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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 6, 1957)
r Local and Grass Burnt Firemen said that a passing motorist may have been responsible for a two-acre grass fire about 1:25 p.m. yes terday in a vacant field at Crest brook rd. and Ellendale dr. They reported that another grass fire in a vacant area along Bear c.eek in the 800 block of North Riverside ave., was caused by children playing with matches. A trash fire, burning after hours in a closed zone was extinguish ed by firemen in the 100 block of East 12th st. about 6:35 p.m. yesterday. LIU JIUKI SUSAN HAYWARD 3rd Big Hit! SAT. ONLY KIRK DOUGLAS "Man . Without A Star" I i 9 uuiam t jTtJ 0THI Enjoy a PLEASANT Evening EDAMCCIE Utk At WALKER'S POPULAR Alwayi a Congenial Crowd At GOLD HILL GRANGE Every Sat. 9 P.M. -1 A.M. Musi by Vie Flood and the Rhythm Masters Cliff Harris Fiddle & Vocal Doyle Smith Guitar & Vocal Linda Flood Vocal Bob Padgett Bast Bob Smith Drums Bill Soule Piano Dining Room for Your Convenience Checkroom FREE SATURDAY NIGHT - EAGLE POINT The Only Spring Floor In Southern Oregon DANCE TO THE COMBINED MUSIC OF DICK SPAIN, BILL LIVELY and The Rogue Valley Boys PLENTY OF FREE PARKING 9 Admission WITH A BIG PARTY SATURDAY NITE at WALKER'S Pg$EAiViI!L.AN(L1 FAVORS FOR ALL EXTRA MUSIC All who attended Dreamland dances 20 years ago are invited to be our guests! COME AND HELP US Personal Rummage Sale The Frater nal Order of Eagles auxiliary will have a rummage sale Sat urday, Sept. 7. from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 217 West Main st. Photo Certificate Dwaine and Janet Smith, manager of Classic Studio, 1112 West Main St., have been awarded a special certificate of merit by- the Wi nona School of Photography, Milwaukee, Wis. The couple were students in a summer course in Speedlight portrait photography there. Tonite! and SAT. Clark GABLE Lana TURNER Victor MATURE UgisCALHERN'kCOiot. Finest of Modern Music The EVERYONE WELCOME per Person ml We're Celebrating Our 29th CELEBRATE Permit Issued A $16,000 building permit has been issued to A. R. Dubs to construct a new residence at 416 Windsor ave. Picnic Neighbors of Wood craft of Medford will hold their fall picnic meeting at the home of Glenn Abbott, Lake Creek, Sunday, Sept. 8. Plant Inspected City Fire Marshal Truman Nelson issued 14 orders for correction of haz ards yesterday after inspection of a bulk petroleum storage and distributing plant. Visits Talent Project Mal colm Logan, bureau of reclama tion employee, is-inspecting the Talent project this week. Logan is attached to. the bureau's of fice at Boise. Ida., as a geologist. Bicycle Taken Jerry Rich ard Selleck, 1722 West 11th st., reported to police Thursday that his bicycle was taken while he was at the YMCA, 522 West Sixth st. , Two Receire Pini James L. Tengesdal received a 10-year pin and Clarence A. Tingleaf re ceived a 20-year pin recently from the department of interior. Both men are employed at the bureau of reclamation in Med ford. Bicycle Found Donald Charles Great, 32li Kennet st., reported to city police Thursday his bicycle was missing from Kennet and .Broadman sts. Po lice recovered the bicycle near the intersection later, reports showed. ' Stummage Sale The Gladam- son unit of the Wesleyan Serv ice guild, First Methodist church, will hold a rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Mon day, Sept. 9, at Sixth and Front sts. Used clothing and house hold articles will be on sale. Return Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Degerness, 520 Dakota ave., re cently returned from a two week vacation. They spent part of it at the Glen Taylor cabin at Union Creek and the remain der in Spokane, Wash., visiting their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Degerness. Attend Convention Bart Gar red and Don Edwards, Medford agents for Farmers Insurance group, will be guests Sept. 24 through 26 at the insurance company's "Topper Club" con vention at Harrison Hot Springs, British Columbia. The two were invited because of outstanding achievements in the insurance field. Visitors Visiting from Cali fornia over Labor Day holiday at the H. E. Baldwin home in Sams Valley were Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bigler and daughter, Shelia; Mr. and Mrs. James Big ler and children, Palima, Roger, Nettie and Jeane; Mr. and Mrs. James Necchia and Mr. and Mrs. Billy Cowdin, and children, Lin da and Larry. The visitors . all spent Sunday at Crater lake. Car Overturned A car driv en by Richard Lester Moyer, 28, of Portland, overturned about 12:29 a.m. today on a curve on Arnold lane between Bellinger lane and Highway 238, state po lice reported. Moyer's car was northbound on Arnold lane when it went into the ditch where it spun around and rolled over on its side, police said. ,Moyer was not injured, they said. Business Names Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Morgan, Jacksonville, have assumed the business name Burger Basket. According to the owners, the new business will have expanded facilities to include a lunch menu. The name Timber Room, South Riverside ave., have been assumed by Mr. and Mrs. Gaylen H. Shaw and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Stirewalt after it was retired by Mr. and Mrs. Leslie A. Shaw, according to records in the county clerk's office. New York (W Virginia Dale, 30, novelist, magazine writer and former Chicago newspaper film and drama critic, was found dead Thursday, apparently of natural causes. YOU Are Invited Dont' Miss It! Stock Market Near Suspended New York IP Today's stock market came as close to suspend ed animation as a market can come and still function. While a few special issues moved outside an orbit of a point the main list held to frac tional fluctuations. The widest fluctuations in the leading issues were a three- quarter point decline in U.S. Steel and a half-point rise in Du Pont. Other steels and chemicals held around the pre vious close. Jersey Standard lost more than a point in a narrow moving oil section. Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical 84 American Can 4314 AT&T 172 li Anaconda Copper 52 Bethlehem Steel 45. Caterpillar Corp 85Ss Chrysler Corp 75Vi Continental Can 439s Crown Zellerbach 483,s Curtiss Wright 37Vz Du Pont I86V2 Eastman Kodak 973i General Electric 65 V General Foods 483s General Motors 42ls Georgia Pacific 30 Graham Paige Unquoted Homestake Mining 35 14 LIVESTOCK Portland (U.P.) Cattle for week 2450. Average choice up to 1100 lb. steers 24.50, other choice steers 24 24.25, good steers 22.50-23.25. stand ard 19-22. Choice fed heifers 22.50 mixed good and choice 22-22.25. jsood mostly 21-21.50. standard 17.50-20. Utility and comm(cial cows 14-16, some"l6.25. canner and cutters 11-12.75, few to 13: heavv cutters up to 13.50. Utility bulls 17.50-18.50. few 19. Me dium and good stock steers 16-19. Calves for week 500. Choice vealers 24.50-26; good 21, standard 17-20.50, Good and choice slaughter calves 20 23. Cull and utility calves and vealers 12-16. Hogs for week 1300. Most 1 and 2 grade butchers 190-220 lb. 23.25-23.50. Mixed grade 180-235 lbs. 22.50-23, sorted off No. 3s down to 22. Weights 240-270 lbs. and 160-180 lbs. 21-22. Sows 300-500 lbs. 16.50-20.50, some 21. Sheep for week 2850. Choice shorn lambs No. 2 pelts 21.50. Mixed good and choice mixed wooled slaughter lambs 85-105 lbs. 20-21. few to 21.30. Goods mostly 19-20. Good and choice shorn lambs with No. 2 and 3 pelts 20-20.50, some 21. Good and choice 65-85 lb. feeders 16.50-18.50. cU to good slaughter ewes 3-6.50. PRODUCE Portland (U.P.I Eggs To retail ers: Grade AA large, 54-56c: A large, 50-52c; AA medium, 46-47c; A me dium. 45-46c: A small, 29-3 lc; carton, l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA and A grade prints. 67-68c lb.; carton, lc a pound higher: B prints. 65-6c. Cheese medium cured To retail ers: A grade cheddar, single daisies. 45'i-52c: 5-lb. loaves. 51'.2-57c; pro cessed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf. 41'2-44c. Farm Market Heavy crates of small to meflium sized Willamette vallev cabbage gen erally sold to retailers at S3.25-3.50 on the Portland market today, with best packs seling to $4.25. The sea son's first Gresham district Brussels sprouts were quoted at $3.25 a 12-cup crate. Poultry, Rabbits Live Chickens Quoted to growers. No. 1 quality ranch fryers. 2'2-4 lbs., 2lc: light hens. 8-ioc to.; at rancn, heavy hens. 5 lbs. up, ll-12c lb.; old roosters. 7-8c. Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers. Fryers, whole drawn, 40-41c lb.; cut up. 46-49c lb.; light type, cut up, 33-36c; heavy type, whole drawn. 35-40C lb. Turkeys To producers: Fryer tur keys, live weight, 27-23c lb.: young hen turkeys. A grade. 28 'ic on evis cerated basis. A grade toms, 25c lb. on same basis. Rabbits (Average to growers, f.o.b. killing plants): Live white. 3'i-5 lbs., f.o.b. dressing plants Portland. 23-26c; colored pelts. 4c under; old does, 10-12 lbs., a few cents higher. Fresh killed fryers 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, $24-25 a ton. Wholesale prices: as reported by the USDA market news service: Wheat, No. 2 soft white. S78 a ton: No. 2 white oats 38-lb. West Coast deliverv, $47.50 ton; No. 2 Valley white oats, $46.50 ton; soybean meal. $83.50 ton, f.o.b. Portland: barley No. 2, 45-lb. West Coast delivery $44.50 ton; stand ard mill run. prompt delivery, $36-37 ton f.o.b. Portland: No. 2 yellow corn. Eastern shipment f.o.b. Portland, $59-59.50. NOW PLAYING FREEB) FRANKIE LYMONwimTEiir um. CHUCK BERRY LA VERN BAKER thm Cr.or.tr ROCK 'N' (Oil Musi ployd by thm igaf oek fall J Croup. THIS IIDt Of HIAViNI PUBLIC PIGEON NO.1 V JANET BLAI VIVIAN BLAINf coiot AlflN XTi Li. b mm m ' nua B IT'S CRAZY MAN! Animation Kaiser Fazer 1214 Kennecott Copper 93?4 Lockheed Aircraft 36?s Katy Pfd 53 Montgomery Ward .. 26lA New York Central 281,z Penney J C .. 80 V Penn RR 19 Radio Corporation ; 34,2 Richfield Oil 771 2 Socony Vacuum 54:-4 Southern Co 22 7 s Southern Pacific 4(Hs Standard California 52 vi Standard Indiana 464 Standard NJ 6114 Sun Mines 1134 Texas Gulf 24 18 Tex Pac Land Trust .'. 7 Transamerica 3614 Trans West Air 12! 2 Tri-Continental 3038' Union Carbide 10!H2 Union Pacific 27',8 United Aircraft 6434 U A L J 24Vt U S Rubber 40V2 U S Steel 6458 Youngstown S & T 943,4 SUCCEEDING Ha r ley 0. Teets, who died last Sunday, as warden at Sair Quentin is Fred R. Dickson, above, 56. He was head of Chino prison. (International) SAT., Sept. 7 - All Moose and Music by the TUNE WRANGLERS at MOOSE HALL TODAY AND SATURDAY CecilB.DeMille's PRODUCT! ON CHARLTON YUL HE5T0N ' BRYN N ER BAXTER ROBINSON YVONNE DEBRA JOHN DE CARLO PAGET SIRCEDRtC NINA KARTHA JUDITH VINCENT HARDWOE rOCH SCOTT ANDERSON PRICE W, 4. k. ACNLAS MACKENZIE JE55E L LA5KY JK JACK GARI55 FRCDflC IK rSANH BJ i. HOLY SCRIPTURES J J. ' -i J -f PJJ lj Pfc- l. ROAD SHOW POLICY TWO SHOWS DAILY Matinees 1:30 P.M. Evenings 7:30 P.M. ROAD SHOW PRICES Matinees Evenings Adults $1.25 Adult $1.30 Leges $1.50 logei ............. $1.75 Children - .75 Children - .75 SPECIAL NOTICE MORNING BARGAIN MATINEE TOMORROW SATURDAY ONLY Doors Open 8:30 Show at 9:00 a.m. Adults 90c Children 50c FOR THIS SHOW ONLY Friday. September 8. 1957 OBITUARIES MRS. ENA E. HOALEY Ashland Mrs. Ena Ezeline Hoadley, 83, of 47 Granite st., Ashland, died at her home early Sept. 5- She had been in fail ing health since a stroke several months ago. Mrs. Hoadley was born April 25, 1874, in Alexandria. Minn. She and her husband lived in Sand Point, Idaho, where Mr. Hoadley died in 1935. After liv ing in Idaho for 21 years she moved to Ashland in September, 1943, and "was a member of the First Methodist church. She is survived by four child ren, Lester H. Hoadley, Sand Point, Idaho: Earl S. Hoadley, Mrs. Ruth Crosby, and Mrs. Ruby Charland, all of Ashland; 12 grandchildren; 20 great-grandchildren; and two brothers, Milo M. Madison. Oggma, Minn., and James A. Madison, Sand Point Idaho. Funeral services will be held Saturday, Sept. 7, at 2 p.m. in Litwiller's Mountain View Chapel, Ashland, with the Rev. Laurence May officiating, as sisted by the Rev. Ross Knotts. Interment will be in the Sand Point, Idaho, cemetery. STUART R. HAYES Stuart R. Haves, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Fritz, Glide, Ore., died recently at Whiting Field, Fla. The body will be for warded to Medford for funeral, according to word received by Perl Funeral home. Haves was born Jan. 7. 1937. Hp attended Medford Junior high school (now McLoughlin junior high) from 1949 to 1952, according to school records. While in Medford, the family lived at 121 Kenwood ave. Hayes' rating was MC Naval Cadet. PLAN EXPERIMENTS Lakeland, Fla. (IP) Experi ments were planned today for thicker frozen organ concentrate which citrus processors think might cut down shipping, han dling and canning costs. Any child living in Jackson county is eligible for a free card for borrowing books from the Jackson County Library when he can write 1ns name without help and give his address, tele phone number, and his father's name and occupation. 9 p.m. Guests 11 NEWTOWN J 6 Days ANNC EDWARD G. if TKTAVrcKjrf TECHNICOLOR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN Agencies Assist Lumber Industry Direct assistance to small business in a hard-pressed lum ber industry is being initiated at the local level by joint action between the U. S. corps of engi neers and the Small Business ad ministration, according to the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce. John G. Barnett. branch man ager, announced that the Port land office of SBA and the Lum ber Purchasing branch of the corps of engineers have started a program of exclusive awards on lumber purchases for firms qualifying as small business in the SBA program. TMs purchase action is termed "set-aside" and the initial bids were opened Aug. 23 and Aug. 30, consisting of lumber and ply wod. By terms of the procure ments, firms with more than 500 employees, and foreign firms are not permitted to compete, the chamber said. An active competition at reas onable prices to the government will determine" the future extent of this program. This action es tablishes two of the largest fed eral procurement agencies in the area, the corps of engineers and Bonneville Power administra tion as actively supporting the OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Zotolla's Country Club located en Grants Pan Golf Court SERVING DINNERS DAILY Featuring FINE ITALIAN FOOD and PIZZA WE GIVE THE LAST BIKE TOMORROW This Is Your Last Chancel ON THE SCREEN ALAN LADD JAMES MASON IN "BOTANY BAY" PLUS CARTOON CARNIVAL and THE FINAL CHAPTER On Kongo Bill You Must See the Ending TONITE & SATURDAY ONLY The exciting story of fighting youth who adventure's greatest hour! WaltDisney JTohnny Tromain Cil rail x Technicolor HAL STALMASTER LUANA PATTEN JEFF YORK - SEBASTIAN CABOT CO-FEATURE They said he was bad... all bad! r'.MJi JACK PALANCE ANTHONY PERKINS , ELAINE AIKEN '-" f Here's tub M 1 W tfj' 15 ); i A First successful motorcycle was not built until 1900." The original two-wheeled cycle was invented in 1868 but it was pro pelled by steam. small business program, the chamber said. ENJOY GENUINE CHARCOAL BROILED FOODS in the CANDLE ROOM at the Medford Hotel TONITE & SATURDAY Burt Lancaster-Kirk Douglas RHOttvA AHUM JO 1M Hit I PLUS ANTHONY PERKINS grf ; V KARL MALDEN !if : ADDED SATURDAY ONLY 3RD BONUS FEATURE TONITE & SATURDAY J i Out 1 NniCMD - PLUS - ep1" i cvnniVfULui (. jeanmaire tjL.V PHIL HARRIS SATURDAY ONLY GREAT FEATURES FIRST HIT SECOND HIT Western Goa-Lsw MvLt THIRD HIT BOWftf ' S-il S Sunday JUL- I m i j rmrnw m mw 9 mm ENDS TONITE WONttC0l0j nyRTMJUTn PLUS 3 iZJ CAWEKOlf BREWWAW