Local and Personal
Visitor Visiting at the home
of Mrs. Lucy Grissom, route 3,
box 75, over the week end was
her niece, Miss Carolyn Nelson
of Coker Butte rd.
Incorporate Articles of in
corporation of Weisfield's of
Medford, Inc., have been filed
in the Jackson county clerk's
office by David Fain, Stewart
Tremaine, and John J. Higgins,
all of 1200 Cascade building,
Portland.
Building Permit B. and G.
Properties, Inc., have obtained
a $20,000 building permit to re
model the old Crater Lake Lum
ber company yards at 609 to
617 East Jackson st., into stores,
according to records on file in
the city building department.
Cabin Entered Harry Mor
ris, 160 Central ave., Ashland,
has reported to the sheriff's of
fice that three boys entered cab
ins owned by Morris, Phil Stans
bury and Ralph Koozer, all of
Ashland, in the Niel creek area.
The boys have agreed to pay for
damages, according to the com
plaint.
Business Name Change Bus
ter B. P. Woody and Stella C.
Woody have retired from the
business name Quality Produce,
which has been assumed by Ra
mona Terrell, Ray Lange, and
Catherine Lange, according to
records filed in the county clerk
office. The business address is
listed as route 1, box 261, Gold
Hill.
CARD OF THANKS
We want to thank all the nice peo
ple and fire department for all they
did for us at the fire.
Mr. & Mrs. Harold Pence.
mmm
J TONITE!
SHOW STARTS 7:15 P.M. I
PLUS 1
Agents Meet Truman Nelson,
Medford city fire marshal, will
speak Thursday noon at a meet
ing of the Medford insurance
agents in the Jackson hotel.
Moose To Meet Election of
officers will be held at a meet
ing of the Loyal Order of the
Moose at the Moose hall, 11
Newtown st., Wednesday, April
6, at 8 p.m.
AWOL Phillip Allen Cox,
110 South Grape st., was arrest
ed yesterday by city police and
is being held on a charge of be
ing absent without leave from
the Army.
Box Company L. G. Adams
has assumed the business name
White City Box company, with
a business address of Box 307,
Camp White, according to coun
ty clerk's records.
At Osteopathic Elmo Bruce
Vyar, 5, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elmo Vyar, Box 712, Central
Point; Oscar J. Shores, Merlin;
and Berle B. Elmore, Applegate,
are listed as medical patients to
day at Osteopathic hospital.
Orders Issued City Fire Mar
shal Truman Nelson inspected
three places of public assembly
and one apartment house yester
day and issued six orders for
correction of hazardous condi
tions. .
i
At Sacred Heart Mrs. Wel
lington Beelby, 695 Pennsylva
nia ave., and Alexander Brad
burn, Mitchell sanitarium, Jack
sonville, are medical patients to
day at Sacred Heart hospital, at
tendants reported.
Rummage Griffin Creek
Grange members will conduct a
rummage and plant sale Satur
day, April 9, at 106 North Ivy
st., from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Those
having articles for the sale are
asked by those in charge to take
them to the building after 5 p.m.
Friday, or telephone 3-4461.
Condition Good The condi
tion of Roy Strickland, Rogue
River, who was injured in a fall
Tuesday at the DeArmond Bros.
Lumber company, is reported as
good" today at Sacred Heart
hospital. He was taken there
soon after the accident. His in
juries were to his nead, arm,
back and chest, according to the
report.
News About
Servicemen
THREE YOUNG MEN
ENLIST IN NAVY
Three young Jackson county
men recently enlisted in the
Navy and are now taking basic
training at San Diego, according
to E. D. Houdescheldt, quarter
master first class, recruiter here.
After nine weeks of training,
they will receive a leave and
can visit their homes before go
ing to their next assignments.
They are Gerald Raymond
Reed, 12 Beach ave., Ashland;
Cecil Eugene Marshall, 611 East
California ave., Jacksonville, and
Ronald George Kaer, 205 D st.,
Jacksonville.
WING SETS REUNION
Members of the 403rd troop
carrier wing, based at Portland,
will attend a reunion of the wing
at the Portland airport, Satur
day, April 16. Their wives and
friends also are invited.
Those serving with the unit
now, and those who have been
members in the past, may at
tend. Dancing, refreshments and
entertainment are on the pro
gram. Among those attending will
be Maj. Gen. Chester E. McCar
ty, former commander of the
wing, now commanding general
of the 18th air force; Maj. Gen.
Robert B. Landry, commander of
the 4th Air Force, and Col. Jo
seph Stromme, first commander
of the Portland Air base.
"v ' ff ' J 'f
SIGNING CONTRACT covering 15,000 workers In 16 plants, Dave
Beck (left), president of International Brotherhood of Team
sters (AFL) and Sewell Avery, chairman, Montgomery Ward &
Co., exchange quips during Chicago meeting. Beck said union
would vote Its stock for Avery In control fight. (International)
MacArlhur's Aide Disputes Report
coming '
FRIDAY ! EKJ1
Plus JOHN WAYNE in "THE DARK COMMAND'
Return Mr. and Mrs. Eu
gene Thorndike, 55 South Berk
eley way, returned yesterday
after being on vacation in Eur
ope for about 2V2 months.
At Community Miss Carol
Wikstrom, 2216 Dellwood ave.,
Mrs. Lee D. Pinkham, 378 Stew
art ave., and Lynn McConnell,
6, whose parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest McConnell, Eagle
Point, are surgery patients to
day at Community hospital.
Picked Up Two Washington
boys were arrested here early
today by city police and jailed
on delinquency charges. They
were a 16-year-old from Blaine,
Wash., and a 17-year-old from
Renton, Wash. A 16 -year -old
Modesto, Calif., boy was picked
up yesterday by city police and
is being held as a runaway.
Cars Collide Vehicles oper
ated by Bert E. Simmons, 322
South Orange st., and Earl L.
Sweek, 844 Stewart ave., were
involved in a collision at the in
tersection of Main and Ivy sts.
at about 12:45 p.m. yesterday,
according to city police. Sweek
was cited for failure to yield
right of way.
Powerhouse Jobs Job va
cancies as powerhouse operators
for the federal government in
plants in Oregon and Washing
ton will be filled through civil
service, examination, according
to the civil service commission.
The jobs pay from $2.06 to $2.46
hourly. Application forms and
other details may be obtained at
the Medford post office. t
From $60 a person in 1913,
the 'U.S. national debt rose to
about $1,970 per capita at the
end of World War II.
f litlii :" :-:; iiinf
u-i ;V4:?W' .) , JJ'2
THE TUNESMITHS
Now in the
HUNT
ROOM
Playing
Nightly Except
Monday
Hie
jalhHHlo
ON HIGHWAY 99 AT TALENT
Southern Oregon's Unique
Dining Room and Supper Club
Good Food Good M usic Dancing
New "York (U.R) A spokes
man for Gen. Douglas Mac-
Arthur disputed last night an
Army historian's report that the
general Knew about ana ap
proved efforts to obtain Russian
military aid in the wind-up of
the war against Japan.
A statement issued by Maj.
Gen. Courtney Whitney, Mac-
Arthur's chief aide, was the
latest exchange in a controversy
that arose last week with publi
cation of the Yalta papers. Mac-
Arthur has been pictured as
one of a group of military lead
ers who recommended to the
conferees at Yalta that Russian
aid be sought against Japan.
Whitney's statement was in
answer to an article in the cur-
Eisenhower, Brother
Play Round of Golf
Washington (U.R) Presi
dent Eisenhower and his broth
er, Edgar, played a round of
golf today. Edgar, a Tacoma
lawyer, was here for a meeting
of the John Marshal Bi-Centen-nial
commission whose members
lunched at the White House.
Wall Street
New. York (U.R) Specialty
issues featured a generally high
er and quiet stock market today.
Gains in the specialties rang
ed to more than a point. In the
main list, price improvements
were limited mostly to the frac
tional zone.
Steel shares, yesterday's mar
ket leaders, sparked today's advance.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T ...
Anaconda .
Chrysler
Curtiss Wright ;
General Electric
General Motors
Montgomery Ward 78 Vz
Perm R R 27V4
Penney J C , 9V
Radio ..... , 43 Va
Southern Co 21
Southern Pacific........ unquoted
S Oil of Calif ... 78ii
Texas Gulf Sulphur 40
Transamerica . . 40
Tri-Continental . 27
United Aircraft .: . 7334
U S Rubber .. 43 Vb
U S Steel .. 81
Youngstown .. 78
180
61
72
22Vs
50
95
rent issue of The Reporter maga
zine by Dr. Louis Morton of the
Army's Office of Military His
tory. . ,
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Portland (U.P.) CatUe 300. Com
mercial and low good steers $19.50
20.75; medium and good stock steers
$17-18; good with some choice 724 lb.
fed heifers $21.25; utility heifers $12
15; canner-cutter cows mostly $9
10.50; few $11; uUlity cows $12-14;
young commercial cows up to $16.50;
2000 lb. Holstein bull $17.50; cutter
utility bulls $12-15.50.
Calves 50. Good and low choice
vealers $23-26; cull and utility grades
$8-16.
Hogs 200. Choicel80-235 lb, butch
ers $19.25-20; 245 Jb. $18: 61 lb.
$18.50; choice 340-525 lb. sows $14.50
$16. Sheep 300. Good-choice fall shorn
lambs $20; choice full wooled lambs
above $21; choice 74 lb. spring lambs
$26.50; good-choice slaughter ewes
$8-9.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (U.P.) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large, 51c doz.; A large
49-50c doz.; AA medium. 49c: A me
dium 47-48c doz.; A small. 44c doz.;
cartons, l-3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints, 66c lb.: cartons, 67c; A prints,
66c; cartons, 67c; B prints. 64c.
Cheese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar Oregon singles. 4212-45tic: 5-H.
loaves. 46,,i-4912C Processed Ameri
can cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 39',i-41c lb.
Farm Market
First local cauliflower is due at
East Side Farmers' market today with
price expected to be around $1.75 a.
standard crate; Roseburg cauliflower
selling at $2-2.25; season's first mus
tard greens brought 65 cents a dozen
bunches to growers.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers (No. 1
quality f.o.b. Portland): Fryers 2V2 to
4 lbs., 30c lb., at farm 29c; roasters,
ranch: light hens, 18-19c; heavy hens.
ail wts., 21-22c lb.; old roosters. 11-
12c lb.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers. New York style. 41-
42c lb.: whole drawn, 51-53c. cut up
5B-58C lb.: roasters. N.Y. style, 4Z-43c;
hens, light-type. New York style, 30-
31c; cut ups. 42-45c; hens, heavy type.
n.y. style. 33-34c: whole-drawn. 44-
46c lb.
Turkeys To retailers: A grade hens,
ready to cook. 48-50c: N.Y. dressed.
37-38c lb.; A grade toms, oven ready,
40-44c; N.Y. style. 34-35C.
Rabbits (average to growers t.o.o.
killing plants) Live white, 3 ',4-44
lbs., 21-23c up; 5-6 lbs., 17-19c: colored
pelts, 4c under; old does, 10-12c lb., a
few higher. Fresh dressed fryers to
retailers, 57-60c; cut up, 62-65C.
PORTLAND CASH GRAIN
Portland Prices as reported by the
USDA market news service: Wheat,
No. 2 soft white. $80.50 a ton bulk,
prompt delivery f.o.b. Portland. No. 2
white oats 38 lb. test Coast delivery
$54-50.55 ton: Portland delivery $52-
53; No. 2 Western barley, $52.50 ton
f.o.b. Portland Coast delivery; soy
bean meal, $88-89 ton, cars, prompt
delivery Portland; standard muirun,
S41 50-42 ton pars nromnt dpliverv
Portland; No. 2 yellow corn. $65 ton
f.o.b. Portland.
Wholesale hay prices: No. 2 green
alfalfa, baled, f.o.b. Portland. $38-40
ton; truck or rail. Timothy mixed hay,
$40 a ton, f.o.b. rail car, Seattle.
Portland grain exchange: Tuesday s
close: Bid
Soft white 1... , $2.38
Soft white, no rex , 2.38
White club . 2.38
Wednesday April 6' 195s
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ELEVEN
LUNCHEON
1 1 :30 A.M. to 2:30 P.M.
REGULAR LUNCHEON OCc
Trier Start t '
EVENING DINNERS
Prices Start at
BEGIN AT
5 P.M.
Serving the Finest and...
Largest Selection of Food
At Sensible Prices!
Under the Supervision of
Chef August "Gus" Bruynee!
TABU DINNER HOUSE
305 South Riverside
O DANCE O
BILLY MAY ORCHESTRA
(Currently playing at the Hollywood Palladium)
With Popular Sam Donahue directing
Vocal stylings by lovely Sherry Kay
Full sixteen piece band coming
THURSDAY, APRIL 7 - GRANTS PASS ARMORY
S.E. 9th Street
Get your advance sale tickets at
SWEMS RECORD STORE MUSIC MART
Advance Sales Adults $1.50 per person
Students, $1.25 per person
All box office tickets $1.80 per person
.Dancing 9 -1:00 ojclock
Obituary
NEWELL MCINTIRE
Funeral services for Newell
Dean Mclntire, 34, of Garber
ville, Calif., who died in King
man," Ariz., March Jtt, Will be
held at Perl funeral home Thurs
day at 1:30 p'm. with the Rev.
J. Thomas Dixon of he First
Methodist church officiating. In
terment will be in Siskiyou Me
morial park.
Survivors include his mother,
Mrs. Jessie Linton, Medford; two
brothers, Enroll, . Medford, and
James Roy, Crescent City, Calif.;
a sister, Mrs. Gladys McKibben,
Brookings, Ore.; and three chil
dren, Carol Jean, Newell Jr., and
Susan Jessie, all of Kingman.
CHARLES ARMOND
Funeral services for Charles
F. Armond, 83, of 1035 Cherry
Lane, who died Monday, will be
held in Conger-Morris chapel
Friday at 1:30 p.m. with the Rev.
M. Homer Thompson of the Ash
land Assembly of God church of
ficiating. Committal . will be in
Siskiyou Memorial park.
The deceased was born Nov. 6,
1871, in Norway, and came to
this country at the age of 12. He
had lived in Medford for the past
four years.
Survivors include two sons,
Larry, San Mateo, Calif., and
Roy, Medford and two grandchildren.
ARTHUR JANES
Arthur D. Janes, 62, died yes
terday at the V.A. Domiciliarv.
Camp White. Conger-Morris fun
eral nome is in charge of fun
eral arrangements. '
GEORGE HUMBARD
George R. Humbard, 58, died
last night at the-V.A. Domicil
iary, Camp White. Conger-Morris
funeral home is in charge of
funeral arrangements.
About 3,000,000 Americans
are taking special courses for
adults provided by the public
school systems.
y j i v 1 1 in
ASHLAND
TONITE ONLY! ,
tovTifl
V K W I CAN
S. , Mr J ma a 3
T7- MAN A...
7J aTJ
Mrtce
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t ...OR A KING Of SCOUNDRELSI
.
X7lm KlWiAKD BUR I UN
JOHN DEREK M
Guardian Brings Suit
For Boy's Injuries
The guardian of a small boy
injured in January, 1954, in an
automobile accident, has brought
suit for $30,163 against Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Monroe Finney, ac
cording to circuit court records.
The suit was brought by Helen
Corbett, guardian of Michael
Dunagan, who at the time of the
accident, was 32 months old. The
youngster was struck by a veh
icle operated by Finney and in
which wife, Geraldine M. Fin
ney, was a passenger.
The -complaint states that the
boy was permanently injured
in the accident. It asks $163
special damages for medical ex
penses, and $30,000 general dam-
ages. ,
Rogue River Church .
Building Plan Told
Rogue River The congre
gation of Hope Presbyterian
church has decided to go ahead
with preliminary plans for con
struction of a new church buil
ding, according to members.
Sites for a building and meth
ods of financing the project still
are being studied. . -
The church has obtained an
option to buy a piece of prop
erty adjoining the present church
building, but no decision has
been reached on whether the op
tion will be used.
mm
HURRY Tomorrow
"THE DRAMATIC
THUNDERBOLT
OF THE YEAR!"
-IOOK MAGAZINE
"BING
CROSBY
GRACE
KELLY
WILLIAM
HOLDEN
ffl c Va
bi A PERLBERG-SEATON Pmtew
THE
PretiooR
I far WILLIAM PERLBERG
Wnfta for the. Screen &od Directed hf
GEORGE SEATON
FfoathtphrbrCWonlOfcli
A Pmmoool Pfehrt
m
OPEN DAILY AT 6:45
ENDS TONIGHT
MMB M MAZM
WIIO MATTO GDOSSO
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CARTOON
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O LATE NEWS EVENTS
Minimum Wage Said
'National Scandal'
Washington (U.PJ The CIO
last night labeled the 75 cent
hourly federal minimum wage
"a national scandaL"
The union repeated its de
mand that Congress raise the
wage minimum to $1.25 an hour
and extend its coverage to addi
tional millions.
In its monthly "economic out
look," the CIO said increases in
living costs and worker produc
tivity since the 75 cent minimum
took effect in 1950 in themselves
justify an increase in the mini
mum wage.
7
Gates opes
6:30 p.m.
Show at
Dusk
mum.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
Pi
13!
All the Drang,
Supra oid
Adviitirt of
At Great Book
Storm to
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r a i
ii
T..!!. THURSDAY
Oil 1 1 FRIDAY
AXTTKIX3
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1
STARRING
MARILYN
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STERLING
HAYDEN
' LOUIS
CALHERN
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"TARZAN"
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REGULAR PRICES