Local and
WW I Vli to Meet The
World War I Barracks and
auxiliary" of Medford will
hold an International potluck
dinner at 6:30 p.m. Wednes
day night.
Meeting The annual meet
ing and all church dinner of
the First Methodist church
will be held at 6:30 o'clock to
night at the church. The Rev
Meredith A. Groves will pre
side as the district superin
tendent of the Eugene district.
School Party Washington
school's pre - school get - ac
quainted party will- be held
Friday. May 23. at 1:30 p.m
in the school gymnasium. All
youngsters who plan to enter
first grade next year and their
mothers are invited to attend,
those in charge reported.
Breaks Leg Bonnie Row
an, 12, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles C. Rowan, 1117
West 11th st., suffered a brok
en leg about 7 p.m. Monday
when she fell from a tree on
Thomas rd. She is confined to
Rogue Valley hospital, where
she was taken by Medford
Ambulance serice.
keep all the
income.
Interest from Municipal bonds is
not subject to Federal Income Tax.
Yon don't eren report it.
Yet, next to government bonds,
Municipals are traditioaallT the
afest investments. f ,.
Good quality, tax-exempt bonds
are now available which yield be
tween 3H and depending
on maturity. i
Foster & Marshall, as one cf the
principal municipal bond under
writers in the Pacific Northwest,
will be pleased to discuss Municipal
with you at your convenience. Just
call or visit our office.
Foster & Marshall
ftHHH NCW YOKK STOCK IXCHANGC
formerly
HOGAN-ROWAN t CO.
IS S. Cen. Medford SP 3-5353
SEATTLE
ELCENE
PORTLAND . SPOKANE
YAKIMA . OLYMPIA
Jpl
Yr
Hffl
1 " : f
Personal
Council To Meet The Med
ford Building Trades Council
will meet at 8 p.m. Wednes
day, May 21, in the Medford
Labor Temple, according to
George Potucek, secretary.
Meeting Set Delegates to
the state convention in Pen
dleton next month will be
elected by the Medford Eagles
lodge at a meeting Thursday.
Initiation also will be con
ducted Thursday."
Bicycle Found A boy's
bicycle was found under the
Cottage st. bridge Monday at
5 p.m. Report was made to
city police by Dennis LeRoy
Brumback, 206 Cottage st. He
gave officers a description to
facilitate locating the owner.
To Build Homes D. L.
Pickell, contractor, obtained
permits Monday to construct
two residences. He will build
a S12.000 home at 1349 For
tune dr., and a S9.000 one
at 907 South Holly st.
To Remodel. Fred Kin-
caid, 932 South Ivy st., and'
J. R. Ellis, 1453 Poplar dr.,
took out building permits
Monday to remodel their resi
dence properties. Each permit
was for $600.
Curbing Started Central
Point city officials reported
that construction of curbs got
under way this week on
North Second st. from Pine
st. to Hazel ave. The firm of
Petrehn and Purdy has the
contract.
Mercy Flight Debbie Hol
lander, 6-year-old Tule Lake,
Calif., girl, was flown to San
Trancisco yesterday .,-' after
noon for treatment of a post
operative heart condition.
She was to go to Stanford
Lane hospital. The flight from
Tule Lake to the Bay area
was made in a plane operat
ed by Mercy Flights, Inc., of
Medford. The little girl was
the -814th patient carried by
planes of the non-profit cor
poration. . .
ENDS TONITE
mm
Alan LADD
iTWO YEARS
THE MAST
UtlftJ
5
of
AMD
Mm
n Tvv IT3 17 n
East Main and Genessee
Over-the-Counfer
Western Stocks
The following bid and
asked prices on selected West
ern securities, provided by
the Medford branch office of
Pacific Northwest Company,
are unofficial and do not rep
resent actual transactions.
but are intended as a guide to
the approximate price range.
Common Stocks Bid Asked
Bank of America 36? 38'
Calif.-Pacific Utilities.... 30
Cascades Plywood 25 !i
Cons. Freightway 153s
Copco 313
First National Bank 47 'j
Pacific Pwr. & Lt. 34 U
Portland Gen. Elec. 24
U. S. National Bank. 63
United Utilities 23'i
West Coast Tel. 20
Weyerhaeuser 36 !i
32U
27s
16a
338
49',
36 1 4
26' ,
67 :a
25
21 J,
381.
Portland Livestock
Portland (U.P. Cattle 150;
early supply mostly cows: trade
slow; choice fed steers Monday
28.25-29.25; good-choice " heifers
mostly 26-28: canner-cutter cows
today liS.50-19; heavy cutters to
19.50; utility cows 20-21: utility
bulls Monday 25-27, add head 27.50.
Calves 50: trade slow, scattered
early sales about steady with Mon
day's 1.00 to 2.00 lower close;
choice vealers 28-29 odd head 30;
good 25-27.
Hogs 300: trade slow; early sa'os
steady; sorted U.S. 1 and 2 butch
ers 180-235 lb. 24.50-24.75: mixed
1. 2 and 3 lots 23.50-24: sows
scarce, salable around 18.50-22.
Sheep 500. holdover 175; trade
slow; few spring lambs weak to 50c
lower: few lots mostly choice
fed lambs Monday to 17.50; few
good feeders 14-15; cullrgood ewes
3-9.
Portland Produce
Portland (VP.) Eggs To re
tailers: Grade AA large, 45-48c
doz.; A large. 42-45c; AA medium,
39-43c; A medium, 38-42c; AA
smalls, 30-33c; carton l-3c addi
tional. Butter To retailers: AA and
Grade A prints, 66-67c lb.; carton
lc lb. higher; B prints. 64-65c.
Cheese (medium curedt To re
tailers: A grade Cheddar single dai
sies, 40-51c: 5-lb. loaves, 51',j-57c;
processed American cheese, 5-lb.
loaf, 40-43c.
Farm Market
, Name brand California lettuce
was quoted to retailers at mostly
4.50-4.75 a carton with mid-Colum-bit
and Yakima lettuce at 4-4.50;
first Imperial valley watermelons
booked for Wednesday delivery at
10 cents a pound.
Poultry, Rabbits .
Live Chickens Quoted to grow
ers at Portland, Salem and south to
Eugene, f.o.b. ranch No. 1 quality
fryers, 2T-4 lbs., 21-22c; light hens,
15-16c; heavy hens, 5 lbs. up, 20
21c; old roosters, 7-8c lb.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade
dressed to retailers: fryers, whole
drawn, 38-43c lb.( cut up, 44-48c;
hens, light type cut up, 37-40c;
heavy type, whole drawn, 43-46C-.
Dessed Turkeys A grade breed
er hens, net to producers on an
eviscerated basis. 29c lb.: turns,
same basis, 25c lb. to retailers; A
grade hens, mostly 37 cents, oven
ready dressed; toms, 32c lb.
Rabbits (average to growers,
f.o.b. killing plants) Live white,
3'2-4'i lbs., f.o.b. Portland. 22-25c;
colored pelts, 4c under. Fresh
killed fryers to retailers, 59-61c lb.;
cut up, 62-65c.
Portland Hay, Grain
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices:
No. 2 green alfalfa baled, f.o.b.
Portland and Seattle, nominally $24
a ton.
Wholesale prices are reported by
the USDA market news service:
Wheat, No. 2 soft white. $73 ton;
No. 2 white oats. 38-lb. West Coast
delivery, S54-54.50 ton; No. 2 Val
ley white oats, $50.50 ton; soybean
meal, $84 ton f.o.b. Portland: bar
ley, .No. 2 West Coast delivery,
$47.50 ton; standard mil 1 run,
wrompt delivery, $38.50-39 ton,
f.o.b. Portland: No. 2 Milo. Eastern
shipment, f.o.b. Coast, $53.50-54
ton; No. 2 yellow corn. Eastern
shipment, lo.b. Portland, $61.25
61.75 ton '
mm
HI
DAY-FRIDAY
ATU'BDAY
at the
ifm
Steel Outstanding
In Current Market
New York 0?i Stocks
more than wiped out the
losses of the past two sessions
today.
Leadership improved with
the steel shares the outstand
ing features. U.S. Steel reach
ed a new high for the year
and along with Armco, Jones
& Laughlin. Youngstown, Lu
kens and Eastern Stainless,
gained more than a point.
American Telephone met
investment demand with its
price rising to a new high.
Aircrafts strengthened all
along the line with Chance
Vought and Temco at new
highs for the year. Gains in
the group ranged to more
than a point.
Railroad ' shares advanced
fractions to more than a point
with Nickel Plate a strong
feature when the directors or
dered the usual dividend.
New York Central firmed de
spite its four-month report
showing a net loss of $20,650,
291 which compared with a
net income of 58,000,494 a
year ago.
Metals moved higher with
Alcoa up nearly 2 points in
the aluminums and Phelps
Dodge up more than a point
in the coppers. Richfield rose
2 to a new high in a firmer
oil sections.
Du Pont with a gain of
more than a point led the
chemicals higher. Philip Mor
ris headed a rise in the tobac
cos and made a new 1958
high. .' ' '
DOW JONES AVERAGES
Dow-Jones final stock av
erages: 30 industrials 459.
83; up 3.85; 20 railroads
112.65, up 1.18; 15 utilities
77.79, up 0.08, and 65 stocks
157.87, up 1.16. Sales today
were about 2,500,000 shares
compared with 1,910,000
shares Monday. '
Today's prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 76
American Can 468
Investment Funds
Noon Quotations on select
ed funds supplied by the Med
ford Branch of Foster & Mar
shall, Members New York
Stock Exchange.
Fund
Bid Asked
11.58 12.70
15.93 17.27
18.55 20.90
12.48 13.49
12.17 13.30
9.18 10.06
11.20 12.27
6.21 6.18
10.48 11.48
6.90 7.57
6.19 6.19
15.55 60.97
9.06 9.89
8.15 8.89
10.09 11.01
14.78 16.13
9.99 10.90
10.64 11.62
10.55 11.41
10.47 11.41
4.67 5.10
12.35 13.47
Bullock
Eaton Howard Stk
Group Sec A via .
Group Sec Com St
Group Sec Elec
Group Sec Petr .
Group Sec Steel .
Group Sec Tobac
Keystone B-4 .
Keystone K-2
Keystone S-l
Keystone S-2
Keystone S-3
Mass Inv Tt
TV-Elec
Value Line Inc
ill
AT&T 1774
Anaconda Copper 43 3, 4
Bethlehem Steel 40Ts
Caterpillar Corp 615s
Chrysler Corp 463&
Continental Can 491s
Crown Zellerbach - 48?s
Curtiss Wright 23Vz
Du Pont . ...177V2
Eastman Kodak 104V2
General Electric 5834
General Foods : 57 XA
General Motors 37Ts
Georgia Pacific 3634
Graham Paige ............... 1?8
Homestake Mining ;. 4434
Kaiser Frazer 9
Kennecott Copper 87'4
Lockheed Aircraft 47 Va
Katy Pfd 47
Montgomery Ward 35V2
New York Central 14V2
Penney J C 94
Penn R R 13V2
Radio Corporation 33
Richfield Oil 70
Sears 2914
Socony Vacuum 50V4
Southern Co 29V4
Southern Pacific 445
Standard California 4834
Standard Indiana 423,4
Standard N J 53
Sun Mines 77a
Texas Gulf 19
Tex Pac Land Trust 10
Transamerica 39 V?
Trans West Air 11
Tri-Continental 33V2
Union Carbide 85
Union Pacific 29
United Aircraft 62V4
UAL 24
U S Rubber 33
U S Steel 63
Youngstown S & T ........ SiM
Prize Winners at
Home Show Announced
Mrs. Lou Rickman, 515 J
st., Medford, won the chil
dren's play house at the third
annual Medford Home Show
Sunday. The four-day show
ended Sunday night.
Fred K. Deuel, 1018 South
Oakdale ave., Medford, re
ceived a deep fat fryer at the
home show.
Watican City (IB Pope
Pius XII, in a speech made
public Saturday, endorsed the
North Atlantic Treaty organ
ization as a modern necessity
on ground that the West must
"face reality" and be pre
pared for surprise attack.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Variable
cloudiness through Wednesday.
Low tonight 55. High .Wednesday
88. , i
Western Oregon: Fair'tonight and
Wednesday, except for morning
cloudiness or fog along me coast.
Low tonight 45-55. High Wednes
day 80-90 interior, 65-70 along the
coast.
Northern California: Variable
high cloudiness tonight and
Wednesday. Chance of a few scat
tered thunderstorms over the high
mountains this evening. Low over
cast on the coast. Little change in
temperature.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
71: above normal 11.
Recordl high this date 92 in 1947.
Record low this date 36 in 1920.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, none. Midnight to 10 ajn.
none. ,
Total this month .16 inch, .58
inch below normal.
Total since Sept. 1, 22.08 inches.
5.69 inches above normal.
' HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
33, highest this a.m. 88.
Huh 4:00 24-
City Yester- a.m. hr.
nay low Free.
Brookings 65
Crater Lake . 61
Grants Pass 85
Klamath Falls 79
MEDFORD 85
Portland 76
50
39
52
47
53
53
Seattle
72
53
53
48
52
61
57
57
62j
77
52
53
76
62
63
.01
Spokane 79
Yakima 85
Eureka 62
Red Bluff 88
Sacramento 86
San Francisco 68
Los Angeles 81
Phoenix
Denver ...
Chicago
Miami
New York
Washington, D.C.
..103
.. 77
,. 72
.. 80
.78
82
.02
.14
.72
AMY'S
BEST BUY!
549.50
USE ANDY'S EASY
CREDIT TERMS
Take 58 Weeks
in '58 To Pay!.
ANDY'S
Your Friendly Credit Jeweler
S & H Green Stamps
15 North Central
Other y
Obituaries
LOU DELLA BOS WELL
Funeral services for Mrs
Lou Delia Boswell, 86, who
died in Tillamook Monday
will be held at the Medford
Mausoleum at 2 p.m. Thurs
day. Dr. Aldis L. Webb of
Tillamook will officiate.
Mrs. Boswell was born in
Hartford, Iowra, June 4, 1871,
and on Feb. 19, l'888, she was
married to Dr. Walter S.
Jones. In the fall of 1888 they
moved to Medford where he
practiced medicine until
March 29, 1908, when he died.
She was a life member of
the First Christian church of
Medford.
She helped build the Chris
tian church when it was on
Holly st., and later the pres
ent structure on South Oak
dale ave.
Mrs.' Webb, wife of the min
ister who will conduct serv
ices, was choir director at the
First Christian church at the
same time Mrs. Boswell was
pianist. She was president of
the Ladies Aid, pianist for the
church for 35 years an active
member of Reames Chapter
OES.
She was married on Jan.
15, 1925, to Robert Boswell,
and they lived in Grants
Pass until Jan. 11, 1941, when
Boswell died. In the spring of
1943 she moved to Tillamook
to live with her daughter,
Mrs. Ackley.
Funeral services for Mrs.
Boswell will be held at the
First Christian church in Til
lamook at 11 a.m. Wednesday.
Perl funeral home assisted
with the local arrangements.
HERBERT VanGORDON
Funeral services for Her
bert Phelps VanGordon , 78,
of 407 Oregon Terrace,, who
died in a local hospital Sun
day, will be held at 11 a.m.
Wednesday in Chapel Mortu
ary. The Rev. John O. Rey
nolds, assistant pastor of the
First Presbyterian church,
will officiate. Private inter
ment services will be in Plea
sant Valley cemetery near
Merlin.
Honorary pall bearers will
be Charles Shaggerty, Ed
ward Hirsch, Orie Moore, Al
bert Sims, Howard Hietz, and
Richard Woodson.
The body will lie in state
at the mortuary throughout
this afternoon and evening.
Mr. VanGordon, the son of
Boyd and Olive Abbott Van
Gordon, was born in Detroit,
Minnesota, on Feb. 10, 1880.
On Sept. 26, 1911, in Cove,
Ore., he was married to Wil
ma Wertman, who survives.
The family came to the Med
ford area in 1935, where Mr.
Van Gordon has been employ
ed at Timber Products comp
any. He was a member of
the Roxy Ann Grange, and
a former member of the
Woodmen of the World.
Besides his wife, he is sur
vived by three sons, Lyle
VanGordon, of Grants Pass,
Lucian VanGordon, Medford,
and Clarence VanGordon, also
of Medford; one daughter,
Mrs. Phyllis Mulhollen, Med
ford; two brothers, Howard
VanGordon, Battle Ground,
Wash., and William VanGor
don, Spokane; four sisters,
Mrs. Kittie Young, Vallejo,
Calif.; Mrs. Ottie Elliott, Eur
eka, Mont.; Mrs. C. Roy
Lance, Northridge, Calif.; and
Mrs. Norman Buoy, Eugene,
and 12 grandchildren.
LESLIE J. CROY
Leslie J. Croy. 55. of Pros
pect, died unexpectedly yes-
treday while at work. Funeral
arrangements will be- an
nounced by Conger-Morris,
funeral directors.
MRS. JOSEPHINE LYTLE
. Mrs. Josephine Lytle, about
84,. daughter of a pioneer Jack
sonville family, died in Port
land yesterday. She, was a
member of the Joseph Wet-
terer family, of Jacksonville.
Wetterer operated a brewery
here for many years. '
She is survived .by one
daughter, Regiene Lytle, Port
land, v . ' ?
Funeral .services will be
held at St. Joseph's Catholic
church, Jacksonville, at 10
a.m., Wednesday. . , .
Pallbearers will " include
Paul Godward, Charles LOfr
fenbacher, Albert Hackert,
Harold Reed, Raymond (Duke)
Lewis, "and Bert Hudson.
PAUL D. LeCLAIR
Funeral services for Paul
Dwight .LeClair, 36, of 1320
Thomas rd.; who died Sunday,
will be held at Conger-Morris
MILITARY
BALL
SATURDAY
May 24th
Rogue Valley
Country Club
Sponsored by R.O.A.
Tickets May Be
Purchased ar Swem's
' 1 " 1 "" i '.wii"'.i,i"H
DR. D. I. VANDERPOOL
To Speak Tonighl
400 Delegates Are
Registered for
Nazarene Meeting
More - than 490 delegates
registered Monday for the
Oregon Pacific District Naza
reen Foreign Missionary" so
ciety meeting being held in
Medford at the First Church
of the Nazarene.
At the morning session the
president's report showed
that the Oregon Pacific dis
trict was a "star society."
This means that the district
has reached the goals it set
for the tyear. ,
Monday afternoon Dr-. Re
miss Rehfledt, international
executive' secretary, and the
Rev. Hubert Helling, mission
ary from Japan, spoke. ,
At the evening session, the
local Nazarene church choir
sang.
Speaker at 7:30 o'clock to
night will be Dr. D. I. Van
derpool, general superintend
ent from Kansas City, Mo. He
also will speak at 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the annual dis
trict assembly meeting. The
public is invited to the eve
ning sessions.
Following the closing of
the annual society meeting
today, the district assembly
will meet continuing through
Friday. .
The joint missionary and
pre-assembly service will be
held which will include con
gregational singing tonight. -
Tokushima, Japan (IP) A
rat killed an elephant in the
Tokyo Zoo, authorities dis
closed today. Tokuko, a nine-year-old
elephant, was so
frightened she bolted and fell
into a ditch surrounding her
enclosure. She died two days
later of severe injuries to her
chest.
funeral home at 9 a.m.
Wednesday. The Rev. Claude
A. Miller of Temple Baptist
church will officiate. Commit
tal will be in Siskiyou Mem
orial park.
Pallbearers will include Wil-
lard D. Rollins, Cleon G. Bots
ford, Clifford E. Spencer,
Charles H. Walden, Don F.
Lafon, and Glenn D. Unger.
Mr. LeClair was born Jan.
27, 1922, in Delphia, Mont.
He was a veteran of World
War II and the Korean War,
serving from Dec. 28, 1941,
to Jan. 16, 1946, as an am
phibian tractor leader, Marine
corps, also from May 22, 1947,
to May 21, 1952, as a staff
sergeant, headquarters 13th
Marine corps reserve district.
He was married Jan. 27,
1946, at Escondido, Calif., to
Imogene Day, who survives.
Other survivors include a
daughter, Diana Lynn; his
father, William LeClair, Bil
lings, Mont.; two brothers and
three sisters. -
Ta The
featuring
BROILED
STEAKS
CHOPS
and
CHICKEN
o
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon. Tuesday, May 20, 1958 9
Barbecue School Set Af Fairgrounds
A chicken barbecue school
led by Charles Fischer, poul
try specialist at Oregon State
college, will be held at 9:30
a.m. Friday, May 23, at the
Jackson county fairgrounds.
Persons interested in or-
Travel Show Stated
In Medford Thursday
J. W. Kemp, director of
tours for Greyhound lines,
San Francisco, will present a
travel show at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, May 22, in the Pio
neer room of the Jackson
hoteL
The show, which will in
clude color slides on Mexico
and various films on vacation
spots in the United States, is
open to the public without
charge.
CALL SP 3-7323
For Information about
. Pictures Playing and Time
Schedules At Your Theatres
ENDSnpNITE
THE LAUGH OF TOUR LIFETIME!
DON'T GO NEAR
THE WATER
KTnoceun
GLENN FORD
CO-FEATURE
EDWARD ARNOLD
LEE J. COBB
IN
"MIAMI EXPOSE"
ENDS TONITE
"ANNIE GET YOUR G0N
CO-FEATURE
Jjcbcl
JOHN PAYNE
in. RUTH
ROMAN
41
y oirrHiiiriCHHww vi
M
m ROMAN m
"A HETEROSEXUAL EXPLOSION!"
I
66'
Mm "
A drama of
i v
39 rj v
MARINE F MAGAU OA NT '
ROBINSON VALLONE Noel Carrel
starring
DINING
Beginning Wednesday, May 2 1st
Breakfast and LuncK
Served
7 A.M. - 3 P.M. (Except Sunday)
Dinner Served Daily
5:30 P.M. to 12 Midnight
ganizing their own barbecue
and serving a barbecued
chicken dinner are invited to
attend the class by register
ing with the county extension
office, SPring 3-6211, exten
sion 211. A class fee of $3
will be charged.
"Organizing a barbecue"
will begin at 9:30 a.m. and
the final section of the school
will end at 2:30 p.m. A com
plete barbecued chicken din
ner will lje served at noon.
FINAL SHOWING
DOORS OPEN TONITE
7:15
Show Starts 7:30
CO-FEATURE
NELSON'
ENDS TONITE
AMERICAN ACES
WHO WORE
FRENCH UNIFORMS!
TAR 4-IIIWTPD
ETCHIKA CHOURAU
A WARNER ROi HCTURt
CO-FEATURE
REED
SCOTT BRADY
ANNE BANCROFT
20- unvnje UAki
TIME MAGAZINE
loneliness and desire
Wednesday Only
"CURTAIN AT 8:30"
In the Holland
Hotel, Corner of
6th & Fir Streets
ROOM
f lmiLl n i im -
fie K "i
tarrina I