Local and
Rummaga Sl The Sewing
Jees will sponsor a rummage
le in the Fehl building. 103
.'orth Iry st.. Monday, Sept. 17.
Aahlandar in Jail Mertie
Sanley Jr., 30. Ashland, is in the
(Ounty jail after having been ar
rested by sheriff s officers on a
non-support warrant Monday.
Br.akrfa.l Planned A lumber
jack breakfast, sponsored by the
Talent Lion' club will be held
Sunday, Sept. 16. at 8 a.m. at
the Talent city all. Charge will
be one dollar.
.
No Fire Found: No fire was
found by firemen about 9 p.m.
last night when they investi
gated a report of smoke at St.
Marks Episcopal church. 141
."North Oakdale ave.
Youth Arretted A 17 year
old Medford boy was arrested at
the post office building yester
day morning and placed in the
county jail charged with being
absent without leave from the
armed services.
lTo Meeting Robert A. Duff.
qity manager, will leave Friday
fpr Banff, Alberta, Canada, to
attend the 42nd annual Confer-
ice of City Managers. The con-,
ftrence will last through Thurs
day. Sept. 20. Mrs Duff will ac
company her husband to Banff.
X Building Permits Building
permits have been issued to C. L.
Smith. 826 Grant St., fof $1,000
. tp remodel a garage into a play
. rpom ana construct a new
garage: Charles C. Madsen, 1001
est Second St., to construct a
concrete floor in the garage val
ued at $130: and to the McKee
brothers to erect a residence at
0 48 Lcland for $10,000.
1
Attic Fira Firemen report
ed that a blaze starting from
OJen electric wiring above the
Kitchen extended to a sealed off
altic and its contents about 2
l.m. yesterday at the home of
qtina M. Jones, 1B18 Maple Park
dr. A small hole was burned in
tie roof and there was minor
iSater damage to the kitchen
and living room.
1
i At Meeting Charles Champ-
l(p, chief of police, will return
tfcis evening from Salem where
h has been attending a meet
iag of the education commission
nl the League of Oregon cities.
Tie commission members dis
cpssed the curriculum and in
structors of the advance police
tfaining school that will be held
m cities throughout the state
later this year.
; Shows Onions D. T. Fergu
son. Columbia hotel, Ashland.
. today was showing some big
onions grown on a one-eighth
acre plot near Talent. The six
h shoed weighed seven
pounds, and he said that three
quarters of his 1.200-pound crop
averages the same size. They
are of the sweet Spanish variety.
I Granddaughter Dies Mr. and
Mrs. Earnest Reames. 6236 Cra
ter Lake highway. Medford.
hjive reported their 16-year-old
granddaughter. Nellie Sue Fra
Wes. died Sunday at Lakeview.
The girl, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dow F. Frakes. had been
iD for a considerable length of
time. She was born June 15.
140, at Lakeview.
t ...
Safety Council The first
meeting of the fall season of the
JSedford Safety council will be
held at noon Friday at the Jack
sin hotel, and Bud Palmer, presi
dent, has urged that all repre
sentatives of safety organiza
tions attend. Organization of the
season's program will be com
pleted, he said, and a talk- on
vjsion and safety in industry
vfill be given.
. ...
COC Show The Medford
(Jround Observer Corps will ap
pear on KBES-TV this evening
starting at 6:12 p.m. instead of
6530 pm. as previously stated
tThe Vital Need of the Ground
(Jbserver Corps'' will be dis
dissed. K. J. Knutson, super
ior of the local GOC post, will
interview Maj. Gen. J. H. Hicks,
Jyckson county Civil Defense di
rector; Air Force Sgt. C. C. Poul
sbn. area officer: and Mrs. Lu
Jlle Brock, chief observer of
tjie Medford post.
TONITE!
1st DRIVE IN RUN!
UJ. mw.. -BRAND MTW THRILLS
vVAANSaCOtAQ.
fUTTOH HOOK
I LATaD
mm
Personal
Square Dane Instructions
An adult class in square dance
instruction will begin today at
8 30 p.m. at Moose hall. All
adults interested in learning to
square dance are invited.
.
Mercy Flight J. W. Tillery.
1100 Loal st., Medford. was
flown to Portland yesterday for
surgery at a hospital there. He
has ben at Rogue Valley hos
pital. The trip was made in a
Mercy Flights, Inc., air ambu
lance plane.
Dane Scheduled Tne Wag
gin Wheelers Square Dance club
will hold a dance starting at 8 30
p.m. Friday, Sept. 14. at Art
Smith's barn on Griffin Creek
rd. Potluck refreshments will be
served and the public has been
invited.
Patients Patients at Rngue
Valley Community) hospital in
clude Michael Banning. lO1-year-old
son of Mr. and Mrs. R.
E. Banning, Etna. Calif., for a
tonsillectomy, and medical pa
tient Robert E. Bromley. 225
Corona ave.
Visits Here Mrs. Robert
Person of Hannibal, Mo., is visit
ing her daughter, Mrs. Mary
Hcberling of Central Point, and
grandson, James Heberling. Mrs.
Person will visit relatives in
San Jose. Calif., before leaving
for Sunnysldpe. Ariz., where she
will spend several months before
returning to her home. While in
Medford she attended the wed
ding of her granddaughter. Mary
Jane Heberling. who married
Richard Scott Hamilton.
...
To Michigan County En
gineer and Mrs. Paul Rynning
left today by plane for Chicago,
where they will spend a short
time before proceeding to Michi
gan, where Rynning will attend
a conference. The meeting is the
fourth national highway confer
ence of county engineers and of
ficials of the American Road
Builders association. It will be
held at Mackinac island Sept.
17-19. Rynning is a director of
the county and local roads di
vision of the association.
...
Back From Meeting Jerry
Gastineau, district manager of
Equitable Life Assurance society,
and Mrs. Gastineau returned this
week from an Equitable confer
ence at Feather River Inn resort
in Plumas National forest near
Blairsden, Calif. Before leaving
Medford. the Gastineaus were
joined by two Salem families
attending the conference and all
had dinner at the Rogue Valley
Country club. The group also
spent some time in Mt. Lassen
National park.
...
Minor Accidents Two minor
auto collisions occured in Med
ford Wednesday morning accord
ing to city police. At 11:06 at
Eighth and Bartlett cars driven
by Leonard Jacob Simmons, post
office box 163, Medford, and
Walter Lewis Kingman, 128 Ash
land ave., collided. A citation
was issued to Kingman for fail
ing to have car registration. The
other accident occurred at Sixth
and Front when vehicles operat
ed by John Myers Reade, 418
Lozier lane, and Virgil Avery
Bower. 729 West 13th collided.
There were no injuries reported
in either accident.
New Record Set
In Calf Roping
Pendleton (U.B' The
Pendleton Round-Up. that grand
daddy of all Western shows in
the Northwest, opened its four
day run on a fast note yesterday.
John Dalton, Brownfield. Tex.,
came close to a new arena rec
ord in the calf roping competi
tion when he was timed at 14.1
seconds. Tne record is 11.6.
Wayne Dunaton of Westmore
land. Kans., ranked number 3
in the national ranking of the
Rodeo Cowboys association, set
a record time in the steer bull
dogging competition when he
threw a steer in 6.3 seconds. The
old record of 7.2 seconds was set
last year by Barney Willis of Vis
alia." Calif.
An innovation of the Round
Up program this year is the stag
ing of a mass Indian tribal dance
under direction of the oldest liv
ing member of the Round-up as
sociation. Lee Drake, 75, of
Pendleton. More than 500 In
dians performed ceremonial tri
bal dances, said to never before
been presented off their reser
vations. One of the top national cow
boys. Shoat Webster of Lcnapah.
Okla.. who three times ras won
the all-around cowboy award at
the Round-Up is missing from
the roster of performers this
year. Illness in his family pre
vented Webster from entering
the show.
BIRTHS
SMITH To Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin, 1318 Locust St., Sept.
12, 1956. a boy. weight 73a
pounds, at Sacred Heart hospi
tal. HACKWORTH To Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence, Jacksonville, ;
Sept 12, 1956. a girl, weight 6H i
pounds, at Rogue Valley (Com
munity) hospital. j
Services Scheduled!
For Oscar Knox
Funeral services for Oscar M.
Knox. 92, of 401 fifth St., Jack
sonville, who died Tuesday will
be held in Conner-Morris chapel
Friday at 2:30 p.m. The Rev.
Norman K. Tully of the Presby
terian church will officiate. Com
mittal will be in Sparlin ceme
tery at Williams, Ore.
Mr. Knox was born Dec. 10.
1363, in Murphy. Ore., a son of
Thomas and 5a rah Knox, early
pioneers of the Applegate val
ley who came there in 1854 from
Illinois.
On March 9, 1890 in Apple
catp he was married to Nancy
W. Cook, who died in 1897.
About 1898 he carried the mail
from Grants Pass to Williams
burg, now known as Williams.
During this time he operated
his own Jivery stable in Grants
Pass. He ran the Star Route from
Jacksonville to Appleqate for
about 12 years. On March the
9th. 1927 in Jacksonville he was
married to Lucy Mitchell, who
survives.
Other survivors include two
daughters. Mrs. J. D. Brown,
Eagle Point, and Mrs. Peter
Flick, Jacksonville; a son. Olin
S. Knox, Yamhill; a sister, Clara
Stewart. Salom; two step-sons.
Lewis Mitchell, Springfield, and
Nicholas Mitchell, Dorris, Calif.;
five grandchildren, nine great
grandchildren and four .great
great grandchildren.
Obituaries
FRANK PASMORE
R. Frank Pasmore, 77, of 611
North Bartlett St., and an em
ployee of what is now Jorgen
sen's Dairy products for the past
27 years, died in a local hospital
this morning.
Funeral services are tentative
ly set for 10:30 a.m. Saturday
with Chapel Mortuary in charge
of arrangements.
MRS. MARY ELLEN PBUITT
Mrs. Mary Ellen Pruitt of 513
Oak St., Medford died yesterday
in a local hospital. Conger-Morris
funeral home is in charge of
funeral arrangements.
MRS. DESSA A. HURT
Funeral services for Mrs. Des
sa A. Hurt of 326 No. Holly.
Medford who died Tuesday will
be held in Conger-Morris chap
el Friday at 1 p.m. The Rev.
William C. Piper of the First
Christian church will officiate.
Committal will be in I.O.O.F.
cemetery, Medford.
Mrs. Hurt was born October
1R71 in Austin. Miss. Her
husband James Hurt preceded
her in death in
Survivors include a daughter,
Mrs. Wilsie Pruitt, Medford:
son. E. V. Hurt. Medford: four
grandchildren, two great grand
children and several nieces and
nephews.
MRS. FLETA CHAPMAN
Roseburg Mrs. Fleta Chap
man, 63. widow of the late
George Reis Chapman, died at
her home in Roseburg. Sent. 12.
Mrs. Chapman was born in Jack
sonville Nov. 14, 1892. the
daughter of a pioneer family,
Chris and Alice Ulrich.
She is survived by a sister,
Mrs. H. K. Hanna of Jackson
ville. Interment will be In the Jack
sonville, cemetery. Monday.
Sept. 17. at 3 p.m. with services
at the grave.
ARTICLES FILED
Salem Articles of incorpora
tion were filed here today for the
Central Oils Company of Prine
ville, a mining firm. They were
signed by H. C. Evans, A. R.
Morris and Julia Morris.
Daily Weather Report
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair throuch
Friday. Low tomsJH 45. Huh Friday
85Vetern Ore.on: Fair through Fri
dav except nisht and morning fog
along coast and patches of early
morning fog in viUtvi. Low tonight
42-30. High Friday 70-80 inland, 6S
along coast. ,
Northern California: Chance of a
few sprinkles Modesto and King City
to Red Bluff and Fort Bragg tonight
or earlv Friday, otherwise fair. Little
temperature change.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
61: below normal 5.
Record high this date 100 In ir37.
Record low the, date 32 in 1921.
PRF.crPITATION: 24 houri to mid
night, none. Midnight to 10 a.m.. none.
Total this month, trace. .14 inch be
low normal. .
Total since Sept. 1. trace. .14 inch
below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest jesterday 23.
highest this a.m. as ...
CITY
High Lw Prec.
63 49
Brookings 63
Crater Lake
G rants Pass 81
Klamath Falls '
MEDFORD 1
Portland
Seattle ..
Sookant
Yakima -
Bfi
. .. 7fi
Eureka
Red Bluff
Sacramento
San Francisco
Lo Angfles
Phoenix
Denver 1
Chicago
Miami
73
83
63
New York - fi
Washington. DC 81
IV Builders Supply
Bricks, Flues,
Drain Tile
727
W. McAndrews
Phone 2 4107
IOkTH QUALITY
IllrJ BLOCKS
Cancer Fight Must
Be Planned, ACS
Official Declares
I San Francisco (U.P.1 An of
j ficial of the American Cancer
, Society said today that as many
1 as 75,000 additional lives could
be saved from cancer each year
if people could be presuaded to
change health habits enough to
have annual checkups and be
alert to the disease's early warn
ing signs.
Leonard V. Griffith, ASC di
rector of Field Services, spoke
at the ACS's Region Six meet
ing here. Approximately 150
volunteers and staff members of
the society's divisions in Califor
nia, Arizona, Nevada. Nebraska.
Utah, Colorado and New Mex
ico are attending the three-day
meeting.
Griffith told the group that
growth and progress in the fight
against cancer cannot be acci
dental; it must be planned in the
interest of saving human lives.
'"Until research provides meth
ods by which we can conquer
cancer, we must direct our ef
forts toward an intermediate ob
jective, that of saving lives from
cancer through education and
service." he said.
Dr. W. Kenneth Clark, assist
ant medical and scientific direc
tor of the ACS, told the dele
gates that establishment of more
cancer case registries was the
best tool for measuring progress
against cancer.
Last n,ight, the delegates elect
ed Dr. Horace Taylor of Reno,
Nev.,"as chairman of ACS Region
Six for the coming year. Dr. Ian
MacDonald of Los Angeles and
Judge Frank McNamee of Reno
were nominated to the national
board of directors of the society.
Hearing on Flood
Control Scheduled
Grants Pass A public hearing
on flood control and related wa
ter uses in the Rogue River basin
will be held here Wednesday.
Oct. 24. with representatives of
the Army Corps of Engineers at
tending, according to Raymond
Lathrop. Josephine county judge.
It is being held at the request
of Col. Jackson Graham of Port
land, district engineer, who will
conduct the hearing.
In a recent letter to Judge
Lathrop, Col. Graham said pur
pose of the hearing will be to
obtain views of the people on
problems to be considered in a
study of flood control and relat
ed water uses. The Corps of En
gineers recently received an ap
propriation with which to re
sume the study.
Col. Graham indicated his of
fice will not be prepared to offer
any plan or proposal at this time.
A later hearing will be held to
present plans and proposals de
veloped in the study, he said.
The hearing will take place
either in the Josephine county
library auditorium or the circuit
court room, according to Judge
Lathrop.
McKay Scheduled to
Turn on Natural Gas
Pendleton U.R) Former In
terior Secretary Douglas Mc
Kay today was to turn a valve at
10 a.m. sending natural gas into
the Oregon Fibre Products plant
system near here.
The turn-on will mark the
first use of natural gas in the
Pacific Northwest by the entire
industrial plant.
Wheat Commission
Names New Chairman
Pendleton U.R) The Oregon
Wheat Commission meeting
here, elected Paulen Kaseberg of
Wasco as chairman,
Morris Wilson, Condon, was
appointed by Gov. Elmo Smith
to fill the vacancy on the com
mission created by the resigna
tion of . Marion Weatherford,
who had served as chairman of
the commission lor several
Sat. Night & $
SEPTEMBER 15
We're Celebrating
DREAMLAND'S
28th
Anniversary
All who ATTENDED the DANCE at
DREAMLAND 20 YEARS AGO will
be Mr. Walker's personal guests!
CnCC COFFEE
rltLL FOR
AT WALKER'S DREAMLAND
FINEST MUSIC NEW POPULAR PRICES
Tuna iff KYJC Saturday Ni9hf, 10:30, far
Dane Music From Dreamland
Stock Market Shows
Oil, Other Gains
New York U.Pj New York
Stock Market showed gains to
day.
International oils, usually the
first to mirror sentiment over
the Suez crisis, met support and
ran up more than 2 points.
Standard of Jersey was one
of the most active issues. It
eased.
Glenn Martin, Lockheed, and
Republic Aviation all moved
higher. Douglas ran up around
2 in the aircrafis and Chance
Vought hit a new high on a gain
of more than 2.
Bethlehem paced the steels
with a rise of more than a point.
U. S. Steel improved fractional
ly. Railroad stocks displayed a
generally easier tendency,
though declines were mostly in
the fractional zone.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
. Dow-Jones final stock aver
ages: 30 industrials 499.69, off
0.28; 20 railroads 156.75, off
1.01; 15 utilities 68.15. up 0.13.
and 65 stocks 174.84, off 0.24.
Sales today were about 2 mil
lion shares compared with 1,
930,000 shares Wednesday.
Allied Chemical 103i
American Can 4338
Neuberger Says
Candidacy Should
Be Repudiated
Salem (Special) The Repub
lican state committee of Oregon
should repudiate the candidacy
of Gov. Elmo Smith because of
his "shocking record" in the
state senate, Sen. Richard L.
Neuberger said at a press con
ference here today.
"It is a record shot through
with opposition to civil rights,
opposition to the United Nations,
opposition to necessary legisla
tive support of our public
schools and colleges of higher
education, opposition to the foreign-trade
policies of the Eisen
hower administration, opposi
tion to the aspirations of our
elderly people," Neuberger stat
ed. His statement continued:
Challenges Parly
'I challenge the Republican
Party to stop promoting Gov
ernor Smith on the basis of his
participation in rodeo shows and
county carnivals, and to have
him run on his record concern
ing governmental policies. The
governorship of Oregon should
not be reduced to a hippodrome.
"A deliberate effort has been
under way for the past six
months to conceal from the pub
lic the fact that Governor Smith
was the State Senate's foremost
foe of civil rights, foremost foe
of education and only foe of the
United Nations.
"This efiort destroys the mean
ing of democracy itself, because
it exalts trivialities and hides
those things which cut at the
root of free government.
"I make no statement against
Governor Smith personally. I
make this statement only on the
basis of issues which have come
before our Legislature, and on
which Governor Smith has been
recorded against the public wel
fare." Benson Scheduled to
Speak in Indiana
Union Mills, Ind. kU.R) Ag
riculture Secretary Ezra T. Ben
son came to Indiana today for a
two-day tour of a key Midwest
ern farm state, obviously hoping
to help sew up Hoosierland for
the Republicans in the Novem
ber election.
Benson was booked to appear
in this small town, about 40
miles southwest of South Bend,
as fcrst stop in a 32-hour trip
over Northwestern Indiana.
ALL
M M
SAT.
NITE
Thursday. . September 13, 1 358
AT&T 172
Anaconda Copper S2i
Bethlehem Steel 166i
Caterpillar Corp 85?
Chrysler Corp 69H
Continental Can 48H
Crown Zellerbach 58
Curtiss Wright 384
Du Pont 204s a
Eastman Kodak 93 1 1
General Electric 601.
j General Foods 47! 2
oenerai motors 41 s
Graham Paige ls
Homestake Mining 33
Kaiser Frazer .'. 18's
Kennecott Copper 1353s
Lockheed Aircraft 51-H
Katy Pfd 61s
Montgomery Ward 41!a
New York Central 35"s
Penneys. J. C 87
Penn CR 23 's
Radio Corporation 41
Richfield Oil 72' t
Sacony Vacuum 52
South Co 213s
Southern Pacific 48
Standard California 49',s
Standard Indiana 60
Standard N. J 54'
Sun Mines 8'. 4
Texas Gulf 31
Tex Pac Land Trust 74
Trans American 37',4
Trans West Air 187i
Tri-Continental 26--s
Un Carbide 118'i
Union Pacific 29T
United Aircraft 83
U. A. L 38 Vi
U. S. Rubber 50
U. S. Steel 69
Youngstown S & T 105
Pear Prices
Portland KU.R) Wholesale
pear market: Calif, standard box
5.50-6; Oregon 30 lb. lugs 2.25-j
2.50.
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Portland (U P.) Cattle 200; supply
largely slaughter cows; trade active,
prices steady; few utility steers
$11.50-15; utility heifers $10-13.50: can-ner-cutter
cows $7-9; few strong
weights beef type to $9.30; utility cows
$10-11.50; shelli down to $5.30; utility
bu Us $ 1 415.50; light cutter bulls
S10-12.
Calves 50; market active, steadv;
rood-choice vealers $16-9; individual
choice to $20; utility-commercial
calves and vealers $10-15.50.
Hops 200; 2 grade butchers $18 75
19; mixed. 1, 2 and 3 grades 180-235
lb. $17.50-18.30; sorted off No 3. $17;
weights 240-270 lb. Largelv 2 and 3
grade S1R.30-17: sows mixed. 1, 2 and
3 grade 300-500 lb. $12-15.30.
Sheep 350; trade moderately active,
steady to weak; good -choice spring
slaughter lambs $17-18 30; no test on
top limitp; utility-low good springrrs
$16-17; good feeders 75-85 lb. Slo
ts .50: common and medium light
weights $11-14.50; cull-good ewe
$2-4.50.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (U.P.l Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large, 57-59c; A large.
52-53c; AA medium. 44-46c: A me
dium. 42-44: A small. 29c; carton, no
charge to 3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints, 67-68c lb.; cartons. 68-69c; A
prints, 67-6Re; B prints, 65-66c.
Cheese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar, single daisies, 42'a-47'..c; 5-lb.
loaves. 49-51 ljc; processed American
cheese. 5-lb. loaf. 41-44c.
Farm Market
Portland t V.P.) Most items con
tinued in large supply with prices
generally unchanged today.
I
MhijlliL 1 1
TONIGHT
A SWELL DOUBLE BILL!
FILMED ENTIRELY IN OREGON!
PILLARS SKY
THIS WAS THE NIGHT
-Cr OF THE TOMAHAWK,
t. . AND THE CROSS!
M CHANDLER
WARD BOND KEJTtf ANDES LEE MARVIN '
it l .,v- i
11 f 3?-
.VNrS III! H IA1T
" llm.llliM
-MEDFORD (OREGON)
SOC Professor Discusses
Reading Instruction Details
The need to go slow because
of the need to be right in the
use and application of new meth
ods to teach children to read was
stressed by Dr. William Samp
son, Southern Oregon college di
rector of education, in a talk to
Medford Kiwanis club yesterday
noon.
Dr. Sampson spoke on "Why
Johnny Can Read" at the service
group's luncheon at Rogue Val
ley Country club.
Read Better
, The college instructor brought
out that youngsters can read bet
ter today than in the past. This
is because teachers are better
prepared and have better instruc
tional aids, more adequate fac
ilities and better working condi
tions, because parents are better
informed, because of more infor
mation about the learning pro
cess is available, and because of
more kindergartens.
"There are a good many things
about teaching reading that we
do not know, the speaker said.
In teaching the subject progress
is slow, he said, pointing out that
the program must be acceptable
to the people of a community and
that changes can be made most
effectively if taken gradually.
Rates Vary
Sampson brought out that chil
dren do not learn to read at the
Saturday
Sept. 15th
(ton 1
on-d
WSM - Radio - TV
RCA Victor Records
AT THE
Rogue Valley
BALLROOM
MnthjIr&MM.
-- MALONE
ftl A t r l J
a aaWI llta UrtK t ft. I lfVaf
AKInUK KtlN INCUT
BETTA ST. JOHN
MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN
same rate, although they may
have the same exposure to the
subject. Some students, he stat
ed, need specialized help. In the
Medford schools this is being
done to a high' degree, he brought
out.
The instructor reported that
30 to 35 per cent of students en
tering Southern Oregon college
do not have the required level
of reading ability. At the col
lege's clinic, he reported, about
half of this group can be brought
up to the level in 25 clock hours.
Most of the others, he stated,
would be salvagable, if time and
money was available.
Coachei Preiant
Head Coach Fred Speigelberg
also gave information concern
ing the Medford High school foot
ball team. Other members of his
staff were guests, Paul Evensen,
line coach; Bob Newland, back
field coach; and Frank Roelandt
and John Kovenz, junior varsity
coaches.
Paul Hornbeck and Dr. William-
Stamm were introduced as
new members.
GATES OPEN 6:30 P.M.
SHOW AT 7 P.M.
1
v nDltfT.IU
DRIVE
iforrn pacific
COiOt hf 0a Lm
7-:
JANE RUSSELL
RICHARD ECAN
ELSE
Phone
3-2924
TCSOCKLBSHELL
HEROFfi
PLUS
VALERIE FRENCH
RAYMOND BURR
r tn none
uwTiimnrHMMV
i MA CAR LOAD
TONITE
DOtOTHT MALOMf
PLUS
TW SMASHING mint Of THt SKY!
ABC5E
ETT WW
wk tocnr snot coin cut
ASHLAND
tlTHE LAST
WAuON 1
r rr -rt
mNiMicopii
Richard WIDMARK
Fetal
.ADD
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Use Tribune Want Ads
Phone
2-6507
PLUS
34
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