Local and
From Vacation Mr. and Mrs.
Swayne A. Jensen, 1036 West
13th St., arrived home last week
end from a three-week vacation
trip to Iowa, Illinois and Mis
souri. They visited relatives.
The Jensens formerly lived in
Iowa.
Mercy Flight George E.
Terry, Agness, was flown from
there to Grants Pass yesterday
for treatment of a heart condi
tion. The flight was made in
a Mercy Flight, Inc., air ambu
lance from Medford. He was the
494th patient flown by the non
profit air ambulance corpora
tion. Clothes Ignite Firemen were
called to the Richard Fanger
home, 7 Windsor ave., about 7:20
yesterday when contents of an
automatic clothes dryer were
ignited. Damage was confined
to the dryer, firemen said. Seven
gasoline spills were flushed from
around parked cars in downtown
Medford during the week end.
Gets Office Sally J. Harris
Medford has been named senate
secretary of the Associated Stu
dents of Oregon State college.
The senate is the main govern
ing body of ASOSC and includes
members, representatives, and
leaders of all major campus ac
tivities. Miss Harris, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Lester O. Har
ris of 707 South Oakdale ave.,
Medford, is a junior majoring
in elementary education at OSC.
She is a 1953 graduate of Med
ford high school.
ind School Students
On Summer Vacation
The two Medford students who
attend the Oregon State School
for the Blind arrived home
Thursday for summer vacation.
They are Jeanne Levtzow, 9,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. H.
Levtzow, 517 Western ave., and
Douglas Daniels, 6, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Daniels, 560 Char
lotte Anne rd.
The Levtzow's daughter has
Just completed the fourth grade
and has attended the school dur
ing the full four school years.
The Daniels' son, entered the
school as a kindergarten student
last fall when he was 5V4, the
age at which they accept stu
dents at the school.
Obituaries
ROBERT LARSEN
Robert Larscn died Sunday
evening in Portland. Funeral
services are pending at Perl
Funeral home.
JOHN D. GUSTANDAS
- John D. Gustandas, 66, for
merly of Phoenix, Ariz., died
Sunday in the Camp White
domiciliary. Conger-Morris fu
neral home is in charge of
funeral arrangements.
JOHN GROVE
The remains of John Gerald
Grove, of Grants Pass, who was
killed instantly Friday after
noon while loading a log truck,
is being forwarded today by
Conger-Morris funeral home to
Red Oak, Iowa, for services and
interment.
Mr. Grove was born Feb. 17,
1919, in Red Oak, Iowa. ,
Survivors include his mother,
Mrs. J. G. Grove, Red Oak,
Iowa.
MARY E. NORTHRUP
Private funeral ' services will
be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday at
Perl Funeral home for Mrs.
Mary E. Northrup, 86, who died
in a local hospital Sunday eve
ning. Mrs. Northrup, who has lived
in MedforcWor the past 15 years,
was born in Indiana on March
26, 1870. She is survived by one
daughter, Mrs. G. W. Jacobs, Val
lejo, Calif.
Committal will be at Siskiyou
Crematorium. The family has re
quested no flowers be sent.
HOW! SOW!
Per
Car
Bring the Whole
Family!
1
Personal
School Oregon State police
will hold a school on disarming
and allied subjects on Tuesday
in the city council room from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Visits Lunetta Bussey, for
mer secretary in the district at
torney's office, was in Medford
today visiting friends and rela
tives. She is now a court record
er in Portland.
Inspections City Fire Mar
shal Truman Nelson inspected
five business occupancies and
one place of public assembly Fri
day and issued five orders for
correction of hazards.
Permit issued W. A. Singler,
1626 Woodlawn" dr., was issued
a building permit Friday to con
struct a $1,300 temporary stor
age building at 512 North Cen
tral ave.
Collision Vehicles operated
by Ralph Wendle Weir, rt. 1,
box 375, Medford, and. Gary
Ronald West, Jacksonville, were
involved in a collision Sunday
at the intersection of Alice and
Niantic sts., according to Med
ford police. No citations or in
juries were reported.
At Osteopathic. Michael
Bortolazzo, 8, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Mario Bortolazzo, Jackson
ville, had major surgery Satur
day at Osteopathic hospital, at
tendants reported today. Susan
Woodcock, 4, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. L. E. Woodcock, Grants
Pass, and Michael Witt, 7, son
of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Witt, route
1, box 33, Ashland, had minor
surgery there today.
i
At Sacred Heart New surg
ery patients reported today at
Sacred Heart hospital are Sher
ril Lee and Carol Ann Simmons,
twin daughters of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Simmons, Central Point;
John Stromberg, 343 North
Main st., Ashland; Harvey
Smith, Glendale, Ore.; Mrs.
Faye Williams, 1874 Camp Bak
er rd.; Mrs. Bruce Gruelle, Ash
land, and Mrs. Virginia Cannell,
Ashland. Reported there for
medical care today are Charles
Bresland, DV4 months, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Omar Bresland,
Central Point, and David Jen
kins, Trail.
Camp White Man
Hurt in Car Mishap
Eueene EL Cloutier. 73. Camp
White, was treated and released
early Sunday at Community hos
pital as the result of injuries
received in. a three-car accident
at 12:05 a.m. on Highway 62
near Agate rd., according to re
ports from the hospital and
state police.
The accident occurred when
the car Cloutier was driving
north cut left of the center strip
and into the southbound lane
of traffic, striking a car driven
by Alvin LeRoy Babcock, 49,
of 1427 Lawnridge dr., police
explained.
A third car approached from
the south and struck one of the
cars and apparently hit Cloutier,
who was standing with Babcock
on the edge of the highway, ac
cording to police.
The third car was driven by
Roy L. Long, 54, Shady Cove,
who was accompanied by his
wife and a daughter, Mrs.
Phyllis Pruess, Grants Pass.
Neither Babcock nor occu
pants of Long's car were report
ed injured. .
A LITTLE MODESTY
Oldham, England (U.R) The
model who played Lady Godiva
before 15,000 gaping spectators
Saturday was supposed to wear
flesh-colored tights under her
flowing hair.. She didn't. But
Andrea Delayne still didn't play
the part in the same costume as
Lady Godiva, who played it
wearing just a smile and nothing
else. When her boy friend for
got to bring along the tights,
Miss Delayne made the Lady
Godiva ride wearing pink undies.
Daily Weather Report
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair through
Tuesday with rising temperatures: Low
tonicht 43. High Tuesday 82.
Western Oregon: Fair and warmer
through Tuesday. Low tonight 40-SO.
High Tuesday 75-85 inland and 65-70
on coast.
Northern California: Fair through
Tuesday but with increasing coastal
fog.
LOCAL DATA
TemDerature: Mean yesterday 52:
below normal 9. Record high this
date. 31 in 1931. Record low this date.
34 in 1929.
PreciDitation: 24 hours to midnight
none: midnight to 10 a.m.. none. To
tal this month. 3.99 in.. 2.93 in. above
normal. Total since Sept. 1. 32.41 in.,
15.68 in. above normal.
Humidity: Lowest yesterday, 39;
highest this a.m. SS'v.
City
Hi Lo Pree.
Brookings
Crater Lake ...
Grants Pass ...
Klamath Falls .
MEDFORD
Portland
68 50
46 28
65 39
. 61 38
. 63 38
58 45
.02
Seattle
Spokane
Y?kima ..
. 63 43
. 71 48
. 76 48
Eureka
Red Bluff
Sacramento
San Francisco .
Los Angeles
55 45
. 80 57
82 57
. 8 47
65 56
Phoenix .
Denver
Chicaso
Miami
New York
Washington. D. C.
92 63
. 5 4g
. 77 53
. 79 73
. 63 58
. 67 64
8th Graders Set
Promotion Event
Central Point Promotion ex
ercises will be held for 121
eighth grade students of Central
Point Junior High school at 8
p.m., Tuesday, at the school
gymnasium.
Scholarship awards will be
presented by Don Patterson,
chairman of the board of direc
tors of school district 6. School
Supt. H. P. Jewett will present
diplomas to the 121 graduates.
Principal C. A. Meyer will
deliver the graduation address.
The Rev. Donald Whitney, pastor
of the Church of Christ, will
give the invocation. Four band
numbers will be presented dur
ing the evening by the junior
high band directed by Harry
Meyers.
-Crater High school held its
baccalaureate exercises for the
class of 1956 yesterday in the
school gymnasium.
The Rev. Whitney delivered
the baccalaureate sermon and
The Rev. Paul O. Kroon gave
the invocation and benediction.
The varsity choir and the high
school band presented four
numbers.
Driver Gets Citation
Following Accident
Deward Edward Greenwood,
31, Crater hotel, Medford.. was
cited for failure to operate on
the rieht side of the highway
Sunday after his vehicle collid
ed on highway 60 with another
car operated by Thomas Clay
ton Anderson. 31. of 709 West
Jackson st., state police said.
The accident occurred at 8:zz
p.m.
State officers said Greenwood
was traveling north on the high
way when he apparently went to
sleep, crossed the center line and
collided head-on with Anderson's
southbound car.
Polly Anderson, 31, a passen
ger in Anderson's car, suffered
minor cuts and bruises, but was
not taken to the hospital. No
one else was injured, state police
reported.
Woman Aids Police
In Capturing Husband
Middleburv. Vt. (U.R) A
pretty waitress who aided police
in th rsntnrp of her husband
today debated whether to -stand
beside him when he faced mur
der charges.
William E. Boswell. 36. was
captured here Saturday by state
nolicp who were tiDDed about
his' arrival by his wife, Arlene.
Boswell's arrest ended a In
state hunt which began after
the body of blonde Philadelphia
heiress Mrs. Anne .Karris van
Ryne, 23, was found in his
Carson City, Nev., apartment.
Police said Mrs. Van Ryne
had been strangled and stuffed
in a closet. The woman, about
four months pregnant, had ap
parently been cnoked witn a
belt found beneath her partially-
clad body. .
Two Added To FBI's
List oi Most Wanted
Washington U.R) Two vic
ious gunmen, one of them who
will "kill without provocation,"
were added today to the FBI's
"ten most wanted" list.
The fugitives are Carmine di
Biase, a New York City killer,
and Eugene Newman, a "trigger
happy" bandit who shot his way
out of a police trap in Buffalo,
N. Y., last year.
The pair replaced two mem
bers of the Boston Brink's rob
bery gang, James Faherty and
Thomas Richardson, who were
captured by FBI agents two
weeks ago in Dorchester,- Mass.
Di Biase is wanted for the kill
ing of Michael Erreciello in a
lower east side social club in
1951 as the victim slept in a
chair.
Newman was one of three men
who attempted to hold up an
armed car in Buffalo last August.
Bulganin Expects Tito
Visit To Be Fruitful
Moscow U.R) Premier Niko
lai Bulganin said Sunday at a
diplomatic reception the Soviet
Union has the "best expecta
tions" for the forthcoming visit
of Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia.
The premier told newsmen,
"We expect this visit will serve
to strengthen the development of
relations between our countries.''
The Yugoslav president arrives
here early in June.
A false fire alarm resulted in
panic that cost 72 lives in a hall
at Calumet, Mich., on Christmas
day in 1913. -
The oldest established
restuarant in Medford
operated continuously for
29 years in same location.
Top Notch Cafe
Nxl t Criteria Beauty Shop
Nine Forest Fires 1
Sweep Oven England
London U.R) Nine forest
fires swept through England's
parched thatched-roof country
yesterday and today, threaten
ing towns and blocking com
munications. The worst blaze laid 2,000
acres waste in Dorset, some 100
miles southwest of London end
famed as the "Wessex" country
of Thomas Hardy's novels. Some
of the fires were expected to
burn for several more days.
A 60-foot wall of flame swept
up to the little village of Ware
ham in Dorset early today but a
sudden shift in the wind avert
ed disaster and the village was
saved.
Nearly 400 firemen, airmen,
soldiers and townspeople turned
out to beat down the last flames
that had cut off the picturesque
little village on three sides.
Winds, sometimes of gale
force, swept the flames over the
hills with the sound of a jet
plane.
Work Catches Up
With Ex-President
Florence, Italy U.R) Harry
S. Truman's former job caught
up with him today.
America's No. 1 European
tourist had to go to work at a
desk piled high with the letters
that come to a former president.
He planned to get his work
done through the morning, later
turning once more to sightsee
ing. Mr. and Mrs. Truman drove
Sunday to Fiesole, a town over
looking Florence and stopped
briefly at the baptistry of the
Florentine cathedral.
The cathedral is famous for
its beautiful door known as "the
door of paradise." Mr. Truman
looked at it and told his group,
"I hope to get in some day."
Communist Paper OKs
'Robinson Crusoe'
Berlin (U.R) The Communist
party newspaper Neues Deutsch
land has given its approval to
Daniel Defoe's "Robinson Cru
soe" as a progressive tale.
Although Neues Deutschland
criticized the novel as "Utopi
an," it said Crusoe was progres
sive in that he outlawed canni
balism. Washington (U.R) The
House Committee on Un-Ameri
can Activities announced it has
summoned Paul Robeson, left
wine Neero basso, to testify
Tuesday in its investigation of
passport irregularities by com
munist sympathizers. Henry Wil
cox of New York and Otto Na
than, executor of the estate of
the late Albert Einstein, also
will appear as witness.
BIRTHS
'CARTER To Mr. and Mrs.
Loren, 204 West Ninth st., May
28, 1956, a girl, IV2. pounds, at
Community hospital.
DOYLE To Mr. and Mrs.
Charles, 320 South Holly st.,
May 26, 1956, a girl, 6V4 pounds,
at Community hospital.
ROBERTSON To Mr. and
Mrs. Wilmer, 1517 Wilson pi-
May 27, 1956, a boy, 8Vi pounds,
at Community hospital.
LARSON To Mr. and Mrs.
Robert, Box 69, Prospect, May
27, 1956, a boy, 7Vfe pounds, at
Community hospital.
KROTZ To Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel, 965 Siskiyou blvd., Ash
land, May 27, 1956, a girl, 13A
pounds, at Community hospital.
COSTELOW To Mr. and
Mrs. Albert James, Box 423,
Talent, May 27, 1956. a girl. 7Vi
pounds, at Community hospital.
HANSHEW To Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur, 211'i North Columbus
ave.. May 27, 1956, a boy, 8Vi
pounds, at Community hospital.
DOWNEY To Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald, 240 Berrydale ave., May
28, 1956, a boy, 7V4 pounds, at
Community hospital.
TONIGHT!
Here for a limited engagement . . .
MERCURY
RECORDING STARS
Wallace & Coffee
Y-euuii
First Show at -10 P.M.
for your dancing pleasure . .
SATCH & HIS TRIO!
(Tonight Only)
DINING ROOM OPEN 5 P.M.
U. S. "Choice" Grade A Steaks
They're delicious'
Special Children's Portions
15 in Medford Area
To Receive Degrees
Corvallis Fifteen students
from the Medford area will re
ceive degrees at Oregon State
college's 87th annual commence
ment on June 4.
OSC will confer 1106 degrees
this year, including a record of
68 doctor's degrees, 179 master's
degrees, 858 bachelor's degrees,
and one professional, civil en
gineering degree. Six students
will get two degrees.
President A. L. Strand will
confer the degrees and deliver
his annual message at 10 a.m., to
assure maximum seating for rel
atives and visitors.
Students from this area and
their degrees include: Janet
Louise Coyle, bachelor of agri
culture; Sue Carolyn Harris, ba
chelor of business and technolo
gy; Fidelia J. Boone, bachelor of
home economics; Ruth Ann Hart,
bachelor of home economics; Mi
chael Webster Wood, bachelor
of agriculture; John Louis De
Zell and George Raymond Dits
worth, bachelor of science; Jack
Duane Pfeifer, bachelor of edu
cation; William Glover Padgham,
bachelor's degree in forestry;
Frederick Wilson Moeller,
James Ellis Lattie, and James
Miller Hutchison, receive bach
elor of agriculture 'degrees; Jack
Pratt,- bachelor of engineering
degree; and William Walter
Smith, master's degree of educa
tion. Roy Lee Rogers will graduate
with honors and will receive a
bachelor of engineering degree.
Driver Credits Belt
In Injury Escape
The George Polski family, 913
King st., Medford, today cred
ited a safety belt with their
narrow escape from a serious
accident at 5:30 p.m. Sunday on
their return from" a beach trip.
Polski, his wife and their sons
Robert, 5, and Richard, 8, were
riding in their new station wa
gon when it collided with an
other car. Driver of the other
car in the accident was appar
ently trying to avoid a head-on
collision with .a car passing the
Polskis, reports indicated.
Polski said he believed the
impact of the crash would have
caused him to lose control of
the car if a safety belt he was
wearing had not held him behind
the steering gear. 1
No one wasseriously injured.
Both cars received extensive
side- damage.
The car passing the Polski veh
icle when the accident occurred
was lodged in a ditch without
injury to its occupants, reports
stated. ,
Celilo Indians
Given New Homes
Portland (U.R) Five In
dian families who lost their tra
ditional homes at the Celilo fish
ing site because of The Dalles
dam today were given new
homes by the federal govern
ment. Keys to four new houses and
one remodeled residence over
looking what will be the pool
behind The Dalles dam were pre
sented to the families at a cere
mony this afternoon by Don C.
Foster, Portland area director
of the Bureau of Indian affairs.
Foster said that families mov
ing into the new housing units
are the only ones who will be
permanently located at the Cel
ilo site. About 28 families will
be relocated in areas of their
choice near Yakima and Top-
penish, Wash., Warm Spring,
Ore., and Lapwai, Idaho.
LOT OF WOMAN V
Hollywood (U.R) There'll
be no scene-stealing from Hope
Emerson in the forthcoming
"Guns of Fort Apache." Miss
Emerson weighs 230 pounds and
stands six feet, two inches tall.
"I realize I'm an awful lot of
woman," she said.
$150
1 up
Monday, Mar '28. 1958
Wall Street
New York (U.R) Stocks
eroded further today, their 15th
decline out of 16 sessions.
At the lows losses ranged to
more than three points. Metals,
chemicals, rails, aircrafts, steels
and oils were hardest hit. Sell
ing spread to all departments,
although volume held small
most of the day. Last hour trades
were on a larger scale with the
prices softening steadily.
Magma Copper lost 5Vi points.
Kennecott fell more than four.
Alcoa was down more than three
and so was Aluminium Limited.
Du Pont dropped three and was
down four from its early high.
International Salt lost four.
Dow-Jones Averages
Dow-Jones closing stock av
erages: 30 industrials 468.76 off
3.73; 20 railroads 161.64, off
3.92; 15 utilities 64.37, off 0.76;
65 stocks 168.50, off 2.25.
Sales today were approximate
ly 2,670,000, compared with 2,
570,000 Friday.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T 179V4
Anaconda .'. 7316
Chrysler 61
Curtiss Wright 307s
General Electric 557s
General Motors 40"8
Montgomery Ward 82I2
Penn R R 24
Penney J C 85
Radio , : 413e
Southern Co , 20-"4
Southern Pacific 50 IS
S Oil of Calif 96' 4
Texas Gulf Sulphur .'. 31
Transamerica 3 9 4
Tri-Continental 25?'s
United Aircraft 63 U
U S Rubber - 49 Vi
U S Steel 53 Vi
Youngstown 8614
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Portland (UP) Cattle 1800.
Choice-prime fed steers above S21:
choice 12i6-lb steers $20: commercial
heifers $15.50; canner-cutter cows $7
9.50; hplsteins $10; utility cows $10-12;
utility bulls $15-16. some higher; light
cutter bulls down to $12.
Calves 250. Choice vealers $20-22;
good S17-19r cull calves and vealers
down to S8.
Hogs 1100. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers
1S0-235 lb $19-19.25, some higher; No.
2 and 3 butchers held at S18-18.50;
300-1400 lb sows $14.50-15.50; under
300 lb to $16.
Sheep 1000. Good-low choice spring
ers $22.50-23; choice-prime spring
range lambs 85 lbs $24.50; good-choice
wooled old crop lambs $15-16; utility
choice ewes $3-4.50.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (UP) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large 49-50c; A large
46-47c; AA medium 43c: A medium
42c: A small, 32c; carton, 2-3c addi
tional. Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints. 68c lb: cartons 69c; A prints
68c; B prints 66c.
Cheese To rcailers: A pride Ched
dar. - single daisies. 431fe-4712c: 5-lb
loaves 48'i-51c; processed American
cheese. 5-lb loaf. 42-44c.
Farm Market
To0 quality Marshall strawberries
sold to retailers at $3-3.35 a flat with
ordinary down to $2.50: first local and
mid-Columbia green pens sold at 13
cents a pound with 30-lb boxes of
Dallesport. Wash., pears at $4.50 a
box; iirst mid-Columbia beets sold to
general trade at $1.60 a dozen.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Cickenhs To growers (No. 1
quality f.o.b. Portland). Fryers 2'i-4
lbs 24-24',2c: at farm 23',2-24c; light
hens, too few transactions for Port
land price: 17-18c at ranch; heavy hens
5 lbs up. not enough trading for Port
land price; at country 20-21c up; old
roosters ll-12c.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers. N Y style. 36-37c lb:
whole, drawn. 42-44c; cut up. 47-50c:
hens, light type N Y style 29-30c. cut
up 41-44c: hens, heavy type N Y style
33-34c: whole, drawn 43-46C.
Turkeys To producers: Fryer tur
keys, live weight, 27-28c lb: breeder
turkey hens 32c lb on eviscerated
basis: breeder toms 39-40c lb.
Dressed Turkeys To retailers nomi
nally A grade young hens 5-56c lb;
eviscerated, depending on weight;
eviscerated fryere-roasters 57c lb.
Rabbits (Average to growers f.o.b.
killing plant): Live, white, 34i-4',i
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 58-60C lb: cut up B2-65C.
PORTLAND HAY, GRAIN
Portland Wholesale Hav Prices:
No. 2 green alfalfa, baled, f.o.b. Port
land nominally $43-45, some sales
higher.
Wholesale prices as reported by the
SUDA market news service: Wheat.
No. 2 soft white, $74 ton: No. 2 white
oats 38-Ib test. Coast delivery. $58
58.50 ton: soybean meal, $91; barley.
Coast delivery $49.50 ton; standard
millrun $44-44.50 ton: No. 2 yellow
com. Eastern shipments f.o.b. Port
land $70.
ONE NIGHT ONLY -
rim
SCREEN!
lldjii jjJUsjJII I
GREATEST SHOW of its K.gQjRTHJ
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE
Taxi Driver Hurries
Back To Home Base
Des Moines, la. (U.R) Del
bert Holson, 35, Napa, Calif., vis
ited her? for the first time, but
left after about 40 minutes.
"I'm in a hurry," he said.
He had just driven a woman
here from Napa and collected a
fare of $800.
Holson said the woman arriv
ed at Napa from Sacramento by
taxi, decided to go to Salt Lake
City by cab and when she got
there decided to continue here
with Holson as the driver. .
MORE INFORMATION ASKED
Washington (U.R) Rep.
John E. Moss (D-Calif.), said on
Sunday the Republican and
Democratic parties should adopt
platforms emphasizing "the peo
ple's right to know." Moss, the
chairman of a House government
operations subcommittee inves
tigating suppression of public
information, call for a freer flow
of public information from gov
ernment agencies.
MORE FOR HAIRCUTS
Des Moines, la. (U.R) T.
C. MacDuffee of Chicago, gen
eral president of the Associated
Master Barbers and Beauticians
said Sunday night that barbers
will strive for a standard price
of $2 a haircut.
"We must continue for this
goal, and right today the econ
omy of the situation dictates that
SI. 50 for a haircut is not en
ough," he said.
The green turtle of the West
Indies, from which wet get soup
and turtle steaks, sometimes
reached a weight of 600 pounds.
HOTEL
4 EDf
ENDS TONITE
j FROM THE FABULOUSBEST-SEUJR!
Gregory PECK -Jennifer JONES
Fredric MARCH
TOMORROW, TUESDAY
Sadistic Surgery Head
Of Any One Cut Off and
Tossed To Audience
Millions Have Been Baffled!
A SUPER THRILLING HORROR
FEATURE FULL LENGTH
'regular pass
LIST SUSPENDED
7--
TOUT
rovutu
TO THI
31
S MESH
j V " 5:30 to 9.-00 P. M.
V Baked Chicken
i $150 j
I B I
W- 45 J
S VT BREAKFAST -
) AND LUNCH
y 7 UL to 2 PA
Wit Wm
171
A turtle, being toothless, can
not chew, but its jaws have
sharp, horny edges. Their clos
ing shears off bites of food,
which are then swallowed whole.
GATES OPEN 6:30 p.m.
SHOW AT DUSK
LM AMHyiM
Phone 2-6507
JANE RUSSELL
: Vfa JEANNE CRAIN
Lnii'i--"'
I TBCMWICOCOR
PLUS
CRATER LAKE HI6HWAV
Phone 3-2924
Our Miss
Broolcs
xai awn??! rvwrrme Z-'2.
PLUS
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