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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 9, 1958)
Local and Trap Robbed Floyd Mc Kee, 2331 South Stage rd., re ported to the sheriff's office that a trap on the Rupert Mad dox property on Sterling rd. was robbed of a coyote. Surgery Patients Daryle Morehouse, Canyonville; Har rison Taylor, 1134 Oak Grove rd., Medford; and Harry A. Lewis, post office box 943, Eagle Point, are surgery pa tients at Rogue Valley hos pital, the hospital reported to day. Being Held Howard Wayne Warren, 21, of Canby, Ore., is being held in Jackson county jail for Canby authori ties after he was arrested Wednesday by state police on charges of larceny by bailee. Police apprehended Warren on Highway 99, near Med ford. Chimney Fires Firemen were summoned to flu fires about 12:40 a.m. today at the Booth Dyer residence, 421 Benson st., and about 6:45 . p.m. yesterday at the home of Delmar Meyers, 211 Elm st. Called at 11:10 p.m. yester day to investigate a report of smoke at the Masonic temple, firemen found the odor to be coming through the ventilat ing system on the roof from a nearby flue. mm A! Now $1 Per Gar! fULET Run ROBOT 3 IJM3TMOI3fE -All AMERICAN TO M TH II M MIDGET PRICES THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY CENTRAL POINT YELLOW ONIONS FLORIDA RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT 3,29 U.S. NO. 2 POTATOES SWIFT'S PREMIUM FRYERS None Better LARGE JUICY FRANKS SWIFT'S PREMIUM BACON Lite Lean Sides GOLD MEDAL FLOUR CHASE t SANBORN INSTANT COFFEE Big 6-oz. jar SNOWDRIFT THE WESSON OIL SHORTENING 3 HOLIDAY COLORED MARGARINE 4, J5 MEN'S BLUE WORK nl TO isa -T MIDWAY We Reserve the Right to Limit Phone NO Personal Windows Broken Ashland police reported several win dows were broken in the Ash land Body shop, Siskiyou blvd., and Highway 99, Wed nesday night. Antennas Damaged Joseph L. Cooley, 109 West Sixth st., and Kenneth Gale Hamner, 109 West Sixth st., reported to Medford police that car radio antennas had been dam aged while their cars were parked at the Holland hotel lot Wednesday evening. Junior Class Mothers of members of the baton section of Bliss Heine's Juniors have been asked to attend Satur day's class to discuss a change in baton work, which has been in the planning stage during the past few weeks. Plans also are under way for participa tion in Oregon's Centennial celebration in Portland. Redecorated The cocktail lounge at the Medford hotel has been redecorated in a French motif, according to ho tel officials. Lighter and brighter colors have been used, a spokesman reported, with a French design wall paper being used. Included in the redecorating are two mur als by Hal Bishop. Accident Cars operated by Ruben Erickson, Long view, Wash., and R. R Laughton, box 673, Central Point, were involved in a col lision at Highway 99 and Pine st. about 7:45 a.m. Thursday morning, according to Central Point police. They said the Laughton car receiv ed heavy damage. Ashland Collision Walter Jackson Cullop, route 1, box 151, Talent, was cited for fail ure to maintain proper look out after a car he was driv ing was involved in an acci dent on Siskiyou blvd., Ash land, with a car operated by Reta Merle Smith, Seattle, Wash., about 7:30 p.m. Wed nesday, according to Ashland police. .45 1 39 50 ,,. 98 39 lb. 3,,1 00 55 lb. 10 1 99 95 79 H u tsa MARKET 4-1 511 Ta,Rrc.!5 like Optimistic on U.S. EDeveBopment Off Polaris MissiDe (Continued from Page One) "as a weapon of expansion . . . harnessed to the same chariot of expansion." "The Soviets are, in short, waging total cold war," he said.. "The only answer to a regime that wages total cold war is to wage total peace." The President dealt at length with his conviction that until the Russians are willing to negotiate a genuine peace, this country and the West have no choice but to improve their military strength. He conceded "that we are probably somewhat behind the Soviets in some areas of long-range ballistic development." Aircraft Said Powerful Deterrent He said, however, that he was convinced "that if we make the necessary effort, we will have the missiles, in the needed quantity and in time, to sustain and strengthen the deterrent power of our increasingly effective bombers." In this connection he said American aircraft constitute "the most powerful deterrent to war in the world today" with their retaliatory power. . "They present to any potential attacker who would un leash war upon the world the prospect of virtual annihila tion ..." The President was optim istic about the American de velopment of intermediate ballistic missiles and particu larly, the development of the submarine-based Polaris mis sile system. He said produc tion of both intermediate and intercontinental missiles would be accelerated. He pointed out that this Highlights Washington 0PI High lights of President Eisenhow er's State of The Union Mes sage: The threat: " "The Soviets are, in short, waging total cold war. The only answer . . . is to wage total peace." Military strength today: Even if our bases should be hit by a surprise and damag ing attack, our bombers would immediately be on their way in sufficient strength to retaliate. In long range missiles "we are prob ably somewhat behind the Soviets in some areas," but making rapid progress. Future military strength: "If we make the necessary effort, we will have the mis siles in the needed quantity and time, to sustain and to strengthen the deterrent pow er to our increasingly effic ient bombers." Economic threat: ''Admit tedly, most of us did not an ticipate the psychological im pact upon the world of the launching of the first earth satellite. Let us not make the same kind of mistake in an other field, by failing to an ticipate the much more seri ous impact of the Soviet ec onomic offensive ... at the very time when the economic threat is assuming menacing proportions to fail to strength en our own effort would be nothing less than reckless fol ly." U. S. economy: "... In the latter part of the year (1957), some decline in employment and output occurred, follow ing the exceptionally rapid expansion of. recent years . . . But the basic forces of growth are solid grounds for confi dence that economic growth will be resumed without an extended interruption." Defense reorganization: The President will propose changes to assure real unifi cation of strategic planning and control; "real" subordin ation of the military to civil ian authority; avoidance of costly and confusing duplica tion in the scientific and in dustrial effort; an end to inter-service disputes. Defense speed-up: We must have "stepped-up long range missile programs; accelerated programs for other effective missile systems; and, for some years, more advanced air News About Servicemen HELP IN RELIEF Fireman Donald D. Mar rington, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. K. 'Harrington, route 1, box 341A, Central Point; Av iation Boatswain's Mate Third Class Carl C. Clayton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Clayton, Eagle Point; and Machinist's Mate Third Class Gordon C. McVay, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Guthrie, 1642 Ridge way dr., recently took part in the Ceylon flood "disaster relief program of the Navy. Several United States ships took part in transporting sup plies to the flood area about Jan. 1. Garage Robbed E. M. Tucker of the Tucker Sno-Cat corporation. Medford, report ed to sheriff's deputies that a garage adjoining his cabin on Laurelhurst rd. near Trail was broken into some time last week. A set of pipe dyes and various other tools were taken, he told deputies. Some one also broke into the prop erty during Thanksgiving and took six peacocks and several chickens, he told officers. country had concentrated on the development of ballistic missiles for only about a third as long as Russia. But he said that in the 1959 budget ex penditures would be increased for missiles, nuclear ships, at omic energy, research and de velopment, science and educa of Ike's craft . . . nuclear submarines and cruisers; improved anti submarine weapons, missile "ships . . mobile forces . . . increases in pay and incen tives to maintain in the arm ed forces the skilled manpow er modern military forces re quire." Foreign Aid: "This is no 'give-away.' Let's stick to the facts! We cannot afford to have one of our most essential security programs shot down with a slogan." Scientific cooperation: Con gress should permit greater exchange of scientific and Ike's Address Fails To Stimulate Market New York (IP) The stock market moved irregularly on volume little changed from the previous session." Wall Street found nothing new to stimulate the market in President Eisenhower's ad dress. The President said noth ing about a crash program which would involve vast sums for defense and stated he planned to present a bal anced budget. Aircrafts and missile mak ers ran up before the address and then backed away from their highs with some issues showing net losses late in the day. Bendix Aviation featured in strength with a 2k point rise. General Dynamics, up a fraction, and North American aviation, down a shade, led in turnover. Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical ..... 75 V2 American Can 42 AT&T 1691s Anaconda Copper 41Vb Bethlehem Steel 37 Caterpillar Corp 60 Chrysler Corp 55 V2 Continental Can 42Vi Crown Zellerbach .. 45 Curtiss Wright 1 27 Du Pont 1771s Eastman Kodak 99 General Electric . 61 General Foods 4914 General Motors 36 Georgia Pacific :. 27 Graham Paige 1 Homestake Mining 33 Kaiser Frazer 8 Kennecott Copper 81 Lockheed Aircraft 41 Katy Pfd 32 Montgomery Ward 31 New York Central 14 Penney J C 84 Penn RR 12 Radio Corporation . 33 Richfield Oil 58VS Sears 2512 Socony Vacuum 46 Senators Launch Milk Support Bill Washington (IP) A bi partisan group of 18 senators launched a drive today to re verse Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson's order slash ing federal support rates for milk, butter and cheese. Sens. Hubert H. Humph rey (D-Minn.), and Edward J. Thye (R-Minn.), said they will introduce bills at the Sen ate's first business session to day boosting supports for manufacturing milk to $3.50 per hundredweight. Manufacturing milk is used for production of cheese, but ter, dried milk, and other dairy products. Sixteen other senators co sponsored the Humphrey bill. Klamath Falls (IP) Ben jamin Jacob Goddard, 41. Klamath Falls attorney, died here today. tion. There will be a special contingency fund for "possi ble new technological discov eries" - and pay increases for the armed- services. All of these things together will rep resent an Increase of about four billion dollars over com parable figures in the 1957 budget. The whole budget, however will be only around two bil lion dollars higher. Careful Management "I believe that, in spite of these necessary increases," the President said, "we should strive to finance the 1959 se curity effort out of expected revenues. While we now be lieve that expected revenues and expenditures will roughly balance, our real purpose will be to achieve adequate secur ity, but aways with the ut most regard for efficiency and careful management." The President reminded the members of the House and Senate that sacrifice and econ omy have to include pet local projects. "After all," he sai8, "It is no good demanding sacrifice in general terms one day, and the next day for local reasons, opposing the elimination of some unneededN federal fac ulty. "It is pointless to condemn federal spending in general and the next moment con demn just at strongly an ef fort to reduce the particular federal grant that touches one's own interest." Message technical information with the Allies. ,. Education and research: A four-year, billion dollar pro gram to improve teaching quality and student opportun ities, increase funds for im proving science education and double basic research funds. S p e n di ng: $1,300,000,000 additional defense funds for the current fiscal year; $4 billion more next fiscal year than currently for new wea pons and military improve ments. Expects a balanced budget in the next fiscal year. Southern Co 24 Southern Pacific 36 Standard California 45 Standard Indiana 37 Standard NJ 49 12 Texas Gulf 15 Transamerica 33 Trans West Air 11 Tri-Continental 28 Tex Pac Land Trust .... 6 Union Carbide 96 Union Pacific 25 United Aircraft 57 U A Lm zs-i U S Rubber 33 U S Steel 52 Youngstown S & T 72 Portland Livestock Portland (UP) Cattle 150. Av erage choice 1020 lb. fed steers 27: standard steers 22.50-24: standard heifers 20-23; utility-commercial cows 16-19; canners-cutters 13-15. Calves 25. Choice vealers 29-32: good vealers 24-28. nogs 150. Sorted 1 and 2 butch ers 190-220 lb. 21.25-21.50: some 21.75; mixed 1, 2 and 3 lots 180- 235 lb. 20.50-21; few 300-500 lb. sows 15-17.50. Sheen 50. Not enough offered early for adequate test. Portland Produce Portland (UP) Eees To retail ers: Grade AA large, 53c doz.; A large. 49-50c: AA medium. 48-49c: A medium, 47-49c; carton, l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: A A and A grade prints, 68-69c lb.; carton, lc a pound higher; B prints, 65-66C Cheese Medium cured To re tailers: A grade Cheddar, sinele daisies, 45j-52c; 5-lb. loaves, 51 j 57c; processed American cheese, 5 lb. loaf, 41'j-42c. Farm Market Trading was moderately active at the East Side Farmers market to day where supplies were limited to Willamette valley apples, po tatoes, dry onions, cabbage, cauli flower and sundry root crops. Poultry, Rabbits Live Chickens Quoted to grow ers at ranch: No. 1 quality fryers, 2?i-4 lbs.. 20c lb.; light hens. 10- 11c -lb., ranch; heavy hens 5 lbs. up, lo-16c lb.; old roosters, 7-8c. Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers. Fryers, whole, drawn, 36-39c lb.; cut up, 43-45c; hens, light type, cut up, 34-36c; heavy type, whole dawn, 36-41C. Rabbits (Average to growers. f.o.b. killing plants): Live .white. 3Ii-43i lbs. f.o.b. dressing plants, Portland, 22-25c lb.; colored pelts, 4c under. Fresh killed fryers to retailers, 59-61c lb.; cut up, 62 65c lb. Portland Hay, Grain Portland Wholesale Hay Prices: New crop. No. 2 green alfalfa baled f.o.b. Portland, $24-25 a ton; some sales to S26. Wholesale Prices as reported by the USDA market news service: Wheat. No. 2 soft white. $76.50 ton;. No. 2 white oats. 38-lb. West Coast delivery, $49.50 ton; No. 2 Valley white oats, $48 ton; soy bean meal, S75 ton, f.o.b. Port land; barley No. 2, West Coast de livery. $47 ton; standard mill run, prompt delivery, $36-37 ton f ob. Portland; No. 2 yellow corn. East ern shipment f.o.b. Portland, $54-54.50. OPEN Jan. 10th LARRY'S Rich Maid Ice Cream 415 North Riverside Obituaries BESSIE C. ANDERSON Funeral services for Mrs Bessie C. Anderson. 92 of Misso uri Flats, who died Wednesday, will be held in the Conger - Morris Funeral home at 11 a.m. Saturday. The Rev. Raymond H. Hum will officiate. Committal will be In the Masonic cemetery, Jackson ville. Mrs. Anderson was born in Weaverville, Calif., on Oct 16. 1865. She moved to Foots Creek in the fall of 1879. In 1928 she moved to Missouri Flats, living there until her death. Survivors include two sons, Edward A. Boling, route 4, Grants Pass; and Ray F. Bol ing. Medfor-d; seven grand children; 14 great grand children and three great great grandchildren. GEORGE MARTIN George Martin, 51, of 520 North Grape st., Medford, died in a local hospital this morning. Funeral services will be held at 9:30 a.m. Saturday at Conger-Morris Funeral home. The Rev. Herbert Hillerman of the Zion Lutheran church will officiate. Committal will be in Siskiyou Memorial park. The body will" lie in state until 8:30 p.m. Friday. STELLA ETHEL CAMPBELL Ashland Mrs. Stella Ethel Campbell, 64, of 212 VanNess ave., Ashland, died here yes terday. She was born Oct. 22, 1893, in Mountain View, Mo. Survivors include her hus band, John B. Campbell, and six children. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Litwiller Fu neral home. Births BEBRICK To Mr. and Mrs. Clarence, 3047 Sunny vale rd., Central Point, Jan. 8, 1958, a boy, 7 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. POPOW To Mr. and Mrs. Michael, 3744 Calhoun rd., Medford, Jan. 9, 1958, a boy, 7 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. OWNBY To Mr. and Mrs. Ralph, Butte Falls, Jan. 9, 1958, a boy, 8 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. SMITH To Mr. and Mrs. Donald, P.O. Box 153, Butte Falls, Jan. 9, 1958, a girl, 6 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. MILLER To Mr. and Mrs. Richard, 728 Newtown st., Medford, Jan. 9, 1958, a girl, 7 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. WALLACE To Mr. and Mrs. Joseph, 183 Gresham st., Ashland, Jan. 8, 1958, a girl, 8 pounds, at Ashland Gen eral hospital. ALLISON To Mr. and Mrs. George, 328 North Cen tral ave., Medford, Jan. 8, 1958, a boy, 8 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. MICHAELIS To Mr. and Mrs. Richard, 2582 Biddle rd., Medford, Jan. 8, 1958, a girl, 8 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. VINZANT To Mr. and Mrs. Robert, 333 West Second St., Medford, Jan. 9, 1958, a boy, 7 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. Daily Weather Report FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Cloudy with occasional light rain tonight. Variable cloudiness and a few light showers Friday. Low tonight 38- 40. High Friday 48-50. Western Oregon: Showers and partial clearing tonight and Fri day. Little temperature change. Low tonight 34-44. High Fiday 46 54. Northern California: Moderate to heavy rains tonight. Occasional rain Friday. Snow in mountains. LOCAL. DATA Temperature: Mean yesterday 41: above normal 4. Record high this date 60 in 1953. Record low this date 10 in 1949. Precipitation: 24 hours to mid night 0. Midnight to 10 a.m. 0. Total since sept. 1 8.91 in., .11 . above normal. Humidity: Lowest yesterday 69. highest this a.m. 100. High 4:00 24-Tester- a.m. hr. day Low Prec. City Brookings 58 47 .02 Crater Lake 33 23 .02 Grants Pass 49 35 .11 Klamath Falls 45 29 T. MEDFORD 52 34 Portland 50 37 .26 Seattle 46 35 21 Spokane 28 24 Yakima - 31 1 8 Eureka 62 46 Red Bluff 54 35 Sacramento 48 35 .01 San Francisco - 55 40 Los Angeles 73 50 Phoenix 71 41 Denver 63 27 . Chicago 26 20 Miami 57 39 .03 New York 33 14 Washington, D C. 33 20 Cambridge, Mass. (IP! Sign on a television repair shop on Middlesex avenue: "Do it yourself then call us." f Thursday, January 9 1938 ICY MONUMENT TO PERSISTENT BLAZE Icicle fringes trim this bleak building in Chicago as firemen continue to spray water on its smouldering interior. Freezing tempera tures and cork insulation in the walls of the building, an abandoned cold storage warehouse, hampered firefighters-in their five day battle against Country Store Retains Early Day Operation Easley, Mo. Tucked away in the rolling hills along the Missouri river south of Colum bia is a general store, vintage 1890. A pot-bellied stove stands amid groceries, tools and bolts of cloth Jtlst as it did at the close of the last century when William G. Easley founded the store. The small community was named for him. Descendants of the founder, Hall Easley and his nephew, Raymond Easley and his wife, operate the store today with out a change. It is open seven days a week 12 hours a day and Sun day is the busiest. On that day, the 30 townsfolk and per sons from nearby communt ties arrive to shop and visit. No Hurry They find fresh foods and an ornate scale operated by hand manipulation of little weights. The scale bears a 1957 stamp of approval from the weights and measures di vision of the state department of agriculture. Bolts of bright material catch the eyes of women cus tomers who are allowed to spread it out and take as long as they need to make up their minds. Mrs. Easley refuses to hurry them. The customer, she explained, must take the ini tiative. Farm tools and work clothes, even lanterns, are available to the men. And the children find jars of candy set invitingly near on worn counters. School supplies are the kind used a half century ago, not a slick sheet 'of paper among them. A TV Set Only one modern note can be seen in the store. A tele vision set was brought in by the Easley family when that new-fangled invention first was prQduced. Most of the time it stands unused. As soon as the novelty wore off, custo mers returned to the circle of chairs around the stove and got back to exchanging com munity news and gossip. Hall Easley, patriarch of the 67-year-old store, recalls when the town of Easley was a stopover for showboats ply ing the Missouri river. He re calls performances aboard the Goldenrod, a showboat now tied up at the St. Louis levee for daily shows, and the old Wonderland. Now, the store provides the brightest bit of entertainment annually. The Easley family plays host to the customers at a Christmas party during the holiday season. Santa is pres ent to distribute gifts. Jersey City, N. J. OF! A Florida radio ham told ama te.ur radio operator Frank Scaglione of this city he had not seen snow for 10 years, Scaglione put snowballs in a can surrounded by dry ice and air expressed it to Buck Brown of Largo, Fla. MON DESIR CLOSED Re-Opens Sat., Jan. 11 MEDFORD (OREGON) the blaze. New England Color Credited To Anthocyanins Amherst, Mass. (IF) "There is literally no other spot in the world that can compare with the vividness. of New England foliage." That statement comes from a man who should know Dr. Theodore T. Kozlowski, head of the department of botany at the University of Massachu setts. He explained that the New England countrysides owe their brilliance to pigments called anthocyanins, which are responsible for the reds, pinks, and purples that are mixed into the autumn colora tion. Anthocyanin pigments are present the year round in a few trees such as copper beech and the crimson king variety of Norway maple. In many other trees anthocya nins form only in the autumn when cool weather conditions prevail. However, Dr. Kozlowski ex plained, many trees do not form the anthocyanins, but instead, contain pigments call ed carotenes and xanthophylls which produce colors of yel low poplar and hickory with their clear, yellow colors are examples of trees that lack anthocyanins. Little Change In Some Then again, some trees con tain admixtures of red antho cyanin with yellow carotene, the result a bright orange color. Changes in the color of the leaves of a tree are due to the decrease in temperature and the decline in the produc tion of the green substance chlorophyll. Thus, by the disintegration of the green pigment and the unmasking of yellow or the formation of red. pigments (or both), the leaves may assume various shades of yellow, orange, crimson, purple, or red. Dr. Kozlowski said some species such as the alders and locusts show little change. Others such as poplars, gink go, honey locust, beech and birches show various degrees of yellow. However, the most dazzling displays are seen in the reds of maples, sassafras, staghorn sumac, white oak, shadbush and others which form large amounts of the an thocyanin pigments. Other trees, such as oaks, usually reach their full colora tion later in the fall; usually after the best maple color has gone. The yellow-brown col ors of beeches and some oaks are products of yellow pig- i ments and a browner pigment (tannin) in the leaves. Indianapolis (IF) Everett xvielliaiu, manage! Ul all xix- dianapolis meat packing firm, is trying to figure out how a ton of hams was stolen from the plant. He said the hams, all in time and weighing from five to 13 pounds each, were valued at $1,145. MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEK Klamfh Plant Walkout Concluded Klamath Falls (IP) An eight-day construction work ers' walkout at the 12 million Johns - Manvilles fibreboard plant north of here ended to day when 250 building trades workers and 50 supervisor! returned to their jobs. Construction work on th huge plant was halted Jan. 2 because of union objection to-the hiring of four men to test boiler units about to be turned over to Johns-Manvill by the building contractor. Settlement of the strike wai effected when '?ohns-Manvill agreed to place four union operating engineers on. standby basis at the boilers. The four men whose hiring precipitated the walkout will be retained on the company payroll. It was further agreed fcy Johns-Manville and union of ficers that union affiliation for bargaining purposes will be delayed until the plant ia fully manned and in produo tion, probably sometime in April. Settlement was on a local basis. Bank Debits Show Increase in Area Eugene Bank debits for November in southwestern Oregon showed an increase of 4.7 per cent over October, 1957, according to the Uni versity of Oregon's businesa research bureau. The total also was a rise of .2 per cent from November. 1956. Total bank debits in November were $71,421,459 with 11 banks reporting, the bureau said. Bank debits in the state, totaling $1,706,457,761, with 167 banks reporting, indicat ed a drop of .9 per cent from October, 1957, but an in crease of .1 per cent from November, 1956. Bank debits are regarded as good indicators of business activity, the bureau noted. They represent the dollar val ue of checks drawn against the deposit accounts of indi viduals and business firms. School of Instruction Set for County Clerks A pre-election school of in struction will be held in the Douglas courthouse Jan. 14 for county clerks serving in the fourth congressional dis trict. Planning to attend from Jackson are County Clerk Bereth P. Hopkins, Chief Deputy Nydah Neil, . and County Election Director At ton Carter. DOLLAR HOT CAKES GOLDEN BROWN Served with Whipped Butter and Your Choice of Strawberry, Blackberry or Maple Syrup. &0tt Mair At; rhW Mr Order 25c Sarvad Until .' . 2:30 p.m. HIE CLOCK Main at Bartlett Ph. SP 2-6766 HURRY! ENDS SOON1 3 LAST 2 Daya fcV-sj . SIEGEl PrvdndlM I PORTER'S. I i ,1 LES GIRLS IE KELLY : I GAYNOR KENDALL: TAIN A ELG JACQUES BERGERSC NEWS SHORTS COLOR CARTOON STARTS TONITE ' Walt Disney's IN TEOINJCOlOt HEART-WARMING CO-HIT JOCK MAHONEY JUUt PAMS TIM HQVfY , : raff 1 I : 7. ;l t li ..: W : 1 ft 'WWW -COLE f lift am. n1 iui..-7y