OBITUARIES
MARK NOBLE - o
Funeral services for Mark
Noble, 69, of 130 Elk st., who
died Friday, will be held at
Conger-Morris Funeral home
Tuesday at 1 p.m. The Rev,
, George Roseberry of the First
Methodist church will of
ficiate. Private committal will
be at Siskiyou Memorial park.
Mr. Noble was born Sept.
7, 1888, m Hamburg, Ark. He
was a veteran of World War
I, serving from May 27, 1918,
to July 25, 1922. He was gnar
ried May 30, 1925, in Lewis
ton, Ida., to Charlotte John
son, who survives. . .
MRS. PAULINE THOMPSON
Funeral services for Mrs.
Pauline Thompson, 2385 Tay
lor rd., Central Point, who
gied Saturday, will be hH in
fae Conger-Morris Funeral
home Tuesday at 10 a.m. The
Rev. C. J. Andeon, Mt. Zici
Lutheran church, Yreka. will
officiate. Committal will' Be
in Memory Gardens Memorial
park. ;
q Mrs. TjQmpson was born in
Norway on May 29, e 1?87.
She w a veteran of World
War I, serving both in "the
Army andrt&vyas a nurse
from 1913 until 192?.
-On 'June 1, 1927, in the
Virgin Islands, she tvas mar
ried to John Bert Thompson,
who survives.
She was a member o the
American Legion. ffeylft-
Holland Post 129, Central
Point. She came to the vlley
in 1934.
Surviving, besides hor hus
band, are three children, Al
bert C. Thompson, Central
Point; Gray Thompson, Pen
dleton; Mrs. Ernestyn Char
ley, Central Point; and en
grandchildren. oe
Casket bearers will b
Kenneth Bowker, Agnol
Bohnert, Qjave Blumeftotein,
Oliver Ober4hain,tir times
and Carl Rhoten. o
MRS. A1$A PETERS
Mrs. Alma Peterman, 99,
of Rosebura. died July in
Roseburg. She was borg July
27, 1898, i itedOrfi -heye
she lived until mcwinj to
Ashla 9nor to rSfcis h
home in Rosebifrg i
She is survived by ft ftue
band, Isaac rm, Jls
burg; her(jaothr, Ms. liura
Wyland, and-, sistr, Km.
Thelma Russell, both IClim
ath Falls; two !toni, Afvin
Peterman, Sbgene; Albert
Peterman, Winstar two
daughters. Mrs. Alv B!l
grave.O Winston, anfl M?.
Annabelle Benford is
sylvania; and & jfcranftchil
dren. .
Funeral series will Re
held WednesdaP, Jufc- 9, t X
p.m. at Litwiller'e Mountain
View chapel, oshland. Tht
Rev. Herschel Hall Ct first
Methodist church wil of
ficiate. Entombment will be
in Rest Haven mausoleum.
JNDS TUE5PAY!
Turn
FIRT RWN!
MM
A
DIANA DOSS
AN
AIXICfATOR
NAMED
DAISY"
o
f
THI UMTtt SIATB tg.fOHAL 1AM Of MtTUNO
J
I A'
MAY L. OLEN
Ashland Mrs. May L.
Olen died this morning in an
Ashland nursing home. Funer
al arrangements will be an
nounced by Ashland Mor
tuary. . t
DR. WILLIAM CHISHOLM
Funeral services for Dr.
William P. Chisholm, 61, who
died Saturday at his home,
600 Melody lane, will be held
in Ashland Mortuary chapel
Wednesday at 10 a.m. The
Rev. Fred G, Plocher of the
Cgregational church will
officiate .Committal will be
in Mountain View cemetery
The body will lie in state at
the Ashland mortuary, Fourth
ajnd C sts'., Tuesday until 9
p.m.
. Dr. Chisholm was born
May 21, 1897, in Orlinda,
Teiin. On Dec. 19, 1925, in
St. Helens, Ore., he was mar
ried t Myra A. Williams,
wlio survives. He came west
with his mother at the age
o 13 and . upon graduation
frbm the Pendleton, Ore.,
High school, he entered the
University of Oregon, gradu
ating in 1923. He then en
tered the University of Ore
gon Medical school and re
ceived hjs medical degree jn
1827.
He served his internship
with the U.S. Army from 1927
to 1928. After completing his
internship' he practiced medi-
kcine in Portland, Coos Bay
and Lakeview. He was at
Lakeview from 1933 to 1948,
when he moved to Ashland
and was chief medical officer
at the Veterans Administra
tion domiciliary at Camp
White, when he retired.
Dr. Chisholm served with
the . Marines during World
War I and was a commander
in the Navy for Z'z years dur
ing World War II He was a
member of Ashland Elks, a
past president of the Lake
view Rotary club, past presi
dent of the Lakeview Cham
ber of Commerce, had been a
member of the Lions club,
and had been active with the
Boy Scouts.
Survivors, besides his wife,
are a son, William Alan Chis
holm, Detroit, Mich.; a daugh
ter, Mrs. Myra Jill Wells, La
Mirada, Calif.; two sisters,
Mrs. James Stovall, Eugene;
Mrs. George Wachtel, Stan
tield, Ore.; three brothers, Dr.
O. G. Chisholm, Yakima,
Wash.; J. J. Chosholm, Walla
Walla, Wash., and J. M. Chis
holm, Ventura, Calif., and
two grandchildren. The fam
ily requests that those who
with may, in lieu of flowers,
end contributions to the
American Heart fund.
XOMEK STEPHENSON
Funeral services for Homer
B. Stephenson, 61, of 2535
Tennessee dr., Medford, who
ied Friday, will be held in
the Conger-Morris Funeral
home Tuesday at 3 p.m. The
Rev. D. E. Millard will of
ficiate. Committal will be in
Logtown cemetery.
Mr. Stephenson was born
in Ashland Nov. 25, 1896, a
son of the late Henry Bryson
and Katherine Hamlin Steph
enson, whose parents were
early pioneers in the Rogue
River valley. He had lived his
entire life in this community.
He was a veteran of World
War I.
On July 11, 1942, in Yreka,
he was married to Eula
Eggelston, who survives. Also
surviving are six children,
Homer Stephenson, Jr., Med
ford; Mrs. Charles Cowan,
Los Angeles, Calif.; Mrs.
Dave Robinson, Shady Cove;
Mrs. Joseph Lagana, Long
Beach, Calif.; Mrs. Lois
Brown and Mrs. Charles
Svitak, both of Medford: tten
grandchildren; three brothers,
Verni F. Stephenson, Butte
Falls; Earl L. and Earnest K.
Stephenson, both of Medford.
G1-
$9eir add to
Saving Account
f JULY 10
fn Interest from
JBIT 1
MEDFORD BRANCH
Myr Um Otf
Lightning Bolts, T
Cloudburst Hit
West Washington
Seattle (UPI) Blister
ing heat, puncuated by
lightning bolts and a freak
cloudburst, had the weather
man ready to eat his barographs,-forest
rangers eating
smoke and . highway crews
eating mud Monday.
Lightning strikes started 25
fires in the Mount Baker Na
tional Forest during the week
end.
At least seven fires were
started by lightning in Srio
qualmie National Forest. '
Mud on Highway
A cloudburst in the Cas
cade Mountains southeast of
Mt! Rainier sent mud and
rocks sliding down in White
Pass Highway near Trout
Lodge early Monday, but the
route was reopened to one
way traffic a short time later.
The Naches Ranger Station
also reported a slide had
closed the Bumping Lake road
in the Goose Prairie area ma
rooning several carloads of
fishermen and campers. Of
ficials said the slide was
seven feet deep and 50 yards
wide and it was not expected
to be cleared until Monday
afternoon.
A freak lightning storm
over Yakima got .the Rex A.
Hansen family out of bed
earlier than usual Monday
morning. A bolt struck the
Hansen home at 6:25 a.m.,
blasting a hole about the size
of a quarter in the roof and
charring the shingles along
the edge of the metal flashing
on the roof. The bolt also ap
peared to have traveled a
downspout, knocking out a
niece of concrete foundation.
The garajre also '. was struck
and the Hansen car seemed
to have been moved.
House on Fire .
"It sounded like a bomb."
said Mrs. Hansen. She said
she didn't realize what had
happened until a neighbor
called and said the Hansen
house was on fire.
None of the forest fires
were out of hand. Only one,
in the Glacier District of the
Mt. Baker forest, was of any
consequential size, it being
eight acres. Thirty men there
had it under control.
BIRTHS
MacDONALD To Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Forbes, 512
Fairmont dr., Medford, July
4, 1958, a girl, 5V4 pounds, at
Sacred Heart hospital.
BETTS To Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Charles, 602 North
Riverside ave., Medford, July
5, 1958, a boy, 7 pounds, at
Sacred Heart hospital. ,
MARTIN To Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Lee, 624 South Ivy
St., Medford, July 6, 1958, a
boy, 8M pounds, at Sacred
Heart hospital. ' , ;
WELCH To Mr. and Mrs.
John Lewis, 2618 Jackson dr.,
Medford, July 6, 1958, a boy
8 pounds, at Sacred Heart hos
pital.
DLILARD To Mr. and
Mrs. Donald ; Eugene, "Butte
Falls, star route, box 17,
Butte' Falls, July 7, 1958, a
boy, IVz pounds, at Sacred
Heart hospital. ., V
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPI)-l Cattle 1300.
Average to high choice steers above
28.50; mixed good-choice ' sold 27.-75-28;
good steers 26.50-27.50; mix
ed good-choice heifers 27.75; good
mostly 26-27; commercial cows 20
21; utility 17.50-19; canner-cutter
mostly 15-17; utility bulls 23.50-25.
Calves 50. Good-choice vealers
26-30: standard 20-25. '
Hogs 750. No. 1 and 2 butchers
180-235 lb 26.25-26.50: - mixed 1,
2 and 3 "ts 25.50-26; 240-2470 lb.
24-25; 1 and 2 sows 180-320 lb.
22-23: few 350-450 lb. 20-20.50.
Sheep 2250. Choice 91 lb. range
lambs 23.25; long haul 84-lb. choice
lambs 23; other choice 22.50: good
21-22; good-choice feeders 18-19.50;
cull-good ewes 4-7.50.
Portland Produce
Portland UPI Eggs To re
tailers: Grade AA large. 48-49c
doz.; A large, 45-47c doz.; AA me
dium, 39-40C doz.; A medium. 38
39c; AA smalls. 28-29C doz.; car
ton 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
daisies. 40-Slc; 5-lb. loaves. 51 'i
57c; processed American cheese,
5-lb. loal, 40-43C. . '
Farm Market '
Yakima valley Moorpark apri
cots sold inside the early market
at 2.50 for "28 lbs. today; Yakima
valley corn in a wide range with
best ears at 3 25 for 5 dozen; Snow
den. Wash strawberries were 2.50
2.75 a 12-cup fill: Willamette val
ley red raspberries slightly , strong
er at 2.2.25 to producers; mid-Columbia
district green peppers were
2.25 a flat to wholesalers.
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, 19
20c: old roosters, 7-8c lb.;.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade
dressed to retailors; fryers, whole
drawn, 41-43c lb.; cut up; 46-48c;
hens. Iignt types cut up, 37-39c;
heavy type, whole drawn. 43-46c.
Dressed Turkeys A grade breed
er hens, net to producers on an
eviscerated basis, 27c lb.; toms,
same basis. 25c lb.; A grade young
hens Joe id to producers on evis
cerated basis; to retailers, A grade
breeder hens, mostly 45-48C
Rabbits (average to growers. "f.b.b.
killing plants Live white, Zx'i-l'i
lbs. f.o.b. Portland, 22-25c; colored
pelts, 4c under. Fresh killed fryers
to retailers. 59-61c lb.: cut no.
62-65C ,
TSto Carroes IFeuiS Wotli
Khrushchev 6 ModdDe East
Paris (UPI) Marshal Tito
of Yugoslavia is preparing to
carry his feud with Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev
to the Middle East, diplomatic
dispatches reported today. ' .
The diplomatic reports said
this would play an. important
role in the talks today . in
Oregon Drivers Get
Praise From Holmes
For Holiday Safety
Salem (UPI) Oregon's
"safe and sane" drivers got
a gubernatorial pat on the
back from Gov. Robert D.
Holmes today after the state
had apparently completed a
78-hour Fourth of July Week
end without a single traffic
fatality: ',
But the long list of drown
ing victims and an explosion
in Portland prompted the gov
ernor to initiate action aimed
at preventing recurrence of
these tragedies.
"We are justly , entitled to
feel lucky and proud of the
three-day death-free record on
our highways and streets,"
Gov. Holmes said. "I would
like to congratulate all Ore
gonians for the fine record,
and commend the police and
safety agencies which contri
buted so much to making it
possible.
Best in U.S.
Oregon had the best high
Pakistan Pushes
Project Designed
To Avoid Desert
Karachi (UPI) Aided
by American and British re
sources, the Pakistan govern
ment is pushing ahead with
its ambitious 150-million-dol-
lar Mangla dam project de
signed to keep northwestern
Pakistan from turning into a
desert.' v ' ' - i
The proposed structure, 900
miles north of Karachi and in
the heart of the bitterly dis
puted Azad Kashmir area will
stretch' almost two miles in
length at its base and rise 350
feet at its highest point. The
reservoir will hold three and
a half million acre-feet of wa
ter in an irregular " 100
square - mile mountain- lake
rimmed by forests. .
-Located on the turbulent
and unpredictable Jhelum
river, the dam will provide
irrigation for a chunk of real
estate the size of Northern
Ireland ;or Connecticut.
. But mainly. It will yield
nine and a half million acre-
feet of water for land 'recla
mation in the Punjab area
which is steadily being turn
ed into a salt bed at the rate
of 75,000 acres per year. With
out the Mangla, the lush Pun
jab might become a Sahara
within 50 years.'
To Curb Floods ;
-The dam will be a rolled
filled earth embankment
flanked by a - power station
and a spillway. The power
house will have an installed
capacity of 300,000 kilowatts.
From the spillway, water
will -cascade 200 feet to . the
lower , Jhelum- river,
t Additionally, the structure
will harness the sometimes
wild Jhelum and halt the ex
cessive flood damage, to the
plains below, i Its reservoir
lake, stretching back 10 miles
into the hills, will, provide a
semi-mountainous 1,200 feet
above sea- level) tourist re
sort complete with .hotels,
boating facilities, fishing and
duck hunting, ' ;
. The massive lake will sub
merge the city of Mirpur and
affect an additional 122 vil
lages, in the area. The Pak
istan government has set
aside 50,000 acres for reset
tlement of the people and has
proposed the construction of
a new town near the dam
site. '
American and British funds
will aid in financing the pro
ject which the government
hesitatingly predicts will be
completed within 10 years.
The government has signed
an agreement with the Lon
don firm of Binriie, Beacon
and Gaurley as consulting en
gineers for the project, aided
by the Harza Engineering
company of the United States
for civil works, and Preece,
Cardew and Rider of Britain
for the electrical portion.
Portland Hay Grain
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices:
New crop. No. 2 green alfalfa baled,
f.o.b. Portland and Seattle, $24-25
ton.
: Wholesale Prices as reported by
the USDA market news service:
Wheat, No. 2 soft white. $68 ton;
No. 2 white oats, 38-lb. West Coast
delivery, S51-52 ton: No. 2 valley
white oats. S51.50 ton; barley No.
2 West Coast delivery. $45-47; soy
bean meal. Eastern shipment, $97
ton, f.o.b. Portland; standard mill
run, prompt delivery. $37-38 ton,
f.o.b. Portland; No. 2 Miio, $57 ton,
f.o.b. Coast; No. 2 yellow corn.
Eastern shipment, f.o.b. Portland
S61.75-62.25. ; - -
Yugoslavia between Tito and
President Gamal Abdel Nasser
of the United Arab Republic.
May Support- Greeks
Greek Foreign Minister
Evangelos Averoff will fly to
Yugoslavia Tuesday to join
Yugoslav and UA.R. diplo
mats and it was believed Tito
way record in the U. S. for
the holidays, Gov. Holmes
noted. Oregon was the largest
by more than twice of eight
states enjoying a deathless
4th.
The last death-free Inde
pendence Day was in 1951
when the holiday fell on a
Wednesday, shortening the
period to 30 hours.
Motor - Vehicle Director
James F. Johnson also - con
gratulated motorist and police
agencies for their fine work.
"It is our ultimate hope to
make every day a death free
day on Oregon highways,"
Johnson said:
New Laws Suggested
The governor said he was
greatly concerned that such
tragedies as the fireworks ex
plosion in Portland should oc
cur and said he was asking
State Fire Marshal Hugh
Earle to begin studies upon
which new legislation could
be based to prevent recur
rence. "It seems to me that we!
need laws which will prevent
the storage of explosives in
or near residential areas.
Gov. Holmes said.
"It is a great tragedy, too,
that our beaches, lakes and
streams should cause so much
grief from drownings," the
governor added, making an
appeal, for water safety mea
sures and education of the
public to dangers in the
water.
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
Bullock : 12.04 13.20
Chem Fund 16.60 17.95
Eaton Howard Stk 20.36 21.77
Fidelity . 13.21 14.28
tiaslnd 13.00 14.21
Group Sec A via 9.74 10.67
Group Sec Com Stk 11.65 12.76
Group Sec Elec 6.70 - 7.35
Group Sec Petr 11.16 12.22
Group Sen Steel 7.27 7.97
Group Sec Tobac" 6.30 6.91
Keystone B-3 15.36 16.76
Keystone B-4. 9.31 10.16
Keystone K-l .. 8.39 9.16
Keystone K-2 10.71 11.69
Keystone S-l 15.41 16.82
Keystone S-2 10.42 11.38
Keystone S-3 ' 11.37 12.41
MassInvTr 11.11 12.01
TV-Elec 11.05 12.04
Value Line Inc 4.90 5.36
Wellington . 12.69 13.84
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Warm and
rather humid through Tuesday.
Afternoon and evening thunder
storms mainly over the mountains.
Low tonight 56. High Tuesday 90.
Western Oregon: Considerable
cloudiness tonight and Tuesday
morning. Little drizzle along coast.
Scattered thunderstorms over Cas
cades tonight. Low tonight 32 to
62. High Tuesday 72 to 84 inland,
65 along coast.
Northern California: Fair through
Tuesday except fog on coast. Little
change in temperature.
LOCAL DATA
Temperature: Mean yesterday 79;
above normal 9.
Record high this date 99 'n 1956.
Record low this date 43 in 1925.
Precipitation: 24 hours to mid
night .16 in. Midnight to 10 a.m.
0 in. -
Total this month .36 in.. .30 in.
above normal.
Total since Sept. 1 25.96 in., 8.11
in. above normal.
Humidity: Lowest yesterday 25,
highest this a.m. 95 .
. High 4:00 24
City Tester- a.m. hr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 62 55 T
Crater Lake
Grants Pass . 99 60 .22
Klamath Falls 87 55 .14
MEDFORD 9 59 .16
Portland : 89 58
Seattle 90 56
Spokane " 81 60
Yakima 89 61 .08
Eureka 60 55
Red Bluff 98 72
Sacramento 93 58
San Francisco 77 57 '
Los Angeles 75 - 61
Phoenix 108 80-
Denver 76 53 ' - -
Chicago 72 64 : , .
Miami 85 81 -
New York . 82 70 - .21
Washington, D.C. .. 92 71 j .
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
(Through July 12)
Western Washington and Western
Oregon Cooler over interior to
night and Tuesday but temperature
will average above normal. . The
maximum in Western Washington
mosUy 75 to 85. Western Oregon
80 to 90 except near normal with
60 to 70 along coast. Precipitation
less man normal.
Northern California No precipi
tation and temperature near normal.
CANDLE ROOM
ft
HOTEL MEDFORD .
arid Nasser would support the
Greek position in the Cyprus
dispute.
Diplomatic reports in Paris
said Tito hoped to strike back
at Soviet denunciation . of
Yugoslav revisionism by try
ing to woo Nasser away from
Soviet enticement.
He also may ask Nasser to
press Algerian nationalist reb
els to "be . reasonable" and
arrive at some agreement
with France to end the four-year-old
rebellion in Algeria.
Meeting on Vanga
A Belgrade dispatch said
Tito and Nasser were meeting
on the isolated and postage
stamp sized isiet of Vanga,
two miles from Tito's summer
home on Brioni. They landed
at Brioni Sunday with their
wives from Tito's yacht the
."Galeb" (Seagull). . ,
A Cairo dispatch said Tito
and Nasser would - reaffirm
their support of positive neu
trality and peaceful co-existence
and that Nasser, who vis
ited Moscow last May, would
try toward off -any drastic
Soviet action .against Yugo
slavia. Pair of Oxen
Newest Attraction
Kansas, City, Mo (UPI)
Rock arid Roll, a pair of oxen,
are Kansas City's newest at
traction. Straight from a ' logging
camp in Biloxi, Miss., the
beasts were bought by a sta
ble ,and are being schooled
for parades, hayrides and ad
vertising schemes.
Howard Benjamin, 25, man
ager of Benjamin Riding
Academy, said he believes
Rock and Roll are' the only
oxen in the vicinity a clear
field for talented oxen.
Benjamin said the pair is
"one of the best broke teams
in the United States for gee
and haw!" That's right and
left in oxen lingo. They're
also brushing up on yea and
whoa stop and go.
The reddish-brown beasts
had their big day Oct. 19 dur
ing the- traditional American
Royal parade through down
Kansas City.
Benjamin said Rock and
Roll are quite blase about
crowds, sirens, horns and
clapping. Not long ago he took
them to the Country Club
Plaza, an expensive shopping
area, as an advertisement for
a restaurant. They also had
a parade trial run at the
Olathe, Kan., centennial cele
bration and put on a credit
able performance.
The team has been called
into use for pulling hayrides,
and Benjamin said the oxen
are so "gentle that we let the
kids get on them."
The animals are not con
trolled by reins and move
only when given verbal direc
tions. Although they already
responded to voice commands
when Benjamin bought them,
they are worked 30 minutes
to three hours each day to
get them used to their new
driver.
ANDY'S
BEST BUY!
SEAMAN, Self winding
shock resistant
5 S4988
ANDY'S
Your Friendly Credit
Jeweler
S&H Green Stamps
15 North Central
' j
- G e n u i n e C h a r c oa I
Broiled Foods!
, ' An especially-good place
to eat if dieting!
Sundays 4 p.m. till 11 pjn.
New Average Highs
In Stocks for Yeor -
New York (UPI) Stocks
carried their rise through the
eighth consecutive session to
day to set new average highs
for the year.
Among leading groups,
gains' generally held to a
point or less but selected specr
ialties moved widely. j
. P. Lqrillard featured with
a two point gain after an
easy opening in line with oth
er tobaccos which reflected
the renewed cancer-smoking
talk. :f
Reichhold Chemical ran up
nearly three points to a new
high for the year, then backed
off on realizing. DuPont and
Allied added around a point.
Ford sparked motors with
a late run-up of nearly a
point. Steels added fractions
to a point in Youngstown as
the production estimate took
a sharp upturn after the holt
day week! Zenith ran up over
two in television, Shell over
two in the oils. .
. Garrett .Corp,, maker of air
craft assessories, picked up
three points.
Only loss of size was in
International Nickel follow
ing announcement of a 20 per
cent cutbacks in nickel pro
duction. It dropped three to
a low of 76 V2 then met sup
port. "
Rails were firm,- with Kan
sas City -Southern and Nor
folk and Western up around
a point.
DQW-JONES AVERAGES :
New York (UPI) Dow
Jones final slock averages:
30 industrials 481.85, up
1.68; 20 railroads 119.53. up
0.11; 15 utilities 79.70, up,
0.13; and 65 stocks 116.12. '
up 0.43. Sales today were
about 2.150,000 shares com
pared with 2,603,000 shares '
Thursday. 1
PEACE LEADER DIES
Swarthmore, Pa. (UPI)
Mrs." Hannah Clothier Hull,
86, former head of the Wom
en's International League for
Peace and Freedom, died here
Saturday. ?
S.D. PHONES
Sioux Falls, S.D. (UPI)
The 150th thousandth tele
phone has been installed in
South Dakota. Officials of
Northwestern Bell Telephone
Co. said it took 65 years to
get the'first 70 thousand tele
phones installed in the state,
and 13 years for the next 80
thousand,.
Auspices V.F.W., American Legin m4 A.A.V.
FIRST TIME! :
CARNIVAL ,
July 8th to 13th Inclusive
6 BIG DAYS 6
MEDFORD
Sheriff's Posse Grounds
(PJ Y i 'if
15 BIG
10 BIG
f MAIL TRIBUNE, MdtW,
"- .Today's prices on- selected
stocks: '" :
Allied Chemical
78
50V8
r..i79 1 ;
.... 45
42
.. 66 : .
.. 47 V2
52
47
25
187
-...113
. 60
64
40
.... 38V4
1V4
43
. 8
-j. 88V4
-48
:. 54V2
38VS
: 16Vi
92
13Vs
.. 35
.. 87
29
51
.... 32
.... 53
..- 46
54
8V2
20V4
11 W
43
12V&
34
92
.... 29
63
28
.. 34
66
89 ' '
Americari CanML.-l-..
A T & .T;........,J....r.
Anaconda Copper ..
Bethlehem Steel .'r.
Caterpillar Corp ,..
Chrysler Corp ...,..
Continental Can ....
Crown Zellerbach
Curtiss Wrght: r
Du Popt'.,....,.
Eastman Kodak (.,
General, Electric -
General Foods . ....
General Motors
Georgia Pacific ;....
Graham Paige ;
Homestake- Mining
Kaiser Frazer
Kerinecott Copper .
Lockheed Aircraft
Katy Pfd .-. ....
Montgomery Ward
New York Central
Penney J C
Penn R R ...... 1.. .J.
Radio Corporation ..
Richfield Oil
Sears ...1.
Socony Vacuum 1...
Southern Co !......
Standard California
Standard Indiana ......
Standard N J .......
Sun Mines
Texas Gulf
Tex Pac Land Trust
Transamerica ...
Trans West Air
Tri-Corrtinental ,..
Union Carbide
Union Pacific-
United Aircraft
UAL .
U S Rubber ...r..
U S Steel ..... ....;.,.
Youngstown S & T
Over-fhe-Counter
Western Slocfa '
The following bid and
asked prices on sheeted West
ern securities, provided by
the Medford branch office of
Pacific Northwest Company,
are unofficial and doiot rep
resent actual transactions,
but are intended as a guide to
the approximate price range.
Comm-jn Stocks Bid Asked
Bank of America (NH) 38 41
Calif-Pacific Utilities 30,i 3214
Cascades Plywood tiVt 26U
Cons Freightways lSVt 18
Copco 82:i 34Ji
First National BanX 46 i 50V4
Pacific Pwr & Lt 355 37i
Permanent (NH) 20 21 'j
Portland Gen Elec 25 'i 27 Vs
US National Bank. 66 v2 . 71
United Utilities 23' 25"
West Coast Tel ,. 207 22,4
Weyerhaeuser 1. 38 x 40:U
RIDES 15
SHOWS 10
J f T
I - 1 I
v..
i
Oregon, MtnJiy, July 7. 1958 y AS
California Man
Elected by Elks
. New; York ' (UPI) , "
Horace Wisely, -54, a partner
in a Salinas, Calif., dry clean
ing firm, was elected over
whelmingly today as grand
ruler of the Benevolent and
Protective Order of Elks.
! Wisely polled 1,764 of the
votes cast by delegates to' the
4th annual convention being
held at the Astor Hotel., His
Opponent. Cvril Krpmsw 57
votes. j . ... .. :
The first Welland canal be
tween Lake Erie and Ontario
was opened in 1829.
Funeral Flowers
and
Hospital Bouquets
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FLOWER
SHOP
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David t Evelyn Chasa, .
Owners . , '"
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ERNEST BORGNINE II
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mum mt) iMTflft ajrim
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