I
Local and
Retires Ham - Fred L.
Walker has retired the as
sumed business name Alliance
Detective Bureau, according
to records on file in the coun
ty clerk's office.
Assumes Name - Edwin R.
Taylor has filed the assumed
business name Alliance De
tective Bureau and Private
Police, according to records
on file in the county clerk's
office.
Runaway Mcdford police
Wednesday arrested a 16-year-old
Central Point girl on a
"juvenile runaway" charge.
She was taken to the Jackson
Count Juvenile Detention
home, police said.
New Restaurant A new
restaurant serving Chinaee
and American food will hold
a grand opening some time
next week at 2330 North Pa
cific" highway. The assumed
name filed in the county
courthouse is Ping's Garden.
Partners are listed as Chathie
Lime, Wallace Wong and
Terry Mah.
Rehearsal Set - Ceremonial
Divan officers of Fuhat Bur
kan Temple 224, Dramatic
Order Knights of Khorassan,
will hold a rehearsal and drill
practice at 7:30 p.m. Saturday
in the Pythian building. A
Dokey-Nomad convention of
Oregon and neighboring states
will be held here Saturday,
Nov. 1 with about 200 mem
bers attending.
Purchase Ladder Works-M.
G. and Marian Louise Wagar,
635 South Holly st., have pur
chased the Medford Ladder
and Cabinet Works from E.
O. and Margaret H. Cunning
ham, Pioneer rd., Medford,
according to Mrs. Wagar. The
business was purchased Oct.
13 and an assumed business
name Medford Ladder Works
filed. The previous name was
dropped, according to records
on file in the county clerk's
office. '
TONITE & SATURDAY
THE FIRST GREA1
SPECTACLE
OF
THE
JET I
AGE!
ROBERT ROBERT
i MITCHUM -WAGNER
KIUHAKU MAI
S ritni. nniTT
CuMn DM 1 1
LEE
E0M0N0 O'BRIEN
MICHAEL
REDGRAVE
IAN STERLING
3rd Hit!, SAT. ONLY!
The
'mercas
MostColorfif
mbilyBan
PHILIPS
aft
CNIMScoo
?S3
SI!
Gold Hill Grange Hall
Saturday Nire
k .--b- mm
i) Music by Vic Flood & the Rhythm Masters
Everyone Welcome
1 jJ)'t'1 Room Free. Dining Room Open Entire Evening
Personal
Collision - Vehicles driven
by Glen Earl Best, route 1
box 22C, Jacksonville, and
Madge Center, 1932 Highway
66, Ashland, collided Wednes
day on Crater Lake highway
south of the Delta Waters rd.
intersection, Medford police
reported. "
Assumed Name The assum
ed business name Mel and
Dean's has been filed in the
county clerk's office in the
county courthouse for a serv
ice station at the corner of
Stewart ave. and Holly st.
Owners are listed as Melvin
Goguey and Lloyd Dean
Rickard.
Thif t Ernest J. Cloud,
Prospect, reported to Jackson
county sheriffs deputies
Thursday the theft of three
weapons from an old house on
Red Blanket rd. during the
past month. Weapons taken
were a .410 and .22 over and
under, .16 gauge single shot,
and a .20 gauge single shot.
Business Names -The busi
ness name White's Silver
Grill, has been assumed by
Emmett and Julia White, 229
Berrydale ave., Medford, ac
cording to records in the
county recorder's office. The
business name, JVO Special
ties company, has been as
sumed by Neil Farrier, 310
Oregon st., Jacksonville.
Ill-O. H. Bengtson, 122 Ore
gon terrace, Medford, left to
day for St. Louis, Mo., where
he was called by the serious
illness of his mother,' Mrs.
Anna C. Bengtson, long time
resident of the valley. Mrs.
Bengtson left Medford two
months ago for the Midwest
where she is living with
relatives.
Cited -James Harvey Grif
fith, 303 Clark St., was cited
by Medford police for follow
ing too close Wednesday fol
lowing a collision between
his vehicle and one driven by
Clarence Clinton Starkey, 627
Palm st., at the intersection of
East Jackson st. and North
Central ave., police reported.
To Bay Area-Central Point
Mavor and Mrs. Donald E.
Faber left Wednesday for the
San Francisco area. They will
visit relatives and friends and
will attend the University of
Oregon - "University of Cali
fornia game at Berkeley on
Saturday and the San Fran
cisco Forty Niners - Chicago
Bears game on Sunday.
Pe)s For Sale
By New York Zoo
New York - (UPD - Anybody
want to buy a pet?
The city is putting up for
sale:
-A hippopotamus named
Berite, two years old and
weighing 1,000 pounds.
-Four llamas, three girls
and one boy. '
-Two elk.
-four deer.
Purchase Commissioner Jo
seph V. Spagna said the sur
plus zoo residents probably
will go on sale next month.
HELICOPTERS RESCUE 11
Berchtesgarden, Germany -(UPD-
Two U.S. Army heli
copters Thursday rescued 11
Germans marooned in Adolf
Hitler's beloved "eagle nest"
retreat high in the Bavarian
Alps. The group, including
two women, was isolated by
avalanches caused by a seven
day snow storm.
Births
HENSLEY To Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph, 433, South Moun
tain st., Ashland, Oct. 24,
1958, a boy, IVz pounds, at
Ashland General hospitaL
LITTLEF1ELD JR.-To Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart H., 1316 East
Main st., Medford, Oct. 24,
1958. a boy, 914 pounds, at
Sacred Heart hospital.
Here Saturday
DREAMLAND
with our Regular
Dreamland Orchestra
FLOOR SHOW &
DANCE 9 P.M.
Everyone
Welcome!
9 p.m. Till 1 a.m.
Beautiful
Seafon Tells
Of Opposition
To Hells Dam
Hastings. Neb.-4?B-Interior
Secretary Fred A. Seaton said
Thursday night the adminis
tration consistently opposed a
S600 million federal dam at
Hells canyon because it "was
and is the reclamation fraud
of the 20th Century."
Seaton told the Nebraska
Reclamation Association that
the Eisenhower administration
opposed the federal dam when
"three dams built by a private
company at no cost to the tax
payers , would practically
match the federal dam in
flood control and power gen
eration benefits.
The administration's stand
he said, was based on a report
by the Federal Power Com
mission. Hells Canyon is on
the Snake river in Idaho.
Land Not Involved
"Not one single acre of ir
rigated land was ever directly
involved in the proposal,'
Seaton said of the federal
dam.
The secretary also said the
administration favored joint
development of the Trinity
River Division of the Central
Valley Project in California
A private company would in
stall the generating facilities
at the Trinity dam, he said
thus saving taxpayers $60 mil
lion.
The present administration
he said, has installed 85 per
cent more generating capacity
in the Northwest than the
Truman administration dur
ing its last five years.
Obituary
WALTER A. K. WALTY
Ashland-Walter A. K. Wal-
ty, 75, of route 1, box -412,
Talent, died Oct. 23. He had
been in failing health for the
last 10 years. Mr. Walty was
born Jan. 5, 1883, 'in Odon,
Ind., and moved to the Talent
vicinity in 1931. -
A veteran of World War
I having served overseas for
19 months, he married Lura
Jo Hartsuff. in Moscow, Ida
ho, March 5, 1930.
Survivors include his wife,
Lura Jo Walty, Talent; three
children, Mrs. Clarence Hoi-
dridge, Talent; Harvey Thay
er, and Jack Walty, both of
Walla Walla, Wash.; two
brothers, Roy Walty, Post
Falls, Idaho, and Deo Walty,
West Boro, Wis.; and two
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held Saturday, Oct. 25, at 2
p.m. at Litwiller's Mountain
View chapel, Ashland. The
Rev. Earnest R. Bell, of Tal
ent First Methodist church,
will officiate. Interment will
be in Stearns cemetery in
Talent.
BUFORD A. CLARK
Buford Albert Clark, 78, of
Butte Falls star route, box
24, Eagle Point, and a resi
dent of that area for the past
27 years, died in a local hos
pital this morning.
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. Marie Carlisle Clark,
and a sister, Miss Minnie
Clark, Naalehu, Hawaii.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 pm. Monday in Chap
el Mortuary, and the body
will be sent to Bellmgham,
Wash., for interment.
Weather
FORECASTS
' Medford and vicinity: Increasing
high cloudiness tonight. Cloudy
Saturday with occasional light rain
by early afternoon. Outlook ior
sundav ciouay witn snowers. ow
tonight 32. High Saturday 65.
Western Oregon: Fair tonight.
Increasing cloudiness Saturday
with occasional showers in north
portion by late morning, spread
ing to south portion during after
noon. Cooler tonight. Low tonight
30-40 with considerable frost.
Warmer Saturday with high 58-68.
Northern California: Increasing
cloudiness north portion tonight.
Rain extreme north portion Satur
day, spreading to about San Fran-cisco-Truckee
line by evening.
Slightly cooler north portion Sat
urday. LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day 45; below normal 7.
Record high this date 80 in 1929.
Record low this date 26 in 1954.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, none. Midnight to 10
a.m.. none.
Total this month .40 inch., .81
inch below normal.
Total since Sept. 1, .68 inch, 1.28
inch below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
Zlc, highest this a.m. S7eo-
Hieh 4:00 24-
City." - - - Sester- a.m. nr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 69 44
Crater Lake 39 23
Grants Pass 58 29
Klamath Falls 51 34
MFQFORP 58 29
Portland 55 ' 30
Seattle
Spokane .....
Yakima
.... 53
.... 52
.... 58
37
30
24
Eureka
Red Bluff
Sacramento
San Francisco .
Los Angeles ... -
.. 57
74
.' 72
.. 69
... 71
44
48
52
52
60
68
34 "
47
70
60
58
Phoenix
Denver ' ;
86
70
Chicago
68
Miami .. 88
New York 63 -
Washington, D.C. 69
.44
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
(Through Oct. 29):
Western Oregon-Western Wash
ington Recurring rain with totals
more than seasonal, averaging 1-2
inches. Temperatures averaging
near or slightly below normal.
Highs generally in 50s in western
Washington. 55-65 in western Ore
gon. Lows generally in mid-30s or
low 40s.
Northern California Rain early
in period and again around middle
of .period. Snow- in mountains.
Temperature below normal.
Stocks Register
Irregular Gains
New York-(UPI-Stocks reg
istered an irregular gain to
day.
Chemicals, some ef the met
als, drugs, office equipments
and special issues declined
steels, selected motors, to
baccos, rails; some oils and
special issues moved higher
Traders said the list be
haved very well in the face
of another boost in the dis
count rate by five of the 12
Federal Reserve banks.
American Motors ran up
more than' two points at .its
best to a new high. The com
pany reported its sales for the
first 20 days of October total
ed 15,889 cars against 9,680
Nixon Meets
Rockefeller;
Rift Denied
New York-HTD-Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon "and
New York's Republican gu
bernatorial candidate Nelson
A. Rockefeller met for a' 30
minute breakfast today. Both
later denied there was any
rift between them to be patch
ed up.
Rockefeller, however, con
tinued to disassociate his cam
paigning "on state issues" for
"state office" from Nixon's
campaigning "for congres
sional candidates."
Absolute Bunk
Nixon spent 30 hours here,
but he rrjet Rockefeller only
in private a few minutes be
fore the vice president left to
continue his barnstorming in
Wisconsin.
Rockefeller said reports of
a rift between him and Nixon
were "absolute bunk . . abso
lute fabrication." He said he
thought Nixon's visit here was
"going to be tremendously
helpful to the ticket in New
York" but he evaded questions
as to whether it was helpful
to his own campaign against
Democratic Gov. AverellHar
riman. The two men posed for pic
tures together, but did ' not
meet reporters except separ
ately. Nixon said "as far as
anything being patched up I
will say there was nothing to
patch up."-
Predicts Victory
In what he said was one
of the first flat predictions I
have made," Nixon said he
predicted "Nelson Rockefel
ler, Ken Keating Rep Ken
neth B. Keating, GOP sena
torial candidate), and the
whole New York ticket at
both the national and state
levels are going to -win.''
The morning meeting was
scheduled late Thursday night
after considerable published
speculation that Rockefeller
was avoiding Nixon in at at
tempt to win votes by disasso
ciating himself from the na
tional administration. Harri
man charged Thursday night
that Rockefeller is "trying to
pretend he has nothing to do
with the Republican party . . .
Is he ashamed of being a Re
publican?" ,
Burns Woman
Killed in Wreck
Burns - (UPD - One woman
died and three other persons
were injured in a one-car ac
cident about 10 miles east of
here on Highway 78 late
Thursday.
Dead was Mrs. Catherine
Perkins, 56, Burns. Her
daughter and two grandchil
dren suffered minor injuries.
State police said Mrs. Per
kins, driver of the car, ap
parently lost control of the
vehicle and it rolled over.
She was dead on arrival at
a Burns hospital.
Harney county Deputy Cor
oner Bob Salladay said the
woman may possibly nave
suffered a heart attack. An
autopsy was planned.
Reaction Favorable
To Auto Price Tags
Washington - d'PD - The Na
tional Automobile association
has said customer reaction
has been "universally favor
able" to compulsory price tags
on new cars.
The association's executive
committee, opening a three-
day meeting here. Thursday,
said the requirement that
manufacturers' suggested re
tail prices be tagged on each
new car was "helping restore
customer confidence."
CANDLE
SiiTf
un-rci nencnon
in the same period of last
year.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York UPC Dow
Jones final stock .averages:
30 industrials 539.52. off
. 1.20; 20 railroads 147.76, up
0.74: 15 utilities 82.28, un
changed, and 65 stocks
186.91, off 0.05. Sales to
day were about 3,770,000
compared with 3,610,000
shares Thursday.
Today's prices on Elected
tocks:
Allied Chemical 90U
Alum Co Am ... -854
American Can. 50
American Motors 3134-
A T & T , ...194V4
Anaconda Copper 59
Armco Steel 64 Vi
Bendix Aviation 58 1 2
Bethlehem Steel 52
Boeing Air 54
Caterpillar Corp 87
Chrysler Corp .... .... 53 V4
Continental Can .... 58
Crown Zellerbach 55
Curtiss Wright 2"'s
Dow Chemical 67' 2
Du Pont v 1964
Eastman Kodak ..128
Firestone ...'. 102 1 A
General Electric 651s
General Foods 66
General Motors 48Vs
Georgia Pacific .. 43 W
Graham Paige 2
Greyhound .-. 16
Gulf Oil- :......116V4
Homestake Mining : 39 '-
Idaho' Power 4334
Kaiser Ind 13"js
Int Paper 114
Johns Manville 4812
Kennecott Copper ........ 97
Lockheed Aircraft 54
Katy Pfd ,66
Montgomery Ward 38Va
Natl Biscuit ; 47
New York Central 27V2
Pac Gas & Elec .. 56
Penney J C 972
Penn R R 16
Radio Corporation , 38
Richfield Oil ................... 86
Safeway ......:...:..-.'. .:: 334
Sears :.. 34
Shell Oil 8314
Socony Mobil Oil 48V4
Southern Co".... 33 12
Southern Co 57 Is
Standard California 54
Standard Indiana ... 47
Standard N J '..'..:.'.'..'.....'.. 57
Sun Mines .;. 814
Texas Gulf Sulfur r..... 22 Vs
Tex Pac Land Trust 15
Transamerica ; 26
Trans World Air ...... 14
Union Carbide ..i.........l 15
United Aircraft 61
UAL '31
U S Rubber - 444
U S Steel 85
Youngstow-n S & T .....-112 Vs
Portland Livestock
P o r 1 1 a n d-MUPI)Ca'ttle for
week 1900. Choice steers 26.75-28;
good 25.75r27; standard 24-26; util
ity 20-24; -mixed good-choice heif
ers 26-26.25: good 24.50-26; stand
ard 22.50-25; utility cows 11.50
13.50; canners-cutevs 15-16.50; util
ity bulls 23-24.75.
Calves for week 410. Choice veal
ers 32-34, one high choice 15; good
28-31; slaughter calves, good-choice
26-30; culls down to 14.
Hogs for week 2350. U.S. 1 and 2
butchers 20.50-21: mixed 19.50
20.50; sows 270-400 lb. 17.50-19.50.
Sheep for week 2925. Choice
wooled shorn slaughter lambs 85-1 10
lb. 20.50-21: good 19-20; feeders 17
19; ewes 3.50-9.50.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPD E g g s To re
tailers: Grade AA large. 48-50C doz.
A large, 45-47c; AA medium 38c;
A medium, 37c: AA smalls, 30-33c;
carton l-3c additional.
Butter To : retailers: AA and
Grade A prints, 67-6RC lb.; carton
lc higher; B prints, 65-66C.
Cheese medium cured To re
tailers: A grade cheddar single dai
sies. 39-51 c; , processed American
cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43c.
Farm Market
Name brand cartons of lettuce
sold within a 2.50-3.00 range to
day: California tomatoes were
higher with large at 2.50-2.75 a
lug; Williamette valley cabbage
sold at 2.75 for preferred sizes with
general range to retailers mostly
3.50-4. I
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?4-4 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: fiiyers, whole
drawn. 31 -35c lb.; cut up, 36-38c;
he ;, light types, cut up. 34-36c;
heavy type whole drawn. 39-41c.
Dressed Turkeys A grade young 1
nens. JUi-Jlc io. xo producers on
eviscerated basis; A grade young
toms 25c lb. eviscerated, 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,
3344i;, 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 Grain Prices:
f.o.b. Portland and Seattle, 28-30
ton with top quality to S32.
Wholesale prices as reported by
the USDA market news service:
Wheat. No. 2 soft white. S68.50 ton;
No. 2 Milo, Eatsern shipment, f.o.b.
Portland, S48: No. 2 white oats. 38
lb. West Coast delivery. S49-49.50
ton; No. 2 vallev oats, S48 ton; bar
ley. No. 2 West Coast delivery. S50
50.50; soybean meal, bulk. Eastern
shipment. S72.50 ton f.o.b. Port
land: - standard mill run. bulk,
prompt delivery f.o.b. Coast, S34
35: No. 2 corn. Eastern shipment,
f.o.b. Portland. S54.25-54.75; local
ly grown No. 2 corn S50-51 ton.
ROOM
Genuine Charcoal
Broiled Foods!
An especially good place
to eat if dieting!
5:30 P.m. tui 12:00
Sundays 4 p.m. till 11 p.m.
UNHallnwppn 1
Project Scheduled
By Local Groups
Medford service clubs, city
school leaders and members of
Medford ' chapter, Oregon
United Nations association,
are working this year to make
the annual UNICEF Hallow
een project more extensive
than in the past. -
. .The UNICEF project serves
a double purpose in that it
provides ' a constructive proj
ect for children on Halloween,
and at the same time is a
means of collecting money
for food and medicine for
children in under-privileged
countries. The schools are
used . as neighborhood head
quarters for 'the project, and
service clubs provide cider
and . doughnuts' for the chil
dren. Posters, tags and milk car
tons with the UNICEF stick
er in which the coins are col
lected by the children, will be
distributed to the schools' by
UN chapter workers. An ef
fort is being made to double
the number of children taking
part in the project.
It is stated that last year
many adults were ready with
small coins, but no UNICEF
spooks and . goblins came to
call. This year parents are
planning . to gather the chil
dren into carloads, pick up the
cartons and tags and then re
turn to their own neighbor
hoods to visit homes. In this
way it is thought all house
holders will be reached and
some not visited over and
over.
"All over the United States
parents and leaders have en
dorsed the. plan whereby
American children may turn
their efforts to aiding chil
dren of other countries who
are sick and hungry" accord
ing to Mrs. Marrs Gibbons,
UN chairman of the project.
Last year Oregon children col
lected 1,284,265 pennies
through the new "the trick is
to treat" Halloween project.
Over-fhe-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 Stork
Bid Asked
Bank of America 393i 42
Calif.-Pacific Utilities.. 31 2 33'i
Cascades Plywood 28 30 'i
Cons. Freightways 17'i 185s
Coico- .- 334 3d V
First National . Bank 50 'i 54
'Northwest Nat. Gas ., 16 V 17
Pacific Pwr. & Lt SB'a 3-
Permanente Cement 225g 24 'i
Portland Gen. Elec 25 U 26"a
U.S. National 69 74 'i
United Utilities 263.; 28 78
West Coast Tel. 21 '4 22 Vi
Weyerhaeuser 44 3 47
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
Aske4
14.53
20.34
23.73
16.15
14.91
. 11.52
13.81
8.92
12.40
10.30
8.00
17.60
10.68
9.75
13.53
18.61
12.83
14.15
13.41
13.66
5.88
14.75
Eullock 13.26
Chem Fund 18.81
Eaton Howard Stk 22.20
Fidelity .. 14.94
Gas ind . 13.04
Group Sec Avia .... 10.52
Group Sec Com Stk 12.61
Group bee tlec H.14
Group Sec Petr .. 11.32
Group Sec Steel 9.40
Group bee To Dae v.ju
KevstoneB-3 16.13
KevstoneB-4 9.78
Keystone K-l &S3
Kevstone K-2 12. 4U
KevstoneS-1 17.06
Keystone S-2 11.75
Keystone S-3 12.96
Mass Inv Tr 12.40
TV-Elec ., 12.53
Value Line Inc o.JB
Wellington 13.53
Kachina Room
. Highway 99 Phoenix, Oregon
Open 7 Days A Week Sundays 1 p.m. to 8 p.m.
FEATURING
Steak Sicilian 14v
With Mushrooms
Minestrone, Relish Tray
Mixed Green Salad
i Ice Cream and Coffee
Try Our
1 FLAMING PIZZA for
ALSO CHILD'S PLATES
Jacksonville Community Hall
SATURDAY NIGHT
' . . . MUSIC BY . . .
Dick Spain Bill Lively .
And The Rogue Valley Boys ,
Featuring The Best In Western Swing
... GUEST STARS ...
Deanne.. Abbot and .Barbara Kjlpatrick . .
Orthopedic Supplies
Store to Open Here
Formal opening of Medford
Orthopedic Supplies, 7 South
Riverside ave., will be held
Wednesday, "Oct. 29, from 9
a.m. fo . 5 p.m., according to
Jay . L. Goodman, manager
and part owner.
The store, only one of its
kind between here and Eu
gene, is equipped with ortho
pedic and surgical appliances
and has been supplying pa
tient needs for the past few
days, although the finishing
touches on redecorating the
property are not quite com
pleted. Wheel "chairs, walkers,
crutches, canes, hospital beds,
Hatfield Tells
Tax Opposition
Portland - (UPD - Mark Hat
field, the Republican candi
date for governor, told a Port
land audience Thursday, he is
opposed to any new types of
taxes in Oregon.
"Any new taxes tend very
strongly to become added
taxes and not just replace
ments for others." he said.
The 36-year-old secretary of
state declared that efficien
cies and modernization such
as he has instituted in his own
department could be made
"right across the board" in
the state administration. :
To attract more payrolls to
Oregon, Hatfield suggested a
capital gains provision in the
tax laws, a revision of what
he termed the "discrimina
tory" inventory tax and a pro
vision for small business
losses'. .
"These things are necessary
to be competitive with sister
states," he said.
' He also urged on his Port
land listeners that they elect
a state administration - that
would "not ally itself either
with labor or management or
any other group."- :
"It is tradition in Oregon,"
he declared "that we work
together as a team."
Pair To Make
Journey in Truck
Portland - 'UPD - Two men,
members of the Trails Club,
a hiking group, "will leave
for a cross-continent trip in a
one-ton truck fashioned to
carry the kitchen sink, Bill
Nordstrom,- 25, and John
Summerville, 26, of Pitts
burgh, Pa., were to begin the
jaunt about 1 p.m. today aft
er christening the truck.
The vehicle, which houses
bunks, stove and sink, was
designed by Nordstrom for
the trip which they hope will
take them through Mexico,
Central and South America.
The-young adventurers es
timate the journey will take
them -about 12 months.
Nordstrom said he has re
ceived many offers from
would-be companions. "There
are only two reactions to the
trip. People either think
we're crazy ' or they want to
go with us," he said.
SLAB
WOOD
' Green & Dry
Immediate Delivery
Phelps Fuel
PHONE SP 3-5878
two
$2
oo
S)25
a 0
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Friday, October 24, 1958 13
braces and suppor- and all
types of sick-room supplies
and equipment for both hos
pital and home use will be
available;. r '? . ;
The store,, now undergoing
renovation and . redecoratiori
includes, reception . and dis
play rooms, two-fitting rooms,
a supply room and workshop,
and an office. .
; The business resulted from
Goodman's experience in
World War II, when as phar
macist mate first class, lie as
sisted in orthopedic wards in
two California Naval . hospi
tals and aboard' ship for more
than three years.
' Following the war, he mov
ed from California to' Oregon,
attended Southern Oregon col
lege and bought a ranch near
Trail. Later he took a special
course in San Francisco, qual
ifying him as a surgical appli
ance technician.
: Goodman has been in busi
ness, in Medford for the past
10 yeaTs: For the past four
years he has . been employed
as merchandiser at Wain
scott's Pharmacy.'
BIST BUY!
S&H Green Stamps
Your Friendly Credit Jeweler
15 NORTH CENTRAL
'ffERES THE
at
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-4
. DEE FORBES
40 North Peach
Won Last Week
It May Be You
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DONALD O'CONNOR
in
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PLUS
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CHAPTER 14 ;
"THE IRON CLAW"
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This was the Man called.
UftJ
Staffing
JOCK
MAHONEY
GILBERT
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LINDA CRISTAl
IN EASTMAN
COLOR
CALL SP 3-7323
For Information about -Pictures
Playing and Tim
Schedules At Your Theatres
0m
b in
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Van HEFUN
Tab HUNTER
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9.
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