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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1958)
Local and To Hold Sale-Eagles's aux iliary will hold a rummage sale Friday and Saturday, Oct. 3-4, at the lodge hall, 217 JVest Main st. Inspections - City Fire Mar shal Truman Nelson issued nine orders for correction of fire hazards yesterday. He in spected five business occu pancies, a public garage and a dry cleaning plant. At Wheaton - Richard V. Evans, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tyley Evans, Central Point, has enrolled as a freshman at Wheat college, Illinois. He is t graduate of Crater High school, and plans to major in education. - - - Grass Fire-An area of about 150 by 150 fee of grass was burned in the 3500 block of South Pacific highway yester day, city firemen said. The fire was on property owned by Harold M. Roberts, 3509 South Pacific highway. , To Hold Sale - Bethany circle. First Presbyterian church, will hold a rummage sale Friday, Oct. 3 and Satur day. Oct. 4, at the church, Eighth and Holly sts. Hours the first day will be 9 a.m to 4 p.m. and the second day 9 a.m. until noon. Vineyard Fire - Central Point rural firemen were called to a grass fire in vineyard at the C. O. Love- joy Droperty on the' Old Mili tary rd. yesterday. The blaze covered about 1V4 acres and apparently started from a trash barrel, firemen stated. Mining Council-The North western Mining Council, Inc., will elect officers for the com ing year at its monthly meet ing at 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 2. The election had been scheduled for last month, but was postponed at that time to the October meeting. Chin Up Meeting - Mem bers of Jackson county chap ter 4, Chin Up club, will meet Friday at 8 p.m. at the Girls Community club, 229 North Bartlett st. Plans for the an nual hobby show, to be held Nov. 14 and 15, will be dis cussed, it was announced. Grandparenis-Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Rawstern, Seattle, Wash., are parents of a bey born Sept. 15, weighing 7 pounds, 4 ounces. The child has been named Bernard Ivan. He is a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Parrish, Old Stage rd., and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ambrose, -870 Ross lane, north. Mrs. Rawstern is the former Judi Parrish. The baby's father is employed at Boeing Aircraft company in Seattle. TONITE! Mfilfe. lESliTSiElSEN WALTER 6RENNAN Margaret O'BRIEN 0 Walter Bremen ' 5WSC0rf Technicolor c 9 - an IIHTiiig and earn interest from October 1 th Unitf jl Stftiff jffljuupl Bank f liana Personal Sal Planned - Women of the Jacksonville Presbyterian church will hold a rummage sale at the Fehl building in Medford Thursday, Oct. 2, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sale Announced - Medford Kiwanian Dames will hold a rummage sale Friday, Oct. 3, in the Fehl building from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Proceeds will go to the Girl Scout camp, Low Echo. Obituaries MRS. GARTH LARKIN Mrs. Garth Larkin, about 34, formerly of Medford, died in Arcadia, Calif., yesterday. She was the former Lois Moran, daughter of Ray F. Moran, who now lives in Molalla, Ore. Mrs. Larkin was born in Medford. WILLFRED MOORE JR. Funeral services for Will fred Moore Jr., infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Willfred Moore, of Butte Falls, who died Sun day, were held at Conger Morris Funeral home this afternoon. The Rev. J. D. Trude of the Seventh Day Ad ventist church officiated. Committal was in Siskiyou Memorial park. The baby was born Aug. 6, 1956, in Medford. Survivors, besides the parents, include a sister, Sandra; the grandpar ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. Moore, Butte Falls; and Mr. and Mrs. Bonnie Combs, Shel- ton. Wash.; and several aunts j and uncles. JOHN B. JOHNSTON Funeral services for John B. Johnston 91, of 861 Swing lane, who died Tuesday, will be held at the Kunz Funeral home in Ft. Jones, . Calif., Thursday at 1 p.m. Northern Star lodge, AF&AM, of Ft. Jones, . of which he . was a member, will be in charge Committal will be in the Ma sonic cemetery at Ft. Jones. Conger-Morris, funeral direc tors, were in charge of local arrangements. Mr. Johnston was born Aug 31, 1867, in Douglas county, Minnesota, and moved to Kan sas when a young poy. in 1881 he came to Central Point, where he followed the carpenter trade, helping to build some of the first build ings in Medford, including where Hubbard Brothers is now located, and the Merri- man blacksmith shop. During 1887 he left for Happy camp, there following the sawmill business and later mining. He moved to Ham burg, Calif., in 1895, where he continued mining, then worked as a forest ranger un til 1914, when he purchased a general mercantile store, ho tel, and blacksmith shop. He continued his residence at Hamburg, Calif., until 1950, and since them hag made his home with his two daughters. He had been a member for 49 years of Northern Star lodge AF&AM, at Ft. Jones. He was married in 1880 in Grants Pass to Francis Ade line Tuttle, who preceded him in death in 1930. . Survivors include a son, Raymond H. Johnston, Van Nuys, Calif.; two daughters, Mrs. Henry A. Garber, Fair Oaks, Calif.; and Mrs. Lee Willits, Medford; two grand sons and two great grand children. Burglars Outfit Selves With Clothing Hermiston -IUPD- Two bur- glars outfitted themselves with new clothing at Kimsey's Clothing store here early Tuesday and left their own clothing, including shoes, be hind. The stolen merchandise, ZbS wortn, included new shoes, jeans, shirts, socks and two leather jackets. pen or add to your savings account on or before October 10 MEDFORD BRANCH gmim inhwrf Otau CjvjT-:r VOLUMES PRESENTED The Jackson county unit of the American Cancer Socie ty recently presented copies of the proceed ings of the ' Second International Cancer Congress in Cincinnati, Ohio, to Rogu.3 Val ley and Sacred Heart hospitals here. The proceedings contained two volumes, and deal with all phases of cancer, its detection and treatment. They will be kept in the doctor's library at each hospital. Shown Innocent Plea Entered In District Court Alfred Offord, 303 North Fir St., apartment 3, entered a plea of innocent to a charge of assault and battery and trial date was set for Dec. 23, by District Court Judge James M. Main Tuesday after noon. Offord, who was represent ed by Brian Mullen, local at torney, was released on S100 bail. He is charged with strik ing a man in the face with his hands and fists Sept. 29. Burney Millworkers Vote Against IWA Burney, Calif. - (UPD - Em ployees of Lorenz Lumber company here voted- 86 to 53 Tuesday against naming In ternational Woodworkers of America their bargaining agent City People Those Living City people outnumber country people in Jackson county today by approximate ly a 4-3 margin. Seven of the county's 10 intercorporated cities- have grown since 1950 and three have become smaller. Five of the seven growing cities boast gains of more than 10 per cent since the turn of the decade. These are some of the sig nificant points in the report issued last week by the Ore gon state board of census. The biggest disappointment, local observers agree, is that Medford has apparently not reached the 25,000 mark after all. A report from city hall July 28 estimated Medford's population at 25,274. The official census board, while noting a 40.4 per cent increase in the city since 1950, sets the present figure at 24, 300. . Here are the official figures, including the percentage of change in the past eight years: Ashland, up 13.7 percent to 8,800. Butte Falls, down 3.2 per cent to 360. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Fair and warm through Thursday. Low to night 42. Hieh Thursday 88. Western Oregon: Fair through Thursday except for patches late night and early morning fog. Little temperature change. Low tonight 44-50. High Thursday 72-80 ; in north, 85-90 in south. Northern California: Fair to night and Thursday except coastal fog night and early morning. Little temperature change. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yester dav 68: above normal 7. Record high this date 92 in 1943. Record low this date 29 in 1950. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 a m, none. Total in September .28 inch, 57 below normal. Total since Sept. 1, .28 inch, 57 inch below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 17 "i, highest this a.m. 83;. High 4:30 24- City Yester- a.m. ' nr. day Low Prec. Brookings 99 61 Grnts Pass 91 42 Klamath Falls 76 49 MEDFORD 91 46 Portland 81 48 Seattle 67 50 Spokane 67 46 Yakima 73 42 Eureka 66 52 Red Bluff 97 71 Sacramento 93 62 San Francisco 76 56 Los Angeles 84 66 Phoenix 92 69 Denver 45 34 Chicago 60 39 Miami 90 76 New York 63 62 21 Washintgon, D. C. 70 65 .26 FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Throueh Oct. 6): Western Oregon-Western Wash- in g t o n Temperatures averaging much above normal and little or no precipitation except chance of few snowers in northwest Ore gon and western Washington early next week. High temperatures 74 84 western Oregon, 65-75 western Washington. Lows 44-54, Northern California No precipi tation. Temperatures above normal. It is 1,160 miles from Du- luth across the Great Lakes ir Hntarin's nutlot TirVtinH ic in " New Fire Insurance Rates Take Effect Portland -(UPD- New rates on fire insurance were in effect in Oregon today with cost on dwellings reduced ' in areas where fire protection is avail able and increased in areas where it isn't. The rates were approved by the State Insurance Depart ment on application of the Oregon Insurance Rating Bu reau. They went "into effect at midnight Tuesday. Other changes saw rates in creased on home contents and on extended coverage such as protection against wind, hail and blast damage. $50 Deductible Available Extended coverage also was altered. Some things previous- Outnumber in Country Central Point, up 26 cent to 2,100. Eagle Point, up 13.7 per cent to 690. Gold Hill, up 5 per cent to 650. Jacksonville, down 2.8 per cent to 1,160. Medford, up 40.4 per cent to 24,300. . Phoenix, down 2.1 per cent to 730. Rogue River, up 1.7 per cent to 600. Talent, up 25.8 per cent to 930. Total city population, 40, 320, and total population else where in the county, 28,340. Total Jackson county popu lation, 68,660, an increase of 17.3 per cent from the 1950 figure of 58,150. Red China Using Phosphorous Shells Taipeh, Formosa - (UPD - The Chinese Nationalists disclosed today that Communist artil lery was shooting phosphorous fire shells against the be sieged Quemoy Islands. The Nationalist Defense. Ministry made the disclosure in a communique announcing that Red guns pounded the Quemoys with heavy new bar rage today, firing at the rate of 15 shells a minute during a sustained six - hour seige from hoon until 6 p.m. Nationalist China, mean while, took a grave view of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles' statement that Nation alist Chinese troops should be withdrawn from the offshore islands if a ceasefire is reached. Russian Position On Test Ban Waited Washington (UPD U. S. of ficials awaited some indica tion from Russia today as to whether the Soviets intended to blow up arms control nego tiations 'with their resumption of nuclear testing. The U. S. Atomic Energy commission announced Tues day night Russia has resumed nuclear weapons tests with two explosions of '"moderate to high yield" at the Soviets' Arctic proving grounds. De tection presumably was by seismographic and atmospher ic means. Official State Department reaction to the Russian tests was that ''unless the Soviet Union holds further tests aft er negotiations have begun, the United States remains pre pared to withhold further testing of atomic and hydro gen weapons for a period of one year from the beginning of the negotiations on Oct. 31." above receiving the volumes are Miss B. J. Larsen, administrator of Rogue Valley, sec ond from left, and ' Sister Luke of the Savior, administrator of Sacred Heart. Pre senting the volumes are Dr. Earl L. Lawson, left, district medical advisor of the Cancer Society; Dr. Robert M. Turner, second from right. Jackson county unit medical advisor; and Dr. Richard W. Schwahn, professional education chairman of the local unit. (Knackstedt photo) ly protected such as television antennas, . outside awnings, signs, etc. were eliminated from standard coverage. A S50 deductible endorsement, was made available. The new rates will be' effec tive today on all new busi ness or renewals written on or after that date. They also apply to policies written be fore today if they go into force on or after Dec. 1. The extended coverage en dorsement will now cost SI. 62 for each 81,000 of insurance on a three-year policy on either the dwelling or con tents with the $50 deducti ble. The old rate for full cov erage without a deductible clause was SI. 08 for each- Si, 000 of insurance. Without the $50 deductible, with the insurance company paying all the loss under extended cov erage, the policy will now cost $2.70 for each $1,000 of insurance on the dwelling and $1.78 on contents. In fire protection districts reduction in fire rates will range from 5 to 14 per cent. The increase in unprotected districts ranges from 15 to 20 per cent, according to A. J. Snow, rating bureau manager. Portland Livestock Portland (UPD C a 1 1 1 e 350. Utility 18-19.50; canners-cutters 15-16. Calves 75. Choice vealers 30-32: good 27-29: good-choice slaughter calves 26-29; stock steer calves 30-32. Hogs 300. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers 21.50-22; mixed 21-21.50; heavier and lighter butchers 20.50-21; sows 17-20. Sheep 1000. Choice wooled and shorn slaughter lambs 20.50-21; good 19.50-20; good-choice feeders 17.50-19.50; cull-good ewes 3-5.50. Portland Produce Portland (UPD E g g s To re tailers: Grade A A large, 53-57C doz.; A large, 50-53c doz.; AA me dium, 45-46c; A medium, 44-45c; AA smalls, 30-32c doz.; carton, l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA and Grade A prints. 68-69c lb.; carton lc higher; B prints, 66-67C. Cheese medium cured To re tailers: A grade Cheddar single dai sies. 39-51c; processed American cheese, 5-lb loaf, 40-43c. Farm Market Best red Delicious apples topped the market at 5-5.25 for 40 lbs. to day with other Delicious packs at 2.75-3 75; Oregon cranberries sold at 4.75 for 24 one-pound cello phane bags of small size. Poultry, Rabbits Live Chickens Quoted to grow ers at Portland, Salem and south to Eugene, f.o.b. ranch No. 1 qual ity fryers. 234-4 lbs.. 15c; 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. 30-35c lb.; cut up, 35-39c; hens, light types, cut up. 34-36c; heavy type, whole drawn. 39-41c lb. Dressed Turkeys A grade young hens. 30'2-31c lb. to producers on eviscerated basis; A grade young toms, 26c lb. eviscerated; young hens to retailers, mostly 41-43c lb. on an oven-ready basis; A grade toms. 34-37C Rabbits (average to growers, f.o.b. killing plants) Live white, 334-4,i lbs- f.o.b. Portland. 21-23c; 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 Seattle, $26-28 ton. Wholesale Prices as reported by the USDA market news service: Wheat. No. 2 soft white. S67 ton; No. 2 white oats, 38-lb. West Coast delivery. $46-49.50 ton: No. 2 val ley white oats. S48 ton; barley. No. 2 West Coast delivery. S49.50; sovbean meal. Eastern shipment, S90-91 ton f.o.b. Portland: stand ard mill run. prompt delivery, S41 42 ton f.o.b. Portland; No. 2 milo, S48.50 fjo.b. Coast. No. 2 corn. East ern shipment f.o.b. Portland. S57 57.50; locally grown No. 2 corn, $54 ton. Daily's U-Drive Medford Airport Stocks Drop After Three High Sessions New York (UPD Stocks de clined today after three ses sions of rise had carried in dustrial shares to a record high. The market made its lows about mid-season, then ral lied. At the lows prices showed losses running to more than a point. Middle East oils were strong spots on the moves to withdraw U.S. troops from the area and from what ap peared to be a better situa tion in the Far East. Royal Dutch made a new high along with Gulf Oil and Jersev Standard. Warner Lambert was off more than four points. It re gained half the loss. U.S. Hoffman fell 2Vz when a Britain's Cyprus Plan in Effect; Unity Threatened London-IUPD-Britain's "part nership" plan for bloodstained Cyprus went into effect at midnight despite violent Greek opposition that threat ened NATO unity and new violence on the Mediterra nean island. Under the plan, Cyprus be comes a territory technically ruled in partnership by Bri tain, Greece and Turkey for a seven-year period. A perman ent solution would be found later. One-fourth of the popula tion of Cyprus is Turkish, and the Turks were going along with the plan. Three-fourths are Greeks who demand union with Greece, and Greece was having no part of the plan now. General Strike Ordered On Cyprus itself the power ful Eoka, Greek Cypriot ex tremist organization, ordered a 24-hour general strike to day to coincide with the start of the plan. Police main tained an extra large guard against possible violence. The Eoka distributed leaf lets saying Greek Cypriots would not bow down before "t h e Anglo-Turkish conspi racy." Both Turkey and Greece were to have appointed a commissioner to serve on the "partner ship" government but Greece refused. And because Britain re fused to reconsider the plan, Greek representative Michel Mellas walked out Tuesday on a NATO conference in Paris which was trying to achieve a compromise to avert an open rupture among the NATO partners. Investment Funds Noon Quotations on select ed funds supplied by the Med ford Branch of Foster & Mar shall, Members New York Stock Exchanee. Fund Bid Asked Bullock Chem Fund 18.52 20.03 Eaton Howard Stk 21.78 23.29 Fidelity 14.61 15.79 Gas Ind 13.58 14.48 Group Sec Avia .... 10.06 11.02 Group Sec Com Stk 12.25 13 41 Group Sec Elec 7.79 8.54 Group Sec Petr 11.42 12.51 Group Sec Steel 9.06 9.93 Group Sec Tobac .. 6.76 7.41 Keystone B-3 16.07 -1733 Keystone B-4 9.67 10.56 Keystone K-l 8.77 9.58 Keystone K-2 12.03 13.13 Kevstone S-l 16.61 18.12 Keystone S-2 11.56 12.61 Kevstone S-3 12.85 14.08 Mass Inv Tr 12.15 13.14 TV-Elec 12.19 13.29 Value Line Inc 5.30 5.79 Wellington 13.28 14.48 Chicks not phoning latefy? Here's the answer: You need L.B. Butch Wax on your hair... ond that's the long and the short of it! Don't wait . . . take the short cut to better looks . . . LB. BUTCH WAX! Try it for FREE, and SEE! To Get Your Free Butch-Wax, Bring this Ad to One of these Stores: HUDSON'S PHARMACY 613 East Main WAINSCOTT'S PHARMACY 322 East Main HURRY! SUPPLY merger with Buffalo Eclipse collapsed. DOW-JONES AVERAGE New YorkUPI!-Dow-Jones final stock averages: 30 in dustrials 530.94, off 1.15; 20 railroads 143.30. off 1.31; 15 utilities 80.75, u? 0.04, and 65 stocks 183.28, off 0.58. Sales today were about 3,780,000 shares compared with 4,160.000 shares Tues day. Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical 93 Alum Co Am 86V4 American Can 4934 American Motors 20Vs AT&T :....190 Anaconda Copper 55 Armco Steel 59 Bendix Aviation 56 Bethlehem Steel 4856 Boeing Air 46V4 Caterpillar Corp. 79 Chrysler Corp. 56 Continental Can 52 . Crown Zellerbach 53?b Curtiss Wright 28 Dow Chemical 65 Vb Du Pont 197 Eastman Kodak 126 Firestone 105 General Electric 61 V General Food 67 General Moiors 46T's Georgia Pacific 44 Graham Paige ,. 2 Greyhound : 15 Gulf Oil II8V2 Homestake Mining 37 Idaho Power 45 Kaiser Ind 13 Int Paper ;. H2V2 Johns Manville 44 Kennecott Copper 96 Lockheed Aircraft ........ 52 Katy Pfd 62 Montgomery Ward 39 Nat'l Biscuit 48 New York Central 224 Pac Gas & Elec '57 Penney, J. C 96 Penn RR 16 Radio Corporation .... 37 Richfield Oil 90 Safeway' 33V2 Sears 33 Vi Shell Oil 83 Socony Mobil Oil 49 Vi Southern Co 3212 Southern Pacific 54 Standard California 56V4 Standard Indiana 48V2 Standard N. J 58V2 Sun Mines 7 Texas Gulf Sulfur 21 Tex Pac Land Trust 14 Transamerica 26V4 Trans World Air 14 Tri-Continental 37 Union Carbide 113 Union Pacific 31 United Aircraft 62 U. A. L 29 U. S. Rubber 41 U. S. Steel 79 Youngstown S & T 110 Over-fhe-Counter Western Stocks The following bid and asked prices on selected West em 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 A-,ked Bank of America Calif.-Pacific Utilities Cascades Plywood Cons. Freightways Copco First National Bank .. NW Natural Gas Pacific Pwr. & Lt. ...... Permanente Cement .. Portland Gen. Elec. .. U. S. National Bank .. United Utilities West Coast Tel Weyerhaeuser 39 41 31 "4 27 17 "4 33 U 49 16 '4 35'i 21 ,i 25 69 '2 27 21 i 43 ',4 33'4 29 38 185s 35'i 52'i 17i 37i4 22-g 268 74 28 "8 224 453,4 SOMETHING "REAL COOL" ONE JAR BUTCH WAX ABSOLUTELY FREE WESTERN THRIFT 30 North Central CENTRAL REXALL DRUGS Main & Central LIMITED! HURRY! MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Nationwide Alert Seeks Escapee From Alcatraz San Francisco -(CPD- A na tionwide alert was out today for the arrest of Aaron Bur gett, 28-year-old gunman from St. Louis, Mo., who may have been the first man to escape from Alcatraz prison. Although Alcatraz officials believed Burgett was either hiding somewhere on the '"Rock" or drowned in the swift tides of San Francisco bay, the FBI acted on the pos sibility he had reached the mainland. Had 'Waterwings' It was known that Burgett had equipped himself with a pair of waterwings fashioned from a plastic bag. "We've got to assume he's still on the island," said War den Paul Madigan, "until we get some definite proof oth erwise. If he did swim for it, we don't give him .much chance." Burgett's companion in the escape, Clyde Johnson, 40, a Memphis, Tenn., bank robber, was captured two hours after the two overpowered and bound guard Harold Miller on Monday afternoon. Johnson was found . shiver ing in the cold waters of the bay, a few feet off the rocky shore of the island prison. "We've got to proceed on the possibility that Burgett has left the island," said Webb Burke, FBI agent in charge. Description Broadcast Taking no chances that Bur gett had escaped, the FBI distributed all-points bullet ins to the nation's police de partments carrying his de scription. Meanwhile, 75 Alcatraz guards and FBI agents con tinued their search of the caves fringing the shore of Alcatraz, Hoping they might find Burgett still in hiding. Six of the larger caves at the. northwest end of the island were bombed with tear gas to no avail. Coast Guard patrol boats and prison launches made in cessant patrols around the fog and windswept island. The 285 convicts at Alca traz remained locked in their cells as guards ad FBI men scoured the island. The platform at the top of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, built in 1887, is 895 feet from the ground. Funeral Flowers . and Hospital Bouquets GROCETERIA FLOWER SHOP Ph. SP 2-8179 Charge Accounts Welcome Free Delivery David & Evelyn Chase, Owners ANDY'S BEST BOY! 17-jewel water & shock resistant Reg. $49.95 S&H Green Stamps Your Friendly Credit Jeweler 15 North Central -. m" Wft,U:f'p 088 ANDYS Luscious L0LL0BRIGIDA in 2 Daring Films! i w m z4 PHIUPE. L0LL0BRIGIDA MAtTMt tlftfii Ml CAROL VENOEUIL Wednesday, October 1, 1958 T Grange Hews Shady Cove Grange Shady Cove Grange held their annual Booster Night program Saturday, Sept. 20 at the Shady Cove school gym. The program included a welcoming address by Edward Houstons, songs, piano num bers by Gary Monital, Ha waiian dancing by 4-H girls Cecelia Kee and Daun Oliver, and an exhibition of maic by George Pierce of Medfoid as well as other entertainment. Refreshments were serred in the school cafeteria W members of the HEC. Delia A. Littlefield, ' Publicity chairman. Rummage Sale Basement of the PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Oct. 3-9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Oct. 4 - 9 to 12 Noon We Give GREEK STAMPS CENTRAL REXALL DRUG Main and Central ENDS TONITE i was lot - r-'-i ' -t fit faicf I f I-4 sS f til 1 WARNER Color m GENE NATALIE KELLY-WOOD CLAIRE TREVOR waine ik noon CO-FEATURE ROSftANO BRAZZI JOAN FONTAINE T Cinemascope - couow y ok luxe. J CALL SP 3-7323 For Information about Pictures Playing and Time Schedules At Your Theatres GERALD MOHR PEGGIE CASTLE CO-FEATURE WHAT HAPPENS AFTER THE ATOMIC AGE A GREAT CAST IN "1000 YEARS FROM MOW" TOWITP ONLY CURTAIN AT 8:30" jtatmto : the .: ttorrinf s mm cm PHILIPE L0LL0BR1GIDA RMMd by Lflfttfl rnt Ontfnbu Corp. CI Tf I 'r j it A CAR LOAD STARTS TONITE