I
Local and
- Grass Fires City firemen
put out grass fires about 12:20
p.m. yesterday in a field in
the 2200 block of Crater Lake
ave. and about 2:45 p.m. along
the road in the 1200 block of
Orchard Home dr.
Theft Kenneth Phillips,
833 Sunrise ave., reported the
theft recently of a flashlight,
several parts for a trailer
hitch and a leatherette folder
containing automobile papers
from his vehicle, according to
city police.
Inspections Made A hos
pital, two business occu
pancies, a building of public
assembly and a flammable
liauid tank truck were in
spected yesterday by City Fire
Marshal Truman Nelson. He
issued nine orders for cor
rection of hazards.
Collision Vehicles operat
ed by Aubra Britton Davis,
1649 Grand ave., and Buster
Aycox, transient, collided on
Central ave. between Fourth
and Fifth sts. Tuesday at 5:30
p.m., according to city police.
Aycox was cited by police
for not having an operator's
license and failure to leave
information at the scene of
an accident.
1st DRIVE IN RUN!
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PLUS 1st DRIVE IN RUN!
GREAT SPORTS CAR THRILLS!
j usuVisw Wilde Wallace
SU!aiwfh
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i fiiG young-mamje Van doren K
What outsells . . .
Ml
1
.VN"
ONE OF .
SERIES
Personal
Hubcaps Missing Two
hubcaps valued at S30, were
stolen last weekend from a
vehicle in the used car lot of
Valley Motor company, 224
North Riverside ave., accord
ing to city police.
Boys Questioned Three
boys, aged 11, 12 and 13, were
interrogated early Tuesday
morning in connection with
the theft of four quart bottles
of pop from the Nehi Bever
age company, 120 West Fourth
st., city police reported.
o
Car Stolen Arthur Biles,
Stockton, Calif., reported to
city police yesterday the theft
of his 1949 Hudson Monday
afternoon while it was parked
on North Front st. between
Main and Sixth sts. The two
tone green vehicle is reported
to have California license
plates.
Accident Wilson Harvey
Smith, 532 Fairmont st., was
cited for following too close
and having no operator's li
cense in his possession after
his vehicle collided with one
one driven by William Harvey
Allen, La Mesa, Calif., on
Oakdale ave., between Main
and Eighth sts. Monday morn
ing, city police reported.
Theft The theft of two
tractor batteries was reported
to the sheriff's office Wednes
day morning by William H.
Kreier, 214 South Columbus
ave. He told officers that the
batteries were taken from a
place at the end of the Yale
Creek rd., sometime between
Aug. 5 and 11. Kreier valued
the batteries at $200.
Accident Vehicles oper
ated by Sherry Roshell Mc-
Intyre, route 1, box 9C, Jack
sonville, and Leonard Lane
Booth, Eureka, Kan., collided
at the Richfield Truck and
Auto Service, 2390 North Pa
cific highway, according to
city police. The accident oc
curred about 1:17 a.nj.
Wednesday.
Reovering Convalescing
today at Medford Osteopathic
hospital following surgery are
Larry Hickman,- 10-year-old
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lenn
Hickman of Eagle Point, and
Mrs. Cecil Wade of Butte
Falls. Mrs. Thomas Wilkins,
120 Laurel St., is convalescing
at Rogue Valley hospital.
James Pardee, six-year-old son
of Mrs. Charleen Pardee, 1832
North Riverside ave., is rest
ing at Rogue Valley hospital
following a tonsillectomy
operation, and Carin Ann Bal
bec, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Balbec of Eagle
Point, was admitted to Med
ford Osteopathic hospital with
a dislocated arm Wednesday
evening.
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ANSWER: THE DAILY NEWSPAPER. Today there will
be created, manufactured, distributed and sold, 58 mil
lion copies of the daily newspaper in the United States.
It is the most wanted product for sale anywhere ! That
is one of the major reasons why it is the advertisers'
favorite medium -more people want it, therefore more ;
advertisers use it. The daily newspaper is the answer
to your advertising needs.
Medford Mail Tribune
Acclden! A non-Injury ac
cident causing minor damage
to two vehicles occurred in
Central Point Wednesday, ac
cording to Central Point po
lice. Lloyd G. Nelson, 58,
Cave Junction, and Harold E.
Mitchell, 23, of Gresham, were
operating vehicles headed
north on Highway 99 when
Nelson stopped for a vehicle
in front of him at Oak st, of
ficers said. The Mitchell car
struck the rear-end of the
other .vehicle. No citations
were issued, police said.
Ike Demands An
Explanation
Washington (LTD Presi
dent Eisenhower considers it
"ridiculous" that the Pentagon
is studying under what condi
tions this country might sur
render in an atomic war, the
White House said today. He
has demanded an explanation
from officials.
A Defense Department
spokesman acknowledged that
such a study has been made.
White House Press Secre
tary James C. Hagerty told
newsmen the President .con
sidered the study "ridiculous."
Hagerty said the study was
brought to Eisenhower's at
tention by Republican con
gressmen at a White House
conference Tuesday. The Pres
ident immediately asked the
Pentagon what it "was all
about."
Hagerty said Eisenhower
was more curious than angry
about the matter.
The Defense Department
spokesman said the study was
completed some time ago.
He said an effort had been
made to determine what con
ditions had caused nations to
surrender in past wars and
to find out what conditions
might lead this country to
capitulate in a future war.
Dispute Settlement
Reported Nearer
Settlement of a dispute be
tween Pacific Air Lines, for
merly Southwest Airways,
and the Air Line Agents as
sociation, International, mov
ed a step nearer this week
when the ALAA announced
it had accepted the National
Mediation board's offer to ar
bitrate the dispute.
Victor J. Herbert, president
of the employee's group
which is affiliated with the
Air Line Pilots association,
AFL-CIO, said he did not
know what the company's re
action to this methodt of set
tling the dispute will be but
said the company's acceptance
would erase the threat of a
work stoppage.
The dispute involves wages
and working conditions, ac
cording to a local employee of
the line.
ill
: , -it' ' t 9 1
FANNING THE BREEZE Evidently in a breezy mood,
Soviet Prime Minister Nilrita Khrushchev (right) toys with
a fan while chatting with Red China's leader Mao Tse
tung, during Khrushchev's recent visit to Peiping.
Stock Activity on
Low-Priced Issues
New York OIPD Stocks
advanced for the second
straight session today.
Activity centered in low
priced issues such as Avco,
American Motors, Benguet
Consolidated Mining, Contin
ental Motors, Erie Railroad,
Firstamerica, Greyhound, Na
tional Theatres, Loew's, Min
ute Maid, Studebaker-Pack-ard
and Welbilt.
Among the blue chips, Du
Pont was up 2 points at its
high, although it backtracked
a bit before the close. U. S.
Steel and Republic Steel firm
ed their group. IBM was up
3 points at its high and at a
new top for the year, but lost
some of the gain on profit
taking.
Leading oil issues were
fractionally higher. Sinclair
was an exception, losing a ma
jor fraction. Aircrafts moved
narrowly. National Lead lost
a point in the non-ferrous met
als following its price cut.
Coppers and aluminum issues
were firm.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York IBPD Dow
Jones final slock averages:
30 industrials 510.30, up
1.08; 20 railroads 132.00,
off 0.43; 15 utilities 79.29,
up 0.05, and 65 stocks
175.28, up 0.13.
Sales today were about
3,370,000 shares compared
with 2,790,000 shares
Wednesday.
Today's prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 90 V4
Alum Co Am .... 81
American Can 47
American Mtrs . 17V&
AT&T 182J2
Anaconda Copper 51
Armco Steel 56V2
Sawmill Workers Go
Info Negotiations
Portland (DPD Lumber
and Sawmill Workers Union
representatives and three em
ployer groups are meeting to
day in negotiations for a new
contract between the union's
Western council and mill op
erators. The LSWU has demanded
a 31-cent package boost. The
package includes a 15-cents-an-hour
increase in wages, 10-cents-an-hour
health and wel
fare, and six cents an hour
for paid holidays.
Rival International Wood
workers of America agreed to
continue their present con
tract because of the current
depressed lumber market.
Employer spokesmen said
Wednesday that they would
go into the meeting "with an
open mind."
Members of the 80,000-man
union authorized a strike by
a 3 to 1 vote giving union
negotiators the authority to
call a strike if necessary.
CCE5CI? "150
A rip from the AAA's driving guid for odutli.
AT 50 MILES PER HOUR
whit your foot dees this
No matter how alert you may be, no matter hew
good the condition of your car may be, you can't
stop on a dime. At 50 miles per hour, you would flash
past more than 800 dimes placed side-by-side, or 55
feet before you eould even get your foot on the brake.
The average person takes about three-fourths of a
second to step on the brake after he sights danger.
This is called reaction time, and it's-a serious matter
to a driver. Reaction time becomes measurably slower
os you grow older, or if your physical condition is not
up to par, or if you have had a drink or become tired.
Only when you know how to adjust your speed to
suit oil conditions can you really say you know HOW
TO' DRIVE.
Bendix Avn 58"s
Bethlehem Steel 4514
Boeing Air 46! 8
Caterpillar Corp 79 V4
Chrysler Corp 53 Ts
Continental Can 49 Vi
Crown Zellerbach 541 i
Curtiss Wright 27
Dow Chemical 63
Du Pont 197V2
Eastman Kodak 119
Firestone 98
General Electric 64 V4
General Foods 67
General Motors 44
Georgia Pacific 44
Graham Paige 1
Greyhound 16V4
Gulf Oil Ill
Homestake Mining 3994
Idaho Power 44
Kaiser Ind 12
Int Paper 106V4
Johns Man 453i
Kennecott Copper 96
Lockheed Aircraft 53
Katy Pfd 59
Montgomery Ward 38
Nat'l Biscuit 48 Vz
New York Central 19
Pac G & El 56
Penney J C 94 V4
Penn RR .; 14 V4
Radio Corporation 35
Richfield Oil 88 Vz
Safeway 32
Sears 31V4
Shell Oil 82
Socony Mobil Oil 48 Vz
Southern Co 30
Southern Pacific 51
Standard California 51
Standard Indiana 49
Standard NJ 5534
Sun Mines 7
Texas Gulf Sulfur 23 V4
Tex Pac Land Trust .... 13U
Transamerica .'. (xd) 2614
Trans Wld Air 141 4
Tri-Continental 36
Union Carbide
Union Pacific 3034
United Aircraft 66
UAL 30
U S Rubber 38
U S Steel 7112
Youngstown S & T 101
Ovef-fhe-Counler
Western Stocks
The following bid and
sfeked 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
Bank of America 38
Calif .-Pacific Utilities.. 30' i
Cascades Plywood 28 U
Cons. Freightwayi 16s3
Copco - 323
First National Bank 47' i
NW National Gas 153
Pacific Pwr. & Lt 347i
Permanente Cement 21 '
Portland Gen. Elec... 25 Vs
U. S. National Bank..- 69
United Utilities 25'i
West Coast Tel. 21 'i
Weyerhaeuser 42',
Asked
40'i
32'2
303j,
17"4
344
50'i
16'
36'
233,
26',
732
27,
22
44 8
The first and finest clip of
wool may be made on an eight
month old lamb.
your car does this!
New Directors Are
Named by Kiwanis
E. H. Hedrick and John)
Pletsch have been named di
rectors of the Kiwanis Med- j
ford foundation, charitable
fund organization, it was an- i
nounced yesterday at the!
weekly luncheon of the Ki- j
wanis club. i
C. W. (Bill) Abbott, in-:
surance man, and Wayne
Struble, architect, were in
ducted as new Kiwanis club
members by Dr. L. Paul Walk
er. '
Reports from Kiwanis
County fair committee chair
men were heard at the meet
ing at Rogue Valley Country
club. It was said that there
were 16 entries to date in the
Miss Jackson County pageant
and 12 in the talent compe
tition. Medford Junior Cham
ber of Commerce has charge
of both of these contests.
Kiwanis president Bill
Singler announced that a dinner-dance
is planned for Oc
tober in observance of the
Medford service club's 35th
anniversary. Actual anniver
sary date is Aug. 22.
Births
LERMANN To Mr. and
Mrs. Don, Rogue River, Aug.
14, 1958, a girl 6 pounds, in
Medford Osteopathic hospital.
WHITE To Mr. and Mrs.
R. E., 3654 South Pacific high
way, Aug. 13, 1958, a girl, 7
pounds, in Rogue Valley hos
pital. McCOY To Mr. and Mrs.
Van, 2811 North Pacific high
way, Aug. 14, 1958, a boy, 8
pounds, in Rogue Valley hos
pital. Obituaries
CLAUDE B. DAVIS
Funeral services for Claude
B. Davis, 81, of 604 California
st., Jacksonville, who died
Tuesday, will be held Friday
at 10:30 a.m. in the Conger-
Morris Funeral home. The
Rev. William C. Piper, of the
First Christian church, will
officiate. Committal will be in
Willamette National cemetery,
Portland.
Mr. Davis was born March
24, 1877, in Corvallis. He was
a veteran of the Spanish
American war, serving as a
sergeant in Company I, 19th
infantry regiment, from Oct.
22, 1900, to Nov. 23, 1902. He
saw. duty in the Philippines
from Dec. 15, 1900, to June
21, 1902. He was married Dec.
24, 1904, in Grants Pass, to
Lottie Ryan, who survives.
Other survivors include two
sons, Lee Davis, Medford, and
Everett Davis, Elma, Wash.,
and one daughter, Mrs. Mil
dred Johnson, Jacksonville,
seven grandchildren and five
great grandchildren.
CHARLES T. LANDING
Funeral services were held
for Charles T. Landing, 75, of
1112 Sunset ave., Wednesday
at the Conger-Morris funeral
home. He died Sunday in a
local hospital.
Elder John D. Trude of the
Seventh Day Adventist church
officiated at the service which
was followed by interment at
Memory gardens.
WAINE A. LARY
The body of Walne. A. Lary,
48, who died at the Veterans
Administration Dom iciliary,
Camp White, Wednesday
morning, will be transferred
to the Cattermole Funeral
home in Winlock, Wash., for
services and burial.
Perl Funeral home is in
charge of arrangements.
Mr. Lary was born in Sand
Coulee, Mont., May 11, 1910,
and was a veteran of World
War II. He is survived by his
father, Axel Lary, of Winlock,
Wash.
ELSIE N. RUNNELS
Funeral services for Mrs.
Elsie Neatie Runnels, 78, of
2455 Stewart ave., who died
Tuesday, will be held at Perl
Funeral home Saturday at 9
a.m. Interment will be in the
Siskiyou Memorial park. .
Mrs. Runnels was born in
Pickering, Mo., Jan. 13, 1880,
and had been a resident of
Oregon for the past 22 years.
Survivors include five
daughters, Blanche Haynes,
Olive Howard, Hazel Pratt, all
of Medford; Leeta Balcom of
Klamath Falls; Hope Thomas
of Newberry, Calif.; two sons,
Cap Runnels of Seattle, Wash.;
Ben Runnels of Klamath Falls;
37 grandchildren and 76 great
grandchildren.
Pallbearers will be Elmer
Rankin, Floyd Land, Charlie
Garreth, Walter White,. Bill
Hirschy, and Bill Dunstan.
CANDLE ROOM
An
to
HOTEL MEDFORD
Shakespearean
Festival Schedule
Thursday King Lear
Friday Merchant of
Venice
Saturday Troilus and
Cressida
Sunday Much Ado
About Nothing
Curtain: 8:30 p.m. nightly.
Buses leave Medford hotel
at 7:30 p.m. and Jackson
Hotel at 7:35 p.m. nightly.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPIl Cattle 125.
Supply mostly cows. Trade active,
fully steadv. Two loads around
100 lb. utility cows 19-19.25; canr
ners and cutters 14-15.50; Holstein
cutters to 16.50; light canners
down to 13.00; utility bulls 23
24.50; light cutters 18.50-21; good
and choice fed steers this week
mostly 25-26.75. '
Calves 25. Trade active, steady.
Good and choice vealers 26-18:
few Wednesday 28.50: standard
calves and vealers 20-25; cull and
utility 15-19.50.
Hogs 200. Supply included deck
Dakota sows. Trade moderately
active, steady. U.S. No. 1 and 2
butchers 180-235 lbs., 24.75-25;
mixed 1. 2 and 3 lots 24-2430;
U.E. 1 and 2 grades 270-350 lb.
21.75-22; 330-550 lbs. 18-21.50.
Sheep 250. Suply included deck
of Mt. Adams range lambs. Trade
active steady to strong. Choice
range spring lambs 102 lbs. 21.50,
other choice slaughter lambs 21
21.50; good 19-20.50; good and
choice feeders 17.50-18.50; cull to
good slaughter ewes 3-7.00.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPIl Eggs To re
tailers: Grade A A large, 56-58C
doz.; A large, 52-55c doz.; AA me
dium, 47-48c; A medium, 46-47c;
AA smalls, 29-32C doz.; carton, l-ic
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 large Cheddar single dai
sies, 40-51c; 5-lb. loaves, 51',2-57c;
processed American cheese, 5-lb.
loaf, 40-43C.
Farm Market
Early variety peaches were in
short supply on the East 3ide
Farmers Market here today with
cup packed lugs of RX Wenatchee
Red Havens topping the market at
3.50-3.75 with tray packed cartons
of fancy Mosier Hale Havens to
2.75.
The first Yakima valley cherry
and pear tomatoes, early Camp
bell grapes and Marblehead squash
reached the market today. The
cocktail tomatoes sold at 2.50 a
12 cup flat with the late squash
going at 6 cents a pound and the
Concord type grapes at. 60 cents
a a-lb. basket.
Rabbits, Poultry
Live Chickens Quoted to grow
ers at PorUand, Salem and south to
Eugene, f.o.b. ranch No. 1 quality
fryers, 234-4 lbs., mostly 20c: light
hens, 12-13c; heavy hens, 5 lbs. up.
15c lb.; old roosters, 7-8C lb.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade
dressed to retailers; fryers, whole
drawn, 3B-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, 28c 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,
3-4'.!! lbs., f.o.b. Portland. 2N23c;
colored pelts, 5c under. Fresh
killed fryers to retailers, 57-60c lb.;
cut up 61-64c.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair
through Fridav. Low tonight 62.
Hish Friday 92-95.
Western Oregon: Fair tonight
and Friday, except cloudy or fog
gv during night and morning
hours. Low tonight 50-60. High
Friday 85-95 in interior, 66-78 on
coast.
. Northern California: Fair tonight
and Friday except scattered after
noon thunderstorms in Sierras and
coastal fog. Little temperature
change.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
dav 74; above normal 2.
Record high this date 108 in
1933.
Record low this date 45 in 1928.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, none. Midnight to 10
a.m.. none.
Total this month, trace, .05 incn
below normal.
Total since Sept. 1. 26.95 inches,
8.94 inches above normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
26 To. highest this a.m. 80 "r.
High 4:00 24-
City Yester- a.m. nr.
day . Low Prec.
Brookings
Grants Pass
Klamath Falls
56
49
51
53
61
61
58
62
53
71
63
56
70
93
87
93
MEDFORD
Portland 84
Seattle 79
Spokane 88
Yakima
. 94
Eureka
Red Bluff
Sacramento ...
San Francisco
. 65
.106
98
73
Los Angeles 87
.01
Phoenix 104 85
Denver 92 68
Chicago . 77 65
Miami 87 80
New York 80 73
Washington, D.C. 83 73
.91
Pre-partition India w a s a
little more than half the size
of the U.S.
Canada is a world leader
in asbestos, newsprint, platin
um and radium.
noii DESIR
DINING INN
OPEN 5 p.m.
Every Day
During
Shakespearean
Festival
Genuine Charcoal
Broiled Foods!
especially good place
eat if dieting!
5:30 p.m. till 12:00
Sundays 4 p.m. till 11 p.m.
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Ore.,
Final Steps Taken
To Extradite Man
Tacorria (UPD Final
steps were taken in State Su
perior Court here Wednesday
to extradite Harry Robert C.
Knowles to Wasco county,
Ore., to face a life sentence.
Extradition papers were
presented as Knowles was re
leased from McNeil Island
federal prison. The papers
were signed by Oregon Gov.
Robert D. Holmes and Gov.
Albert I. Rosellini.
Knowles faces a life sen
tence for second degree mur
der in Oregon. He pleaded
guilty in the summer of 1954
to strangling Albert C. Stuart
in 1953 near Shaniko, Ore.,
in Wasco county.
Knowles was sentenced in
Sacramento, Calif., after con
viction of the Dyer Act. He
was later sentenced in The
Dalles on the second degree
murder conviction, and was
released to federal authorities
with a "hold" order for him
to be returned to Oregon.
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
Bullock 12.52
Chem Fund
Eaton Howard Stk 21.25
Fidelity 14.09
Gas Ind 13. 59
Group Sec Avia .... 10.34
Group Sec Com Stk 12.07
Group Sec Elec 7.26
Group Sec Petr 11.52
Group Sec Steel 8 33 '
Group Sec Tobac 6.58
Keystone B-3 15.56
Keystone B-4 9.55
Keystone K-l SJ5Z
KevstoneK-2 1139
Keystone S-l 16.03
Keystone S-2 10.93
Keystone S-3 12.19
Mass Inv Tr 11.73
TV-Elec 11.71
Value Line Inc
Asked
13.72
22.72
15.23
14.85
11.33
13.22
7.96
12.62
9.13
7.22
16.97
10.42
9.32
12.43
17.49
11.92
13.30
12.68
12.76
Wellington . 13.05
1423
Portland Hay, Grain
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices:
New crop No. 2 green alfalfa,
baled, f.o.b.; PorUand and Seattle,
25 ton.
Wholesale Prices as reported by
the USDA market news service:
Wheat. No. 2 soft white, $6G ton;
No. 2 white oats, 38 lb., West Coast
delivery, $48.50-49 ton; barley. No.
2 West Coast delivery, $48-48 50;
soybean meal, Eastern shipment,
S87.50-88.45 ton, f.o.b. Portland;
standard mill run, prompt deliv
ery $41-42 ton. f.o.b. Portland;
No. 2 milo. S54.75 ton. f.o.b. Coast;
No. 2 yellow corn. Eastern ship
ment, f.o.b. PorUand, $61.50-62
ton.
Taste Templing
Goodness!
Try Our Delicious ...
Sandwiches
Salads
Snacks
THE CLOCK.
Main at Barrieft
Ph. SP 2-6766
ANDY
recommends .'
LOVEBRIGHT
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ANDY'S
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Thursday, August 14, 193S 1J
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RONALD REAGAN V
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