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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1958)
I Local and Cow-Medford police receiv ed a report Wednesday that 8 cow belonging to Mr. and Mrs. Earle Fichtner, 2447 Co rona ave., was straying onto a neighbor's lawn. Surgery Patients Mrs. Alice B. Williams, 107 Elm sU, and Mrs. Jody Workman, 936 Newtown st., Medford, are surgery patients at Rogue Val ley hospital today. Kumntjt Sal - The Home makers Guild is sponsoring a rummage sale between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 10, in the Fehl building, 108 North Ivy st, Medford. Persons who have items for the sale may obtain pickup service by calling Mrs. E. S. Bowers at SPring 3-4953. Bruise Sandra Lee Clark, 17, of 2118 Dellwood ave., suffered bruises Wednesday when she fell from her ve hicle while swerving to avoid a collision with another car at the intersection of 10th and Holly sts., according to Med ford police. The car stopped on the sidewalk at the north east corner of the intersec tion, police said. Collision A vehicle driven by Patricia Gayle Colley, 1036 Winchester ave., struck a parked vehicle registered to Grant Allen Quinney, v1015 Winchester ave., Wednesday on Winchester between Ham ilton and Plum sts., Medford police reported. Quinney's car in turn struck a California Oregon Power company pole, police said. Accident Russell Munsell, 34, of Grants Pass, escaped serious injury Wednesday afternoon when the automo bile he was driving failed to make a turn on East Evans Creek rd. approximately two miles from Rogue River. State police said the vehicle rolled over and landed in a pasture when a rear tire blew out as the vehicle started around the curve. Births 1 MADDOX-To Mr. and Mrs. Jtaoul, 140 South Pioneer st., Ushland, Dec. 4, 1958, a boy, 9 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. GRACE-To Mr. and Mrs. feuane, route 2, box 93, Cen tal Point, Dec. 4, 1958, a boy, 11 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. - WILLIAMS - To Mr. and ,Irs. Dexter, 523 North Bart- ett St., Medford, Dec. 3. 1958, a boy, 8Vi pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. BUSS-To Mr. and Mr. Al ton, 1517 Whitman st., Med- Sford, Dec. 3, 1958, a girl, IVi Sxmnds, at Rogue Valley hos Jpital. - T.OfiAM-To Mr. and Mrs. fRichard. 730 South Holly st., Medford, Dec. 3, 1958, a girl, 934 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. HARALDSON-To Mr. and Mrs. Loren S., 2495 West Main st., Medford, Dec. 3, 1958, a girl, 8 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. a beautiful "mw room" In just one day with fHE DELUXI LATEX WALL PAINT FREE PARKING fCMlfSTS IN HOMfWAIfff 245 S. Central at 10th ACTION FEATURES 3 Personal Medical Patient-Mrs. Lydia Holloway, 1830 North River side ave., Medford, is a medi cal patient at Rogue Valley hospital today. Approval Given-Three un derground storage tanks were tested and approved for in stallation yesterday by City Fire Marshal Truman Nelson. He inspected five business oc cupancies and issued eight or ders for corrections of haz ards. Dance Saturday Waggin Wheelers Square Dance club will hold a square dance at Kershaw Square on Corey road Saturday, Dec. 6, start ing at 8:30 p.m. Douglas Deck er will call, with the assist ance of guest collars. Potluck refreshments will be served. . Tonsillectomies Yvonne Clark, 5-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenyon Clark, 218 South Columbus ave., Medford, and Howard Dun lap, 7-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Dunlap, 1216 Sal ing st., Medford, are tonsil lectomy patients at Rogue Valley hospital today. Open House-Rogue Valley Nursing homes will hold open houses starting today and con tinuing through Sunday, rep resentatives of the Nursing Homes association, announc ed today. Open house has been proclaimed by Gover nor Robert D. Holmes, they said. Refrigerator Burned The Ashland city fire department was called to the E. Berge residence, 639 Park st., Ash land, Thursday afternoon where faulty wiring started a fire in the refrigerator. Smoke damage was reported to the residence and the re frigerator burned completely, firemen said. DUched-A Medford police man Wednesday night found a vehicle registered to George Sowards, route 1, box 16, Eagle Point, driven into a pile of dirt and partly across a sewer ditch on McAndrews rd. Just west of Biddle rd. The vehicle had "pparently crossed the intersection with out first stopping and skidded through detour markers and a barricade into construction work, which is part of the Kenwood-Grandview sanitary sewer installation. Obituaries MRS. MARGARET BOUNDS Mrs. Margaret Bounds, of 521 West Second st., died this morning at a local hospital. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Conger-Morris, funeral directors. AMELIA L. HOLMES Ashland-Amelia L. Holmes, 81, of 1300 Butler Creek rd., Ashland, died at the Ashland General hospital early today. Mrs. Holmes had lived in Ash land since 1937 and is sur vived by her husband, How ard Holmes, two brothers and one sister. Funeral arrange ments will be announced by Litwiller's Funeral home. MARIE NEUMAN Ashland Marie Dorothy Neuman, 75, of Scappose, Ore., died at the home of her daugh ter in Ashland this morning while visiting here. Funeral arrangements will be an nounced by Litwiller's Funer al home. MRS. DOROTHY VOGEL Funeral services for Mrs. Dorothy Pauline Vogel, 48, of 10 Quince st., Medford, who died Thursday, will be held at 9 ajn. Saturday at Perl Funeral home. The Rev, George R. V. Bolster of St. Mark's Episcopal church will officiate. Interment will be in Siskiyou Memorial park. - Mrs. Vogel was born, in Whittier, Calif., June 24, 1910, and had been a resident of this area for the past 12 years. She was . a member of the Just Folks club at the Epis copal church. Survivors include her hus band, Floyd Vogel, Medford; one daughter, Mrs. Shirley Mae Weisenburger, Medford; two grandchildren; and one brother. Virl Murphy, Whit tier, Calif. Pallbearers will be Bill Hagen, Larry Espey, Murray Neal, Don Ward, Verl Stearns and Lynn McKee. Three of four bank em ployees in the U.S. are ma chine operators or clerks. H Li J I I i iMVU imiilrM W School Production Of 'Brigadoon' Is Wejl Done A large audience saw the opening performance of "Brig adoon" at Medford High school auditorium last night. Performances are scheduled for tonight and Saturday, and curtain time each night is 8 p.m. "Brigadoon" is a typical American musical - comedy with light, catchy songs, spicy dialogue, dance routines and JOHN P. MOFFAT JR. Gets New Position Moffat Named to Engineer's Position John P. Moffat Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Moffat, 34 Berkeley way, Medford, has been appointed chief en gineer of the Electro Mechani cal Instrument division, Con solidated Electrodynamics cor poration in Pasadena, Calif. Moffat, formerly director of quality control for the divi sion, joined the company in 1952. He was a test engineer, tooling group supervisor, and data analysis supervisor, all in quality control, prior to his appointment as assistant director of the department in 1956. He became director of quality control in October last year. . ; . Moffat has a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering, from' the Cali fornia Institute of Technology, and a master's degree in busi ness administration from Stanford. Labor Pledges Fight To Raise Minimum Wage Washington - (ITS - Orga nized labor has pledged a de termined fight to raise the minimum wage from $1 to $1.25 an hour. It has taken on the battle despite warnings of strong opposition even in the heavily-Democratic new Con gress. AFL-CIO President George Meany declared Thursday that the minimum wage should be boosted by a quar ter and coverage should be ex tended to millions more workers. Meany said the move would meet powerful opposition and cries of "socialism." -But, he said "the trade. union move ment will not be deterred nor halted by such meaningless and hypocritical attacks.'1 The. AFL-CIO. leader spoke Thursday night in an address climaxing a two-day confer ence marking the 20th anni versary of the Federal Fair Labor Standards Act which now provides for a Sl-an-hour minimum wage. The confer ence was sponsored by the AFL-CIO and the National Consumers League. Rep. Richard Boiling (D- Mo.) called for a $1.25 mini mum but warned the group that the going woud be rough. He said the drive would win congressional approval only through a coalition of North ern, Eastern and Western Democrats phi some Repub licans and moderate Southerners. ORDER NOW! NAME IMPRINTED CHRISTMAS CARDS Largest Selection to Choose From by Cast colorful costumes. For a school production, it is very well done. Rosemary Doolen, John Frohnmayer, George Koch, Sue Baker, Paul Moore, Mar ianne Samuelson, Ted Lawson, Rosemary Tokar and Dennis Barr play and sing the leading roles. Miss Doolen and young Frohnmayer are an appealing pair in the lead roles and Miss Doolen's sweet soprano voice has improved consider ably during the past year. In George Koch and Sue Baker the school has two stu dents who fit easily into the roles of the fast-talking Jeff Douglas and the pert, saucy Meg. Both are naturals for roles with a comedy touch. Ted Lawson turns in a good performance as Harry Beaton and his Scottish sword dance is impressive. Dennis Barr does very well indeed with the mature role of Mr. Lundie, and Marianne Samuelson is. a sweet and graceful Jean, the bride, teamed with her is Paul Moore, playing the romantic bridegroom. The set for "Brigadoon" is good, particularly the forest scene with its impressionistic trees and blue background and lighting. An enormous amount of work went into the set, staging and costumes, as well as into the rehearsing of dialogue, songs and dances, and a large cast and crew backed up the principals. The singing of the chorus brought considerably favorable com ment last night, and the danc ing is of the modern interpre tive type. Production Staff The production staff in cluded Lynn Sjolund, musical director; Lenore Zapell, dra matics director; Warren Wolf, set design; John Drysdale, or chestra; Melody Pierce, pian ist; Judy Carver, organist; Robert Stedman, lights; Stan ley Zapell, Earl Knight and Allen Cone, set construction. Bonnie Cox was assistant stage manager; Rosemary To kar was dance director and Phil Morgan, student lights director. The Art ' Students league and drama classes worked on the sets. "Brigadoon" is a typical American musical comedy written primarily for presen tation before the ultra-sophisticated, jaded, adult audi ences of New York, San Fran cisco and other large . cities. This reviewer believes that it is too sophisticated, with its bar scene and frank dialogue, for presentation by a high school cast.-O.S. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Variable cloudiness tonieht and Saturday. Pitches of morning fog. Continued cold. Low tonight 23. High Satur day 45. western Oregon: Fartiy ciouay toninght and Saturday. Some patches of early morning tog. Chance of a few light showers pos sibly mixed with a few snow flur ries. Cooler. Low toninght 25-33. High Saturday 40-46. Northern California: Fair to night, except increasing cloudiness extreme north. Increasing cloudi ness most of area Saturday. Occa sional rain on coast Eureka north ward. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE : Mean yester day 42; above normal 1. , Record high this date 58 in 1918. Record low this date 24 in 1929. PRECIPITATION : 24 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 a.m., none. Total this month .04 inch, .38 inch below normal. Total since Sept. 1, 3.37 inches, 3.26 inches below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 33, highest this ajn. 100. High 4:36 24- City Tester- a.m. nr. day Lew Free. Brookings 58 . .39., , - Crater Lake 46 M.., . Grants Pass 51 33 Klamath Falls 52 21 MEDTORD 53 26 Portland 46 37 T Seattle 43 36 .01 Spokane 37 22 Yakima 46 22 Eureka 54 46 Red Bluff 71 39 Sacramento 67 43 San Francisco 75 47 (' Los Angeles . 75 - 57 - Phoenix 75 50 Denver : 53 31 .20 Chicago 43 19 Miami Beach 77 61 New York 42 41 , .34 Washington. D.C. 44 37 .02 FIVE-DAY FORECASTS (Through Dec. 10) . Western Oreion-Western Wash. ington Temperatures averaging below normal. Precipitation light with a few showers of rain or snow. Highs western Washington mostly 34-44. western Oregon 38- 48. Lows 20-35. - Northern California Two or three days of rain likely with snow in mountains. Temperatures sear normal. GIFTS RECORDS Union Business Representative Shot By Painter West Hollywood, Calif. -(LTD- "I only wanted to humili ate him in front of every body. I told him to walk to the swimming pool and jump in and when he didn't I shot him in the stomach. He ran and I followed him and shot him again." . . Howard Newman, 35, non union painting contractor, Thursday explained with those words why. he shot and killed Roderick MacKenzie, 66, a union business repre sentative for Painters Union Local 5. Shot in Stomach Witnesses told: police New man shot MacKenzie in the stomach as the union man ap proached ; a company site where Newman had a paint ing contract. He then shot him in the back and leg .as the victim turned to flee. MacKenzie fell to the ground and Newman went up to him, pulled up his head and fired a final shot behind the left ear, witnesses said. Sheriff's deputies, who booked Newman on suspicion of murder, said the two men became involved in a dispute earlier in the week when Mac Kenzie pulled one of New man's union workers off a job in retaliation for Newman's hiring of non-union workers. Pulled Worker Off "I had four men working for me Tuesday," Newman said. "When MacKenzie pull ed the. one union worker off, two of the others got scared and quit. "There was only one man and myself working Wednes day. I was afraid MacKenzie would come back and pull him off. I brought a .32-cal ber revolver from home, but I only intended to humiliate him by making him jump in the pool in the . back of the building." After the shooting, New man walked into a nearby of fice, laid the gun down on a counter and told Mrs. Pat ricia Finger, 19, a switch board operator, to call police. NUMBER PAYS OFF ' Reading, England - (UPB - Loftus Thome, a retired gov ernment employee, said to day he used his old army serial number 534422 in two competitions based on atten dance at this year's London automobile show. He won a new car each time. Portland Livestock Portland (UPI) Cattle for week 2075. Average to high choice 1128 lb. steers 27.80, low choice 27.25 27.50: mixed - eood-choice steers 26.75-27.25:- sood steers 26-27 standard 24-26; mixed good-choice heifers 28.SO-Z6.7o; gooa za-zcza; standard 23-24.50; utility-commercial cows . 17-21: canner-cutter 14.50-16: utility bulls 23-25. Calves for - week 315. Choice vealers 31-33; good 28-31; standard calves and vealers 22-27; good choice slaughter calves 26-30; cull, utility calves and vealers 14-21. Hogs for week 2775; U.S. 1 and 3 butchere 20-20.25: mixed 19 19.75; heavier and lighter butchers 17.50-18.50; l ana a sows ie-i7.au, Monday 18. Sheep for week 2450. Choice slaughter lambs 19.25-20; Monday 20-25; good slaughter lambs 18.50 19.25; good-choice feeders 17-18.30; common-medium 14-17; cull-good ewe 4-830.. . . ... - . Portland Produce Portland (UPI) E g g s To re tailers: Grade AA large. 50-55c A large 48-53c; AA medium. 43 48c; A medium, 43-47c; AA smalli, 35-39c; carton l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA and grade A prints, 67-68C lb.; carton lc higher; B prints, 63-66C. Cheese medium cured To re tailers: A grade Cheddar single daisies. 39-51c; processed American cheese, 3-lb. loaf, 40-43c. Farm Market Trading was slow and mostly on a fill-in basis today with supplies ample for the demand; top quality large lettuce heads were being sold by retailers at around 15 to 18 cents each or as low as 2 heads for 29 cents. ... 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?i-4- lbs., 15c: light hens, 10c; heavy hens,- 5 lbs. up, old roosters. 7-8c lb. Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn, 29-32c lb.; cut up, 34-37c; hens, light types, cut up, 34-36c; heavy type whole drawn, 39-41c. Geese Live, to producers at farm, 20c lb. for fat ones; 25c at processing plants. Dressed geese, to retailers 52-55C lb.; to consum ers mostly 45e lb. - - Dressed Turkeys A grade young hens, 29c lb. to producers on evis cerated basis; A grade young tome, 24c lb., eviscerated, young hens to retailers, mostly 39-42c lb., on an oven-ready basis; A grade toms, 34-36c depending upon weight. Rabbits (average to . growers, f.o.b. killing plants) Live white, 3i-4ii lbs., f.o.b. Portland. 20-23C colored pelts. 5c undex. Fresh killed fryers to retailers, 57-60c lb.; cut up 61-64. (LDIPEWIWiE TIMBER ROOM CAFE Main at Riverside Steak Sandwich ..$2.00 Fried Chicken $1.25 Hamburger . .25 Lunches Free Coffee Saturday and Sunday Stocks Continue In Erratic New York-fUPB-Stocks con-1 tinued to perform in an er ratic manner today with stress on issues which are outside the group used to calculate averages. The industrial section gave ground moderately while the rails firmed. Utilities had their eighth advance in a row. Despite the market s rag- gedness there were a number of strong spots. Eastman Ko dak was one of the upside features rising around two points at its best. Merck and Pfizer added more than three each at their highs in the drugs. . Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical 89V4 Alum Co Am .-. 857 American Can 50 American Motors 34Ts AT&T (xd) :.196V2 Anaconda Copper 55 Armco Steel 613,4 Bendix Aviation .. 65 M Bethlehem Steel 485s Boeing Air 49 Vs Caterpillar Corp 87 Chrysler Corp 5094 Continental Can 5814 Crown Zellerbach (xd) 51 Va Curtiss Wright ... . 26 Dow Chemical 72 ?s Du Pont 197 Eastman Kodak 1345s Firestone 123 General Electric 69 General Foods .. 77 General Motors 47U Georgia Pacific .... 46 V Graham Paige 3 Greyhound 18 Gulf Oil II8V2 Portland Hay, Grain Portland Wholesale Hay Prices: New crop No. 2 green alfalfa, baled fob. Portland and eSattle. $31-32 ton with top quality to $34-35. Wholesale prices as reported by the USDA ' market news service: Wheat No. 1 soft white. $6750 ton; No. 2 milo. Eastern shipment, f.o.b. Portland, $49.50-50. No. 2 white cats. 38. lbs.. West Coast delivery. $51.50: No. 2 Western barley, Coast delivery, $52.50 ton; soybean meal, bulk, Eastern shipment,. $84 ton f.o.b. Portland:' standard. mill run, bulk, prompt delivery. f.O;b. Coast, $36-37: No. 2 corn, Eastern ship ment f.o.b. Portland. $5450-55. . Over-the-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 Rank of America 407 43V Calif.-Pacific Utilities - 32 Cascades Plywood .. 27 Cons. Freightways - 18 'i Copco - 341 First National Bank 54 Northwest Nat. Gas- 18 Pacific Pwr. & Lt 37 ' Permanente Cement 24,4 Portland Gen. Elec 26 U. S National . Bank..- 74 United Utilities . 29i West Coast Tel 22 li Weyerhaeuser 44 34 29 VB 19 36 J 573'4 19V 40 25 n 27?i 78 'i 313i 23 3 47 Vi Investment Funds Noon Quotations on select ed funds supplied by the Med ford Branch of Foster & Mar shall, Members New York Stock Exchange. Fund Bi -Asked Bullock .r. 13.11 14.37 Chem Fund 19.43 21.01 Eaton Howard Stk 22.56 , 24.12 Fidelity 15.42 16.67 Gas Ind 13.99 15.29 Group See Avia .... 10.78 11.81 Group Sec Com Stk 12.64 , 13.84 Group See-r-Elec 8.89 9.74 Group Sec Petr 11.28 12 35 Group Sec Steel 9.55 10.46 Group Sec Tobae 7.40 8.11 Keystone B-3 . 1656 17.85 Keystone B-4 9.99 10.91 Keystone K-l 9.20 10.0d Keystone K-2 12.98 14.14 Keystone S-l 18.05 19.70 Keystone S-2 11.82 12.91 Keystone S-3 13.64 14.89 Mass Inv Tr 12.86 1350 TV-Elec 13.24 14.43 Value Line Ine 5.55 6.07 Wellington 13.44 14.64 to the Music of LARRY ROCK and hit ROCK and ROLL WESTERN BAND Every Sat. Night ROGUE RIVER LODGE Hiway 62 Vi Mile from Trail Manner Homestake Mining 42 li Idaho Power 43 U Kaiser Ind. .... 14 115 495s 932 .. 61 Int Paper Johns Manville Kennecott Copper Lockheed Aircraft .. Katy Pfd. 64U Montana Power Co. 69 Montgomery Ward 41V6 National Biscuit ... ' 50 New York Central 261,4 Pacific Gas & Elec. 60! Penney, J. C 109 Penn. RR nA Radio Corporation 45 ?s Richfield Corporation 104i-2 Safeway 353g Sears ...... 37V4 Shell Oil , t 7934 Socony Mobil Oil 48 Southern Co 37 Southern Pacific 605 Standard California 58U Standard Indiana ..... 46 V Standard N, J 58 Sun Mines ............ Texas Gulf Sulfur 21V4 Tex. Pac. Land Trust 15 Transamerica . 31 Trans World Air 16V4 Tri-Continental . 39 Union Carbide .. H8V4 Union Pacific ..: 3514 United Aircraft 62V2 United Air Lines .. . . 30 U. S. Rubber :.... 45 U. S. Steel , ... 86V4 Youngstown S & T 111 Fire Nearly Controlled Malibu, Calif. (LTD Many evacuees were expected to re turn to their homes today with the nearly complete con trol of the 20,000-acre fire that raged from the Santa Monica mountains to the sea. Complete-control of the fire was-in. sight. " Greatly improved weather conditions helped firemen win their thre-day' battle' against the huge fire. Stockholm, Sweden (DPD Ingrid Bergman has regained the Swedish citizenship she lost when she married Italian movie producer Roberto Ros sellini in 1950. An HOTEL MEDFORD ' V MOOSE JAMBOREE fllTE DINE - DANCE SATURDAY, DEC. 6 Steak Dinner 7 to 9 Dancing 9 fv 1 ; Music by Bill Glomb's 5 Thunderbirds For Moos and Guasts Advance Tickets till Noon Saturday at Oldsmobil Garaga Tickets at Door till 9 p.m. $1.35 CoupU, 75c Singio Something NEW and Different SAT. NIGHT at Walker's DREAMLAND! fir 's Gold Hill Grange Hall Saturday Nite Music by Vic Flood & the Rhythm Masters vjCheck Room Free. Jacksonville Community Hall SATURDAY NIGHT ... MUSIC BY ' Dick Spain Bill Lively And The Rogue Valley Boys featuring The Best In Western Swing LOTS OP FUN FOR EVERYONE MAIL TRIBUNE, McdforJ, OrtfM, Friday, Dec.mbtf 5, 13S IS America Said Losing Delinquency Battle Portland - RJPD - Dr. Gar rett Heyns, director of in stitutions for the state of Washington, Thursday told the combined groups of the Oregon State Sheriffs associa tion and the Oregon Prison Association that America is losing the battle against juve nile delinquency. Heyns told the two groups, . . we are not licking the game as long as we continue to take in as many youths or more than we're letting out of our corrective institutions." He said it was not an in stitution's place' to prevent crime but that the only func tion of a reformatory was to prevent "a repetition of crime by the men and boys sent to them. Heyns emphasiied that Americans must come to make the prevention of de linquency a part of their lives. . AMY'S' BEST BUY! 17-jewel water & , shock resistant Reg. $49.95 S&H Green Stamps ANDY'S Tour Friendly Credit Jeweler 15 North Central If88 CANDLE ROOri CHARCOAL STEAKS especially good place to eat if dieting! 5:30 p.m. till 12:00 Weekdays Sundays 2 p.m. till 10 p.m. ROSE CASH playing en of Furuckcr's BEAUTIFUL HAMMOND ORGANS Part Tim With th Regular Orchestra 417 Cast Main Mtdf.rJ, Ore. on SNACK BAR SERVING REAL COFFEE When There's Better Music, Walker Has Itt Everyone V Welcome! 9 p.m. Till 1 a.m. Beautiful EvtrrtM Welcome , Dinini Room Of)" Entire Evening 0 is-l King-size cigarels now " count for about 22 per cent of the annual cigaret sales, ac cording to tobacco industry studies- THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SP 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRES TONITE & SATURDAY ONLY lost child wh became savage queen S of a black v J -15 5. . ttinwg Marion Michaeb 4rol"SM KiNm" la UtGirri tAIOOT HanfyKrupr - CO-FEATURE - m M 1 j a c 1 r "BW i : 1 1 1 u lv(,vj DANA ANDREWS PIPER LAURIE in A Swell Picture "SMOKE SIGNAL" PLUS Chapter 5 ' "WILD BILL HICKOK" and 1 LOTS OF, CARTOONS l 1 J?(ilh i jungle! M,V i NAKED EARTH Ir RICHARD TODD f JULIETTE GRECO 4: I TONITE & SATURDAY II CARY SOPHIA I GRANT L0REII I Romance f I ' AFUATI HlSfe 1 1 Jlpjl IOJtUT I -MAmAiHYER TONITE & SATURDAY STEVEN MeOUEENNSSijI AN ETA COftSEAUT , . 2nd BIG HIT! ttiKt'S TUB