I
Local and
Flue Fire Firemen at 1:25
p.m. Monday stood by while a
flue fire burned out at the Glenn
L. Rader residence, 1428 Crown
A: No damage was reported.
Flue Fire A flue fire at 8:20
p.m. at the E. E. Stezler resi
dence, 2114 East Jackson st., re
sulted in no damage, Medford
firemen said.
Inspection! City Fire Mar
shal Truman Nelson inspected
one office building and two busi
ness occupancies yesterday and
issued three orders for correction
of fire hazards.
Square Dance Square danc
ers interested have been invited
to attendo a dance Thursday,
March 22, from 8 to 11 p.m., in
the Medford YMCA. Doug Fos-
bury will be the caller.
Return Mr. and Mrs. G. A.
0 Koellner and children, Carl,
Sheryl and Eric, Sams Valley rd;,
have returned from a week's
motor trip to San Francisco.
Koellner is sales manager at Big
Pines Lumber company.
Card Party A card party,
open to the public, will be spon
sored by Roxy Ann Grange mem
bers at the hall Saturday, March
24 at 8 p.m. Prizes will be
awarded and refreshments
served.
Cited Robert Lewis Fergu
son, 21, Hilt, Calif., posted $25
bail with Medford police Satur
day night following his arrest
for reckless driving on Central
ave., between Main and Eighth
st. Police said the. youth was
participating in a drag race.
Garbage Truck Fire Firemen
. were called at 10:45 p.m. yester
day when garbage in the city
garbage truck ignited while it
was parked behind 1184 Court
st. The truck was unloaded and
firemen extinguished the blaze.
Origin of the fire was not known.
Coupe Damaged A coupe
owned by Harry Eckman, Seat
tle, was damaged some time
Monday or Tuesday when
struck by an unidentified vehi
cle while it was parked on Ha
ven st., according to Medford
ffl city police. A door of the coupe
was damaged, police were told.
Accident Vehicles operated
by Charles Edward White, 26,
Rogue River, and Frank L.
Spangler, 60, of 325 Ardmore
ave., Medford, collided at the
junction of old Crater Lake
highway and Buckshot Hill rd.
about 4:30 p.m. yesterday, ac
cording to state police. White
was cited for failure to yield
the right of way, police said.
Jeans and Janes A dance will
be held by the Jeans and Janes
Square Dance club Saturday,
March 24 beginning at 8:30 p.m.,
at Grants Pass in the Double J
barn on Gordon way. Potluck re
freshments will be served. Miss
Ruth Stillion of Coos Bay will
call. Miss Stillion has written
numerous square dance tunes
including "Somebody Goofted,"
and "Little Shoemaker."
From Meeting Mrs. Betti
Boyle, manager of the Jackson
hotel, arrived home Monday
night from Seattle, Wash., where
she attended a northwest region
al convention of the Hotel Greet
ers. Mrs. Boyle is vice-president
of the Oregon group. She visited
her son and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Adams, while in Seattle. She
also visited in Portland and
Salem.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our thanks to
the Central Point Rural Tire Dept.
and to our many friends for their
help and generosity when we had our
recent fire.
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Finnell
www.
NOMINATED
FOR
6 ACADEMY AWARDS!
togt KEITH Tom TULLT
II Ut ZUAl
PLUS ANOTHER AWARD NOMINEE IN
AN EPIC IN SCREEN MADNESS!
MU. II
Personal
Chest X-Ray The chest x-ray
unit will be open at the Sacred
Heart hospital Thursday be
tween 2 and 5 p.m., the Jackson
County Public Health associa
tion has announced.
Orchestra to Rehearse The
Philharmonic Society of South
ern Oregon will rehearse at 7:30
p.m. today in Washington school
gymnasium. Director R. D. Wer
ner urged members to attend.
Marshal Inspects Medford
fire marshal inspected three
business occupancies and one of
fice building Monday. Eight rec
ommendations and orders for
correction of hazardous condi
tions were issued.
Visit Mail Tribune Four
members of the Cub Scout Den
9 Pack 15 visited the Mail-Tribune
plant Tuesday afternoon.
Den mother is Mrs. Noweta Ven
cill. Members making the trip
included Roger Biddle, John
Barker, Stuart Vencill and Dale
Tompkins.
Business Names Carl A. and
Norma C. Morgan have retired
the assumed business name
Woodland Heights Market and
Lyle and Essie Barret have as
sumed the name. Bert R. and
Delia Hughes have retired the
assumed name The Motel Cafe
and Dorothy M. Weaver has as
sumed the name, according to
records in the county recorder's
office.
Visit Disneyland Mr. and
Mrs. R. A. Tilley and son Allen,
16, box 453, Jacksonville, were
among guests recently at the
American Dairy association ex
hibit in Disneyland. The Tilleys
own and operate a 60-acre farm
stocked with 123 Herefords and
27 Jersey cows. Milk from the
herd is marketed through Sni
der's Dairy, 154 Bartlett st. The
Tilleys are on a month's auto
trip.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Rich
ard Vinson, Eugene, are visiting
their parents this week. Mrs.
Vinson is the former Miss
Cheryle Cody, daughter of Mr
and Mrs. Herb Cody, 820 Penn
sylvania ave. She is a former
office staff member of the First
National bank here. She now is
employed in the Eugene branch.
Vinson is a senior in predental
school at the University of Ore
gon. His parents are Mr. and
Mrs. C.'J. Vinson, 1204 Niantic
st. The couple arrived Monday
and plan to leave this week end.
Taking Trip G. O. Sanden,
304 South Central ave., left
March 13 to visit friends and
relatives in several parts of the
United States. He has been
visiting in Los Angeles, Comp
ton and Riverside, Calif., and
attended the National Orange
show at San Bernadino, Calif.
He will go to San Diego, Calif.,
to visit his son, Gage, and fam
ily. Sanden plans to see friends
in several Texas towns and to
visit his daughter Eunice at
Laredo, Tex. He will also visit
friends in Houston, Minn., Mis
souri, Wisconsin and in Dunn
county, North Dakota where he
was county assessor before mov
ing to Oregon. Sanden will re
turn to Oregon via the northern
route, some time in May.
Navy Secretary Received
By President of Cuba
Havana, Cuba (U.R) Presi
dent Fulgencio Batista received
U.S. Secretary of the Navy
Charles Thomas Tuesday.
Thomas stopped here briefly
en route to the American naval
base at Guantanamo where he
will participate in exercises of
the Navy's latest atomic war
fleet units.
I rtiotoyophed m EASTMAN COLOR
tun
UP BABY
mm
News About
Servicemen
ATOMIC DEFENSE SCHOOL
Cpl. Loyal D. Severson, son of
Simon P. Severson, 303 Garfield
st., graduated recently from the
atomic, biological and chemical
defense school at the El Toro
Marine Corps Air station, Santa
Ana, Calif.
COMPLETES BASIC
A3c William James White,
son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. White
of Eagle Point, completed his
basic training at Parks Air Force
Base March 5. He left March 16
by plane for Amarillo, Tex.,
where he will attend jet me
chanic school for 15 weeks
training.
REENLISTS
Sgt. 1c Jack L. Patterson, son
of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Patterson,
626 West Second st., recently
reenlisted for six years in the
regular Army while serving at
Fort Mason, Calif. Patterson
originally entered the Army in
1943 and is now a photographer
with the area service unit. His
decorations include the bronze
star, purple heart, good conduct
medal and the European, Afri
can, Middle Eastern campaign
ribbon. His wife, Lilly, lives in
Marin City, Calif.
GRADUATES
Jack W. Gardner, mechanic
construction apprentice, son of
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Gardner,
1730 Camp Baker rd., recently
graduated from the Navy's con
struction mechanic's school at
Port Hueneme, Calif. He has
been assigned to Mobile Con
struction Battalion 11 at Kwa-
jalein, Marshall Islands. Before
entering the service in July 1955
he graduated from Phoenix High
school.
IN LONDON
Navy Lt. Ben R. Schmidt, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Ben H. Schmidt,
3490 South Pacific highway,
Medford, is serving as exchange
officer at headquarters of the
eastern Atlantic and Mediterran
ean Naval forces in London. Pre
viously, he served as logistics
and supply officer of a mine
squadron at Charleston, S. C.
Mobilgas Cars Move
For Grand Junction
Salt Lake City U.P.) Nine
teen new stock cars left Salt
Lake City before dawn today on
the next to last leg of the 1956
Mobilgas economy run.
The 19, led by Mel Alsbury of
Hollywood in an Imperial South
ampton, were due in Grand
Junction, Colo., 288 miles away,
tonight. The run is scheduled
to end tomorrow noon in Colo
rado Springs.
Trie number of cars was pared
down by one yesterday as heavy
traffic brought one car into Salt
Lake City two minutes after the
deadline. Four other drivers
missed being dropped from the
run by squeezing in with less
than a minute's time left.
Alsbury posted a gasoline
consumption figure of 21.48
miles per gallon and a ton-mile
average of 62.67 for the 888
mile trip from Los Angeles to
Salt Lake City.
Illness Postpones
State Graft Hearing
Salem (U.R) A grand
jury investigation of charges of
graft in state institutions will
be postponed at least until to
morrow due to "the illness of a
grand juror.
District Attorney Kenneth
Brown said the delay precluded
an end to the investigation this
week. Testimony has been com
pleted on Fairview home and a
probe of the state hospital will
continue when the grand jury
reconvenes.
Law does not provide for an
alternate juror in cases of ill
ness. Daily Weather Report
Sunset tonight 6:24 p.m. Sunrise to
morrow 6:12 a.m.
Medford and vicinity: Cloudy and
mild tonight and Thursday with
chance of occasional light showers.
Low tonight 38. High Thursday 55.
Western Oregon: Mostly cloudy to
night and Thursday. Scattered show
ers tonight. Continued rain likely
Thursday afternoon. Continued mild
but slightly cooler coast section to
night. Low tnight 40-46. High Thurs
day 48-58.
Northern California: Cloudy in
north portion. Occasional rain Ukiah
and Redding northwestward tonight
and a few showers Thursday. Cooler
northern interior Thursday.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
44: below normal 4.
Record high this date 82 in 1939.
Record low this date 24 in 1912.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to mid
night, none. Midnight to 10 a.m., none.
Total this month 1.29 inch, .21 inch
above normal.
Total since Sept. 1. 27.76 inches,
13.72 inches above normal.
Humidity: Lowest yesterday 475J,
highest this a.m. 95.
CITY High Low Prec.
Brookings 52 50
Crater Lake 33 27
Grants Pass 64 38 T
Klcmath Falls 57 39
MEDFORD 57 33
Portland 47 44 .48
Seattle 45 43 .44
Spokane 44 35 .09
Yakima 50 38 .11
Eureka 61 52
Red Bluff 65 45
Sacramento 69 44
San Francisco 60 43
Los Angeles 71 54
Phoenix 80 50
Denver 53 32
Chicago 45 28
Miami , 65 44
New York 39 29
Washington, D.C. 41 29
Anti-Morse Reply
Expected Friday
Salem UP.) Attorney Gen
eral Robert Y. Thornton said to
day an answer to the summons
calling for elimination of the
name of Sen. Wayne Morse from
the Democratic party primary
would be filed in Marion county
Circuit Court here by Friday.
The complaint and summons
was turned over to Thornton by
Secretary of State Earl T. New-
bry and Gov. Elmo Smith on
whom it was served yesterday.
Woodrow Wilson Smith, a
Hood River Democrat who op
poses Morse in the primary,
charged it was his "information
and belief Wayne Morse is not in
fact a Democrat in good faith
but is instead a Republican."
Smith asked either that
Morse's name be withheld from
the ballot or that the governor
and secretary of state appear in
court to show cause why the
name should not be withheld.
Smith will act as his own
attorney.
Reductions of Load
Limits Are Listed
Load limit reduction which
went into effect on Highway 66
between Ashland and ( Klamath
Falls recently was 50 per cent
on the maximum gross load
only, according to J. G. Brom
ley, in charge of highway main
tenance for Jackson and Joseph
ine counties.
The maximum gross load on
the Green Springs highway now
is 36,000 pounds, compared to
72,000 pounds previously. Other
reductions were from 16,000 to
11,000 pounds gross on any sin
gle axle, and from 32,000 to 20,
000 pounds gross on any pair of
tandem axles.
The reduction is between mile
post 34.3, at Klamath county
line, east to mile post 59.08, at
the junction of Highways 66 and
97. Load limits were reduced
because freezing and thawing
weather caused considerable
damage from heavy traffic, ac
cording to state police.
Potato Marketing
Agreement Displeases
Bakersfield, Calif. (U.R)
Governors of two potato-growing
states disagreed over the de
sirability of a proposed federal
potato marketing agreement now
before Congress.
Gov. Robert E. Smylie of
Idaho, a Republican, said grow
ers should not rush into the
agreement without first consid
ering what effect government
controls would have on the in
dustry. Democratic Gov. Edmund S.
Muskie of Maine, Idaho's chief
competitor on the nation's Rus
set potato market; said the pro
posed legislation would benefit
his state. He said the agreement
would result In better market
quality.
The two chief executives yes
terday addressed 2000 delegates
attending the final session of the
12th annual Kern County Potato
Growers association convention.
Smylie said he doubted that
Congress could write a law
which would impose the same
controls on the potato industry
in all states without penalizing
some states to the advantage of
others.
Defense Attorneys
Wage Alabama Fight
Montgomery, Ala. (U.R)
A battery of Negro defense at
torneys began efforts today" to
counter the state's case against
the Rev. M. L. King, first of
90 accused Montgomery Ne
groes to be tried for violating
Alabama's anti-boycott law.
The Negroes, indicted as a re
sult of the mass 14-week boy
cott of Montgomery city buses,
are to be tried separately be
fore Circuit Judge Eugene Car
ter for violation of the little
used 1931 statute. They waived
jury trial.
The prosecution completed its1
case against King today and
Carter overruled a defense mo
tion to throw the case out of
court.
Death Takes OSC
Assistant Dean
Corvallis U.R) Laurence E.
Darlington, 55, assistant dean of
men at Oregon State college,
died today in a local hospital.
He had suffered a heart attack
March 11.
Darlington was known as
"Sarge" to thousands of OSC
graduates. He was sergeant in
structor in the Army ROTC pro
gram here from 1921 to 1940.
National
KRAUT
and
TnD MftTrU r
-net i'a
NLRB Starts Hearings
On Election at Salem
Salem U.R) The National
Labor Relations board started
hearings today to determine if
an election should be held on
making an independent union
the official bargaining agency
for workers of the Valley Motor
company here.
Budget Move Creates
Canada Gold Market
Ottawa (U.R) A free
market for gold became wide
open tu Canadian mines today
if they want it.
Surprise changes in Finance
Minister Salter Harris' budget
last night created the free mar
ket. They also would allow
hoarding by individuals, but the
government's experts expected
little of that sort of thing.
Any mine agreeing to forego
its aid under the emergency gold
mining assistance act will be
able to sell its gold wherever
it wants to. It will be subject
only to reporting its production
and sales to the Finance depart
ment. The return to a free market,
on an elective basis, means the
first free sale of gold by Can
adian mines since 1931. Fi
nance Department experts told
reporters, however, that they
would be "surprised if this
makes any great change in the
present situation."
Wall Street
New York (U.R) Stocks en
countered their first real opposi
tion to advance today since Pres
ident Eisenhower said "yes" on
Feb. 29.
The industrial department,
best gainer, was the hardest hit.
The rails lost only a shade, and
utilities advanced a few cents.
Westinghouse opened on a
half-point rise. Later it sold off
to a loss of IVi and then regained
a bit of the loss.
Elsewhere the market ranged
between a loss of nearly three
points in Du Pont to a gain of
3Vz in Zenith Corp. Many spe
cials gained.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T 184V4
Anaconda 82V4
Chrysler 77
Curtiss Wright 3034
General Electric unquoted
General Motors unquoted
Montgomery Ward unquoted
Penn R R v 24
Penney J C 97 Vz
Radio 49
Southern Co 22
Southern Pacific 57
S Oil of Calif 98V4
Transamerica - 39
Tri-Continental 27
United Aircraft 70
U S Rubber 58
U S Steel .'. 58
Youngstown 101
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Portland (U.P.) Cattle 450. Choice
1028 lb. fed steers S20; 1243 lb. most
lv choice steers S19; good steers S18
18.75; choice 857 lb. fed heifers $18.65.
796 lb. S18.50, sorted S17; good S16.50
17.50; utility-commercial heifers
S10.50-16; canner-cutter cows S8-10;
utility $10.50-13 with commercial
potato 'fed cows S14.
Calves 50. Good vealer $20-24 with
choice to S28.
Hogs 300. U.S. 1 and 2 180-235 lb.
barrows and gilts $16-16.50; No. 3
around $15.25; individual 380 lb. sow
S12.50.
Sheep 150. Choice fed wooled lambs
$19-19.25; good-choice slaughter
lambs mostly $17-18; cull-good ewes
$2.50-6.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (U.P.) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large, 55c; A large, 52
53c: A medium, 50-52c; A medium,
50-51c; A small, 38-41c; cartons, 2-3c
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, single daisies, 40 ',-!-45V2C; 5-lb.
loaves, 46 ',2-49 "ic Processed Ameri
can cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 39-41c lb.
Farm Market -
One load of Wenatchee Delicious
apples moved out from a "local- whole
sale house at $550 a box today; onion
sets packed in one pound cartons
were offered retailers at 2.45 a dozen.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers (No. 1
qualitv f.o.b. Portland!: Fryers. 21,i-4
lbs., 23c; at farm. 22c; roasters, 23c
lb. f.o.b." Portland; light hens, 18-20c;
heavy hens, 5 lbs. and up, 21-23c; old
roosters. ll-14c.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers, New York style, 36
37c lb.; whole drawn, 41-43c; cut up,
45-49c; hens, light type, New York
style, 30-31c; cutups. 41-44c; hens,
heavy type. N.Y. style, 36c; whole
drawn, 44-47C.
Turkeys To producers: Fryer tur
keys, live weights, 27c rb.
Dressed Turkeys To retailers nom
inally A grade young hens, 55-56c lb;
eviscerated, depending on weight;
eviscerated fryer-roasters, 57c lb.
Rabbits (Average to growers, f.o.b.
killing plant): Live white, 33,i-4",i lbs.,
23-26c; 5-6 lbs.. 18-21c; colored pelts,
4c under; old does, 10-14c lb., a few
higher. Fresh killed fryers to retailers,
58-61C lb.; cut up, 62-65c.
PORTLAND HAY, GRAIN
Portland Wholesale hay prices:
No. 2 green alfalfa, baled, f.o.b. Port
land, S43-46 ton; some sales higher.
Wholesale prices as reported by the
USDA market news service; Wheat,
No. 2 soft white. S74.50 ton; No. 2
white oats, 38-lb. test. Coast delivery,
S53.50-55; No. 2 Western barley,
S49.50 ton, f.o.b. Portland Coast de
livery; soybean meal. S75 ton deliv
ered Portland: standard millrun
S40.50-41 ton: No. 8 yellow corn, East
ern shipments f.o.b. Portland, $66.25
ton. !
and it's better
at the
Top Notch
A EC Next to Craterian
Beauty Shop
Wednesday, March 21. 1958
Man Sentenced to
Year in Penitentiary
Kenneth A. Sheldon was sen
tenced in circuit court this
morning to three years in the
Oregon state penitentiary on a
sodomy charge.
Sheldon was returned to Jack
son county Friday from Oregon
state hospital to face sentencing.
He earlier pleaded guilty to the
charge.
Paul Leon Jacks, 21, Gold
Hill, pleaded innocent to a
charge of burglary not in a
dwelling, and Frank Close,
Grants Pass, pleaded innocent
to a charge of grand larceny.
Earth Satellite
Appropriation OK'd
Washington (U.R) An extra
appropriation of 5795,768,823
breezed through the House today
without a record vote.
It included 829,262,000 for
work on a dozen Earth satellites
and funds to carry other govern
ment functions through the pres
ent fiscal year to June 30.
A demand for a roll call de
layed its passage yesterday.
When it was called up today the
demand was not repeated and
the measure was'passed by voice
vote. The bill now goes to the
Senate.
Terrific Blast Rocks
Plant in Schenectady
Schenectady, N.Y. (U.R)
A terrific explosion rocked a
four-story chemical building at
the General Electric company
plant here today. One man was
killed and another was still
missing 12 hours later.
Thirteen persons were injur
ed. Fire followed the explosion
and wrecked the interior of the
structure.
Damage was estimated at S7,
500,000. 8,000 Japanese Homeless
As Fire Destroys Homes
Tokyo (U.R) A raging
fire destroyed 1,482 homes in
the Japanese sea coast town of
Noshiro today, leaving an esti
mated 8,000 persons homeless.
The flames, fanned by brisk
winds, spread rapidly and razed
the city's business section. There
were no reports of deaths, but
12 were injured. 'Noshiro is a
city of 50,000 population in
northern Akita Prefecture.
$700 000 Authorized
For Oregon Flood Relief
Washington '(U.R) Presi
dent Eisenhower today author
ized the Civil Defense adminis
tration to spend" $700,000 for
new flood relief in Oregon. The
President previously authorized
$650,000 for the same purpose.
TONITE Widmark
ISSHOI
WAS THE SIXTH MAN THE SECRET
TO THE FIVE EMPTY GRAVES?
il
The answer
il
Print by
St-Umf
IB
. fill
ft ffi . A
RICHARD WIDMARK DONNA REED
eotterini WILLIAM CAMPBELL JOHN MclNTIRE S
PLUS fflplib
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE FIFTEEN
Obituary
HAZEL SAMUELSON
Mrs. Hazel Samuelson, Brook
ings, died last night in a local
hospital. Conger-Morris funeral
home is in charge of arrange
ments. Survey of Denfal
Health Planned
A dental health survey among
first, third, fifth and seventh
grade students at Ashland and
Medford schools will be con
ducted between April 9 and 20,.
public health officials have an
nounced. The survey is designed to
give objective data concerning
the extent of dental health prob
lems among the children here
and to determine the extent of
dental care the children have
received.
The survey is under joint
sponsorship of the Southern
Oregon Dental society, Jackson
county health department,
County Public Health associa
tion and Ashland and Medford
schools.
Dr. David Witter, dental con
sultant with the state board of
health, will work with local
dentists in conducting the ex
aminations. Data concerning the number
of missing teeth, filled teeth
and decayed teeth will be noted.
Decision to conduct the sur
vey was reached Monday after
noon at a meeting of representa
tives from the sponsoring groups
called by Dr. Earl C. Carter,
president of the Southern Ore
gon Dental society.
in His Toughest
waited in a
woman j
TTechnlcolor
; HOTEL i
j V j 5:30 to 900 P. M.
l TENDERLOIN I
I VEAL CUTLETS J
I $TI50
It Mushroom II I
Sauce I
"""breakfast
f AND LUNCH
y 7 -m. to 2 p.m.
Role!
Fish 'n Chips and
Jumbo Fried Shrimp
at McDuffie's
COFFEE POT
DRIVE-IN
1132 North Riversid
Samuel Goldwyn's
Picture of the Year . . .
America's Own
Jean Simons
Frank Sinatra
In Cinemascope and Color
Written for the Screen and Directed by t
Joseph LMankiewicz,
I DISTRIBUTED BY M-G-l
NOW!
Doors Open 6:45 P.M.
GATES OPEN 6:30 P.M.
r &'imM-ri 2 556?
TONITE Tf.s
A Woman Branded Him
Savage... Hired Killer!
PLUS
Glenn Ann
FORD SHERIDAN
Zodiary SCOTT jmX
T
U
o ASH LAN Do
TONITE & THURSDAY
"Europe's biggest
SEX BOMB
in an all-out
tYBincmum
Time Mag.
GjNA
L0LL0BRIGIDA
bread"
loco
DREAMS
VITTORIO DE SICA
rnfetd t t Grni
KncM tr liifi CcbwcM ;
Low in Cost!
QUICK and EASY!
Use Tribune Want Ads
fptJYS
v a Marlon Brando
LLHES
fl ROBERT M IF '
MITCHUM X
1 BEL GEDDES .
Vl PRESTO Nf
VI if! WAl" ik ?M
Ml
j