Local and
Y Lodge to Meet Warren
lodge 10, Jacksonville Ma
ons, will confer degrees at a
meeting Wednesday, Feb. 19
Refreshments will be served
L
C Hubcaps Missing Frank
Jack McKeown, 109 South
Orange st., reported to city
police four hubcaps, valued
at $34, were taken from his
ear while it was parked at
08 North Riverside ave. last
week end.
VeU to Meet Veterans of
World War I, Barracks 540
end auxiliary will hold a pot-
luck dinner at 6:4a p.m
Wednesday, Feb. 19, in the
Girls Community club rooms
on North Bartlett st. All vet
erans of World War I are in
vited.
M 1 1 n 9 The monthly
meeting of the Crater Lake
Branch 186, Fleet Reserve as
ociation will be held in the
Veterans of Foreign Wars
building, 40 North Front st.
on Wednesday, Feb. 19, at 8
p.m. All members of the
Navy or Marine corps are in
vited to attend.
; Collision Cars operated
by Robert Reeves Lonzway,
116 Lincoln st., and Rose
mary Katrina Eismann, 121
Vernada st., were involved in
a collision at Sixth st. and
Oakdale ave. about 3:50 p.m
Monday, according to Med-
ford police. They said no ci
tations were issued,
i
Collision Edward Keith
Witt, 44 North Orange st.,
and Marcedus Elsie Lewis,
409 East Main st., were driv
ers of cars involved in a col
lision on East Main st., be
tween Bear creek bridge and
Riverside ave. about 12:05
pjn. on Monday, police re
ported. No, citations were is
sued.
Cars Damaged Joe Har-
rod Lindsey, 28 Vales rd.,
Central Point, told city police
the front window of his car
was damaged while he was
driving on South Central ave
Monday afternoon. Police
aid a rock, apparently
thrown from the tires of an
other vehicle, was the cause.
Returns From Trip F. B.
Trosty" Liddell, 712 New
town st., returned Friday af
ternoon of last week from a
tavo-week visit in Southern
California. In Oceanside he
visited his daughter, Roma,
and son, Gilbert, and their
families. In Van Nuys and
Qeseda he visited his mother
nd two sisters and their fam
ilies. Incidentally he reports
ttoat sunny California wasn't
ery sunny while he was in
hat state as only two days
were sunny and balmy, the
qther days being cloudy and
San Francisco
FOOD&
I: ATMOSPHERE
in Medford
" ot
MON DESIR
OPEN EVERY
EVENING ,
' Except Monday
Ph. NO 4-2513
t Mt
BIGGER, BETTER
THAN EVER! I
HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
FEB. 26-27-28, MARCH 1
Benefit Kiwanis Dental Clinic
COMEDY! MUSIC!
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW
From Any Member of Medford Kiwanis Club
Personal
Surgical Patient W. R
Walker, 2320 Kings highway,
Medford, is a surgical patient
at Rogue Valley hospital
friends have reported.
Window Broken Thomas
J. Hart, 615 South Central
ave., reported to Medford po
lice a front window in his
home was broken by B-B gun
shot on Monday evening
False Alarm The Medford
fire department answered a
false alarm at the Medford
Corporation about 3:08 p.m
Monday. Firemen said a shed
was reported on fire but they
were unable to find any trace
of fire when investigating.
Convalescing George Kai
ser, 746 Dakota ave., Med
ford, is improving in a Cres
cent City, Calif., hospital fol
lowing a sawmill accident at
Smith river Wednesday,
friends here reported today.
He suffered chest and back
injuries, friends said.
Trash Fire Medford fire
men extinguished an illegal
trash fire in the 500 block
on Palm st. about 7:25 p.m.
Monday. They said the fire
was burning after hours, un
attended and in a high wind.
No complaint was issued By
the department, they added
Flue Fires Medford fire
men extinguished a flue fire
at the home of Mrs. Laura
Lawrence, 2757 Jacksonville
highway about 11:16 a.m
Monday. They said a wall and
ceiling were damaged. A flue
fire was extinguished at the
residence of W. R. Peabody,
922 Murray ave., about 7:10
p.m. Monday, accoraing to
firemen. No damage was re
ported.
Pole Falls An electric
power pole was blown over
in an alley in the 800 block
of South Riverside ave. by
high winds Monday night, ac
cording to the Medford fire
department. They said a pick
up truck, owned by Dwyer
Furniture house, was dam
aged. They reported standing
by until California Oregon
Power company repairmen
arrived.
'
Patients Mrs. Eugene
Mars, Rogue River, is conva
lescing at Medford Osteo
pathic hospital following sur
gery Monday, the hospital re
ported today. Mrs. Robert Bit
man, Gold Hill, and Mrs.
Augusta Hall, 388 South
Stage rd., Medford, were re
ported as surgery patients,
and Perry Parker, Rogue
River, and Mrs. Ralph S
Chandler, 220 Beatty st., were
medical patients today.
Membership Drive
Meeting Scheduled
Paul Mitchell, chairman of
the Young Men's Christian
association membership drive;
will preside at a membership
rally at the YMCA tonight.
Mitchell said the member
ship drive is in full swing and
urged - all members of the
YMCA. to attend the report
session. Membership drive ac
tivities began Feb. 4 and will
conclude Feb. 25.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank our friends
and neighbors for their kindness,
cards, flowers and svmDathv dur
ing the loss of our beloved wife
and motner.
Mr. W. J. Lindstom
Wm. F. Roberts family
Ralph Conner family
George Williams family
Lewis Lindstrom family
Two-Parfs Perfect
r J ill
9102
SIZES
12-48
For town or country, we
suggest this sew-easy dress 'n'
jacket that travels the seasons
smartly. Note cool neckline,
diagonal bodice buttoning.
Printed Pattern ideal for
cool cotton.
Printed Pattern 9102:
Misses' sizes 12, 14, 16, 18,
20; 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Size 16
dress, bolero take 4s yards
39-inch. .
Printed directions on each
pattern part. Easier, accurate.
Send THIRTY-FIVE cents
(coins) for this pattern add
cents for each pattern for
lst-class mailing. Send to
Marian Martin, care of Med
ford Mail Tribune, Pattern
Dept., 232 West 18th st., New
York 11, N. Y. Print plainly
NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE
and STYLE 1JUMBER.
CALENDAR
Tuesday:
6:30 p.m. Gladamson unit
of Weselyan Service guild,
home of Mrs. William Sweet,
2045 South Stage rd.
6:30 p.m. Crater Lake
auxiliary VFW, auxiliary
room, 42 North Front.
8 p.m. Chapter BE of
PEO Sisterhood, home of Mrs.
J. F. Fliegel, 22 North Modoc
ave.
8 p.m. Hammond Organ
Society, home of Mrs. Ward
McOuat, 612 Pierce rd.
8 pjn. Pythian Sisters,
Pythian bldg.
8 p.m. Rogue Valley
Handweavers' guild, home of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bradfish,
220 Bradford way.
8 p.m. Woman's Society
of Christian Service, circle 10
with Mrs. Cleo Epps, 2002
South Stage rd.
8 p.m. Zion Lutheran
circles: Mary, home of Mrs.
Arnold Operand, 1424 South
Ivy st; Miriam, home of Mrs.
C. E. Borg, Jr., 870 Ellendale
dr.; Lydia, home of Mrs
James Wicker, 809 Adams
lane.
8 p.m. 8 and 40, home of
Mrs. Leo Williams, 1003 Red
dy avenue.
Wednesday:
9:45 a.m. League of Wo
men Voters, home of Mrs. El
wood Hedberg, 1206 East
Main st.
10 a.m. Mother singers,
Hedrick cafetorium.
10:30 a.m. Central Point
Home Extension unit, home
of Mrs. Leo Ghelardi, Old
Stage rd.
10:30 a.m. Medford Home
Extension unit, court house
auditorium.
10:30 a.m. Rogue Elk
Home Extension unit, home of
Mrs. Kenneth Lacy, Central
Point.
11 a.m. Townsend harmony
auxiliary club, Carpenters
hall, 123 Vz West Main st.
12 noon Woman's Soci
ety of Christian Service, circle
8, with Mrs. Byron Griffith,
920 Broad st.
12:30 pjn. Phoenix HEC,
home of Mrs. George Hartley,
5468 South Pacific highway.
12:30 p.m. Chapter CP
of PEO Sisterhood, home of
Mrs. E. S. Str other, Shady
Cove.
12:30 p.m. Reames Social
club, luncheon and style show
at Medford Masonic hall.
1 p.m. Chapter CG of PEO
Sisterhood, home of Mrs. R. c.
Beatty, 1798 Myers lane.
1 p.m. Getogether club.
Moose hall, 11 Newtown ave.
1 p.m. Past Chiefs' club.
Pythian Sisters, home of Mrs.
Carl Fichtner, 613 South Hol
ly st.
1:30 p.m. Applegate Val
ley Garden club, with Mrs.
Louis Jones.
1:30 p.m. Contemporary
Book club, withMrs. Floyd
Hart, Grant rd. , . -
2 p.m. Wednesday Study
club, Girls Community club.
Stocks Irregular on
Fairly Wide Range
New York (IP) Stocks
moved irregularly over a fair
ly wide range today in the
quietest trading since early
November.
Gains and losses of a point
or more featured the main
list, although small price
changes dominated.
Rails generally favored the
upside. Western Maryland
was an exception, losing more
than one at its low. Allied
lost one and Du Pont coun
tered with a gain of around
one.
Steels featured on the up
side. Today's prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 76
American Can . 43
AT&T 1723s
Anaconda Copper .. 41
Bethlehem Steel 39
Caterpillar Corp 60V4
Chrysler Corp 53
Continental Can 42xd
Crown Zellerbach 45
Curtiss Wright 23
KDu Pont 180
Eastman Kodak lOOVi
General Electric 61
General Foods 53
General Motors lVa
Georgia Pacific 2914
Graham Paige lVa
Homestake Mining 37
Kaiser Frazer 8
Kennecott Copper 79 Vz
Lockheed Aircraft 49
Katy Pfd 35 Vi
Montgomery Ward 33
New York Central 14
Penney, J. C 89 Vz
Penn RR Unquoted
Radio Corporation .'. 34
Richfield Oil 5SVz
Little Rock Negro
Girl Expelled
Little Rock, Ark. (IP) Min
nie Jean Brown, one of the
"Little Rock Nine" who in
tegrated Central High school
under protection of federal
paratroopers last fall, has
been permanently expelled
from school because of trou
blemaking. The 16 -year -old Negro
school girl has been involved
in five racial incidents in the
school since integration began
last September.
Permanent suspension of
the girl was recommended to
the school board last week
by Superintendent Virgil T.
Blossom. Blossom himself does
not have authority to expel
students, only to suspend-
them. Expulsion is up to the
school board.
Daily Weather Report
FORECASTS
! Medford and vicinity Cloudy
with rain tonight; showers and par
tial clearing Wednesday. Low to
night 48. high Wednesday 58.
Western Oregon Occasional show
ers and some partial clearing Wed
nesday. Low tonight 45-52; high
Wednesday 50-60.
Northern California Rain tonight
and Wednesday with the rate of
rainfall decreasing Wed nesday.
Snow in the mountains with snow
level lowering to 4.000 feet Wednes
day. Cooler temperatures.
LOCAL DATA
Temperature: Mean yesterday 57;
above normal 13.
Record high this date 72 in 1916.
Record low this date 22 in 1932.
Precipitation: 24 hours to mid
night .02 in. Midnight to 10 ajn. .T
in.
Total this month 3.07 in., 1.82 in.
above normal.
Total since Sept. 1 17.34 in., 5.22
in. above normal.
Humidity: Lowest yesterday 46,
highest this a.m. 34
High 4:00 24-
. City Yester- a.m. hr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 60 53 .85
Crater Lake 35 32 .58
Grants Pass 57 45 .12
Klamath Falls 53 41 T
MEDFORD 63 57 .02
Portland 54 49 .38
Seattle 57 51 .33
Spokane . 43 38 .07
Yakima 48 42 .18
Eureka 64 58 .39
Red Bluff 61 51 .05
Sacramento 65 51 .34'
San Francisco 64 56 - .08
Los Angeles 68 56
Phoenix
Denver
79 .
57
. 6
58
48
29
-2
42
4
11
Chicago
Miami
New York 10
.01
Washington, D.C. 13
yOU NEVER SAW
zztiwicked goings-on.
"3 FEET
A BELMam of Boudoir Buffoonery! '
WEDNESDAY ONLY
"CURTAIN AT 8:30"
Sears
Socony Vacuum 46
Southern Pacific 39
standard amurnia 9?s
Standard Indiana 36
Standard N.J .49 M
Sun Mines 8
Texas Gulf 16U
Transamerican 37 V
Trans West Air 2Vz
Tri - Continental 29
Texas Pac Land Trust 7x2
Union Carbide 904
A A 5 ' !
Union Pacific 27 V4
United Aircraft 5334
U. A. L 27?
U. S. Rubber 3334
U. S. Steel 573,
Youngstown S&T ..Unquoted
Porter Proposes
Forest Service,
Jobless Measures
Washington Bills to de
crease national unemploy
ment and to give the U.
Forest Service control over
surface resources and surface
management of national for
est lands were introduced
last week by Congressman
Charles O. Porter (D-Ore).
Both provide companion leg
islation to Senate bills.
The Public Works Act of
1958 ( H. R. 10632) calls for
the appropriation of $500
000,000 to provide Federal
Assistance to states and local
governments for the construe
tion of needed public works
and public improvements
The ratio would be $90 of
Federal assistance for every
$10 of State or local funds
made available for a project,
In introducing legislation
identical to that proposed by
Senator Albert Gore (D-
Tenn.), Porter noted that con
tinued increasing unemploy
ment on the national level
was evident. His bill is de
signed to help offset slowed-
down employment markets,
State level action in Ore
gon was proposed October 6
1957, in Roseburg. At that
time Democratic county chair
men in the Fourth Congres
sional Districts addressed
resolution to Governor Rob
ert Holmes proposing state
aid to stem current unemploy
ment.
Bill Identical
The surface management of
national forest lands bill
(H. R. 10633) is identical to
one introduced by Senators
Neubeger and Morse. It is
aimed- at closing loopholes
which permit miners or min
ing companies to cut exces
sive amounts of federal tim
ber growing on mining claims
and patents.
Representative Porter said
the legislation as proposed
was not designed to impede
miners but rather to establish
as "uniform policy, proced
ures which already exist on
six national forests, includ
ing Mt. Hood," It would pre
vent another Al Serena, Por
ter said.
The legislation allows per
sons who locate mineral de
posits on national forest land
to occupy and use the surface
to the extent necessary to
carry out prospecting and de
velopment work. Timber may
be cut and used for actual
mining operations. Porter
said that if a claim is patent
able under the mining laws,
a patent will still issue, but
the bill conveys title only
to the mineral deposits within
the boundaries of the claim
and the right to use the sur
face timber to the extent es
sential to actual mining oper
tions. .
SUCH WACKY...
in nr nut of
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DvUmttdl I Legend 19
Obituaries
PETER SULLIVAN
Peter Sullivan, 63, of route
2, Jacksonville, died in a lo
cal hospital Monday evening.
Funeral arrangements will be
I announced by Perl Funeral
f
Ex-Medford Man
Managing School
Ward Bebb, formerly of
Medford and now of Modesto,
Calif., and Mrs. Bebb. have
taken over the managership
of a business college in Mo
desto, according to a news re
lease in the Modesto Bee. Pur
chase of the establishment by
the young couple and her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. George R.
Boardman, of Sacramento,
took place earlier this month,
The Boardmans have inter
ests in other business train
ing establishments in north
ern California.
Bebb is a son of Mr. and
Mrs. Royal E. Bebb, 528
South Grape st. He is a grad
uate of the University of Ore
gon, holding a bachelor's de
gree in business administra
tion, and later took business
courses at the University of
Denver and San Antonio col
lege in Texas. He served four
years with the Air Force,
having been attached to the
audit division. Since his dis
charge he has been in the in
surance business in Califor
nia. Mrs. Bebb, who attended
San Francisco State college,
has been employed in the
market' research department
of the California Packing
company.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UP) Cattle 300.
Average choice steers ,26.25-26.75;
good 25-25.50; standard 23-24; few
good fed heifers 23-23.50; standard
20.50-22.50; utility-commercial cows
17-20.50; caners-cutters 13.50-15.50.
Calves 50. Choice vealers 31-33.
50: good 27-30; standard 20-26.
Hogs 25. Sorted 1 and 2 butchers
180-235 lb. 23.25-23.50; mixed 22.50-
23; sows 16-20.50.
Sheep 300. Choice slaughter
lambs 23-23.50; good 22.50-23; feed
ers -19.50-22.50; slaughter ewes 4
9.50. Portland Produce
Portland (UP) Eggs-To retail
ers: Grade AA large, 43-44c doz.; A
large, 38-40c; AA medium, 37-38c;
A medium, 35-37C: AA smalls. 29-
33c; carton l-3c additional.
sutter-lo retailers: AA and A
;rade prints, 68-69c lb.; carton lc
b. higher; B prints, 65-66c.
Cheese-medium cured-To retail
ers: A grade Cheddar single daisies,
40-51c, 5-lb. loaves, 51 '.i 157c; pro
cessed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf,
41 Vz-44c.
Farm Market
First Willamette vallev hothouse
cucumbers due on market this
week, much later than usual as
roducer planted crops later in
opes competition wouldn't be so
heavy from Floriad field grown
cukes; Summer hothouse rhubarb
was mostly 2.65-2.85 for 15 lb. flats
of extra fancy. .
Poultry, Rabbits
LIVE CHICKENS Quoted to
growers as ranch No. 1 quality, fry
ers, 2V3-4 lbs.. 21c lb; light hens,
10-llc lb., ranch; heavy hens, 5
lbs. up. nominally 18-19C lb.: old
roosters, 7-8c lb.
DRESSED CHICKENS No. 1
grade dressed to retailers. Fryers,
whole drawn, 38-42c lb., cut up,
43-47c; hens, light type cut up,
34-36c; heavy type, whole drawn,
40-45c lb.
RABBITS (Average to growers,
f.o.b. killing plants), live white,
3'i-4?i lbs., f.o.b. 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, S24
25 a ton.
WHOLESALE PRICES as report
ed by the USDA market news serv
ice: Wheat No. 2 soft white, $76
ton; No. 2 white oats, 38-lb West
Coast delivery, $49.50 ton; No. 2
Valley white oats. 548 ton: soy
bean meal, $76.50 ton, f.o.b. Port
land; barley No. 2 West Coast de
livery, $47.50 ton; standard mill
run, prompt delivery, S4-41 ton
f.o.b. Portland; No. 2 yellow com.
Eastern shipment f.o.b. Portland,
$53.75-54.25 ton.
HURRY
ENDS TONIGHT!
technicolor
tcchniRAMA
introducing HIIKO TAKA
ENDS TONIGHT!
Z Legend i
f SLw'W Love
1 '"C'M d Defiant
Desire!
a Am m i -m
Tuesday, February 18, 19S8
Los Angeles Man
Held Captive by
Ecuador Convicts
Los Angeles (IP) A Los
Angeles attorney Monday
night reported that 21 escaped
Ecuadorian prisoners had held
him and others aboard his
yacht captive for three days
off the coast of South
America.
Attorney William Rhodes
Hervey Jr. told of the har
rowing experience in a radio
telephone call to his brother,
retired Gen. Harcourt Her
vey, in Pasadena.
Hervey said the fugitives
held him, his wife, Mildred,
Frank Olson, Seattle, and a
four-man crew as prisoners
aboard Hervey's jacht Valinda
from Saturday until late Mon
day. He said the men forced
him to land them on the Ecua
dor mainland and robbed
them of money, clothing and
other items. .
Treated Roughly
Hervey said he and the pas
sengers aboard his 110-foot
yacht were treated roughly
but not harmed.' He described
the convicts as "desperate
men.
The attorney said the men
were fugitives from Isabella
Island in the Galapagos Is
lands about 650 miles west
of Ecuador. He said they
boarded the yacht, a convert
ed subchaser, at 3 a.m. Satur
day from three fishing boats
and left the ship at about
6 p.m. (PST) Monday at a
beach on the northwest coast
of Ecuador 28 miles southwest
of Esmeraldas.
Gen. Hervey said the party
aboard the yacht left Los An
geles in mid-December on a
cruise to the Cocos and Gala
pagos Islands via Acapulco,
Mexico. He said his brother
assured him his family and
other passengers had not been
harmed.
HESSIAN FLY CONTROL
Des Moines, Iowa Success
ful Farming magazine reports
that effective control of the
Hessian fly in wheat by a sin
gle application of chemical
insecticide mixed with the fer
tilizer at seeding time may
soon replace the current prac
tice of delayed seeding. For
this type of control, a system
atic insecticide Is applied to
the seedbed so that its toxicity
of killing effect on the fly
may be grown into the plant
tissue by the sprouting wheat.
TOM
vir if
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rWV-.X.; I ft, NL , ;x -J
s
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NIIfE
News About
Servicemen
GRADUATES
Hospitalman Thomas D.
McCoy, 2440 Crater Lake
ave., recently graduated from
the Operating Room Tech
nique school in Oakland. Mc
Coy will be transferred to the
Naval hospital at San Diego
He attended Crater high
school.
COMPLETES TRAINING
First Lt. Allen D. Taylor,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Vernal E.
Taylor, route 2, Star Ranger
station, Jacksonville, has com
pleted aircraft carrier landing
training in the Marine corps.
The landing system includes
the use of a newly developed
mechanical mirror.
ABOARD PORTERFIELD
Fire control technician sec
ond class Richard P. Eids
wick, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John A. Eidswick, of 159
North Main st., Ashland, is
currently serving aboard the
destroyer Porterfield. The
ships are undergoing advanc
ed training.
IN DIVISION
Claude W. Wilson, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde G. Wil
son, Jacksonville, a private
first class with the U. S.
Army, is a member of the 7th
Infantry division in Korea.
Wilson, who attended Jack
sonville High school, entered
the Army in October, 1956,
and is a jeep driver in com
pany B of the division's 31st
Infantry. He has been over
seas since March, 1957.
DESTROYER SERVICE
Seaman Dewey R. Ander
son, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. R.
Anderson, of 587, Wilson rd.,
Central Point, is aboard the
destroyer Porterfield. The
ship is undergoing advanced
training before going to the
Far East area.
Births
RICHEY To Mr. and Mrs.
Donald, 455 Whitman ave.,
Ashland, Feb. 16, 1958, a girl,
5 pounds, at Sacred Heart
hospital.
MURPHY To Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph, route 2, box 127,
Central Point, Feb. 17, 1958,
a boy, 9V2 pounds, at Sacred
Heart hospital.
LANINI To Mr. and Mrs.
Denis, 175 North Pioneer st.,
Ashland, Feb. 17, 1958, a boy,
8 pounds, at Ashland General
hospital. . . . '.
at the
GMT
Jimmy IVafaly
Atomic Power in
Autos Doubtful
Portland (IP) A nuclear
physicist said Monday that the
prospects of atomic power for
commercial aircraft, railroad
locomotives and trucks and
automobiles are remote.
Dr. William E. Parkins told
the Chamber of Commerce
that "nuclear energy for the
propulsion of land vehicles
holds essentially no potential
for the future." He pointed
to disadvantages in size re
quirements for shielded re
actors in cars and trucks and
even locomotives.
Limitations imposed by
weight of shielding also make
nuclear aircraft propulsion
chances remote, although he
said "it is possible large mili
tary manned aircraft may
eventually be built using nu
clear propulsion plants."
"Dr. Parkins said nuclear
energy has a eood future for
both Navy and merchant ship
propulsion.
1 V
Go
7T" i
SAN FRANCISCO
go to the
HOTEL
that offers the
"MOST"
Belleviie
GIARY ot TAYIOR
Downtown center of
everything, only 2 blocks
from Union Square and the
finest shops. At the Belle
vue you'll find complete
hotel service 300 Beauti
ful rooms. Moderate Rates.
Convention Facilities.
1 1
1
a
t
1
3
life I
Vh WALLACE G. A V3
WAa STEELE