Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 11, 1955, Image 13

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Local and
Nam Retired. W. Wade and
Edna M. Harmon have retired
the ahsomed business name Phoe
n jg, feed & Seed, according to
county clerk records.
Name. Changed Sally Marion,
o Camp White, has cancelled the
assumed business name White
City Market & Coffee Shop and
filed the name White City Cof
fee Shop, according to county
(cjerk records.
o"Gi Cap Taken Marguerite
(Caroline Peterson, 502 . Beatty
5f, reported the theft of two gas
(Japs from parked cars last nigm,
(according to city police depart
rHoen. records.
Equipment Display Ray Hub
djell;' chairman of the county
Vouflg Farmers club, has an
(pouneed the organization will
(Jponsor an equipment display
during the 4-H, FFA fair next
week. Anyone interested may ob
tain further details by calling
(5-4048. Equipment for the dis
play should be at the fairgrounds
Wednesday morning.
Permits Issued Building
permits have been issued to
Glen Porter Builders for erec
on of an $11,000 residence at
$100 Loal st., and to F. L. Pat
(fcrson and Son for erection of a
$12,000 duplex at 2022 Quince
(it., and the $900 altering of a
duplex at 610 Plum sts., accord
ing to records on file at the city
hall.
SQUARE
DANCE
MOOSE HALL
SATURDAY
August 13th
8:30 P.M.
Potluck Coffee Served
MAN CRONIN, Caller
ENDS TONITE!
SSOli
Pirate
2 GREAT
1st Drive In Runs
TOMORROW!
PLUS
Richard TODD
tot Dfenay's
Al
Ihre-Actioo
ThrilUfl
IICHARD TODD GlYNIS JOHNS
ah mo-uoo ncruv
l SIMMONS 3
e BURT -
LANCASTER
yistaVision "'
WHOM NCTUM I MSMIMUW
A legend that
will live forever...
3QUN
k FOR
1 COVER
JAMES WiiiJ-.
IJNDIDRSMl
DEREK
COLOR PV
TECHNICOLOR
JEAN HEBSHDU - GRANT WITHESS M
; nuwincMfiyHtitnus &mwauw
. fSi A
v
in
$
IVf OettawlJ
Personal
File Claim Andrew John
Freeman, 145 Scenic drive, Ash
land, and Mrs. Nell M. Foster
have filed a mining claim, ac
cording to records in the Jackson
county recorder office. The
claim, known as Gibson Heights,
is in the Ashland Mining district.
No mineral was specified.
At Home Robert G. Fowler,
county assessor, is convalescing
at his home at 145 North Ivy
st., after being at Community
hospital for medical care. He
was dismissed Monday from the
hospital, where he was taken
last week after he had collapsed
at his office.
Swingin' Bees Harold Evans
will call the squares for a dance
session of the Swingin' Bees
Square dance club Saturday,
Aug. 13 from 8:30 p.m. to mid
night at 40 North Riverside ave.
All square dancers of the valley
are invited. Potluck refresh
ments will be served.
Trespassers Three boys, two
of them 16 and the other 17,
were picked up by city police
yesterday after trespassing on
the roof of the Plaza Apts., 235
South Oakdale st., according to
Sergeant Clyde Fichtner of the
Medford Police department. Po
lice were notified of the boys'
actions by Charles Columbus
Temple, manager. Their case is
now in the disposition of the
juvenile office, police records
showed.
'
Change Operators The as
sumed business name "Mill
Cafe" has been retired by John
R. Lattie, and has been assumed
by Thomas E. and Winifred
Phelps in Central Point, accord
ing to records in the county re
corder's office. The assumed
business name "Home Appliance
company," has been cancelled by
Richard V. Finch, Randall M.
Gifford and Mark A. Goldy, and
has been assumed by Richard
V. Finch and Randall M. Gif
ford, 115 East Main st., Medford.
O SMORGASBORD $2.25
Includes Barbecued Spareribs
O WONDERFUL DINNERS
Special Prime Ribs of Beef
O ALA CARTE MENU
mom msm
FOR RESERVATIONS - Phone NOrmandy 4-2513
Prospect Oregon
We will have OPEN HOUSE on SUNDAY, AUGUST 14,
from 1 to 6 p.m. There will be a FREE BUFFET LUNCH
served during those hours. All of our friends, and their
fiends (which means everyone) are invited!
We are also happy to announce that our Cafe will be
managed and operated by Perry and Ruby De Voe.
SEE YOU ALL NEXT SUNDAY
LOUIS and MARJORIE
Have Surgery Two surgery
patients were reported today at
Community hospital. They are
Fritz Boight, route 2, box 220,
Medford, and Miss Irene Brooks,
Grants Pass, 16, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Daniel R. Brooks.
w
Work Party Members of the
Jackson county Young Farmers
club are asked to attend a work
party at the fairgrounds Satur
day morning, and from 10 a.m.
to noon Sunday. Refreshments
will be served.
Name Assumed The business
name Fayetta's Yardstick has
been cancelled by Fayetta Bal-
lance and Ema A. Filatreau, and
assumed by Fayetta Ballance,
1832 Woodlawn dr., according
to county clerk records.
Prowlers Caught Two boys,
aged 14, were released to the
custody of their parents this
morning after one of them was
apprehended while "peeping,"
according to city police records.
The boys will appear in juvenile
court some time in the future,
police added.
Juniors Resume All classes
of Bliss Heine's Juniors will be
resumed as usual beginning Sat
urday, Aug. 13. The group has
participated in several parades
and programs recently. Plans
will be made Saturday for par
ticipation in the Miner's jubilee
at Cave Junction.
Finds Keys Shirley Jean
Harmon, 509 West Jackson st.,
has reported finding a Corbin
brand padlock and a tan leather
key case with seven keys at the
intersection of South Front st.
and East 12th st., according to
the city police department.
Daughter Born Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Rawson, former Medford
residents, are parents of a daugh
ter born Sunday, Aug. 7 at
Klamath Valley hospital, Klam
ath Falls. Mr. and Mrs. R. E.
Rawson, paternal grandparents,
live at 2217 Kings highway.
They drove to Klamath ' Falls
Sunday and Mrs. R. E. Rawson
will remain there for several
days with the family.
DINING INN
CENTRAL
POINT
Louis and Marjorie Biden
Announce
The Opening of
Their New Restaurant
MILL CREEK
FALLS
News About
Servicemen
GRADUATED
Pvt. Leonard J. Keene, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Chester B. Keene,
142 Glenwood rd., was graduated
July 16 from paratrooper school
at Ft. Campbell, Ky. He success
fully completed the prescribed
course in general airborne sub
jects, ground training and jump
ing from an aircraft in flight
He now is attending school in
Ft. Campbell and will go to Ger
many, with Operation Gyro
scope, sometime in January,
1956. Private Keene is a Phoenix
high school graduate and attend
ed Southern Oregon college be
fore joining the Army airborne
PROMOTED
James R. Hopkins, son of Mr,
and Mrs. J. H. Hopkins, 113 Ross
lane, has been promoted to ser
geant in the Army, his mother
has learned. A paratrooper, Ser
geant Hopkins has been in the
Army for almost three years,
and is due for discharge next
March.
A graduate of Medford High
school, he returned recently from
service in Korea, "and now is at
Ft. Carson, Colo. He took para
troop training at Camp Camp
bell, Ky.
VISITS PARENTS
Richmond Havniear, radioman
seaman apprentice, is visiting
with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Vencill,
Coleman rd., after completing a
course in Navy radio school at
San Diego, Calif. He will leave
Monday for Japan for about 18
months.
Runaway Held A 15-year-old
boy from Pittsburg, Calif., is
being held in the county jail after
being arrested by city police yes
terday as a runaway.
Scout Head's Good Deed
Unappreciated by Cop
St. Paul (U.R) A Boy Scout
administrator, Carl Kaepple,
had to pay $5 for his good deed.
Kaepple had a cup of coffee
in a downtown restaurant and
then went to his office without
paying for it. Figuring the wait
ress might get docked, Kaepple
climbed into his car, fought the
traffic downtown, parked his
car across the street from the
coffee shop, ran inside, handed
over the dime and dashed out
again.
Before he could get to his car,
a traffic officer had made out a
$5 rush hour parking tag.
Dead line for Sunday Classified is
at noon Saturday.
CAFE
i
I CMAftltSTON
1
CONNIE IS UNDECIDED Hurricane Connie, a roaring
giant undecided where to strike, slowed to a virtual stand
still in the Atlantic 225 miles to the southeast. From its
present static position, the hurricane could move in any
of three directions (shown by black dotted arrows), inland
over the Carolinas, up the East Coast toward New York,
or out to sea.
WALL STREET
New York (U.R) Stocks
moved higher today under the
lead of metal shares.
Standard Oil of New Jersey
rose more than 3 points to fea
ture a firm oil department. Du
Pont rose nearly 5 iri the chemi
cals and Union Carbide was up
nearly 3. Allied Chemical lost 2.
Dow-Jones Averages
Dow-Jones final stock ave
rages: 30 industrials 455.18 up
4.89; 20 railroads 153.47 up 1.81;
15 utilities 65.44 up 0.01; 65
stocks 163.82 up 1.52.
Sales today were about 1,620,
000 shares compared with 1,500,
000 shares traded yesterday.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T .183 Vs
Anaconda 74V&
Chrysler 83 Vz
Curtiss Wright 19
General Electric 50
General Motors 128
Montgomery Ward 80
Penn. R. R 27Vs
Penney, J. C 94
Radio 46
Southern Co. .. 20
Southern Pacific 60Vi
S. Oil of Calif 90
Texas Gulf Sulphur 39
Transamerica .'. 42
Tri-Continental 26V4
United Aircraft 76
U. S. Rubber 45
U. S. Steel ..1 . 51
PORTLAND CASH GRAIN
Portland Wholesale hay prices:
New crop No. 2 i?reen alfalfa baled,
f.o.b. trucks, Portland.
Prices as reported by the USDA
market news service: Wheat. No. 2
soft white, $74.50 ton: No. 2 white
oats, 38-lb. test. Coast delivery. $51.50
Thursday, August 11, 1955
HURRICANE
"CONN! E
U:jQ AM E-0.T. SeSSi
8-10-55
a ton; Willamette valley oats. PorUand
delivery, $50; No. 2 Western barley,
$46 ton f.o.b. Portland Coast delivery:
soybean meal. $83 ton, cars prompt
delivery Portland; No. 2 milo. f.o.b.
Portland. $57.50 ton; standard mill
run, $46.50, cars; No. 2 yellow corn,
Eastern shipment, f.o.b. Portland, S66
ton.
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Portland (U.P.) Cattle 250. Com
mercial steers $18-18.50; commercial
around 825 lb. cows $13;' utility grade
$11; canner-cutter cows mostly $8
9.50, shells down to $6; cutter bulls
$11.50-12.50.
Calves 25. Good-choice vealers and
calves $17-19, including 402 lb. at
$18.50 and 360 lb. at $19; utility grades
$11-13.
Hogs 100. Mixed U.S. 1 and 2 butch
ers $19.75-20; No. 2 lots $19-19.25; No.
2. 161-lb. butchers $18; choice 350
550 lb. sows $12-15; one 260-lb. stag
$14.50.
Sheep 200. Good-choice slaughter
lambs $17-18; some prime grade up to
$18.50 or above; good-choice feeder
lambs $14-15; heavy range feeders
$15.50; light common feeders down to
$10; good-choice slaughter ewes
$3.50-5.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (U.P.) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large 60-61c doz.; A
large, 51-55c; AA medium 49-50c; A
medium 47-49c; A small, 34-35c; Car
tons l-3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints, 65c lb.; cartons, 66c; A prints
65c; cartons, 66c: B prints. 63c.
Cheese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar, Oregon singles, 42 'i-45 'sc; 5-lb.
loaves, 461,j-49,2C. Processed Ameri
can cheese. 5-lb. loaf, Siic lb.
Farm Market
White Rose potatoes from Oregon's
Boardman district were booked by
most wholesalers at 2:50-2.75 a hundred-weight
today: East Side Farm
ers' market trading was on the slow
side.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers (No.l
quality f.o.b. Portland): Fryers 2'2 to
4 lbs.. 29c; at farm, 28c lb.; light hens,
17-18c; heavy hens, all wts., 19-20C
up; old roosters, ll-14c.
Dressed Chicken No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers, New York style, 39
40c )b.; whole drawn, 51-55c lb.; cut
up, 56-59c lb.: hens, light tvpe. New
York style. 28-29c; cut-ups. 40-46c;
hens, heavy type. N.Y. style, 28-31c;
whole drawn, 41-44c.
Turkeys To producers for A grade
young hens, f.o.b. farm, N. Y. dressed,
32-33c: A toms, N.Y. style. 31'2-32c lb.
to retailers. A grade young hens ready
to cook 50c; N. Y. dressed. 37-38c lb.;
A grade toms, oven ready. 41-45c; N.
Y. style, 34-35C lb.; fryer turkeys, 4-8
lbs., 49-5 lc.
Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b.
killing plants) Live white. 33J-4','2
lbs., 21-23c up; 5-6 lbs.. 17-19c: color
ed pelts, 4c under; old does. 10-12c lb.;
a few higher. Fresh dressed fryers to
retailers. 57-6 lc; cut up, 62-65c.
Betatiful fashion-
selected colon... in
"Softooc" pbstk devel
oped by D Pont espe
cially for luggage.
Nerer before hare
bad tbe privilege of
offering a luggage line
of such quality at prices
so fac below what you'd
expect o pay!
11 M-fxff sizts!
14 Trip -
It
14" CommKc .
21'WMkUr $14.30
24" PvNhmni $54.50
29 Onot $2S.50
21" WordrobeM .,..$2430
24" iombe Wardrobe. $32.50
7
24 Karyal $37.50 Qpejf
rh
20 Fortwit
f J Hot
.$34.50 IW
.$24.50
i
0r S14.SO 'A, VJ. - II
See BUM'S
314 East Main
For the Largest Selection of Luggage In Townl
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN
Obituaries
ALICE ROWLAND
Private' funeral $ervices for
Mrs. Alice A. Rowland, 62, who
died Aug. 3 in San Francisco,
will be held Friday at 10 a.m. at
Siskiyou Memorial mausoleum.
It was announced earlier that
services would be at Perl funeral
home.
Interment will follow the serv
ices and will also be at Siskiyou
Memorial .mausoleum.
CHARLES DUNN
Funeral services for Charles
Dunn, 72, who died Monday at
his home, 1335 South Peach st.,
will be held in Conger-Morris
chapel Saturday at 11 a.m. with
Bishop D. W. Shepherd of the
L. D. S. church officiating. Com
mittal will be in Jacksonville
cemetery.
The deceased was born May
24, 1883, in Canada, and had
lived in southern Oregon for the
past 35 years.
Canned Salmon Cargo
Arrives From Alaska
Seattle U.R) The biggest
cargo of canned salmon to ar
rive here from Alaska this year
was unloaded from the Alaska
Steamship Co. freighter Tonsina
at Pier 24 yesterday.
The 7,500 tons were packed
in 15,211,360 cans and the value
of the shipment was estimated
at 9,250,000 more than the
United States paid for Alaska
in 1867. '
Undersecretary of Commerce
Walter Williams of Seattle was
among dignitaries gathered to
watch the unloading.
SELECTED COLORS
SAD&U SUNT AH GfiEEK WHITt
TAN HlX GJNGH
AMAZON Luggage is the moif complete
tine of men's end women's travel cot
w hove ever carried... 14 size!, 7 colore.
Mode by "MULTNOMAH" a pioneer leg.
gage etanufacturer. Open itock . . . iterf
your lef nowl
I Tues.
Tickets on Sale tsf t(A p
At Purucker's IpL ff
Piano House VpL
MEDFORD HIGH
SCHOOL STADIUM
Sponsored By I
Medford Active Club I
mi m i nm hi m mt
ff. li
Boy Suffers Minor
Injury in Bike Mishap Q
William J. Hedrick, 13, of
409 South Peach st., was hurt
slightly yesterday as the result
of a twd-bicycle accident on
Front st. between Ninth and 10th
sts. yesterday, according to the
city police department.
The accident occurred after
Eugene Howard Vincent, 11, of
326 Benson st., lost control of
his bicycle and fell before the
wheels of a bicycle ridden by
Howard Duwayne Hansen, 11,
of 418 Plum st., on which the
Hedrick boy was a passenger,
police said. 0
The bicycle ridden by the two
boys ran into the Vincent boy's v
bike and overturned. In falling,
the Hedrick boy was struck in
the left side by the handlebar
of the Vincent bike and had the
wind knocked from him, police
added. An ambulance was called
by policemen but was dismissed
after the boy stated he was feel
ing better.
EESTB
ASHLAND
r . . . TUB
DONALD O'CONNOt
MARTHA Kill
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mwv- .TIMTS WILLIAM
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JACK
BE1SYPMMER
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PRODUCIDK
LELAND HAYWARI
PLUS ON THE STAGE
UAY ClARKEi
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At 9:15 P.M,
TONITE sat.
PLUS
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