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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 17, 1955)
and Move -The Cecil Crow family moved last week from 512 South Fourth st., Central Point, to Warm Springs, Ore. ...... wall . Damaged Furemen re ported that some damage to the wall and ceiling at the J. R. Scoville home, 1053 Court st. resulted when fire-spread from a flue opening about 10:55 a. m today. Returned Glenn McCullbugh Medford agency manager . for Provident Life Insurance com pany, . has returned from : Bis marck, NJD where he attended a business meeting and house- warming for a newly completed home office building. Trades Council A meeting of the Medford Building and Con struction Trades council will be held at 8 p.m., Jan. 19, at 24 South Grape st, according to Alvin D. York, secretary. -: : vrw rum a xum on na tional defense will be shown at a social meeting of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Tuesday, Jan officers said todayRefreshments 18, at 8 p.m. in the VFW hall, will be served. Mothers March Scroll Scrolls for the Mothers March on Polio have arrived and Mrs. Lew Miles, chairman, today asked .her captains to pick them up at Central Supply of Southern Ore gon. 425 North Front st. Receive Death News Neys has been received 'here of the death of Mrs. Clara Salzwedel, former Medford resident. Who died Jan. 16 in Madison, Wise. Belatives here include Mrs. H. W. Wright, a daughter, William tL and Mel 'Wright and Mrs. Hugh Huntley, grandchildren. Has Surgery Mrs. Arnold Motschenbacher, Route 2, Med ford, underwent surgery at Sac- zed Heart hospital today as the .result of an ankle fracture which .she received the : end of last weelcwhen she slipped and fell on ice in front of her home, at tendants said-today.' , - K - " la Far East Wilbur L. Hober, a Navy chief machinist's mate, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam B. Ho ber, 1206 West Eighth st., is serving oh the USS Zelima in the - Far East, according td a Nivy ' release. His wife is the former Miss Norma E. Chinnock, of Santa Clara Calif.' Ball Game Members of the Cave Junction Community Bible church young men's basketball team will play today at 7:30 p.m., against members Of the Central Point Community church at the Central Point Jun . ior high school.. No admission will be charged, those in charge announced. The public is invited. Emergency Surgery Michael George, 7, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. George, 2650 Tennessee dr.. is convalescing from emerg ency appendectomy which he underwent Saturday at Osteo pathic hospital, attendants said today. Also undergoing surgery there Saturday was Mrs. Earl Peffley, Gold Hill. . .. i - At Community Miss Goldie wilinn Rnl Smith Ttrtf -at Ann Frank Lambo, 1389 South Peach st, are listed today at Commun ity hospital as surgery patients. Dismissed Saturday after minor surgery there was Marelyn An derson, 742 McAndrews rd., and dismissed Sunday was Mrs. Vefh Burg, Butte Falls Star route, Box 58, Eagle Point, who was a surgery patient . C:- Orders' Issued ,- City Fire Marshal .:- Truman Nelson in spected a home and seven busi ness occupancies on Friday and issued five orders for correction of fire hazards. The residential inspection, was made at the re quest of the Owner. A Saturday inspection by Nelson was' made at 305 South y Riverside ave. where the residence occupied by the Robert - Remillard family burned Friday. ,,v.., ... .- . -. ... : At Sacred Heart Mrs. ' Pha roah Dyer, Butte Falls; Mrs. Everett Gosch, 243 North Ivy st.; Mrs. Andrew Matney, 915 Beatty st., and Owen Schwartz, Lakeview, are surgery patients at Sacred Heart hospital, attend ants said today. Listed as medi cal patients there are J. E. Dame wood, Gold Hill; Gerald Ed wards, Camp White; Eber Weed, 129 Columbus ave.; Mrs. Richard Payne, Route 2, Medford; Stev en Gamaechlich, two months, son of Mr. and Mrs.. Eugene Gemaechlich, 527 Effie st., and Russell Ross,-20 months, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ross, 65 Hartley rd." r " '".7"' Dog Licenses Dee Jones, county dog control officer, will be at Shady Cove Wednesday, Jan. 19, from 9 a. m..to 4 p. m., it the Shady Cove cleaners; and at Rogue River at the Chinook Sporting Goods store Friday, Jan. 21, from 9 a. m. to 4 p. na. The officer will be in those areas as a convenience to county dog owners wanting to buy licenses for their pets. From now until March 1 the license fee is $1.50 for each dog. After March 1 the j post will be S3.50. All dogs past eight month old must have I licenses, the officer pointed out J Local Personal No Fire Two pumpers . and the aerial ladder truck were dis patched to Morton Milling com pany, 10 West Jackson st., Sat urday night when a resident of the neighborhood reported to the fire department what appeared to be a fire at the mill. Firemen said they found no blaze. A flue fire occurred yesterday at' the home of Dominic Issi, 3073 Delta Waters rd. There reportedly was no damage. . ; ..' ' On Cruiser-Allen Harris, : son of MT. and Mrs. D.'L. Johnson, route l,"bOx' 48,' Central Point, is serving with the Navy on the USS Ashland which will return to the east coast '. in February. While on the four-month cruise to the Mediterranean, he has visited in France, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Spain, Portugal, and Al geria. He joined the Navy in 1952. ; v-.,;. - Minors Damage., ' A truck driven by Arthur W. Fails of Pomona, Calif., received minor damage about 7:40 p-m. Satur day, when Fails was driving north on Highway 99 in Phoenix and a car ahead of him slowed down and his car slid into the ditch and overturned, when he applied his brakes, according to a report from the state police. ... , . .. . Medford Explorers Plant 725 Trees v Eleven Explorer-Scouts from Medford planted 725 young trees while on a snow trip over the past week . end in .;. the Savage Creek area south of . Rogue river, Boy Scout officials said ' today. The scouts did the planting in cooperation with Bureau of Land Management with Dick Swan of the BLM in charge. To plant the trees the young men had to clear away the snow which was from 6 to 8 inches deep. They cleared circles about three feet in diameter before planting each tree. . In the group were one Explor er Scout from Ppst 8; three, from Troop 9, and seven from Squad ron 14. : i v Film Studio To Hold Marilyn To Contract Hollywood (U.R) Marilyn Monroe's studio said today it will prevent the rebellious blonde actress ironj acting for anybody unless she lives up to her long term contract. . - Twentieth Century-Fox Studio suspended the . sexy star Satur day for failing to appear for pre- production work : on her next film,. "How. to. Be Very,Very. Popular." The "new" Marilyn, who wants to make films, with her own company, returned here last week from' New York where she announced she was tired of sexy roles and wanted to do something more serious. - She said she planned to go into independent work in all fields of entertainment with her own company, Marilyn Monroe Pro ductions, with herself as presi dent and cameraman Milton Greene as vice president. ; JOHN WOMACK ' Funeral - services - for John Hugh -Womack, . 62, . who died Friday, will be held in Conger- Morris chapel Tuesday at 1 p.m with the Rev: J. Thomas Dixon, of the First Methodist church officiating. Interment will be in Memory Gardens cemetery. The deceased was born Oct. 17, 1892, in Wallowa Ore. He was a veteran of World War I, serving in th U. S. Marine Corps from July 2, 1917, to Oct 19, 1919. He saw active service in France and was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross ior extraordinary heroism. He came to Eagle Point - about I four months ago. :- k ' Survivors include -two broth ers, William, Wallowa, Ore., and Osborne. Klamath Falls; and and two sisters, Mrs. -J. W. Gil lasoev. Eagle ; Point and Mrs. Bertha Mink, Enterprise, Ore. WENLOC PALMER - Remains of Wenlock C. Pal mer, 50 who died Friday at Camp White, will be forwarded tonight by Conger-Morris fun eral home to Woodsville, N. H., for services and internment The deceased was born Oct 17. 1894, in North Haverhill, N. H.. and "was a veteran of World War I, serving from June 9, 1917, to April 28, 1919, as a private in the Army. Survivors include his widow, Florence L. North Haverhill, N.IIL, and two sons, . William, Phoenix, Ariz.; and Robert A., North Haverhill, N.H. EATON'S DINNER HOUSE C . S12 Crater Lk At. -7- ITALIAN AND AMERICAN DINNERS SPECtAl An th Stwhcttt aa Bomemad BartoU yon can est. Includes - Hone Msde Bread, Butter sftd C o f f e. CQQ S COURSE ITAUIAN DINNER $1.50 , Opn 1.11 PJsV Till t TM. ttU laU laa aad Mwu Only Robots Operate Production Lines at TV-Radio Factory Without Coffee Break Harvard, 111. U.R Robots are running production lines here with never a pause for coffee break. They are ushering in the "age of automation" at plants of one of the large television manu facturers. The robots are at work here on TV sets and clock radios, and ' they do their jobs with speed and accuracy no human being could match. But now and then a robot gets off its feed and a human being has to straighten it out." The Admiral Corp. plant here has two robot production lines, one for TV and the other for clock radios. Twenty-three robots on the TV line insert 44 component parts into a TV-chassis board in about ZVi minutes. A completed board forms about half a television chassis. ' . The robots can turn out 250 boards an hour or 2200 in an eight hour day. - x ? t -; Different" Tasks - . Powered by compresser air and controlled by electronics, the robots work in unison al though each performs a ' dif ferent task. They hiss as their compressed air is released,- then they stamp their assigned parts into position. ' It's "that way . all day long, hiss, stamp, hiss, stamp. . The robots don't look like their comic strip counterparts, They have nd hands or feet. They have no head, either, but that's why they're called - "heads." - ' i- i Actually, the robots or 'heads' look like what they are-automa- tically controlled stamping ma chines. " - The robots are stationed at ragular intervals along a 45 foot track. Beneath each robot is a relay box with a red light which irlows when ever that particular machine is . jammed. That happens once in awile when the tobot is fed an irregu- Births NUNES To Mr. and Mrs. James, 169 East Glenwood rd., Jan. 15, 1955, a girl, 7 lbs., at Osteopathic hospital. MINKLER To Mr. and Mrs. Lee Jr., 941 Kenyon st, Jan. 13, 1955, boy, 7 lbs., Sacred, Heart hospital. ;:' ". ' ' ANHORN Td. Mr. and Mrs. Melviri, 527 Arnold lane, Jan. 13, 1955, boy, 53A lbs., Sacred Heart hospital. . ;' " HUNZIKER To Mr. and Mrs. Alfred, 719B Bennett st, Jan. .14, 1955, a boy, 8V& lbs., at Sa cred Heart hospital. FERNLUND To Mr. and Mrs. Raymond, 786 Gilman rd., Jan. 15, 1955, a boy, 634 lbs., at Sa cred Heart hospital. . HADLEY To Mr. and Mrs. Maynard, 474 Litway Ashland, Jan, 15, 1955, a girl, 5Va lbs., at Sacred Heart hospital. JACK To Mr. and Mrs. Alva, route 1, box 399D, Med ford, Jan. 16, 1955,- a girl, 8 pounds, at Osteopathic hospital. BROWN To Mr. and Mrs. Robert, '2545 Tennessee dr., Jan. 16, 1955, a boy, 9 54 pounds, at Osteopathic hospital. KINDELL To Mr. and Mrs. Joseph, 2418 Biddle rd., Jan. 16, 1955,- a girl, 914 pounds, at Sac red Heart hospital. ! WILSON To Mr. and Mrs. Howard, route 1, box .280,! Cen tral Point, a girl, 9 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospitaL , - REEVES To Mr. and Mrs. William, TOketee Falls, Jan 14, 1955, a boy, tVt pounds, at Com munity .hospital. v nv?Cv ROYSTON To ' Mr. and Mrs. Victor A., 117 C at., Phoe nix, Jan. 15, 1955, a girl, 6 pounds, at Community hospital -HARRIS To Mr. and Mrs. Vern, 271 South Stage rd., Jan. 15, 1955,- a -boyj-.a pounds, at Community hospital. - H SHUMAKE To Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey, 231 South Fifth st, Central Point, Jan. 17, 1955, a girl, 9 pounds, at Community hospitaL ' . , ( '- ' SVENSEN To Mr.; and Mrs. Norman, 307 Mae $t, Med ford, Jan. 17, 1955, a boy,9H pounds, at Community hospital, Yon sii ' GEORGE LEWIS At .viv-..: ROGUE TRAVEL SERVICE A FREE SERVICE We Kefterv ani Sell O Alrtina and Staamship Tickets : LOSSY HOTEL JACKSON larly shaped part it can't digest Master Brain at Head of Line ' At the head, of the line is a "master brain,", an - electronic system that controls all the "heads." ? . , .' ; The chassis boards on which the robots perform "their tasks are bakelite slabs measuring 9 by VA inches with TV circuits "printed" on them in copper. . . The boards move along the track, stopping under each robot The robot inserts its assigned part or parts, and the board moves along to the next robot ; Parts inserted include 36 . re John Noble Re(u riis From 10 Years in Soviet Labor Camps New York (U.ft) John H. Noble, 31, who last saw his na tive America more than half his life ago, returned today after nearly 10 years in Russian slave labor camps. "If I tell you the truth about them," he said; "nobody would believe it It is unbelievable for Western persons to understand." Grange Shady Cove Grange Shady Cove Grange met -Jan; 12 with the new officers taking over. Past - Master Phil Motsch enbacher installing .'..Secretary Lula Clark, Treasurer Agness Brown and Gate ; Keeper Bert Clark who did not have the op portunity of being installed at one of the previous installations. Delia Littlefield was elected Overseer and Travis Littlefield on - tne : executive , committee, These offices were vacated by Mr. and Mrs. Ira Connor.--' Bob Bush was a visitor from Gold Hill. ;. The Grange voted to donate proceeds from the penny drill for the meetings of Jan.-12 and 26 to the March of Dimes. They wilfc also hold a card party in the near future for benefit of the Shady Cove fire department, Maril Larson was accepted by demit as a member. Lecturer Vanderlip presented an enjoyable and interesting proi gram, highlighted by a candle lighting ceremony. ushering the old year out and the new year in and led by Master Reed Mc Kay with all members taking part. ;v -, H.E.C. chairman presented our Grange Mother, Mrs. Ida Otto with her dues card for the com ing year and thanked her for her untiring work for the H.E.C. and Grange the past year.- - H.E.C. met at the Cross home Jan. 11 with desert luncheon at 1:30 p. m. ; Gertrude . Lewen, past president installed Vice- President Sady Vanderlip. une lacues decided to noid a pot luck " dinner the second Grange meeting of every month, the first to be ; held Jan. 26. Ladies are asked to bring two dishes, a main dish and a desert or salad. "Dinner; will be served at 7 o'clock sharp preceding reg ular Grange meeting at 8 p. m, Next H.E.C. meeting will be at Mrs. Vanderlip's home Feb, 8 at. lp.m. Upper Rogue Grange . Upper Rogue Grange Home Economics club met Jan.-13, at o'clock. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Carl Richardson and Mrs. Ronald Axtell. : ; - . Chairman Dorothy i Tockstine asked that all Grange ladies bring a : batch of " home made candy to the Jstnuary 20 meet ing to .be sold to ' the members as a means of raising funds. FIRST 10-ROUNDEtC New York ' (U.R) Twenty- year old Floyd Patterson of Brooklyn, already ranked fourth among lignt neavyweight con tenders, engages ih his first 10- round bout tonight against Don Grant of Los Angeles at Brook lyn's Eastern Parkway Arena! Although each lost but one fight in his-brief career; Pattersofl is favored at 3-1 to win their tele vision scrap. w : -NOT RECOMMENDED Rockville, Conn. (U.R) Ap pealing a $50 fine for kindling' a fire without a permit, Myron E. Green served as his own law yer and wound up with a $100 fine and 15 days in jaiL V The nighthawk perches length wise on a tree limb, not cross wise , as most birds dOi PHONE 24779 sistors, - two - condensors and . six wire jumpers. ' . ; The clock radio line has 18 robots which grind out complete chassis boards including a con densor, four resistors, eight wire jumpers and five tube; sockets. . It would be hard to say how many . people the ' robots have "replaced.". Production has in creased so much since the robots were installed here last July that the human working force has doubled. f ; ";: And the human workers have to hustle to keep pace with the robots. -,- U ' :.. 1 - Noble was reunited with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.r Charles Noble of Detroit, about . five hours after he arrived by plane at Idlewild Airport Father Silent Tears streami ng down her face, Mrs." Noble could only mur mur, over and over, "My son, my son." ; : - .: 5 '" . - : - ; The father; who had taken his son to Germany just before the outbreak of World War II and who returned himself from Rus sian imprisonment only two and one half years ago, embraced his son without words. ? Young Noble told of his im prisonment in a slave labor camp 50 miles from the Arctic Circle; He said 90 per cent of the. pri soners were Soviet citizens and most of them were imprisoned for political reasons. ' Strikes in Camps r v -- Nobel said there had been strikes in the slave labor camps f ollowing the arrest r of Soviet Secret Police Chief Iiavrenti Beria. - ..I .'v:f- " ' : Hundreds of prisoners were shot down, he said, as the strikes were broken. He said that in a camp near his, prisoners congre-i gated at the gates and' refused to return to work in the mines. 'Eight hundred guards began to fire," he said, "and shot until the last one was laying on the ground." He said 110 were kill ed outright and 500 to 600 wounded. Wall Street New York (U.R) Stocks suffered one of their worst breaks since Korea in an active session today. Two forces induced selling - one . a f ederal Reserve move to stiffen interest rates and make bonds more J attractive than stocks, ' and second, the Presi dent's budget message which in dicated lower government spend ing and no further corporation' tax relief. . Prices of stocks fell 1 to more than 4 points. Trading increas ed on the decline. - Today's closing prices on se lected stocks: American T & T -L.- . 173U Anaconda Chrysler. 48 66V& 16 47 93 80 22 83U 37V4 18 51J4 74 3914 38 2534 73V4 4014 68 72 Curtiss Wright General : Electric M. General Motors Montgomery Ward Penn R R ; Penney J,C,.- Radio ..... Southern Co'..'... Southern Pacific . S Oil of Calif ; TexaS Gulf Sulphur - Transamerica .. Tri-Continental United Aircraft U S Rubber U S Steel Yoimgstown - HOT WATER CAPACITY : heats water faster so you "need not invert In a large, expensive 82-gallon heater. New heater supplies 150 , hot water in just 33 min-. ' utes front A cold start! ' You get 50 per cent MORS hot water in a 24-hour pe--riod than with itandard 82-sallon heaters. w .."Quick Recovery" heater has the capacity to wash a load of clothes in an automatic washer every hour all day Ion;! NOTHING DOWN F.H.A. TERMS Payments As Low As $6.50 Per Month i AuHiored Dealer .J GwBaral Electric Appliances - . MEW with BIG Monday. January 17. 1955 Stevens, Adams May Be Called in ; Hew Peress Probe Washington (U.R) - Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.) said Sun day night he expects to summon Army Secretary Robert T. Ste vens and Army counsellor John G. Adams in a new investiga tion of the celebrated "Peress Case." - McClellan was sharply critical of the Army's role in the case of Maj. Irving Peress, New York dentist who was ; promoted and later honorably discharged, des pite his refusal to answer loy alty questions. ' " . , " Replaces McCarthy The Arkahsan is new chair man of the Seriate Investigating Subcommittee, formerly headed by Sen. Joseph R.: McCarthy (R-Wis.). ; ; . . j The group might alsoNyeopen McCarthy's "controversial invesi- gation of . alleged espionage at the Army's Fort Monmouth, iU; secret radar center, McClellan said. -;v McClellan anticipates no trouble from McCarthy, "if he is sincere, and I always ascribed to him absolute sincerity in his ; opposition to . Communism, . I would assume he ; would -try to work with the committee Mc- Clellan said. "- J ...... -. McCarthy, in a stormy Senate debate last week, accused some Democrats of insincerity in agre ing to contiue investigating Communism. ."- ,, Heads Parent Group , - The Arkansan will head the Senate Government Operations Committee, parent of the investi gating subcommittee, as well as the : inquiry group. ; r: ; - j-s '! Asked if he agreed with Sen; Charles E. Potter(R-Mich.) that Stevens and Adams . should ; re sign, McClellan said, "If I had some responsibility there'd be1 some action, taken." He did "not elaborate. ' ' ::';"' ' Portland Livestock Portland (VF.) Cattle 2250. Choice about 1050 lbs. - fed steers ( $24.50; mostly choice steers $24; food steers, 22-$23; utility steers . 120 $17.50;; good-choice 667 lbs. stock steers, $18.75; choice around 925 lb. fed heifers $21.50, sorted at $20: good heifers $20f canner .cutter cows, most ly 11.50-$13.50; commercial grades 14 $15 with 1049 lb. $1525; utility-commercial bulls 13.50-$16. , . i ; Calves 200. Good-choice vealeri mosUy 20-$24; one prime vealer $26; good-choice around 450 calves $10; utility-commercial grades 9-S18. Hogs 1,200. Choice one-two butchers, 180-235 lb. 20-$20.50: Choice mostly $19.50 to 619.75: 250-280 lbs. 18-S18.73 rhniv asn-Kflfl 1h arnvfl 18.Sl7.r -; '- - . Sheep 1200. Mostly Choice "lahibs 1S-S19.50; good-choice feeder lambs 16-$16.75. Portland Produce . Portland (U J.V Ees To retail ers: Grade AA large. 47c doz: A large, 43-44c doz: AA - medium, 43- 44c; A medium, 41-42c; A small. 35c; cartons. l-3c additional. - Butter To retailers: AA grade prints, 66c lb; cartons 67c; A prmts 66c: cartons. 67c: B prints, 64c. Cheese To retailers: A grade (died-' dar, Oregon singles, 4212-45'c; 5-lb. loaves, 461,i-49',ic. Processed Ameri can cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 39'.i-41c lb. Farm Market - ; i ' - Willamette valley cabbage sold for $2.50-325 a crate today on the Fort land Eastside Farmers market. Cauliflower brought $2.50-2.75 for pany crates, $3.-225 for lettuce crates ana 3 .a u-3.au a - aozen neaas ei cel lophane wrapped. ' . 1JUDY ANN Sandwich Shop 443 South Central Next to Central Market " OPEN FOR BUSINESS TODAY, JANUARY 17 V . r . ' - SERVING ' ? Those Delicious - Sandwiches and Chill T 4omLo:i Water Heater us e. Main PHONE 2-4SSS . - ft Lr m ' :' m I J : -MEDFORD (ORE SenatorMorse Sets on S4ti: Wayne Morse ; will . con duct the first of a . series 0 of radio reports to citizens in ; Ore gon Tuesday evening. . ' "The program, to be heard on radio station KYJC from 10:15 to 10:30 p. m. Tuesday, this week will feature Senator Morse - in terviewing Sen. Richard L. Neu- berger and Congresswomari Edith Green - on their experiences in getting settled in Washington, arid on federal .aid - to educa tion. - t '." The program series is spon sored locally by a committee of friends of Wayne Morse.. LI, FORECASTS --.. - -:',.;' "Medford and vldnitv;-Tlatn in vnt. leyc .and mow in mountains this eve ning. Occasional snow tonight. ' Can. siderable cloudiness with snow iur nes. Tuesday. Colder Tuesday and Tuesday nieht. Low tonieht 30. Hieh -Tuesday-38.- - . Western Oreeon: Showery fanicht and partly cloudy with a few showers Tuesday of mixed rain and snow in interior valleys. Cooler tonieht and Tuesday. Low tonlffht 32-38. Hih 33. 42.. - . . local data .; ; - " . .. . .. : Temierature-'a year ncro . lvlav- Highest 44; Lowest 35..--- ", - .: Total monthly orecinitatlon fi7 In Deficiency for the month -.70 inches. Total precipitation since September 1. 1954. 5.29 inches. Deficiency for the season 438 . inches. : Relative humidity 4:30 nm-mtivj day 18: 4:30 aon. today- 88 TOMORROW : r-;.,,i j,;,-,. Sunrise 7:38 ajn." SiinSF S-n7 nm ' OBSERVATIONS' TAKES AT . V 4:30 A.M, 120 MERIDIAN TIME " 84 - 21 .30 39 23', - Boston .. Chicago Denver .22 13 . 18 . . .T 38 .41 32 f ..36 Eureka -46 Grants Pass- ..44 j Havre -.25 20 - ,T Klamath Falls , -12 .. Los An)reles... Medford ... -56 -44 -42 " 39 -36 27 -39 14, -55 ,.45--44 41 New York - Omaha Phoenix Portland ; .70 .66 .02 .47 "..03 r-M Reno .37 12 38 ; . 7 ,: 34 38 27 r '29 28- Eugene i ... Salt Lake ...I. San Francisco . Seattle Spokane i;.. 43 30 51 .41 32 .42 .35 Washington, D.C xaicuna .. People GO to 80 CAII APPLY FOR LIFE KiSURAKdE Kansas City," Mo.. - Even though you .ihay be past 60, -let us tell you how you can -still apply for .an extra $l,0u0Jworth ox life ; insurance to help ' take care of final expenses and other emergencies. You; cah handle the entire transaction by 'mail with OLD AMERICAN, of KANSAS CITY. No obligation. No one will call on yOu! ' ; Write today for free informa tion. Simply ; mail postcard or letter (giving age) to Old Amer ican Ins.' Co.," 3 Wroth, Dept L36B, Kansas City 5, Mo." ' " ASHLAND Report Tuesday Daily Weather Report alfBnftiiDO . . hjiw. ii i m. if i i n uti ii lJMMtl -p,,,, . no o in 4 o o in I ,.lnUlll.snyilcilllJI: II; O BOX OFFICE OPENS AT &30 0 3 -fr : MOWftSHOWiMeff L - TVK - V. TeKle,..,;,: s V. -Tune! , I C3 YCy3 ETtiL tXXftiZl-KHiTIIY tLCTZ fl ViATE NEWS O CAJlTOCN Q ON) MAIL TRIBU1TS-CS VKT STARTING WEDNESDAY : Hollywood's Greatest ' Story About Hollywood! ' Wdnderful v ; Return to the Saeenl TECHNICOLOR '. . !1 with' Jock CARSON I Charles BICKFORD HURRY! POSITIVELY ends; TOMORROW is lifelike II! T-r L - U L '1 7 Q A 'W. .1 f 01 IVI J 4 Thsn vjl .m. - ' '.'.'v.m.j 10 M , 'A loir: i: 3 ?J j'ciJnr iV