Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 07, 1958, Image 13

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    Soldier Held In Girl's Death
Oshkosh, Wis. - OB - Au
thorities -were due to arrive
here today with a young
AWOL soldier wanted for
questioning in the death of
Ruth Schmidt, 17, whose body
was found by hunters.
Vemon R. Dillman, 22,
waived extradition in Nebras
ka after he and another
AWOL soldier were arrested
while hitchhiking near Big
Springs, Neb.
Sheriff Charles Lowrie of
Winnebago county,' Wis., and
two deputies left Ogallala,
Neb., Friday with Dillman in
CANDLE
"'
Tuff
S27
iimti ncncnon
DANCE
WALKER'S
POPULAR
ENDS IIU'IFAM S SMASH
SAT.! ff"ffiSS-HITS!
I SAGA OF WESTERN B95epS I I
gun-iusticei cVE pCIJ
f3WT?l JT HUNTER I Tl III 3 'I
Qmm ib3 $sMS&l danc CLARK
Dr.w! JC SfK SR?!! "N COOPER
w'faJVLKJ NELSON
Wrier you greet eld friends and meet new friends!
THe NEWLY REORGANIZED ORCHESTRA
meet the hearty approval of the crowds.
Always a Pleasant Crowd
SNACK BAR SERVING REAL COFFEE
When There's Better Music, Walker Has It!
Gold Hill Grange Hall
. Saturday Nite
) Music by Vic Flood & the Rhythm Masters
everyone wcicomo
XSrVjCWk Room Free. Dining Room Op" Entire Evening
WOW
the Beautiful New
PING'S GARDEN
2330 N. Pacific Highway Ph. SP 3-6363
SERVING
.1 n r-rT
rneocdi
Chinese
89
mm
'and American
Dishes!
Family Style Chinese Dinner
For 2 Persons W
Chinese Soup BBQ Pork Spa re rib Appetizer Fried Wonton .
Almond Chicken Chow Mein Water Chestnut Chow Yuk
Fried Shrimp BBQ Pork Fried Rice Chinese Tea. Dessert,
Fortune Cookies and Ice Cream or Sherbet with Fortune Cookie.
o FEATURES
Banquet Room Large Dining Area
Comfortable Booths Lunch Counter
FREE PARKING
Open Daily 1 1 a.m. - 3 a.m. Fri. Sat. Till 4 a.m.
PING'S GARDEN
2330 N. Pacific Hiway 99 Phone SP 3-6363
custody. He was held on a
morals charge.
Lowrie said Dillman was
seen with the Schmidt girl in
Oshkosh on the night of Aug.
15. shortly before she disap
peared. Her body was found
by hunters last week
Dillman told Nebraska au
thorities he enlisted in the
Army under the name Jerry
Schefers about a month after
he left Oshkosh. He and his
companion, Joseph Honor, 17,
were stationed at Fort Carson,
Colo. Honor was turned over
to military authorities.
ROOM
Genuine Charcoal
Broiled Foods!
An especially good place
to eat if dieting!
5:30 P.m. n 12:00
Sundays 4 p.m. till 11 p.m.
SATURDAY
NIGHT
DREAMLAND
Everyone
""""'"Welcome! "
9 p.m. Till 1 a.m.
Beautiful
fgll
ilSt;
mm'
IO
Locals
Shed Damaged Roof of a
small shed at 810 Childer st.,
was damaged by fire about
3:05 p.m. yesterday, firemen
said. No cause was listed for
the fire. Residence at the
property was not occupied.
Orders Issued Eighteen
orders., or. recommendations
for removal of fire hazards
were issued by City Fire Mar
shal Truman Nelson yester
day. He inspected two busi
ness occupancies, a building
of public assembly, two bulk
storage plants, a hotel and a
liquid petroleum gas installa
tion. .
Obituaries
ALDEN IRA BROOKS
Alden Ira Brooks, 70, of
41V2 Fairmont ave., died this
morning in a local hospital.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Conger-Morris,
funeral directors.
MRS. ANNA G. BENGTSON
Funeral services - for Mrs.
Anna G. Benetson. 84. of 16
Newtown st., Medford, who
died in St. Louis. Mo.. Nov. 4.
will be held Saturday, Nov.
8, at 2:30 p.m. in Denver. The
services will be held at Huf
man Mortuary. 601 Broad
way ave., with interment in
the family plot at the Fair
mont cemetery, Denver.
Family members have ask
ed that persons wishing to
send flowers should send them
to the mortuary in Denver.
DADE R. TERRETT
Dade R. Terrett, about 73,
formerly of Medford, died at
his home in Santa Monica,
Calif., Wednesday. He oper
ated a cleaning establishment
while living in Medford.
Survivors include his wi
dow, Hazel; two sisters, Mrs.
C. S. McErale, Grand Forks,
N.D., and Mrs. C. O. Fay,
Minneapolis; a daughter,
Dorothy Kelley, Santa Moni
ca, Calif., and a son, Jack Ter-
ret, Detroit, Mich.
Funeral services are sched
uled in Santa Monica Satur
day. HARRY M. SMITH
Harry M. Smith, 65, of
1648 Orchard Home dr., died
at his home Wednesday after
a long illness.
Mr. Smith was born in De
catur, 111., Dec. 18, 1893. He
came to Jackson county in
December. 1927, and spent
most of the following years
in the Sams Valley and Cen
tral Point areas, where he
was an orchardist.
He is survived by his wife,
Evalina; three sons, Melvin
Smith, Astoria; Ray Smith,
Central Point; Ralph Smith,
Redmond; one daughter, Mrs.
Marie Downs, San Francisco;
13 grandchildren; two neph
ews and two nieces.
Funeral services "will be
held at Litwiller's Mt. View
chapel, Ashland, at 10 a.m.
Monday, Nov. 10. The Rev.
R. H. Mathewson will offici
ate. Interment will be in
Ashland cemetery.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPIt E g g s To re
tailers: Grade AA large, 48-51C
doz.; A large. 45-47c; AA medium
38-39; A medium, 37-38. AA smalls
30-34c; carton l-3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA and
Grade A prints. 67-68e lb.; carton
lc higher; B prints, 65-66c.
Cheese medium cured To re
cents a pound with smalls down
sies. 39-5 lc; processed American
cheese. 5-lb. loaf 40-43c.
Farm Market
No. 1 grade jumbo sized onions
sold inside the early market at
mostly 2-2.25 in 50 lb. bags today;
Hubbard squash sold at 3' it to 3
the USDA market news service:
to l',2C
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.. 16c; 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. 32-35C lb.; cut up, 37-40C;
hens, light types, cut up, 34-36c;
heavy type whole drawn, 39-41C.
Dressed Turkeys A grade young
hens. 30c lb. to producers on evis
cerated basis: A grade young toms
25i lb eviscerated, young hens to
retailers, mostly 40-43c lb. on an
oven-ready basis; A grade toms, 34
38c depending upon weight.
Rabbits (average to growers,
f.o.b. killing plants) Live white.
34-V2 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:
New crop No. 2 green alfalfa,
baled, f.o.b. Portland and Seattle,
$28-30 ton with top qaulity to $32.
Wholesale Prices as reported by
the USDA market news service:
Wheat. No. 2 sotf white. $69 ton;
No. 2 Milo. Eastern shipment, f o b.
Portland. $49.50: No. 2 white oats.
35-lb. West Coast delivery. $50-50
ton: No. 2 valley oats, $48-48.50
ton; barley. No. 2 West Coast de
livery. S50-50.51: soybean meal.
Wheat, No. 2 soft white, $69 ton;
f.o.b. Portland: standard mill run,
bulk, prompt delivery, f.o.b. Coast,
$34-34.50; No. 2 corn, Eastern ship
ment, f.o.b. Portland, S54.50-55; lo
cally grown No. 2 corn $52 ton.
Kachina Room
Highway 99 Phoenix, Oregon
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK SUNDAYS 1 P.M. TO 8 P.M.
SPECIAL FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY
ROAST TURKEY $000
Dressing and All the Trimmings
TRY OUR DELICIOUS FLAMING PIZZA
ALSO CHILD'S PLATE
i
yj v, 4v
' ' ' Wis r
ZJ "" &Sr I i ' w i I
&Vw 1 -Ay
JUBILATION A joyous Nelson Rockefeller embraces
a GOP party worker after hearing that Averell Harriman,
his opponent in the New York state gubernatorial race,
had conceded the election to Rockefeller. Rockefeller's
election was one of the few bright spots for the GOP as
Democratic victories swept the nation.
Market Irregular
On Profit
New York -UPD- Week end
profit taking brought irregu
larity into .the stock market
today. Late in the fifth hour
selling increased with steels
meeting some pressure. Check
er. Motors fell nearly two
points.
Some of the rails encoun
tered" selling and the alumi
nums were dragged down by
Bad Forestry
Practice Charged
Salem-IUPD-Small woodlands
are producing only 50 per
cent of their capacity due to
bad forestry practice, J. Her
bert Stone, Portland, regional
forester of the U.S. Fbrest
Service told a group of Ore
gon farm foresters here Thurs
day. Stone said that . the low
productivity was of vital im
portance since 60 per cent of
all commercial forest lands
in the United States are in
small ownerships.
Paul Erb, Molalla, repre
senting the Clackamas Coun
ty Farm Forestry association,
told the group there should
be closer cooperation between
the State Game commission
and the State Forestry depart
ment in controlling hunter
activity during hazardous fire
periods.
Investment Funds
Noon Quotations on select
ed funds supplied by the Med
ford Branch of Foster & Mar
shall, Members New York
Stock Exchange.
Fund
Bullock
Chem Fund
Eaton Howard Stk ..
Fidelity
Gas Ind
Group Sec A via ....
Group Sec Com Stk
Group Sec Elec
Group Sec Petr .
Group Sec Steel
Group Sec Tobae ..
Keystone B-3 .
Keystone B-4 ...
Keystone K-l .
Keystone K-2
Keystone S-l
Keystone S-2
Keystone S-3
Mass Inv Tr .
TV-Elec t v
Value Line Inc
Wellington
Bid Asked
12.89 14.13
19.41 20.98
22.79 24.36
15.40 16.65
13.85 15.14
10.50 11.50
12.38 13.56
8.45 9.26
11.39 12.47
9.65 10.59
7.16 7.85
16.23 17.71
9.89 10.80
8.99 9.81
12.69 13.96
17.60 120
11.62 12.68
13.25 14.46
12.83 13.87
12.43 13.55
5.41 5.91
13.81 15.05
Over-ihe-Counler .
Western Stocks
The following bid and
asked prices on selected West
ern securities, provided by
the Medford branch office of
Pacific Northwest Company,
are unofficial and do not rep
resent actual transactions,
but are intended as a guide to
the approximate price range.
Common Stocks
Bank of America
Calif.-Pacific Utilities
Cascades Plywood
Cons. Freightways
Copco
First National Bank ....
Northwest Nat. Gas
Pacific Pwr. & Lt
Permanente Cement...
Portland Gen. Elec...
U. S. National aBnk ..
United Utilities
West Coast Tel.
Weyerhaeuser
Bid
39's
31'
27'
173,
33!,
31
163,
37's
23 3i
25'2
69i
27".
2U
43 3 4
Asked
42'.
33 U
29 Sj,
18 2
35's
54 '2
172
39' 4
25
27'i
7434
29 '4
22i2
4634
Taking
weakness in Alcoa. Boeing
was a loser in the aircrafts.
Eastman softened late in the
session in the chemicals. U. S.
Steel slipped in the steels and
General Motors in its section.
Autombile issues generally
were narrowly irregular. Fire
stone fell more than two. in
the tires. American Home
Products was a loser in the
drugs.
Today"s prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 9414
Alum Co Am 86
American Can 48
American Motors 33
AT&T 196
Anaconda Copper 59
Armco Steel 65ls
Bendix Aviation 65
Bethlehem Steel 51
Boeing Air 52
Caterpillar Corp 92V-
Chrysler Corp 52
Continental Can 59
Crown Zellerbach 56
Curtiss Wright ...... 27
Dow Chemical ... 73 Vz
Du Pont 199
Eastman Kodak 13314
Firestone 2V2
General Electric 69
General Foods 69 Vz
General Motors (xd) 50
Georgia Pacific 47V4
Graham Paige 2
Greyhound (xd) 16
Gulf Oil . 123
Homestake Mining 39V2
Idaho Power 44
Kaiser Ind 13
Int Paper 121
Johns Manville 40
Kennecott Copper 98Vz
Lockheed Aircraft 54
Katy Pfd 66
Montgomery Ward 39
Nat'l Biscuit .-. 49
New York Central 28Vs
Gas & Elec 59'4
Penney, J.C 98V4
Penn RR I614
Radio Corporation 40
Richfield Oil' 90
Safeway, 34V4
Sears 35V4
Shell Oil 83 Vfc
Socony Mobil Oil 48
Southern Co 33
Southern Pacific , 58
Standard California 56
Standard Indiana . . 48
Standard N. J 59
Sun Mines 8
Texas Gulf Sulfur 24
Tex Pac Land -Trust .... 15
Transamerica 30
Trans World Air 15
Tri-Continental 39
Union Carbide ..119Vi
Union Pacific . 32
United Aircraft ... 64
U. A. L 32
U. S. Rubber 44i2
U. S. Steel 87
Youngstown S & T 118
features
O
Alfred E.
Rotten
f? (1(1 O
The P J) I"! VV
Need Seen for
Curriculum Change
Salem-UPD-Dr. Gerald Wal
lace, superintendent of Cor
vallis schools, told a two-day
conference on secondary edu
cation here Thursday that
there was a need for strength
ening and changing the cur
riculum of Oregon schools.
But he said "we're not just
going to educate the best and
shoot the rest."
Oregon schools will be
faced with the challenge in
the next 10 years of restoring
respect for learning, he said,
adding that unless this respect
is restored "we will surely
sink into mediocrity."
Wallace said that teachers
must be relieved of teaching
subjects that do not contribute
to real learning, so that they
can improve current cur
riculum. Wallace said there was a
definite need for better sci
ence, mathematics and lan
guage instruction, but that
many students who couldn't
cope with such courses also
must be educated to perform
useful tasks.
MOLOTOV MAKES SPEECH
Tokyo DPD Soviet Ambas
sador to Mongolia Vyacheslav
M. Molotov, ousted Kremlin
leader, spoke at October rev
olution ceremonies in Ulan
Bator Thursday night, the
Communist New China News
Agency reported today. It said
Molotov said "the perfect
unity of the socialist coun
tries was manifesting itself
most .convincingly in the
struggle against revisionism
and imperialism.
TAKE OVER THEATER
Brussels (UPD The Belgian
government has decided to
take over the U. S. theater at
the Brussels World Fair which
closed on Oct. 19, it was an
nounced Thursday night.
Why Not Have Dinner at The
OREGON INN
South of Caveman Bridge Grants Pass
Before Ihe Football Game Tonight
Featuring
Fried Chicken on the Smorgasbord
PLCS
Complete Dinners With or Without Smorgasbord
Open 7 Days a Week 7 A.M. to 10 P.M.
, PHONE GR 9-9252
FIREMAN'S
5)
Saturday Night
Jacksonville
Community Hall
MUSIC BY
Dick Spain -Bill Lively
And The Rogue Valley Boys
Featuring Th Best In Western Swing
ADMISSION - $1.00 PER PERSON
Sponsored By
Jacksonville Volunteer Fire Dept.
"Trick r Tunesmiths"
EVERY
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Neuman Says: "My Hi-Fi Records Sound
after listening to Trick's Tunesmiths"
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Cloudy
with rain tonight. Showers Satur
day. Low tonight 52. High Satur
day 60.
Western Oregon : Rain tonight.
Showers and partial clearing Sat
urday. Low tonight 44-50. High
Saturday 52-58.
Northern California: Mostly fair
tonight and Saturday ex-ept some
light rain extreme north portion
Saturday and fog or low clouds on
on coast. Little temperature
change.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
56: above normal 9.
Record high this date 68 in 1941.
Record low this date 26 in 1935.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, .08 inch. Midnight to 10
ajn., .01 inch.
Total this month M inch, 28
inch below normal.
Total since Sept. 1, .90 inch, 2.14
inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
77 "Tc highest this a.m. 99.
Hirh 4:09 24-
City Yester- a.m. nr.
day Low Prec.
Brookina 58 56 1.60
Crater Lake . 43 32 1.83
Grants Pass 63 52 .14
Klamath Falls 58 42 ' T
MEDFORD 59 54 .09
Portland 63 . 41 .18
Seattle ...
Spokane
60 43 .04
54 34
Yakima
58
34
Eureka 63 59 .13
Red Bluff 82 57
Sacramento 77 53
San Francisco 71 54
Los Angeles 82 60
Phoenix 82 53
Denver . 58 39
Chicago 50 34
Miami 83 , 75
New York 63 46
Washington, D.C. 61 47
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
(Through Nov. 12):
Western Oregon-Western "Wash
ington Recurring rain with total
precipitation heavier than normal
in western Washington, near nor
mal in western Oregon, averaging
1-2 inches on coast .5-1 inch over
interior. Temperatures near nor
mal western Washington with highs
50-58. above normal western Ore
gon with highs mostly 55-65. Lows
40-50.
Northern California Occasional
rain in north portion. Tempera
tures near or above nomal.
PUBLISHER DIES
Chicago JPD wfrliam E.
Hutchinson, 70, for the past
10 years executive vice presi
dent and secretary of Corn
Belt Publishers, died Thurs
day in Wesley Memorial hospital.
All
f MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Friday, November 7. 19t 13
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPI) Cattle for week
2400. Choice steers mostly 27
2T.T5; good 26-27: standard 24
2655; mixed good-choice heifers
26.25-26.50; good 25-26: standard
23-25: u t i 1 i t y-commercial cows
7.50-20. commercials up to 21; util
ity bulls 23-25.
Calves for week 425. Choice
vealers 31-33.50: good 28-31: good
choice slaughter calves 26.50-29:
cull-Utility 14-20. good-choice stock
ster calves 26-29.
Hogs for week 2600. U.S. 1 and 2
butchers 20-20.25. few 20.50; mixed
19-19.75; heavy and light butchers
18.50-19. few above 270 lb. down
to 17.50; sows 16.50-17.
Sheep for week 1800. Choice
woolcd and shorn slaughter lambs
85-109 lb. 20-20.50 late: good 19
20; feeders good-choice 17-19: ewes
4-9.
ANDY'S
BEST BUY!
S&H Green Stamps
ANDY'S
Your Friendly Credit Jeweler
15 NORTH CENTRAL
Tonite & Saturday Only
ESTHER WILLIAMS
jeff CHANDLER
'"-KT" COLOR
CO-FEATURE
THE
SAGA OF
HEMP BROWN
TONITE SATURDAY
ONLY
WONDROUS
0CfTAni
nr tnur.
ur junu i-
AND ADVENTURE! '
e-ai em. jm m r 'kev-
A WU
Man
tmasnit
trie Secret
of trte
Atysteriou
East!
diamonds Xei I M
71
- PLUS -
il'ilLiuWijT' 1 AUDI E .
V fj'1l Mill I MURPHY
wr. iJ33 GIA SCAL"
"" SAM JAFFE
. El K0
FOOD SALE
Heme Appliance Store
115 East Main St.
Saturday, Nor. 8
Starting at '9:00 a.m.
Sponsored by.
Siskiyou District
Federated Garden Clubs
CMMP
2tltKtS lilt
1
FREE! FREE!
ANOTHER
WONDER HORSE
?Y s "i :lW
7-
DENNIS TOOMEY
714 Park St.
Won Last Week
It May Be You This Week
PAUL DOUGLAS
JANET LEIGH
"ANGELS Ifl THE
OUTFIELD"
PLUS
CARTOON CARNIVAL
and
CHAPTER 1
OF A BRAND NEW '
SERIAL
"WILD BILL
HICKOK"
THEATRE
INFORMATION SERVICE
CALL SP 3-7323
FOR FULL INFORMATION '
ABOUT YOUR THEATRES ;
MTU nnnr nwrnm
MA CAR IDM)J
TONITE & SATURDAY
FINE
FEATURES
i WALT DISNEY'S
PLUS
ut and Hot hi the Soatk Sees I
2Wl
ION KJU1
JOHN CARMDME '
PLUS
BILL WILLIAMS COLEEN GRAY
TONlf E & SATURDAY
Continuous from
1 p.m. Saturday
COLOR
byOLui
CinemaScopG !
AN DC)
SO YAMAMURA
r
mm
tw:
f 1
1 n
ran
m Song oft
phe South