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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1956)
o Monday, March" 5, 19S6 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE O Local and CAP Meeting A regular meeting of the Civil Air Patrol will be held tonight from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the CAP build ing at the airport. The CAP has been recently reorganized by Captain Robert Thompson, for merly of the US Air Force. Any one is welcome to attend. Meeting Postponed An open house scheduled by qentral Foint Parent-Teacher association for Tuesday, March 6, has. been postponed to Friday, April 20, officers said today. Obituaries LILLIAN SCHMIDT Mrs. Lillian Schmidt died Saturday at the home of her son, Robert, Old Stage rd. Conger-Morris funeral home i& in charge of arrangements. COLLINS P. SAYLOR q Mr.duollins Parker Saylor, 61, of 616 Midway rd., Medford, died in a local hospital Satur day. Conger-Morris funeral home is in charge of arrangements. PATRICIA BELLES Funeral services for Mrs. Pa tricia Belles, who died at Red mond, Feb. 29. will be held at the graveside in Siskiyou Me morial park Tuesday at 10 a.m., with the Rev. George R. V. Bolster of Saint Mark's Episcopal church officiating. Mrs. Belles will lie in state at the Perl funeral home today from 7 to 10 p.m. Her father, Earl Lintz was formerly employed at the Southern Oregon Farm Loan association. She is survived by her hus band Clarence Belles of Red mond, and her mother, Mrs. Alta Lintz of Stockton, Calif. GEORGIA McNEILL eorgia McNeil, a former resi O dent of Medford, died in Oak land, Calif., Saturday afternoon. She will be transferred to Med ford and Perl funeral home will be in charge of local arrange ments. JAMES SAYLE 0 James T. Sayle, of Central Point, died at a local hospital late Saturday night. Perl fun eral home is in charge of ar rangements. MARY MALONE Mrs. Mary Malone, mother of John Malone, 442 South Ivy st, died at home Sunday evening. Perl fun9ral home is in charge of arrangements, which will be announced later. LILLIAN SCHMIDT Mrs. Lillian Schmidt, about 70, mother of Robert Schmidt, route 1, box 292B, was found dead in her trailer house at that address yesterday morning. Mrs .Schmidt moved here last September to make her home with her son, and was staying In the small house trailer next to the family residence. Another son, Allen, Santa Barbara, Calif., also survives. Investigators called by Schmidt included state police, the district attorney's office and the county coroner. They attributed the death to gas com ing from a small stove in the trailer. Mrs. Schmidt had been in poor health recently, her son reported. Ends WEDNESDAY MErmnmi mmna JANEVYMANor OPEN F.QR SEASON I Beginning Starting MONDAY, MARCH 5th 8 to 10 P.M. (Every Monday for 10 Weeks) Doug Fosbury, Instructor YMCA Social Hall for Registration PHONE 2-6295 Personal At Community Mrs. Clara Spencer, 23 Vancouver ave., is a medical patient at Community hospital, and Mrs. Thomas Ke'n naday, route 2, box 459, is a surgery patient there, attendants reported. Flue Fires City firemen re ported chimney fires about 12:20 p.m. yesterday at the G. W? Wil liams home, 1216 Murray st., and about 4 p.m. at the Vern Buse man residence, 221 Vaucouver ave. Firemen Called Firemen were dispatched to the G. H. Maasdam residence, 657 South Holly st.,' about 12:45 p.m. yes terday when a fire in an oven was reported. They were sum moned to the Fourth Wheel cafe. 29 South Front st., about 7:45 p.m. to extinguish a grease fire on a kitchen griddle. News About Servicemen GRADUATED Navy Lt. Cdr. Donald C. Stan ley, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Stanley, 35 Crater Lake ave., who entered the service in 1941, was graduated Feb. 14 from com bat information center officers school at the Navy air station at Glenview, 111. AT FT. LEWIS Sgt. Vernon L. Phillips, 27, son of" Mr. and Mrs. David L. Phillips, 110 South Laurel st., Ashland, recently arrived at Ft. Lewis, Wash., and now is a mem ber of the 2nd infantry division. Sergeant Phillips, a medical rec ords specialist in Medical com pany of the division's 38th regi ment, entered the Army in 1947. He holds the commendation rib bon. His wife, Anna, lives at Ta coma, Wash. TO OKINAWA Marine Sgt. Bill H. Day, son of Mrs. Robert Force, Route 1, Medford, and husband of the former Miss Alice L. Hale, Cen tral Point, departed from Camp Pendleton, Calif., Feb. 8 for Okinawa after completing four weeks of training in the Staging regiment at Camp Pendleton. A GRADUATE David Peterson, a mechanic constructionman in the Navy, son of Mr. and Mrs. David L. Peterson, 531 Fairmount st., was graduated Jan. 20 from the me chanics school at the construc tion battalion center, Port Hue neme, Calif. Peterson attended Medford high school before en tering the navy in June, 1955. He has been transferred to Mid way island in the Pacific. TO GERMANY Sgt. Richard D. Roberts, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester L. Roberts, Central Point, recently left Ft. Campbell, Ky., for Ger many as part of operation gyros cope, the1 Army's unit rotation plan. Sergeant Roberts' unit, the 11th airborne division, is re placing the 5th infantry division in Europe. His wife, the former Miss Mary Berriman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Job Berriman, Jacksonville, lives at Clarksville, Tenn. He is a 1951 graduate of Central Point high school and a former employe of the Safe way Stores, Inc., Medford. AT SAN DIEGO Three Phoenix young men are receiving basic training at San Diego, Calif., and all attended Phoenix High school. They are Roger Puhl, whose mother, Mrs. Gladys Davenport, lives at 1221 Thomas rd., Allan Cotton and Mel Lloyd. The famous bottomless pit in the Big room of the Carlsbad caverns national park in south eastern New Mexico is said to be 700 feet in depth. Three North Dakota counties are among the top 10 in the U.S in potato production. They are Walsh, fourth; Pembina, sixth; Grand Forks, seventh. Use Tribune Want Ads Just Call 2-6141 DANCE CLASS 3 RESTING IN NEW YORK, Autherine Lucy, 26, center of momentous controversy over right of Negro to enter the University of Alabama, awaits decision by her advisers as to next move after university trustees expelled .her for criticizing officials in court ac tion. John A. Caddell, trustee, announced the decision. (International Soundphoto) Bend Girls Stranded On Buses in Snow Bend (U.R) Snowslides and heavy drifts on the Santiam high way early yesterday morning stalled two chartered buses on the Cascade mountain pass with their cargo of 44 high school girls and their chaperones. The girls, all from Bend high school, were returning to their homes from Salem where they had attended a high school basketball tourna ment Saturday night. The buses finally reached Bend yesterday morning after spending some six hours on the snowbound mountain. They fol lowed a rotary snowplow down the steep slopes shortly after daybreak. Miss Zola McDougall, dean of girls at Bend high school, said none of the girls was frightened, even though the buses were with out heat and lights and there was no food. "They were very calm and collected and took it lightly, sleeping most of the time," she said RV Manor President Visits LA Institution M. N. Hogan, president of Rogue Valley Manor, returned yesterday from Los Angeles where he gathered information from the controller of Pacific Homes, an institution similar to the one planned here by the firm Hogan heads. Hogan stated that he spent the greater part of-a day at Pa cific Homes with the controller and discussed how the Los An geles institution is financed and operated. He gathered figures on the costs, charges, financing, reserve setup and other perti nent information, and also dis cussed some of the management and operation problems. , Pacific Homes has been in operation about 12 years, Hogan reported, and has learned the solution to many questions which the local institution must solve. Daily Weather Report Sunset tonight, 6:06; sunrise tomor row. 6:39 a.m. FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Partial clear ing tonight and Tuesday with . snow showers becoming more widely scat tered. Continued cool. Low tonight 20-23. High Tuesday 45-47. Western Oregon: Considerable cloud iness and scattered showers of snow or rain becoming less frenuent tonight. Partly cloudy Tuesday morning with occasional snow or rain Tuesday after noon and evening. Low tonight 25-35. A little warmer Tuesday with, highs 42-48. Northern California: Fair tonight and Tuesday, except in extreme north. Scattered light showers in extreme north Tuesday. Little change in tem perature. LOCAL DATA Temperature: Mean yesterday 38; below normal 8. Record high this date 73 in 1936. Record low this date, 20 in 1955. Precipitation: 24 hours to midnight. .91 in. Midnight to 10 a.m., .02 in. Total this month, .93 in., .69 in. above nor mal. Total since Sept. 1, 27.40 in., 14.20 in. above normal. Humidity: Lowest yesterday, 55; highest this a.m. 100. City Hi Lo Prec. Brookings 49 36 .59 Crater Lake 19 8 .93 Grants Pass 46 29 .83 Klamath Falls 35 16 .10 MEDFORD 44 23 1.00 Portland 44 33 .07 Seattle 40 30 .03 Spokane 36 20 .06 Yakima 41 21 .11 Eureka 49 38 .80 Red Bluff 54 40 .10 Sacramento 60 43 .06 Court Records POLICE COURT Robert G. Thornton, failure to stop at stop sign, S5. Leonard K. Stevenson, violation of basic rule. S10. Laval A. Meunier, violation of bas ic rule, S10. Gerald G. Cook, failure to stop at stem light. S5. Warren J. Walker, violation of bas ; ic rule. S10. Eva E. Deutschman, failure to yield right of way, S10. DISTRICT COURT Don E. Anderson, violation of basic i rule, S15. Clarence W. Strahan. failure to stop at stop sign, S10. Raymond i;. carpenter, lauure to operate in a single lane of traffic, S10. Larry R. Walker, violation of basic rule. S10. George D. Crevier, no operator's license. S10. Orville R. Scholer, violation of bas ic rule. S10. Dexter A. Benston, failure to stop at stop sign, S10. Johnnie D. Gibson, inadequate muf- I fler, Slo. CIRCUIT COURT LaDonna Hoff vs. Conrad Francis Hoff Jr., divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Leonard Joe Queener and Ruby Pearl Perkins, Drew, Ore. ' - ' RODNEY KEATING Files for Convention Delegate Rodney, Keating Seeks Election As Delegate Rodney Keating, . !J a c k s o n county orchardist and county judge, announced today that he would be a candidate for dele gate to the forthcoming Repub lican national convention. Judge Keating seeks one of the two delegate posts in the Fourth Congressional district. Kathleen M. Bash, chairman of the Jackson county Republican Central committee, has also filed, Feb. 27, to seek election from the district. "Under the Eisenhower ad ministration," Keating said, "we have come from war to peace and from economic uncertainty to unparalleled prosperity. All Americans should dedicate themselves to seeing these ac complishments extended." Keating has long been promi nent in civic and political af fairs. In 1933 he was elected as sistant chief clerk, Oregon House of Representatives. He has served as precinct commit teeman and vice-chairman of the Jackson county Republican Central committee; co-chairman of the county welfare commis sion; and as a member of the legislative interim committee on local government, appointed by the Association of Oregon Coun ties. In June, 1954, he was ap pointed county judge by Gover nor Patterson, and was elected to a six-year term in November of the same year. Keating; a commander in the naval reserve, was on active duty, as public relations chief for the Seabees from 1942 through 1945, and for three years was commanding officer of the Medford naval reserve unit. Prominent in Episcopal church work, he was elected to the Diocesan Council in 1954. He is a member of the Elks, American Legion, Rotary, and Oregon Farm Bureau. He is also a member of the board of trus tees, American Red Cross; exec utive .committee, Association of O&C counties; and the public land committee, .Association of Oregon Counties. He has been active in flood control work in southern Oregon. Judge Keating was born in Oregon City and grew up in Portland. He graduated from the University of Oregon and Northwestern college of Law. Pre-war business experience in cluded selling and public rela tions for. the petroleum indus try. , San Francisco 57 42 .02 Los Angeles 65 53 Phoenix 82 47 Denver . 68 40 Chicago 57 36 Miami 82 69 New York 47 36 . Washington, D. C 57 38 "A Lightning Strikes Home in Portland Portland (U.R) A bolt of lightning struck a northeast Portland residence yesterday in Oregon's potpourri of weather that also saw sunshine, rain, snow and freezing temperatures. A chimney of the. Sidney A. Murphy home was cut cleanly from the roof of the dwelling. Murphy at first blamed, a jet airplane for the mishap until it was learned that the .aircraft only happened to be flying over head at the time the lightning struck. WALL STREET New York (U.R) Railroad shares rose to new highs since Dec. 8 today on their best gains since Feb. 17. They outdid the industrials percentage wise although the in dustrial average rose to an all time record high. The incentive was a 6 per cent rise in freight rates granted after the market closed Friday. Utilities approached their bull market high too and were at their best level since July 29. Today's closing prices, on se lected stocks: American T & T 186 Anaconda 745,8 Chrysler 74 Vs Curtiss Wright-. 3134 General Electric 60Vs General Motors 45 Montgomery Ward 90V2 Penn R R 247s Penney J,C 99V2 Radio , 45 Southern Co 21V4 Southern Pacific 56 V4 S Oil of Calif 95 Transamerica 42 Tri-Continental . 27 United Aircraft 59 U S Rubber , 56 U S Steel 57 Youngstown unquoted PORTLAND LIVESTOCK Portland (UP) Cattle 1500. Av erage choice 1135 lb. fed steers 19; some 990-1090 lb. steers 18.50; choice 781 lb. led heifers 17; mostly choice grade 16.50; good heifers 15-16; can-ner-cutter cows mostly 8-9.50; lew to 10; utility cows 10.50-12; utility and commercial bulls 14-15; light cutter bulls down to 11. Calves 100. Choice vealers 26-30; good grades 21-25; culls downward to 8.50. Hogs 1100. U.S. No. 1 and 2 butch ers 15-15.25 for 180-235 lb. weights; No. 1, 2. and 3 grades around 14.50 14.75; few 300-460 lb. sows 11-12.50. Sheep 750. Mostly choice lambs 104-115 lbs. 19; choice with good end 18.25-18.50; other good - choice grades 17-18; utility to choice ewes 4.50 6.50. PORTLAND PRODUCE Portland (UP) Eggs To re tailers: Grade AA large. 54-55c; A large. 51-53c- AA medium, 49-52c; A medium, 49-50c; A small, 38-41C; car tons, 2-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA grade prints, 6c lb.; cartons, 67c; A prints, 66c; cartons. 67c; B prints. 64c. Cheese To retailers: A grade Cheddar, single daisies, 401,i-45'.jc; 5-lb. loaves. 461,2-4912C. Processed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 39-41c lb. FARM MARKET The season's first Mexican honey dew melons were offered to the trade on the Portland wholesale produce market today at $14.50 tor crates of 36s and 45s. Otherwise, price changes -were few and trading was moderately active. California broccoli was sharply low er than this ' time last month and most dealers were quoting wholesal ers within a $5.75-6 range for 28 bunches. There was a limited supply of winter squash. POULTRY, RABBITS LIVE CHICKENS To growers (No. 1 quality fob Portland): Fryers 2'i-4 lbs. 23c; at farm, 22c; roasters 23c lb. fob Portland; light hens. 18c; heavy hens 5 lbs. and up, 21c; old roo-ters, ll-14c. DRESSED CHICKENS No. 1 d.essed to retailers: Fryers. NY style, 36-37C lb.; whole drawn, 41-44c; cut up 45-49c; hens, light type. NY style, 30-31c; cutups, 40-43c; hens, heavy type. NY style, 35-36c; whole drawn, 44-47C. TURKEYS To producers: Fryer turkevs. live weights, 27c lb. DRESSED TURKEYS To retail ers nominally A grade young hens, 55-56c lb.; eviscerated, depending on a -eight; eviscerated fryer-roasters, 57c lb. - - - RABBITS (Average to growers, fob killing plant): Live white, 3i 4'i lbs. 23-26c; 5-6 lbs. 18-21c; color ed pelts, 4c under; old does, 10-14c lb. a few higher. Fresh killed fryers to retailers, 58-61C lb.; cutup, 62-65C. Use Tribune Want Ads Holland Hotel Wooden Shoe Restaurant Featuring Fine Food Reasonably Priced Open Daily 6:30 A.M. to Midnite Friendly Place to Dine" On The Side (Distributed by King With lightsome heartl pulled a rose That grew upon its thorny tree. But my false lover stole my rose. But, ah! He left the thern with me. Burns "Our kitchen is open for in spection." That notice should be on the menu card of every restaurant. That would compel cleanliness. Many people would not eat in the restaurants they do if they had a glimpse of the state of the kitchen in which the food is handled. Food poison ing is on the increase and much of it is due to dirty restaurant kitchens. Among the Married Birth planning continues to increase in popularity. Some people plan astrological births.' Others plan to have a certain pe riod between births. It is claim ed the best time of the year for a birth is in the spring. Dr. Al lan R. Dafoe once said, "Chil dren born in the spring have a low death rate in infancy. The Barnes Nominated To US Court of Appeals Washington (U.R) President Eisenhower today nominated Assistant Attorney General Stan ley N. Barnes to be a judge of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Mr. Eisenhower also nomi nated Dr. Leonard A. Scheele for another four-year term as sur geon general of the. Public Health Service. Barnes, a former judge of Los Angeles Superior Court, has headed the Justice Department's anti-trust division since 1953. He is a native of San Marino, Calif. He was nominated to succeed Judge William E. Orr who re tired Jan. 1. The ninth judicial' circuit covers the districts of California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, East ern Washington, Western Wash ington, Idaho, Arizona, and the territories of Alaska, Hawaii and Guam. Births BATEMAN To Mr. and Mrs. Peter, 3062 Table Rock rd., March 3, 1956, a boy, 54 pounds, at . Community hospital. SHOUP To Mr. and Mrs. Deronda, 741 West Jackson st., March 3, 1956, a girl, 7V4 pounds, at Community hospital. HUGHES To Mr. and Mrs, Cecil, 133 Mace rd., March 4, 1956, a girl, 6 pounds, at Com munity hospital. HECKERT To Mr. and Mrs. Donald, Jacksonville, March 4, 1956, a boy, SVz pounds, at Com munity hospital. McGEE To Mr. and Mrs. James, 474 Litway, Ashland, March 2, 1956, a girl, 7 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. KYKER To Mr. and Mrs. William, 861 Swing lane, March 2, 1956, a girl, 7 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. BOLAN To Mr. and Mrs. Carl, 41212 Crater Lake ave., March 3, 1956, a girl, 6V4 pounds at Sacred Heart hospital. PRICE To Mr. and Mrs. Roy. Box 151, Butte Falls, March 3. 1956, a boy, 7 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. MIDDLESWORTH To Mr. adn Mrs. .Elmer, route 2, box 170 A, Central Point, March 3, 1956, a boy, 9Vi pounds, at Sa cred Heart hospital. MOSS To Mr. and Mrs. James, Wiliams, March 4, 1956, a boy, 7V& pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. PORTLAND HAY, GRAIN Portland WHOLESALE HAY PRICES: No. 2 green alfalfa baled, fob Portland, $41-43 ton; some sales higher. WHOLESALES PRICES AS RE PORTED by the USDA market news service: Wheat. No. 2 soft white, S74 ton; No. 2 white oats, 38-lb. test, coast delivery, $53-54; No. 2 Western barley. $47.50 ton, fob Portland, coast delivery: soybean meal, S74.50 ton delivered Portland: standard millrun, S41-41.53 ton; No. 2 yellow ,corn. East ern shipments, fob Portland, $63. 1 Quart Delicious Vanilla Freeze and one 25c bag of Potato Chips given FREE with 6 of Wallie's better Ham burgers at 30e each or 6 of Wallie's better Cheese burgers at 35c each. 1 Pint of Delicious Vanilla Freeze and one 10c Bag of Potato Chips given FREE with 4 of Wallie's Better Ham burgers at 30c each or 4 of Wallie's Better Cheese burgers at 35c each. THEY TASTE BETTER BECAUSE THEY'RE MADE BETTER With SWIFT'S FRESH GROUND BEEF! Our Delicious Freeze May Be Bought Separately, PINT-30c; QUART-45c; Vi GALLON 85e TRY OUR HOME MADE PIES Open Eves. 4:30 to 7:30 Closed Sundays WALLIE'S CAFE 1236 No. Riverside Medford; Oregon 10 Years Same Owners Same Location By E. V. Durling Features Syndicate, Inc.) birth, of persons who achieve distinction rise to high propor-i tions in that season. Children born in the spring are more in telligent than those born in the j summer and still more so than' those born in the winter." j Bargain j wnai is me oest oargam you ever enjoyed as the result of a cut-rate war between rival or ganizations? At one time the cut rate battle between the Southern Pacific and Santa Fe railways reached such a point that a tick et from Chicago to Los Angeles could be bought for $1! Passing By Mary Pickford. This country's richest ex-actress. She was 14 when she made her first film which was titled, "Her First Bis cuits" and was directed by D. W. Griffith. Mary's salary was then $40 a week. It was Ben Grauman of San Francisco, father of Sid Grauman, ho first called Miss Pickford "America's Sweet heart." . . . Helen "Babe" Kane. The original boop-a-doop girl. Helen hit the peak of her popu larity in the late 1920s when she introduced the song . titled "That's My Weakness Now." Asking Queries from clients. Q. Who was "Cool Papa" Bell? My hus band says he was a trombone player. I claim he was a ball player. Do I get the nylons or does my : husband get the sto gies? A. You're right for a pair of nylons! "Cool Papa" Bell was one of the greatest of Negro ball players. Starred for the Home stead Grays. What is this coun try coming to when wives know more about baseball than their husbands. Horses and Women Many small women have great style sense. Innumerable petite females are superbly attired However, when it comes to mak ing those "best dressed women" lists, the tall females get all the breaks. The only short female ever, to be named "the best dressed woman in the world" is the Duchess of Windsor. She is about five 'feet and weighs around 100 pounds. So They Say Insofar as secretaries are con cerned, the most difficult bosses are those born under Cancer (June 22-July 23). Cancer males are extremely thrifty. Always thinking of how to cut down expenses when they should be thinking of how to increase business. They are system fanat ics. They love filing cabinets. They have a passion for punctu ality and punctuation. They never put off until morning a letter they can dictate at 4:45 p.m. All secretaries with Cancer bosses always have a large size package of aspirin tablets in their desks. Or, so say the star gazers. Hint to Husbands In his brilliant book of help ful hints on handling women, Leon Blum observed, "Never forget to make your wife believe you really love her or she will succumb to the natural tempta tion to try out her feminine powers on somebody else. A woman needs confirmation of her power." Stalin's Death Anniversary Ignored Moscow (U.R) The Soviet press today ignored the third anniversary of the death of the late Premier Josef Stalin whose one-man rule recently was crit icized by the Communist Party's 20th Congress. Instead, today's issue of the party organ, Pravda, carried a summary of an article written by East German Communist Leader Walter Ulbricht Sunday in which he accused Stalin of inflicting "severe damage" to tjie party and the Soviet Union. Fish 'n Chips and Jumbo, Fried Shrimp at McDuffie's COFFEE POT DRIVE-IN 1132 North Riverside FREE! FREE! TO TAKE OUT ONLY Kaiser Speedboat Flipsr Loses gecord . Honolulu :u.R) The Ha-waii-Kai, a speedboat owned by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser, today was rated good "only for firewood," in the wake of a spectacular fiipover when it seemed headed for a world un limited hydroplane record. The craft spun over yesterday cn Keehi Lagoon after it had attained a speed of 193 miles per hour. The driver, Kenneth St. Oegger, 34, was thrown clear of the thrashing boat and escap ed with a broken leg and a black eye. "He was way over the record when he dumped," said Kent Hitchcock of Ledo Isle, Calif., racing commissioner of the Am erican Power Boat Association. "There's no doubt about it if the boat had held together he would have had the world rec ord in the bag." Use Tribune Want Ads BREAKFAST AND LUNCH 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. NOW SHOWING Hepburn... Venice... IT l .... -A4n v uniorgettabie Adventurp! '- KATHARINE HEPBURN ROSSANO BRAZZI j Summertime mm N O W ! DOORS OPEN 6:45 P.M r-.. "i 'II" Trdtf 8LYN mnMourmtuum hctwi o ASH LAND PRINT BY TECHNICOLOR mm ncrukc "cSlorring LOUIS CALHEP.N HOTEL r Vj 5:30 to 9:00 P. M. Ic h w & Cranberry jj r.l ...... ... M ! w ititnia Ttim 1 TI u"'""""u wi plos 1 -GRANGER 1 M -TAYLOR '-U jO v NOLAN - PABFT frfSi Lucille BALL fttfit DesiARNAZ James MASON e plus e o o