Local and
Permit Issued Traveiodge.
orporation has been issued a
Ijuildira pr-rinit to coiir-jct a
M.000 -A-irT,mi.n2 pool a TU2
-North riverside a ;
Thefl Thro'i'.re Aiton An-!
dfr:-oi:, 1043 We-t 13th St. re
ported 'o ci'y police Saturday .
the tiieft i,! a gold rms from'
T role's Jcv.'rlry .tor. 33 South;
Brtlett st. Thf police said it was
vaiutd at SI 2'
Hazards Found City fire
Marshal Truman Nc-ison issued
six orders for removal of firej
hazards Friday after inspection j
ef thror- parkin;: house?. Fire
men flushed a'.vay two caoline
.pill? from around parked cars
esterday in the downtown area.
Announce Exams The Girl
Scout physical examination for
irl5 attending Camp Low Echo
will be held Tuesday, July 31
?t 7:30 p.m. at Doctor's clinic,
1032 Wc Main street, it was
announced today from headquar
ters. Guests Ilrlinor T. Tin"t'i
.inhn A. Carter and Virgil R.
Wilkes of Medford. are attend
ing special meetings this week
in Los Anseles as the guests of
State Farm Insurance com
panies. Tlu y were among, the top
25 per cent of State Farm's field
salesmen during the pat year.
Visits Relatives Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Richardson and three
children, are visiting Richard
son's parents. Mr. and Mrs. J.
S. Richardson of Table Rock.
The Richard.sons are from Port
land where he is an attorney.
They will spend two weeks in
Medford fishing and attending
the Shakespearean Festival
In Jail Here Clifford An
drew Salmon. 4!). Porterville.
Calif., spent Sunday night in the
Jackson county jail and proceed
ed this morning to Porterville.
where he will face a charge of
forgery in transit. He was ar
rested in Banks. Ore., by a Por
terville police officer who is es
corting him to California.
Grandson Born Mr. and Mrs.
J. M. Dodge, King St., are grand
parents of a son born July 24 to
their daughter and son-in-law.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Read of
Elko, Nev. The baby weighed 6
pounds. II ounces, and has been
named Robert Lawrence. Mrs.
Dodge is now in Nevada with
her daughter, who is the former
Dorothy'Dodge
Jailed A car operated by
Clarence Elsworth Suber. Jack
sonville, collided with a parked
car Saturday registered to
James Daymont Crumley. 2981
Buckshot rd.. near 210 Cottage
st., according to Medford police.
Suber was arrested and confined
to city jail charged with driving
while under the influence of in
toxicating liquor, police said.
MS
ENDS TONITE!
ANDROCIES
AND
THE HON" r
X
i
it, ft i v f.v -.j
DINE ON THE COOL,
BREEZY PATIO AT - - -
MON DESIR
DINING INN - Near Central Point
You'll enjoy delicious foodi . . . th delightful atmosphere . . .
the warm tosjitality at MON DESIR . . . Phone NOrmandy 4-2513
for reservations
The WflJOPEN
''
FEATURING
Complete
FILET MIGNON
DINNER
$1
95
Personal
Purse Stolen Nclda Joyce
Nil'. 130 West Main st . resorted
t city police Saturday the t"ef
ot her purse while sh? w- a1
'he Yc'eran s r'l.b. 42 Nor'.:1.
Fiont s'..
Collision Vehicles opera yd
by Jarv.es La Monte Bradley,
fin Cra'cr Lake highway. .'"d
Kenneth Louis Bujim.n M;iry--vii!e,
Calif., were i.'ivoived m
f-ri accident Sunday on Sou'h
Riverside aye. near Ninth st..
, according to Medford police.
j Attends Workshop Ronald R.
j Apodaca, Spanish supervisor in
j the Ashland public schools, has
completed the session at the Ele
. nientary Language workshop at
; tiie University of Colorado held
''July 16 through 27. About 20
teachers from several states
were enrolled in the workshop
i wnich included instructions for
! teaching language to small chil
' dren.
Annual Aquacade
Show Set Tonight
At Ashland Pool
I Ashland The second annual
! aquacade at Twin Plunges swim
i miug pools. Ashland, will begin
; at 7 p.m. today. The public has
j been invited.
A junior Miss Twin Plunges
will be chosen at the start of the
' siiow. Entrants for the title are
i Lissa Schmclzer, Terri Barger.
Sandy Barger. Deborah Engtl,
j Christy Revel. Toni Gay Geor-
gianna. Cathy Kane. Rhonda
i Kinard. Kitty Kees. Anne Sch
j wiebert. Jill Todd. Jean Cole.
, and Christine Hald.
! Following this, a baby ballet.
will be presented by swim pupils
who will demonstrate the differ
ent steps used in teaching them
to swim.
Christine McGce and Ronald
Johnson will present a duet in
synchronized swimming, with
diving and swimming exhibi
tions by Bill Garrison, Pat
Sollee, and Larry Lawrence to
follow.
Routines Scheduled
Routines presented to music
will be performed by Patricia
Barger. Shirley Champion, Mary
Anne Dawson. Judy Eberhart,
aren Engel, Kay Engel. Eliza
beth Hartford, Sue Heitz. Pat
Kearns, Mary Keyes, Christine
McGee. Jane Milne. Tammy
Parks, Dixie Revel, Helen
Stults. Jackie Taylor. Linda
Weber. Brenda and Mary Anne
Woods.
One of a number of girl con
testants will wear the crown
which goes with the title Miss
Twin Plunges: Linda Madison,
Sallv Lusk. Cleo Linton. Jean
Eberhart. Pat McAllister. Dixie
j Myers, Mary Olson. Carole
: Pence. Rosalie Pence. Kay Engel.
I Joy Bauman, Clarice Williams.
; Viola Campbell. Nicky Olson.
; Frances Campbell, Patricia
! Dailey, Ruth Johnson, Carol
1 Gander, Sue Heitz. Barbara
Hendrickson. Mary Ellen Kelso,
Kay Konapaseke, Phyllis Dc
Boer, Helen Read, Phyllis Nich
ols. Peggy Rutter. Jeanette Petty
or Carol Preston.
Ashland Mayor Richard Neill
will be on hand to present prizes
and to crown the two queens
for the evening.
The average Army reenlist
ment is for three years - the
minimum reenlistment period
accepted by the Army. The next
greatest percentage is for six
years.
USE TRIBUNE WANT ADS
FOR RESULTS
DINING ROOM
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!
7:00 A.M. to 11:00 P.M.
Funeral Services j
Set Wednesday for j
Charles J. Haas i
A Req-nem Ma.-s for Charles i
I Joseph Haas, of 802 West 11th j
who died in Enid. Okla.. last'
.Monday of injuries suffered in;
an automobile accident, will be j
I held at 9 a m. Wednesday in !
' Sacred Heart Catholic church j
j v .ith the Hev. N. J Deis official-j
I Dig. Interment will be in Sis- j
kiynu Memorial park. i
Casket bearers will be John F.
O'Hara. Stanley M. Piircell. R.
B. Smith. Xavicr Widmer. John
I. Man.-field. and Leland D.
Mc ker.
A reci-ation of the Holy Ros
ary will he helj at 8 p.m. Tues
! day in Chapel Mortuary.
! Mr. Haas, the son of Joseph
i and Julia Remstein Haas, was
born in Waukon. Ia.. Oct. 4.
1872. lie was married in Wau
! Icon on Sept. 22. 1894. to Alice
I O'Brien, who died two years
later. He married again on Nov.
: 17. 1898. to Helen Pitzenbergcr,
;who also preceded him in death
; in Medford. On Jan. 31. 103D. he
I was married to Alberta Leah
: Chirk, who survives.
The family came from Mc- i
Intosh. S.D.. to Medford in 1918. j
u here Mr. Haas has been en-i
, caged in contracting work and
the operation of various types of
ranchc s.
One son. Charles James Haas, j
j was killed in World War I, and I
; another son. Clement Haas, was I
i killed in World War II. I
i Other survivors, besides his
I wife, include five sons. Dan,
; Bernard and George, all of Med
ford, Murl. of Portland, and Je
rome, of Ashland; four daugh
ters. Viola, now Sister Helen
Teresa, of Marylhurst. Ore.. Mrs.
Anna Brandt. Milwaukie, Ore..
Mrs. Evelyn Morris. Portland,
and Mrs. Helen Morrison, Mod
lord: 15 grandchildren, and
eight great grandchildren.
Obituaries
FRED COMBEST
Funeral services for Fred
Combest. 75. of Talent, who died
at his home early Saturday
morning, will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday, at Perl Funeral home.
The Rev. George A. Trobough of
the First Methodist church will
officiate. Interment will be in
the Jacksonville cemetery.
Mr. Combest was born Aug.
11. 1330. in Alanthus. Gentry
county. Mo. He crossed the
plains in 1887 with his parents
when he was seven.
Mr. Combest. a veteran of
World War I. when he served in
the Navy, was employed by the
government and settled in Jack
sonville. In 1943 he moved to
Talent where he has since lived.
He is survived by his mother,
Mrs. Louisa J. Combest of Tal
ent; brothers. Tiney Combest,
Central Point. Hugh Combest.
Talent. Cyrenius Combest. Gold
Hill; one sister, Melissa Came
ron. ' South Pacific highway;
three nieces. Ardith Lokken.
Gold Hill. Virginia Holbrook.
Medford, and Mrs. Peggy Mar
shall, San Francisco. Calif.,
three nephews. Russell Combest.
Ashland, and Clay Combest,
Turner, and Hugh Combest Jr.,
Medford.
EARL D. DURANT
Funeral services for Earl D.
Durant. 72. of Camp White, who
died Thursday, in the VA Dom
iciliary, will be held in Camp
White Chapel Tuesday at 9:30
a.m. Chaplain Samuel Feller
will officiate. Committal will be
in Camp White cemetery.
Conger-Morris funeral home
is in charge of arrangements.
Mr. Durant was born Feb.
13. 1884. in Fort City, Iowa. He
enlisted in the Army on May
13, 1917, and was discharged on
Apnl 8. 1919.
Survivors include a brother.
Clarence Durant, Kerman, Calif.
MRS. MINNIE ROBISON
Funeral services for Mrs.
Minnie Robison, 30 North Sec
ond st., Ashland, who died Sat
urday morning, will be held in
the Ashland Mortuary, Fourth
and C sis., Wednesday at 10
a.m. The Rev. Homer Thompson
of the Assembly of God church,
of which she was a member,
will officiate. Committal will be
SfflOE
All Food
Prepared by
CHEF DORSEY
Former Chef at:
Wichita Country Club
and Dobbs House, Inc.
ftp- u 4- !
"r"1"i-i' uiim to embezzling SooU.OUU in state
funds. Orwlle E. Hodge llefti. resigned Illinois state audi
tor, posts S100.0UU bond at Springfield and is released.
Vi'h Lim is hiss attorney, Arthttr M. Fitzgerald 'gray
hair;, as bond is signed. (International Soundphoto)
Stock Prices Rally After
Egypt Fear, Steel Strike
New York ,U.P Stocks over-
came Ecvut's Suel Canal coud
and settlement of the steel strike
today with prices rising all
around after an early setback.
Even the Near East oils ral
lied from their lows following a
drop of two to four points. The
steels ran up over the whole
list. Aircrafts strengthened.
Rails and utilities firmed.
The Near East oils took a fur
ther beating for a time as prices
of oil shares slumped in foreign
markets. They rallied from the
lows.
Dow-Jones Averages
Dow-Jones closing stock aver
ages: 30 industrials 513.42, up
Star-Bound Man Must
Take His Own Gravity
Berkeley. Calif. (UP.' If and
when man takes off for the stars,
he'll need to take with him his
own gravity, his own atmos
phere and even his own night
and day.
That's the opinion of Dr. Nello
Pace, a physiology professor it
the University fo California. He
suggests that the solution of how
and what man is to breathe on
the long journey into space may
be solved by taking along a
sort of atmospheric garden.
He points out that tiny green
plants would supply the atmos
phere with oxygen and use up
the carbon dioxide which man
normally exhales. The problem
of a suitable atmosphere still re
mains. Pace said, because man
cannot survive on pure oxygen
over a long perioc'. of time.
As for gravity, the physiolo
gist maintains that no research
has shown whether humans can
get along with a complete ab
sence of gravitational pull. Once
out of the earth's pull, two of
the three orienting sense organs
now dependent on gravity would
be useless.
Both of the sense organs, the
canals in the inner ear and nerve
receptors in the muscles, would
not function and man
have is eyes alone to
him.
Even night and day
would
guide
might
have to be provided, Pace noted,
since it appears man needs some
kind of a cycle or change to help
him function best.
Michigan's capital city of
Lansing almost was named Frog
ville after it was chosen by the
state legislature. Other names
considered included Houghton,
Polk and Tartarus.
in Stearns cemetery, Talent.
Honorary pallbearers will be
from the Union Veterans of the
Civil War. of which she was a
member. They will be as follows,
Mrs. Jean Avery, Alice Turner
and Lucille Dozier.
Mrs. Robison was born in
Centerville, Iowa. June 21. 1873,
a daughter of the late Enos and
Malinda Conger. On Aug. 3,
1902, she was married to Frank
Robison. who preceded her in
death in Dec. 1914.
She had made her home in
San Francisco until following
the earth quake in 1906. when
she returned to Jackson county.
She had made her home in Ash
land since 1937.
Survivors include niece. Mrs.
Edna M. Trent. Medford; great
niece. Mrs. Charlotte M. Toon,
Fairfield, Calif.; two great great
nieces, one great great nephew:
two sisters-in-law. Mrs. H. W.
Conger. Medford. and Mrs.
Frankie Guilder. Chico, Calif.;
cousins. Mrs. Laura Beer, H. E.
Conger and Bert Conger, all of
Medford. Lawrence Conger, of
Prospect; Martin Conger, Mon
mouth, Ore., and other cousins
in the East. One sister. Mrs.
Irene WelLs. and a brother. H
W Conger, preceded her in
death.
l.K
20 railroads 169.03, off
0.04:
15 utilities. 70.90. up 0.05;
j 65 stocks 182.24. up 0.23.
Sales today were about 2.100,-
000 shares compared to about
2,240,000 Friday.
Selected stocks from the New
York Stock Exchange:
American Chemical 112
American Can 44' s
AT&T 184's
Anaconda Copper 79' 4
Bethlehem Steel 165' 4
Caterpiller Corp 9234
Chrysler 64
Continental Can 53'8
Crown Zellerbach fi45s
Curfiss Wright 348
DuPont 214'i
Eastman Kodak 973's
General Electric 6334
General Foods 497s
General Motors 47
Georgia Pacific 80Ts
Graham Paige 2
Homestake Mining 34
Kaiser Fraser 19's
Kennecott Copper 133
Lockheed Aircraft 48:!8
M and M Wood 34"'s
Katy Pfri 65' 4
Montgomery Ward 42'
New York Central 387s
Penney. J. C 94
Penn. R. R 24"s
Radio Corporation 43 3 8
Richfield Oil 79
Socony Vacuum 533s
Southern Co 22' 4
Southern Pacific 501
Standard California 56
Standard Indiana 61' i
Standard N. J 59
Sun Mines 8's
Texas Gulf 32' i
Texas Pacific Land Trust .. 8r:s
Trans American 39-'
Trans West Air 21si
Tri-Continental 28' s
Union Carbide 126'4
Union Pacific 170
United Aircraft 72::4
U. A. L. 4!-'s
U. S. Rubber 53-s
U. S. Steel 64 1 4
Youngstown S & T 99', 2
Births
CLOSE To Mr. and Mrs.
Lorin, 815 Sherman st., July 28,
1956. a girl, 8 pounds, at Rogue
Valley (Community) hospital.
NAISH To Mr. and Mrs.
Robert, Roseburg. July 28, 1956,
a boy, 8 pounds, at Rogue Val
ley (Community) hospital.
HIBDON To Mr. and Mrs.
Carl. 320 Apple St.. July 28,
1956. a girl, 7 pounds, at Rogue
Valley (Community) hospital.
CLARK To Mr. and Mrs.
Duane. route 1. box 403A, Med
ford, July 29. 1956, a girl, 7
pounds, at Rogue Valley tCom
munity) hospital.
SINGLER To Mr. and Mrs.
William. 1626 Woodlawn ave.,
July 29. 1956. a girl, 6 pounds,
at Rogue Valley (community)
hospital.
SURPRENANT To Mr. and
Mrs. Paul, 32 Eastwood dr., July
29. 1956. a girl, 7r2 pounds, at
Sacred Heart hospital.
HAMPTON" To Mr. and
Mrs. Boyd, Eagle Point. July 29,
1956 a girl, 7 pounds, 51 2 ounces,
at Osteopathic hospital.
GENUINE CHARCOAL
BROILED FOODS!
Candle Room( jfj
Medford J' J
Hotel W
6 to 1 A.M. Doily- I ; if
4 to 11 P.M- Sundays ; j
Monday. July 30. 1956
Pennsylvanian Wins
Jet Airplane Race
New Orleans U.R M a j.
David F. McCallister of Swarth
more. Pa., will receive the Ricks
Memorial Trophy Wednesday
for winning the jet race from
San Francisco to New Orleans.
The w inning time of the pilot
from the 142nd Fighter Inter
ceptor Squadron of the Dela
ware National Guard was three
hours, five minutes and eight
seconds for a flight of about
1900 miles. His average speed
was 547.68 nr.les an hour in
an F86.
Seven pilots of Air National
Guard units took off from Ham
ilton Air Force Base Saturday,
but Capt. Robert E. Raily, Hy
attsville. Md.. dropped out at
Bryan. Tex., after running low
on fuel.
Maj. Henry C. Bosserman of
Van N'uys, Calif., plagued by
more than the normal time for
refueling stops, finished last. He
made the jaunt in four hours,
six minutes and 30 seconds.
The race was held in conjunc
tion with the 10th annual Air
Force Association convention
which opens here Wednesday
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Portland (UPi Cattle 2350. Av
erage to hish choice 920 pound ted
steers S24.25. Other choice steers
around 23-5U-S24. Good and choice
heifers 20 to $21.50. Canner and cutter
vows 7 to S9. Utility cows 10 to 511.50.
Young commercial cows above S12.50.
L'Tilitv hulls 13.50 to S14.
Calves 400. Choice vealers 15 to $17.
Utility 10 to $12. Culls down to $6.
Hoes 1.000 U.S. 1 and 2 prade 180
to 235 pound 19.25 to M9.50 with
some S19.60. Mixed 1. 2 and 3 grades
18.50 to Sift. Sows 300 to 500 pounds 12
to S16. lishter weights to S16.50.
Sheep 3,000. Good and choice 85 to
105 pound spring slaughter lambs 18.50
to S20. with mostly choice $21. Good
and choice 75 to 85 pound feeders 15
to SI5.50. Cull to good shorn slaughter
ewes 2 to S4.
PORTLAND HAY. GRAIN
Portland Wholesale hay prices:
New crop No. 2 green alfalfa baled
f.o.b. Portland, 34-S36-
Wholesale prices as reported by the
USDA market news service: wheat.
No. 2 son white 71-S72 ton; No. 2
white oats, 38-lb test Coast delivery
S57 30 ton: No. 2 Valley oats, nomi
nally $55 ton; soybean meal, S84 ton
f ob. Portland; barley. Coast delivery
$48 ton: standard mill run 41-542 ton;
No 2 yellow corn. Eastern shipments
f.o b. Portland $71 ton.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (UPI Eg-gs To retail
ers: Grade AA large. 5-58c: A large
52-53c; AA medium. 48-51c; A medium
48-50c: A small 31-32c; carton, no
charge to 3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints 67-68c lb; cartons 63-69c; A
prints 67-68e; B prints 65-6fc.
Cheese To retailers: A grade ched
Har. sincle daisies. 4312-471jC'. 5-lb
loaves 4812-51c; processed American
cheese 5-Ib loaf 42-44c.
Farm Market
Fir.-t shipment of Boardman water
melons arrived today and were quoted
to retailers at 4', cents a pound off
the front or 5 cents delivered: Wash
ington Long White potatoes were
quoted to the general trade at 6.25
Sfi 5ft a hundredweight for No. Is:
Northwest lettuce sold to retailers at
2.50-S2.75.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers No. 1
oualitv f.o.b. Portland!: Frvers 2 to 4
lbs 24c lb; at farm 23-23'2c; lishthens.
too few transactions for Portland
price: 15c at ranch; heavy hens, 5 lbs
up. not enough trading for Portland
price: at country 17c lb up, old roost
ers ll-12c.
Dressed chickens No. 1 grade
dressed to retailers: Fryers. NY style.
3fi-37c lb; whole drawn 41-44c lb: cut
uo 47-51 c: hens, light type. New York
tyle 28-29c; cut up 4i-44c: hens, heavy
tvpe xy stvie. 30-3Ic; whole drawn,
42-45C.
Turkeys To producers: Fryer tur
kes. live weight 27-28c lb: youni tur
key hens 23c lb live weight; 3Gc lb
on eviscerated basis.
Rabbits 'Average to growers f ob.
killing plantsj: Live white 334 to 4'2
lb 20-23c: 5 to fi lbs 15-18c; colored
pelts 4c under; old does 10-12c lb. a
few higher. Fresh killed fryers to re
tailers 56-58c lb; cut up 60-63c.
Daily Weather Report
FORECASTS:
Medford and vicinity: Fair through
Tuesday with little temperature
change. Low tonight 53. High Tuesday
90.
Western Oregon: Fair through Tues
day, except patches nie;ht and morn
inK coastal cloudiness. Little tempera
ture change. Low tonight 45-55- High
Tuesday 78-88 except about 65 on
coast.
Northern California: Fair through
Tuesday but night and morning fog
near coast. Little temperature change.
LOCAL DATA
Temperature: Mean yesterday 69; be
low normal 5. Record high this date,
100 in 1925. Record low this date, 46
in 1917.
Precipitation: 24 hours to midnight,
none. Midnight to 10 a m., none. Total
this month. .94 in.. .77 in. above nor
mal. Total since Sept. 1. 34.34 in.,
16 38 in. above normal.
Humidity; Lowest yesterday, 27 rc ;
highest this a m.. 80.
City Hi Lo Prc.
Brookings BJ 53
Grants Pass 83 48
Klamath Falls 84 52
MEDFORD 87 51
P o rt 1 and - 7 5 r 2
Seattle 72 50
Spokane 85 54
Y akima 8 8 5 3
Eureka 50 51
Red Bluff P7 fi7
Sacramento 32 57
San Francisco 70 50
Los Angeles 77 64
Phoenix 51 73
Denver W) h;j
Chicago 70 53
Miami 90 76
New York 80 67
V a shington. D C. - 76 60
MYE-nY FORECAST
(Through August 4):
Western Oregon Temperatures av
eraging near normal with high. gen
erally m 80s and lows in low 50s. No
rain indicated.
Northern California No precipita
tion. Temperatures near normal.
Emotional Shock
Ruled Compensable
Buffalo. N.Y. (U.R An un
usual ruling in workmen's com
pensation court here designat
ed that emotional shock suffer
ed at work was compensable.
Referee John J. Carogana
made the ruling in the case of
William Lyman. 35. a grain mill
worker.
Lyman claimed he and another
er worker become emotionally
upset when a co-worker was
killed accidentally.
The death victim suffocated
after he fell from a bos'n chair
while being lowered into a bin
at the mill. He landed in a grain
pile about 35 fect below.
Lyman said that when he was
told of the accident he became
so upset that he fell to his knees
and "broke out crying." He re
quired hospital care for shock.
Carogana ruled that the inci
dent constituted an accident,
the same as when someone is
injured because of "'horseplay '
on a job.
: HOTEL
7
mm
YOURSILF
TO THI
s
BREAKFAST
AND LUNCH
7 a.m. to 2 p-ia.
AUGUST
WED. I THURS.
MEDFORD HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL FIELD
TWICE
DAILY
230-8
00
p.m.
THE JACKSON COUNTY
SHRINE CLUB Presents
THE REFRESHINGLY NEW
AND DECIDEDLY DIFFERENT
1956 EDITION
T
PRODUCED BY
TOM PACKS CIRCUS
Stupendous Mobilization
of arenic surprises
amazingly accomplished
animals . . .
Aerial marvels . . . masters
of spilt second precision
headed by the empress
of the clouds . . .
"Miss Rietta"
and a dazzilng sky ballet
of skill . . . grace and
glittering feminine loveinless
The incomparable
WALLENDAS
high wire walking wonders
The Flying Hartzels
incredible aerial artistry . . .
TOM PACKS ELEPHANTS
CAPT. EDDIE KUHN
and his mixed group of some
of the most treacherous wild
jungle beasts ever assembled
together.
Comical Clpwns
Frolicking Bears
Educated Canines
Bubbling over with
laughs and new innovations
Avoid waiting in line
Get Tickets NOW
at the
ESQUIRE THEATER BLDG.
Adults $1.20
Children 50c
Reserved Seats: Matinees 60 Addit.
NighH 1:00 Addit.
Inc. Tax
' J 5 JO to 9.-00 P. M.
I Baked Chicken I
V Sage $1 50 I
i Dressing H ;
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE
Buddhist fishermen of Ceylon
refuse to kill anything, even an
insect. Of their profession, the
devout say they do not really
kill the fish they just take
them out of the water.
The mongoose is not immune
to the venom of the deadly
snakes it kills and eats. Keen
vision and lightning agility en
able it to evade their poison
fangs.
!
HURRY!
ONLY 2 MORE NITES
iknii
Cii by TECHNICOLOR
Jeff CjiANDLLR-GEcrgeKACEfi-juhe A3iMS
ASHLAND
ii:uifiiv;a.?CTIin
LDuchin
Story .
Gates Open 7 P.M.,
Show at Dusk
Phon
2-6507
m -Hudson w
All ikt
'f.
ffedyen
Plus
I&MTO
RIVEIN
CRATER LAKE HI6HWAY
Phone
3-2924
SIM CUES
Of GOLD
RENNIE
QUINN !f "2wu.
P
L
U
S
CINemaScoP
V TOM SKEREE
JEWELL-NORTH
ynTii nnnr ut&mm
TMkllTC Phon
IVMIIt 2-5562
THE ADVEHTUSE Of AHY LIFETIME!
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