and the Gilberts cam.
paigns, carrier aircraft com'
manding officer, flying for 45
. years from the ranks up, pre
pared for the service he would
render the Air Force In a later
. day.
: The era of the Naval Air Sta
tion passed and once more Klam
ath Falls became headquarters for
Bnolher Air Force, the 40flth Fight-
iMan Makes
"Diamonds'
WHITESVrLLE. W.Va. (UPII-
Everyone knows that diamonds
are a girl s nest lrienrt but a
West Virginian has made some
ot them man's best friend.
. Lnnnie Stone ot Whitesvllle, has
created diamonds which are
1 inexpensive.
' Thus, a man doesn't have to
spend himself Into the poorhoiisc
buying Jewelry for his wife or best
r girl.
' Slone has developed a process
of moulding, sanding and finish
ing to produce a gem like material
he calls a "black diamond." It
is made of coal, a famous West
Virginia product.
Stone,, his wife, and their three
teen-aged children make brace
lets, earrings, brooches, necklaces
cuff links and such in their shop,
which they call "The House of
.Stones."
Stone and other makers of coal
jewelry, such as the Coal House
Souvenir Shop in White Sulphur
Springs and the Kamara Jewelry
Co. In Iieckley expect their jew
elry to get national attention dur
ing IBM. The Mountain State will
play host to visitors from all
parts of the country helping the
stale observe its centennial.
KAIHATOR STOl.KIM
15IHMINGHAM, via. (ITU
Mrs. Vernon C. Talmer pulled her
smoking car into a service sta
tion Thursday and learned its ra
diator had been stolen.
er Group (Air Defense) . . . King
sley Field became the official
name of the vast base where
many facilities were non-existent.
Commander Sterling, who had
chosen to return to Klamath Falls
to live, voluntarily contacted local
merchants and businessmen, the
chamber of commerce, civic or
ganizations, seeking cooperation In
speedy integration of this new mil
itary group and their families into
the civilian community.
Came the F-101B supersonic air
craft and the public 'elation prob
lem associated witn the .sonic
boom." Commander Sterling,
acung as a one-man team, says
the U.S. Air Force "helped cdu
calc organizations as to the cause
and necessity for this phenomc
non so new to the Basin, and so
necessary in defense.
Again he rtevoted time, say
Ills superiors, to increasing capa
bilities of the Non-Commi.ssioned
Officers' Club and the Officers'
Club to provide wholesome rec
reational programs for the person
nel, participating in fund-raising
activities and giving generous per
sonal donations to both func
tions ..."
Lt. Cmdr. John Sterling, flying
on full status for over 40 years,
cast his lot with air minded men
when as a youth he saw Graham
White make the first flight around
the Boston Lighthouse.
From his Andover. Mass., birth
place. John Sterling charted his
future ... he made his first
flight In 1919 as a civilian to Key
West In a single-motored J-I Stan
dard. There were then no twin en
gine aircraft . . . his Navy pilot's
number Is 775 . . . the first trans
port licenses were usuod in l!21
and in the early 1920s he carried
his first mail ... he barnstormed
in South America, became a mem
ber of the Caterpillar Club after
ball-out, (he has had two) . . .
flew a bomber through a coconut
tree at Eniwetnk on the last day
before leaving the island ... re
covered from a broken arm and
a broken leg to fly again.
At national- air races John Ster
ling knew the round-the-world fly
ers who made early history, Clyde
Pangebnrn, Clarence Chamber
lain, Charles Lindbergh, Ituth
Nichols, one o the lirst women
who flew a Curtiss-Condor when
twin-engines took to the air -If
was a friend of Amelia Earhar
and knew fhea Hausch who
brought her trl-motored German
Fokker to America to amaze the
populace . . . went to flying
school with Charles (Buddy) Rog
era In Corpus Christ! and keeps
in touch with those who flew
when planes had less horsepower.
Today, Lt. Cmdr. Sterling is a
businessman, co-owner with his
wifo of the Merchandise Mart.
the Canvas and Nylon Products
Co., and a rancher-"on a small
scale."
The couple has two sons and a
daughter: John Jr., who served as
a bomber pilot with the U.S. Air
Force overseas and is now chief
pilot for an insurance company
Hying out of Columbus, Ohio,
James, a second lieutenant In the
infantry, wounded a' Guam, the
ather of nine girls, now living
at Phoenix, Ariz., and Betty, mar
ried and living in New York City
Olllcer Sterling is attached to
an electronics unit reserve) at
Kingsley Field, faithfully performs
the duties required.
He will retire in June hut
licked in his wallet will he his
pilot licenses with single and mill
i-engine ratings, ami the plaudits
well done tor his man'
War-Hardened Viet Mam Peasant a
Digs In For Long, Tough Battle
By ARTHUR J. DOMMKN
United Press International
SAIGON (UPI) Americans
who are now deeply involved in
South Viet Nam, are accustomed!
to thinking in terms of short, de
cisive wars.
But the Vietnamese peasant.
who has watched continuous troop
movements and heard sporadic
gunfire around his bamboo hut (or
the past 20 years, knows that end
ing the struggle between the pro
Western government of South Viet
Nam and the pro-Communist Viet
Cong guerrillas is a matter of
years, not months.
Vict Nam, once part of Indo
china in the mighty French empire!
of Southeast Asia, is a violent
land.
The Vietnamese peasant knows
that the Communist .government
of North Vict Nam sympathizes
with the insurgents fighting
against the regime of South Viet
Nam President Ngo Dinh Diem
He may be only dimly aware, if
at all, that North Viet Nam sec
retly directs and supports the
guerrilla fighters in the south.
The struggle has more the sem
blance of an insurrection than an
invasion, in any case. And the
North Vict Nam government in
Hanoi is careful to keep It that.
way.
Peaceable By Day
Today, as eight years ago In
the fight against the French, the.
black-clothed peasant in his rice-!
field Is peaceable by day but often
violent by night. And, again as in
Ihe Indo-China war, It is the
peasant who forms the raw ma
terial of the struggle, and Is Its
chief victim.
He has thrown In his lot with
neither the Diem government, nor
Ihe shadow administration estab-
shed in his village by the Viet.
Cong. His lack of uniform and in
signia permits him to be a soldier
without commitment. He can play
one side against the other, or both
gainst the middle, in order to
save himself and his family from
destruction.
The Vietnamese peasant, thus
aught in the middle, may be no
more than a disgruntled toiler in
the fields. He may be disillusioned
with Diem's promises of land re
form, or the actions of the g-iv
einmontappointed district chief.
Discreet TlnoH
His support for the guerrilla;
may consist only of a discreet
tipoff to the local Viet Cong about
government troop movements.
On the other hand, he may have
lost a relative in a government
mopping up operation," and may
feed, clothe and hide Viet Gong
agents in his house. More often,
the Viet Cong holds some com
pelling element of blackmail over
his head which forces him to col
laborate with them.
This is the kind of soldier on
which the clandestine political co
ordinating body of the insurrec
tion depends. The National Liber
ation Front, formed in December,
1960, has no leading figure oil
any wide international reputation.
It is unified by common opposi
tion to President Diem.
Its leaders are not tongue-tied
functionaries of North Viet Nam
because the Viet Minh learned
during the long fight against the
French that success in guerrilla
warfare depends on an unshak
able popular support. The insur
rection must take root among,
and stem from, the local inhabitants.
Make Crude Weapons
This is why, eight years after
France's defeat at DIen Bien Phu
Vietnamese insurgents are still
fabricating crude rifles and pistols
from scrap iron in the swamps
and jungles of the Mekong Delta
This correspondent inspected t
variety of such weapons, the best
that crude-materials and tools
could produce. But each was a far
crv. indeed. Iiom American or
CHINA
-0
1.
? o
iZ NORTH tJ-Z'iVIETMHU-3"
r W
I THAILAND v v . -
( v - - t
f 1 --i
(fel CAMSO01A J.fZ't'7m
4g c SOUTH
Jl, VIETNAM
f - . '' if '
BATTLEGROUND South Vietnam is battleground for
12,000 American troops fighting elusive Communist
Viet Cong guerrillas. This fighting may never end with a
sharp, decisive victory according to experts.
UPI Telephoto
Family Homes
French firearms that North Viet
Nam could furnish by the truck
load.
In their propaganda sheets dis
tributed in South Vietnamese vil
lages, the insurgents avoid the!
use of Communist jargon, far too
complicated and remote for the
average peasant to understand. In
stead, they, stress two major
themes comprehensible to every
one liberation and unity.
It is liberation from the tyran
ny of Diem's palace police and his
sometimes corrupt henchmen in
the rural areas. It is liberation,
above all, from the Americans
who they say are unlawfully oc
cupying the land of the Vietna
mese people, just as the French
did before the Japanese war.
It is the unity of the common
people against the so-called American-Diem
collaborators, the unity
of the uneducated masses in the
face of the privileged few of
Saigon.
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Sunday, February It, 1963
merican Business In
Over Nation's Trend
To
2Vtf'
: 1 I
ears of meritorious srtvice.
English Lauded As Mosf
Widely Used Language
WASHINGTON U'PD
"Okay."
Tins word of approval, arrord
Ing to the National Geographic
hociety, is probably the world's
most widely u.'ed and understood
word.
The Society has Issued in
Knciish, naturally a report
paying tribute to tnglish.
' "No other language has served
a greater variety of need;
come closer to the mythical goal
of a world tongue." the Society
said. "As the speech of civil avi
ation, it has reached the far
corners o! the earth. Half Ihe
world's newspapers and scientific;
journals are published in English."
It sa:d some 300 million people
ST'wik English, making it second
only to Chinese.
"Hindustani comes next; yet In
dia, its homeland, retains English
as an official language," the So
ciety said
Why is English so popular?
Tool of Science
"The international appeal of
English lies in its flexibility," the
society said. "While precise
enoiign to he a tool of science, It
possesses Hie delicate shades ol
.leaning required for literary pnr
;.Jfl.ies. Foreign speakers appreci
;iJe the abundance of short,
punchy words."
Of liitf more than' I million
words in the English vocabulary,
about TS per cent are dented
from foreign sources, according
to the Society.
It said the immediate ance-tor!
of English was a Teutonic dialect
spoken by tribesmen on the North
Sea coast between Holland and
Denmark.
In the 5th Century, many of
these people the Ansles, Jutes
and Saxons - settled England."
it said. 'The descendants of
tribesmen who slaved on the con
tinent still use a version of the
original language, low German or
rrisian
l eft Their Mark
"Celtic Britons, who were driv
en westward by Germanic invad
ers, left the ingredients of mod
ern Gaelic and WcMi But their
influence on the Anglo-Saxons was
insignificant."
The next wave of colonists, the
Danes and Norsemen, contributed
about 900 words, including such
indisnensahles as ecg and skv
Such words of Itin derivation
as bishop, altar, and candle came
from missionaries from the con
tine nt.
The Renaissance contributed
1(1.000 new words from all over
Europe
Traders and exi!oicrs brought
further additions to Hie tongue -
lea and bamboo Irom China and
Malnva; hurricane, tobacco and
tomato Irom New World Indians!
DESIGN 571
Houia 1.723 in ft.
21.6 Cu. rt.
Goragi 33 Sq. rt.
Ranch Type
Home Needs
Wide Land
Overall apiearance of the home
hon above, marks it distinctly
i am h stvle and its 7.1-tiot width
calls for a wide lot or good wood
ed acreage.
Modem stvle is enipli.isied bv
the wide overhang, decorative trel
lis on either side of the front
planting box and in the wide pic
lure window.
Two projected wings of bed
rooms and garage ceate balance
to the exterior of ledge rock,
brick veneer and wood siding.
rienty of wall areas for mod !
em interior treatments and a line
fireplace is highlighted in the spa
cious living room.
Dining area Is separate with
handy built-in china cabinet.
Kitchen is long with separate
hre.iklast nonk and r.room closet.
Kitchen h.is access to utihtv room
h is riiv idcd (or use as a hob
hv area or work shop.
Garage boasts an incinerator
nd oilers two possb!e sheltered
entrances; from laundry and
from front covered porch
Three bedrooms have four win
dows in each. Two wardrobe clos
ets and a vamtnry berch and mir
ror is designed for the master
lied room
This pl.in ronfoirm to general
KHA. V and Building Code re
quirements You can obtain the
building plans with specifications
.ind material list, see order coil-ion
I 7. 1
! , , , ,,,,1- , .in, i ! im j ii l l - r '
. TTrrn d , -rVK'-s. 1 1
I
Code Rules
Supermart
Pushcarts
NEW YORK (UPI) - Pushy
personalities don't heed rules of
the aisle in supermarkets. They
cause upsetting situations a n d
sometimes skin shins.
The problem of proper deport
ment while pushing a supermart
cart first was noticed only by
poor injured fellow shoppers.
But the way the innocent push
er's being bumped and bruised by
thoughtless cart pushers now has
become a matter of public safety,
as the Greater New York Safe
ty Council sees it.
As a community service, the
council has drawn up a code for
supermarket characters.
Many rules of the road apply
in piloting a cart through the pro
duce, meat and sweets depart
ment.
Aisle hogs, for example, are
something like road hogs. Then
there are the supermarket tail-!
gaters. They cause rear-end col
lisions just as automotive tailgat-
ers cause smashups.
Ditto for unsettling conditions
caused by cart pushers who pass
without oberving S.O. P. simple,
ordinary politeness.
Rules of the aisle suggested by
the council include the following:
Gentle that cart. The aisle
isn't a drag race strip. And don't
park the cart in the middle of a
traffic lane while you shop else
where.
Avoid cutting through t h e
checkout lines. If in a hurry, try
going around through less crowd
ed aisles.
If you want to pass, try
simple "excuse me." It fiets bet
ter results than brute force.
keep both feet under you not
stretched behind when you bend
town (or something on a low shelf
or pause to meditate about selec
tions.
Children should not be allowed
to push carts around at will, run
ning with them and using them
like scooters, the council said,
By WARD CA.NNEL
Newspaper Enterprise Assn
SAO PAULO INEA) With
Cuba's government revealed as
obviously taking orders from Mos
cow, will any other Latin Ameri
can nation dare try communism?
In Brazils richest city, the
booming U.S. business community
is having a bad case of the jit
ters over the possibility that this
mammoth nation may be headed
down that path.
You don't talk about it at the
office or at the club," the Brazil
manager of a major U.S. com
pany says. "But everybody's
worried.
"We seem suddenly to have
stopped giving parties," says a
U.S. business wife. "Nobody saysi
why. But everybody knows.1
And from an American execu
live with 18 years in Latin Amer
ica behind him:
'For the first time in my career!
I've had to ask myself seriously
whether or not to send my wife
and kids back to the States."
At the base of the tingling over
seas business spine are a series!
of little bumps uncomfortable!
enough to give even a new ob
server pause for reflection.
In the capital, Brasilia, the ten
tative government of President
Joao (pronounced Djuan) Gou
lart is lacing a showdown over
whether the country will be run by
a strong president or as it is at
present by a parliamentary sys
tem that could, with an unfavor
able vote in the legislature,
turn his cabinet out of office.
To strengthen his position in a
bid to reinstate a strong presi
dency, Goulart has placed several
known and suspected Communists
in middle-government offices.
"He thinks he is using them,"
says a worried U.S. business exec
HI It, KING PLANS PLAN BOOKS ORDER FORM
Herald and Ness Plan Dept.
FAMILY HOMES
21NIO Alpha St..
Lansing, Mich.
I want items cheeked: Deslen No:
4 sets of Building Plans A Spei lllc aliens, with
Material List
. I set of Building Plans A Specification. Kith
Material List
Family Homes Plan Bonk, postpaid
Enclosed llnd t (or Items cheeked.
r NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE
$?9.75
7.95
.75
The fust nw or-oper.ttcd laun
hy was started in last in Oak
ind, Calif., hy a man named Da
vis. He used a 10-horsepimer don
key engine
Moon Landing Not Goal
Of U.S. Space Research
U1S ANGELES UPl'-Why i-
the I'nited States spending t30 bil
lion or so to put a man on the
moon?
The question assumes that the
lunar landing is the ultimate goal
of space research. New Frontiers.
publication of The Garrett Corpor
ation, says it is not. hut rather a
focal point on which to concen
trate the whole space research
effort.
Tlie magazine s.ivj the rral goal
of tlie proposed lunar expeihtion
is American supremacy in space
for reasons of security, prestige
and other benefits. It savj the
major benelit is more d.ila .ihnut
the universe
New Frontiers notes that for the
lard headed re.ilist who wants to
so a return on his tax dollar, the
first fne yens of the space age
alieady have demonstrated many
w.-.vs in which space research ran
provide practical IxMiefits.
Tlie most dramatic example is
the communication satellite such
as Teirstar Advances in this area
mean sports f.ins most likely w ill
he able to view live tlie next
Olympic g.ime from Japan The
tudent ot current attairs also will
le able to witness histoiy-m.ikmg
events abroad as they happen.
The m.igatnr. published by one
'( Ihe nation's major rWrnse
iirms eng.iged in dev eloping life-
upport sv stems for space flight.1
avs other practical benefits to
.iccrue horn sn,tce resrarch arc
improved techniques in weather
foiec.isting, navigation, survoil
'..iiue ,in,t whining system
Homework Not
Punishment
ST. LOUIS (LTD - School
principal (Juincy C. Dickey says
teachers shouldn t give homework
as punishment.
"Homework." Dickey says,
"should serve two primary (unc
tions to develop proliciencies
in a particular skill, and to allow
r tlie pupil an opportunity to dem
lOnstrale this skill to his parents.'
I "If the weekends and one eve
ining in the middle of the week
.are left free, Ihe pupil has an op
Iportunily to develop appreciation
and skill in art and music and
to participate more fully in the
social life of the family and th"
community."
Homework is iniort.int to the
high school student, especially if
he intends to go to college, Dick-:
ey adds.
In college. Dickey said, the stu
dent will have to spend about 30
hours a week. In study twic:
the amount of lime he'll spend in
class.
"If the student isn't used to!
homework, he'll be lost." he said.
"TW ) NEWI EASYI
-SJ CONVENIENTI
W- )i On handle I
j N de-f-l the work H
. ... - -.-! -
s
(PRESIDENT GOULART
razil Quakes
nmiinism
; ' :,. v If"
u i r i l , 1 , II- a
iMtlvTiar' ! ? ' m ' i '
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; I ; , A , ' r " V l
l.,r JY , s 70
GNAWING WORRY Behind this gleaming facade of
bright lights and tinsel on a busy Street in Rio is a gnaw,
ing worry. . . . Which way will Brazil go?
"Our earnings are tremendous
on paper," savs an automotive in-
utive. "But they are awfully
smart. We don't know who is us
ing whom."
At the same time, the gov
ernment is currently considering
legislation that would make as
signed radio and TV channels
temporary and on constant review
hy federal authorities.
Even though this system has!
been in effect for years, there is
the fear in tlie American com
munity in Sao Paulo that commu
nications legislation is the first
step toward suppression.
In Rio de Jamero once the capi
tal and still foreign service and
press headquarters, old orazii
hands and the international civil
service are inclined to discount
the stirrings in Brasilia as part
of an old game.
But just why there has been a
build-up of both U.S. and Iron Cur-i
tain newsmen in Rio within the
can say.
Closer to home, the business
community is supported in its wor
ries by the Brazilian money situation.
With sales, earnings and em
ployment at an all-time high, the
cruzeiro is losing value daily. A
dollar today buys nearly 700 cru
zeirosnearly twice the amount of
a year ago. But you can't find
dollars to buy. And by recent
law, you can't send home any
more than 10 per cent of your
profits or 10 per cent of your capi
tal
dustry supplier. "But what good
are they. You certainly wouHn't
put your cruzeiros in the bank to
day, not knowing what they'd
be worth tomorrow."
Money is worth so little, in
fact, that you find few beggars on
the streets and few hard goods in
the stores. Everybody's putting
his paper money into things. A
steak dinner filet mignon costs
about 85 American cents.
And what's going to happen
when we reach capacity produc
tion?" a manufacturer asks. "To
keep Brazil from a slump, we've
got to make seven million new
jobs every year. But next year
or the year after, most of us will
be at capacity production. Then
what?"
Between the money squeeze.
wild inflation, and the drive to
ward capacity production, many
businessmen both Brazilian and
American have dark suspicions
that "other companies" are pro
tecting Communist-infiltrated la
bor' unions in order to avert
strikes.
Just how potent the Communists
really are appears to be beside
the point in Sao Paulo thinking.
even though ardently democratic
observers are sure the subversive
threat is small in numbers.
"What if it's small. It's well or
ganized." says a U.S. organiza
tion man. "That's what counts.
Take Time, Care Splicing Cords
By MB. FIX
Written for
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Making long lengths of rope out
of short pieces is simple enough
just tie them together.
Making long lengths of electric
cord out of short pieces is a little
more involved. Instead of knotting
the pieces together it is necessary
to splice them, making the con
nection electrically as well as me
chanically sound.
Splicing will be needed where
electric cords prove too short
where breaks occur or where in
filiation has become fraved
If the cord is old and fraying
occurs in more than one spot
replace (he entire cord. Also
never splice two extremely short
lengths. It's not worth the bother
Stagger the splicing in the two
wires the cord contains. Cut each
strand of wire so that the connec
tion will occur several inche:
apart. This will keep the thickness
of the connections to a minimum
Cut away the insulation care
fully. Use a sharp knife and make
several cuts at an angle Then
twist off the insulation Do not
cut through any of the many tiny
strands of copper wire that make
up the cord Be sure it is not
plugged in.
lt will lake practice to cut
sulatinn with side cutters, a sort
of pliers used (or electrical work
This requires that you onlv par
tially close the pliers so that you
lit only the insulation.
When you are ready to start
plicing. match up Die short wire
in one cord with tlie long one in
he other, i Remember, von cut
c3sA
f rieien-Welmon Co.
WIS Mam St. b. TU 4-704
t
mmm
! fiiM Ii
9,
PUCIMG IS AM ART oF
am
WIRE:
Before
TlNWNS
PbUT CUT COPPER WIRES
TiMTiPS BEFORE SPUCiNS
m
them different lengths.)
Twist the bare wires together
after you have tinned them. Tin
ning is done by first scraping the
wires clean, then holding the
wire against a soldering iron un
111 it is hot. Touch some rosin
core solder acainst the hot wire
so that it is thmlv and evenlv
nalod.
After the wires aiv securely
twisted together, hold the spliced
section against a soldering iron
until hot and then apply rosin
core solder.
Complete Joint
nectnrs, altlioiigh these are not
practical where the cord will be
exposed or receive much handling.
The connector is a plastifc nut
with a threaded metal insert. The
wires are simply twisted together
and inserted in the connector. This
is then given a few turns and the
connection is made.
Such connectors are used in
electric clwks. lamps, vacuum
cleaner and in other covered
places where the wire will not be
handled or walked on.
Take off just enough insulation
to fit in the connector. Too much
Complete the joint hy wrappinclhar' wou'd r?main lmPrn-
with ' rubber tape and frictinni1'1"1
tape, or some of the newer plastic
electricians' tape.
Splicing jobs can be simpli
fied with Ihe use of snideries con-
r OPEN A
CHARGE
ACCOUNT!
Up lo S Moiitht to Pay I
No Carrying Cdorjn
Tne Sucdwin Wiluams Co
1124 I. Main . TU 4-7704
ltflli I I !
7 .Vitt,."?''''-
WUl'n A.'4Jllls.' .y - ?!,
, ,.11.11. ii. r.,-.,
RENT thai HOST j
Electric Brush
in
Tv ('(-if ht4 fc
HOM CLlN(D S';
! aj.rf iftia f
I It 'fait
Ph. 4-5111 ar 2-25)1 far
CASCADE
LAUNDRY J CLEANERS
0. 9 0 lllk ( Kltioatk
RUGS
AND
HOST PROCISS
New Method
CLEANERS
14S1 ttalaa.aa fh. 4 4471
RUG CLtANINS
WALL-TO-WALL
CABMT CLtANtNG
FURNITURE CLfANINd
1 TINTING
Gold Bond Stamps, TotJ