Local and
Eusiness Name Delmar L.
and. Frieda L. Smith, route 1,
box 530A, Central Point, have
filed the assumed business name
or Crater Rock museum in the
county clerk's office.
, .
From Portland The Misses
Donna Zeitler, 705 West 10th
St., and Rita Cardona, 234 Sagi
naw dr., have returned after
visiting since Saturday in Port
land. Move Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Fruett recently moved from 909
Jasper st. to the Griffin creek
area. They sold their home to
Mr. and Mrs. John Stewart, ac
cording to the Chez agency
which handled the transaction.
Office Manager Mrs. Allegra
Coates, 527 Dakota st., began
work Monday as office manager
at Oregon Finance company, re
placing Mrs. Carl Burk, the for:
mer Miss Joan Burk, whose
wedding was a recent event.
At Coast Mr. and Mrs. Har
old E. Gist, 556 Haven st.f
were in Crescent City, Calif., on
the coast for the week end.
There they visited her father,
Joe McCallister. They were ac
companied on the trip by her
brother, James McCallister of
Lake Creek.
From Trip Mr. and Mrs.
Dean R. Norman, 104 South
Keeneway dr., returned home
Saturday after vacationing for a
week at Santa Barbara and San
Francisco, Calif. Norman repre
sents Broyles wholesale firm
and Mrs. Norman is employed at
the First National bank.
At Eugen e Mr. and Mrs.
John Esp, Eagle Point, returned
Sunday evening after being in
Eugene and Springfield for the
week end. At Eugene they at
tended a Masonic lodge session
and they visited at Springfield
with her brother-in-law and sij
ter. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. May-
field.
'
Assume Names R. J. and
Thelma Reinning have assumed
the name R and R Radio and
TV, for a busines at Shady Cove,
according to county clerk's rec
ords. Marvin L. and Glen C.
Crocker have taken the name
Automotive Beauty center, for
a business at 621 East Jackson
t.
DAV Session A regular busi
ness meeting for members of
Disabled American Veterans
which had been "scheduled for
Tuesday has been postponed and
the men instead will meet Thurs
day evening at Camp White, of
ficers said today. The auxiliary,
however, will meet Tuesday
evening when state department
off icers will be present. A social
meeting also will be held by the
auxiliary Tuesday evening to
which DAV members are in
vited. CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank our friends and
neighbors for their sympathy and
kindness during the less of our be
loved husband and father. Also for
the many cards and floral offerings.
Mrs. .Harry Kaolon. Norman Kapion
and Thelma Cohen. Portland. Ore.
FKint TONITf '
Gary Cooper -"RETURN
TO PARADISE"
Greer Garson
"SCANDAL AT SCOURIE"
New Show TOMORROW!
MICKEY '
SPILLANE'S
Newest & Hottest!
-A , - .
ANTHONY QUINN
CHARLES COBURN
GENE EVANS
PEGGIE CASTLE
Plus 2nd Technicolor Hit!
tain
STOUT
TAYLOR - GRANGER - BLTTH
PLUS COLOR CARTOON
iMl
it - v I-
VS7
Personal
; Cabinet Shop Fred Meadows
has filed the assumed business
name of Meadows Cabinet shop,
1000 Sunset ave., in the county
clerk's office.
Moving Mrs. Lucy Lyman,
who has been living at 423 King
st., is moving this week to a
duplex apartment at 23212
South Ivy st,
Nimt Retired Paul Hennick
and Joseph P. Hennick have
filed - a retirement of the as
sumed business name Hennick
Brothers, according to county
clerk's records.
Vagrant' Jack Lewis Barr,
58, transient, was sentenced to
10 dayi in the city jail today
on a vagrancy charge, according
to police records. The sentence
is subject to later suspension.
In Hospital Duane Thore
son, 16, is a patient in Osteopath
ic hospital following an append
ectomy yesterday afternoon, the
hospital reported this morning.
He is the son of Mrs. Clara
Thoreson, 124 Washington st.
Inspects Businesses Fire Mar
shal Truman Nelson yesterday
inspected three business occu
pancies, a public garage, and a
warehouse. He issued seven or
ders for the correction of haz
ardous conditions.
Business Name Gerald M.
Gleaves has assumed the busi
ness name Gleaves Automotive
Shine Shop, with an address of
1243 South Riverside ave., ac
cording to records filed in the
office of the Jackson county
clerk.
Swallows Aspirin Candace
Gately, four-year-old daughter
of Mr. 'and Mrs. Homer Gately,
Talent,, was treated at Commun
ity hospifal this morning after
she had swallowed several as
pirin tablets, the hospital re
ported this morning.
.
Arretted James Horn, 54,
route 4, box 213C, Grants Pass,
was arrested today by Oregon
state police on a charge of driv
ing while intoxicated, according
to records in the sheriff's office.
Horn was lodged in the Jackson
county jail.
Sentenced John Lindsay, 22,
of 338 North. Front st., was sen
tenced to 30 days in the county
jail today on a petty larceny
charge . involving theft of two
fender skirts from William M.
Bosse, according to court records.
The court stipulated that the sen
tence will be suspended after one
day if Horn makes restitution.
Building Medford building
permits have been issued to F.
L. and Ralph Patterson, 802-4
Broad st., $10,000, to erect a
duplex and carport; N. L. Hawk,
701V2 West list St., $1,900, re
pair fire damage; D. G. Piatt,
1540 Oregon ave., $10,000 er
rect residence and A. R. Dubs,
500 Barnes ave., $9,000, erect
residence.
Pre-School Roundup A pre
school health roundup for chil
dren of the Elk-Trail area will
be held Thursday, March 10, in
the Shady Cove school gymna
sium. Parents of the Elk-Trail
area are asked to bring their
youngsters for the health check
in the morning, and those of the
Shady Cove area in the after
noon. FOE Meeting The Fraternal
Order of Eagles will meet in
the hall at 219 West Main st.
Thursday at 8 p.m. with an ini
tiation , followed by refresh
ments. At last week's meeting a
group of past worthy presidents
put on a comedy initiation skit.
It was written by Past President
Jack Webber. Nearly 200 were
served at the crab feed. '
At Community Three sur
gery cases reported by Commun
ity hospital this morning were
Mrs. William Short, Eagle
Point; Mrs. Willard Singleton,
Central Point, and Mrs. Lyle
Schoppert, 720 Crater Lake ave.
Michael Heckert, 2, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Heckert, route
2, box 456H, Medford, is in the
Community hospital for medical
care.
Man Injured Edward Brea-
zeale, Selma, Ore., was treated
at " Sacred Heart hospital here
yesterday for an injured eye.
Hospital attendants said that
Breazeale had been struck with
a limb. Other patients reported
by the hospital this morning in
cluded Jeffrey Jefferson. 4, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jefferson,
206 Cottage St.; Salvadore Es-
quivel.f Central Point; Everett
Howard,- Yreka, Calif.; Bob Ash
worth, Grants Pass; Mrs. Vin
cent Lobdell, 1007 Murray st.,
and Mrs. Floyd Crafts, 502
South Fir st., all for surgery.
Medical patients reported were
Linda Lewis, 10, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lewis, 503
Maple st.; James Hale, route 2,
Medford: Joe Whipple. Eagle
Point; David Russell Brendle,
1R months, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell ; Brendle, 3595 .' Table
Rock xd.; Cesare Salvadorini,
Box 2193, Jacksonville highway,
,and Pamela Scott, 9, daughter
of ,Mr.: and Mrs. Arthur Scott,
143 Cedar st., Central Point.
Governors Asked
If States Able To
Match Road Funds
Washington (U.R5 A Sen
ate Public Works subcommittee
today asked U. S. governors
whether their states can match
increased federal funds being
proposed in highway construc
tion bills before congress.
The ' governor's views about
the "ability and present inclin
ation" of their states to raise
additional funds for highways
were sought in a letter written
by subcommittee chairman Al
bert Gore D-Tenn.).
Administration Proposal
The subcommittee ; is consid
ering an administration bill call
ing for the expenditure in the
next 10 years by state and lo
cal governments of $29,000,000
more than their present spend
ing for roads and streets out
side the interstate highway sys
tem. The measure also calls for
$25,000,000 in federal spending
on interstate roads, but states
would be required to put up no
more matching funds than under
the present law.
Another 'bill being consider
ed by the subcommittee is one
sponsored by Gore calling for a
total expenditure of $1,100,000,
000 annual in federal funds for
primary, secondary and urban
roads with states to, match the
funds on a 50-50 basis. This bill
also would increase funds for
interstate roads from $175,000,
000 to $500,000,000 annually.
This would be one a two-thirds
to one-third matching basis.
Hearings Announced
Mearlwhile, Chairman Dennis
Chavez, (D-N.M.), of the full
fudiic works - committee, an
nounced hearings will be held
on highway needs in all nine
regions of the Bureau of Public
Roads.
Gore also issued a table show
ing that total allocations of ex
isting authorization for federal
highway aid would be divided
to nclude: California 5.40 per
cent, Oregon 1.48 per cent, and
Washington 1.62 per cent.
State and local governments
would be required to raise an
additional $29,000,000. Gore's
table broke it down to the fol
lowing amounts: Oregon $430,
000,000, Washington $469,000,
000 and California, $1,565,000.
Falls From Roof Harold G.
Jones, route 2, Central Point,
was taken to Community hosnital
by Medford ambulance service
yesterday evening for treatment
of injuries suffered when he fell
from the roof of a house on West
Main st. which he was helping
to demolish. He was treated at
the hospital for cuts about the
head and for an injured arm, and
then released.
Fire Alarms Medford fire
men responded to two alarms
yesterday. One was at 11:53 a.m.
in the 2100 block of the Jackson
ville highway, where a grass fire
was burning, and the other was
at 7:46 p.m., when a general
alarm called two pumpers and
the aerial ladder truck to the old
First National Bank building,
now being remodeled. Smoke
which caused the alarm to be
turned in turned out to be from,
the flue of the Allen hotel next
door.
Daily Weather Report
DATE March 8, 1953
Sunset tonight 6:09 pjn. Sunrise
tomorrow 6:33 a.m.
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair tonight,
partly cloudy Wednesday with a lew
light showers, mainly in- mountains.
Low tonight 34. high Wednesday 60.
Western Oregon: Partly cloudy with
scattered showers tonight and Wed
nesday. Cooler in north half tonight
and in south half Wednesdav. Low to
night 34-44; high Wednesday 45-60.
Northern California: Partly cloudy
tonight and Wednesday. Possible scat
tered showers Wednesday, mootly in
central California. Cooler north por
tions tonight.
Five-day forecast, through Sunday:
Western Oregon: Cooler Wednesday
with temperatures slightly below nor
mal through Sunday. Considerable
cloudiness with showery periods. Total
precipitation from .25 to .75 in inter
ior valleys. Highs 46-54; lows 32-42.
Northern California: Occasional
rain, snow in mountains. Temperatures-
below normal.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
50: above normal 4. '
Record high this date 74 in 1953.
Record low this date 26 in 1935.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to mid
night, none. Midnight to 10 a.m.. none.
Total this month .12 inch.. JO inch
below normal.
Total since Sept. 1, 6.68 Inches; 6.63
inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 22,
highest this a.m. 89.
CITY High Low Prec.
Brookings 64 36
Crater Lake 51 20
Grants Pass 68 28
Klamath Falls 61 29
MEDFORD 71 32
Portland 59 30
Seattle
Spokane
Yakima
. 47
50
'5
37
32
25
Eureka
Red Bluff
Sacramento .....
San Francisco
Los Angeles "...
58
70
71
70
87
40
42
44
45
59
Phoenix
Denver .
Chicago
Miami ...
83
. 57
. 20
. 78
. 35 .
. 38
50
31
17
63
19
24
New York .
Washington. D.C.
Vet's Club Dining Room L
(Open Under New
WILL BE
Week Days: 11 A.M. to 1
6 to 9 P.M.; Saturday
T
McKay Lauds lkers
Electric Program
Washington U.R) Interior
Secretary Douglas McKay,
stressing the importance of fed
eral, local and private coopera
tion, said today the Eisenhower
administration has taken the
"positive approach" in develop-,
ing electric power.
Obviously referring to the ad
vocates of public power McKay
said the new program is "a de
parture from the negative view
that only the federal government
is equipped to do the job . . ."
"The construction to be under
taken is too ' tremendous and
costly for the federal govern
men to carry the burden alone,"
McKay said in ihs annual report
to President Eisenhower for the
fiscal year ended last June 30.
Mercy Planes Carry
Two Patients Monday
Two patients were flown to
Portland for medical treatment
by air ambulance planes of Mer
cy Flights, Inc., it was reported
this morning.
The first flight took Sister
Ellen Genevieve of St. Mary's
convent for treatment of a
heart condition, i
In the afternoon, Virgil Neun
schwander, route 1, box 452,
Talent, an employee of Lininger
and Sons, was flown north for
treatment to his eye. A steel
sliver entered th'e eyeball while
he was working yesterday, it
was reported.
The patients were the 333rd
and 334th carried by planes of
the non-profit corporation since
it began service in 1950.
Births
BARTLETT To Mr. and Mrs.
Steven, 416 North Fourth st.,
Central Point, March 7, 1955,
boy, 634 pounds, at Sacred Heart
Hospital.
KRUGGEL To Mr. and Mrs.
Frederick Jr., 525 Boardman st.,
March 7, 1955 boy, 6V2 pounds,
at Sacred Heart Hospital.
SMITH To Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald, 331 Kennet st., March 8,
1955, girl, pounds, at Com
munity Hospital.
THOMPSEN To Mr. and
Mrs. Norris, 2004 Westerlund
dr., March 7, 1955, boy, 9 pounds
at Sacred Heart Hospital.
OMANN To Mr. and Mrs.
Norbert, 211 Jeanette st., March
7, 1955, boy; 10 pounds; at Sac
red Heart Hospital.
HAYMAN To Mr. and Mrs.
Bert, route 1, Box 382, Talent,
March 8, 1955, boy, 8 pounds,
at Sacred Heart Hospital.
NOUD To Mr. and Mrs. Pat
rick, route 1, box 295, Talent,
March 5, 1955, a boy, IV2
prunds, at Community hospital.
WEST To Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace B., Box 201, Central
Point, March 6, 1955, a boy, 8
pounds, at Community hospital.
MOBERLY To Mr. and
Mrs. William, Box 62, Talent,
March 5, 1955, a boy, 7V4 pounds
at Sacred Heart hospital.
LARSEN To Mr. and Mrs.
Walter, 725 West 11th st.,
March 6, 1955, a girl, 7. pounds,
at Sacred Heart hospital.
ANDERSON To Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence, 623 Benson st.,
March 6, 1955, a boy, 7V& pounds
at Sacred Heart hospital.
HARRIS To Mr. and Mrs.
Robert, 513 King st., March 7,
1955, a boy, 63i pounds, at
Sacred Heart hospital.
WESTFALL To Mr. and
Mrs. James, route 1, box 180,
Eagle Point, March 5, 1955, a
girl, iYz pounds, at Osteopathic
hospital.
LE CLAIR To Mr. and
Mrs. Keith, Grants Pass, March
7, 1955, a girl, 5Ms pounds, at
Osteopathic hospital.
TUCKER To Mr. and Mrs.
Tommy, route 2, box 82, Cen
tral Point, March 6, 1955, a boy,
534 pounds, at Community hos
pital.
MARY'S
... CASA
OPEN
Daily & Sunday
(Exeapt Monday)
- HOURS -S
P.M. to 9 P.M. Daily
2 P.M. to 8 P.M. Sundays
Homo of REAL Italian Food
537 Mary St. - Phono 2-5349
Management)
OPEN
P.M.; Friday Night
Night 6 P.M. to' 12
Grange
Griffin Creek Granea
Grifin Creek Grange will
meet Thursday. March 10, at 8
p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Luchterhand
and Mr. and Mrs. Art Slackler
will serve refreshments.
All officers and a large group
of members were in attendance
at the last meeting. Visitors
were, Mr. and Mrs. Olive Poe,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hocker
smith, Mrs.- Maxine Hixon, Mrs.
Densmore, and Mr. Wood of
Phoenix, and Mrs. Velda Mang
and Mrs. Bertha Taylor of Cen
tral Point.-' ,
Wall Street
New York (U.R) A selling
drive drove stocks down sharp
ly in the last half hour of trad
ing today.
Tickers fell as much as nine
minutes behind the actual mar
ket.
Aircrafts, steels, and rails
were hardest hit.
Losses ranged beyond five
points.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T 183
Anaconda ... '. .. 52
Chrysler 69
Curtiss Wright 20 Vi
General Electric 50 V4
General Motors . .. 93 Va
Montgomery Ward ..... 79
Penn. R. R .. 26
Penney, J. C. . ... 88V2
Radio 427s
Southern Co 2054
Southern Pacific . '. . 56
S. Oil of Calif .'. 7834
Texas Gulf Sulphur .. 40V4
Transamerica ... 39
Tri-Continental . 20
United Aircraft 78V2
U. S.. Rubber 42V2
U. S. Steel "77Vs
Portland Livestock
Portland (U.P.) Cattle 200. Aver
age choice steers $23.25; other good
choice steers $20.50-23; choice fed
heifers $21; good-choice 814 lbs.,
$20.50; canner-cutter cows $9.50-11,
utility cows $12-13.50; commercial to
$15 or above; bulls up to $16-16.50.
Calves 35. 'Choice 1-2 butchers 380
235 lb. $18.50-19; i-noice 3 butchers $18.
Sheep 150. Good wooled lambs
$19.50-20; choice around $21-21.50 and
pbove; choice with some prime lambs
$22; good feeder lambs $18; utility
good ewes $6.50-8. ',
Portland Produce
Portland (UP.) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large, 49-50c doz.; A
large, 48-49c doz.; AA medium. 48-49C
doz.; AA medium 48-49c: A medium
47-48c;- A small. 42-44c doz.; cartons
lc to 3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints 66c lb.; cartons 67c; A prints,
66c: cartons 67c: -B prints 64c.
Chese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar. Oregon singles,- 42-45 lie; 5-lb.
loaves 46 '.2-49 lie. Processed Ameri
can cheese 5-lb. leaf 59l2-41c lb.
Farm Market
Willamette valley rutabagas sold
higher today at 1.80-1.90 a lug; Ore
gon City hothouse cucumbers -were
$10-10.25 for 3li-4i dozen packs.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers (No. 1
quality f.o.b. Portland). Fryers. 2lj to
4 lbs.. 27-28c lb.; at farm. 26-27c lb.;
roasters. 4 lie lb. up, 27-28c lb. f.o.b.
Portland, 26-27c at ranch; light hens,
15-16c: heavy hens, ail wts.. 18-19c
lb.; old roostes, 10-llc lb.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers. 36-37c lb.: roasters,
39-40c; light hens. 29-300; neavy hens,
33-34c; cutup fryers, all wts.. 51-53c
lb.: whole drawn. 46-48c lb.
Turkeys To retailers. A grade hens
ready to cook. 4S-50c; N. Y. dressed,
37c lb.; A grade toms, oven-ready, 41
44c lb.; Beltsville A grade hens, oven
ready to 52c; Beltsville toms. 47c lb.
Rabbits (average to growers, f.o.b.
killing plants) Live white. 34-4 li
lbs.. 19-2 lc up; 5-6 lbs.. 15-17c: color
ed pelts, 4c under; old does. 9-1 lc lb.;
a few higher. Fresh dressed fryers to
retailers, 55-58c; cut up, 61-64c.
Portland Cash Grain
Portland Prices as reported by the
USDA market news service: . Wheat,
No. 2 soft white, $79.75 a ton bulk,
prompt delivery f.o.b. Portland. No. 2
white oats 38 lb. . test Coast delivery
$57.50 ton; Portland delivery. $53
53.50; No. 2 Western barley, $54 ton
f.o.b. Portland Coast delivery; Soy
bean meal, $89 ton,' cars, prompt de
livery Portland; standard millrun
shipment. $43.50-44 ton cars prompt
delivery Portland: No. 2 yellow corn,
$64.50 ton f.o.b. Portland.
Wholesale Hay Prices: No. 2 green
llfalfa baled, f.o.b. Portland. $35
trucks, $37 rail. Timothy mixed hay,
$36 a ton. f.o.b. rail car, Seattle.
Portland Grai Exchange: Monday's
close: Offer
Soft white $2.39 li
Soft -white, no rex 2.39 li
White club 2.39 'i
I7VVVVVVVVV7VVVVVVVV7V7VVVI
Ml
III
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STARTS TOMORROW!
IN THE GREAT TRADITION OF "BROKEN ARROW" 20th CENTURY-FOX GIVES YOU THE . .
MIGHTIEST INDIAN ADVENTURE EVER FILMED!
Ifflffif-ETD
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Tuesday. Marqh 8, 195S
City Officials Attend
Cave Junction Meet
Cave Junction Three Med;
ford city officials attended an
cpen forum meeting last night
at. Cave Junction, to discuss fi
nancing city : government and
other southern Oregon prob
lems. From here were D. L. Flynn,
president of the League of Ore
gon cities, Mayor Earl Miller and
City Manager Robert A. Duff.
Specific topics discussed in
volved sanitation systems for the
community, a shorter route to
the area from the Applegate
country, and obtaining a major
airline to service' the Illinois
Valley, Duff reported.
Citizens in . that community
are vitally interested in obtain
ing a shorter route to the ocean
from Medford, he said. The ov
erall plan is a better route from
Winnemucca, Nev., to the ocean,
coming down through Lake O'
Woods via Brownsboro and
Eagle Point.
Mayor Elwood Hussey presid
ed, at the meeting, which about
12 persons attended.
Northwest Gas Permit
Under Consideration
Philadelphia (U.R) The third
circuit court of appeals today
took under advisement a motion
to dismiss a petition for review
of a Federal Power commission
decision granting Pacific North
west Pipeline corporation per
mission to serve the Northwest
with natural gas.
The petition for a review of
the decision was filed by Trans
Northwest Gas, Inc., Spokane,
one of two firms which lost a
bid for the franchise granted
Pacific Northwest.
The court gave no indication
when it will rule on Pacific
Northwest's motion to dismiss
the petition. .---- - -
Freight Employees
Idled by Strike
Salt Lake City V" U.R) A
strike , against Garret Freight
Lines today had idled 900 em
ployees in Utah, Idaho, Califor
nia, Colorado, Oregon and Mon
tana. This includes 300 workers in
Salt Lake City and 20 in Ogden.
Company spokesmen said the
layoffs were forced'from a lack
of freight. No negotiation session
had been scheduled to settle the
dispute. . .
The walkout started after a
stalemate in negotiations for an
initial contract for .25 clerical
workers at the freight lines'
Salt Lake City terminal. "
REOPENS
Wednesday
. Featuring
SURPRISE
HIT
o ASH LAN Do
TONITE
DORIS DAY and
FRANK SINATRA
'"Yiing at Heart"
. in Technicolor
BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:45
ukuh JX
o PLUS o
CINEMASCOPE SHORT - "FAR EAST
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN.
Obi tuary
ARNOLD MORTON
Funeral services for Arnold
Loraine Morton, 39, of 826 Grant
ave., who died Friday in San
Francisco, will be held in Conger-Morris
chapel Thursday at
1:30 p.m. with the Rev. Willis
J. Loar of the Eastwood Baptist
church officiating. Interment
will be in Siskiyou Memorial
park. .
Pall bearers will be Frank
Weigel, Jake Strong, Francis
Hart, Ed , Radzweit, Robert
Agard, and Maynard Paup.
The deceased was born May
27, 1915, in Table Rock, Neb.,
and came to Medford from Sa
lem, Ore., three years ago. On
July 26, 1940, in Vancouver
Wash;, he was married to Lor
raine E. Nelson, who survives.
Other survivors include a son,
Allen L., and a daughter, Bar
bara J., at home; his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Morton,
Table Rock, Neb.; two sisters,
Mrs. Virgil Cook, Table Rock,
Neb. and Mrs. Joe L. Green,
Denver, Colo.; a brother, Elzie
L., Minatare, Neb., and his
grandmother, Mrs. Jasper Skil
lett, Table Rock, Neb.
HASS INFANT
Private funeral services were!
held today for the infant daugh-
ME
HURRY! ENDS TONITE!
CinemaScopE
j j - ii myit mhii""'- 1 Tr'iT it'tti m r in""'" "
i in i tm
ife S GREAT 52,500,000 f
WsT BOSTON h
(I "-' "ks nrr" ft
TONY CURTIS
JULIE ADAMS-GEORGE NADER
-r JAY C. FLIPPEN'SAL MINEO
fleeted t JOSEPH PEVNEY
frafetdiy AARON ROSENBERG A
L
ENDS TONIGHT
JAMES STEWART RUTH ROMAN
"THE FAR
PLUS SELECTED SHORTS
I i AeV- m I Bk . Jit ak 1 s.
ROEeKT WAGKEK DH2A PAGET y JErrKcT HU71TK
JOHH LUND HUGH
BASTIONS" - CARTOON
n j aa j aa vV
Notices
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund E.
Hass, 1615 Crown ave. Conger
Morris funeral home was in
charge of funeral arrangements.
ERIC ANDERSON
; Graveside funeral services for
Eric Anderson, 85, of Joe Bar
mine, Copper, Calif., will be
held Thursday, at 11 a.m. at
Siskiyou Memorial park.
. Mr. Anderson, a resident of
the Copper area for 13 years,
died March 4 in a Yreka, Calif.,
hospital, where he had been for
the past two years. He was born
in Sweden on March 4; 1870.
Mr. Anderson was preceded in
death my his wife, Milinda, who
died in 1941.
Girdner Funeral Chapel, Yre
ka, is in charge of arrangements.
A TIMBER
Wanted to buy from
owners, in lots of 2 million
feet or more. Medium
grade or better pine or
fir.
PHONE 2-5742
115 South Ivy, Medford
J
ROMANCE! MUSIC! SPECTACLE!
Is this the truth behind the !f.
Sow, b SIDNEY 60EHM
UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURT
1
COUNTRY
ii
0TX1EM n
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