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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1958)
o Local! anl Personal Patient 4ob& K. Xijekier, 2166 East Mfin Bedford, is convalescing ft hie home atfer being conflnei to Secred Heart hosgitfi tor evvertl weeks. 9 e aolon tmrrlon Irl Heft, 211 North Cojainriftue iv., re ported to eiif police -Tuesdsy the thaft jj 9 Centre! Retlty .sign Arot l Jtorth Fetch st. . 3ftcrfW ft9 At :19 .m. Tu&fljr !Ktffsrf - firemen weoo to e 11 in tht 100D tWft a Wett 10th t. wlyi tWk tire burn- ,ing. eeiinjuiehed the bMvoUf e imfe tin9 BI T-Mroldt laughter u of H(4 IN wn. wtieon 1024, Iffrt Jafcone? t.. Med-. ford, Mflee t tonsillec tomy t Stojpt-' Vflley ho O pitl tefUf, th logitl r- jporx. tT ft ' Gas Sitfttirift aJoteaft art, 91 ifr ft., Cntil Point, report to golic that about eitfit fillon) or fato- line 'ere taften from hia va- hicle sometime eTlf-r 10 P-m Monday whil it ftee peried on 45 Bush t Cintetl Point ' Truck Disjatelel h Mf ford fire trucft was iicgatched to a residence on Joardmin st. about 6:11a J jn. Monday. Neighbors reorUd that ev er small boy ejfre trying to burn a beesr natt etna t torch, firemen" Thr o fire. " - Grass ireman ftera lummonOi k) fftinzuish a crass bfea& Cfcoufc. 1:90 B.m yesterday inth 100 blocfe of South RitM fvf Tha flra covered ftbovA onj-half acra. Three solin tjiUt from parxva (lomoDuit win flushed in fcDfmfcpej MaSfbrd Chin Ua ttiatf Mtm- bers of Jgcso counte chap ter 4, Chin Ug club, eeill matt at the Gir Community elufc, 229 North BCHIaftft, frifliy at 8 p.m. 4 fefort on "tha e- cent con9nti m FortttM will b mff tng efficara ibr the coiSiftfi year eiU, t9 ia- sMilg,(iaaated. 'j? Harr SEofift, jnnj ee of tha Centtfi Point Stance CoOp, repotted to police ttt two SStemfti Wfe ia!e Monday nitettxiy Tueadertotsfce gaSolS from CoOp trucks. HeSi&tt i& each eeee the linB ySnf trom tne tan& 9ft trofteft l5Vlt AO 41 - BISTHS HIHtLf - ? "Wp. A Mi Dtrl Xiigon, pott of fic$ bc 33t- jacktofiville, Junf) IT, 39St, girl, V pourft g$ 5se Kagrfc lws- ttuSXSMtt X Mr. an Mi gmft JoUfK 39 Lin6 ero fiet Medford, guna 1, 1W 9J, found, t eM!ji9 e ftWIM ocSOid 930 lb. ters 8Koni)it iprtSd At 17-9: food ijrija H.7S; low good 10X lb. n er.St.! as-26; util-S-mm tmtanAmr hfers 19-2 50: tmea l-1850. includii 4kM G-choioa vain 5 8- . 1 nd butch rJ: ig-tt. ' f CM ! shinatft, .pring MmJV- 75'- etstern Oragon at llVAli i)d-choic (f 3JS arig-Ig.ao: a-?. Mm r iat n-en alfalfa. aia ,aaea and SmtUft ) t' fei9j 1 ton: M. !) oia. -! :cft . a51-a ton; rllB . 31 ton; No. t Caast ealivaay. ( aa reartd b lb tXa. rkat nat Fic: Maat Va. n whia. 7VT.a i: m k oat. no. a Brlay 4S-47: sovrMTi faswni anipaiaai. $92 Tog. t)rtlaft: atandtrS aiill run. pronrat eaiivary, 17-38 ton. 6.o.b Pttrnd; o. aiilo. 54 nn f o b Cfa:- ato i valloar corn. Eastern (yiipmgpt, f.o.b. gortlfna. 5tj-OJ.ou ion. SHOW tfTAgTf &T 9Wt o c "ilA e VIRGINIA HDD UAYO O'BRIEN Vatient . James D. An drews, 1790 Archer st., Med ford, underwent a tonsillec tomy at Rogue Valley hospital today, the hospital reported. Lodge To Meet Amethyst Rebekah lodge will meet Wednesday. June 18. at 8 D.m ii the IOOF hall on Fourth ava in Gold Hill. It will be the last meeting until September, peaks Tonight The Rev. B. W. Brogden, pastor of the First Southern Baptist church, Port Angeles, Wash., will be guest speaker at the Medford First Southern Baptist church, 7f Lozier lane, at 8 o'clock tonight. r;- giraart Call-The Medford fire department was called at 1:03 p.m. Monday by the air port control tower to stand by fop tha landing of a Mercy flight, Inc., plane which re ported a flat tire. The report was inaccurate and the plane mefla safe landing. Ckee Cliaic The chest X-rav clinic at Sacred Heart hoepitel will be open Thurs- ay from 2 to 5 p.m., accord ine. to tha Jackson County Tu hvpculoaia Health associa tion, ehich sponsors the clin ic. Volunteer assistance is giv an ftf the Providence Guild of Sacra Heart hospital. ' aratwatas Delbert Trox all, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Troell of 1133 South Peach at., was recently graduated from' Butler university,' In flianapolis, Ind.- He received a bachelor of divinity degree in the School of Religion, a grad uate theological seminary. liciier Cited C entral Point police cited Marlow Bert. It. of Little Fork, Minn., Monday night for soli citing and canvasing sales without a license. Foiice saia there were several boys with Bere. who said he was work ing for a national magazine association. The youth's auto mobile ia being held by the police in lieu of $25 bail. Theft Graduation presents, includine an electric clock, a pajama set, a mirror set, and aome gtationeryj were report ed stolen from an automobile oDerated by Miss Jessie Wil- ltrd, route 1, box 646, Cen tpal Point. Miss Willard, a last eraduate of Crater High achocl. told Central Point po lice the items were taken from the car while it was parked at the high school. Mows About Scrvicomen Obituaries DANIEL L. EVERSOLE Daniel L. Eversole, 58, died last night at the Veterans Ad ministra tion Domiciliary, Camp White. Funeral arrange ments will be announced by Conger-Morris, funeral directors. LESLIE E. McFALL Funeral services for Leslie E. McFall, 67, who died Mon day at his home near Rogue River, will be held at Conger Morris Funeral home Thurs day at 11 a.m. Committal will be in Hillcrest cemetery, Grants Pass. ftlCXIYIS TRAINING Donald L. Terry was gradu ated from recruit training at the Naval Training center, San Diego, Calif., June 13. Terry is the husband of the former Mias Ada Storts, and son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse E. Terry, all of route 1, box 141, Rogue River. SBADUgTIS . Cloyd X. Golden, USN, was graduated from the- Machin ist's Mate school at the Naval Training center, Great Lakes', 111., recently. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Cloyd A. Golden, 861 Gilman rd., Medford. ABO AID CARRIER Navy Airman Gordon ;R. Munden, is now serving as a plane captain aboard the air craft carrier USS Saratoga. Hie squadron is attached to tha U. S. Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean area. As a plane ceptain, Munden is re aponaible for the maintenance el a "DmenV jet. He is the eon of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert S. Mainden, S04 Beekman ave., Medford. GROUP PLACES FIRST Sp3 Raoul G- Maddox was a member of the Dixieland band which placed first in the musical combo category of the Army's recent Alaskan enter tainment contest at Ft. Rich ardson, Alaska. Maddox is regularly assigned as a trom bonist with the 9th Army band' at Ladd Air force base. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George I. Maddox of 340 South Groveland ave., Medford. COMPLETES COURSE Army Capt. Ted Vance re cently completed a 37-week officer advanced course at the Army Armor school, Ft. Knox, Ky. Capt. Vance, who has been in the Army since 1944 is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Vance of route 2, Medford.. IN PORTLAND Seaman Apprentice Fran cis D. Brown, visited Port land during the annual Rose Festival last week as a crew man aboard the destroyer USS Colahan. Brown is the son of Mr., and Mrs. Harley D. Brown of route 1, box 253, Rogue River. LYDIA EHRKE Funeral services for Mrs. Lydia R. Ehrke, 83, who died at her home, 200 Tripp st., Monday, will be held at 2 p.m. in Chapel Mortuary. The Rev. Thomas . White, pastor of the Philadelphia church, will officiate. Interment will be in Siskiyou Memorial park. Mrs. Ehrke, the daughter of Jacob and Mario Ideli Rin ker, was born in Wurttem berg, Germany, on June 19, 1874. When she was 13 years old her family came to Wis consin in 1887, where she was married in 1903 to Wil 1 i a m Ehrke. The family moved to Montana in 1918 and then came to Ashland in 1919, where Mr. Ehrke died in 1939: Mrs. Ehrke moved to Medford in 1946. Surviving are two daugh ters, Miss Lillian Ehrke, of Chicago, and Mrs. Florence Cardinal, Riddle, Ore. MRS. CORA MOORE Funeral services for Mrs. Cora May Moore, 86, of 327 Marie st., who died Monday, will be held at Colonial Mor tuary in Portland Thursday at 10 a.m. Committal will be in Lincoln Memorial park. Local arrangements were un der the direction of Conger Morris, funeral directors. Mrs. Moore was born May 10, .1872, in Pennsylvania, and had lived in Medford for the past eight years. Survivors include a son, Charles E. .Collins,' Medford; two sisters, Mrs. Stella Dunn, Baker, Ore.; and Mrs. Mary Guld, Lebanon, Ore.; a broth er, Malcomb Bennett, Oregon City; one granddaughter and three great grandchildren. FRED M. BROWN Private funeral services were held at the Perl Funeral home this morning for Fred M. Brown, 76, of 1701 Strat ford way, who died Monday. The Rev. John S. Power of St. Mark's Episcopal church officiated -Full rrmrnh sprv. ices will be held at Bozeman. Mint., and interment will be in the Sunset Hills cemetery in that city. . ; Mr. Brown was born in Bozeman, Mont., oh Nov. 20, 1881, and was married to Miss Mary Ann Holland in Billings, Mont., in 1904, where they made their home. Mr. Brown was county engi neer for ' many years, city manager- of Bozeman, and was division engineer for Montana for 18 years before retiring. He represented Gal latin county in the state legis lature of Montana for four years. He was a member of St. James Episcopal - church - of Bozeman; various Masonic bodies of Montana and was a past grand patron of the OES and past grand high priest of the Royal Arch of Montana. He was a registered profes sional engineer in Montana and in Oregon. He received his professional training at Montana State college and University of California. He was preceded in death by his son, Fred H. Brown, in 1948. He is survived by his wife and his daughter, Esther Brown, who is dean of women at Montana State college; four grandchildren; five great grandchildren, sev eral nieces and nephews and one sister, Mrs. Edith Milloy, of Vancouver, British Columbia. Awards to National Forest Personnel Announced by FS Awards and honors recent ly won by Rogue River Na tional Forest employees have been announced by Forest Supervisor Carroll E. Brown. Various individual and unit awards for safe work per formance were presented Monday at the annual fire guard training camp orienta tion program. About . 100 Rogue River employees, two thirds of the entire summer force, were present at the fire guard training program got under- way at . the old CCC Council on Aging To Meet Thursday The Rogue Valley Council on Aging will meet at 3 p.m. Thursday, June 19, in the Red Cross building auditor ium on Hawthorne ave. Preceding the general meet ing committee will meet at 2 p.m. Mrs. Harlan Bosworth is chairman. . , "All members are urged to attend both meetings as an election of three directors and a vice president will be held to complete the executive board. General council meetings will be held once a month in the. future at 3 p.m. on the third Thursday each month. The first Thursday of each month will be reserved for committee meetings and meetings of the executive board. Program material for the Northwest Regional confer ence on Aging at Reed col lege, Portland, June 29-July 2 will be available at the meeting Thursday. Eskimo Finally Buys Refrigerator Greeville. Mich. (UPI) It finally happened. An Eskimo bought an icebox. Word of the tale came from C. J. Gibson, president of 'a Greenville appliance manufacturing firm. "The sale of a refriger ator was made last month to an Eskimo living near Churchill. Alaska." Gibson -said.- ' Weather FORECASTS ! Medford and vicinity: Afternoon thunderstorms in mountains; .other wise fair through Thursday.' Low tonight 60. High Thursday 93. ' Western Oregon: Isolated thun dershowers southern mountains this evening. Fair tonight and sunny Thursday except morning overcast along coast. Low tonight 52-60. Highs Thursday 82-92 inland, 65-70 on coast. Northern California: Fair through Thursday except a few scattered thunderstorms in high mountains and fog along coast. Little tem perature change. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 77: above normal 12. Record high this . date 100 in 1945. Record low this date' 40 in 1954. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, trace. Midnight to 10 a.m. nTotal this month 1.78 inch, 1.12 inch above normal. Total since Sept. 1. 24.68 inches, 7.18 inches above normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 315i, highest this a.m. 91. High 4:30 24 . City Tester- ajn. hr. ' - day Low Prc. Brookings 62 54 .01 Crater Lake Grants Pass 98 62 Klamath Falls 88 52 T MEDFORD 94 61 Portland 93 60 Seattle 90 61 Spokane 86 69 T Yakima 95 65 Eureka . 81 56 Red Bluff 96 68 Sacramento 85 59 San Francisco 72 59 Los Angeles 81 63 Phoenix 106 82 Denver - 80 5; Chicago - 68 52 Miami 90 78 New York 67 59 Washington, D.C. 80 57 FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through June"23): Western Oregon - Western Wash ington Temperatures averaging much above normal and little or no precipitation. Highs generally 80-95 in western Oregon and 74 86 in western Washington, except 64-74 on coast. Lows 50-60. Northern California No rain ex cept scattered afternoon thunder showers in high mountains. Tem peratures above normal. AS The Whole Town's talking about the wonderful ... Mexican Plate DINNER Served at the Jackson Hotel DAILY from 5 to 7 P.M. DON'T FORGET ... . Our, Rtgular-Manii'- of Delicious Feeds it Available j Usual From 6:30 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. DAILY. camp northeast of Butte Falls. The Klamth ranger district organization received a cita tion for .10 years continuous work without a lost time acci dent. Robert L. Cooper, dis trict ranger during this 10 year period of accident free work was recently promoted to the staff of the regional forester, Juneau, Alaska.' The citation was received for the Klamath district organization by the new district ranger, Darroll K. Frewing. Maintenance Crew The forest road mainten ance crew, Daid T. Thompson, foreman, received a citation for the fourth consecutive year of accident free work. The Union Creek -ranger district organization, Rex. A. Resler, district, ranger in charge, received a citation for four consecutive years of ac cident free work on that dist rict. This is considered an un usual record since the work force of the Union Creek dist rict for the past several years has averaged 50 to 80 men during the summer period. Three ranger districts re ceived citations for the second consecutive year of" accident free work. They were the Applegate district, Vern E. Taylor district ranger; the Ashland district," Harold A. Thomas, district ranger; and the Butte Falls district, Ralph A. Riese, district ranger: The forest road engineering crew, Robert S. Snoich, chief of party, received a citation for one year of accident free work. . Howard G. Hopkins, timber management staff officer,' was given an award for safe driv ing of government vehicles for 20 years and a safe work er award for 20 years without an accident. Safe Driving Award Ralph A. Wiese received an award for safe driving of gov ernment .owned vehicles for 10 years without an accident. Harold M. von Stein, fire con trol aid, Applegate district, received an award for safe worker without a lost time accident for 10 years. These individual awards for Safe driving and safe working are given annually by the re gional forester in Portland! to employees who have earned them from 10, 20 and 30 years service. Length of service awards consisting of certificate signed by Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson and a 10 or 20-year lapel pin were issued to Robert L. Dowell, fire con trol aid, Applegate district, 20 years' service; Sylvester S. Stevens, property and supply clerk, Medford office, 20 years service; Wiese, district ranger Butte. Falls district, 10 years service; Robert K. Krell, as sistant ranger Prospect dist rict, 10 years service; Douglas B. Finch, district ..assistant Butte Falls district, 10 years service. Tribute to Record Brown paid tribute to the cooperative effort of all em ployees that had resulted in the fine safety record of the Rogue River National Forest. He pointed out that al though forest work is rated among the most hazardous, personnel of the Rogue River National Forest organization have now gone for more than 20 continuous months without a lost time accident. The cu mulative frequency rate for the past 3 years was 4.23 acci dent per million man-hours work. He gave particular credit to the leadership of S. T. (Ten ny) Moore, fire staff man and safety officer. ANDY'S BEST BUY! ,17 Jewel O Water Resistant O Shock Resistant NOW ANDY'S Your Friendly Credit' t Jeweler S&H Green Stamps 15 North Central Stock Market Rally Fouled by Decision New York (UPI) A rally featuring General Mo tors today ran afoul of Wash ington trust-busters in the case of DuPont, largest Gen eral Motors stockholder. A Justice Department spokesman said the DuPont Over-the-Counler 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 ..' . 37g' 40 Calif-Pacific Utilities. 29 31 Cascades Plywood 25 i 27 3i Cons. Freightways .. 16 17,'s Copco 32 i 34H First National Bank 46 3 50 Pacific Pwr. & Lt. (nh) 358 37 Portland Gen. Elec 253, 27 U. S. National Bank .... 65 69 United Utilities 23 Ti 25 "4 West Coast Tel 20'v 21 'i Weyerhaeuser-. 3838 40?8 investment Funds Noon Quotations on select ed funds supplied by the Med ford Branch of Foster & Mar shall, Members N e w Y o r k Stock Exchange. Fund Bid Bullock 11.87 Chem Fund 16.43 Eaton Howard Stk 20.14 Fidelity 13.05 Gas Ind 12.88 Group Sec Avia .... 9.57 Group Sec Com Stk 11.53 Group Sec Elec .... 6.62 Group Sec Petr .... 11.01 Group Sec Stee .... 7.29 Group Sec Tobac ... 6.29 Keystone B-3 15.86 Keystone B-4 9.35 Keystone K-l 8.34 Keystone K-2 10.49 Keystone S-l 15.17 Keystone S-2 ...v. 10.29 Keystone S-3 11.30 Mass Inc Tr 11.05 TV-Elec 10.89 Value Line Inc 4.85 Wellington 12.63 Asked 13.01 17.77 21.53 14.11 14.08 10.48 12.63 7.26 12.06 7.99 6.90 17.31 10.21 9:10 11.45 16.55 11.23 12.33 11.95 11.87 5.30 13.77 Portland Produce Portland (UPI) Eggs To re tailers: Grade AA large, 44-46c doz.; A large, 41-43; AA medium, 37-39: A medium, 37-38; AA smalls, 27-29; carton l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA and Grade A prints, 66-67c lb.; carton lc lb. higher; B prints, 64-65c. , Cheese medium cured To re tailers: A grade Cheddar single dai sies, 40-Slc; 5-lb. loaves, 51'V2-57c; processed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43c. Farm Market Best strawberries cleaned up early at the East Side Farmers mar ket at mosUy 2-2.25 a 12-cup fill; red raspberries sold at 2-2.255: Maryhill cherries sold lower at 25 cents a pound;. Bings from The Dalles were . 27 12 cents; Oregon lettuce was 3-3.50 a crate; Poultry, Rabbits Live Chickens Quoted to grow ers at Portland, Salem and south to Eugene, f.o.b. ranch No. 1 quality fryers. 2?i-4 lbs, 23c; light hens, 14-15c; heavy hens, 5 lbs. up, 20c; old roosters. 7-8c lb; Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade dressed, to retailers: fryers, whole drawn, 41-43c lb.; cut up, 46-48c; hens, light types cut up, 37-40c; heavy type, whole drawn, 43-46c. Dressed Turkeys A grade breeder hens, net to producers on an eviscerated basis, 27c lb.; toms, same basis, 25c lb.; A grade young hens, 35c lb. to' producers on evis cerated basis; to retailers. A grade breeder hens, mostly 36-38. Rabbits (average .to growers, f.o.b. killing plants) Live white, 3V2-4'i lbs. f.o.b. Portland, 22-25c; colored pelts, 4c under. Fresh killed fryers to retailers, 59-61C lb.; cut up, 62-65c. QUACKERS NEEDED Sun Valley, Calif.. (UPI) Thieves stole 21 ducks from Mrs- M. A. Buckelew's back yard without a single quack of alarm. The ducks, known as Moscovies, are quackless. proposal for complying with a ruling to get rid of its GM voting- rights was "complete ly unacceptable" andthat the government has no intention of . backing down on its de mand that DuPont get rid of its 63 million shares of GM stock. ' DuPont weakened. Tuesday it had soared eight points and closed with a gain of five. Chrysler at its top showed a gain of nearly two points. American Motors was active and firm. ' ": Today's prices on selected stock DOW-JONES AVERAGES New York (UPI Dow- , Jones final stock averages: 30 industrials 476.65. off ' 2.32;- 20 railroads 118.88, off 0.47: 15 utilities 78.79, off 0.35, and 65 stocks 164.49, off 0.75. Sales today were about 2.640,000 shares compared with . 2,950,000 shares Tuesday. Allied Chemical . American Can . ...... AT&T Anaconda Copper Bethlehem Steel Caterpillar Corp. ;'. Chrysler Corp. . Continental Can Crown Zellerbach Curtiss Wright ........". Du Pont Eastman Kodak General Electric General Foods General Motors . Georgia Pacific Graham Paige .". Homestake Mining Kaiser Frazer Kennecott Copper. Lockheed Aircraft Katy Pfd. Montgomery 'Ward, v New York Central Penney, J. C Penn RR .. Radio Corporation .;. Richfield. Oil Sears Southern Co. Southern Pacific Sdcony Vacuum . Standard California ... Standard Indiana Standard N. J Sun Mines ..,. ......... Texas Gulf Tex Pac Land Trust ... Transamerica Trans West Air ... Tri-Continental Union Carbide Union Pacific United Aircraft U. A. L. U. S. Rubber U. S. Steel Youngstown S & T ... 78 V2 ... 49 Vs ..17834 .. 48 .. 417s .. 645s .. 48 .. 50?s .. 493a .. 25 ..187 ..11034 ..59V2 6078 .. 39? 8 .. 37 - 1Y4 .. 4212 91,8 .. 91 V4 .. 473s .. 53 . - 35V4 1712 9412 .. 13 58 .. 35 .. 803s ... 293s 3034 - 451s . 5118 ...52 ... 47 : ... 54 12 ... IVs ... 21V4 ... ll34 42 I2V2 ... 35V4 ... 90 ... 2958 ... 623a 2634 34H ... 65 8 ... 88 Funeral Flowers and Hospital Bouquets GROCETERIA FLOWER SHOP Ph. SP 2-8179 Charge Accounts Welcome Free Delivery David & Evelyn Chase, Owners MJIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Wednesday, June 18, IMS IS Barnes Elected FFA President at CHS Central Point Allen Barnes was recently elected president of the Crater High school Future Farmers of Am erica club. A senior at the school, he succeeds David Mack who graduated this year. . - . Other new officers include seniors John Caster, vice pres ident; Donald Ryon, secre tary; and Mike Redmond, treasurer. Juniors 'r Donald Denning and Kennith Wood were elected reporter and sen tinel respectively. V 5 Retiring officers, in addi tion, to Mack, are- Lyle Big ham, president; Robert Lich ti, secretary; George Gilman, treasurer; Carl Vanderpool, reporter; and Barnes, sentinel. : The officers of the : FFA chapter form an executive council which meets regular ly to determine club activity and policy. Roseburg Firm To Build Adair Housing Washington (UPI) Sen. Richard L. Neuberger (D-Ore.) reported today that the Air Force has received a letter of acceptability for construction of 150 housing units at Camp Adair, Ore. The contract was awarded to Todd Company" of Roseburg, Ore., with a low bid of $2,391,750. nOti DESIR DINING INN Announce . the Valley's . First STEREOPHONIC INSTALLATION For Your- Listening Pleasure - NO 4-2513 , CALL SP 3-7323 For Information About Pictures Playing and Time Schedules At Your Theatres $ DRIYE'IM pj COUTH PACIFIC WtMttJlZ, STARTS TONIGHT PAT BOONE SHIRLEY JONFC SI A 1 I - I CO-FEATURE r""V MISTOBrS QBMff MANHUNT I TONY CURTIS -kUXtSI MKI o . mi am mm aiaea T HOtTHMfinCMIMMay iA CAR LOAD TONITE ONLY "CURTAIN AT 8:30" "Sam Bleu! Is there mo end to bis ippetitt?" . rotd-ybrow glimpw into tha boudeirt and drawing room of Pari ttorring MICHEL SIMON STARTS TONITE I HOPPtR UY10I 1 COUiuii atrtiiee CO-FEATURE i bRIVE IM ENDS TONITE mtkotaui I PLUS Q rumen LAME war MARLOW STARTS TONIGHT! A GREAT SHOW TWO TOP 'A' HITS! - THEY'RE BOTH TERRIFIC! (w(gMfS3 1 TEK FREDERICK rill H" W THE 7T Jfcf! X&y . SRTflfl (tir'VH w' vaaaw JOEL McCREA talIott haggerty coates Cinemascope colorhnum , o