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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1958)
Local and Grange Plans Cane The Upper Applegate Grange has announced plans for a Thanks giving dance at the Upper Applegate Grange hall Thurs day, Nov. 27. Odor Investigated-Firemen investigated a reported gas odor around the fireplace at the R. D. Marshall home, 2000 Woodlawn dr., yesterday. They found no odor of gas or moke but said that burning material in the fireplace might have been the cause. Orders Issued - City Fire Marshal Truman Nelson is sued seven orders for correc tion of fire hazards yesterday. He inspected three business occupancies and investigated one complaint in a residential area. One private dwelling was inspected at the request of the owner. Postpone Bataar-The ba zaar which the Salvation Army Home league had planned for today will be held tomorrow, Nov. 2Z, it was an- rnounced this morning. The f postponement was made nec essary by a conflict in dates. The bazaar will open at 10 a.m., luncheon will be served from 11:30 ajn. until 1:80 p.m. and pie and coffee will be served shoppers during the afternoon for a nominal fee. Featured at the bazaar will be fancy work, baby clothes and baked foods. Births SCHULTZ-To Mr. and Mrs Walter, 2014 Buckshot rd.f Medford, Nov. 20. 1958, a girl, 534 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. HAYS-To Mr. and Mrs Robert W., 2595 Stewart ave., Medford, Nov. 21, 1958, a boy, 7V4 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. ADAMS-To Mr. and Mrs. Billy Ray, route 1, box SUB, Central Point, Nov. 21, 1958, a girl, 814 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. Barrymore Scion Sentenced To Jail Malibu. Calif. - (UPD - Actor John Barrymore Jr., 26, son of the late great profile,, was sentenced to a three-day jail term Thursday for driving 90 miles an hour in a 45-mile-an-hour speed zone. ' Justice Clarence M. Mc Dougall passed sentence after Barrymore pleaded guilty to the charge arising from his arrest for speeding Oct. 21. EX-INSURANCE MAN DIES Upper Montclair, N.J. -(TJPD Alexander B. Grant, 76, at one time United States man ager of the Thames and Mer sey Marine Insurance co., Ltd., died Wednesday after a short illness. TONITE & SATURDAY WESTERN HITS! MSUUK COt0t SCOTT BRADT AM BANCROFT THURSDAY - FRIDAY r 6 P.M. lo 2 A.M. (Your FXrirrvefd,eshmcnts Home Made Apple Pie for Dessert FISH & CHIPS With Toast. Salad and Coffee- PIONEER CAFE CENTRAL Personal Son Born Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Frink, Idaho Falls, Ida., are parents of a son born Nov. 19 in Idaho Falls. The child weighed 6 pounds, 10 ounces and has been nam ed Michael Ray Frink. Frink is the son of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Frink, 1654 Thomas rd- Medford; this is the couple's first child and the Frink's first grandchild. Birth Announced-Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Canfield, Klam ath Falls, are parents of a son born Nov. 15. Thej child, third born to the couple, weighed 5 pounds, 9 ounces and has been named William Fay Canfield. Mrs. Canfield, the former Zelda Gay of Med ford, is a daughter of C. G. Gay, 600 Mary place, and a granddaughter of Mrs. Syrena Gay, 522 Bessie st. Obituaries BERTHA A. McGRATH . Mrs. Bertha Allena Mc- Grath, 79, of route 4, box 459, Medford, died in a local hos pital Wednesday. She was born in Phoenix, Ore., Oct. 16, 1879, and has been a resident of this area for the past 40 years. Mrs. McGrath is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Cath erine Goodwyn, Medford; two sons, Charles Edward. Mc Grath and James Bernard McGrath, both of Medford; one granddaughter, a great grandson, one step - grand daughter and one niece. Funeral services will be held at Sacred Heart Catho lic church Monday at 9 a.m. The Rev. John Ilg will offi ciate. Recitation of the Holy Rosary will be at Perl Funeral home Sunday at 8 pjn. Burial will be in the Medford IOOF cemetery. THOMAS M. REEDER Thomas Matthew Reeder in fant son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J.; Reeder died at a local hospital yesterday. Funeral services will be held at the graveside in Siski you Memorial park Saturday morning at 10 o'clock. The Rev. John Reynolds of the First Presbyterian church will officiate. Perl funeral home is in charge of arrangements. MRS. JACKIE ADAMS Mrs. Jackie Adams, 28, died this morning at her home in the Plaza apartments. Funeral arrangements will be an nounced by Conger - Morris, funeral directors. HUBERT SAUVAGEAU A requiem mass for Hubert Sauvageau, 69, of 2294 Coro na ave., Medford, who died Tuesday, will be offered by the Rev. John Ilg Saturday at 10 a.m. at Sacred Heart Cath olic church. Recitation of the Holy Rosary will be at Con ger-Morris Funeral home Fri day at 7:30 p.m. Interment will be in the Siskiyou Memo rial park. Mr. Sauvageau was born April 21, 1889, in Wildrice, N.D. On June 23, 1913, at Gaylord, N.D- he was mar ried to Miss Mabel Giumont, who survives. Mr. Sauvageau had worked for the U.S. government for 16 years. He retired eight years ago and came to Med ford seven years ago. He was a member of Sacred Heart Catholic church of Medford. Other survivors include one son, Cecile Sauvageau, of Portland; . two sisters, Mrs Ludovica Trottier, Fargo, NJD., and Mrs. Annette Riv- ard, Fargo, N.D., and two grandchildren. Court Records DISTRICT COURT Samuel M. Parkey. passing with insuiiiciem clearance. $13. John Wesley Kerns, overload S33. Joseph D. Wickham, overload, $21.30. James E. George, overload. $137. Oscar W. Swanson. improper ngnu, iu. CIRCUIT COURT Nadine Moschos vs. Charles C. Moschos, divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATION Louis David Weide. 431 Wilson rd.. Central Point, and Oletha Joy iuangrum, iroject city, calif. Specializing FRIED chicken: $j00 Dinner IT SATURDAY & SUNDAY 75 POINT CENTRAL POINT PTA Meeting Br DORIS HUGHES Central Points The Crater High school Parent Teachers association will meet Nov. 24 at 8 p.m. in the cafetorium of the school. Helen Caster, Crater High school publicity chairman, re ported two meetings recently in connection with the school. The budget committee met at the school Nov. 12. On the evening of Nov. 18, Roy Hend ry, PTA president, held an executive meeting. Delmar Smith of Scenic ave. wag elected president of the Oregon State Bee Keepers as siciation at the convention Nov. 14 and 15 in Portland. Roy Sires of Hermiston was elected vice president. The Crater Grandmothers club met Nov. 17 at the home of Mrs. D. R. Hendrickson of Merriman rd. A dessert lunch eon was served by the hostess with Mrs. Millie Johnson and Mrs. Cordie Burns acting as cohostesses. Mrs. W. J. Geb hard, president, presided. Mrs. Carl Hover, chaplain, read a poem and led in prayer. A report was made of the Con ger Morris Mortuary tour. Some of the ladies' husbands accompanied the group on the tour. Seventeen people attended making a substantial increase in the club's treasury. Mrs. Harry Barnes was welcomed as a new member. The group decided to re member some lonely grand mothers instead of exchanging gifts at the December meeting. The mystery package was won by Mrs. Millie Johnson. En tertainment consisted of Thanksgiving games and po ems. The next meeting will be Dec. 15 at the home of Mrs. W. J. Gebhard, 4978 Gebhard rd., Central Point. The Roxy Ann Gem and Mineral club met Nov. 12 at the Crater Rock Museum on Scenic ave., Central Point. Co hosts and hostesses were Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Weidman and Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Tay lor. Approximately 60 people attended the meeting. Refresh ments of doughnuts-and cof fee were served. The Theta Rho Girls club of Central Point held a slumber party Nov. 7 at the IOOF hall on Pine st. They met at the hall at 6:30 and from there went to Medford where they attended the movies. When the girls returned to the hall, Patty Kime and Sandy Ren frow made fudge. The girls played records, danced, and sang, accompanied on the pi ano byPatty Kime. At midnight they roasted hot dogs on the barbecue grill. Mary Elin Burkhart made taffy and Karen Renfrow popped corn The majority of Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Valley fog tonight and Saturday morning. Variable high' cloudiness above fog. Little temperature change. Low tonight 38. High Friday 55. Western Oregon: Mostly cloudy or foggy tonight and Saturday with sunny periods Saturday after noon. A little drizzle in foggy areas during late night and early morn ing hours. Cooler north portion to night. Low tonight 36-44. High Sat urday 48-58. Northern California: Tair tonight and Saturday except fog on north coast. Local fog in coastal valleys early Saturday morning. Little temperature change. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 48: above normal 5. Record high this date 67 in 1924. Record low this date 16 in 1929. PRICIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, trace. Midnight to 10 ajn.. none. Total this month 1.62 inches, .10 inch below normal. Total since Sept. 1. 2.32 inches, 1.96 inches below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 74, highest this a.m. 100. High 4:30 24- Ctty Tester- a.m. nr. day Low Pree. Brooking. 63 52 20 Crater Lake 48 31 Grants Pass 63 41 Klamath Falls 34 31 MEDFORD 57 36 Portland 61 54 Seattle Spokane Yakima . 58 53 60 49 44 38 .20 .03 Eureka Red Bluff - 9 47 70 39 61 43 Sacramento . San Francisco 69 47 Los Angeles 80 60 Phoenix 74 65 53 79 49 32 36 72 47 43 Denver Chicago Miami Beach New York 58 Washington, D.C. 63 FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through Nov. 26): - Western Oregon-Western Wash i n g t o n Temperatures averaging above normal with highs 48-58 and lows 38-48. Precipitation heavier than normal, occurring mostly the first part of next week. Total rain fall 1-2 inches over interior, 2-3 inches on coast. - Northern California A da- ' or two of rain likely in north portion latter half of period. Otherwise no precipitation. Temperatures near normal. , CHINESE and A a . -ft -twCw Open Daily 1 1 a.m. - 3 PING'S 2330 N. Pacific Hiway Scheduled the girls stayed up until 7 ajn. when hot chocolate and sweet rolls were served. Attending- were Mary Elin Burkhart, Rosalie Wilson, Sandy Renfrow, Patty Kime, Judy Wilson, Karen Renfrow, Glenda Branch, Joan La Casse, Pat Branch, Julia Thomason and Wayna Brown. Mrs. John Robison, the advis or, and Mrs. Martin Johnson, the assistant advisor, chape roned the affair. The Crater High school Fu ture Farmers of America held their annual barn dance Fri day in the Crater vocational agriculture shop. The dance is one of Crater's largest social events of the year. Doris Owens was announc ed as being FFA Chapter Sweetheart for the 1958-59 school year. For the corona tion ceremonies, in keeping with the FFA theme, the huge throne was made up of shin ing bales of straw. An FFA Chapter Sweetheart jacket and a bouquet of red roses were presented to Miss Owens. Mike Redmond made the pre sentation. The room for the barn dance was decorated with colored streamers. The lighting arrangement consist ed of strings of tiny lights. Dolen Roberts and The Star Dusters, a Western band, pro vided the music. A box social was held dur ing the intermission. Don Den ning, chapter reporter, acted as auctioneer. The attendance at the dance was estimated at 90. Chairmen for the dance were Mike Redmond, refresh ments; Curt Payne, decora tion; LeRoy Chastain, tickets; Bill White, Gary Dusenberry and Don Denning, publicity; and Ron Ross, general chair man. As a publicity stunt, the day of the barn dance was de clared "Western Day" at Cra ter High school. - A prize was given for the best dressed "Western Cou ple" and many of the students participated in the fun. Mike Redmond and Virginia Mun day were selected to win the prize, which was free tickets to the barn dance. David Foote, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Foote, Central Point, received second place representing Crater High school FFA at the South West ern Area Soil Conservation Public Speaking co ntest which was held at Crater High school Thursday. Scott Redding of Illinois Valley Union High " school FFA won first place. Both boys spoke on the most val uable natural resource in Ore gon the forest. The winner will receive an expense paid trip to Baker, where he will speak in the State contest. The first FFA parliamen tary practice of the year was held last-Thursday. The boys will participate in the Dis trict Parliamentary Contest to be held at Phoenix in Janu ary. Nine schools compose the district. They are Grants Pass, Illinois Valley, Phoenix, Eagle Point, Roseburg, Myrtle Point, acific High school at ort Orford, Marshfield and Crater High school. Although only six boys will be named to the team, more than. 18 participate in the practice. The only boys pres ent at the practice who were on the team last year were John Caster, a junior, and Don Denning, a sophomore. The chairman of the team will be selected later in the year. Last year the team won sec ond place at the state contest in Bend with George Gilman, Allan Barnes, Bob Licti, Da vid Mack, Caster and Denning representing Crater. The win ner of the district contest will be entered in the sectional contest to be held in the spring. The purpose of the parliamentary team in the FFA program is to give the boys a knowledge of parlia mentary law and to develop a more active chapter. The Green Hand initiation program of the Crater FFA will be held Monday, Dec. 1, at 8 p.m. in the Crater High school cafetorium. The 51 Ag ricultural I students will be come members of the FFA and be eligible to participate in the program of the chapter. Among the activities, of the chapter are parliamentary procedure, public speaking, band, talent groups, TV and radio programs, newspaper, AMERICAN DISHES! SPECIAL Merc1311!' Lunch fyfJ served 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dinner 4 p.m.-3 a.m. We Serve Family Orders and Orders to Take Out! a.m. Fri. Sat. Till 4 a.m. GARDEN 99 - Phone SP 3-6363 Three Join Nuclear Power Experiment Portland-(U?D-Two big pri vate power companies here said today they have joined with 44 utilities in sponsoring a plan to design and build an experimental nuclear power plant which they called a big step in gaining economic elec tricity from the atom. Portland General Electric and Pacific Power and Light said they were joining in a proposal submitted to the Atomic Energy commission for development of a plant which would utilize a high temperature, gas-cooled and graphite moderated nuclear reactor. The new plant would pro duce $40,000 kilowatts of electricity and be located in the east on the system of the Philadelphia Electric com pany. GN Diesel Units Dive Info Washout Skykomish, Wash.-flJPD-The first two units of a Great Northern diesel engine, pull ing a 30-car freight train, plunged into a washout near here Thursday night. The washout was caused when a rock and mud slide took out a 28-foot bridge near here. The engineer and fire men were in the first unit of the engine when it made its plunge, but escaped injury. They returned to one of the three units remaining on the track and backed the train into Skykomish. . ' Great Northern crews were rushed to the scene following the incident and a road spokesman said that the track would be repaired by mid morning. County Clerks Elect Officers Portland-ttJPB-Ralph Shind ler of Benton county Thurs day was elected president of the Oregon County Clerks and Recorders association. Other officers include Charles DeLap, Klamath coun ty, vice president; Jack Beel er, Yanmhill county, treasur er, and Marjorie Martirt, Wal lowa county, secretary. The association approved resolution asking the 1959 legislature to take clerks and recorders jobs out of politics and put them on a non-partisan basis. HAUNTED SHIP Auckland, New Zealand-(UPD Magistrate R. M. Grant today refused to allow British sea man Brian Bishop to remain in New Zealand despite his testimony that he skipped ship because he saw ghosts on it. UNDRESSED TRUANT ' London -4UM1- A magistrate freed Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hayter of a charge of failing to send their young son to school regularly when Mrs, Hayter testified the boy re fused to get up and dress in the morning. skills contest, record books, supervised farming projects and many special activities. W8ZSL V ij pit V3UIU mil i range nan Saturday Nite Music by Vie Flood & the Rhythm Masters Check Rom Free. DAHCEST WALKER'S DREAOLAIID t - - ... . . DM Jacksonville Community Hall SATURDAY NIGHT ... MUSIC BY . . . Dick Spa in B ill Lively And The Rogue Valley Boys Featuring The Best In Western Swing LOTS OF FUN FOR EVERYONE Stock Prices Drop In Quieter New York -flIPD Stocks de clined in quieter trading in the week end session today. . Lacking new developments in the news to push prices higher, - the trading element elected to take profits here and there in the list. At the same time there was selective buying in special issues and isolated stocks of the - major groups. Tobacco shares met fairly good demand on their recent higher earnings reports, some dividend increases and more anticipated. Strength also was noted in individual issues of the building, amusement, chemical, beverage, electron ic, and oil groups. Steels, motors, most of the oils, chemicals, and televisions receded. Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical 9VA Alum Co Am 85V4 American Can 52 American Motors 33 Vi AT&T 198 Anaconda Copper 61V Armco Steel 65 Bendix Aviation 64 Bethlehem Steel ........... 491,4 Boeing Air 51V4 Caterpillar Corp. 90V Chrysler Corp. S2V Continental Can S7Vz Crown Zellerbach 58 Vs Curtiss Wright .'.. 2734 Dow Chemical .... 74 Du Pont ......200Vi Eastman Kodak 134V4 Firestone 117V. General Electric 70 Vi General Foods 74 General Motors ... 47 Georgia Pacific 451. Graham Paige .. 2 Greyhound -16 Gulf Oil 120 Homestake Mining ... 42 Idaho Power 44 Kaiser Ind 13 Int Paper ...115 Johns Manville 50V Kennecott Copper IOOVb Lockheed Aircraft 59 Katy Pfd 64 Montgomery Ward 41 Nat'l Biscuit 51 ttew York Central 27 Pac Gas & Elec. 61 Vz Penney, J. C 107 PennRR..; 16 Radio Corporation 40 Richfield Oil .. 97 Safeway 35 Sears . 37 Shell Oil ... 79 Socony Mobil Oil 48 Southern Co 35 Southern Pacific 60 Standard California 59 Standard Indiana 46 Standard N. J 59 Sun Mines 8 Texas Gulf Sulfur 23 GOES TOO SLOW Los Angeles (UPD Actor Steve McQueen, a former race driver, was acquitted Thurs day of driving 'his speedy sports car "too slow" on the Hollywood freeway. He ex plained he could only go 39 miles an hour because of en gine trouble. AIRLINER TEST RUN London -(UPD- A Russian TU104 jet airliner has left Moscow for Cairo on the first test run of a new service, Ra dio Moscow said Thursday. Everyone. Welcome! 9 p.m. Till 1 a.m. Beautiful n ' Li. 1 1 - Ivary.il Waleame Dining Roam Om" Entire fvenint For a Pleasant Evening ind a Good Time for all Home of Good Music and Refined Dancing on one of the best floors in Southern Oregon. Where Old and New Friends Meet. Our 30th year.. . 417 East Main Me.fora, Oreeen - SNACK BAR SERVING REAL COFFEE When There's Better Music, Walker Has It! Jl Trading Tex Pac Land Trust 15 Transam erica 30 Trans World Air 15 Tri - Continental 39 Union Carbide ... Union Pacific United Aircraft U. A. L U. S. Rubber U. S. Steel ... Youngstown S & T 108 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 Stocks Bid Asked Bank of America Cascade Plywood Cons. Freiehtways 40', 42', 27i 19s 34 ' 29 s 20. 364 57'i 17?, 401, 28',, 79 23 i 48',, Copco . f irst National BanK 34 Northwest Nat. Gas 16'i Pacific Put. & Lt. 38 Portland Gen. Elec 26'i U. S. National Bank 74 ' j West Coast Tel. 22 1; Weyerhaeuser 45 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 Bid 13.17 20.04 23.12 15.64 14.09 10.94 Asked . 14.44 21.67 24.72 16.91 15.40 11.98 13.87 9.40 12.55 10.63 8.09 17.78 10.84 10.01 14.50 19.70 12.93 14.86 ' 14.08 14.17 6.07 15.29 Group Sec A via Group Sec Com Stk 12.67 Group See Elec 8.58 Group Sec Petr 11.46 Group Sec Steel 9.70 Group Sec Tobac 7 .38 Keystone B-3 16.29 Keystone B-4 9.94 Keystone K-l 9.17 Keystone K-2 13.30 Keystone S-l 18.06 Keystone S-2 11.84 Keystone S-3 13.61 Mass Inv Tr 13.02 TV-Elec 13.00 Value Line Inc . 5.5S Wellington 14.00 Portland Produce Portland (UPIi E g s To re tailers: Grade AA large, S3-ac; A large, 49-52c: AA medium. 44-47c; A medium, 4.-43C; AA smalls, 37 39c: carton l-3c additional. Butte r To retailers: AA and Grade A prints. 67-68c lb.; carton lc higher; B prints, 65-66c. Cheese medium cured To re tailers: A grade cheddar single dai sies. 39-5 lc; processed American cheese. 5-lb. loaf, 40-43C. . Farm Market Western Oregon dry onions were slighUy higher today, going at 2.25 2.50 to retailers for medium and 2.75-3 for large sized in 50 lb. bags; Willamette valley radishes in short supply and California imports sold at 70 to 90 cents a dozen bunches. Poultry. Rabbits Live Chickens Quoted to growers at Portland. Salem and south to Eugene, f.o.b. ranch No. 1 quality fryers, 23i-4 lbs., 15-16c; light hens 10c; heavy hens, 5 lbs. up, 13-14c lb., old roosters. 7-8c lb. Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: fryers, whole drawn, 31 -34c lb.; cut up, 36-39c; hens, light types, cut up, 34-36c; heavy type whole drawn, 39-41c. Geese Live, to producers at farm, 20c lb. for fat ones; 25e at processing plants. Dressed geese to retailers 52-55c lb.; to consumers mostly 65c lb. Dressed Turkeys A grade young hens, 29c lb. to producers on evis cerated basis: A grade young toms. 24c lb., eviscerated, young hens to retailers, mosUy 39-42c lb. on oven ready basis: A grade toms, 34-36C depending upon weight. Rabbits (average to growers, f.o.b. killing plants) Live white, 3'i-Hi lb., f.o.b. Portland, 20-23c: colored pelts. 5c under. Fresh killed fryers to retailers, 57-60c lb.; cut up, 61-64c. LAST WEEK'S WINNER ROBERT HEYERMAN HURRYII ONLY 2 MORE WONDER HORSES TO GIVE AWAYI - ON SCREEN - JOHN PAYNE JAN STERLING in A SWELL ACTION HIT "The Vanquished" PLUS CARTOONSI CARTOONSI and CHAPTER 7 "Wild M Hickok" 118 35 64 28 . 47 . 88 i m 'A - I MAIL TRIBUNE, Mtdford", Oregen, EX-POLICE OFFICIAL DIES Santa Barbara, Calif, -dffl)-Theodore J. Roche, 82, presi dent of the San Francisco Po lice commission for 25 years, died at his home Thursday. Portland Livestock Portland (UPD Cattle for week 2300. Low to average choice steers 27-27.50: good 26-27; standard 24 2625; choice heifers 265-26.50; good 25-26.50; standard 23-25; com mercial cows 20-21: utility 17-19: canner-cutter 14-1550; utility bulls 23-2450. Calves for week 435. Choice veal ers 32-33; good 28-31: good-choice slaughter calves 26-30: standard calves and vealers 23-26; cull-utility 14-20. Hogs for week 2650. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers 1950-20: mixed 18-19:-sows 16-17 for 1 and 2. 14-1650 for mixed. Sheep for week 4450. Choice slaughter lambs 19 late: good 1750 18.50; good-choice feeder 16.50-18; common-medium feeders 14-16.50; cull-good ewes 4-8. Portland Hay, Grain Portland Wholesale Hay Prices: New crop No. 2 green alfalfa, baled, f.o.b. Portland and Seattle, S30-32 ton with top quality to $34-35. Wholesale prices as reported by the USDA market news service: Wheat. No. 1 soft white. $68 ton; No. 2 Milo. Eastern shipment, f.o.b. Portland, $49.50; No. 1 white oats. 38 lb. West Coast delivery, $50 50.51; No. 2 Western, barley. Coast delivery. $52-5250 ton; soybean meal bulk Eastern shipment $8050 ton, f.o.b. Portland; standard mill run. bulk, prompt delivery, fx.b. Coast, S3450-35.50; No. 2 corn. Eastern shipment, f.o.b. Portland, $54.50-55. Fresh Killed TURKEYS (Not Frozen) Oven-Ready Broadbreaste-I HARTLEY'S Produce Market Vt Mile No. of Talent The Truly great story 0 L . L MM i - COLOFi .-, i i ANNOUNCING! AN UNUSUAL EVENT FOR MEDFORD TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25th ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY CONCERT ENGAGEMENT "A MAJOR EVENT OF THE THf (aNK OtGANtZATION Hk ariee is ersssMIni MmW Usee teftmes eeler featuring "GISELLE" in two at stofrfiif GALINA ULANOVA ExecHy at prawnt. before Her Majesty Out Bizabetk I of Hi Royal Op.ro Howw, Cevnl Garden LIMITED TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT THE CRATERIAN THEATRE! THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SPrinf 3-7313 FOR FULL v INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRE sJiiLLyu CHAINED TOGETHER- to five or die! mmCAHA Friday, Nevemfcer 21, l3t II ANDY'S BEST BUY! S&H Gretn Stamps AIM'S Yaur Friendly Cre.ir Jtwaiar 15 NORTH CENTRAL .T-rs- TONITE t SATURDAY STEWART MAtfE! HARIlYrS PLUS RIAN KEITH COtOW y 0 UJXS RITA CAM TONITE and SATURDAY of the U. S. Marliesl III. ....... Ilf....v II. WALNUT Mh lit HUN K UZ7 flu i uiu Ucidth Ifirvni -CMTUPrJClOU DANCE SEAS0N...A MUST!' JOHN MARTIN, NEW Y0K IMIBt diamonds -UB M TOE- Ay 'BALLET TONITE & SAT. Centimiairt Saturday rraoa 1 p.m. TONY CURTIS SIDNEY POITIER WILUAWtV