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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1956)
Local and Fir in Truck Firemen were called to 303 South Grape st. about 9:20 a.m. today to extin guish a fire in a city sanitary service truck. The blaze started from a welding operation, fire men said. Film Tuesday A film, "The magic bond of comradeship" will be shown on television at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday by the Vet erans of Foreign Wars, accord ing to M. A. Beneka of the VFW film committee. Ira Canfield, past department commander, will introduce the movie, which is presented in conjunction with National VFW week. Minor Surgery Those who had minor surgery Saturday at Community hospital and who were dismissed the same day in- eluded Janet Schwartz, 3, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs- Orval Schwartz, 824 North Riverside ave., and Susan Keene, 7, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ches ter Keene, 96 West Glenwood rd. At Osteopathic Mrs. Walter F. Bronish, Gold Hill, is receiv ing treatment at Osteopathic hospital for a back injury which she received in a fall at her home, attendants said today. She was admitted Saturday. Mrs. Fairman Connell, also of Gold Hill, is a medical patient there. Smoka Investigation City firemen had two alarms Sun day. They investigated smoke at the Bert Luman residence, 19 North Columbus ave., about 4 p.m. Cause was found to be a plastic toy on a floor furnace grill. An overheated stove was checked at Central Church of Christ at 10:55 p.m. At Community Pam Cook 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Orbin Cooksey, 89 Janney lane, is a medical patient at Comma nity hospital, attendants report ed today. Surgery patients list ed there this morning included Carolyn Field, 6, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey D. Field, 1525 Terrace dr.; Mrs. Lucile Fasel, of Anchorage, Alaska, who is visiting at 23 North Barneburg rd.; and Mrs. Wanda McElroy, Central Point. To Hospital Hayden Richard Ison, 32, was taken to Rogue Valley Memorial hospital last night for treatment of a back in jury received in a fall in the county jail, the sheriff's office reported today. Mason, who was jailed last week in lieu of pay ment of a $250 fine for driving while under the influence of in toxicating liquor, was reported in "good condition" today by hospital attendants. Rural Board Meeting The regular meeting of the Rural school board and lay members will be held Tuesday at 10 a.m in the courthouse, annex audito rium to discuss the annual bud get. An item in yesterday's Mail Tribune inadvertently reported the cancellation of the meeting, and should have announced the cancellation of the regular meet ing of the, Jackson County School Boards association. Reserve Training Otto Ewaldsen, manager of Swem's Book and Gift shop, left Satur day by car for Ft. MacArthur, Calif., near San Pedro, to re ceive two weeks training in Army Officers reserve school En route home he will stop at San Francisco to attend gift market shows and will be joined by Mrs. Swem who will assist in the purchasing of stock for the store. Obituaries MARY DUGAN Mrs. Mary Dugan, 80, a resi dent of the Eagle Point area for 52 years, died Saturday in her home on Little Butte Creek rd. She was born in County Cork, Ireland, on March 21, 1875. Mrs Dugan was a member of the Sacred Heart Catholic church. She is survived by four daugh ters. Mildred Dugan, Walla Walla, Wash.; Helen and Margaret Dugan, Eagle Point; and Mrs. Julia Whitman, Med ford; two sons, Joe Dugan, Ash land, and Richard Dugan, Eagle Point; two sisters, Miss Julia and Helen Sidley, Lake Creek, Ore., and eight grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Tuesday, Jan. 24, at 9 a.m., at the Sacred Heart Catholic church, West Tenth st. and South Oakdale ave. The Rev. William McCleod will .officiate. Inter ment will be in the Jacksonville cemetery. Recitation of the Holy Rosarv O will be held at Perl funeral home at 7:30 p.m., today. MARY L. BISHOP Mrs. Mary L. Bishop, formerly of Medford, died at her home on Coolidge st., Ashland, Saturday. Conger-Morris funeral home is in charge of funeral arrange ments. MAMIE WOLF Mrs. Mamie Wolf of Ashland died Saturday in Salem. Conger Morris funeral home is in charge of arrangements. Personal Dismissed Angus Bowmer, Ashland,' was dismissed Sunday from Community hospital where he had been since Tuesday for surgery. Oven Fire Oven and flue fire alarms were answered Saturday evening by city firemen. -No damage was reported from the oven blaze at the B. J. Larson home, 57 Summit ave., nor from the flue fire at the Delle Mac Donald residence, 1022 Ste vens st. Norblad To Seek Ban on High Speeds Washington (u.R) Rep. Walter Norblad (R-Ore.), said to day he would try to get Con gress to pass a law making it impossible to drive a car faster than 70 miles an hour. He said he was "exploring every legal means" to get the federal government to prohibit the manufacture of automobiles capable of speeds higher than 70 miles an hour or to require gov ernors on all cars limiting them to that top speed. Norblad caustically criticized automobile manufacturers for their disregard of safety in their new cars. "I attended the automobile show in Washington last week," he said in a statement, "and was shocked to see the emphasis, the sales talk, and the advertising was all on the greater speed and horsepower of the new automo biles." R. Darrohn Innocent On Larceny Charge Robert Darrohn was found in nocent of larceny of livestock in a trial last year, rather than guilty, as was stated incorrectly and was the result of an inad vertent mistake in Sunday's Mail Tribune. The error came about when the phrase "not guilty" was used, and the word "not" was omitted. The Mail Tribune regrets the error, and expresses its apologies to those concerned. The mistake occurred in a story about activ ities of the district attorney's of fice during the year 1955. News About Servicemen COMPLETE COURSE Two valley men are scheduled to complete recruit training Jan. 27 at the Marine corps recruit depot, San Diego, Calif. They are Calvin R. Dalton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Dalton, 1900 Spring st., and Darrold M. Barker, Navy engineman second class, son of Mrs. Eleonar L. Hammersley, Route 2, Box 21, Eagle Point, and husband of the former Miss Dora M. Wallace, Trail. Upon completion of train ing they will be assigned to Camp Pendleton, Calif., for fur ther infantry training or to one of the many Marine corps schools. AT MARE ISLAND Darrold M. Barker, Navy en gineman second class, reported for duty Jan. 2 with the Mare island group of the Pacific Re serve fleet based at the Mare Island Navy shipyard, Vallejo, Calif. Barker is a son of Mrs. Eleonar L. Hammersley, Route 2, Box 21, Eagle Point, and hus band of the former Miss Dora M. Wallace, Trail. Before enter ing the Navy in March, 1952, he attended Chiloquin high school . Wall Street New York '(U.R) Stocks ral lied from their lows in the late trading today after a drop car ried the list to a new low since early November. At the lows on the listed mar ket the losses extended to near ly 4 points. Chrysler was hard hit. Jersey Standard had a bad time and so did Bethlehem. Today's closing prices on se lected stocks: American T & T 179 Vi Anaconda 66V2 Chrysler 76 Curtiss Wright Z1V General Electric 53 General Motors 43 Montgomery Ward 80V2 Penn R R 23 Penney J C 96 nacuo 'HYs Southern Co 20 Southern Pacific ; 52VJ S Oil of Calif 88'i Texas Gulf Sulphur 354 Transamerica 39 Tri-Continental 25 United Aircraft 65 li U S Steel . 52Vs U S Rubber 503,4 Youngstown 851 Eat the Chili Size ot McDuffie's COFFEE POT DRIVE-IN 1132 North Riverside cBE Holbrook'i River . . . The most learned and sagaci ous writer of books in the early days of white men on the Co lumbia river was the Congrega tional missionary, Sam Parker, who ranged up and down the region in 1835-1836. He had a scholar's - eye for the timber, from Fort Okanogan to Astoria. But he promised his readers, "I do not here intend to enter upon the dendrology of this country." Stewart Holbrook owns the sagacity of a Rev. Parker and he has a head full of the den drology and economic history of the region's forests. Best of all, through his 35 years of ranging the lands of the Colum bia and its prominent tribu taries he has gathered in a great treasure of tales, mainly the true but legends too. When he goes to recite a chapter of his tory he says, in effect, "Now once there was a man, and this is what he did." Sometimes, "And there were women." The Holbrook "Columbia" is the 50th in the Rinehart "Rivers of America" series. It began many years ago with a book on the Housatonic. The Oregon au thor knew this and other New England rivers of the series when he was a boy. And he was bred on Bryant, whose famous poem, "Thanatopsis," written in 1811, carried the line, "The con tinuous woods where rolls the Oregon, and hears no sound, save his own dashings." These woods are seldom out of sight in the new book about the Co lumbia. Simon Benson . . . At the start of Chapter 11 the narrator remarks, "It is time to mention that for a century past the base of major activity along the Columbia and many of its tributaries has been tim ber; Timber is king here." Truer word was never said with finer restraint. Holbrook nails it down with the story of Simon Benson. Benson was a Columbia log ger who saw giant promise in the Southern California market for West Coast lumber. He built a sawmill on San Diego Bay and began to ship his logs there on coasting schooners. But the costs were high. Then: "In the quiet of Wallace Slough on the lower Columbia, they built a great cradle, filled it with 3,000,000 feet of logs, hitched on a powerful tug, and started. In 20 days the. rig made the 1,100-mile voyage without trouble. This was it. More than 100 other rafts followed in her wake, and the Benson mill in Southern California was perhaps the only one in North America to saw lumber from logs grown in a forest 1,100 miles away." So the timber chapter runs, with blazing pages of forest-fire history, the saga of the Wob blies in the woods, lore of the pine camps, the Skidroads of Spokane and Portland. The chapter closes with a rousing prose poem on daybreak in the old-time Columbia river logging Court Records POLICE COURT Henry K. Miller, violation of basic rule. S10. George E. Gunter, no operator's li cense, So. A. D. Van Horn, violation of basic rule, S10. Marion E. Fisher, violation of basic rule. S10. Alan M. McQuade, failure to stop. $5. Wayne N. Troxell, violation of basic rule, S10. Cecil O. Blake, excessive noise, S10. Ray R. Lue. violation of basic rule, $10. Jack W. Dennie, violation of basic rule. $10. Danny W. Tuggle, violation of basic rule. $10. Bert DeKortt, violation of basic rule. $10. Billy Kyker, violation of basic rule, $10. DISTRICT COURT Walter L. J arisen, failure to stop at stop sign. $5. , C. J. Hamilton, overload, $59. Louis C. Yaws, failure to display PUC nermit. S15. Everett Hale Greenman, violation of basic rule. $12.50. Joseph H. Morris, failure to stop at stop sign, $10. Robert D. Burns, violation of basic rule. $12.50. Joe C. Reese, no operator's license, S5. James C. Buckmaster Jr., failure to operate on right side of highway, $15. CIRCUIT COURT avid Lee Thrapp vs. Betty Louise Thrapp, divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS George Wesley Steele and Mary Eliz abeth Rice. Klamath tans. Eugene Maurice Keane. Springfield, and Sonja Catherine McCullough, Klamath Falls. Virgil Lvle Govenor, Prospect, and Alta Pearl Pitts, Trail. Singer Russ Columbo was killed Sept. 2, 1934 when an antique pistol he was looking at exploded. Tree leaves, used as fertilizer, are about twice as valuable as well-rotted barnyard manure, pound for pound. "The tsetse fly has 4,000 eyes. Humans have two. Either will be able to watch the MARCH OF DIMES TV AUCTION," woftheI'oWs, yUi STEVENS camp. This alone is worth the measly S5 that is charged for the book. New Day . . . Longview pioneering has a chapter of its own in "The Co lumbia," and the author projects the theme with a realism that does more good for the forest fiber capital of the country than any eulogy could do. He packs an amazing amount of facts worth knowing in 16 pages of stories one of them about the remarkable religious adventure of Mrs. Minnie (Ma) Kennedy in Longview. The big story, of course, is of tree farms and new forest products. You can be sure that Hol brook gives the leaders of free enterprise on the Columbia, from David Thompson to Ralph Jarron Cordiner, earned credits. And I, for one, was not un happy at finding no mention of the Bonneville Power Adminis tration. The story of the dams is told, of course, but Holbrook tips no skimmer to public power. He has never petitioned the gov ernment to turn the Columbia into a string of lakes. I can't say that I have, either. On The Side (Distributed by King It is a fearful thing to love As I love you. I have no hope that does not Dream of you. No joy that is not shared by you. My hours are spent in shaping our future lives After my own romantic fantansies. You are the star around which my Thoughts revolve like satellites. Letitia Landon. A British journalist says the Princess Margaret is never re ferred to as "Meg" in England. That calling her that "originat ed in America where it is a popular practice to refer to girls named Margaret as "Meg." I question the gentleman's state ment. I have known innumerable American girls named Margaret but the only one I ever heard called "Meg" was Meg Mundy, the model and actress. By the way, what became of Miss Mundy? Asking Queries from clients. Q. How is the name of Zsa Zsa Gabor pronounced? A. Ja Ja Gabaw. Q. What is the United States record for an all boy family? A. Believe it is held by the Jones family of Peterstown, W. Va., in which there were 17 sons and no daughters ... Q. Is there such a thing as a "widow's ring"? A. I understand there is a gold ring inlaid with black enamel which is called a "widow's ring." . . . Q. What was Bing Crosby's first solo recording? When was it made? A. Bing's first solo re cording, made in 1926, was of that song titled "Muddy Waters." Cradle of Stars Brooklyn is the birthplace of more film stars than any other city in the world. Never in mo tion picture history has there been a period when there were not at least three Brooklyn girls who were outstanding stars. The first Brooklyn girl to become a film star was Florence Turner. That was around 1907. . Asides Dorothy Lamour was chosen "Miss New Orleans" to compete in a bathing beauty contest held in Galveston, Tex. Dorothy fin ished twelfth ... It was Mon taigne who said, "If you want to know what God thinks of money look at some of the peo ple he gave it to." Guide to Gals When a Pisces (February 21 March 20) woman is irritated by her husband, she weeps. A Leo (July 24-August 22) wife sulks. The Libra (September 24-Octob-er 23) wife makes sarcastic and insulting remarks. So does the Scorpio (October 24-November 22) spouse. Only more so. The Scorpian females also throw things at their mates. When a Sagittarian's (November 23-De-cember 22) husband angers her she reminds him of things life would like to forget and makes references to his weaknesses. Or, so say the stargazers. Please Note The owl is constantly being described as "a wise old bird." TRY OUR Budget Plan Budget your meal to the budget price you wish to pay THE Top Notch Craterian Theater Bldg. March of Dimes Coming Events Events scheduled throughout Jackson county in the next few days to raise March of Dimes funds for the fight against polio include the following: Jan. 24 Modern dance at Oasis, Eagle Point, 8 p.m. to 12 p.m. Music by Dick Spain, Bill Lively and Rogue Valley Boys. Crater high school Fresh man class Dutch auction and box social, 7:30 p.m., Crater high gym, Central Point. Jan. 25 Square dance spon sored by Jackson County square dance association at YMCA, 9 p.m. Policemen vs. Firemen basketball game at Med f 0 r d high school, preliminary Yellow Cab vs. Hawkinson's, 7:30 p.m. Crater Lions club auction, KBES-TV, 9:30 p.m. Jan. 26 Radio auction, at KWIN, Ashland. Jan. 27 ? Radio auction, KWIN, Ashland. Yoggi Hussane and Texas wrestling, with lady referees, 8:30 p.m., Ashland junior high gym, sponsored by Ashland Lions club. Phoenix Lady Lions dance at Commun ity clubhouse. Music by Melody Wranglers. Local talent show at intermission. Modern dance at Rogue River. Baked food sale by Crater high school students. By E. V. Durling Future Syndicate, Inc.) The fact is, that the owl is a very dumb bird. One of the least intelligent of our feathered friends. Then consider the dove, which is utilized as a symbol of peace. The dove is not peaceful ly inclined. It is a very belliger ent bird. Always looking for trouble. When a Man Marries Noting what is happening to men in the matter of divorce set tlements, especially in Beverly Hills, Calif., brings to mind the observation of Justice McCardie, which was as follows: "By bind ing himself in matrimony, a man receives little or no benefits from the law. He incurs respon sibilities so vast that no man could contemplate them with out the rosy tinted spectacles of love. Portland Police Nab Young Thugs Portland (U.R) Portland police, in the midst of a "thug busting" crackdown, nabbed four youths over the week end and were searching for a man who tried to hold up the Metro politan branch of the U. S. Na tional bank Saturday by threat ening to lblow up the cashier with a bottle of nitroglycerin. Three of four Portland youths were charged with armed rob bery early yesterday and held in lieu of $10,000 bail after two southeast stores were held up Saturday evening. The fourth, a 16-year-old, was turned over to juvenile authorit ies. The three charged were identi fied as Richard Donald Scarbor ough, 20; Jonathan Olney, 21, and Raymond Gus Smith, 19, all of Portland. The bank robbery attempt was foiled ' by assistant manager R. V. Runyon who calmly dialed police as the would-be robber 117 S. CENTRAL 8" KITCHEN VENTILATING FAN Eliminates Kitchen Smoke, Odors 16.88 Reg. J 8.95 Powerful fan moves 350 eu. ft. of air per minute . . keeps your kitchen free of smoke and cooking odors. Easy to install in ceiling of any kitchen. Baked-on gray enamel finish with stainless steel . grill. Pull chain switch. Filter screen catches dust and grease. Enclosed, dust proof motor. Monday, January 23, 1958 HORNBROOK Company Has Rv MRS. H. H. CHAPMAN i Hornbrook The machine shop crew of the Fruit Growers Supply Co., of Hilt, was given a dinner party recently at the Bur-Bel resort on the Klamath river. Members of the company's safety organization also were guests. Art Hall, machine shop foreman, was host. The affair was given in recognition of the outstanding safety record made hv the crew. This crew has worked a total of 740 days with out time lost due to injury, ana with only three first aid injuries reported during this period. Those attending as guests of Hall were Bill Tallis and Julius Beterbide, safety supervisors for the company. Sam Flyte, plant supply clerk, and Fred Haynes, Tom Mills, Ray Matchke, Henry Thompson, Ray Middleton, Ches ter Wilcox, members of the ma chine shop crew. A' recent item in the Mail Tribune, reporting the finding of the body of Robert Bartlett, Yuba City flood victim, recalled to residents here that his grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Bartlett, were ranchers in the Hornbrook area for many years. The Sewing club held their first meeting of the new year on Tuesday, Jan. 17, at the home of Mrs. L. C. Walsh on Henley road. Members present besides the hostess were Mrs. Lawrence Breceda, Mrs. L. E. Jeter, Mrs. James Hodge, Mrs. S. D. Ha worth, Mrs. Ed ' Smith, Mrs. Marshall Horn and Mrs. Harry Chapman. The meeting honored the birthdays of Mrs. Breceda and Mrs. Jeter. Mrs. Will Rogers of the Rog ers Ranch down the Klamath river entertained the Hornbrook Auction Bridge club on Wednes day, Jan. 18, at the home of her sister, Mrs. Bertha Bradley. Reg ular members playing beside the hostess and her sister were Mrs. Lester Nye, who placed second, Mrs. Henley Clawson and Mrs. Frank Ohlund of Hilt. Guest players were Mrs. Fred Mills, Mrs. Bill Wiley and Mrs. Laura Swinnerton who held high score. .' Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Heflick and sons Tommy and Davey of Riverside, Calif., are visiting at the home of Mrs. Heflick's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Greene. Mrs. Heflick is the former Ro berta Greene. Miss Joyce Rimell of Canyon ville, Ore., Miss Beverly Kel bach of Sedro-Woolley, Wash., Non-Farm Work Up 1700 in December Salem (U.R) Non-farm em ployment in Oregon climbed 1700 in December to 474,000, about 12,400 higher than a year ago and the best year-end total ever reported to the State Nnem ployment Compensation Com mission. Preliminary estimates were based on reports from 1900 rep resentative establishments. Record employment in trade, threatened to blow him up with nitroglycerine. Runyon said the bandit "didn't look desperate enough." He fled when Runyon refused to return the note he had shoved at him demanding money. PHONE 2-6241 Save $2 Safety Dinner and Bob Hagan of Red Bluff, Calif., were week-end guests of Oliver Fick at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Harry Chapman. The girls are students at the Canyonville Bible acad emy while both boys are alumni of the same school. Mr. and Mrs. James Liskey became ' the parents of a son, their first child, on Jan. 18 at the Siskiyou County General hospital. PORTLAND LIVESTOCK Portland (UP) Cattle 2600. High good-choice fed steers 18.50 19.25; choice-prime steers above 20; good fed heifers 15.50-16; canner-cut-ter cows 7-8.50, few 9; utility cows mostly 9.50-11; commercial grades 12; some higher; utility bulls mosUy 14.50 15.50, few 16; light cutters down to 11 or below. Calves 200 Good-choice vealers 21 26. some higher: good 431 lb. slaughter calves 16; good-choice 450 lb. stock steer calves 17.50, sorted at 15. Hogs 2000. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers 180-235 lb. 14-14.50. some 14.75; No. 3 around 13-13.25; few 300-550 lb. sows 10-12. Sheep 1350. Choice with some prime 109-115 lb. fed wooled lambs 19; oth er choice lambs mosUy 18.25-18.50; good-choice 17.50-18; good feeder lambs 14.50-15; utility-good ewes 4-5. PORTLAND PRODUCE Portland (UP), Eggs To retail ers: Grade AA large, 55-57c; AA med ium, 51-54c; A large 52-55c; A medium 51-53c; A small 47-49c; carton, 2 to 3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA grade prints, 66c lb; cartons, 67c; A prints 66c: cartons 67c; B prints 64c. Cheese To retailers: A grade Ched dar, singles daisies, 401,a-451,ac: 5-lb loaves 46 Vz 49-',ic. Processed American cheese 5-lb loaf. 39 ',2-41c lb. Farm Market California and Brookings, Ore., daf fodils sold down to $30 for 1,000 buds compared with S45 starting price ear lier this month; top quality California green onions brought wholesalers 75 80c a dozen bunches with radishes 60-65c. Poultry, Rabbits Live Chickens To growers (No. 1 quality f.o.b. Portland): Fryers, 2 Vx to 4 lbs 23-24c. at farm 22-23c; roasters 24c lb f.o.b. PorUand: light hens 18c, heavy hens all wts 2oc; old roosters ll-14c. Dressed Chickens No. 1 dressed to retailers: Fryers, New York style 36 37c lb: whole drawn 42-45c: cut up 47-52c; hens, light type, N. Y. style. 30 31c: cut ups 42-4(!c; hens, heavy type N, Y. style 36-37c; whole drawn 45-49c. Turkeys To producers: Fryer tur keys, live weights 27c lb. Dressed Turkeys To retailers, nom inally A grade young hens 55-56c lb eviscerated, A grade young toms 46 50c lb eviscerated, depending on weight: eviscerated fryer-roasters 57c. Rabbits (Average to growers, t.o.D. killine Dlants) Live, white. 33,i-iVx lbs 23-26c; 5 to 6 lbs 18-21c; colored pelts 4c under; old does 10-14c lb, a few higher. Fresh killed fryers to re tailers 58-eic 10; cut up oz-oac. transportation, service and gov ernment provided the main im petus, although gains in ship repairing, machinery and metals enabled the manufacturing total to remain at 135,400, same as a year before when lumbering operations were considerably higher. SCARED! Red Satellite bosses admit fear of Radio Free Europe A high Polish Cornmunist re cently said of Radio Free Eur ope: "The regime would giva any amount of money to abol ish this station." The -Czech Prime Minister wails that even party members are being "mis led" by its broadcasts. Escapees report that Red prison guards are less harsh . . . because Radio Free Europe constantly warns of a day of reckoning. Don't Stop Now Your dollars have made this possible. And only your dollars can keep Radio Free Europe on the air . . . giving hope to mil lions. Because it is privately supported and operated, Radio Free Europe can hit the Com munists hard and often . . . can keep alive hope and continued resistance. Send your Truth Dollars for Radio Free Europe to- CRUSADE for FREEDOM co Local Poitmatter TOGETHER end TERRIFIC! JACK . PALANCE SHELLEY WINTERS 7mm f WarnerColor a wtt mot. werva MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE "NINE Daily Weather Report Sunset tonight. 5:13 p m.; sunrise tomorrow. 7:33 a.m. FORECASTS: Medford and vicinity: Vari able cloudiness through Tuesday with oc casional shallow patches of morning fog. Snow above 3500 feet. Low to night 32-35. High Friday 48-50. Western Oregon: Scattered showers tonight and Tuesday. Frequent sunny periods Tuesday. Cooler tonight. Low tonight 30-38. High Tuesday 42-48. Northern California: Clearing in. north portion this evening. Becoming partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday with snow flurries in mountains. Cold er in mountains tonight and Tuesday. LOCAL DATA: Temperature: Mean 46; above norm mal8. Record high this date 59 in 1942. Record low this date, 16 in 1949. Precipitation: 24 hours to midnight, .91 in. Midnight to 10 a.m., .01 in. Total this month, 5.47 in.. 3.68 in. above nor mal. Total since Sept. 1, 21.11 in, 10.96 in. above normal. Humidity: Lowest yesterday 69 , highest this a.m. 92. City ,Hi Lo Prec. Brookings Crater Lake Grants Pass Klamath Falls . MEDFORD Portland .53 48 . 33 18 . 50 37 43 30 ... 48 39 53 -42 1.20 1.52 .98 .19 .90 .13 Seattle 51 37 38 33 36 32 Spokane . .32 .09 07 .77 .23 .46 .04 Yakima Eureka .55 47 . 52 48 55 53 . 59 53 . 58 54 Red Bluff Sacramento San Francisco . Los Angeles Phoenix . Denver Chicago .. 56 44 44 18 trace trace 18 Miami ..... 75 New York '. .43 32 46 34 Washington, D. C. PORTLAND HAY, GRAIN - .imv.wi Jiti y i-ntes. No. 2 green alfalfa baled f.o.b. trucks, Portland 40-$42 ton. trices as reported bv the USDA market news service: Wheat. No. 2 soft, white, S74 ton; No. 2 white oats. western barley S47 f.o.b. Portland v-vaak uciivery soy Dean meal, ton, H nl 1 UOTPfl T3mlanr4. .J ,J IT - DMlluaiU IflllllUll S42.50; No. 2 yellow corn. Eastern ship- .uuiiu, i.u.o. j-ortiana 901.au. BREAKFAST AND LUNCH 7 a.m. to 2 p -m. Q Now Doors Open 6:45 P.M. Howard Am Dolors Vic ' ' . KEEL-BLYH- GRAYDAMONE, A METt O -COLD WYN JAAYH HCTWf , ASHLANDo HURRY THIS GREAT DOUBLE HIT SHOW ENDS TUESDAYI UWYES for the US'DERWORLD! : HOTEL - f X " . 5:30 to 9 KM P. M. "Roast Turkey mi TtOMNICOLOM ??T-J mun twm twite ttuwm PLUS fWJMPalanM-SielleyiitoS jIJELI ItJa LtmM - Wendell Corey -yfeS lean Hagen-RodSieigg- EDWARD ROBINSON v m f i