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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1955)
t'tnrr Local and On Vacation Mrs. Shirley Frankenfield, secretary to Jack son County School Superinten dent Alf B. Mekvold, is spend ing a two-week vacation in Portland and Oregon coastal points. ' Parents Leave Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dorrough, Ft. Smith, Ark.; left Saturday after visiting for two weeks with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ken neth R. Corliss, 1564 Myers lane. , Fined For Assault Ernest Kilsmiller, 21, post office box 133, Prospect, was fined $55 in district court Saturday when he pleaded guilty to charges of as sault and battery. He was charged with striking Janice Kitsmiller, also of Pro', pec t. . . . File Claim Madge M. Gaz ley, route 1, box 348, Gold Hill, filed a location notice claim in the Jackson county recorder's office Saturday. The claim, known as Clarabelle No. 1, is in the Foots Creek Mining district No mineral was specified. Drunk-Driving Fine Stanley Drue Wright, 520 North Front St., pleaded guilty in city court today to charges of driving while under the influence of alcoholic beverages. He was fined $100 and his driver's license was sus pended for 90 days, according to Municipal Judge James Main. Wright had been arrested July 18, city police said. . . In Court James Horn, 54, Grants Pass, was fined $255 in district court Saturday for driv ing while under the influence of intoxicating liquor. He was arrested last March 8 by state polite between Gold Hill and Rogue River on Highway 99. Previously he pleaded innocent, but changed his plea and for feited bond. At Lodge Leaving today after vacationing at Rogue -River lodge during the week were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Blanc, Tucson, Ariz., and their daughter, Miss Patsy Blanc, San Francisco; and Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Kutz, Chico, Calif-' who were accompanied by Mrs. Nina Boyle of San Fran cisco. Sister Hero Mrs. 'A. H. Johnson, Grand Forks, N. D., is visiting with her sisters and fam ilies; the H. H. Corlisses, 938 South Holly st, and the O. D. Frazees, 525 West Second st Mrs. Johnson has been here for about , two weeks and plans to leave next Monday. In the mean time the group has visited var ious points of interest including Crater lake, and also made a trip to Klamath Falls. Auto Mishaps Cars driven by Lowell Edgar Fowler, route 1, box 352B, Ashland, and Hazel Grace Hakworth,. route . 1, box 350M, Medford, collided at the Intersection of East Main and Front sts., early yesterday, ac cording to the city police de partment Cars driven by Roy Pruitt, 1012 South Holly st, and Lucie Juanita Waddell, 823 Beekman st, collided in front of 403 King St., yesterday after noon. The latter was issued a citation for not having an opera tor's license on her person, po lice said. No injuries were re ported in either collision. EEDS TCMTE! f Hlliil MMIBUIS ' sun Mtins plus; "A first rate bit of frivolity." -feteTICHNKOlOft TOMORROW! FKIST RUH! m Ullllk mp Miimu I of a rogs-to-nchet I T.J Princess! I TICHNtCOtOt aHUtlwrKMtOnMiirtiwiPiiinNSli AUi And FIRST DRIVE-IN Boa of ri. i . i iff is sr sa ii Personal Returns Milton Beck, former ly of Shady Cove, arrived last week from an extended trip to Mexico, and is now living at Trail. From Livermoro Harry Cab bage, Livermore, Calif., is visit ing this week while on vacation at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George D. Evans, 1130 Niantic st. He vacations here annually with the Evans. - To Meet Women's Missionary council of Medford Assembly of God church will meet in the church annex Wednesday, July 20, at 10:30 a.m. A potluck luncheon will be served at noon. At Riddle C. N. French, for mer owner of Frenchie's Pet shop on North Riverside ave, now is located at Riddle where he is employed as street and water superintendent. He visited in Medford for the week end, Hold Picnic Employees of the city of Medford will hold a pic nic at the Elks picnic grounds Thursday, July 21. All' employees and their family are invited. Games and recreation for the youngsters are planned. Class To Meet ABC Sunday school class of First Christian church will hold the July meet ing Thursday, July 21. It will be a potluck picnic at noon in Hawthorne park in the area at the rear of the Scout house. A beverage and buns will be fur nished by a committee. Hold AWOLs Bobby Gene Dority, 18, HoldenvUle, Okla., and Billy Junior Spurting, 18, Alabama City, ' Ala. are being held in Jackson county jail for Naval authorities. They were ar rested at Medford city hall by city police yesterday for being absent without leave. Dakota Picnic Former resi dents of the North and South Dakotas will picnic Sunday, July 31, at TouVelle park. A tug o war, an annual event between the North and South teams, will be held and there will be games, other contests, music and prizes. Those attending should take a basket lunch. Ice cream, coffee and punch will be furnished. - At Community Surgery pa tients reported today at Com munity hospital are Mrs. Wil liam Gregory, Rogue River; Mrs. Harold Finnell, Corvallis; Sha ron, 7, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fletcher, 812 South Riv erside ave.; Mrs. Patsy Fredrick son, Gilchrist nd Linda, 8, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theron Van Sickle, 914 South Peach st. At .Osteopathic John R. Fu- gill, 325 West Third St., has been at Osteopathic hospital since Friday where he is receiv ing medical ' care, 'attendants said today. Miss Joyce Reeves, 229 North Ivy st., had surgery there the same day and John Gist of' Eagle Point was admit ted this morning as a medical patient. Mrs. Mary Konkel, 924 Summit st., left Sunday -after undergoing surgery. , - At Wolf Creek Mrs. J. R. Seller, 1132 West Main st., re turned last evening after being in Wolf Creek over the week end to return her grand-children, Dianna, Judy and Jim Carter to their home. They are children of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carter and were here visiting for a week. Mrs. Carter is the former Miss Cherokee Seller. The Carters also are parents of a son, Douglas, born at Grants Pass, July 10. BIRTHS ADAMS To Mr. and Mrs. James, 620 Oak St., July. 15, 1955, a girl, 8Vi pounds, Sacred Heart hospital. CRIPPEN To Mr. and Mrs. Lee Roy, 720 Oak st, July 16, 1955, a girl, 8 pounds, Sacred Heart hospital. ST1TH To Mr. and Mrs. Aub rey, route 1, box 10, Central Point, July 16, a girl, iVi pounds, Sacred Heart hospital. McMANAMA To Mr. and Mrs. Robert, 447 Fairmont st, July 16, 1955, a girl, 6 pounds, Sacred Heart hospital. CHRISTIE To Mr. and Mrs. Donald, route 1, box 515, Central Point, July 16, a girl, 694 pounds, Sacred Heart hos pital. AWARD MADE Springfield, Mo. A gold med al' certificate for production of 4,000 pounds of butterfat has been awarded to a milking short horn, Kirtland Beauty, owned by O SMORGASBORD - $2.25 beladee Barbecaed Spareribs O WONDERFUL DINNERS ..... Special Frime Ribs ef Beef O ALA CARTE MENU 'raM.:vESBES. FOR lEStXVATlONS- Phone NOrmondy 4-2513 Funeral Wednesday For Ashland Han; Children Live Here Ashland Funeral services for Lee F. Conner, Ashland, will be held Wednesday, July 20, at 1:30 p.m. in Litwiller's Mountain View chapel with Bishop Col lins Hassel, of the Ashland Lat ter Day Saints church, in charge. Interment will follow in the Mountain View cemetery. Mr. Conner died Saturday while attending an auction sale in Phoenix. He was born in Memphis. Mo., on March 14, 1886. In 1909 in Beaver, Okla., he married Ma mie Pate, who survives. The couple moved to Talent in 1927 from Idaho, moving to Ashland the same year. They resided in the Green Springs area for many years. Children Survive . Beside Mrs. Conner, survivors include four sons in Ashland, Clifton J., Samuel L., Donald L. and Francis K. Conner; a son and daughter in Medford, Mrs. Geraldine Disrude and Richard N. Conner, and another daugh- er, Mrs. Donas Ridenour, Modoc Point. Another son, Jack Con ner, died in a logging accident in 1943. There are also surviving 18 grand children; three brothers, R. E. Conner, Talent; Lynn, a twin of the deceased, Farns worth, Tex., and Clyde, Beaver, Okla.; two sisters, Mrs. Lou Shockley, Beaver, and Mrs. Edna Armstrong, Clinton, Ariz. Hersa Wheat Funeral At Ashland Tuesday Ashland Funeral services for Hersa Luvina Wheat, 84. who died Friday in Sari Fran cisco at the home of a daughter, will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. in Litwiller's Mountain View chapel with the Rev. J. C. Whit- sett officiating. Interment will follow in Mountain View ceme tery. Born in Paris, Mo., on May 10, 1871, Mrs. Wheat was the mother , of four surviving chil dren, Mrs. Cathryn Anderson, San Francisco, with whom she was living; William Fred Wheat, Medford; . Harold H. Wheat Dunsmuir; and Maj. Robert L. Wheat, Washington, D.C., and three grandchildren. She was a resident of Ashland for a number -of years before moving to San Francisco. Funeral Rites Thursday For Ex-Local Resident Grants Pass Funeral ser vices for Arthur Henry Wissing, who died here Sunday, will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday, July 21, at the L. B. Hall funeral home with the Rev. Robert Neal, of the First Christian church, of ficiating. Mr. Wissing lived in Medford between 1912 and 1925, then moving to Grants. Pass. He was born in Brookville," Kans., Nov. 12, 1876 Survivors include the widow, Ellen Wissing, Grants Pais; a son Carroll Wissing, San Francisco; a brother, Jake Wiss ing, Brookville, . Kans., and two grandchildren. - . Interment will follow the fun eral in HOlcrest Memorial park, Grants Pass. . Small Business Loans Procedure Is Speeded Portland John G. Barnett, branch manager of. the small business administration, has an nounced that the agency's field offices can now make direct bus iness loans up to $10,000 without prior approval of the Washing ton, D.C., office. Loan processing time, now cut down to approxi mately three weeks, is expected to be further reduced. . The regional office for Wash ington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and Alaska, is in the 905 Second Avenue building Seattle 4, Wash! The Portland branch office is at 520 S.W. Morrison st Substitute Teacher Requirements Listed Teachers who wish to serve as substitutes in Jackson county schools next year must , register teaching and health certificates with the county school superin tendent. . State department of education special substituting ' certificates may be secured by qualified teachers by applying to the de partment, . division of teacher certification, 106 Library build ing, in Salem, Mrs. Una B. Inch, county rural school supervisor said. Veltie . Biles, route .1, -Rogue River, Ore., according to the American Milking Shorthorn so ciety, i DINING INN CENTRAL POINT District 20 - Convention About 75 delegates from Port land, Salem, McMinnville, Kla math Falls and Medford, Ore., and Tulelake, Calif., attended the mid-summer educational meeting of the northwest dis trict of 20-30 clubs here Satur day and Sunday. The Saturday session, at the Medford hotel, included an edu cational meeting for incoming officers. A laides' no-host lunch eon featuring a fashion Show, was held at noon. Attorney Speaks John Dellenback, a Medford attorney, was speaker at the Saturday banquet. He discuss ed service clubs, pointing out that since they grew up in this country, the benefits to com munities include both direct and indirect influences, as well as building character for members. The more obvious of the di rect benefits, he said, are con tributions of time and money to civic functions and charitable purposes. The indirect benefits, Dellenback added, . are as im portant as the others, but are not so readily apparent. These include the building of good citizenship and a better under standing, aid toward checking delinquency, and providing a stimulus for group effort in the achievement of ideals, the speak er said. j Dellenback stated that service club work is a rewarding ex A Nichol's Worth of . ... Comment On y HARMAN Uaite' Press ' Kitimat, B. C 0J.R) We were Inunffine on the Datio of the spiffy Rod and Gun Club, worry ing down xau, u j m cooi ones when Ken Brumley showed up. Ken is editor of the weekly Kittimat North- 4 em S e n t i nel, which reports the doings of folks connected with the brand new smelter Havman Wiehol Dlant of the Aluminum Comnanv of Canada. After introductions, the squire of these parts, hardly a spit ana a mountain from the Yukon. flashed Don Spaulding of Na tion s Business and tms corres pondent a green eye. The editor spoke: "How I envy you guys! Here T nf boredom while vou cover biff doines in Washington belly up to the bar with big shots, write your own tickets, ana . . . Writing Own Ticket "Just a cotton-Dickine mo ment," butted in Don. "Let me Daily Weather Report Sunset tonight 7:44 pjn.: sunrise to- morrow 4:51 a.m. FORECASTS Medford and vicinity Fair through Tuesday. Low, tonight 48-50. High Tuesday 92-94. ' Western urefon: ssosuy ciuuuj night and morning hours, clearing rurtintlv in afternoon. Tuesday. Low tonight 50-58. High Tuesday 70-85 over interior,- S4-6S on coast... Northern California: Faif through Tuesday with variable low cloudiness or fog on coast. Little temperature change. LUCAL DAIS TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 63; below normal' 10. Record high this date 104 in 1914. Record low this date 45 in 1916. . . PRECIPITATION: Past 24 hours' none. Total this month, ttrace: .12 In. below normal. Total since Sept. 1 8.88 In.; 9.03 below normal. HUMIDITY : Lowest yesteraay-21; highest this a.m. 73. hieh low prec. Brookings 83 48 Crater Lake . 65 36 Grants Pass 81 42 Klamath- Falls 80 43 MEDFORD 81 45 , Portland 79 57 Seattle 75 53 83 58 ; 84 48 trace Spokane Yakima .. Eureka . 64 . 90 50 60 53 53 63 Red Bluff Sacramento 86 San Francisco . 63 78 Los Angeles Phoenix 95 79 90 57 86 71 .07 .08 .32 Denver . rhiMfa Miami ... ... KB 74 Nrar VnrV , 97 79 95 77 Washington, D. C. "NT "V" 1 WANT TO SUB-LEASE AT ONCE! UODERII FURNISHED APARTKEflT FOR I OR 2 KOriTIIS- Will Pay Up To $150.00 Per Month FINEST REFERENCES CALL 2-6424 from lO fo 12 a.m. 1 to 3 p.rm When You 30 Club Held Here perience and helps mold and build character for club mem bers. The ' members, he said, must, be unselfish enough to give a great many hours to service work, rather than to their own desires. The evening concluded with a dance for members and former members. The convention business meet ing was held Sunday morning, at which time Salem was select ed as the site for the next dis trict convention in January. Bill White, past president of the Portland club, was elected dis trict governor, succeeding How ard Elwood, Salem. John D. Watkins, past president of the Medford club, was named lieu tenant governor. Watkins also was the convention general chairman. ' Officials Visit Visiting officially at the ses sion included Leonard Carlson, Medford, past international president; Norm Morrison, Sac ramento, northern California district governor; R. P. (Dad) Shimmin, Phoenix, Ariz., the "international ambassador of goodwill" of the 20-30 clubs. He has averaged three meetings per week for the past, two years, and has travelled some 66,000 miles visting clubs. Jim Campbell and Andy Gid lof, members of the Woodland, Calif., 20-30 club, alsc; attended. This and That W. NICHOLS PMM Write set you straight. Sometimes, big doings melt down to little doings, same as do knitting bees and horse-shoe matches up here.; And nobody bellies lip to a bar in Washington, not even the wheels. It's agin the law. And just try writing your own ticket, mister." - "Yeah,? ; put in the 'country editor, "but look at the fun you have watching history being made. Fine clothes; fat living." "Listen, friend," I said, "you got it made. History in the mak ing sometimes makes a noise; and loud noises make you rocky. You can put your paper to sleep end come out here and look at the beautiful mountains. . You can watch the Kitimat river lick the rocks, and run down to . provide power that one day will give you folks the biggest aluminum smel ter plant in the world. And. clothes, man! Let's shed and trade. You're cool in that short sleeved sports shirt and no coat. In, Washington a man is stared down if he so much as loosens his neckwear. If you want to trade lots, kit and kaboodle, Don and I will, draw -up a contract here and now on the back of this cocktail napkin." Modern Plant ' - ' Indeed, Ken, as editor, has it made. The outfit which owns the Northern Sentinel already has contracts for much of the com mercial printing for Alcan, which prefers to go -native on such things. And they are Ken Brurhley's contracts. If he doesn't get a fat commission he ought to. He works in one of the most modern weekly plants I've ever seen. High speed job presses, two up-to-date linotypes, a fme crew in the back shop and up front. . As we were waiting for an other round of the cool stuff, Ken coughed and hemmed and asked how would we like to write a few hundred guest words for that week's issue? Impressions and that sort of thing. We said we would and away we went to his plant to turn out labors of love, via hunt and peck. ,- ; "Guess you're right,".' the squire said. "And thanks. I got it made at least for - this week. Your copy will just fill the cur rent issue. Let's go fishing." ; . Ken caught his supper in a couple of minutes. Don and I got on a yacht and went up the river a piece to Kemano, B.C., to take a look at a lady bear. TRAVEL SEf GEORGE LEVIS ROGUE TRAVEL SERVICE A FREE SERVICE ; We Reserve and Sell ' O Arline and Steamship Tickets PHONE 2-f7?t IOMY HOTEL JACKSON Monday. July II. 1155 Special Education Director To Visit Mason McQuiston, state direc tor of education for slow learn ing children, will confer the week of Aug. 9 with parents de siring to enroll children in new classes this year in Phoenix, Mrs. Una B. Inch, county rural school supervisor, said today. Mrs. Inch said . two classes will be organized this year. One will be for children between 12 and 16 years of age which will be held at Phoenix, and the other for 8 to 12 year olds which will be. held at Talent. Karl Hayes, director of the county-wide program, will be in charge, and will be assisted by a teacher for children between eight and 12 years old. '. Mrs. Inch said additional in formation may be obtained from Hayes, telephone Medford 2 9684. Woman Seeks Assistance In Locating Relative Jackson county Sheriff . How ard Gault has received a letter from Mrs. Pearl Davis of Glad stone, 111., asking help in locat ing her sister, Mrs. Virgie Earley, who was last known to be living in Medford. Mrs. Davis said she and her brother whom she did not name, were unable to locate Mrs. Earley when their mother died recently. Mrs. Davis said her sister's husband's, name is Frank, and that last she knew, Mr. and Mrs; Earley purchased a home here. Gault said any information concerning either Mr. and Mrs. Earley. may be directed to the sheriff's office. Wall Street New York UJi) Stocks started the new week on a note of . confidence which soon was nipped by profit taking. . Prices dipped from their highs. A few specials " recorded wide losses. But the main list held well with rails and industrials lower and uitilities higher. Dow-Jones Averages - Ddw-Jones final stock aver ages: 30 industrials 460.07, off 0.16; 20 railroads 158.06 off 1.11; 15 utilities 65.27 up 0.12, and 65 stocks 166.10 off 0.32. . Sales today were about 2,160, 000 - shares, against 2,230,000 shares Friday. , . Today's closing prices on se lected stocks: . American T & ,T Anaconda ...... 186V4 . 69 Chrysler : . 80V 19V4 Curtiss Wright . General Electric General Motors ..... Montgomery Ward Penn. R. R. 52 125 80? 28 . 91V 50 19 .62 91 41 46 27 64V4 46 53 89 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 Youngstown NELLIE LEES . Miss Nellie Piatt Lees, 73, of 520 West Jackson st., Medford, died Saturday in a local hospital. Conger-Morris funeral home is in charge of funeral arrange inents. .. GOT ANY- -TO CLEAN Our superior cleaning facilities are ready to go. Bring your crop to us if you want the best possi ble job. ' " YOU GET THREE JOBS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE Let us show you how wc do this Wc Are in the MONARCH SEED & FEED CO. CeriMr 10th 4 P.S. Com in and inspect Sovffom Oregon's finoc i; Sood-procossing Plant. . - - PORTLAND LIVESTOCK Portland (UP) .Cattle 3150. Aver age choice 1071 lb steers 92Mi choice 975-lb $24; mixed good-choice steers 22.30-S23.50; mostly choice around uoo-io S23.30; commercial steers 18 S20: god S30-lb feeder steers S18.50: good-choice hed heifers S21.50: utility dairy-type heifers 12-S14: canner-cut-ter cows mostly 8JO-S10: beef type iju; utility cows 11-S13: commer cial cows 14 JS-S14J0; utillty-commer-cia bulls 14-S15.S0. Calves 300. Good-choice vealers 19- szi; utuity-commecial 12-S18. Hogs 750. VS. I and 2 butchers 180 235 lb 21-S21 M: No. 3 lots 20-SJ0.50: heavier and lighter weights 18.50- iaju. enmee sows szo-eoo-ibs 12 $14.50; lighter to $16 JO. Sheep 3500. Choice with some prime 89-lb spring lambs $1830: most bids down on good-choice; good-choice feeder lambs $15; god ewes $3.00. PORTLAND PRODUCE Eggs: To retailers: Grade AA large 50c dot; A large. 52-54c; AA medium 50-52c; A medium 49-51C dox.: A small 38c doc cartons 1 to 3c additional. Butter -To retailers: AA grade prints 65e lb; cartons S6c; A prints 85c; cartons 86e: B prints 63c. Cheese To retailers: A grade ched- oar. uregon singles. 42 ',-43 y,c; s-itt loaves 4',4-41' jc. Processed American cheese 5-lb loaf 3S 14-49 'ic lb. Farm Market Northwest apricots Mid mostly at 2.25-S2.50 for 28 lbs today: first Free water Yellow transparent apples of fered at 2-S2.10 a 20-lb lug: WaUa Walla dry onions sold at 1.73 and be low for -No. 1 grade, 3-inch minimum; Willamette valley raspberries sold under pressure up to 2.40-$2.50 with bulk of sales at 2 -$2.25. Poultry, ftabbits a live Chickens To rrowrr fNo. 1 quality f.o. b. Portland) Fryers 24 to 4 lbs 28c. at farm 27-28c lb: light hens 17c; heavy hens all wts 18c up; old roosters 1 lto 14c. - Dressed Chicken No. 1 dressed to retailers: Frvers. New Vork stvla 42. 43c lb: whole drawn 33-5 5c lb: eutup 57.60c lb; hens. Ught type. New York styie z-zc: eut-ups 40-44c: hens, heavy tvoe. V. Y. stvla M-Slc whole drawn 41-45c. Turkeys To producers for A erade young hens f.o.b. farm. N. Y. dressed. 33c; A tarns N. Y. style 31c lb: to re tailers A grade young hens ready to cook 30c; N. Y. dressed 37-3Bc lb; A grade tomi oven ready 41-45C-. N. Y. style 3 4-35c lb; fryer turkeys 4 to 8 lbs 49-Slc. , : . . Poultry. Babbits Rabbits . (average .to growers f.o.b. killing Dlsntst Live, white. aA tn ail lbs 21-23c up; 5 to 6 lbs 17-lSc: col ored pelts 4c under; old does 10-12c lb a few higher: fresh dressed fryers to retailers a-oic; cut-up B3-03C. PORTLAND CASH GRAIN Portland Wholesala Tiav nrtrmn- New crop No. 2 green alfalfa baled fj.b. trucks. Portland. $33. Prices as reported by the tJSDA market news service : Wheat. No. 2, soft, white, $78.00 ton; No. 2 white oats 38-lb test. Coast delivery $3130 ton; Portland delivery $30 ton; No. 2 West ern barley 4730-S4S ton f .o.b. Port land Coast deliver; aovnaan maal. $8337 ton. cars, prompt delivery Port land standard millrun, 84730 cars; No. 2 yeUow corn, Bastern shipping points U.Z3-fU.T3. I . Dead line Sunday Classified Is at noon Saturday; 10 a.m. Monday for Monday: other days 5-M previous day. NEW LOCATION Ucizm Flrrr.bfcs ft SHEET METAL CO. 613 East Jackson Phone 3-536S. HEY KIDS! THERE IS STILL TIME TO JOIN THE CRATERIAN .- THEATRE S WEDNESDAY Matinee Club o Membership Cards - FREE! REGISTER ANTTTME Evenings From 7 to t pjn. . or Sat and San. Matinees Join Cratorian's DAVY CROCKETT CLUS TODAY! and SELL Market to Buyl So. Fir Sts. MEDFORD (OREOOK) MAIL TRXBT710E VOTS Manager of Chamber Attending Institute Don McNeil, secretary and manager of the Jackson Coun ty Chamber of Commerce, left last week end to attend week long meeting of the Western In stitute, an educational gather ing for chamber executives, at Stanford university.. McNeil, who has attended the institute each year for some time) will teach a class in commercial activities, dealing with the obli gation of the chambers of com merce to retailers and whole salers, promoting trade and en hancing the importance of the trade area. . L- C. Hansen, manager of tha Grants Pass chamber, also is at tending. . lira MIGHTY SPECTACLE! 4MM OP TH1 lOHS UiBurDrni no V Jock HAWXIhCO01 COtUNS jl T.o plus ON OUR STAGE Questions On lev and Marriag TONITE TUESDAY wctiEn MatTEt r ma aui PLUS Chill Wills in Kentucky Rifle" in color V V Answer! na Your UZbtW' -' : ;tv- I V n V nwaa-is-BCSTjf V " TONITE is TLgSDAY Jt . v - ; . .. V ASHLAND 0 VI i . ai