Gene Autry Interested
in KTRB
PUMPING GASOLINE is a difficult business In Modesto, and last week's hike in wholesale prices by some of the major oil companies is hardly making life on the Islands any easier. Dealers are bound by iron-clad contracts to buy their gasoline from the parent corporation whose flag they fly, and the bitter pill, says one operator, Is that major stations pay more for gasoline at wholesale than the cut-rate stations charge at retail.
"This often is one and the same gasoline," he added. "We are forced to pay 28.5 cents a gallon for regular grade, while a cut-rate station down the street is retailing regular at 27.9 cents a gallon." "ON TOP OF THIS, the major oil companies charge us 2.25 to 2.5 cents a gallon for rent, bringing our wholesale costs to about 31 cents a gallon. This means we have to 2.5 cents a gallon for rent, bringing our wholesale costs to about 31 cents a gallon. This means we have to charge 10 cents a gallon more than the discounters, and no amount of service we can provide is worth that much."
"In fact, I happen to know a major oil company Is supplying gasoline to one of the local cut-rate stations, and sometimes it is exactly the same grade I am pumping and probably even comes out of the same lot," he said. "This is a very upsetting and frustrating situation," he continued, adding it is time for an industry wide congressional probe into the practices of the big oil firms. He says franchise operators are prevented from buying gasoline from any source other than the parent company. The same is true of spark plugs, oil, filters and other items, any of which he claims can be purchased at local discount stores at prices less than he is forced to pay at wholesale.
"I'm wishing Ralph Nader would take a look into this mess," lie said. SOME SAN FRANCISCO area disc jockeys and newspaper columnists seemingly never tire of poking fun at Modesto, making it the butt of endless jokes and portraying its residents as a fabulous collection of bumpkins. Or "hayshakers," as one columnist insists on labeling us. However, being a hayshaker is not all that bad, as the columnist has pointed out in attacking San Francisco's public utilities department for its Tuolumne River water agreements with the Modesto and Turlock Irrigation Districts.
According to his version, San Francisco officials went up to Modesto many years back to work out agreements with the irrigation districts to obtain drinking water for the city without interfering with the districts' prior rights. The San Franciscans went home victorious but minus wallets, watches, fobs, spectacles and even their fountain pens used for signing the agreements.
The story, of course, points out the writer's realization that Modesto and Turlock area residents are sharp, intelligent people. And of late some well-known personalities have been taking a careful, calculating look at the community. They include, to name a few, Gene Autry, Art Linkletter and Johnny Carson. Why? They are among the several who have expressed an Interest in buying radio station KTRB, which manager Dick Brown says is not for sale but might be soon.
11-22-70
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