: nr i ' - : 1 - -
Cfcsiks3
SITTING IN KREMLIN PALACE, India's Prime Minister Nehru (left) and Soviet Premier Bul
ganin (right), jointly sign statement calling for complete ban on nuclear weapons and sub
stantial reduction in conventional arms. At right is Soviet Dictator Khrushchev. (International)
Local and
At Yreka Mr. and Mrs. L.
A. White of the Clock restaurant
visited friends for the week end
at Yreka, Calif.
To Chico Mrs. Nina Ellis
of Chico, Calif., left Monday for
her home after visiting for two
weeks with Mr. and Mrs. James
Ambrose, 832 "West 13th st.
Returns Mrs. George Cod
ding of Hadley's store, returned
home the end of the week after
a week's vacation at Las Vegas,
Nev., where she visited friends.
At Meeting Robert Rector
of Medford Furniture company
is attending a national meeting
of Philco representatives being
held this week in Miami, Fla.
- DAV Social Night A social
evening for members of the Dis
abled American Veterans is plan
ned for 8 p.m., today at the DAV
hall, 1515 North Riverside ave.
Reports of delegates to the state
convention also will be given.
Permits Issued Building
permits have been issued to A.
B. Hall, 1017 Plum St., for the
erection of a $5,000 residence,
and to F. J. McKeown, 1223
East 11th st., for $500 fire dam
age repairs.
Family Returns Mr. and
Mrs. R. Angus Todd and family
have returned to Medford to
live. Todd is a barber at Park
Barber shop, 518 East Main st.
The Todds formerly made their
home here but in recent months
lived in Cornelius, near Port
land. .
From Palm Springs Miss Ar-
lene Collier, Palm Springs, Calif,
was week end visitor with Mrs.
Matilda Dietrich and Mike Diet
rich, 939 North Central ave.
Dietrich, who is associated with
Bullock's store at Palm Springs,
is here for two months at the
home of his mother while trans
acting business. . , . .
From Markets Mrs. Adrien
ne Dippel and Mrs. Dorothy HqJ
bertson returned home Saturday
from a two-week buying trip to
the Los Angeles and San Fran
cisco markets. Mrs. Dippel is the
owner of Adrienne's shop and
Mrs. Holbertson, an employee;
assisted her in buying merchan
dise for the store.
Family Leaves Mrs. Rob
ert Leavitt and children, Patty
and Mike, left last week end
for their home in Crescent City,
Calif., after visiting for two
weeks with Mr. and Mrs. A. R.
Leavitt, 39 Summit ave. Robert
Leavitt arrived with his family
and visited for a week. He is a
son of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Lea
vitt. New Patients New patients
reported this morning by the
Sacred Heart hospital included
Mrs. Edna Hawley, 312 Alice
st., in the hospital for medical
care; Charyl, 5, and Janet, 10,
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert Pfaff, Central Point, who un-'
derwent tonsillectomies this mor
ning; Troy H. Lacy, Grants Pass,
Mrs. Leland Harter, Jacksonville
and James Frederickson, 5, son
of Mr. and Mrs. David Freder
ickson, Gilchrist, Ore., all surg
ery patients. . ' .
I I I 1 t i ; 1
rf.iifirTlff'liTilr1rfif1i1!iWl
Ends TUESDAY!
Show Starts 8:25 p.m.
' C0UJMM ftCTUKS praMnti
TYRONE POWER
!maureen OHARA
JOHN FORD'S
1 THE LONG
CRAY LINE
Plus
CELL 2455
Death Row
William Campbell
Robert Campbell e Marian Carr
y L J 1 1 v
Personal
Treated Eldon R. Smith,
route 3, box 64, Medford, was
treated Sunday noon at Osteo
pathic hospital for dislocated
shoulder. He entered the hos
pital at noon and was released
several hours later.
Dale Changed First Baptist
church's SOS class social, origi
nally scheduled for Friday, has
been changed to 6:30 p.m. Thurs
day at the home of Charley C.
Gilbert, 613 Ross lane, it was an
nounced today.
Assume Name Louis C.
Burns, post office box 1307, Med
ford, has assumed the business
name "Burns Engraving Co.," ac
cording to records filed in the
Jackson County Recorder's of
fice. Shirts Taken Vern Gordan
Marsh, 122 Willamette ave., re
ported the theft of two dresses
and eight white T shirts from
his car yesterday while it was
parked in front of Bud and
Lucille's Cafe and Lounge, ac
cording to city police.
Patients Reported Patients
reported by Sacred Heart hos
pital this morning included Mrs.
Daniel Serry, Jacksonville, Mrs.
Marion Caster, Central Point,
Mrs. Ernest Dayton, Grants Pass,
and Robert Hayes, Eagle Point,
all in the hospital for surgery,
and Weber Bennethum, Holly
wood, a medical patient.
To Visit Linda and Virginia
Teeter, daughters of Mr. and
Mrs. Ken B. Teeter, 1202 East
Main st., left for Portland Sat
urday to visit their grandpar
ents, Mr. and Mrs. B. R. Teeter.
The girls will return to Medford
Friday accompanied by their
grandparents, who will stay in
Medford during the fourth of
July holidays.
Bound Over Jerry Yates
Sparling, 26, of 724 Oak st., Med
ford, and John Butler Childress,
25, of 430 DeBarr ave., Medford,
waived preliminary hearing in
district court yesterday and were
bound over to grand jury. They
were released on $1,000 property
bond. Both are charged with en
tering a motor vehicle with in
tent to steal.
File Claims Kenneth O. Mer
rifield, route 1, box 92, Gold Hill,
has filed a mining claim, known
as Mary June, in the Jackson
county recorder's office. The
claim, in the Gold Hill Mining
district, listed gold and other
minerals. A claim known as Jack
pot was filed by K. C. Berge and
Rhea Norton. No minerals were
specified.
At Meetings Mrs. Betti
Boyle, manager of the Jackson
hotel, returned Monday from
Portland and Eugene. At Port
land she attended a state meet
ing of the Oregon Hotel Greeters
held Saturday when she was in
stalled second vice-president of
the group. On her . return trip
she attended a meeting Sunday
at Eugene of the Oregon Hotel
association. She also attended
the play, "Sabrina," given by the
Eugene civic theater group at the
Very Little Theater. She was a
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Land-
owne, Eugene hotel managers.
Argue Motion A motion to
quash and dismiss a complaint
charging Jack William Lewis,
32, of 136 Highland dr., with
driving while intoxicated, was
argued in district .court yester
day. The motion was argued on
grounds the complaint was not
verified by the oath of the com
plaining witness before and in
the presence of the district court
judge or any magistrate. Lewis
was arrested last month by sher
iff's deputies and bond was set
at $225. The case was continued
while Judge Rawles Moore took
the motion under advisement.
R90N EDESOCS
.... July 1st
News About
Servicemen
AT TORPEDO STATION
Roy N. Colley, a Navy seaman
apprentice, reported June 10 to
the Navy torpedo station at Key
port, Wash., for duty from the
Navy station at Tacoma. Before
entering the Navy he attended
Medford High school and was
employed at Barneburg and An
drews store.
Children Uninjured
In Railroad Mishap
Syracuse, N.Y. tU.R) Two
New York Central passenger
cars, carrying about 100 Mon
tana schoolchildren, were ram
med from the side by a freight
engine in the railroad station
before dawn today.
The father of one child and a
railroad employee were injured.
None of the children was hurt,
although they were shaken up,
the railroad said. -
The vacationers, en route
home to Great Falls, Mont., were
aboard the last two coaches of
the westbound Iroquois. One of
the cars was derailed, the other
was tipped slightly when they
were hit on the side by the en
gine of the overnight freight
during a switching operation.
Five Persons Charged
With Argentine Plot
Buenos Aires, Argentina (U.R)
Five persons were being held
today in connection with a plot
masterminded by the Commu
nists to provoke disturbances at
Catholic churches.
' The arrests were announced
Monday night by police at Eva
-Peron (formerly La Plata). They
said large quantities of anti-government
leaflets and pamphlets
were seized in the roundup of
the alleged plotters.
Police identified the ringlead
er as 35-year-old mechanic Jose
Maria Ballesteros, described as
an active member of the Com
munist Party.
Daily Weaiher Report
- DATE June 28. 1955
Sunset -tonight 7:52 pjn. Sunrise to
morrow 4.37 a.m.
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Decreasing
shower activity tonight, becoming
partly cloudy with widely scattered
showers Wednesday. Low tonight 47.
High Wednesday 75.
Western Oregon: Mostly cloudy to
night, partly cloudy Wednesday, with
a tew showers over the mountains.
Low tonight 48-56. High Wednesday
65-75 over interior, 60-65 along coast,
tonight and Wednesday. Fog along
the coast. Cooler in northern interior
tonight.
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
Western Oregon Few showers oc
curring mostly during middle of the
week. Precipitation mostly light.
Temperatures rising to normal. Highs
70 to 85 by the end of the week.
Northern California Scattered
thunder showers occasionally in ex
treme northern mountains, otherwise
no appreciable precipitation. Coastal
overcast. Temperatures near or below
normal. &
LOCAL DATA ,
TEMPERATURE- Mean yesterday
64: below normal 3.
Record high this date 101 in 1948.
Record low this date 42 in 1954.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to mid
night, none. Midnight to 10 a.m. .07 in.
Total this month none. .93 in. be
low normal.
Total since Sept. 1. 8.81 inches,
8.94 inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 24,
highest this a.m. 88 To.
CITY
Brookings
Crater Lake ..
Grants Pass
Klamath Falls
MEDFORD
Portland
Seattle
Spokane
Yakima ...
Eureka ...
Red Bluff
Sacramento
San Francisco
Los Angeles
Phoenix
Denver
Chicago
Miami .
New York .
Washington. D.C.
Parents Visit Mr. and -Mrs.
H. F. Pupke, Portland, left the
end of the week for their home
after visiting a week with their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr, and
Mrs. Don Berry, 815 Taylor st.
High Low Free.
64 53 .03
61 37
85 55 .02
85 55 .02
82 57 .07
63 54 .57
63 51 .18
75 55
80 . 54 .24
60 53
88 63
86 54
64 53
75 60
100 71
86 53
82 61
85 74
82 65
80 61
Enforcement Agent
Dies at Home Here;
Funeral Wednesday
Funeral services for Wayne
Herbert Flickinger, 57, of 307
Portland ave., Medford,- who
died Sunday evening, will be
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Hull and Hull funeral chapel in
Grants Pass.
Mr. Flickenger, an enforce
ment officer for the Oregon
liquor control commission in
Medford for the past five years,
died at his home here Sunday
evening as the result of a heart
ailment.
Burial in Iowa
The Rev. L. D. Hall, minister
of the Grants Pass Assembly of
God church, will officiate at the
services Wednesday. Interment
will be in Cherokee, la., where
Mr. Flickinger was born on Sept.
22, 1897.
Survivors include Mrs. Flick
inger, Medford; a daughter, Bar
bara June Summers, Medford;
a son, Wayne A. Flickinger, Mi
ami, Fla.; his mother, Jessie G.
Flickinger, Grants Pass; four sis
ters, Geneva Lynass, Winner,
S.D,. Juanita Oliver, Yosemite
National Park, Calif., Alice Lee,
Los Angeles, and Laura Louise
Garrett, Seattle; three brothers,
Clement Flinkinger, Merlin; Cal
vin Flickinger, Anchorage, Al
aska, and Howard Flickinger,
Grants Pass.
Obituaries
MICHAEL HARRIS
Michael LeRoy Harris, infant
son of Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Harris, died Monday at a local
hospital. Private services were
hold today at Butte Falls,, with
Perl funeral home in charge.
Besides his parents, survivors
include a sister, Pamela, arid, a
brother, Roger, and his grand
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Harris, Butte Falls, and Mr. and
Mrs. Vern Helbig, Rogue River.
TESSIA SCOTT
Tessia Josephine Scott,- 942
Cherry st., died at her home
Monday evening. Funeral serv
ices are pending at Perl funeral
home. j
ANNA McCOLLOM
Funeral, services for Mrs.
Anna Eliza McCollom, San Di
ego, Calif., who died June 23,
have been changed and will -be
held Wednesdav at 9-3(1 a m at
graveside in Siskiyou Memorial
park.
The Rev. C. M. King will of
ficiate, and Perl, funeral home
is in charge of arrangements.
MAVIS LUSHBOUGH
Funeral services for Mrs. Ma
vis Lorraine, Lushbough, of 141
Garfield st., Ashland, who died
in a local hospital Monday, will
be held in Sturgis, S.D., at the
Anderson-Stingley funeral chap
el. Interment will be in Bear
Butte cemetery at Sturgis. Chap
el Mortuary is in charge of local
arrangements.
The deceased was born in Get
tysburg, S.D., on Jan. 12, 1928.
She was married in Rapid City,
S.D., on Feb. 15, 1951, to Estel
M. Lushbough, who survives.
The couple came to the Rogue
valley three years ago.. Mr. Lush
bough works in a lumber mill
at Phoenix. ' "
Other survivors include two
brothers, Gaylin Thompson, Se
attle, and Larry Thompson of
Hereford, S.D.; her father and
mother, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Thompson, Hereford; her mater
nal grandmother, Mrs. ' Olga
Morse, Gettysburg, S.D.; and her
paternal step-grandmother, Mrs.
G. W. Thompson, San Francisco.
Pilot Killed as Two
Jets Collide in Flight
Savannah, Ga. (U.R) One
pilot was killed and another es
caped with injuries yesterday
when both bailed out of their
F86 jet fighter planes during a
thunderstorm.
The planes had been flying to
gether but lost contact during
the storm. Both fliers were
members of the 17th Tactical Re
connaissance Squadron of Shaw
Air Force base at Sumter.
Dead line Sunday Classified Is at
noon Saturday: 10 a.m. Monday for
Monday: other days 5:30 previous day.
TUESDAY IS
LAP DIES
mow PLUNGES
ASHLAND y
Ladies FREE Every Tuesday
After 6:30 P.M. When Accompanied by an Escort
Truck Driver Dies in
Washington Accident
Toppenish (U.R) Henry La
Roe, age and address unknown,
was killed instantly about seven
miles south of here last night
when the truck and trailer he
was driving went off the road
and crashed..
LaRoe was driving a carnival
truck of the Douglas Greater
Shows to Toppenish from New
port, Ore., when it went out of
control, the State Patrol report
ed. LaRoe apparently tried to es
cape by jumping from the cab
but apparently was run over by
the huge rig, the patrol reported.
Wall Street
New York (U.R) The 450 lev
el proved a difficult one for the
stock market to hurdle. It came
within 14 cents of it yesterday
and today backed away a bit on
reduced volume.
. The 450 level means that fig
ure for the industrial average. It
isn't the price of stocks, nor is it
the average price, but it is a fig
ure which measures the market
over the long term, adjusted for
stock splits, stock dividend and
the like. It was 381.17 at the
bull market high in 1929.
It is an all-time record high
for industrial shares. Having
risen in 16 out of 18 sessions the
industrials were entitled to a set
back, said the experts. But the
decline was a small one, and it
ceme without pressure on any
particular issue. Also the mar
ket rallied substantially from
the lowest of the day. '
Dow-Jones final stock aver
age: 30 industrials 449.02, off
0.84; 20 railroads 160.91, off
1.12; 15 utilities 64.04, off 0.01;
and 65 stocks 164.25. off 0.51.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T 182
Anaconda - 697S
Chrysler 1 ... . 81
Curtiss Wtig&ht 19
General Electric . ' 53
General Motors 107
Montgomery Ward .. - 81 V
Penn. R. R 27
Penney, J. C ... 96V4
Radio '.. 50
Southern Co. ........... .. 19H
Southern Pacific 61V4
S. Oil of Calif; .....; 87
Texas Julf Sulphur r 44
Transamerica .... ' 44
Tri-Continental . 27
United Aircraft - 7014
U. S. Rubber ..... 48
U. S. Steel 52V4
Youngstown ; 82 Vz
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
' Portland (U.P.) Hog prices were
power today. Cattle 200;-market mod
erately active, but fed cattle scarce;
short load good steers unsold, choice
fed steers Monday $23.50-24; 3 loads
choice heifers $22.25; few utility heif
ers today $12-15; canner-cutter cows
mostly $8-10; few utility cows $11-12;
utility-commercial bulls $14.50-16.25;
cutters down to $12.
Calves 100; choice vealers scarce:
other grades fairly active, mostly
steady; commercial-good vealers $17
21: choice to $23.
Hogs 350: holdover 400: early sales
25-50c below Monday's average;
choice 1 and 2 butchers 180-235 lb. in
limited supply at $22-22.50: few
choice 3 lots $21.50 but large propor
tion of supply unsold; sows slow;
choice around 350-550 lb. quoted
$12.50-15.
Sheep 500; holdover 685: market
slow; spring lambs weak to 50e lower
than Monday's average: few old crop
lambs around 50c lower; scattered
lots choice with some prime spring
Iambs $18-18.50; few lots mostly
choice No. 1 pelt yearlings $13; few
good-choice slaughter ewes $3.50-4.50;
one lot No. 1 pelt ewes $5..
PORTLAND PRODUCE
PorUand (TJ.P.) Portland dairy
market is same as yesterday.
Portland (U.P.) Eggs to produc
es:' Candled f.o.b. Portland; ungraded
large 43c doz.; AA large 47c: A large
42c; AA medium 41c; A medium 40c;
A small 30-37C. ..
Live Chickens To grower! (No. 1
quality f.o.b. Portland): Fryers. 2',i to
4 lbs.. 34c (nominal), at farm, 33-34c;
light hens, 18-19c; heavy hens, all wts.,
20-21c up; old roosters. 12-14c..
Dressed Chicken No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers, New York style, 41
42c lb.; whole drawn, 55-57c lb.; cut
up. 56-62c lb.: hens, light type. New
York style, 29-30c; cut-ups. 41-45c;
hens, heavy type, N.Y. style, 31-32C
lb.: whole drawn, 42-45c lb.
Turkeys To producers for A grade
breeder hens, f.o.b. farm. N.Y. dressed,
26c lb.: eviscerated, 31c. A toms. N.Y.
style, 31c lb.; eviscerated. To retailers,
A grade young 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. 3,i-4,i
lbs.. 21-23c up; 5-6 lbs.. 17-18c: colored
pelts, 4c under: old oes. 10-12c lb.;
a few higher. Fresh dressed fryers to
retailers, 57-61c; cut up, 62-65e.
Portland (U.P.) Willamette valley
lettuce sold mostly at $3-3.25 a crate
to retailers today: Oregon strawber
ries sold at S2.50-2.85 a 12-eup flat to
producers: Willamette valley cauli
flower was available at $2.25-2.50
pony crate. .
AT
Tuesday, June 31. 1935
mil &r sjc 335
it I
DISCUSS PLANE INCIDENT Pictured above are Russia Foreign
minister V. M. Molotov (left) and U. S. Secy, of State John Foster
Dulles. They-met Saturday in a hurriedly arranged meeting to
discuss the forcing down of a Navy Neptune bomber over St. Law
rence island on June 22. In a statement released following the
meeting, Dulles stated that "while he accepted with satisfaction the
Soviet government's expression of regret, the offer as a whole fell
short of what he had expected of the Soviet government in light
of the information received.
Berry Growers Issue
Call for More Pickers
Portland (U.R) Berry
growers in Washington and
Multnomah counties today, is
sued an urgent call for 5000
berry pickers to go to work im
mediately on a bumper crop of
strawberries.
Growers were assured a rec
ord harvest as cool weather aid
ed development of the late ma
turing crop. They offered pickers
a shuttle - bus - service from
downtown Portland to encourage
recruitments.
Medium Quake Hits
Yugoslav Capital
Belgrade, Yugoslavia (U.R)--
An earthquake of "middle in
tensity" hit Belgrade today,
rattling dishes and windows and
causing buildings to sway.
The seismological institute
said the shock was strong enough
to have, caused some damage at
its epicenter, estimated at about
50 miles south of Belgrade.
BIRTHS
BRANAM To Mr. and Mrs.
Fred, 1106 West Fourth St., June
27, 1955, a boy 6V2 pounds at
Sacred Heart Hospital.
LANDING To Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer, Ashland, June 27, 1955,
a girl, 9 pounds at Sacred Heart
Hospital.
ALFORD To Mr. and Mrs.
Lester L., Ashland,' June 24, 1955
a boy, 7Vi pounds, at Commun
ity hospital.
HARDESTY - To Mr., and
Mrs. Owen, Rogue River, June
26, 1955, a girl, 7 pounds, at the
Osteopathic hospital. . , .
iii
Doors Open 6:45 P.M.
2253
EES
"THE
with Sterling
Plus. "THE
wit
STARTS TOriORROVI!
MATINEE ! PM
12
Noon
YXbtQKb (0X106) MAIL TEIBtTUT-1 MRTUH
U.S. Has Quality Ecfgr
On Reds, Expert Says
Washington U.R) An auth
ority on aircraft production
said today that the United States
"still has a qualitative advant
age in air weapons" over Russia.
This assurance was given by
Adm. Dewitt C. Ramsey (ret),
president of the Aircraft Indus
tries Association in an address
to the Aero Club here.
"From what I have seen and
heard and from what I know of
our own aeronautical products,
the United States still has a
qualitative advantage in air
weapons and we can be sure
that the military-industry team
will keep it that way."
Harry Bridges Case
Recessed to July 1 1
San Francisco Federal
Judge Louis E. Goodman has re
cessed until July 11 the civil
case in which the government
is making its fourth attempt to
deport let twing longshore leader
Harry Bridges.
Goodman said he would hear
defense arguments for dismissal
of the denaturalization suit and
rule on the admissability of key
government testimony presented
in a deposition from a witness
who later died.
Helman Bath's
POOL
NOW OPEN
Foot of laurel St.
ASHLAND
PHONE 2-7131
For Further Information '
Shows at 7 P.M.
ETERNAL SEA"
Hayden Alexis Smith
ATOMIC KID"
Mickey Sooner
ma
EBSEN
TiTPTn
liliiuHJ
WEDNESDAY
COMING
Wednesday
TO THE
CRATER. AN
SPECIAL
MATINEE
WEDNESDAY
1 P.M.
Doors Open
12 Noon
V Anna BAXTE2
ShmCOOOAN
Pl.i
. . , I
Supper
1
Vl uu
-no
V
WO'UUSISTDI'JCXJ
0ASHLAND0
TWO BIG HITS!
nWtdtkr Tka mr
I 1
f -9 AiADirteie mi
-AND-
Techjblon VSsSm
WidereenV I SK
ClN P iis show
I tA WAV V Hffl M
Xl ENDS TONITE
VII ftfl)..tl I
5 uSST m
flrxD 1
1
Vjj LifisW? J Mnwnm i
rj STEOHNIOOU)sil