Local and
At Instiluie-Sam Zier, rep
resentative of the MedXord Os
teopathic hospital, is in Port
land attending a two -day
meeting of the American Oste
opathic Hospital association
Northwest institute, Sept. 11
and 12.
Lightning Fire-Crewmen of
the state department of forest
ry were checking today on a
lightning fire spotted yester
day near Buck Point south
east of Butte Falls. Patrolmen
also were called out on a
small debris fire near Hugo in
Josephine county.
In Hospital - Mrs. Bessie
Lumsden, 93, Plaza apart
ments, a resident of Medford
since 1888, has been in the
Rogue Valley hospital since
Sunday, friends reported to
day. They said she sustained
a back injury, but is progress
ing well.
Hay Stacks Burn-Two smMl
hay stacks and about two
acres of grass burned late yes
terday morning on Griffin
Creek rd., city firemen report
ed. They said that flames
from a trash fire of the pre
vious day were whipped up by
high wind. Mike Ober was
listed as resident on the prop
erty at route 4, box 360D.
which is owned by a Mr,
Greenwald of Portland.
Rcovering-Mrs. Joseph
(Opel) Pruitt, 721 Broad st.,
is recovering at her home
from a triple break of her
ankle suffered in a fall Aug.
24, according to her husband.
The patient broke her ankle
while fishing on the North
Fork of the Little Butte creek
and had to be carried a half
mile to the car by Pruitt. Etoc-
tors report that Mrs. Pruitt
will remain in a cast for an
other six weeks.
Births
GRAVES-To Mr. and Mrs.
Tommy, 1902 Elm st., Med
ford, Sept. 11, 1958, a girl,
8". 4 pounds, at Osteopathic
hospital.
PENLAND - To Mr. and
Mrs. Ivan L., route 3, box 71,
Medford, Sept. 10, 1958, ta
boy, 8 pounds, at Sacred
Heart hospital.
ALLEN-To Mr. and Mrs.
Jackie, 2570 Highway 99
south, Ashland, Sept. 10,
1958, a girl, 9V2 pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
WALLACE - To Mr. and
Mrs. Milton, box 52, Phoenix,
Sept. 11, 1958, a girl, 9
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital. Flames Threaten
Elgin Industry
Elgin, Ore.-(UPD-Fire fight
ers from widespread areas of
Eastern Oregon converged on
the town of Elgin Wednesday
in answer to the plea for aid
to help control a fire that
threatened to destroy the
town's chief industry.
The blaze, of undetermined
origin, broke out in the log
deck of the Western Stud Mill
Wednesday afternoon and
went out of control.
Flames jumped a road and
crackled to within a few feet
of the home of John Kroghans
before being beaten back by a
small army of firefighters in
cluding many women and
children.
Firemen from Elgin, La
Grande, Wallowa and men
and equipment from the State
Department of Forestry
moved in to fight the fire
which had turned the exten
sive log decks into an in
ferno. Early Wednesday night the
fire was contained, but all
equipment continued to pour
water onto the smouldering
logs throughout the night.
A converted B-25 bomber,
used throughout the area on
range fires with much suc
cess, made three passes over
the fire, dropping some 6,000
gallons of borate slurry on
the flames.
The mill, managed by How
ard Crippen, employs some
270 persons, and is the town's
major industry.
FIRST
DRIVE IN
RUNS!
iwmw
4
Persona!
Ciled-Jack Herbert Mc
Candliss, 21, of 27 Ashland
ave., was cited yesterday for
following too close after the
vehicle he was driving struck
one driven by Charles Darrow
DeLorme, 19, of 1800 Strat
ford ave., at the intersection
of Lozier lane and Sunset ct.,
state police reported.
ROY ASHPOLE
Services Scheduled
Funeral Services
For Roy Ashpole
Set for Friday
Funerals services for Roy
Ashpole, 71, prominent Eagle
Point resident who died Tues
day, will be held at Conger
Morris Funeral home at 2:30
p.m. Friday. The ev. Joseph
Munshaw of the Eagle Point
Community Bible church will
officiate.
The Medford Elks club will
be in charge of committal
services at Jacksonville ceme
tery. Mr. Ashpole was born Sept.
9, 1887, near Eagle Point, a
son of the late John and Ada
line Ashpole, early pioneers
who came fo the valley in
1876 from Illinois by covered
wagon. Mr. Ashpole was in
the stock business for several
years until an injury forced
his retirement.
He owned and operated the
Eagle Point Hardware from
its founding in 1912 until it
was sold last year. He was a
member of the Elks club for
48 years, and for 27 years was
a member of the Eagle Point
Grange- He served on the
Eagle Point city council for
more than 20 years.
He was married Nov. 6,
1912, in Medford, to Donna
Rader, who survives. Other
survivors include a son, Don
Ashpole of Eagle Point.
Honorary pallbearers will
include Clarence J. Greb,
Lyle 'Vanscoy, Leonard Brad
shaw, V. D. Brophy, Fred Luy,
Robert LaRocque, Arthur Be
saw, Donald McGovern, Roy
Swan, Jim West and Earl
Richardson. Active pallbear
ers will include B. J. Doden
hoff, Roland Jenks, Jess Mc
Gadden, Harold Ottoson,
Rudy Weidman and Orville
Henderson.
Schedule Set for
YMCA Before School
The Medford YMCA will
maintain a special schedule
for its swimming pool and
gymnasium tomorrow and
Saturday, Wilson Gilinsky,
aquatic director, announced
today.
The pool will be open to
8 to 10-year-old boys Friday
from 10:30 a.m. to noon; high
school age boys and men from
noon to 1 p.m.; girls from 1
to 2:30 p.m.; and boys 11 to
15 years old from 3 to 5 p.m.
Grade school boys may use
the gym during the morning
and junior and senior high
school boys during the after
noon. Saturday's schedule in
cludes boys in the pool from
10:30 a.m. to noon; girls from
1 to 2:30 p.m.; and all mem
bers from 3 to 5 p.m. The
gymnasium schedule will.be
the same as Friday.
The regular winter sched
ule will go into effect Mon
day, Sept. 15.
X " ' if
mmm
"From Hell To Jexas"
DON MURRAY CHILL WILLS
2a-
Z3
Sherman Adams Storm Becoming
increasingly Difficult To Weather
Washington - (LTD - A White
House source conceded today
the storm over Sherman
Adams within the Republican
Party was becoming increas
ingly difficult to weather.
When and whether Adams
goes through the formality of
resigning as the top assistant
to President Eisenhower, this
source said, depends on
Adams' determination of his
own political liability.
An increasing number of
Republicans running for of-
Obituaries
STEVEN G. WISELY
Sheven G. Wisely, 6-month-old
son of Mr. and Mrs. David
Wisely, of 917 Grant st., died
in a local hospital Wednesday
afternoon. Funeral arrange
ments will be announced by
Conger-Morris, funeral di
rectors. MRS. FRANCIS I. BENDER
Ashland-Graveside services
for Mrs. Frances I. Bender, 90,
who died Wednesday at
Clarksburg, Calif., will be
held in the Ashland cemetery
Friday at 1:30 p.m. The Rev.
J. A. Morquam, of the Grants
Pass Presbyterian church and
the Order of Eastern Star, will
officiate. Ashland Mortuary is
in charge of arrangements.
Mrs. Bender was born in
Arkansas, and spent most' of
her life in Oregon. She was
a sister of the late Mary E.
Eddy, of Ashland. She was a
member of the Grants Pass
Presbyterian church and the
Order of Eastern Star. Her
husband, Fred S. Bender, pre
ceded her in death.
Survivors include four
nieces, Mrs. Zella V. Yelland,
Clarksburg, Calif.; Mrs. Bess
E. . Lyons, Berkeley, Calif.;
Mrs. Frances P. Pilbury, Al
bany, Calif.; and Mrs. Leah
S. Mynatt, Grants Pass.
WILLIAM J. CUNNINGHAM
A requiem mass for William
John Cunningham, 38, of 816
Taylor st., Medford, who died
Tuesday in a local hospital,
will be read by the Rev. John
Ilg at Sacred Heart Catholic
church Saturday at 9 a.m.
Recitation of the Holy Rosary
will be Friday evening at 7
p.m., at Conger-Morris funeral
home. Committal will be in
Siskiyou Memorial park.
Mr. Cunningham was born
Aug. 22, 1920, in Stockton,
Calif. He was a veteran of
World War II, serving from
May 28, 1943, to Aug. 25,
1944, as a seaman in the Navy.
Survivors include his wife,
Verna, a son, William J. Cun
ningham Jr.; a sister, Mrs. Lu
cille DeBreque, Stockton,
Calif.; and a brother, August
DeBreque, Fort Smith, Ark.
MRS. MARY FLANERY
Funeral services for Mrs.
Mary Flanery, 40, of 2185
Crestbrook rd., Medford, who
died in a local hospital Tues
day, will be held in Sacred
Heart Catholic church at 10
a.m. Friday. Recitation of the
Holy Rosary will be held at
Perl Funeral home at 7 p.m.
today with the Rev. John Ilg
officiating.
Interment will be in Holy
Cross Catholic cemetery in
Spokane, Wash., next Monday.
Mrs. Flanery was born in
Spokane, Wash., May 5, 1918,
and had been a resident of this
community for the past six
years. :
Survivors include her hus
band, Robert C. Flanery,
Medford; one daughter, Pa
tricia, at home; her parents,
M. and Ms. Emil Costanzo,
Spokane, Wash.; four brothers
Phil, Angelo and Tony Cos
tanzo, all of Spokane, and Or
Costanzo, Tampa, Fla.; three
sisters, Mrs. Rose Murdza,
Spokane, Mrs. Eleanor Blan
da, Spokane", and Mrs. Ann
Talarico of Spokane, and sev
eral nieces and nephews.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Mostly
cloudy tonight. Partial clearing
Friday. Low tonight 50. High Fri
day 75
Western Oregon: Considerable
cloudiness tonight and Friday with
a few showers. Little tempeature
change. Low tonight 45-55. "Highs
Friday 70-80 in interior, 60-70 on
coast.
Northern California: Fair through
Friday except local cloudiness and
fog on coast night and morning.
Warmer inland Friday.
LOCAL DATA
TEMFERATURE : Mean yesterday
63: below normal 3. Record high
this date 103 in 1922. Record low
this date 38 in 1916.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, trace. Midnight to 10
a.m.. none. Total this month 2.1 in.,
.12 in above normal. Total since
Sept 1.. 22. .12 in. above normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
41 f; highest this a.m. 84 70.
High
... 69
. 68
70
. 77
... 74
4:00 24.
a.m. nr.
Low Prec.
52 36
48 .09
46
55 T.
57 .01
CHy
Brookinps
Grants Pass
Klamath Falls
MEDFORD
Portland ,
Seattle ...
Spokane
Yakima .
75
91
86
55
55
48
56
. 61
56
60
61
.13
Eureka
Red Bluff
Sacramento ....
San Francisco
Los Angeles ....
68
84
85
76
88
.13
Phoenix
Denver
Chicago
Miami .
New York
Washington, D.C.
.104
. 86
. 64
- 89
. 75
79
80
59
56
78
.01
fice this fall want Adams out
of the White House because
of his relations with Bernard
Goldfine, the Boston textile
magnate facing federal prose
cution for contempt of Con
gress. Alarmed over the Demo
cratic sweep in the Maine
elections this week and at
tributing part of the GOP de
feat to the Adams-Goldfine af
fair, top Republicans in New
York State joined the verbal
assault on the man widely
regarded as the second most
powerful figure in the ex
ecutive branch of govern
ment. Adams was aware of the
new demands that he get out.
But he kept his own counsel
so closely that Press Secre
tary James C. Hagerty said
he knew of no contemplated
changes in Adams' status.
Hagerty said no resignation
in any form had been sub
mitted. United Press International
sent a reporter on a 170-mile
journey through the woods of
New Brunswick. Canada,
Wednesday night to find
Adams at the Renous Miri
michi Fishing club near the
town of Newcastle. Adams
was expected by the White
House to remain there pos
sibly through next week.
Nothing to Say
Adams, according to the re
porter, was "very formal."
Questioned about reports of
his departure from the' White
House, Adams said simply
that he had nothing to say.
Although there was a
known reluctance on the part
of the President's associates to
bring up with him the ques
tion of Adams' leaving unless
Eisenhower first raises the
matter, some of these same
associates believed Adams had
No Benefits for
Oregon Teamsters
Salem - OiPD - About 1,800
members of the Teamsters un
ion in Oregon can't collect
unemployment benefits, the
State Unemployment Com
pensation Commission said
today.
They are involved hi a
truck tie-up involving 11
states.
The commission said the
Oregon Teamsters were too
directly involved in a labor
dispute to collect the benefits.
Individuals still have the
right to appeal the ruling to
the Commission.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPI) Cattle 100. Low
to average choice 1130 lb. fed steers
26.25; some 26; utility cows 18
19.50: canners-cutters 15.50-17.50.
Calves 35. Choice vealers 21-31;
good 27-29.
Hogs 50. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers
23-23.25; mixed 22.50-22.75; sows
17-20.
Sheep 200. Choice wooled and
shorn slaughter spring lambs 20
20.25; good slaughter lambs 18.50
19.50; cull-good ewes 3-7.50.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPI) Eggs To re
tailers: Grade AA large, 60-62c
doz.; A large, 55-58c doz.; AA me
dium. 46-48c; . A medium, 45-47c;
AA smalls, 30-32c doz.; carton l-3c
additional.
Butter To retailers: AA and
Grade A prints, 67-68C lb.; carton
lc lb. higher; B prints, 65-66C.
Cheese (medium cured) To re
tailers: A grade Cheddar, single
daisies, 39-51c; processed American
cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43c.
Farm Market
No. 1-A name-brand Washington
russet potatoes were on the Port
land market today at S2.55 a hun
dredweight. Oregon and Washing
ton concord grapes were in slightly
larger supplv and prices held
steady at mostly S2 to 2.10.- Me
dium sized Oregon yellow onions
were mostly $1.75 to $2.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live chickens Quoted to grow
ers at Portland, Salem and south
to Eugene, f.o.b. ranch. No. 1 qual
ity fryers, 2-4 lbs., 17c lb.; light
hens, 10c: heavy hens, 5 lbs. up,
13c lb.; old roosters, 7-8c lb.
Dressed chickens No. 1 grade,
dressed, to retailers: fryers, whole
drawn. 34-38c lb.; cut up, 39-43c;
hens, light types, cut up, 34-36c;
heavy type, whole drawn, 39-41c lb.
Dressed turkeys A grade young
hens, buyers offering 29-30c lb. to
producers on eviscerated basis: A
grade young toms, 24-25c lb. evis
cerated; young hens to retailers,
mostly 41-43c lb. on oven-ready
basis: A grade toms,' 34-37c.
Rabbits (average to growers,
f.o.b. killing plants) Live white,
33-42 lbs., f.o.b. Portland, 21-33c;
colored 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 SeatUe, S26 ton
with some top quality to 528.
Wholesale prices, as reported by
the USDA market news service:
Wheat, No. 2 soft white. S66 ton;
No. 2 white oats, 38-lb. West Coast
delivery. S48.50-49.50 ton; No. 2
vallev white oats. S46.50-48; barley.
No. 2 West Coast delivery, 48.50;
soybean meal. Eastern shipment.
S89 ton f.o.b. Portland; standard
millrun. prompt delivery, S45 ton
f.o.b. Portland: No. 2 milo, S54 f.o.b.
Coast; No. 2 corn. Eastern shipment
f.o.b. Portland. S59-59.50 ton.
CANDLE ROOM
4
a Genuine Charcoal
"fir tr k) . m mm mm
urnri nencnon
IIW I kb IilkUl VIIW
I seen the light after the Maine
j voting and would not return
j to his high command.
The demand by Rep. Ken
neth Keating, GOP candidate
for senator in New York, that
Adams resign "for the good
of the President and the coun
try" may have had more im
pact on some White House of
ficials than certain aspects of
the GOP defeat in Maine.
Ives Agrees
Sen. Irving M. Ives, retiring
Republican senator from New
York, echoed Keating's plea.
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
AN OLD WINDBAG in the Senate got his come-uppance in
his home state penitentiary last month. While inspecting a
new wing and dining room there, he offered to make speeches
to the prisoners on two suc
cessive evenings. A capacity
audience sat glumly through
lecture one, but next day a
protest committee visited
the warden. "The men are
pretty sore about the sena
tor's lectures," said its lead
er. "They're not included
in our sentences."
A star of the silent movie
days entered a studio in a rage
the other day. As she stepped
out of a cab, a little old lady
stopped her to ask, "Do you
remember a picture you made
called 'Love in the Tropics' where you held a baby in your arms
through most of the first reel?"
"Indeed I do," lied the star graciously. "Well," continued tne little
old lady, "I was that baby!"
1958, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate.
Second Lebanon
Marine Battalion
To Be Withdrawn
Beirut-(UPD-The second U. S.
Marine battalion to be with
drawn from Lebanon since the
July landings will begin
boarding ships bound for the
United Starf.es Monday.
Adm. James Holloway an
nounced Wednesday night the
1st Battalion of the 8th Marine
Regiment, alreay four months
overdue for rotation home,
will leave next week. The
withdrawal will reduce the
size of the U. S. force in Leb
anon to about half the number
of troops that landed two
months ago.
Holloway said the with
drawal is justified by a "ma
terial improvement in the in
ternal and external situation
of Lebanon."
In Washington, the Navy
Department announced a- bat
talion of the 6th Marines al
ready is boarding ships in
Morehead City, N. C., which
will carry it to the Mediter
ranean area to replace the
battalion that is to be rotated
home. It is unlikely, however,
the replacement battalion
will land in Lebanon.
Navy Unit Going
The Navy also is sending a
regimental headquarters com
pany to the Mediterranean,
presumably for service in case
it becomes necessary to in
crease the size of the Marine
force in the area.
Next week's withdrawal
will reduce the U. S. force in
Lebanon to a' battalion of the
6th Marines and an airborne
battle group of the Army's
24th Infantry Division.
Outgoing President Camille
Chamoun told United Press
International Wednesday eve
ning U.S. troops probably
will have to remain in this
country at least until Novem
ber. State Highway
Engineers Promoted
Salem - (LTD - Promotion of
three career engineering em
ployees in the construction
division of the State Highway
Department was announced
today by State Highway En
gineer W. C. Williams.
Victor D. Wolff will move
up from assistant chief lo
cating engineer to chief locat
ing engineer here.
J. E. Morelock, resident
engineer at La Grande, will
be promoted to assistant chief
locating engineer and recon
naissance engineer here.
James F. Putnam, district
maintenance superintendent
at Grants Pass, will be pro
moted to assistant division en
gineer in Roseburg.
broiled roods:
An especially good place
to eat if dieting!
5:30 P.m. u 12:00
"I have been reluctant to
criticize Sherman Adams in
that (Goldfine) case," Ives
said, "but I think it has now
reached the point where it is
doing damage.
,-I think Adams is being
used to some extent as a
scapegoat for the results in
Maine. But, nevertheless, I
think his holding an import
ant post in the White House
could provide embarrassment
for other candidates and for
that reason I think he should
bow out."
Investment Funds
Noon Quotations on select
ed funds supplied by the Med
ford Branch of Fosier & Mar
shall, Members New York
Stock Exchange.
Fund Bid Asked
Bullock 12.66 13.98
Chem Fund 18.22 19.70
Eaton Howard Stk 21.29 22.77
Fidelity 14.13 15.28
Gas Ind 13.46 14.71
Group Sec A via 10.03 10.99
Group Sec Com Stk .. 11.97 13.11
Grouo Pec Elec 7.50 8.22
Group Sec Petr 11.17 12.23
Group Sec Steel 8.67 . 9.50
Group Sec Tobac 6.55 7.18
Keystone B-3 15.68 17.11
Keystone B-4 9.35 10.21
Kevstnnp K-l R o
! Keystone K-2 11.70 1276
Keystone S-l 16.16 17.63
Keystone S-2 11.13 12.14
Keystone S-3 12.42 13.56
Mass Inv Tr 11.39 12.85
TV-Elec 12.08 13.17
Value Line Inc 5.17 5.65
Wellington 13.03 14.20
Television Course
Scheduled by SOC
Ashland-James Dawson, as
sistant professor of science
on the Southern Oregon col
lege faculty, will return to
television this fall with the
presentation of .a three hour
college credit course. The
course, biological science sur
vey, will be the first attempt
at offering a laboratory course
over television. The first tele
cast will be Sept. 22.
The program titled "Adven
tures in Knowledge," is a
"live" broadcast from the tele
vision station KBES-TV and
is viewed in northern Cali
fornia and southern Oregon
Monday evenings at 10 p.m.
This time may be changed
and the viewer is instructed
to watch for any change in the
station broadcast schedule.
Television stations, in Klam
ath Falls and Eureka relay
the program.
Other telecourses will be
offered by the general exten
sion division each succeeding
term during the year. View
ers may request courses by
writing to the general exten
sion division, college campus,
Ashland.
Jamestown, N.Y.-(l'PI)-Frank
Holmes, 74, former actor and
secretary to the late Al Jol
son, died Wednesday after a
long illness. He was a native
of Bradford, Pa.
ANDY'S
BEST BUY!
17-jewel
water &
shock
resistant
Reg. $49.95
g88
S&H Green Stamps
ANDY'S
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15 North Central
Top-Ranking Stocks
Swing Into Action
New York-0iPii-Ton-rankin2
stocks eot into action on the
kupside near closing time on
the Stock Exchange today.
They lifted industrials to
around their best levels in
more than a year. Other sec
tions of the market registered
smaller gains.
International " Business Ma
chines crossed 400 for a gain
of more than 15 points. Zen
ith ran up seven points.
Of more importance mar
ketwise than these wide ad
vances were a rise of more
than two in General Electric
and more than a point each
in U.S. Steel and Westing
house Electric.
Railroad" issufcs joined tha
industrials at a slower pace.
Utilities ruled firm.
Drug stocks mounted to
gains running to more than
two points.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York - (IPII - Dow
Jones final stock averages:
30 industrials 520.43, up
4.23: 20 railroads 132.49,
up 0.78; 15 utilities 79.87,
up 0.24, and 65 stocks
177.77, up 1.20. Sales loday
were about 3,300,000 shares
compared with 2,820,000
shares Wednesday.
Today's prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 89
American Can. 47Tb
American Motors 17 '.a
AT&T 18614
Anaconda Copper 518
Over-fhe-Counier
Western Slocks
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.-
Bank of America 393i 42 '
Calif.-Pacific Utilities 30" 8 32 8
Cascades Plvwood .... 263i 'S'i
Cons Freightways .. 17 j, 18 -4
Copco 33', 35
First National Bank 4834 51 1,
NW Natural Gas 16' 172
Pacific Pwr. & Lt. 35? 38
Permanente Cement 23 24'!,
Portland Gen. Elec. 25'i ' 274
U.S. National Bank .. 69 73 ,
United Utilities 2634 28 "4
West Coast Tel.' 21 '2 22 4
Weyerhaeuser 4is8 44
"Bawdy, nawdy' enough to bs French P
- Welter WmtWl
' ' ' ,
4,;." i
1-tAKLU...
ENVIED...
but only this
woman wanted
him enough to
break the
ami men!
f '4
1
Ti ill il 5 mm
IB
ARTHUR KENNEDY LEIF ERICKSON
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Ore.,
Armco Steel 593s
Bendix Aviation' 58k
Bethlehem Steel ..... 47V2
Boeing Air . ; 45
Caterpillar Corp. 80
Chrysler Corp. 55',2
Continental Can 49'4
Crown Zellerbach 56
Curtiss Wright : 29
Dow Chemical 65H
Du Pont 199.Ts
Eastman Kodak 127
Firestone .i 105Vi
General Electric 66s.i
General Foods ... 70
General Motors 45 s
Georgia Pacific ... 44
Graham Paige 13,4
Greyhound '. 16
Gulf Oil .....'.....11 07 s
Homestake Mining '405s
Idaho Power 433s
Kaiser Ind ; 13
Int Paper ...10834
Johns Manville 45li
Kcnnecott Copper .......... 92?-s
Lockheed Aircraft 53V2
Katy Pfd 577-8
Montgomery Ward. 38
Nat'l Biscuit 49:l4
New York Central 19
Pac Gas & Elec . -56
Penney. J. C 99
Penn RR , 141 4
Radio Corporation 3Z
Richfield Oil : 88
Safeway 3434
Sears 324
Shell Oil :.... 8214
Socony Mobil Oil :. 47
Southern Co ..:.;. 3H4
Southern Pacific 52"s
Standard California 563,s
Standard Indiana 48'.8
Standard N. J 56
Sun Mines 77s
Texas Gulf Sulfur ... 21 '2
Tex Pac Land Trust 127's
Transamerica 27Vs
Trans World Air 13
Tri-Continental" 377s
Union Carbide. ..............llOVs
Union Pacific. , 30'8
United Aircraft ..... 66
U. A. L "29
U. S. Rubber ............. 42
U. S. Steel 76
Youngstown S & T ......10538
Salem Assembly of God
Man Elected To Posf
Springfield,' Mo. -iUFD- The
Rev. N. D. Davidson of Sa
lem, Ore., superintendent of
Oregon" Assembly of God
churches, has been elected to
the executive presbvterv. the
j Assembly's highest governing
board with national headquar
I ters here.
ENDS TONITE
"Curtain at 8:30"
WINNER GRAND PRIX
FOR BEST C0ME0Y ,
CANNES FILM FESTIVAL
DICK CARRELL AT
THE ORGAN 8 P.M.
MBS
mmmmmmmmmii mj,.,miWVP I
AY
W.1" fx 'vt
ffe-Sp lVvV
CHARLES McGRAW ERNEST
TTiuTsdav, September 11, 1958 13
The Dalles Vctss cn
Sewage DisposcI Plant
The Dalles The Dalles
city voters went to the polls
loday to vole on a S240.000
sewage disposal plant bond
issue.
Rummage Sk!e
TOWNSEND CLU3
EAGLES HALL
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 12-13
For Donation Pick-Up
PHONE SP 2-6628
CALL SP 3-7323
For Information about
Pictures Playing and Tims
Schedules At Your Theatres
NOW SHOWING
JOEL
Wars
V ; of the
AtcCREA.-jJtaneh fZ
PLUS
PM UIWlll .1 jl IUH1I MUMP!
OnewaScopE
EDMONO .O'BRIEN
H0RTH PACIFIC HI0HWA?
A CAR LOADI
NOW SHOWING
Daring Spectacle I
PLUS
'RELENTLESS tfAKUKT!
fMALUtDUlliTtpC" Q,f 'lAMB
ct.'- rt,M' v." "
STARTS
TONITE
Doors Open
6:30 P.M.
ft '
4
S -
NOT
SINCE
"THE HIGH
AND THE
MIGHTY"
LIKE
THIS!
TRUEX
SOUTH PACIFIC HIDHWAviJjV
Cinemascope COlOli by D,
Sundays 4 p.m. till 11 p.m.
.04
ST