Moderate Trading
Pushes Stocks Ud
New York CTD Stocks
rose to new highs for the
year today in moderately ac
tive trading.
The rally was a continua
tion of the sharp advances
scored on Thursday and Fri
day of last week. Industrials
paced the market higher.
Obituaries
REVEREND MEAGHER
The Rev. William J.
Meagher, 73, resident Catho
lic priest at Sacred Heart hos
pital for 41 years, died Sun
day, Aug. 10, after a three
year illness.
The priest was born in
Clomel, county Tipperary,
Ireland in February, 1835,
and came to the valley as a
young priest.
Survivors include nieces
and nephews in Ireland.
Holy Rosary will be recited
t the Perl Funeral home at
7:30 o'clock tonight.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday in Portland
with Hennessey, Goetsch and
McGee Funeral directors in
charge of arrangements there.
CHARLES T. LANDING
Charles T. Landing, 75, of
1112 Sunset ave., Medford,
died here Sunday.
Services will be held in the
Conger-Morris Funeral home
at 11 a.m. Wednesday. Burial
will be in Memory Garden.
GLENN ANDERTON
Glenn Leroy Anderton, 66,
of Trail, died Sunday in a
local hospital.
He was born on March 20,
1892 at Vail, Iowa. Mr. An
derton had lived in southern
Oregon for 12 years. He was a
member of Masonic Cascade
Lodge No. 208, Harvey Chap
ter 232, RAM, Harvey, 111.;
Table Rock Council 15, R and
SM, Medford; Bethel Chapter
291, OES, Elgin, 111.; and of
the Upper Rogue Grange.
Survivors include his wife,
Marguerite Anderton; Harvey
Anderton, Monte Vista, Colo.
A sister and a son preceded
him in death.
. Services will be held in
the Conger-Morris Funeral
home at 1:30 p.m., Tuesday.
The Rev. George R. V. Bolster
of St. Mark's Episcopal church
will officiate. Masonic grave
side services will be conducted
by Cascade Lodge No. 208,
AF and M.
. Honorary pallbearers will
Include Reed McKay, Ed
Houston, Harvey Anderton,
Kobert Chamberlain, Scott
Brill, and Athel Dudley. Act
ive pallbearers will include
Bruce Grieve, Ronald Axtell,
Wyles Berry, D. H. Howe,
Getald Owen and Ray Briggs.
CHRISTOPHER ELLIOT
Christopher Sidney Elliot,
59, of Klamath Falls, died in
a local hospital Saturday.
He was manager of Pen
ney's store in Klamath Falls
and live at 1920 Auburn
street.
Funeral services will be
held at O'Hair's Funeral cha
pel in Klamath Falls. Perl fu
neral home had charge of
local arrangements.
SuDUP
ENDS TUESDAY
) CmmaScop
mo MTROCQtOW
Taylor Lonoon
john Cassavetes
us mim met
RJfflWUH00X-i9(Df8B
(iMfBt&tpt
17-jewel
water &
shock
HO88
resistant
Reg. $49.95 I
S&H Green Stamps
ANDY'S
Tour Friendly Credit Jeweler
15 North Central
ANDY'S
Rails firmed, but utilities
gave ground.
Individual gains in the list
ran past two points in such
issues as American Home
Products, American Chicle,
Continental Can, Eaton Man
ufacturing, IBM, and Free
port. Aircrafts featured on the
upside. Douglas rose more
than a point and Boeing, Ben
dix, General Dynamics. Re
public Aviation and United
Aircraft all added fractions.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
Dow-Jones final slock
averages: 30 industrials
512.42, up 2.29; 20 railroads
133.79, ud 0.16; 15 utilities
79.39, off 0.02, and 65 stocks
176.25, up 0.52.
Sales today were about
2,870.000 shares compared
with 3,650,000 shares Fri
day. Today's prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 90
Alumn Co Am 8H4
American Can : All 's
American Mtrs 155s
AT&T 1.18214
Anaconda Copper 52
Armco Steel 57',2
Bendix Avn 59
Bethlehem Steel 45? s
Boeing Air 46?4
Caterpillar Corp 79'2
Chrysler Corp 54V4
Continental Can 49',
Crown Zellerbach 52s8
Curtiss Wright 28V4
T rt - . , .
uow onemicai ooa
Du Pont 197V2
Eastman Kodak 119'i
Firestone 99? g
General Electric 64?g
General Foods 6634
General Motors (xd) 445 s
Georgia Pacific 42
i t- -. -
uiaudiii raige i-g
Greyhound 158
Gulf Oil 11312
Homestead Mining 29M
Homestake Mining 3914
Idaho Power 44 4
Kaiser Ind 12
Int. Paper 104
Johns Man 461 a
Kennecott Copper 9736
Lockheed Aircraft 5334
Katy Pfd 59
Montgomery Ward 38
Nat'l Biscuit 49?8
New York Central 195i
Pac Gas & Elec 56 Vz
Penney, J.C 96M
Penn RR 1434
Radio Corporation 35?s
Richfield Oil 91?4
Safeway 32sa
Sears' 31
Shell Oil 8414
Socony Mobil Oil 4934
Southern Co. 30V2
Southern Pacific .... 52Vi
Standard California 52 2
Standard Indiana 4914
Standard N.J 565 s
Sun Mines .., 8
Texas Gulf Sulfur 23? 8
Tex Pac Land Trust . 1358
Transamerica 26
Trans Wld Air 1416
Tri-Continental 37
Union Carbide 1097s
Union Pacific 31 14
United Aircraft 69V2
U.A.L 311a
U. S. Rubber 383s
U. S. Steel 7112
Youngstown S & T 1037s
Sloan Dies
In Hornbrook
Hornbrook George Sam
uel Sloan, 62, died Saturday,
Aug. 9, at his home in Horn
brook following a month's ill
ness. He was bprn Nov. 10,
1895, at Cataract, now Copco,
Calif.
Mr. Sloan was employed
for many years by California
Oregon Power company, was
a rancher and drove the
Hornbrook to Copco star
route mail delivery for 20
years. A veteran of World
War I he made his home in
Hornbrook for the past seven
years.
Survivon include his wife,
May, 12 children, and 20
grandchildren. Children in
clude Lennard Sloan, Horn
brook; George Sloan, Yreka;
j Harold Sloan and Carl Sloan,
1 Sacramento; Mrs. Vincent
J Balbi, Mrs. Joe Thornton,
Stockton; Mrs. Franik Burk-
hart Jr., Areata; Mrs. Hudson
Spencer, Castro Valley, Calii.;
Mrs. Curtis Lewis, Ashland;
Mrs. Fred J. Moore, Areata;
Mrs. George Lawall, Seattle,
and Mrs. Lawrence Lemos,
Hornbrook. Two sisters, Mrs.
Bernice Baker, Klamath
Falls, and Mrs. Grace Bean,
San Francisco, also survive.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday, Aug. 13, at
2 pjn., in the Girdner chapel,
Yreka, with the Rev. Gordon
Titus, of the Hornbrook Bible
church officiating. Graveside
services will be held at 3 p.m.
at the family plot in Henly
Hornbrook cemetery.
SWIMS ENGLISH CHANNEL
Dover, England (ITD
Brazilian swimmer Abilio
Couto, 34, became the first
swimmer of the season Sun
day to finish the gruelling
crossing from France to Eng
land, completing the crossing
from Cap Griz Nez in 12
hours, 45 minutes.
Thcyll Do It Every
F? THN-yEAR-OLD PASES HE HAD TO V f iMf
SJ VK'O 1SABETTER. J MEMORIZE. yOaD pVMm r-ZTt
f villain than Kmkit AytvJJiVr rSQL
i i r7Hv the nu no f'7 'nStme aw
SPeAi.N6 OF r Sicxj will one IgfMV I RS8f?- lrclu?X
OlVN WORDS- TO DELIVER A . g Vy ACT FOR A
"TrtEYLL DO TELE6RAM. hiO ) V lsi MILLION f
IT EVERY DIALOGUE.' A, ffa I BU-KSV (T
Public Hearings
Called by Council
On Three Requests
Three public hearings have
been called by the city coun
cil, one for each of its next
three meetings.
The first, on Aug. 21, is on
a request to re-zone property
on the southwest corner of
Main and Cottage sts. from
multiple family to commer
cial, in order to accomodate
a filling station. The city
planning commission recom
mended last month that the
request be refused.
The second, Sept. 4, is on a
trunk water main assessment
for Black Oak dr. from Coun
try Club dr. to Walden pi.
The third, scheduled for Sept.
18, will take up the vacation
of Priddy st. in the Jackson
County Housing authority
area. The planning commis
sion has recommended ap
proval. The council called the hear
ings at its meeting last week.
Other Action
The council also declared
the necessity of acquiring
right of way for the Eighth
st. extension from Riverside
ave. east to Bear crek, in case
current negotiations with pro
perty owners should fail.
Funds for the Kenwood-
Grandview, North Laurel-
hurst and Siskiyou blvd. sani-,
tary sewers, and for paving
work on Beatty and Kennet
sts., Eastwood dr. and Siski
you blvd., were created.
Plans and specifications
were authorized for a sanitary
sewer on Springbrook rd.
from a point 600 feet south of
Roberts rd. to Buckshot Hill
rd., as were plans and specifi
cations for street improve
ment on Corona ave., from
Grand ave. to Morrow rd.;
Johnson st. from Corona ave.
to Velia ave.; Velia ave. from
Johnson st. to Morrow rd.;
and Edgemont st. from Bar
nett rd. to Hillsdale ave. ,
An agreement between the
city and Medford corporation
to provide a perpetual ease
ment for the Kenwood-Grand-vlew
sanitary sewer system,
where it crosses Medco's rail
road was approved.
News About
Servicemen
TO LEAVE BOOTS
Marine Pvt. Kent G. Koop
man, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James W. Mowrey of Route
1, Box 114, Gold Hill, is
scheduled to finish four
weeks of individual combat
training Aug. 21 at the Mar
ine Corps base, Camp Pendle
ton, Calif.
COMPLETES CRUISE
Roderick S. Guile, boat
swain's mate second class,
USN, son of Duke M. Guile
of 824 E. Ninth St., Medford,
aboard the destroyer USS
Rowan, is scheduled to arrive
at Alamed,a, Calif., Aug. 18,
following completion of a
midshipmen cruise to Central
and South American waters.
AT NORFOLK
Nathan C. Douthit, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Douth
it of 3116 Sunnyvale rd., Cen
tral Point, completed three
weeks of amphibious training
July '30, at the Little Creek
Naval amphibious base, Nor
folk, Va.
He is one of. more than 700
Naval Reserve Officer Train
ing Corps college juniors who
received indoctrination in the
latest methods of amphibious
assault during July.
TO FINISH TRAINING
Marine Pvt. Larry Conway,"
son of Mr. and Mrs. Duard
B. Conway of 362 N. Third,
Central Point, is scheduled to
finish four weeks of individ
ual combat training Aug. 21
at the Marine Corps Base, at
Camp Pendleton, Calif.
Time
. 7 u t. -A
Shakespearean
Festival Schedule
Monday Merchant of
Venice.
Tuesday Troilus and
Cressida
Wednesday Much Ado
About Nothing
Thursday King Lear
Curtain: 8:30 p.m. nightly.
Buses leave Medford hotel
at 7:30 p.m. and Jackson
hotel at 7:35 p.m. nightly.
Lease Planned
FoY Nosier Firm
To Use Property
Ashland A lease will be
negotiated with the Nosier
Partition Bullet company for
use of the city warehouse, the
Ashland city council decided
during a recent meeting.
The proposed lease would
be for five years with an op
tion to renew for five years
or to buy. Rent would be for
$250 a month with S50 to ap
ply to the purchase price, the
council decided.
' Councilman Ken Jones had
previously contended that the
area in which the city ware
house is located could be used
better for light industry, that
mooe revenue could be obtain
ed from the lease and the
council should see if a more
suitable site could be found
on which to relocate the firm.
However, like other council
men he had agreed that the
firm should be kept in Ash
land. Considerable Discussion
After considerable discus
sion, the council agreed not
to adopt a resolution on as
suming taxes on the property,
which amount to $500 a year.
Councilman Walt Basshard's
bargaining position might be
weakened by such a move, the
other council members decid
ed. One councilman pointed
out that Bend, Grants Pass
and Central Point would like
to have the Nosier firm lo
cated there. The acquisition
of property on which the
firm is now located makes a
move urgent, it was ex
plained. Judy Lazkina Named
State's Miss Rodeo
Prineville tUPD Judy
Lazkina, 18-year-old redhead
who was queen of this year's
Pendleton Roundup, Sunday
was named as "Miss Rodeo,
Oregon," at the windup of
the Crooked River Roundup
here.
She will compete with oth
er state winners for the "Miss
Rodeo, America," ' title in a
pageant at Las Vegas later
this month.
Bill Hartman, Oakdale, Cal.
was named winner ' of the
Golden Triangle award at the
Crooked River event. ' The
award is based on point totals
from the other two roundups
that comprise the Golden Tri
angle the Emerald Empire
at Eugene and the Klamath
Basin at Klamath Falls.
Bub Gatzman, also of Oak
dale, was selected as the Ail
Around Cowboy for the three
day Prineville rodeo. The
roundup here, which drew top
cowboys from over the nation,
was attended by about 13,000
persons.
CANDLE
0
Sun
Ttsr
HOTEL MEDFORD
By Jimmy Hatlo
rlE WRITERS,
PfttDUCERS AKO
ENGINEERS IN
THE CONTROL
,R00M ARE VER
OUTSPOKEN IM
THEIR DIM VIEW
OF THE ACTORS.
Ashland Council
Asks Termination
Of Hospital Lease
Ashland The lease for
operation of the Ashland gen
eral hospital will not be re
newed in September, the city
council decided recently.
Superintendent Alfred
Paulson has been notified that
lease provisions are inade
quate. Councilmen said Paulson
will be considered along with
other applicants should he
want to retain the hospital
operation. He commended the
superintendent for his past
operations.
According to the lease
terms, a six-months notice of
intention to abandon trie
agreement is required by
either the city or Paulson, it
was explained.
Present Contract
Present contract calls for
$250 a month rent payable in
advance. However, R. A.
Herndobler, hospital board
chairman, said the only thing
the city is now receiving from
the lease is amortization of
the X-ray room recently add
ed to the hospital. The city
wants more rent to compen
sate for recent hospital im
provements, Herndobler said.
Ashland now has three
years in which to completely
renovate the hospital which
includes addition of a com
plete sprinkling system, Hern
dobler said. The state fire
marshal has specified also ad
ditional improvements includ
ing fire doors, he said.
Considered New Hospital
Officials have considered
building a new hospital but
have been informed that no
Hill-Burton funds will be
available to them for three
years for such construction,
Herndobler explained. Fed
eral matching funds provide
about 50 per cent of construc
tion costs and are administer
ed through the state level,
Herndobler said he under
stood. The present hospital lot is
so small that officials are not
sure if, according to the terms
of the Hill-Burton act, it
could be used for a new hos
pital. The present hospital
property is deeded to the city
providing the land is used as
a hospital, the board chair
man said.
Herndobler said termina
tion of the lease is not a
criticism of Paulson since he
has done "an exceptionally
fine job."
Disease 'Outbreak'
Said in One Horse
Grants Pass An "out
break" of equine encephalit
is in the Illinois valley, re
ported last week, was confin
ed to only one horse which is
now responding to treatment,
it was reported today by Dr.
A. C. Schneider, Grants Pass
veterinarian.
He told Lee Pruitt, manag
er of the Josephine county
fair, that it should cause no
concern to horse-owners plan
ning to enter the fair. He said
he has suggested innocula
tions of other horses simply
as a precautionary measure,
but he emphasized that there
is no "epidemic." Isolated
cases of the disease are not
unusual, he said, and added
that this case constitutes no
general hazard.
ROOM
Genuine Charcoal
Broiled Foods!
An especially good place
to eat if dieting!
I,iPuui.t11 ,w
Voodoo Jets Make
Distance Record
Bentwater AFB, England
(ITU Seven U.S. Air Force
F101 Voodoo jet fighters land
ed here Sunday at end of a
5.953-mile nonstop flight from
Bergstrom Air Force Base in
Austin, Tex.
The 10-hour 45-minute trip
set a distance record for a
formation of this size.
The FlOls left Bergstrom
just before midnight Saturday
for the flight described by
Air Force officials as an "en
durance test for manned air
craft." Officials said the flight was
designed to familiarize the
Texas pilots with U.S. Air
Force bases in Britain before
the Voodoos start replacing
F48s here later in the year.
The planes of the 27th Tacti
cal Fighter Wing will fly mis
sions here before returning to
Texas Aug. 15 and 16."
The pilots included Maj.
Adrian Drew of Atlanta, Ga.,
who established a new speed
record of 1,207 m.p.h.' last
fall. The leader of the flight
was Maj. William R. Eichel
burger, Marion, Miss.
Other pilots were Maj. Bry
an J. Lincoln, Minneapolis;
Capt. Howard B. Maree, Town
Bank, N.J., Capt. James B.
Ramsey, Elizabethton, Tenn.;
Capt. Carl W. McKenzie, Kan
sas City, Mo., and Capt.
Charles Cleveland, East Or
ange, N.J.'
Man Killed When
Car Hits Culvert
White Salmon, Wash. (LTD
A man identified as Wayne
Leroy Hodges, 36, was killed
Saturday night when he lost
control of his car on a curve
west of Lyle, Wash., on High
way 830.
He was thrown from the
vehicle when it rolled and
struck a culvert. The car then
rolled over him, crushing him.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPI) Cattle 1650:
trade rather slow; early sales about
steady; good steers 25.00-26.00;
standard 22.50-24.50; good heifers
23.50-24.00; utility cows 16.50-18.00;
canners and cutters mostly 14
15.50; light canners down to 13.00;
load good and choice feeder steers
23.50.
Calves 200; trade slow, about
sxeaay; gooa ana cnoice vealers
26.00-28.00.
Hogs 850: trade rather slow,
around 25 cents lower: U.S. No.
1 and 2 butchers 180-235 lbs.
25.00-25.25; mixed 1. 2 and 3 lots
24.25-24.75; few 400-550 lb. sows
18.50-20.50.
Sheep. Salable 1500: trade rath
er slow, about steady; choice spring
lamDs zo.ou-zi.uo including sorted
load range lambs 21.00; good 19.50-
20.00; good and choice feeder
Iambs 18-19.00: cull to good slaugh'
ter ewes 3.50-7.00.
Portland Produce
Portland (UF1) Eggs to retail
ers: Grade AA large, 56-58c doz.;
A large, 52-55c doz.; AA medium,
47-48c; A medium 46-47c; AA
smalls. 29-32C doz.; 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
daisies. 40-51c; 5-lb. loaves. 51 '2
57c; processed American cheese,
5-lb. loaf, 40-43C
Farm Market
Dillard District cantaloupes sold
on the Portland market today at
S2.75-2.85 a standard crate. Quality
packs of hydro-cooled corn brought
growers $1.50-1.75 for 5 dozen ears.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens Quoted to grow
ers at PorUand, Salem and south
to Eugene, f.o.b. ranch No. 1
quality fryers, 234-4 lbs., 20-21c:
light hens, 12-13c; heavy bens, 5
lbs. up 15c lb.; old roosters, 7-8c lb.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade
dressed to retailers: fryers, whole
drawn, 38-41c lb.; cut up, 44-46c;
hens, light types cut up, 36-37c;
heavy type, whole drawn, 40-42c lb.
Dressed Turkeys A grade young
hens, 33-34c lb. to producers on
eviscerated basis; A grade young
toms, 27c lb., eviscerated; young
hens to retailers, mostly 44-47c lb.
on an oven-ready basis.
Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b.
killing plants' Live white, 33t-i'i
lbs., f.o.b. Portland, 21-23c; col
ored pelts, 5c under. Fresh -killed
fryers to retailers, 57-60c lb.; cut
up, 61-64C.
Portland Hay, Grain '
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices:
New crop No. 2 green alfalfa, baled,
f.o.b. Portland and Seattle, S25 ton.
Wholesale Prices as reported by
the USD A market news service:
Wheat, No. 2 soft white.- $66 ton;
No. 2 white oats, 38 lb. West Coast
delivery, $48.50 ton; No. 2 valley
white oats, $46.50 ton; barley. No.
2. West Coast delivery, S48-48.50;
soybean meal. Eastern shipment.
S93 ton, f.o.b. Portland; standard
mill run, prompt delivery, S41 ton,
f.o.b. Portland; No. 2 milo, S55 ton,
f.o.b. Coast; No. 2 yellow corn,
Eastern shipment, f.o.b. Portland,
$61.25-61.75 ton.
MAWADDAN
Pries Good
Through Wed.,
Aug. 13th
Morse Calls for
Troop Withdrawal
Des Moines, Iowa 0JPD
Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.)
has called for the "immedi
ate withdrawal" of American
troops from Lebanon.
"We never should have gone
into Lebanon," Morse told a
news conference here Satur
day night. "Now we should
get out."
Acknowledging that the
President "has the right and
duty to protect American lives
if they're in danger," Morse
said, "American lives in the
Middle East were not in
jeopardy."
His comments followed a
speech marking the dedication
of a new building of United
Auto Workers Local 450.
The Senator said America
"played right into the hands
of the Russians" in sending
troops to Lebanon.
"Arab nationalism just hap
pens to be a fact, and you
can't stamp it out with arms,
even if you keep troops in
there for 50 years," Morse
added.
He said the United States
should realize that other peo
ples want to govern them
selves and stop supporting
"dictatorships" that govern
them.
Births
PEEBLE To Mr. and
Mrs. R. L., 1871 Marsh lane,
Medford, Aug. 11, ' 1958, a
girl, weighing 614 pounds,
at Rogue Valely hospital.
HOOVER To Mr. and Mrs.
Griffith Gordon, 201 Chest
nut st., Medford, Aug. 8,
1958, a girl, weighing 53,i
pounds, at Sacred Heart 'hos
pital. NELSON To Mr. and
Mrs. Wesley Odell, 1104 West
Fourth st., apartment A, Med
ford, Aug. 9, a girl, weighing
5M pounds, at Sacred Heart
hospital.
LANDERS To Mr. and
Mrs. James Verne, route 2,
box 649, Central Point, Aug.
10, 1958, a girl, weighing 61
pounds, at Sacred Heart hos
pital. -KELSER To Mr. and Mrs.
John, 5054 South Pacific
highway, Medford, Aug. 9 a'
boy, weighing IV pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
BROWN To Mr. and Mrs.
Charles, post office box 859,
Central Point, Aug. 10, a boy,
weighing 7Vz pounds, at
Rogue valley hospital.
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 38',, 40',i
Calif-Pacific Utilities 30 32
Cascades Plywood 28 'i 30Ti
Cons Freightways 173i 18 'i
Copco 32 7 34
First National Bank 47' . 50!
NW Natural Gas 15"s 16's
Pacific Pwr & Light 35 U 37t
Permanente Cement 22 '2 23si
Portland Gen Elec 253 ". 27Vi
US National Bank 16 2 74
United Utilities 26 27 i
West Coast Tel 21 'i 22s,
Weyerhaeuser ...... 41 " 41'. 4
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 . 12.56 13.77
Chem Fund 17.82 19.28
Eaton Howard Stk 21.28 22.76
Fidelity 14.14 15.29
Gas Ind 13.61 14.87
Group Sec Avia .... 10.44 11.44
Group Sec Com Stk 12.07 13.22
Group Sec Elec 7.21.. 7.91
Group Sec Petr 11.65 12.76
Group Sec Steel 8.31 9.11
Group Sec Tobac 6.58 7.22
Keystone B-3 15.55 16.97
Keystone B-4 9.52 10.40
Keystone K-l 8.53 9.31
Keystone K-2 11.44 12.48
Keystone S-l 16.06 17.52
Keystone S-2 10.95 11.95;
Keystone S-3 12.24 13.36
Mass Inv Tr 11.78 . 12.74
TV-Elec ... 13.73 12.78
Value Line Inc 5.11 5.58 J
Wellington 13.11 14.29 1
THE PLACE TO GO FOR THE BRANDS
YOU KNOW AT PRICES WAY LOW
'GROCETERIA
6TH AND
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medferi,.Orjen, Monday, August 11, 195S ?
Arson Suspected
In Portland Fires
Portland (UPD Five sepa
rate fires in Portland busi
ness plants were reported
Sunday and city firemen said
investigations indicated an ar
sonist may have been respon
sible for some of them.
A two-alarm fire at the
Multnomah Plywood comDanv
plant on Southwest Front and
Jeuerson started from an
overheated conveyor belt mo
tor and spread to a big pile
of sawdust, firemen said, caus
ing an estimated S2.500 dam
age. Firemen had the flames
out in about 20 minutes.
There were two fires on
East Burnside, one at the Ply
wood Sales company building
and the other at the Bob
White Discount House. In I
North Portland, blazes were i
reported at the Mel Goodin '
Tire company and the Voitj
Rubber company.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair
through Tuesday except some after
noon cloudiness over mountains.
Low tonight 60. High Tuesday 95.
Western Oregon: Generally fair
tonight and Tuesday except late
night and morning coastal cloudi
ness and brief early morning
cloudiness in northern valleys. Low
tonight 54-60. High Tuesday 84-94,
except 65-70 on coast.
Northern California: Fair tonight
and Tuesday except coastal fog.
cnance 01 a lew tnunaerstorms in
southern Sierra Nevadas. Little
change in temperature.
LOCAL DATA
Temperature: Mean esterday 81;
above normal 8.
Record high this date 103 in 1933.
Record low this date 45 in 1932.
Precipitation: 24 hours to mid
night 0. Midnight to 10 a.m. 0.
Total this month irace. .05 in.
below normal.
Total since Sept. 1 26.95 in.,
8.94 in. above normal.
Humidity: Lowest yesterday 23.
highest this a.m. 67. - .
High 4:0 24
Clty Tester- a.m. hr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 61 54"
Grants Past 100 53
Klamath Falls . 89 54
MEDFORD 19 l
Portland 89 ' 64 T
Seattle 82 58
Spokane 97 70
Yakima 98 60 v
Eureka 60 54
Red Bluf 100 71
Sacramento .... 96 59
San Francisco 76 56
Los Angeles 89 66
Phoenix 109 77 Z2
Denver 87 62
Chicago 93 73
Miami Beach 88 76
New York 83 72 .78
Washington. D.C. - 90 76 T
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
(Throuih Ant. 16):
Western Oregon-Western Wash
ington Continued dry and warm
with temperatures above normal.
Cooler with showers likely about
Friday. Highs mostly 75-85 west
ern Washington, 8o-9o western ure
Eon. Lows mostly in 50s.
Northern California No precipi
tation except change in occasional
thunderstorms in mountains. ien
perature near normal.
Funeral Flowers
and
Hospital Bouquets
GROCETERIA
FLOWER
SHOP
Ph. SP2-8179
Chargt Accounts Wcleem
Free Delivery
David t Evelyn Chata,
Owntrs
THE WORLD'S
MOST
HONORED
SHOW
Michael
52 BIST
PICTURE
AWARDS
& WORLD
WIDE
HONORS
GRAPE
f?
M
CAR FIRE
A car owned by John Fred
rick Bush, box. 158, Butt
Falls Star route, Eagle Point,
burned from the dash board
to the rear early Sunday
morning on Butte Falls rd.
about a mile below the Mid
way Service station, state po
lice said. They reported that
the vehicle caught fire from
wiring under the dash. A for
est service truck put out the
blaze.
MOIJDESIR
DINING INN
OPEN 5 p.m.
Every Day
During
Shakespearean
Festival
. CALL SP 3-7323
For Information obout
Pictures Playing and Tim
Schedules 'At Your Theatres
DRIVE-IN
COUTH PACIFIC HIGHWAY1
NOW SHOWING
TTMM
POWER
DIETRICH
PLUS
1 UNEiuCvtnE .
n&um wwlvwp '
JOANNE WOODWARD UE I. COBB
NCmTHfWIFICHICHWW
Wk MR LflADJ
NOW SHOWING
WORLD IN MY CORNER
PLUS
HURRY!
It Can't Stay
Forever
Todd's
r
' 80 ass
ONI SHOW TONITE 8:00 P. M. ',
Adults and Students 1.25
Logei : 1.50
Children .50
46-oz. can
reg. 41c
Save 12c
GROCETERIA Will Close
At 5:30 Tuesday
For Employees Picnic