Locals
" Nam - The business name
A-B-C Supply and Service has
been assumed by Douglas
McKee, 2645 South Stage rd.t
Medford, and Walter L. Dye,
route 1, box 86, Gold Hill, ac
cording to records in the
county recorder's office.
Packed Snow on
Rood at Austin
Portland -CPD- Packed snow
was reported at Austin today,
and the State Highway de-
oartment advised motorists
traveling that route to carry
chains.
MINING ENGINEER DIES
New York -4UPB- R. Gordon
Walker, 74, a mining engineer
and former vice president of
Oliver United Filters, Inc.,
now Dorr-Oliver. Inc.. died
Thursday after a long illness.
ODuGlEP
EE
ENDS SUNDAY!
TfTTT
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J0U6H ii Mil COMf!
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3rd HITI SAT. ONLYl,
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Obituaries
AtlDY'S
DEST DDI!
ROBERT A. NATLAND
The body 'of Robert Alex
ander Natland, infant son of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Nat-
land, 122 Vancouver ave., was
sent to Portland today by
Conger-Morris Funeral home
for services and committal.
He was born Dec. 31, 1958,
in Medford and died Jan. 14.
Survivors, besides his par
ents, include two brothers,
Arthur and Charles, both at
home; grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Allan C. Schlottman,
and Mr. and Mrs. Henry G.
Keeney, both of Portland.
ROBERT FINNEY
Robert N. Finney, 69, died
yesterday at his home in
Jacksonville. Funeral serv
ices will be held at Conger
Morris Funeral home Monday
at 10 a.m.
AT PRESS CLUB President Eisenhower is shown
seated at the head table during a lunch at the National
Press Club in Washington. It was the President's first
visit to the club since he took office. In a speech to the
members, he said that if inflation can be controlled, the
way will be paved for a possible tax cut.
ROSETTA BRAYTON
Ashland - Rosetta
Brayton, 87, of 1 Corral lane,
died Jan. 15 in a local hos
pital. She was born May 4,
1871, in Cass county, Mich.
Survivors include nieces
Mrs. Hazel Stevens. Kalama
zoo, Mich., Mrs. Minnie New
ton, Mrs. Jean Denzer, Mrs.
Mary Harden, and Mrs. Emma
Her, all Ashland.
Funeral services will be
held Tuesday, Jan. 20, at 10:30
a.m. at Litwiller's Mountain
View chapel, Ashland. James
Morse, assistant congregation
servant of Jehovah's Wit
nesses, will officiate.
Algae Hold Two
Possible Hopes
For Man's Future
17-jewel
water &
shock
resistant
Rag. $49.95
988
S&H Craan Stamp
AtlDY'S
Tour Friendly Credit Jeweler
15 North Ctntral
It' iflnTTrrr-i fflTTnntrr
1
RENA WALDRON
Rena Waldron, 64, died this
morning at ner home, JU5
Liberty st. Funeral arrange
ments will be announced by
Conger-Morris Funeral home.
CHARLES NICK HORN
Charles Nick Horn, 86, died
this morning in, a local hos
pitals Funeral arrangements
will be announced by Con
ger-Morris Funeral home.
LOSING SIGHT Hugh Tncrnhill, 7, of Natchez, Miss.,
is flying to San Francisco for surgery which is hoped
may save me signt of his remaining eye. A victim of
' glaucoma, his right eye was removed four years ago, and
sight in the left one is rapidly failing. His parents held
his birthday party three days early, so that he would be
able to see his cake.s
BLANCHE IRENE WATRUS
Ashland - Blanche Irene
Watrus, 53, of 216 Mead st.,
died unexpectedly Jan. 15 at
a local hospital. Mrs. Watrus
iwas born June 8, 1905, at
Harrisonville, Mo.
She was operator of the
Ashland Beauty Shop for the
past 10 years and was a mem'
ber of the First Church of the
Nazarehe and Soroptimist
club.
She is survived by her hus
band, Arthur Watrus; two
sons, Jim Watrus, Medford,
and Ben Watrus, Ashland; one
granddaughter, four sisters,
Mrs. Cecil Shaw, Ashland;
Mrs. Margery Shaw, ; Hilts:
Mrs. Ethel McCall.-t -Tracy,
Calif., and Mrs. Opal Wild,
Walla Walla, Wash.; and three
brothers, William Kimbell,
Frank KimbelL both Calexico,
Calif., and Robert Kimbell,
Los Angeles.
Funeral services will be an
nounced by Litwiller
Funeral home.
Washington -(Science Service)-
Algae that "turn out"
more oxygen and increase
1,000-fold in one day even at
temperature as high as 100
degrees Farenheit hold two
possible promises for man's
future, Dr. Constantine Soro
kin has reported.
With their more effective
conversion of carbon dioxide
into "organic products of
great economic value" low
temperature algae increase
only eight-fold in the same
time period we may actu
ally see a revolution in agri
culture, Dr. Sorokin said.
The protein in algae is the
Belle !same and as nutritious, as
mat in meat, in ruture years,
Dr. Sorokin, who is at the
University of Maryland, pre
dicted, we may be growing
algae for food instead of crops
that have remained basically
the same throughout man's
history as a farmer. However,
he said, the algae will prob
ably be processed chemically
before being used as a food.
While some nations do not
have a food shortage now,
the use of algae as a source of
human food is currently being
intensively studied in places,
such as Israel and Japan,
where farming land is scarce.
With the problem of feeding
world population that ap
pears to be growing explosiv
ely, Dr. Sorokin pointed out,
even nations such as the
United States with its food
surplus may be interested in
algae cultivation.
A second possible use for
these fast-growing . high tem
perature algae is as a pho-
osynthetic gas exchanger.
In closed places such a s
submarines, spaceships and
dwellings which, man will
build on other planets, algae
can maintain a proper balance
between oxygen and carbon
dioxide for idefinite periods
of time as they carry out
photosynthesis. In one hour,
Dr. Sorokin said, one unit vol
ume of high temperature al
gae produces 180 volumes of
oxygen.
However, one unit volume
of low-temperature algae
evolves only 45 volumes of
oxygen in one hour one
fourth as much.
DAHCE
SATURDAY 1IGIIT
January 17th
SAMS VALLEY
GRANGE
A SONNY'S MUSIC O
Brings your friends
come en out!
California t Oregon Streets
JACKSONVILLE
SERVING MILKSHAKES
AND HAMBURGERS
Open Saturdays Until 2 A.M.
Servicemen
JOANNE RILEY
Joanne Riley, infant daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Alvin Riley, 203 East McAn-
drews rd., Medford, died in a
local hospital Thursday. Fun
eral arrangements will be an
nounced by Perl Funeral
home.
RETURNS TO BASE
Glenn F. Schneider Jr., Air
man second class, recently
completed a return trip by
car to Eielson Air Force base
near Fairbanks, Alaska, "his
father reported.
The youth stopped twice on
the 3,200 mile trip on the Al-
can highway, he told his
father by telephone. Stops
were made at Prince George
and White Horse. Accompany
ing him was his wife, the
former Carol Jones, of Med
ford. Schneider told his father
that temperatures ranged to
63 degrees below zero.
The youth had also trav
eled by auto on the highway
during his trip home where Medford;
he spent a 30-day leave with
his parents. Schneider is with
the Air Force police. He at
tended Medford High school,
BRYAN KENT
Funeral services for Bryan
David Kent, 3 Vz - weeks - old
son of-Mr. and Mrs. GleaSon
E. Kent . Jr., who died Jan
13 in Santa Barbara, Calif.
will be held at Perl Funeral
home Saturday at 10 a jn. The
Rev. R. H. Mathewson of the
Four Square church will offi
ciate. Interment will be in
Memory Gardens Memorial
park.
Bryan was born in Santa
Barbara Dec. 17, 1958. Sur
vivors Include his parents:
one sister, Karen; one broth
er, Kreg; paternal grandpar
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Gleason
E. Kent of Santa Barbara:
material grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Muir of
greatgrandmothers
Mrs. Jessie Muir, of Medford
and Mrs. Enolia Brothers of
La Grande. .
Saturday Nile!
WALKER'S DREAMLAND
Our Regular Orchestra playing your
favorite music again with well
known Pianist and Violinist.
417 East Main Medford, Oregon
SNACK BAR SERVING REAL COFFEE
When There's Better Music, Walker Has It!
Gentlemen ... SI. 00 Ladies ... 50c
HAVE BOMB-WILL DROP
IN PERSON
The FARON YOUNG Show
MEDFORD HI SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
SATURDAY NITE Next Week End -JAN. 24
2 BIG SHOWS 7:30 - 9:30
Advance Safe Tickers $1.25 Now Available at KDOV and PUR
UCKERS. Guest stars include: Jimmy Newman, The Carlisle,
Johnny Ferg and Grandpa Jones.
Over-the-Counfer
Western Stocks
The following bid end asked
prices on selected Western securi
ties, provided by the Medford
branch office of Pacific Northwest
Company are unofficial and do not
represent actual transactions but
are intended as a guide to the
approximate price ranee.
Common Stocks
Bank of America
Calif-Pacific Utilities .
Cascades Plywood
Cons. Freightways
Copco
Bid Asked
First National Bank
Northwest Nat. Gas
Pacific Pwr. & Lt.
Permanente Cem. Co.
Portland Gen. Elec.
U.S. National Bank
United Utilities
West Coast Tel
Weyerhaeuser
45 '3
34
33 's
21 1x
373S
584
18 V. ,
41
28 '
30
79
30
24' 2
47U
48
36!,
36
23
39
62
191!
44 1
29'
32
841
32
26
:
OUT OF JAIL Marie Torre, columnist for The New York
Herald Tribune, holds her eight-month daughter Roma
after being released from a New Jersey jail where she
served a 10-day sentence. The 34-year-old newspaper
woman was convicted of contempt of court for refusing
to name the source of a news item about singer Judy
Garland.
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMEN
New York - (UPD - Irving
Berlin's daughter. Linda
Louise, announced her en
gagement Thursday to Ed
ouard C. Emmet, son of Mrs
Watson C. Emmet of New
York and Paris.
Investment Funds
Noon Quotations on selected
funds supplied by th "-dford
Branch of Foster & Marshall, mem
bers New York Stock Exchange.
Fnnd " Bid Asked
Bullock . 13.62 14.93
Chem Fund 20.01
Eaton Howard Stk 23.67
Fidelity 15.93
lias ind
Group Sec - Avia 11.06
Group Sec - Com Stk.. 13.51
Group Sec - Elec 9.71
Group Sec - Petr 11.85
GrouD Sec - Tobac 7.91
Keystone B-3
Keystone a-
Keystone K-l
Keystone K-2
Keystone S-l ',
Keystone S-2
Keystone 5-3
Mass Inv Tr
TV-Elec
Value Line Inc
Wellington
1651
1037
9.56
13.64
18.83
12.44
14.38
13.46
14.17
5.90
14.00
21.63
25.31
17.22
16.09
12.11
14.79
10.64
12.98
8.67
17.80
11.32
10.44
14.88
20.54
13.58
15.70
14.55
15.44
6.45
15.26
Weather
Industrials Push
To wa rd 600-Ma r k
New York - (UPD - Leading
groups with the exception of
rails moved to new high
ground today.
Industrials continued to
push for the 600-mark. Profit
taking in some issues put
rails down slightly. Utilities
made a new 28-year high.
Steel shares stood out
through most of the day as
the strongest group on the
board. The leading issues
moved ahead by fractions to
more than a point. Others
rose one to three points.
Youngstown Sheet & Tube
at its best was up more than
five points at a new high.
Today's prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 95
American Can 50
American Motors ......... 4H4
AT&T 233 V4
Anaconda Copper ..
Armco Steel 71V
Bendix Aviation .. 66
Bethlehem Steel ...... 5234
Boeing Air 44
Caterpillar Corp 87
Chrysler Corp . 52 s
Continental Can 56
Crown Zellerbach 58
Curtiss Wright ..... 28V2
Dow Chemical 80
Du Pont 212
Eastman Kodak ....143 V4
Firestone 130
General Electric 78 Vfe
General Foods 77J4
General Motors 49
Georgia Pacific 58
Graham Paige .... 2S4
Greyhound 18
Gulf Oil 12434
Idaho Power 50 V2
Kaiser Ind 14
Int Paper 119V&
Johns Manville 54
Kennecott Copper :..104
Lockheed Aircraft 6114
Katy (New) J 7V4
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Friday, January 16, 1959 IS.
Winnem ucca-To-Sea
Contract Awarded
Carson City, Nev. A
$335,723 contract for work
on the proposed Winnemuca-to-the-Sea
highway has been
awarded the Nevada highway
commission.
The job went to Willis
Brothers of Winnemuca to
surface the highway from the
Oregon - Nevada line to the
junction of state route 8A
west of Denio.
for
1030
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPIt Cattle
week 2600. Average choice
lb. fed steers 29: good-low choice
1050-1200 lb. 26.75-28.50: standard
25.50-26.50; good-choice fed heifers
25.50-27; utility cows 18-20; com
mercial and standard 20.50-22.50;
canners-cutters 16-18; utility bulls
24.26.
Calves for week 350. Choice veal
ers 34-36, individual 38; good 30
33.50; standard 24-28.
Hogs for week 2700. U.S. 1 and
2 butchers closed 19-19.50 after go
ing to 20.50 Monday; mostly 2 and
3 butchers 17.50-18.50; mixed sows
13-16.50.
Sheep for week 1925. Choice 105
lb. wooled slaughter lambs 19.50,
some 19.25; good-choice lambs 18
19; cull-good ewes 4-9.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPD Dairy market:
Eggs To retailers: Grade AA
large, 46-48c doz.; A large. 44-46c;
AA medium, 40-42c; A medium, 39
41c; AA smalls, 31-35c; cartons l-3c
additional.
Butter 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
daisies, 39-51c; processed American
cheese, 5-lb. loaf 40-43c.
POSTER COP ONLY
London - (UPD - Policeman
James Birtchnell, 26, who
posed for police recruiting
posters, was sentenced to 18:
months in jail Thursday for
stealing an electric drill and
car radio.
No diamond is too big or.
too small for the fine art of
the diamond cutter.
HERE'S THE
M
Farm Market
Delicious apples from the Okano
gan valley were offered to 7.75 a
tray pack for fancy quality today;
Sumner, Wash., hothouse rhubarb
was mostly 3.65-3.75 for 15 pound
flats.
Montana Power Co 71
Montgomery Ward 4234
Nat'l Biscuit L 49
New York Central 28
Pac Gas & Elec 63
Penney, J. C. 101
Penn RR 18
Radio Corporation 49 Vs
Richfield Oil 104
Safeway : ; 1 41
Sears ...... 434
Shell Oil 84 '
Socony Mobil Oil 4814
Southern Co 367s
Southern Pacific .. 68
Standard California 59
Standard Indiana , 48
Standard N. J 56Vfc
Sun Mines 8
Texas Gulf Sulfur 22
Tex Pac Land Trust 16
Transamerica 31
Trans World Air 17
Tri-Continental 41
Union Carbide 125
Union Pacific 36
United Aircraft 59
United Air Lines 33
U.S. Rubber 51
U.S. Steel 97
Youngstown S&T .... 123
TOUR LATIN AMERICA
London- (UPD -The Duchess
of Kent and her daughter,
Princess Alexandra, fly to
Mexico City Feb. 11 to start
a tour of Latin America, it
was announced at their resi
dence, Kensington Palace.
Some Eskimos believe that
the souls of the dead reincar
nate themselves in newborn
babies, and protect the grow
ing children from harm. They
hold that a parent should not
punish a small child because
the spirit might resent the in
terference. When the child
grows old enough to take care
of himself, the spirit departs.
Poultry, Rabbits
lave Chickens Quoted to grow
ers at Portland, Salem and south
to Eugene, f.o.b. ranch. No. 1 qual
ity fryers, 23,4-4 lbs., 17c. some
dealers offering 18c lb.; light hens,
9c; heavy hens, 5 lbs. up, 15c lb.;
old roosters, 7-8c.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade
dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole
drawn, 33-35c lb.; cut up, 38-40c;
hens, heavy type whole drawn,
32-42c.
Dressed Turkeys (Prices mostly
nominal to producers). Fresh froz
en young hens to retailers, mstiy
39-40C lb.; A grade toms, 38-42c
lb., depending upon size. j
Rabbits (average to growers.
f.o.b. killing plants) Live white,
SiVaC lb., f.o.b. Portland 20-23c;
colored pelts, 5c under. Fresh kill
ed fryers to retailers, 57-60c lb.;
cut up, 61-64c.
Portland Hay, Grain
Portland Wholesale Hay Pric
es: New crop No. 2 green alfalfa,
baled f .o.b. Portland and Seattle,
$31-33 ton with top quality to $35.
Wholesale prices as reported by
the USD A market news service:
wheat. No. 1 soft white. $68.50; No.
2 milo. eastern shipment, f.o.b.
Portland, $51.50; No. 2 white oats.
38 lbs., west coast delivery. $52-54;
No. 2 western barley, coast deliv
ery, $51-51.50 ton; soybean meal.
bulk eastern shipment. $91.50 ton,
f o b. Portland; standard mill run,
bulk. nromDt delivery f.o.b. coast.
$44-45; No. 2 corn, eastern ship
ment, f.o.b. Foruand. $56.Zo-d0.75.
HEY KIDS!
HERE'S ONE
YOU CANT MISS
SCOTTY BECKETT
in
"CORKY OF
GASOLINE ALLEY"
PLUS
LOTS OF
CARTOONS
and
CHAPTER 11
"WILD BILL HICKOK"
TONITE & SATURDAY
WHITE
WILDERNESS
3
PLUS
late Show Sat.! Nit
Come as late as 10 p.m.
SEE BOTH FEATURES
THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE
CALL SPring 3-7323
FOR 'FULL INFORMATION ABOUT TOUR THEATRES
TONITE
AND
SATURDAY ONLY
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Cloudy
with a chance of light rain tonight
and Saturday. Low tonight, 40.
High Friday, 48.
western Oregon: Mostly ciouay
tonight and Saturday in north por
tion with occasional rain. Scattered
showers south portion tonight and
occasional rain Saturday. little
temperature change. Low tonight,
42-50. High Friday. 48-58.
Northern California : Partly
cloudy tonight and Saturday. Occa
sional light rain near Oregon bor
der. Fog in Central valley, clearing
locally in afternoon. Little temper
ature change.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day, 40; above normal, 3.
Record high this date, 62 in 1944.
Record low this date, 15 in 1949.
PRECIPITATION : 24 hours to
midnight, trace; midnight to 10
a jn., trace.
Total this month, 1.23 in.; .01
In. above normal.
Total since Sept. 1, 6.06 in.; 3.53
in. above normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday,
70, highest this a.m. 97.
HUH 4:36 24
City Tester- a.m. nr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 55 47 .02
Crater Lake 47 31 .03
Grants Pass 45 39
Klamath Falls 45 32 T.
MEDFORD 46 39 T.
Portland '. 45 39 .37
Seattle .: 45 40 .19
Spokane : 29 28 .55
Yakima 35 32
Eureka 55 47
Red Bluff 58 47
Sacramento 55 43
San Francisco 58 50
Los Angeles 79 57
Phoenix 69 45 .
Denver 26 10
Chicago 35 3 T.
Miami Beach 75 65 .06
New York 47 45 .13
Washington, D.C. 67 39
OPENING DANCE
YFW POST HOME - ROGUE RIVER
Featuring
'Wheat" "Duckworth"
Popular Orchestra
JAN. 179 P.M. to 1 A.M.
And Every Saturday Hereafter
Adm. 75c person. Everyone welcome.
A DOUBLE BILL THAT'S REAL ENTERTAINMENT
TARAWA
DEACHH
THE MARINES
PITH
BEFORE
7 CTfielrilKJU
they can lUMt3
rGcrT"' i f JANE?yI1'
laMMBtaMSuSiMBBla I ... 1 mm una Meruit
KERWIN MATHEWS JULIE ADAMS
' KAY DANTON
aw w ft j ft i w i m m
sa m m mw Kr
i : 1 1 1 u UYiiVj
si n n i
TONITE
AND
SATURDAY
Everyone
Welcome!
9 p.m. Till 1 a.m.
Beautiful
Gold Hill Grange Hall
Saturday Nile
Music by Vic Flood & the Rhythm Masters
Ivervone Welcome
'Check Room Free - Dining Room Open Entire Evening
FIRED One-time batting
great Jimmy Foxx (shown in
January, 1958 file photo)
has been fired as an aux
iliary coach by the Boston
Red Sox. Manager Joe Cro
nin said it was an economy
move.
CANDLE ROOM
CHARCOAL
STEAKS
An especially good place
to eat if dieting!
llftTEl riCnCnDn 50 p.m. till 12:00 Weekdays
IIUICL I.ICUrUntl Sundays 2 p.m. till 10 p.m.
11 -JS
If
DA
Jl
Jacksonville Community Hall
SATURDAY NIGHT
. . . MUSIC BY . . .
Dick Spain -Bill Lively
And The Rogue Valley Boys
Featuring The Best In Western Swing
LOTS OF FUN FOR EVERYONE
mm m.
HERE'S ANOTHER GREAT 1959 HIT!
f hunger, 10
ir every I i
shame,
every, lVf
word i f
is Pri I 1
TRUE! Vif
TRUE! ? Jt
I TRUE! J 5Q?j
Susan Hayward
SIMON OAKLAND . VIRGINIA VINCENT
THEODORE BIKEL
SPECIAL MATINEE
SATURDAY - 1:00 P.M.
CP51 !