Local and
Flush Streets Firemen
flushed away gasoline spilled
from the .tanks .of five automo
biles in downtown Medford yes
terday. To Leave E f f a Corliss,
938 South Holly st., and Mrs.
H. Vessey plan to leave Friday
for San Louis Obispo, Calif., to
visit for a week.
At Community Norma Jean
Yandell, 4, and her brother, Da
vid, 6,.children of Mr. and Mrs.
Leon ..-Yandell, 202 Willamette
st., underwent tonsil surgery at
'Community hospital.
' From Portland Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Gorliss, South Pacific
highway, and Mrs. Harold H.
Corliss, 938 South Holly st., re
turned Tuesday from Portland
, where they had been for three
days visiting and on business.
Orders Issued City Fire
Marshal Truman Nelson issued
12 orders for correction of haz
ards following inspection yes
terday of three apartment hous
es. He was accompanied by W.
P. Roble, deputy state fire mar-
shal. Nelson also investigated
" two complaints of hazardous con
ditions in residential areas.
Square Dance A square
dance ' will be held Saturday,
June' 11 at 8:30 p.m., at the
Moose hall, sponsored by the
Moose lodge. The dance is open
;to the public and Fran Cronin
will call the squares. Women
i are to take sandwiches for pot
luck refreshments. The ' lodge
members will serve coffee free
of charge.
riT-MaiTI
1 wlnwTTHm
ACTION
SUSPENSE
HITS!
Show Starts 8:20 P.M.
NO. 2
1st DRIVE-IN RUN
STARTS FRIDAYI
Wiiliam HOLDEN
Grace KELLY
Fredric
MARCH
Mickey
MONEY
Keith Mirick ...
Student of Maggie,
(Teacher-coach of
Raphael Mendez)
Graduate of Willamette
University, with degree
of Bachelor of Music
Education. Mr. Mirick
will teach Music at the
Music Mart this summer.
I D I I . I I
-i i i r l
J, SCOTTWAPT
NO. 3
v - .1. '
Rental may be applied on purchase of instrument if you wish.
DROP IN NOW AT THE
Mul!
c
Personal
Cancel Meeting Medford
Safety council has canceled the
June meeting, it was announced
yesterday by Aubrey Loper,
council secretary.
To Utah Mr. and Mrs. Don
Snyder, formerly of 313 Maple
st., have moved to Logan, Utah,
friends said today. Snyder is
with the soil conservation ser
vice. Examinations Announced
Civil Service examinations for
clerk in federal agencies were
announced recently. Application
forms may be obtained at the
post office, and must be filed
with the Director of the 11th
U. S. civil service region not
later than June 27.
At Sacred Heart Mrs. Nor
man Hepp, 129 Mistle St., and
William Richenbach, 586 East
Main st., Ashland, are medical
patients at Sacred Heart hos
pital, attendants reported today.
William S. Beaustien, Klamath
Falls, is a surgery patient there.
To Build Building permits
have been issued to Glenn Por
ter for construction of an $8,000
residence at 1200 Loal st., and a
$7,000 residence at 1049 Ingrid
st. A permit was issued to
Walter P. Hannon for $1,000 for
remodeling his . home at 705
West 10th st.
Treated Christine Elmgren,
4, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Elmgren, 3300 Jacksonville high
way, was treated at Community
hospital Tuesday for a leg injury
which she received when she
caught the leg in a bicycle chain,
attendants reported today. She
was hospitalized but discharged
later in the day.
At Osteopathic Mrs. Ebroh
Griffiths, Central Point, and
Keith Cooley, Butte Falls, are
medical patients at Osteopathic
hospital, attendants said today.
la San Fraacisee Ronald
Robbins, Phoenix, of the Med
ford branch, First National
bank, collections department,
visited last week end in San
Francisco.
Moad Recovering - ' Jack
Moad, University of Oregon and
ex-Medford High athlete, who
was stricken with polio last
month at Eugene, is responding
to treatment and is "up walking
around," it was reported today.
Moad is at Sacred Heart hospit
al at Eugene He will observe
his 20th birthday on Thursday
and it has been suggested that
friends and other followers of
his sports career send him cards.
The athlete is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. John D. Moad, 1012
East Main st.
At Sequin Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Ketch, who lived here
for some time in 1952, while
Ketch was employed as a music
ian at the Rogue Valley Country
club, are appearing this week at
the Sequin club in Grants Pass,
friends here said today. Mrs.
Ketch was a member of the
Footlighters and appeared In a
production of "George Washing
ton Slept Here," and she also
was in the Kiwanis Kapers that
year. They have been in Phoe
nix, Ariz. They are billed at
Grants Pass as the Mario duo.
Subscribers
To report improper or n on -delivery
of the Hail Tribune phone
2-6141 before 6:43 pjn. daily and
10:30 a.m. Sunday.
If regular delivery arrives short
ly after you call please notify of
fice thus eliminating special mes
senger service.
for Summer BRASS
Both Private and Small Groups by
keith-
ENROLLMENTS
Art) Being Taken Immediately
Classes Start June 13 & 14
.Rental Band Instruments may be C
obtained at the
MUSIC MART for
v
M
ml
News About
Servicemen
New Marine Corps
Aviator Training
Program Listed
The Marine Corps has an
nounced a new training pro
gram for prospective Marine
aviators.
The first new program for Ma
rine officers since World War II,
the program will result in ear
lier commissions as second lieu
tenants for men who desire to
become Marine pilots.
Previously all Marine Corps
aviators were drawn from the
Naval aviation cadet program or
from the ranks of Marine offi
cers on active duty. The new
program is intended to supple
ment the present ones.
Basic Course
The program will be offered
to college graduates who will
attend a 10-week basic indoctri
nation course at Marine Corps
schools, Quantico, Va. This will
give them basic Marine Corps
training, with an emphasis on
infantry.
Successful graduates will re
ceive Marine Corps commissions
and be ordered to active duty as
student aviators. Upon comple
tion of flight training, which
lasts from 15 to 18 months, they
will be obligated to serve a
minimum of two years with the
air arm of the Marine Corps.
Additional information may
be had at the local Marine Corps
Recruiting Station located on
the second floor of the Medford
Post Office.
RETURNS TO SHIP
Lt. (jg) Joe Fligel Jr. left by
United Airlines Tuesday to re
port for duty on the USS Hoist
at Norfolk, Va.
Haymes To File
For US Citizenship
Hollywood (U.R) Crooner
Dick Haymes, encouraged by
last week's federal court decision
that he was not deportable, said
he would fly to Reno, Nev., to
day to file for U. S. citizenship
to correct the mistakes of the
past and erase the 'slacker' stig
ma against my name."
Haymes said he and his at
torney, Welburn Mayock, would
file in Nevada's Washoe county
where the singer established le
gal residence last year when he
and his actress wife, Rita Hay
worth, lived in seclusion at Lake
Tahoe.
The government had sought
to deport the crooner, a citizen
of Argentina, on charges he re
entered the United States illegal
ly in 1953 after a trip to Hawaii
to woo Miss Hayworth
Business Name Pearl A. Ben
edetti and Darrel L. Wampler
have assumed the business name
Ben-Wamp Logging Company,
according to records on file in
the office of the Jackson county
clerk.
a
Church Picnic A picnic for
members of the church school of
St. Mark's Episcopal church will
be held Sunday, June 12, at 2
p.m., at the Girl Scout Day camp,
off Barnett rd. No church school
classes will be held Sunday.
The summer schedule will begin
Sunday, June 19, when the
school will convene at 11 a.m.,
and continue at that hour
through the summer.
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday; 1 a. m. Monday for
Monday: other days 3:30 previous day
Instruction
chrick
111 W. Main
Phone 2-2022
500
PER MO.
a
JP-
yt. . mi
:: f
CLEARED The Supreme
Court cleared Yale Profes
sor John P. Peters (above) of
disloyalty charges and re
buked the government's old
Loyalty Review Board for "an
unwarranted assumption of
power." However, the tribu
nal sidestepped a ruling on
the major issue posed by
Peters, whether a federal em
ploye accused of being a secu
rity risk can be fired without
having a chance to confront
his accusers.
Western Holding
Companies Merge
San Francisco (U.R) Three
large western holding companies
have merged into one organiza
tion, according to Charles H.
Loveland, who was head of the
three original firms and will
serve as president of the new
one.
The three merging firms are
Western Utilities Corporation,
West Coast Utilities Corporation
and Loveland & Company. The
surviving corporation is to be
known as Western Utilities Cor
poration The three operating companies
are capitalized in excess of $96,
000,000. Western Utilities owns con
trolling interest in California
Water & Telephone company,
serving customers in Monterey,
Los Angeles, Riverside and San
Bernardino counties; the West
Coast Telephone company, pro
viding service in Oregon, Wash
ington and Northern California;
and the Southewst States Tele
phone company, providing serv
ice in sections of Texas, Louisi
ana, Oklahoma and Arkansas.
Robots Cutting in
On Mill Workers
Pittsburgh U.R) Industrial
automation is taking a giant step
forward in a Pittsburgh rolling
mill with robot installations that
may eventually eliminate 20 rjer
cent of the mill's workers
Morrow Products, Inc., Pitts
burgh firm installing the devices,
wefold not name the mill. But an
officer said the gadgets, . infra
Ted photo-electric controls, will
eliminate table reversing oper
ators, table control operators
and automatic shear button oper
ators. R. D. Morrow, company
vice president, said:
"In the future, we will be
able to eliminate any man doing
a sequence job ... (including)
almost every man but the main
tenance and control operators.
And we can do a better job."
Morrow's firm also has de
veloped an infra-red television
unit that could be used to posi
tion barges or railroad cars for
unloading despite fog, smoke or
steam.
BIRTHS
ADAMS To Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer, 518 West Sixth st., June
7, 1955, a girl, 53A pounds at
Community hospital.
NOTE To Mr. and Mrs. Ray
mand, 809 Beekman st., June 7,
1955, a boy, 8 pounds, at Sacred
Heart hospital.
KEIM To Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert, P. O. Box 931, Eagle Point,
June 8, 1955, a girl, 91$ pounds,
at Sacred Heart hospital.
ROSE To Mr. and Mrs. John,
Box 52, Happy Camp, Calif.,
June 3, 1955, a girl, 7 pounds,
at Sacred Heart hospital.
COMING
Out with the OW
In with the Newl
Watch for Our
ANNOUNCEMENT
JUNE 9th
Trowbridge & Flynn Electric Co.
214 W. Main
Ban Extended on
Carloading Grain
Washington (U.R) An exten
sion of the ban against carload
ing grain inan effort to free
additional freight car for lum
ber was announced today by the
Department of Agriculture.
The ban was extended to next
Monday. Charles Lauby of the
car service division of the As
sociation of American. Railroads
told the department that 3202
cars were loaded with grain in
western Oregon June 7. The re
port prompted the department s
extension of the ban.
Lauby said "what we need
worse than anything is settle
ment of the truck strike." But
even that would not prevent a
shortage running into October,
according to Charles W. Taylor
Jr., director of the interstate
commerce commission.
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
' Portland (U.P.1 Cattle 130. Low
to average choice 1025-1035 lb. fed
steers S23-23.50: utility-commercial
S16-18; commercial-good heifers $17
19.50; utility 513-15: commercial
young cows on heifer order $14.50-15;
utilitv-commercial $11.50-12.73: can-ners-cutters
$10-11.50; good-choice
530-645 lb. stock steers S20-21; year
ling stock heifers S16.50-17.50.
Calves 25. Good-choice vealers $20
22: utilitv-commercial $13-18.
Hoes 200. Choice 1 and 2 barrows
and gilts 180-235 lb. $21-21.75: 200-220
lb. choice one $22: 240-60 lb. $19
19.75: choice 350-550 lb. sows $14-16.
Sheep 600. Choice 95-100 lb. spring
lambs S21: utility down to S17; util-itv-good
120-134 lb. shorn old crop
lambs and vearlings mixed $10-13.50;
78 lb. spring feeding lambs $15.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (U.P.) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large. 52-53c doz.; A
large. 47-49c; AA" medium. 47-48c doz.;
A medium. 46-47c doz.: A small. 36
40c doz.; cartons. l-3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints. 65c lb.: cartons. 6c; A prints,
65c: cartons. 66c; B prints. 63c.
Chese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar, Oregon singles. 421,2-451,jc; 5-lb.
loaves. 46Ii-49,,2C. Processed Ameri
can cheese, 5-lb. loaf. 39',i-40',2C lb.
Farm Market
Best Willamette valley strawberries
sold early at $3.25 a flat at the East
Side Farmers' market today; most
radishes were 50-55 cents a dozen
bunches: local cauliflower . sold at
mostly $2.50-3 a crate.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers (No. 1
quality f.o.b. Portland): Fryers. 2',a to
4 lbs.. 30c. at farm 29c; light hens, 18
19c; heavy hens all wts.. 22-23C lb.;
old roosters. 12-14c lb.
Dressed Chickens-No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers New York style, 38-39-40c
lb.; whole drawn. 49-50c: cut
up. 55-51C lb.: roasters. N.Y. style. 41
42c: hens, light type. New York style.
3l-32c: cut-ups. 43-44c; hens, heavy
tvpe. N.Y. style. 34-35c; whole-drawn
45-47c lb. . .
Turkeys To producers for A grade
breeder hens, f.o.b. farm. N.Y. dressed
26c: eviscerated. 31c: A toms. N.Y.
style. 31c lb.: eviscerated. To retailers,
9 grade voung hens, ready to cook.
48-50c: N.Y. dressed. 37-38c lb.: A
grade toms. oven ready, 40-44c: N.Y.
style, 34-35c lb.; fryer turkeys, 4-8
lbs.. 49-Slc. . .
Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b.
killing plants): Live white. 34-4
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. 51-60c; cut up. 62-63C
PORTLAND CASH GRAIN
Portland Prices as reported by the
USDA market news service. Wheat,
No 2 soft white. $82 a ton bulk,
prompt delivery f.o.b. Portland: No. 2
white oats 38 lb. test. Coast delivery.
$55 ton: Portland delivery. $52.50;
No. 2 Western barley. $57 ton f.o.b.
Portland Coast delivery: soybean
meal $79 ton. cars prompt delivery
Portland: standard millrun $4850-49,
cars: No. 2 yellow corn. Eastern ship
ment, full billinc. delivered North
Coast points. $68.00 ton.
Wholesale hay prices: New crop.
No. 2 green alfalfa, bale, f.o.b. trucks,
Portland. $33.
Daily Weather Report
DATE June 8. 1955
Sunset tonight 7 46 p.m. Sunrise tor
morrow 4.34 a.m.
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Continued
hot and dry. Chanae bf thunderstorms
over Siskivou's Thursday afternoon.
Low tonight about 58. High Thursday
96.
Western Oregon: Fair and continu
ed warm tonight and Thursday.
Patches of early morning fog or lpw
clouds along coast. Low tonight 46
60. High Thursday 90 in nrth to 100
in south interior, 60 on couth coast
to 80 on north coast.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
76: above normal 13. .
Record high this date 93 in 1918.
Record low this date 39 in 1950.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to mid
night, none. Midnight to 10 a.m.. none.
Total this month none. .28 in. be
low normal. , .
Total since Sept. 1. 8.81 inches,
839 inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 19,
highest this a.m. 77.
CITY High Low Prec.
Brookings 58 45
Crater Lake
Grants Pass . 99 SO .
Klamath Falls 81 " S
MEDFORD , 9J 59
Portland 83 52
Seattle -J J3
Spokane '2 j
Yakima 87 50
Eureka -.S'- .52
Red Bluff . -102 . 72
Sacramento, 95 SB
San Francisco J '
Los Angeles 90
Phoenix .. , 122 25
Denver '55 '"'55
Chicago '2 22 '
Miami 75
New York 54 .07
Washington; D.C H 1
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday: 10 a.m. Monday for
Mondav: other days 5:30 previous day.
SOON!
Phont 2-5211
Wednesday. Junt 8, 1933
Wall Street
New York (U.R) Industrial
shares rose to record territory
again today in an irregularly
higher, moderately active stock
market. v
Metals, some merger candi
dates, selected oils, paper, and
office equipment issues made
wide gains.
Sperry Rand featured in turn
over and set a new high. Sperry
gained more than 5 at its high
and Remington Rand, the other
merger partner was up more
than 3 at its top.
Dow-Jones Arerages
Dow-Jones final stock aver
ages: 30 industrials 436.95, up
2.40; 20 railroads 161.15, off
0.27; 15 utilities 64.42, up 0.03,
and 65 stocks 162.08, up 0.41.
Sales today were about 3,300,
000 shares compared with 3,230,
000 shares yesterday.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T ...183?8
Anaconda ..... . 67
Chrysler 77
Curtiss Wright 2034
General Electric . 54V
General Motors 100V4
Montgomery Ward 79T
Pen. R. R 29
Penney, J. C 92
Radio ; 53H
Southern Co 20 V4
Southern Pacific 603,i
S. Oil of Calif. .. 773g
Texas Gulf Sulphur 42H
Transamerica Alii
Tri-Cpntinental 27Vi
United Aircraft 71
U. S. Rubber : 49Vi
U. S. Steel 483i
Noel Coward Success
In Las Vegas Debut
Las Vegas (U.R) British
playwright-composer Noel Cow
ard made a successful American
night club premiere here last
night before some 230 persons at
the lavish Desert Inn Hotel.
Coward, who will appear at
the hotel for four weeks at $140,
000 weekly, staged a production
number with artificial London
type fog on the stage and sang
many of the songs he has written
in the past 30 years.
2
REGULAR PRICES
TONITE S!
Ginger Van Gn
ROGERS HEFUN TIERNEY
RAFT rwS
IT SPINS
A DEADLY
WEB OF
MAN.
WOMEN
DANGER!
4
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.i mm
"i 1
TONITE A THUR.
JEAN PETERS JOHN MflNTMf
PLUS
GARY COOPER
, ! Ml! SEKTmoHMU ft
..cnlLW,.nWAM
LMMY JONES rolttTA HAYNK
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4
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MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBPlfg I U I UM
ELECTION of Mrs. Gertrude
Eiseman, practitioner, as pres
ident of the Mother Church, the
First Church of Christ Scientist,
is announced at annual meet
ing in Boston, (international)
Reciprocal Trade Act
Jumps Big Hurdle
Washington U.R) One of the
chief items in President Eisen
hower's legislative program,
a three-year extension of the re
ciprocal trade act, was over its
last big congressional hurdle
today.
But House Democrats, who
went all out to give the Presi
dent the kind of bill he request
ed, were still smouldering with
anger because the administra
tion refused to put up a fight
against "protectionist" amend
ments written into the - bill in
the Senate. .
Final passage of the trade
bill hrnhshl
4-'-wJ "VAt VCCAt Wt
assured when a . Senate-House
Conference Committee iA
terday agreed on a compromise
version that included most of
the Senate-amendments.
SPECIAL TONITE ONLY
AT 0:10 P.I1. "
rl
A MAJOR STUDIO'S NEW .
.HIT PICTURE . . . STARRING
2 GREAT STARS . . . IN A
CINEMASCOPE ADVENTURE SAGA
PLUS TONITE
Together
for the
first time
and
TERJOTC
CINemaScoPS
11 rr-r--
.. 1 Mi lEtEIEtieEEEiaifilEElltEtEtEaaaaaaaaaaa
dilllHillilil now
WAVE AFTER WAVE OF EXCITEMENT!
I"5
EMM i
ADDED CARTOON - LATE NEWS
HOLLY Starts Friday
ALL TKE FRE AD FU3Y...L0YE AO ADYCflO...
OF IKE FAUH.0US KST-SELLCC3 K0YE1 .
OAftli...ot you file
lStdro:2-TcaT0LlT
Court Records
MARRIAGE LICENSE
APPLICATIONS
LeRoV Thomas Farlev, 22. of route
1. box 98K. Eagle Point, and Dorothy
Ellen Carlson. 17. of Box 754. Eagle
Point.
Gordon La Verne Layton. 21, of
route 2. box 79. Central Point, and
Erma Jean Childers. 17. of route 2,
box 39. Central Point
KSTIIUI IHDON in sn
uo neitui sum: usmut rm turn
tenors in tn ti . in., iinih, a. t
E
ASH LAN Do
tlWtTWJsSCOPfJ
I APTAIN
TlGHTFOOT
TECHNICOLOR i
biffin fl.hl
PLUS
BiftSSl-JgD
AND THURSDAY
94.4 7
PR00F
(Baannus
(HE -
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ii
WAYNE TURNER