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The Salina Journal from Salina, Kansas • Page 6

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Salina, Kansas
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6
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Latest market report market tri iris Today's record some early losses NEW YORK (AP) The stock market late in today's session trimmed an early loss. Volume was moderate. The 2 p.m. Dow Jones average of 30 industrials showed a decline of 2.19 to 912.82. The volatile glamour issues firmed after having paced the sharp decline Tuesday and the milder slide in early trading today.

The extent of the setback continued broad with prices among the motors, electronics, nonferrous metals, rails, airlines, tobaccos and building materials mostly Big BoanJ prices in late trading included Delta Air lines, off 1'A to 45V 8 IBM, up to 314; Reynolds Metals, off to 27 Burroughs, up to Continental Foods, up to 460 and Phillips Petroleum up to 31tt. Among American Stock Exchange prices were Loew's Corp. warrants, up to Recrion, off to 33; Syntex, up to 68; Amco Industries, up 2 to 25; Valley Mettalurgical, up 1 to II 1 and Tesoro Petroleum off IVi to 29Vfe. The noon Associated Press 60-stock average was down .8 to 322.4, with industrials off .7, rails off .7, and utilities off .4. Losses in the volatile glamour area included IBM IVz to 311, National Cash Register to 47Vt, Polaroid to and Xerox Vt to 109 Analysts said investors continued to be cautious in view of widespread speculation about possible boosts in interest rates.

Profit taking continued to depress the market they said. Among Big Board prices were Alberto Culver, off to45: Alcoa, off to 61tt; U.S. Leasing, up tt to 28V; International Telephone, off 1 to DuPont, off to 140V4; Air Reduction, off to 25; and Ford Motor, off Vt to 63. Wheat, corn CHICAGO (AP) Wheat and corn futures prices were sharply higher on the Chicago Board of Trade today, but oats, and soybeans were irregular. On the opening, wheat was to .1 cent a bushel higher, July 1.56%; corn was to 1 cent higher, July 1.51%; oats were Vs lower to higher, July cents, "and soy'-" beans were V-t lower to V4 higher, July 3.18.

CHICAGO LIVE BEEF CATTLE" Inc.) June Aug. Oct. Dec. FebTZ June July Aug. Oct.

Dec. July Aug. Mar. '72 OPEN 32.4S 30.TC 30.07 21.9? 30.70 LIV 21. 22.H 11.17 22.75 HIGH 32.M 31.02 30.22 30.02 30.72 'EHOGS 22.55 21 Z2.K LOW 32.40 30.15 30.00 2I.M 30.60 21 .45 22.32 21.70 22.70 Prtv.

CLOSE CLOSE 32.47 30.17 30.15 30.00 30.70 19.15 21.95 22.52 21.00. 22.92 32.50 31.02 30.22 30.00 30.45 19.72 21.92 22.40 21.92 22.95 PORL BELLIES 34,25 24.10 34.05 33.75 24.W 24.45 34.07 33.IS 24.25 23.95 33.55 33.35 24.M 24.45 J3 33.55 24.47 24.27 34.17 34.00 Closing stocks' Tuesday NEW YORK (AP) Closing stocks: Net Cbg. Admiral Allied Ch AlllsCh Alcoa Am Alrlin ACyanld Am Motors Am Ampex Corp Anaconda Atl Rlchfld Alias Chem Avco Corp Beat Fds Beech Air Beth Stl Boeing Co Cetanese Cp Cessna Air Chryilr Cities Svc CBS Comsat Cent Can ContOII CorGlW Curtis Wrt DowChm duPont Eas Kodak Echlln Mf Emer El Firestone FMC Co FordM Gen Dynam Gen El Gen Mot Gn Tel El Goodyr Grace Greyhound Gulf Oil Halllburt Hercules Homestke IBM Int Harv Int Pap Kan GE Kan Lt Katy Ind McG Kroger Litton Ind Marcor Martin Me Don Mid 1 Util Minn MM Mobil Oil Monsant Nabisco Nat Gyp No Gas Nort Simon Ok la GE Okla NGs Pen Am WAir Panh EP Penn Cent Penney JC Phill Pet Proct Gm RCA Ryder Sy Safeway St Joe St Joe St Regis Sa Fe Ind Sears Ro Sperry St Oil Cal St Oil Ind St Oil NJ Texaco Tlmken Trans Air Un Carbide Un Elec Uniroyal US Steel wn union Westg El Woolwth Vt 31 'A It Vt 1 36 Vi 6Vz A 'A 21 Vt 73 36V. 21 'A 75 'D 'A 26 'A 'A Vt 4S'A 2Vt 'A 'A tA 82'A 'A 44'A Vt 7SVt Vi 30 Vt 2 TOVt 7 A JIVt Vt 33'A Vt 22 Vt Vt WVt 1 24 'A 312 SVt 29 'A Vt 3 7 Vt 23 Vt Vt 14 Vt 140 1 41 'A 7 A 34'A H'A 24A 1 47 50 7 A 'A SI S4'A 'A Vt Vt 17'A 'A 36 SVt Vt 0 7 A 30Vi 'A Vt 37Vi 'A A 'A 40 Vt nvt vt 34 59 'A 'A 6I 7 A Vi Vt Vt Vi 32 'A 1'A Vt IVt Investments Tuesday NEW YORK (AP) The following quotations, supplied by the National Association of Securities Dealers, are the 'prices at which these securities have been sold (bid) or bought (askedX Tuesday. Bid Ask Metals: NEW YORK (AP) Copper cents a pound, Connecticut Vaitey; lead 13'A' cents a pound.

New zinc 14 cents a pound, delivered; silver SI.610 per troy ounce, New York. Affiliatd iAm Bus Am Mutl Anchor Group: Fd Inv Axe Houghton: Fnd A Frx) Stock Bullock Calvin: Bullck Channlng Funds: Balan Grwth Specl Chemlcl Dreyf Lv Eaton Howard: Balan' Grwth Stock Fidelity Group: Fidel Puritn Financial Prog: Indust Founders Group: Mutal Fd HFI 1CA Investors Group: Mutl Stock' Select Var Py Keystone Funds: Cus S3 Cus S4 Mass Gth Mass Tr OmaG Oman! MutTrst Nat SecurSer: Stock Pion Fnd Price Funds: Grwlh Putnam Funds: Georg Grwth Incom Seltd Am Supervisd Inv: Tech TwnC Gt TwnC Inc United Funds: Accm Incom Scien Fd -Can Value Line Fd: Val Li Wash Wellingtn Group: Welltn Winfield 7.59 1.22 3.37 3.65 9.52 10.40 9.31 10.21 S.H 8.79 6.13 6.70 15.34 16.80 12.00 13.11 5.97 4.51 2.05 2.24 18.70 20.44 14.91 16.42 10.25 11.20 13.77 15.05 14.20 15.52 16.34 17.84 10.73 11.73 3.94 4.34 9.00 9.14 4.85 5.31 13.71 15.04 10.23 11.12 20.00 21.74 9.17 9.M 7.91 8.40 1.57 9.40 5.21 5.79 13.20 14.43 14.40 15.94 5.99 4.51 10.17 11.82- 2.00 2.00 1.30 12.11 13.31 .27.10 27.80 14.19 14.27 10.83 11.14 8.35 9.13 10.11 11.05 8.00 1.72 3.12 3.42 4.M 4.47 7.21 1.57 14.36 15.69 8.25 9.04 7.99 8.73 7.23 7.92 12.94 14.16 11.72 12.81 4.77 5.21 Livestock Closing stock averages: 323.2, down 2.1. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE quotations provided by A.G. Edwards Co. Central Soya 2SV4 Control Data 63 Dillons 25 Gen Foods Ho Am Rock (N R) 29'A Union Pacific Corp 57W United Utilities STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT NEW YORK (AP) Sales, closing price and net change of the 15 most active stocks traded on the NY Stock Exchange.

Woblwrth 190,500 2'A Melv Shoe 173,300 52 Pan Am 149,400 17'A A Nat CR 139,800 Am TT 125,600 'A Fst NC Cp 125,300 37'A Mohwk 39Yn Vi Ling TV 114,300 Spry Rnd 105,300 34 FMC Cor 100,100 A Air Reduc 99,900 Gen El 93,000 2 Natomas 92ft 2V Farah Mf 15,700 'A ElPaso NG 85,500 WHAT SlOCKS DID NEW YORK (AP) Prev, Mn. day 420 419 912 704 275 277 1677 1670 37 76 60 52 IAPJ a 1 2 0 0 a 150; steers and heifers choice fully steady; cows steady to 25 higher, instances 50 feeders steady; steers choice 32.2533.50; good and choice 31.75-32.25 good 21.00-31.25; heifers choice 31.50-32.50; good and low choice 28.00-31.0; cows high cutter, utility and commercial 19.75-22.00; high dress- Ing boning, utility 22.00-50; few 22.50-23.00; feeder steers and steer calves choice thin 400-400 Ib 39.00-42.00; 400-500 Ib 37.00- 39.50; 500-400 Ib 35.00-37150; choice fleshy 450-400 33.00-36.00; 400450 Ib 31.50-34.00; "mixed good and choice 375-450 Ib 36.0039.00; 450-700 Ib 32.50-36.00; feeder heifers and heifer calves choice thin 300-400 Ib 33.0036.00; 400-500 Ib 31.00-34.00. Hogs barrows and gilts 25-50 lower; instances 75 lower; Ib 17.75-11.25; 2-4 240250 Ib 17.25-11.00,-- 250-260 Ib. 17.00-50; few 17.75; 240-210 Ib 16.00-17.00; 3-4 210-310 Ib 15.7514.25; sows mostly steady; 1-3 330-500 Ib 14.0-15.25; 2-3 500-600 Ib 14.00-50. Sheep 100; spring lambs and ewes fully spring lambs choice and prime 30.00-31.50; few 21.50-30.00; ewes cull to good 3.004.00.

i a for lomorrw. cattle calves 100; hogs sheep 100. Cosh grain Tuesday KANSAS I (AP)-. -Wheat 20 cars: down '3-up Vt- No. 2 hard 1.40'/i-1.4 A no.

3 1.58-1.7t'/2. No. 2 red wheat No. 3 1.57%- 140V4n. Corn 37 cars: down 'A-up No.

2 white l.SS-2.00n; No. 3 1.30-1.95n; No. 2 yellow 1.52%1.53; No. 3 1.42fe-1.54n. Oats none; nominally unchanged; No.

2 white 74-83n; No. 3 4142 n. No. 2 Mito 2.501/2. No.

2 Rye 1.04-1.11 n. 2 Barley 1.15-1.23 n. No. 1 Soybeans 3.13-3.20% n. Sacked bran 4t.OCMI.75.

Sacked shorts 49.50-50.25. Wheat futures closed from unchanged-down 'A Wheat futures: Open High Low Close Jly 1.44% 1.47V- 1.46'A 1.46% Sep 1.47% 1.41 1.47% 1.47% Dec 1.51 1.51% 1.51 1.51'A Mar May Sorghums Dec 1.54 1.52% 2.27 Produce Tuesday Advances Declines Unchanged issues New 1971 htghs New 1971 tows KANSAS CITY (AP) -Wholesale eggs: -large, 80 per cent A 22-30; medium, 80 peH cent A 15-23. unchanged: grade Ib, quarters 15; grade Ib, solid 15. CHICAGO (AP) USDA Butter: wholesale selling prices unchanged; 93 score AA 67.714; 92 A 67.714; 90 6S.714. Eggs: prices paid delivered to Chicago 1 fewer to 'AIMgber 10 per cent or better grade A whites 26-27'A; medium white extras 20-21 standards unquoted.

Htspital MMSSMMS St. Derek L. Blair, 118 W. Wilson; Clay Davis, 1212 W. Ash; Mrs.

Gene F. Hinde, 2108 Wesley; Steven E. Illingworth, 627 Park Place; Jarrod Michael Miller, 519 E. Claflin; Mark A. Stansbery, 2048 Harold; Anderson, Bennington; Mrs.

Eldwin J. Appelhans, Hill City; Mrs. Milton Broadbent, Beloit; Charley F. Brueggmann, Tribune; James P. Goodwin, Delphos; John David Hanson, Logan; Linus A.

Kind- erknecbt, Grinnell; Iril W. Kindt, Marquette; Wayne L. Kpetkemeyer, Wilson; Tracy A. Potter, Concordia; Mrs. Irvin" J.

Romberger, Solomon; Mrs. Grant Swenson, Concordia; Thomas A. Vopat, Wilson. Asbwy William E. Stry, Tampa; Mrs.

Lou Ann Davis, 123 E. Ellsworth; Donna D. Tyrell, WakefieW; Robert F. Bearing, 729 Custer; Tracey W. Ewing, 330 N.

13th; Alan P. Lange, 615 S. 5th; Donald M. Warnow, 325 S. 5th; Irvin F.

Turnbull, Stockton; Gregory L. Street, Russell; Carla Sue Goff, 321 N. 10th; Mrs. Harold E. Baier, 1222 N.

3rd; Robert R. Fordyce, Clay Center; Mrs. Kenneth L. Kohler, Grove; Ferdinand A. Kleinschmidt, 1027 Park; Earl Kitterman, Longton; Anna K.

Kuxhausen, 213 Dover Drive; Mrs. Lafe Greenway, Tescott; Delbert E. Bryant, Chapman; Brian D. Geering, 676 Whittinghill. Dismissals St.

John's George O. Boyce, 1115 E. Iron; Mrs. M. J.

Bradshaw, 2508 Simmons; Harold D. Carter, 333 N. llth; Mrs. 0. A.

Simpson, 215 N. Oakdale; Valerie C. Brown, Belleville, Lloyd L. Garlow, Glasco; Steven L. Honomichl, Ellinwood; Leroy Janssen, Sylvan Grove; Kenneth L.

Ward, Asbwy i-- Mrs. Roy C. Hudson, Niles; Mrs. Tony Carter and son, 508 S. 8th; Mrs.

L. G. Parker and son, 1040 Neal; George Oelrich, Junction City; Chester A. Gaumer, 800 Woodland; Mrs. Ruth B.

Neaderhiser, 1 Bennington; Anna K. Glover, 321 N. Phillips; Mrs. George R. Jeffers, Lincoln; Pearlie Lee Lobdell, 655 S.

tad; Mrs. James Hays, 919 Highland; Mrs. Elsie Ross, Windsor Estates; Mrs. Basil L. Zickafoose, 2115 Meadowlark Lane; Mrs.

Donald H. Ostermann, Sylvan Grove; Ralph M. Disney, 1108 Funston; Mrs. Clara B. Senior, 902 Park; Wayne C.

Sullivan, 1008 Apache; Mrs. Edith B. Johnson, Salina RFD Carolyn Sue Bailey, 414 Albert; Barbara Peterson, Falun; Boyd W. Hatfield, 609 W. Iron.

Births Girls Mr. and Mrs. Danny L. Geist, 1013 2 June 8 at Asbury. Building Permits First Covenant Church, utility building, 1715 Roach, $150.

Melvin Bergkamp, 3-bedroom house, Maynard Nelson, contractor, 2108 Leland Way, $30,000. F. E. Barringer, single family residence, 452 Camden, $30,000. Courts District: Judgments Robert H.

Clark by his father, vs. Robert L. Smith, plaintiff awarded $2000 on charge of auto negligence; Dowell Division of Dow Chemical Co. vs. Walter J.

Nelson, plaintiff awarded $4318.50 and $4067.88 for 2 defaulted contracts; R. P. Hagen, doing business as R. P. Hagen Lumber Sales, vs.

M. L. and Bedie B. Michaelsen, plaintiff awarded $9792.87 and interest on defaulted promissory notes. Dismissed Caren L.

Scheidt, by her father, vs. Mary K. Constable, suit asked $1760.59 for alleged auto negligence. Filed (Criminal) State vs. Louis Thomas, defendant bound over from magistrate court on charge of insufficient funds check.

Municipal Joe Torres, 432 Putnam, driving while intoxicated, $100 and costs, driver's license suspended 6 months except to and from work; Martin J. Nash, Minneapolis, driving while intoxicated, $100 and costs, driver's license suspended 6 months except to and from work. MIAMI ATHIt XT Deaths and Area girls win office at Girls State funerals Divorces Filed -Bennett. Marvin L. vs.

Uatha Christine ALBERT PLUNKETT Albert Plunkett, 63,1131 N. Santa Fe, died Tuesday at his home. 1 He was born Aug. 18, 1907, in Marion and had lived in Salina 14 years. Survivors are the widow, Ruth, of the home; 2 sons, Eldon, Culver, and William, 1105 N.

5th; 3 Minneapolis; Robert, 336 S. 4th, and Richard, Gillette, 2 sisters, Mrs. Opal Comfort, Wells, and Mrs. Charlie Klein, Delphos; and 6 grandchildren. The funeral will be at 10 am Thursday at the Rush Smith funeral home, the Rev.

Donald O'Hara officiating. Burial will be in Roselawn Memorial Park cemetery. HJALMER E. OLEEN FALUN The funeral for Hjalmer E. Oteen, 87, Falun, will be at 2 pm Thursday at the Falun Lutheran Church.

Burial will be in the Salemsborg cemetery. An earlier obituary incorrectly listed the funeral time as 10 am Thursday. GROVER C. CALLABBESI The funeral for Grover C. Callabresi, 86, 608 E.

Iron, will be at 2:30 pm Thursday at Ryan mortuary, the Rev. Stanley Rogge officiating. Burial will be in the Highland cemetery, New Cambria. Mr. Callabresi died Tuesday at St.

John's hospital. He was born March 20,1885, in New Cambria and was a lifetime resident of the Salina area. He was a retired farmer and a member of St. John's Lutheran Church. Survivors are the widow, Ethel of the home; a foster son, Walter, 1413 Winona; a foster daughter, Winona Hart, 1413 Winona; 2 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren, and a brother, Earl, Livermore, Calif.

The casket will be closed following the Sugar allotment plan unchanged WASHINGTON (AP) The Housi Rules Committee handed U.S. sugar allotment program backers a major victory today by approving a no-amendment, take it or leave it plan for floor action on a troversial revision and extension of the 1948 Sugar Act. Following a lengthy hearing in which opponents sought to pry open the Agriculture Committee-approved package for changes, the Rules Committee agreed to send the measure to the House floor Thursday under a so-called closed rule. That means amendments to the controversial and diplomatically sticky allotment program will not be permitted from the floor--in effect requiring the House to buy all of the bill or none of it. This came despite pleas by several foes of the South African apartheid racial system who sought to give the House a chance to vote directly on whether that nation's annual sugar quota should be deleted from the proposed three-year extension legislation.

The Agritulture Committee's majority wrote into the extension plan a continuation of the South African quota at essentially the current level. LAWRENCE Several area girls have been elected to offices at the 29th annual Sunflower Girls State, Lawrence. Three will head county politifal activities during the week's session. They are Jeanne Arnoldy, Tipton, Cimarron county Federalist party chairman; Candace Cramer, Glasco, Delaware county Federalist party chairman, and Earlice Switzer, Bogue, Saline county vice-chairman. One Salinan and several area girls were elected to city offices.

Carmen Beverly, 1845 Haskett, Salina, was elected mayor of Kiowacity. Lenita Bergstrom, Kackley, was elected mayor of Osage city. Elected to city councils were Patti Orr, Oberlin; Kay Hrabe, Plainville; Karen Inloes, McPherson; Autumn Kaufman, Durham; Ruth Johnson, Canton; Jane Mick, Beloit; Sue Kauten, Norton; Joyce Love, Mankato; Denise McCrary, McPherson; Vikki Liby, Minneapolis; Susan Cailteux, Concordia Sherry Spitsnaugle, WaKeeney; Roxie Wallert, Ellsworth. Other elected as city police judges were Karen Allison, Marquette; Francine Mathes, Norton, and Barbara Bergling, Ludell. Girls appointed to city offices include Bev Benda, Ludell, clerk; Vickie Steinert, Tampa, attorney; Janet Haywood, Herington, clerk; Cindy Bicker, Sharon Springs, treasurer; Patty Mall, Clay Center, clerk; Melanie Alsup, St.

Francis, clerk; Kay Harold, Oberlin, treasurer, and Jane Hall, Minneapolis, clerk. Check to see if election necessary HERINGTON City officials still are checking state laws to determine whether an election is required, or can be held even if unnecessary, on a proposed 5600,000 hospital bond issue. The mayor and commissioners say voters should have an opportunity to express their wishes, and even have discussed an "opinion poll." No deadline for a final decision was' set at Tuesday's meeting. The hospital board seeks the funds' from the city toward the estimated $800,000 cost of a new 36-bed hospital. The new facility would replace the old structure moved into Herington from the former naval base.

The bond proposal originally was intended for the April 6 city election ballot. The hospital, board didn't make the request, however, because of differing legal opinion on whether the election is necessary. FORECAST KANSAS -Partly cloudy Thursday with chance of scattered thunderstorms mostly west and thif afternoon and over most of state tonight; scattered thunderstormsdevel- oping again Thursday afternoon or evening west and central portions; low tonight in 60s; a little warmer Thursday high upper 80s to lower 90s. EXTENDED FORECAST Kansas extended outlook Friday through Sunday Chance of rain central and east slight chance extreme west Friday ending Saturday or Saturday night; low in 50s northwest to near 70 southeast cooling to 1 40s northwest and mid 50s to low 60s southeast by'Sunday morning; high around 80 northwest to 90 southeast cooling by Sunday to 70s northwest near 80 southeast. ZONE Zone 6 Mostly cloudy with showers and thunderstorms this afternoon and evening followed by decreasing cloudiness late tonight, Thursday partly cloudy and a little warmer; low tonight near 60; high Thursday 85-90; southerly winds 8-18 mph outside thunderstorms tonight; precipitation probabilities 40 per cent tonight, 20 percent Thursday.

SALINA WEATHER City Airport temp, at 12 noon 77; min. Wednesday 64; Max. Tuesday 83. FA A Reported at 12 noon: Barometer 29.95, steady Wind SE 10 MPH; Relative Humidity 58 percent. Lowest this date 45 in 1916; highest 105 in 1913.

Thursday Sunrise 6:05 am; Sunset 8:55 pm. Strike possible of Bell System WASHINGTON (AP) The top union negotiator in nationwide telephone bargaining has predicted a walkout of some half a billion Bell System workers if negotiations don't pick up. The union wants an immediate 25 per cent increase on salaries that presently range from $101 a week for women clerks to week for central office switchmen in larger cities. Fire Alarms 1:25 pm Tuesday 339 N. 9th, flare pot owned by Jayhawk Roofing 600 W.

North; damage to nearby peach tree. You will be happily surprised. Classified ads sell old things. Grade-schoolers protest park-grabbers AMES, Iowa (AP) Four Cedar Falls grade school students Tuesday took the Iowa State Highway Commissioner to task for a road project which will take part of a Cedar Falls park. The youngsters told the commissioners animals are more important than people.

The four were objecting to taking 13 acres of George Wyth State Park in Cedar Falls, for relocation of U.S 20. Acknowledging the commission is taking only a small part of the park, Dore Newell, 12, told the commissioners "Our head is only a small part of our body, but if you cut it off, you're dead." Lisa Eiklor, 10, explained to the commission how she had been in the park many times and watched the deer in that Part of the area is a swampland which would be replaced under the commission plan with a clear-water lake. Miss Eiklor said, "Swamp may look ugly to you, but to animals it is a paradise. No clear lake can take the place of a swamp." She also expressed fear that the highway noise would eventually destroy all of the area's wild life. Under the plan, the commission will give the" park 37 acres of nearby land but this also left the students unimpressed.

They contended that some of the land to be taken is irreplacable. When asked which are more important, animals or people, Miss Newell chose the animals, indicating human life was not that valuable, "if we're just going to kill our- selves going in cars." She also said "when this (highway construction in the state) is all done you guys aren't going to be here but us young kids are going to have to live through all the pollution." When she was given the choice of whether houses or the park should be taken for right of way, she chose houses, saying "You can pay for them, but you can't pay for animals." Built carefully to mow safely Tuesday 3 4 5 4. 7 i. 12 Midnight 3 12 73 1 71 1 am 44 (..... .73 i 77 2noon 77 Cat travels in airborne luxury but owner drives A serviceman's transfer from Alaska to New Jersey resulted in the loss and eventual recovery of a sensitive piece of "baggage" in Salina recently after several long distance phone calls and many complications.

The ''baggage'' --ablack Siamese slipped out of the serviceman's car as he and his wife were eating lunch at the Colonial House. couple apparently didn't realize the cat was missing until they were somewhere in Missouri. The wife called Mrs. John Chalmers, who manages the restaurant with her husband. Mrs.

Chalmers and her staff looked for the cat and finally found him near the restaurant. After several more long distance calls, Mrs. Chalmers arranged to ship the cat by airmail to Cleveland, Ohio, where the couple would meet the plane. Before the cat could be shipped however, he had to make a trip to the veterinarian's' for a health certificate, a cage had to be purchased and several other details arranged. "I started out at 8 am with a phone call to the airport, and finally got him on a plane at 10:45 am," Mrs.

Chalmers said. Hail damage estimates high in Salina area TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) Kansas Insurance Commissioner Fletcher Bell estimated today that wind and hail storms in Kansas during late May caused approximately $5 million damage. He said isured. losses may exceed the $5 million figure and that this estimate does not apply to tree, shrub and crop damage, or deduc- table amounts applying to insured property.

He said the most extensive damage was in the Hays, Russell and Salina vicinities. He estimated $2 million damage at Salina; $1.75 million in Hays, and $1.20 million in Russell. TORQ 1125 I. Crawford SALINA, KANSAS SALE! Save SALE ENDS IUNE24TH S175 $375 10 Diamonds 1 ct. total weight INMM Mfcfact to Salt Quantity rights reserved.

Entire stock not included in this sale. Original price tag shown on every item. Use one of our convenient charge IthistraHorn enlarged Custom Charge Revolving Charge Master Charge BankAmericard ZALES JEWELERS: 106 S. Fe.

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About The Salina Journal Archive

Pages Available:
477,718
Years Available:
1951-2009