o
Local and
Sal Planned Medford Toast-
mistress club will hold a nun-
mage sale Thursday, Oct. 6, at
106 North Ivy st., from 9 a.m. to
9 p.m.
At CommitY Mrs. Walter
Hoeflin. Gold Hill, is reported
today as a medical patient at
Community hospital, and Frank
Hoffman, 820 Taylor st., is there
for surgery.
To Los Angeles Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Corbin are to leave by
air for Los Angeles tomorrow
where Corbin will attend a con
vention of the National Theater
Owners of America. They expect
to be there three or four days
Corbin is manager of the Oregon
California theaters here.
Car Leaves Hoad Tracy Ba
ker, 20, of 22 Willamette St., an
Armv man. was the driver of a
car which left the road early to
day at the intersection of Ram
sey Canyon rd. and the old roaa
into Sams Valley, according to
state police. Damage to the car
was reported and police saia
"very minor" personal injuries
were suffered by Baker and
Joan Bennett, Beverly Rock and
, Clark Wright Jr., all of Medford,
- who were passengers in the car.
Shingles Ignite Shingles ig
nited from an overheated flu
at the home of Mabel Roberts,
327 West Second st, about 7:30
a.m. today, firemen reported
Thev said minor damage result
ed. Two pumpers were sent
when the alarm was given. Con
siderable smoke damage was
caused in the house when a
washing machine moto shorted
out about 9:30 a.m. today at the
William Laren residence, 634 J
st.. according to firemen who
used a smoke ejector.
X-Ray Clinic The outpatient
x-ray clinic sponsored by the
Jackson County Health associa
tion, will be open between the
hours of 2 and 5 p.m., Thursday,
Oct 6. The clinic at Sacred
Heart hospital is operated week
ly on Thursdays between- the
same hours and is a service to
the public for the purpose of de
termining cases of tuberculosis
In the county: Heart disease and
other abnormal chest conditions
also are determined through the
x-rays. All residents of the area
are eligible for this public
service.
Rummage Sal Medford
Business and Professional Wom
en's club will holda rummage
sale Friday and Saturday, Oct.
7, 8, in the Fehl building, 106
North Ivy st? Sale hours will be
6 to 9 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. to
6 p.m. Saturday.' In addition to
clothing, articles on sale will in
clude electrical appliances such
as stoves and an automatic wash
er. Donations are to be taken to
the building Thursday evening
and those wishing pickup service
are asked to call Mrs. Marian
Wood, 2-4537; Mrs. Frida Bur
ger, 2-8563, or Mrs. Cozette
Jones, 2-4131.
OMAR'S
Restaurant Ashland
Will Be
-CLOSED-OCTOBER
4th thru 11th
REOPENING
October 12th at 4:30 P.M.
TONITE!
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
GARY
COOPER-LANCASTER
VERn"CRUZa
I HMOU) XKHT prtMsMios wM TlCHMICOtOR.
DENISE DARCEL-CESAR R0MER0-
Personal
Wrist Injured Mrs. George
Belton, 201 Portland ave., was
treated today for a wrist injury
at Sacred Heart hospital, atten
dants reported.
Has Surgery Con DeVore,
25 Louis st., well-known retired
valley meat market operator, un
derwent surgery today at Sacred
Heart hospital, according to at
tendants. Flown Here Martin Colby,
Happy Camp, was brought by
private plane to Medford today
for treatment of injuries re
ceived when a log rolled on his
foot, according to Sacred Heart
hospital attendants.
Building Permits Building
permits were issued Elwin J
Fordyce, 215 North Keeneway
dr., for erection of an $8,000 res
idence, and "Medford Neon Signs,
1202 North Riverside ave., for
erection of a $1,200 sign.
'Poor' Condition Floyd
Pence, Route 1, Jacksonville,
who suffered critical injuries
Saturday evening in an automo
bile accident at Central Point,
is reported today in "poor" con
dition, at Sacred Heart hospital.
Ashes Burn Hoi Firemen
were dispatched to the Richard
B. Smith residence, 214 Vancou
ver ave., yesterday when ashes
from a cigar fell onto the arm
of an overstuffed chair. They
reported that a small hole was
burned in the arm.
Loaves Hospital J. G. Hib-
bard, who has been a patient in
Community hospital, was taken
to his home at 1220 Corona ave.
yesterday, the family reported.
Friends were asked to make no
visits or telephone calls to the
Hibbard home for at least 10
days.
.
Assume Nam The business
name, M and M Market, has
been assumed by Harvey C. and
Geraldine L. Maxon and Forrest
F. Martin, according to records
in the Jackson county recorder's
office. The business is located at
the corner of South Stage rd. and
Griffin Creek rd.
Steam Blows Wire trouble
was suspected when steam filled
the boiler room at the Mason
Ehrman warehouse north of
Medford about midnight last
nieht. according to Central
Point rural firemen. Steam was
found to be blowing out of a
safety valve. A fireman entered
and shut off the burner.
At Sacred Heart Mrs. Wil
liam Sanderson, 411 West Jack
son st.,; Mrs. Eugene Brooks, 336
O'Gara st.; Mrs. Stephen Sher
man, Box 44, Seiad, Calif., and
Mrs. Donald Beisecker,. 1402 Eu
clid ave., ali are listed, today as
surgery patients at Sacred Heart
hospital. William H. Hittle, Gold
Hill, and Miss Hilda Dovre, 2418
Hillcrest rd., are medical pa
tients there.
BURT
1
News About
Servicemen
TRANSFERRED
News has been received here
that William Roger Bradley, who
has been serving with the Navy
on the USS Hamul has been
transferred to the Navy electron
ics school at San Diego. While
in school there he will study
gyro compasses, synchros and
Navy amplifiers. Upon' comple
tion in January, Bradley is to fly
back to his ship which will be
at Yokosuka, Japan. He is a son
of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stevens,
3672 South Pacific highway. The
USS Hamul is a repair ship with
the third division and spends
seven months of the year in ports
of Japan, and at Hongkong,
China and Pearl Harbor, Ha
waii. Bradley entered the service
in Aug. 1954.
Obituaries
MARTHA BETZ
Martha Anna Betz, 84, died in
a local hospital today. Conger
Morris funeral home is in charge
of funeral arrangements.
JOE H. EUDEY
Ashland Funeral services
will be held at Litwiller's Moun
tain View chapel here Friday at
2 p.m. for Joe H. Eudey, 62, who
died yesterday. Services will be
conducted by the Rev. Wendell
Herbison of the First Christian
church and interment will be in
Mountain View cemetery.
The deceased, a fruit dealer
for over 20 years, was born in
Farrin county, Texas, on Feb. 28,
1893, and came to Ashland in
August 1944.
On Jan. 4, 1914, at Childress,
Tex., he was married to Mary
Messengill, who survives. Other
survivors include three daugh
ters, Mrs. Joe Murray, Tilla
mook; Mrs. John Croskell, Eagle
Point, and Robbie Sue, Ashland;
two sons, Spurgen, Maynard, la.,
and J. M., Rockford, 111.; 13
grandchildren, a sister and five
brothers.
BIRTHS
SNOOK To Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley, route 2, box 366, Med
ford, Oct. 4, 1955, a boy, 9V
pounds, at Sacred Heart hos
pital.
BOOTH To Mr. and Mrs.
Henry, route 1, box 319, Central
Point, Oct. 5, 1955, a boy, 7
pounds a' Sacred Heart hospital.
ZIMMERMAN To Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph, Drew, Oct. 4, 1955,
aJsoy, 8V4 pounds at Community
hospital.
ALLEN To Mr. and Mrs.
Carl, route 2, box 207T, Central
Point, Oct. 5, 1955, a girl, 6
pounds, at Community hospital.
Portland Produce
Portland (UP..) Eggs to produc
ers: Grade AA large 53-54c: A large
4B-S3c; A medium 43-44c; A small
26-32c.
Eggs To retailers: Grade AA large,
62-63c; A large. S5-58C. AA medium,
51-52C. A medium, 50-51-c doz., A
small. 37c; cartons, l-3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints, 66c lb.: cartons, 76c; A prints,
66c; cartons. 67c; B prints. 65c.
Cheese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar. Oregon singles, 4 lb., 45 Vic; 5-lb.
loaves, 46ii-49V2C Processed Ameri
can cheese, S-lb. loaf, 39 !i 41c lb.
Farm Market
- Five-dozen ear sacks of corn were
offered at $1.75-2 at the East Side
Farmers' market today: No. 1 flats of
Dicklinr cucumbers were $1.35-1.50
with No. 2 at $1.15-1.25: Elberta
Deaches brought $1.75-2 a lug with a
few to $2.50; Hales sold for $1.65
1.75 for flats; Oregon Hermiston Kus
sett notatoes brought $2.25 for U.S.
No. Is; eastern Oregon and Idaho yel
low onions were 91.su-1.33 lor su-id.
sacks.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers (No. 1
Quality f.o.b. Portland): Fryers. ,i to
4 lb... 24c; at farm. 23c: roosters, 28c
lb.; light hens, 17c; heavy nens, au
wts., 18-20c up; old roosters. ll-14c.
Dressed Chicken No. 1 dressed to
37c lb.; whole drawn, 44-47c lb.; cut
up. 49-52c lb.: hens, light type. New
York style. 27-28c; cut-ups. 40-45c;
hens, heavy type. N. Y. style. 28-30c;
whole drawn. 41-45C
Turkeys To producers for A grade
young hens, f.o.b. farm, N.Y, dressed,
39-39 lie lb.: A grade toms. 32'ic;
live weight basis, toms, 28c; A grade
hens, 35c; A grade young hens ready
to cook. 51-52c: N. Y. dressed. 4 5-4 6c
lb.; fryer turkeys, 4-8 lbs.. 49-51c.
Rabbits Average to growers, f.o.b.
killing plants) Live white. 3-4,4
lbs., 25-26c up; 6-6 lbs., 20-21c: colored
pelts, 4c under; old does, 10-14C lb.; a
few lusher. Fresh killed fryers to re
tailers, 58-61-c; cut up, 62-65c.
JOEL
vis rr
i .i'
1 1
McCBEA
L
ECJ
UIROSIAVA
Crawfords Reveal
Sale of Interest
In Mann's Store
- Mr. and Mrs., John G. Craw
ford have announced the recent
sale of their interest in Mann's
Department store to John P. Mof
fat, manager of the store and
president of the corporation
which owns the establishment.
Mrs. Crawford is the former
Janet Mann, daughter of the late
John C. Mann who came to Med
ford in 1910 and started the store
the same year. She was born and
raised in Medford, and married
Crawford in 1943, while he was
in the Army.
Crawford returned to Medford
from service in the European
theater of war in 1945, and be
came the manager of the men's
department of the store, a post
he held until recently. He served
as vice-president of the corpora
tion from the time of its forma
tion in 1950 until December,
1954. The Crawfords had a sub
stantial minority interest in the
firm.
Mr. Mann's other daughter,
Margaret Mary (Mrs. C. R.)
Holmgren, Tulsa, Okla., retains
her interest in the company.
The Crawfords plan to remain
in Medford.
Dash Into Street
Fatal To Young Girl
Nampa, Ida. (U.R) An eight-
year-old Nampa girl was killed
this morning when she reported
ly ran in the path of a truck
hauling corn into the city.
Acting Canyon County Coro
ner H. E. Bradley said the girl
was Connie Lane, the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Francis N. Lane,
who live about a mile outside
the city limits.
Bradley said the youngster ap
parently was running to catch a
school bus when she dashed
across the road and was hit by
the truck.
Wall Street
New York U.R) Stocks ran
into profit taking in the late
trading today after a substantial
recovery in all departments of
the list.
The late selling brought Gen
eral Motors old stock down to a
small net loss from an early rise
of Vi points. Du Pont touched
216V, up two, and closed at
2151.. New York Central held
1 or a 2 point rise.
Dow-Jones Averages
Dciw-Jones final. stock aver
ages: 30 industrials 461.14 up
2.29; 20 railroads 153.10 up 0.90;
15 utilities 62.66 up 0.08; and 65
stocks 163.69 up 0.75. Sales to
day were about 1,920,000 shares
compared with 2,020,000 yester
day. Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T ..il 7 9 V&
Anaconda .:.;. 68
Chrysler : 95
Curtiss Wright . 23
General Electric . 49
General Motors 138
Montgomery Ward .. 88V
Penn. R. R 25V
Penney, J. C 97 V
Radio : unquoted
Southern Co 20
Southern Pacific- 57V
S. Oil of Calif 49
Texas Gulf Sulphur ZWa
Transamerica 42
Tri-Continental . 251.
United Aircraft 55
U. S. Rubber 45 Ys
U. S. Steel ; ... 57
Youngstown 97V
Portland Livestock
Portland .(UJ.) Cattle 300. Choice
fed steers about $23.50; good steers
about $21: light utility steers down
to $11; canner-cutter cows mostly
$6.50-8; few $825; utility cows $9.50
11; few mixed utility-commercial
grades 12; cutter-utility bulls $11
$14.50. Calves 100. Choice 270 lbs.. $19;
commercial-good heavy calves $13.50
$17 .
Hogs 200. U.S. 1 and I butchers 180
235 lb. $18.50-19; No. 3 lots down to
$17.75; sows 285-550 lb., $14-16:
Sheep 500. Mostly choice central
Oregon lambs $18.50, other good
choice mostly $17-18; good nearby
feeders mostly $14-14.50: good-choice
range feeders about $15; good-choice
ewes $3.50-5.
THE YEAR'S TWO
GREATEST
ADVENTURE HITS!
UTHOM IN TKE SADDLE...
(I CREASED UEHTi;;:;Jr,TTHKIS
...thtrt nm rodf a man
ti match Mm!
THE" STRANOCR
Hi town Qovt him
12 hours to live!
E3
Deer, Deer Everywhere.
But They Weren't Hunting
La Grande (U.R) Unlike
thousands -of others in Oregon,
Mr.1 and Mrs. John N. Tschopp,
of Milwaukie, Ore., weren't even
looking for a deer yesterday.
But they saw enough to last them
a long while.
While driving east on the Elgin-Weston
highway, Tschopp
said, a whole herd of the beasts
stepped into the highway in
front of his car. He swerved to
miss them and collided with
a gasoline tank truck.
The Tschopps were treated in
Elgin for cuts and bruises. The
deer escaped without injury.
Habeas Corpus Writ
Dismissal Affirmed
Salem (U.R) Dismissal by
the trial court of a petition for a
writ of habeas corpus by Ber
nard L. Alexander, Oregon state
penitentiary inmate, was affirm
ed today by the Oregon Supreme
Court
Alexander was indicted in Jef
ferson county for burglary and
was arraigned and pleaded in
nocent. He was confined in jail at
Bend in Deschutes county and
while there appeared with his
attorney before Judge Ralph S.
Hamilton and requested permis
sion to change his plea to guilty
and for immediate sentence. He
was sentenced to a term of five
years.
In answer to Alexander's con
tention that the sentence was
unconstitutional and void be
cause imposed in another county,
the high court in an opinion by
Justice James T. Brand said that,
in view of Alexander's express
request and waiver, no constitu
tional right was violated.
ip of Tongue
Aids Quiz Winner
?Iew York (U.R) A slip of
a tongue could be credited to
day with boosting a roly-poly
Irishman up the ladder on TV's
"The $64,000 Question."
Patrick Keough, 62, plant
manager from St. Louis, falter
ed momentarily last night on a
baseball question worth $16,000
on the giant CBS giveaway
show. But he was able to pro
vide the answer after Emcee
Hal March inadvertently let part
of the answer slip out.
Another contestant, Don E.
Self, El Paso, Tex., successfully
want through a series of queries
in the category "Mythology" to
run his winnings to $8,000.
Godfrey Settles
Plane Incident -
Washington U.R) Televi
sion star Arthur Godfrey made
a $500 civil compromise settle
ment with the Civil Aeronautics
Administration today in con
nection with a plane incident in
Chicago Sept. 7. But he empha
sized the payment "is not to be
construed as an admission , of
guilt." '
Daily Weather Report
Sunset tonight 5:46 p.m. Sunrise tol
morrow. 6:14 am.
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Clear tonight
and Thursday. Increasing high cloudi
ness Thursday afternoon. Low tonight
35-57 with danger of frost in cold
spots. High Thursday 65-68C
Western Oregon: Partly cloudy to
night. Patches of fog early Thursday,
otherwise partly sunny with clouds
increasing during day. Cooler tonight
with lows 35-45. Patchy frost in inter
ior valleys. High Thursday 55-65.
Northern California: Generally fair
through Thursday but increasing
cloudiness in extreme north and occa
sional light rain north of Cape Men
docino late Thursday. Warmer north
ern interior Thursday.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean ' yesterday
57; below normal 2.
Record high this date 63 in 1953.
Record low this date 30 in 1913.
PRECIPITATION : 24 hours to mid
night, trace. Midnight to 10 a.m.. trace.
Total this month, trace, .20 inch be
low normal.
Total since Sept. 1, .83 inch. .02 inch
below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 46,
highest this a.m. 83.
CITY High Low Prec.
Brookings 55 45 .48
Crater Lake 34 25 .91
Grants Pass , 61 41 T
Klamath Falls 54 35 T
MEDFORD 63 46 T
Portland 60 44 .57
Seattle
57
52
61
47
37
38
.41
.18
.04
Spokane
Yakima .
Eureka
Red Bluff
Sacramento
San Francisco
Los Angeles
61
79
78
67
70
52
53
50
53
58
.02
Phoenix
Denver , ',, . ,
Chicago
Miami
New York"
Washington'. D.C.
87
80
73
88
69
66
48
64
76
57
.67
.06
Portland Cash Grain
Portland Wholesale hay prices:
No. 2 green alfafla. baled, f.o.b. trucks,
Portland and Seattle. $35-36 ton.
races as reported by the usda
market news service: Wheat. No. 2
soft white. $73.50 ton: No. 2 white
oats. 38-lb. test. Coast delivery, $49;
No. 2 Western barley, $47 f.o.b. Port
land Coast delivery: soybean meal.
$88.50 ton, cars, prompt delivery Port
land: Mo. 2 mile, f.o.b. Portlan-,
$57.50 ton: standard millrun. $44.50
cars; No. 2 yellow corn. Eastern ship
ments, l.o. D. jfortiand, ssu.
(HEMORRHOIDS )
w ones bktai saossea
nc-rtD vrruour moswtm. oftJunoN
40 STOMACH AND COLON f
coNVMiMr oka
MSf tOOKUT m Cst
PHONE J-MU ee. REYNOLDS
Tit REYNOLDS CLINIC
Nsturopsthic tntS ChifOprtb'e Physicians
SOUK, M KH. I. 3 00 I'U CCNTCI tTtCS
Wednesday, October 5. 195S
Californians Buy
East Evans Ranch
Mr. and Mrs. Norman B.
Wade and Mr. and Mrs. J. B.
Spencer, all formerly of Sacra
mento, Calif., have purchased
the Newton Bros. Cattle ranch
near Wimer in the east Evans
Creek area. The ranch formerly
was known as the "old" Wil
liams Bros, ranch.
The sale was transacted
through the Medford office of
the Southern Oregon Land com
pany by Gib Barbee and Ken
Callison, who stated"" that this is
one of the largest property sales
in this area during the year.
Wade formerly was a cattle
rancher in Texas. .
The couples traded extensive
real estate holdings including a
40-acre subdivision near Sacra
mento, according to the agents.
Haystack Project
Bids To Be Called
Washington U.R) Secretary
of Interior Douglas McKay said
today the Bureau of Reclama
tion will call for bids on $51,
000,000 worth of major con
struction by next June.
Included with be. $11,000,000
worth of construction on nine
new projects authorized by the
last Congress Calls for bids to
initiate work on six of these new
starts will be issued by Janu
ary, and the other three in
March.
Jobs on which bid calls will
be issued include:
Haystack dam and equalizing
reservoir, Deschutes project,
Oregon. An earth-filled dam 83
feet high and 1,250 feet long on
Haystack creek near Madras,
Ore. . -
216th Polio Case
Reported in Idaho
Boise U,R)The Idaho Divi
sion of Public Health today re
ported the 216th polio case of
the year and the fourth this
month that of a 35-year-old
woman in Coeur d'Alene.
Two new cases were reported
yesterday afternoon. They were
a 44-year-old man in Latah coun
ty and a 23-year-old woman in
Twin Falls.
Phoenix PTA Meeting The
first meeting of the Phoenix
PTA will be held Thursday at 8
p.m. in the grade school gymnasium.
O OUR FAMOUS DINNERS
Specializing in Prima Ribs of Beef : '
and other delectable dishes
O ALA CARTE MENU
MON EDESDR ifN
FOR RESERVATIONS - Phone NOrmandy 4-2513
TODAY
White Heat
m
SAVAGE
PASSIONS!
THEY FOUND
FORBIDDEN LOVE
IN A. JUNGLE
OF FEARI
s jf
j! WILL MAKE ' Tn '-
pCm SKIN CRAWL! I
j9HiaBE7 i fJrfAU He fought the greed of ruthless men ....
T" x wiril hi OWB kind il-nt rvn8'
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUWE THTRTEEJC
Speaker Slated
By Cattle Club
"Vitamin Fortification of
Dairy Feed," will be the topic
of a discussion at the October
meeting of the Rogue River Jer
sey Cattle club Sunday, Oct. 9.
Keith Hockersmith, representa
tive of the Grange Cooperative
Supply association of Central
Point, will be the speaker. .
Club members and guests will
assemble at the D."W. Mongold
ranch near Eagle Point for a
noon potluck luncheon to be fol
lowed by a business session and
program. Those who plan to at
tend should take table service.
No Change Planned
For GOP Convention
Washington '(U.R) Repub
lican National Chairman Leon
ard W. Hall said flatly' and em
phatically today the GOP nom
inating convention will be held,
as planned, in San Francisco
starting Aug. 20.
Hall announced at a news con
ference that he had signed today
a final contract with San Fran
cisco's Cow Palace, where he
predicted "we are going to nom
inate the next president of the
United States." He said the con
tract contains no escape clause.
. Hall also told newsmen:
1. His choice for the GOP tick
et still is President Eisenhower
and . Vice-President Richard M.
Nixon. He declined to speculate
on an alternative ticket in event
Mr. Eisenhower does not run.
2. Recent declines in the stock
market, paralleling the an
nouncement of Mr. Eisenhower's
heart3 attack and, later, that he
was not feeling so well, indi
cate that "there is great faith
in President Eisenhower.' Be
yond that, he was not prepared
to discuss the stock market re
actions to the President's ill
ness. JUDGE OPPOSED
Greenwich, Conn. (U.R)
The judge who sentenced Ruth
Snyder and Judd Gray to the
electric chair in 1927, following
one of New York's most notor
ious murder trials, says he's al
ways been opposed to capital
punishment. Townsend Scudder,
90, who retired 19 ' years ago,
called it a "barbarous ' perfor
mance" but explained the death
sentence was mandatory.
Explodes!
TTlhlTr 'TT T.rVT.T. wm I
Dietrich Disappoints
Throng at Las Vegas
Las Vegas (U.R) Marlene
Dietrich strutted down burlesque-type
runway for her $25,
000 a week nightclub show last
night, but clothed from neck
to toe In a masculine outfit that
hid her famous figure.
The 50-year-old grandmother,
had promised in advance that
she would leave the stage of the
Sahara hotel in this gambling
capital to give the customers a
better look at the usually near
nude Marlene.
But, true to the showmanship
that has made her a top head
liner here, she pulled a surprise
and underplayed it
For most of her show she ap
peared in a $9000 gown of nude
colored transparent fabric em
broidered with white feathers on
one side. The other side had but
one bead to keep the censors
away.
EATON'S
DINNER I&OUSE
812 Crater Lake AT e. Ph. 2-44M
ITALIAN AND
AMERICAN DINNERS .
SPECIAL AU the Spachettt ana
Homemade Ravioli von can eat
Includes Home Made Bread,
Batter and Coffee. f QQ
- COURSE ITALIAN DINNER
$1.50
- Open 5:3 PJL Tin t PJt.
. Every Day Except Zhorasi-y
TONITE-,
Door Open 6:45 P.M.
Mry.Tei-ra
ALFRED HtTCHCOCK-S
TO CATCH
VI
A TH1CF
TECHNICOLOR
T0.1ITE & TllUnS.
CLOSED
TEMPORARILY
' FOR
tm-Pam a in
KCrAllw
ii
GATES OPEN 6:30 PM.
SHOW STARTS 7 PM.
I
MMMm-tmwmm-Bmiim-mntm-mcMim