Local and
Hot SloUn A g&fftea ke
valued at $10 was reperWd stol
en Saturday by Mickie Colleen
Cass, 1005 West "Main st., ac
cording to ciV police.
Educators ftetuKi A3 Meit
vold, county superinendent of
schools and Bruce Hitt, super
visor of elementary education,
have returned from a week's
workshop of the Oregon Asso
ciation of County School Super
intendents in PorRand.
Drirer Cited Maxine Dresser
Thurston, 2234 Roberts rd., wae
cited by city police for failure
to yield right of way Saturday.
Her car was involved In an ac
cident with another vehicle
driven by Carolyn Joyce Van
dersteen, 126 Clover lane, at the
intersection of North Bartlett
and Fifth sts.
Panel Hit A panel truck
parked on Court st. between
Manzanita and Edwards sts.,
was struck by an auto driven by
Rodney Samuel Thompson,
route 3, box 232, Medford, Sun
day afternoon, city police said.
The panel was owned by Rich
ard E. Christensen, 1024 Court
St.
Two-Car Accident State
police reported a two-car acci
dent occurred Sunday at the in
tersection of the Jacksonville
highway and Perrydale rd. west
of Medford. The cars were
driven by Martin Richard Fred-
enburg, 67, of 3039 Jacksonville
highway and Commodore De-
vore, 25 Lewis St., state police
reported.
Leave for Camp Glenn
Klein, County 4-H agent, and
four boys left this morning for
the range management summer
camp near Tupper guard station
in eastern Oregon. Klein will
return Immediately to duties
here. Boys remaining for the
week's camp are Steve Carroll,
Eagle' Point: Russell Elmore,
Applegate; Wayne Ditsworth,
Phoenix; and David Hughes,
Eagle Point
mm
Ends TOMORROW!
tok
HUNTER
Natofo
WOOD
The Girl
He Left
Behind"
Hi-School
FOOTBALL
STADIUM
MEDFORD
Friday Saturday
AUG. 2-3
- TWO DAYS ONLY
Twice O, m D.l eHM
Daily
The
Medford Shrine Club
presents
The 8th Annual
Bigger!
Better!
More Thrills
Than Ever
The Apex of Circus Thrills
Bubbling Over With Variety
laughs ... and . . . Surprises
All New . . All Different.,
with no advance in prices . .
Avoid standing in Line . . .
Buy Tickets NOW at
7 North Bartlett
3000 S2S 90
Children
50c
Reserved Section (Extra)
WW
ml
Personal
Surgery Patient Mrs. Clif
ford Schleith, route 2, box 213,
Medford, was a minor surgery
patient at Medford Osteopathic
hospital this morning.
Girl Molested City police
received a report at 10:25 p.m.
Saturday that a nine-year-old
Medford girl had ben molested.
Futher investigation is being
made.
Hubcap Theft Daniel Allen
Waldron, 124 Stark St., reported
to city police Saturday the theft
of two hubcaps from his car
while it was parked at 304
North Ivy st.
Bikes Taken Two bicycle
thefts from the YMCA were re
ported to city police at 10:20
p.m. Saturday. Owners of the
bikes were Walter Roy Lee, 847
Palm st., and Rex Joel Nicode
mus, 1122 West Fourth st.
Break Attempt A 14-year
old Medford boy called city po
lice yesterday afternoon to re
port three other youths, aged
about 13 and 14, had attempted
to break into the Esquire thea
ter building, 416 East Main st.
Cars Collide A jeep driven
by Elmer William Abbott, 1212
Withington st., and a "car oper
ated by John G. Turck, Klamath
Falls, collided at the intersection
of Main st. and Central ave.
about 6:50 a.m. today, city po
lice reported.
Realtors Meet The regular
meeting of the Medford Multiple
Listing Service, Inc., will be
held at noon tomorrow in the
Timber Room. A delegation from
the Ashland Multiple Lasting
Service will be guests. All mem
bers and brokers are urged to
attend, a spokesman said.
Failed to Stop Victor Elmer
Peterson, Roseburg, was cited by
city police for failure to stop at
a stop light Sunday, afternoon.
Peterson's car collided with an
auto driven by Homer George
Kisner, 2931 South Pacific high
way, at the intersection of high
ways 99 and 62.
Fir Extinguished Upon
complaint of neighbors, a trash
fire in the rear of a grocery
store in the 700 block of Stewart
ave., was extinguished by the
Medford fire department yester
day. The owner was advised of
burnind regulations in the city
limits. The fire was put out
about 8:50.
lirths
NEER To Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence, 619 Pennsylvania St.,
July 25, 1957, a boy, 834 pounds,
at Sacred Heart hospital.
WORKMAN To Mr. and
Mrs. Edwin general delivery,
Phoenix, July 26, 1957, a boy,
7V4 pounds, at Sacred Heart hos
pital. . KING To Mr. and Mrs.
Charles, 128 Valley View dr.,
July 27, 1957, a girl, SH pounds,
at Sacred Heart hospital.
NIELSEN To Mr. and Mrs
Frode, Applegate, July 28. 1957
a girl, 6V pounds, at Sacred
Heart hospital.
MORGAN To Mr. and Mrs.
Buckley, 706 South Oakdale ave.
July 28, 1957, a boy, 6 pounds,
at Sacred Heart hospital.
HAYES To Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin, 2823 Table Rock rd.
July 19, 1957, girl, 834 pounds,
at Medford Osteopathic hospital.
Daily Wealher Report
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Afternoon nd
evening thunderstorm over the moun
tains. Otherwise fair and mild through
Tuesdav. Low tonight ob: men lues
' day 75-80 in the north; 85-90 in the
south: 63 on the coast.
Western Oregon: Temperatures av.
i eraetntf below normal through Sat-
I urday; highs generally 75-85 except
j tor 65 on tne coast. iow 40-31. n
little rain likely on northern Oregon
coast about Wednesday, otherwise lit
tip or nn rjrecirjitation.
t Northern California: Fair through
, Tuesday except for fog and low over
: cast on the coast. Probably a few
scattered thunderstorms in the Sierra
; Nevadas during the afternoon ana
evening. Lime cnange in icmpera-
ture.
! LOCAL DATA
Temperature: Mean yesterday 72;
. below normal 2.
Record high this date 102 in 1923.
Record low this date 44 in 1950.
' Precipitation: 24 hours to midnight
none. Mldmgnt to tu am. none.
Total this month. .16 in.. .01 in.
helow normal.
Total since Sept. 1 21.84 in, 3 68
; in. above normal.
Humidity: Lowest yesterday 23
1 highest this a.m. 76.
High 4:30 21-Yester-
a.m. hr.
day Low Free,
City
Brookings
Crater Lake
Grants Pass
Klamath Falls
."MEDFORD
60
71
92
86
52
42
54
M
56
54
59
66
60
53
84
48
53
65
85
67
77
7S
70
70
91
Portland - 82
Seattle
Spokane
Yakima ...
Eureka ...
Red Bluff .
... 57
102
95
7
.... 83
.102"
90
A. 82
85
Sacramento
San Francisco
Los Angeles
Phoenix
Denver
Chicago
1.06
.01
.06
.Miami
New York 74
Washington, D.C. 90
Underlying Nebraska's Sand
Hills is a billion acre feet of
water, enough to supply the city
of Los Angeles for the next 1.000
years at the present rate of consumption.
Obituary
ROYAL VICKREY DUNHAM
Royal Vickrey Dunham, 82, of
316 North Central ave., Med
ford, died in a local hospital Sun
day.
He was born in Burnetts
Creek, Ind., on May 14, 1875.
Dunham had been a Medford
resident for three years. He was
principal of Jackson school of
Medford for three years and of
the Benson school in Roseburg
for one year. He was also a mem
ber of the Knights of Pythias
since he was 18 years old.
He is survived by his wife,
Ada Dunham, a daughter, Ellen
Dunham of San Francisco: one
sister, Mrs. Katherine Huling of
Portland; two brothers, Mark
Dunham of Portland and Russell
Dunham of Ashland; and several
nieces and nephews.
The body will be forwarded
to Roseburg where graveside
services will be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday in the IOOF ceme
tery there. Perl Funeral home
is in charge of local arrange
ments. NETTIE L. FOUTS
Mrs. Nettie L. Fouts, 91, form
er Medford resident, died July
21 at the home of her daughter,
Mrs. Charles Smith, in San Jose,
Calif.
She was born in Indiana Sept.
5, 1865. She was the widow of
the late Erastus J. Fouts of Med
ford. Mrs. Fouts moved to Medford
in 1908 with her family. Her
husband was in business here
from 1908 to 19211. During that
time he was also worshipful
master of the Medford Masonic
lodge. The family moved to Los
Gatos in 1921. Mrs. Fouts died
there in 1925.
OWEN A. RUTH
Owen A. Ruth, 81, of 121
Laurel St., Medford, died in a
local hospital Friday.
He was born in Benton coun
ty, Missouri on Sept. 18, 1875.
Ruth is survived by two sons,
Owen J. Ruth of Kansas City,
Kans.; Marion Ruth of Salem,
Ore.; two daughters, Mrs. Hom
er Stephenson and Mrs. Anna
Kindred, both of Medford; one
sister, Mrs. Sarah Murry of
Quincy, Mo.; one half-sister, Mrs.
Ivy Quigg of Waitsburg, Wash.;
two half-brothers, Leslie Ruth of
Wapato, Wash., and John Ruth
of Kansas City, Kans.; and a
number of grandchildren and
great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at the Perl Funeral home at
10:30 a.m. Tuesday. The Rev.
Melvin Dixon will officiate. Bur
ial will be in Siskiyou Memorial
park. '
Canada Gas to Be
Sent to California
San Francisco IP) The
huge natural gas reserves of
Western Canada will be linked
to Pacific Lighting Gas distrib
utors to give Southern California
an out of state gas supply total
ing 1,230 million cubic feet, Rob
ert A. Hornby, president of the
California company, announced
today.
The project will take three
years to complete.
Southern California and the
Southern Counties Gas Comp
anies have also contracted to buy
an additional 200 million cubic
feet of gas daily from the El
Paso company which will re
ceive the supply from the Pacific
Northwest Pipeline company
which is in turn is contracting
for Canadian gas.
El Paso plans to build a 34
inch pipeline from California,
southwest of Las Vegas, to Twin
Falls, Idaho, 500 miles away.
This line will connect with the
Pacific Northwest pipeline sys
tem. More facilities will be re
quired to get gas to Southern
California markets.
All agreement pertaining to
the 2,200-mile link are subject
to approval by the California
Public Utilities commission, the
Federal Power commission, and
Canadian governmental agencies.
Prisoner Credited
With Saving Jailer
Chehalis, Wash. OPi Sheriffs
officers have credited prisoner
Kenneth Rocque, Chehalis. with
saving the life of Jailer Ernest
Runke during a scuffle with
three other inmates in an abor
tive escape attempt at the Lewis
county jail here Saturday.
Rocque, serving time on two
counts of robbery, jumped in to
help Runke when the three other
prisoners began beating the jail
er over the head with a push
broom.
The three inmates, who at
tacked Runke while he was de
livering food to their cell, turned
on Rocque, burned him with hot
coffee and beat him with their
fists.
The three inmates who at
tempted the escape were caught
later inside the jail building
They were identified as Harold
Dean Black, Alabama City, Ala.;
James Lewis Blackhorse. Idaho
Springs, Colo.: and Dewitt Stuart
Schwarz, Clairmont, Okla., all
18.
The three were apprehended
about two weeks ago and were
being held for Army authorities
at Lowry Air Force base near
Denver.
Notices
MRS. ADA WERTZ
Mrs. Ada Wertz of 823 West
10th St., died last night at her
home.
The body will lie in state in
the Rose room at Conger-Morris
Funeral home until noon Wed
nesday. Funeral arrangements
will be announced later by Conger-Morris
Funeral home. .
CASSANDRA ROSE
Cassandra Rose, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rose of
2752 Howard St., died Sunday in
a local hospital. Conger-Morris
Funeral home is in charge of ar
rangements. MRS. EDITH LARSEN
Mrs. Edith Larsen of route 1,
box 419B, Medford, died this
morning in a local hospital. Conger-Morris
Funeral home is in
charge of arrangements.
MRS. LIZZIE FREAUF
Funeral services for Mrs. Liz
zie Freauf who died Sunday will
be held at Conger-Morris at
noon -Wednesday.
For the past 17 years she had
made her home with her daugh
ter, Mrs. Glen Chase of Gold
HilL
CMARLES BOATWRIGHT
Services for Charles Boat
wright, 76, of Shady Cove, who
died Sunday in a Medford hos
pital, will be held in Ashland
Mortuary chapel Tuesday at
2:30 p.m.
The Rev. Leo Wine of Faith
Temple will officiate. Burial
will be in Mountain View ceme
tery. Mr. Boatwright was born in
Gentry county, Missouri, May
24, 1881. He was married April
13, 1945, to Mary Weeks, who
survives. He came to Oregon in
1943, residing in Talent. In 1948
he moved to Shady Cove and
was living there at the time of
his death.
Survivors besides his wife in
clude six daughters, Mrs. Sadie
Miller, Mrs. Florence Gage, and
Mrs. Grace Obannion, all of
Standsbury, Mo., Mrs. Ester
Crow, Phoenix, Ore.; Mrs. Doro
thy Morris and Mrs. Morine Tay
lor, both of Ashland; seven sons,
Jack N. and Robert L., Ashland;
Dick E., Charles V. and Frank
H., all of Gold Beach; and Wil
bur D., and A. Wayne, both of
Shady Cove; three stepdaugh
ters, Mrs. Catherine McCoy,
Midway, Calif.; Mrs. Lorraine
Brotzman, Westminster, Calif.;
and Mrs. Helen Hawkins, Med
ford; a stepson, Donald E. Hoo
denpyle, Cloverdale, Calif.; and
15 grandchildren and 22 great
grandchildren.
OMER A. RITTER
Funeral services for Omer A.
Ritler, 58, of Medford, who died
Friday will be held at Conger
Morris Funeral home Tuesday
at 1 p.m. The Rev. D. E. Millard
will officiate. Committal will be
in Rock Point cemetery, Gold
Hill.
Mr. Ritter was born Sept. 16,
1897 in Richland, Ore. He was
married to Sarah Eblen, who
survives him, on Oct. 1, 1945,
in Klamath Falls. He was a
member of the F.O.E., Aerie No.
2090, Klamath Falls.
He was a veteran of World
War I, serving from March 12,
1918 through July 26, 1919. He
was discharged as a corporal.
Other survivors include a step
son, Maj. Thomas H. Eblen,
Branford, Conn; half - sisters,
Myrtle Hendricks, Halfway,
Ore., Nova Thayer and Jose
Duke, both of Sacramento,
Calif.
Hiatt Made Member
Of Architect Firm
Robert D. Hiatt . of Medford
has been apponted to the local
staff of James L. Payne, archi
tect of Medford and Salem, ac
cording to an announcement by
Payne today.
Architect Wayne E. Struble is
manager of the local office.
Hiatt is a 1950 graduate of the
University of Oregon school of
architecture and was employed
by A. D. Harvey, consulting
engineer of Medford, for two
years.
He designed the new Colleen
Hope Dance Studio, 45 Hawth
orne ave.. and a number of
Medford residences, and previ
ously had wide experience in a
number of professional offices
in the state.
Mr. and Mrs. Hiatt and three
children reside at 1016 East
Jackson st.
Police Drive to Cut
One-Day Staff Sickness
Hoboken, N.J. (OT City
officials are conducting a drive
to combat one-day sicknesses"
in the police department. .
Daniel F. Carmody, Hoboken
personnel director, plans to in
struct police department sur
geons to make a house call on a
policeman the day he reports
sick.
He said an average of five of
the 170-member police force
have been reporting sick each
day and claimed this was "too
many one-day illnesses."
SAWDUST
Phone SP 3-6297
McGiniy Fuel Co.
Wide Decline Noted
In Rails in Market
New York W Railroad
shares, which made a bid for
power in the stock market last
week, suffered their widest de
cline today since Feb. 11, the
day before the market as a
whole set its 1957 low.
Losses in the rails ranged
from a point in New. York Cen
tral to 2 points in Louisville
and Nashville at its low..
Industrials had several wider
losses. Blue chips like Du Pont,
Gulf Oil, International Paper,
Lukens Steels, National Lead,
Pfizer, Pittston, and Safeway
Stores lost 2 to 3 points. A
long list lost a point or more.
It was difficult to find gainers
in the market as a whole.
Standard of Jersey held about
the previous close by a sharp
rise in its earnings for the first
half. American Airlines managed
to score a small gain. F. E.
Miss Soule To Be
Arraigned Today
San Mateo, Calif. (IP) Su
zanne Elaine Soule, 19-year-old
confessed killer of her socialite
roommate, was to be arraigned
on a murder charge today.
Miss Soule was to appear be
fore San Mateo Municipal Judge
J. A. Branson' on a charge of
murdering Catherine Marie El
vins, daughter of a prominent
Seattle physician.
Miss Soule admitted bludgeon
ing and stabbing Miss Elvins to
death last Wednesday in the
bedroom of the Burlingame ap
artment they shared.
Miss Soule's father, Frank
Soule, arrived Sunday from
Freeport, Long Island, N.Y., and
visited his daughter in San Ma
teo county jail in Redwood City.
Accompanying him was another
daughter, Mrs. John Ward, who
lives in the same apartment buil
ding as the slaying took place.
Matron Vera Healey said Miss
Soule appeared happy to see
her father.
Soule delayed his departure
from Freeport because of the
marriage of a son on Saturday.
ininq Council
Protests to Ike
Washington (If) The west
ern governors' Mining Advisory
council protested today that
President Eisenhower has "sac
rificed" the west's mining in
dustry to eastern importers.
Sam H. Williston, Palo Alto,
Calif, chairman of the group,
made the statement in testimony
before a Senate Interior sub
committee. Williston said that some form
of import controls are manda
tory if the mining-oriented econ
omy of the western states is to
be preserved. Foreign mining in
terests, he said, already have
seized half of the domestic min
erals market.
He said Eisenhower has em
phasized the need for a "heal
thy" mining industry but appar
ently does not favor the broad,
long range plans of Interior Sec
retary Fred A. Seaton.
The President, he .said, "has
deemed it proper to sacrifice the
mining industry of the west to
certain segments of our eastern
economy who profit by trade
and barter but contribute little
or nothing in the form of actual
production."
The Advisory council advises
western governors on mineral
problems. Williston is executive
vice president of the Cordero
Mining company.
Bacon Gets Trophy
At Credit Meeting
Vern Bacon, manafjr of the
Credit Bureau of Medford, was
recently awarded a district tro
phy for outstanding Credit Bur
eau service by the Northwest
District of the Associated Credit
Bureaus of America.
The trophy was presented at
a recent district meeting at Spo
kane, Wash., attended by more
than 600 delegates from 135
bureaus in the Pacific north
west. They met to consider mutual
credit interests in assisting the
credit buying publicum making
a more intelligent and greater
use of credit facilities and in de
creasing the dangers of over
buying, according to a bureau
announcement.
The average truck in 1941 was
5.6 years old. Today the aver
age is about seven years.
mm
iDAricir
' nam aw m -
INDUSTRIAL"'
16 S. Central PtotM SP 3-530
Monday. July 29, 19S7
Myers stood out with a rise of
2'2 points.
A lone list of stocks registered
new lows for the year. Indust-1
rials had their widest decline
since June 19 and so did the
average of the Dow-Jones 65
stocks.
Dow-Jones final stock aver
ages: 30 industrials 508.25, off
6.34; 20 railroads 149.32. off
3.01; 15 utilities 69.91. off 0.12;
and 65 stocks 175.65. off 2.19.
Sales today were about 1.
900,000 shares compared with
1.710.000 shares Friday.
Allied Chemical 90
American Can 443,i
AT&T 173
Anaconda Copper ; 66
Bethlehem Steel 48H
Caterpillar Corp 85V4
Chrysler Corp ....... 1 764
Continental Can 45
Crown Zellerbach 53Vt
Curtis Wright 41
Du Pont 199'. 8
Eastman Kodak 110
General Electric 70
General Foods 48H
General Motors 45' s
Georgia Pacific 33H
Graham Paige IVi
Homestake Mining 3334
Kennecott Copper "...110
Lockheed Aircraft 31Vt
Katy Pfd 56
Montgomery Ward . 37 Vg
New York Central 34 Vi
Penney J C 78
Penn RR 207s
Radio Corporation 34 V4
Richfield Oil 74 V
Socony Vacuum 61 V4
South Co 25 Vs
Southern Pacific 44 Vi
Standard California 58 's
Standard Indiana 513,4
Standard NJ 667'8
Sun Mines . 12Vi
Texas Gulf 26V4
Tex Pac Land Trust 714
Transameiica . 35 V4
Trans West Air ... 13
Union Carbide 122
Union Pacific 29'.-
United Aircraft 624
UAL ; 283,8
U S Rubber 443,4
U S Steel 68? s
Youngstown S & T 103!b
Portland Livestock
Portland Cattle 1650. includes .25
lnaris fed steers and 5 loads fed heif
ers: market slow; early sales fed
steers, heifers and beef cows steady
but many bids lower: canner-cutter
cows weak to 50c lower; load hi(?h
rhnice 1165 lb. fed steers 26; load
average choice 1050 lz. 25.75; part
load low choice luuu 10. wan
choice 785 lb. fed heifers 23.75:' few
ennri-phnice 643 lb. feeder heifers 21:
Mnnpr-pntter cows mostlv 11-11.50;
heavy cutters to 13, some bold nigner:
utility cows 14-14.50; commercial
16.50-17: uUlity bulls 17.50-18, old
head 19.
Calves 300; market not fully estab
lished; early sales and bids weak to
1.00 lower; few good vealers 19-21;
choice held above 23: few good-choice
240-350 lb. stock calves 20-23.
Hogs 1000: market strong to coc
higher; No. 2 and 3 grades up most;
enrtpri 1 and 2 butchers 190-220 lb.
24.50-24-75; mixed 1. 2 and 3 lots
23.75-24.25; sows 300-500 lb. mixed 1.
2 and 3 grades 16-20.
Sheep 2100; spring lambs strong
to 50c higher, other classes steady:
load 301 neaa mostly cnoice Oregon
ranee lambs 98-lb. off truck weights
21.75; other choice spring lambs 20-21
with few selected lots 21.50; good
choice 19.50-20.50: deck choice No.
2 pelt 20; utility-low good shorn lambs
17-17.50; slaughter ewes 3-6.
Portland Produce
Portland (UP) Eggs to retailers:
Grade AA large. 54-5!c: A gradf. 50
52c: AA medium, 44-46c; 'A medium.
44-4 6c; A small, 28-3 lc; l-3c addi
tional. Butter To retailers: AA & A grade
Erints. 67-68c lb.; carton, lc a pound
igher; B prints. 65-66C.
Cheese Medium cured To retail
ers: A grade Cheddar, single daisies,
4512-52c; 5-lb. loaves. 51I,3-57c; proc
essed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf
41 ,2-44c.
Farm Market
Head lettuce prices reached a new
seasonal high today with best from
Vancouver, Wash., topping market at
4.50 a 3-dozen head crate; best Cali
fornia lettuce was around 4.00 a car
ton; few flats of first Yakima valley
hot peppers sold at 2.00 each; strictly
No. 1 Freewater district tomatoes
topped market at 3.00 a 23-lb. lug:
Willamette valley blackberries and
boysenberries in limited supply and
moved early at 2.00 a flat.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens Quoted to growers
No. 1 qualitv, at ranch, 22-4 lbs., 25c
lb.; light hens. 9-llc lb. at ranch,
heavy hens. 5 lbs. up. 12-13c lb.; old
roosters. 7-9c lb., f.o.b. Portland.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade
dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole
drawn, 42-46c lb.; cut up. 47-51C lb.:
hens, light type, cut up. 34-37c; heavy
type, whole drawn. 36-41c lb. "
Turkeys To producers: Fryer tur
keys, live weight, 27-28c lb.; young
hen turkeys, A grade. 25ic on evis
cerated basis.
Rabbits (Average to growers, f.o.b.
killing plants): Live white, 3:4-5 lbs..
f.o.b. dressing plants Portland. 23-26c;
colored pelts, 4c under: old does, 10
12 lbs., a few cents higher. Fresh kill
ed frvers to retailers, 59-64c lb.; cut
up, 62-65C lb.
Portland Hay, Grain
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices
New crop. No. 2 green alfalfa, baled,
f.o b. Portland and Seattle. $26 a ton.
Wholesale Prices as reported bv the
USDA market news service: Wheat
No. 2 soft white. $78.50 a ton: No.
2 white oats 38-lb. West Coast de-liven-,
nominally $48 ton; No. 2 Val
lev white oats, $45.50 ton; soy bean
mean. $81 ton, f o.b. Portland; barley
No. 2, 45-lb. West Coast delivery
$44.50 ton: standard mill run. prompt
delivery. $37.50-38.50 ton f.ob. Port
land: No. 2 vellow corn. Eastern ship
ment f.o.b. Portland. $64-64.50.
Daily's U-Drive
- Medford Airport
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ELEVEN
YMCA Schedules
Special Camp Days
A special camping period for
girls will be run for three-day
periods starting Aug. 12, Bob
Jones, Medford YMCA secre
tary-manager, said today.
The period starting Aug. 1H,
has been scheduled for girls
13-years-old and up, and Aug.
15th to 17th for girls 9 to 13
years of age, Jones said.
The special period has been
made available to introduce girls
to camping in a forested area,
Jones explained. Mrs. Sarah
Stickel, formerly of the regular
YMCA staff will conduct the
girls' period. She will be assist
ed by Herbert Partridge, YMCA
camp director, and Mrs. Edith
Baker, camp nurse. Names of
counselors will be announced la
ter.
The schedules include climbs
of the two mountains near Dia
mond Lake Bailey and Theil-
son. Activities will include also
boating, canoeing, fishing, swim
ming, archery, and wild-life
study. ,
-Girls will live in army squad
tents. Meals will be served in
Elliott hall, the YMCA dining
lodge. Ruth Lee, a Klamath
Falls school district cook, will
prepare the meals.
"Any girl in the Rogue valley
is eligible for the short period
camping which is provided at a
nominal cost," Jones said. "The
camp-out will accomodate 60
girls."
Federal Grand Jury
Convenes in Tacoma
Tacoma Wl A federal grand
jury was reconvened here today
to look further into the income
tax life of Dave Beck, presi
dent of the International Broth
erhood of Teamsters.
Subpoenas for about 30 wit
nesses were to be served by U.S.
Marshal Budd Parsons' office.
Among them is one for Frank
Brewster, president of the West
ern Conference of Teamsters.
The grand jury already has
indicted Beck for income tax
evasion in 1950. The portly union
boss, who is in Florida for a
union meeting, pleaded Innocent
to the charges.
Last Friday, Beck pleaded in
nocent to a King county Grand
Jury indictment charging him
with grand larceny in selling a
Teamsters' auto and pocketing
the money.
Dave Beck Jr. is to be ar
raigned on a similar King county
jury indictment Tuesday.
Gerrish Named PT&T
General Manager
Portland Harold A. Gerrish,
39, today was named general
commercial manager for Pacific
Telephone in Oregon succeeding
Fred Scholl, for 21 years the
head of the company's commer
cial operations in the state.
Gerrish will assume his new
duties here Aug. 1.
Scholl, presently absent due
to sickness, is scheduled to re
tire under the company's auto
matic retirement rule at age .65
on Sept. 1. He began his tele
phone career at Sacramento in
1912.
Gerrish comes from Los An
geles where he has been the
general sales manager for the
telephone company in southern
California.
ENJOY GENUINE
CHARCOAL
BROILED FOODS
in the
CANDLE ROOM
at the Medford
Hotel
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A Paramount Picturt
Five-Year-Olcl Drowns
After Falling in Creek
Scio, Ore. (W Michael
Doan, 5, drowned Sunday when
he fell into a creek while on a
picnic with his family and struck
his head on a rock.
He was the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Hubert Doan of Shelburn,
near here.
Wood for coffins provides one
of the heaviest drains on Chi
nese forests.
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