Local and
Meeting -Pack 8, Jackson
school, will meet Thursday,
Jan. 22. at 7:30 p.m. at the
school gymnasium.
. Meeting - The Eagles will
meet Thursday, Jan. 22, at 8
p.m. t the Eagles hall. By
laws will be voted on at the
meeting.
Medical Patient Mrs. Rich
ard Peepple. Butte Falls, was
admitted Sunday to Medford
Osteopathic hospital as a med
ical patient.
Medieal Patient Michael
Lake, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ein
ard Lake, route 4, box 703,
GranU Pass, was admitted to
Sacred Heart hospital yester
day as a medical patient.
Births
POWER-To Mr. and Mrs.
William M., 722 West 14th st,
Medford, Jan. 19, 1959, twins,
boy, 6V4 pounds, and girl 5V4
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital.' SCHMELZER - To Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene, 218 Chestnut st.,
Medford, Jan. 18. 1959, a girl,
IVi pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
CROUCHER-To Mr. and
Mrs. Gary, box 416B, Oregon
Technical Branch, Klamath
Tails, Jan. 19, 1959, a girl,
634 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
MULL-To Mr. and Mrs. Lee
M-, route 2, box 206, Medford,
Jan. 19. 1959, a girl, 8V4
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital. SALTMARSH-To Mr. and
Mrs. Earl B., 101 Lozier lane,
Medford, Jan. 19, 1959, a boy,
8'i pounds, at Sacred Heart
hospital.
CAR DWELL- To Mr. and
Mrs. Billy J- 63 North 4th
at. Central Point, Jan. i,
1959, a boy, 7 pounds, at
Sacred Heart hospital.
HOLMES - To Mr. and
Mrs. Joe J., route 4, box 456,
Medford, Jan. 20, 1959, boy,
6U pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
ELLS - To Mr. and Mrs.
Harold, Trail. Jan. 20, 1959,
girl, 73A pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
SAMMONS-To Dr. and
Mrs. William, 1044 Park ave.,
Ashland, Jan. 20, 1939, girl,
63i pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
JOHNSON To Mr. and
Mrs. William, box 925, Cen
tral Point, Jan. 20, 1959, a
girl, 5Vi pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
KLINKO To Mr.-and Mrs.
Edward J., route 2, box 425B,
Medford, Jan. 21, 1959, a girl,
64 pounds, in. Rogue Valley
hospital.
SALTMARSH To Mr. and
Mrs. Earl B., 101 Lozier lane,
Medford, Jan. 19, 1959, a boy,
8 pounds, in Sacred Heart
hospital.
News About
Servicemen
TASK UNIT COMMANDER
A Navy task unit, consist
ing of one cargo ship and two
icebreakers, under the com
mand of Capt. Edwin A. Mc
Donald, Medford, has arrived
at Cape Hallett, Antarctica.
The unit while at the sta
tion will unload supplies and
equipment.
To reach the 16-man joint
United States-New ' Zealand
science station, the ships had
to navigate through icepacks
off Moubray Bay.
. Hallett station, built during
Operation Deep - Freeze H,
was maintained and supplied
by the Navy during the Inter
national Geophysical Year
which ended Dec. 31. It is
now being operated for Ant
arctic Research programs.
SERVING AT STATION
Gold" Hill-Harold F. Payne,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester F.
Payne, route 2, is serving at
the Naval Receiving Station,
Brooklyn, N. Y. Payne is a
boilerman third class in the
U. S. Navy.
WITH SIXTH FLEET
John R. Hart, son of Mrs.
Eugene L. Huffman, 801
North Central ave., is serving
aboard the attack aircraft
carrier TJSS Forrestal, operat
ing with the U. S. Sixth Fleet
in the Mediterranean.
Hart, a machinist's mate
first class with the U. S. Navy,
was among the sailors who
played host to 500 Italian or
phans in Naples at Christmas.
ASSIGNED IN GERMANY
Capt. John K. Ricker, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene K.
Ricker, 235 South Oakdale
ave., has been assigned to the
95th Quartermaster battalion
in Germany with the U.S.
Army. Capt. Ricker, a supply
officer, was last stationed at
Ft. Lee, Va.
Personal
Medical Patient Michael
Lake, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Einard Lake, route 4. box 703,
Grants Pass, was admitted to
Sacred Heart hospital as a
medical patient yesterday, the
hospital reported.
Tonsillectomy L a u r n a
Lynn Wolff, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. E. A. Wolff, route 3,
box 55B, Medford, was ad-,
mitted to Medford Osteopathic
hospital as a tonsillectomy pa
tient this morning.
Medical Patient William
Walker, 12-year-old son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Walk
er, route 2, box 430, Gold
Hill, was admitted to Rogue
Vally hospital as a medical
patient yesterday.
Surgical Patient Miss
Alma Horton, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Clinton Horton, 2755
Connell ave., Medford, was
admitted, to Sacred Heart hos
pital as a surgical patient to
day. Tonsillectomy Wanda
Stockhoff, 2-year-old grand
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ken
neth Stockhoff, 721 Bennett
ave., Medford, was admitted
to Rogue Valley hospital this
morning as a tonsillectomy
patient. .
Patients Mrs. John G.
Luelling, route 1, box 85,
Rogue River, and Mrs. Rolen
Rosecrans,, route 1, box 64,
Gold Hill, were listed as sur
gery patients at Rogue Valley
hospital yesterday.
Vehicles Collide Vehicles
operated by Willard Garland
Harwood Jr., 1 East Clark st.,
and Leo Keith Schultz, 1140
Loal st., collided Monday
afternoon at Melrose ave. and
Kenyon st., Medford police
reported.
X-Ray Clinic - The chest
x-ray clinic at Sacred Heart
hospital will be open Thurs
day, Jan. 22, from 2 to 5 p.m.
The clinic is sponsored by the
Jackson County Tuberculosis
and Health association, and as
sisted by volunteers from the
Providence Guild of Sacred
Heart hospital.
Driver Cited - Ronald
Ray Peery, 33 Rose ave., was
cited for failure to yield the
right of way Monday follow
ing a collision between his
vehicle and one operated by
Roy Elmo Simmons, 328
North Oakdale ave., at Front
and Eighth sts., Medford po
lice reported.
.
Pool Ball Theft - Six pool
balls were taken last week
end during a burglary of
Moose Lodge 178, 11 South
Newtown st., according to
Medford police. Police said
the missing balls were report
ed by John Wesley Keener,
217 Portland ave., but further
details were not. immediately
available.
Car Recovered An auto
mobile reported stolen on
Modoc rd. Monday has been
recovered in Madras, Ore.
Two teenagers have been ap
prehended there in connection
with the theft, state .police
said this morning. Officers
said they were notified yes
terday that a 16-year-old
Rogue River youth and a 15-year-old
Gold Hill boy had
been arrested in Madras and
the car recovered. The car had
been on the Dan Haas prop
erty on Modoc rd. when it was
found missing, officers said.
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Cloudy to
night and Thursday with a few
showers of rain or rain and snow
mixed in valley and snow flur
ries in mountains. Low tonight
35. High Thursday 43.
Western Oregon: Cloudy with oc
casional light rain or drizzle and
a little warmer tonight and Thurs
day. Low tonight 33-44. High
Thursday 44-45.
Northern California: Fair to
night and Thursday except cloudy
in extreme north. Little tempera
ture change.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day 38; above normal 1.
Record high this date 59 in 1942.
Record low this date 6 in 1937.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, none. Midnight to 10 ajn.
trace.
Total this month 1.26 inch, .37
inch below normal.
Total since Sept. 1. 8.10 inches,
3.89 inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
4U'o. nignest this a.m. 95
. High 4:30 24-
Clty : Tester- a.m. nr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings , 56 41
Cratei Lake 30 13 T
Grants Pass 42 31 .03
Klamath Tails 38 21
MEDFORD 48 31
Portland ... 43 35 .03
Seattle 41 34 T
Spokane 23 7
Yakima 36 25
Eureka si 40
Red Bluff ; 57 38
Sacramento . 55 36
San Francisco 59 48
Los Angeles 65 ' 50
Phoenix 60 35
Denver 27 -4 .06
Chicago 27 25 .64 '
Miami Beach 75 72
New York . 44 36 .40 i
Washington, D.C. 45 38 .26 i
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
(Through Jan. 26):
Western Oregon-Western Wash
ington Temperatures rising near
end o week, averaging for period
above normal. Highs 44 48, mini
mums 30-38. Precipitation 'near
normal occurring mostly durinc or
after week end.
Northern Caifornia One or two
days of rain in north portion, but
no precipitation likely otherwise.
Temperatures near or above nor
mal.
Inspections Made-City Fire
Marshal Truman Nelson in
spected five mercantile occu
pancies and one office build
ing yesterday and issued 12
orders for correction of haz
ardous conditions.
Bike Stolen - A bicycle,
owned by Thomas Willis
Broadbent, 32 Mistletoe st.,
was reported stolen from the
bicycle racks at Medford High
school between 6 and 7:20
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Medford city police.
Permits - Building permits
for three new residences have
been issued by the city build
ing department. They were is
sued to Ralph Patterson, $12,
000, at 1300 Fortune dr.; John
C. Chisholm, 86,000, at 207
Elm St.; and Loyd Nielson,
$11,000, at 916 South New
town ave.
Permits Issued Medford
building permits were issued
last week to Carl Whitmore,
for adding three units valued
at $8,000 to a motel at 3250
North Pacific highway, and
to William Harry Elmore, for
$250 in plumbing installa
tions at a proposed trailer
park site at 1059 Morrow rd.
Tools Lost - Charles Otis
S t r a w n, 3253 Cottonwood
ave., reported to city police
Tuesday afternoon the loss of
a painted aluminum tool box
containing miscellaneous me
chanic tools valued at $150.
They were reported to have
been lost in the vicinity of
Biddle rd. and Highway 62
between 6 and 7 p.m.
Meetings Cancelled Serv
ices scheduled at the Central
Point Community Bible
church by the Rev. William E.
Berg, missionary - evangelist,
have been cancelled, accord
ing to the Rev. Paul O. Kroon,
pastor of the church, Mr. Berg
had to leave the valley due to
the death of his mother.
Tires Slashed - James Wil
liam Young, 210 East Main
st., reported to city police
Tuesday evening that four
hubcaps had been stolen from
his pickup while it was park
ed at the YMCA. The tires on
the vehicle were also report
ed to have been slashed. Value
of the tires and hubcaps was
reported at $120.
.
Chimney Fires -City fire
men were, called to flue fires
yesterday at the home of
Sarah Stevenson, 103 South
Newtown st., about 12:25 p.m.
and at the residence of H. R.
Riggs, 617 East Jackson st.,
about 5:50 p.m. They said mi
nor damage occurred . yester
day morning at the home of
Richard Sohnrey, 1819 East
Ninth st., when an overheated
stovepipe ignited the wall
covering. The fire was out
when firemen arrived.
Portland Livestock
P o r 1 1 a n d (UPI) Cattle 300.
High good-low choice 1154 lb. fed
steers 28; good 835 lb. heifers
26.25; utility cows 17-50-19; some
higher; canners-cutters 15-16.50.
Calves 50. Good-choice vealers
29-35. cull down to 16.
Hogs 250. U S. 1 and 3 butcrers
19.25-19.75; few 250 lb. 18; cows
13-16.50.
Sheep 250. 'Choice 108 lb.' No. 1
pelt slaughter lambs' 19.50; other
good-choice 18-19; mostly good
17.75; cull-good ewes 4-9.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPI) Dairy market:
Eggs To retailers: Grade AA
large, 46-48c doz.; A large, 44-46c;
AA medium. 39-43c; A medium, 39
41c: AA smalls, 34-35c; 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 dai
sies. 39-51c; processed American
cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43C.
Farm Market
Prices held firm on lettuce, to
matoes and celery today while
most large sizes of oranges de
clined 10 cents a carton.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens Quoted to grow
ers at Portland, Salem and south
to Eugene, f.o.b. ranch. No. 1 qual
ity fryers. 2i-4 lbs, 18-19c: light
hens, 9c; heavy hens, 5 lbs. up, 18c
lb.; old roosters, 7-8c lb.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade
dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole
drawn, 34-37C lb.; cut up, 39-42c;
hens, heavy type whole drawn, 40
42c; light-type, cut up, 32-34c lb.
Dressed Turkeys (Prices mostly
nominal to producers). Fresh fro
zen young hens to retailers, mostly
39-4 Oc lb.; A grade toms, 38-42c lb.
depending upon size.
Rabbits (average to growers
f.o.b. killing plants) Live white.
3?;-4j lb., f.o.b. Portland, 20-23c;
colored pelts, 5c under. Fresh
killed fryers to retailers, 57-60c lb.;
cut up, 61-64c. -
AIM'S
BEST BOV!
DIAMOND ONYX RINGS. Jet
onyx, with glittering diamond;
far him er her. Priced from
$2950
S4H Green Stamps
ANDY'S
Your Friendly Credit Jeweler
15 NORTH CENTRAL
OBITUARIES
LEWIS CALVIN HILL
Ashland - Funeral services
for Lewis Calvin Hill, 80, of
953 Mary Jane ave., Ashland,
who died Saturday, were
scheduled at 1:30 p.m. today
at Litwiller Mt. View chapel.
Interment was scheduled in
Mt. View cemetery.
GEORGE DUMPHY
George Edward Dumphy,
70, who had been visiting rela
tives here recently, died in
the University of California
hospital in San Francisco,
Calif., Monday night.
Born in Denver, Colo., Mr.
Dumphy had been staying at
the Valley Center Trailer
court in Medford before he
became ill. Funeral services
will be held in California. .
HARRY E. NICHOLSON
Harry Elroy Nicholson, of
515 Cherry St., Central Point,
died this ' morning in San
Francisco. Funeral arrange
ments will be announced by
Conger-Morris, funeral direc
tors. ERNEST RECTOR
Ernest Rector, 77, of Cen
tralia, Wash., died this morn
ing in a local hospital. Funer
al arrangements will be an
nounced by Conger-Morris,
funeral directors.
ROSS A. JOHNSON
Funeral services for Ross
A. Johnson, 64, who died
Monday at the Veterans Ad
ministration Domiciliary,
Camp White, will be held at
the Camp White Chapel at
9:30 a.m. Thursday. Chaplain
Roger Pryor will officiate.
Committal will be in the
Camp White cemetery with
Perl Funeral home in charge
of arrangements.
Mr. Johnson was born June
14, 1894,, in Coloma, Mich.,
and was a veteran of World
War I. , .
Survivors include a daugh
ter, Ida Callies, New Port,
Ohio. , . .
CLARENCE F. PINKERTON
Funeral services for Clar
ence Frank Pinker ton, 61, of
455 Courtney st., Ashland,
who died Monday, will be
held in the Ashland Mortuary
chapel, Fourth and C sts.,
Ashland, Friday at 10:30 a.m.
Ashland lodge AF&AM will
officiate.
Mr. Pinkerton was born
March 11, 1897, in Nebraska.
He was married June 25, 1955
in Grarrts Pass, to Florence
Woodman, who survives. He
was an engineer with the bu
reau of reclamation at the
time of his death. He served
with the Medical Corps dur
ing World War I, and with the
U.S. Navy (Seabees) in World
War II. He moved to Yakima,
Wash., in 1906 from Idaho,
and made his home in Yakima
until 1950, coming to Ashland
in March of last year. He was
a graduate of Washington
State college in 1920, receiv
ing a degree in engineering.
Mr. Pinkerton had been a
member of the American Le
gion for 40 years, and was a
member of Yakima Masonic
lodge AF&AM.
Survivors, besides his wife,
include four brothers, Dwight
I. Pinkerton and John L. Pin
kerton, both of Yakima,
Wash.; Harold R.. Pinkerton,
of Seattle; and J. Orion Pin
kerto n, of Santa Monica,
Calif.: a stepson, Stanley D.
Woodman, Alamosa, Colo.;
and a stepdaughter, Mrs. Bet
ty Freel, Moffat, Colo.
WW
GEORGE JONES
Mercury Sta relay Records
BILL CARLISLE
AND THE FAMOUS
CARLISLES
Singers Dancers
Comedians Fiddlers, Etc.
The most colorful show on
the road, barring none
Low Admission
Adults, in advance $1.25
at the door.. , $1.50
Children, under twelve. .....$ .35
anytime
BUY TICKETS NOW & SAVE AT
Purucker's Record Dept.
HIGH SCHOOL
AUDITORIUM
MEDFORD, OREGON
y3
KAY LOUISE GILBERT
Ashland - Funeral services
for Miss Kay Louise Gilbert,
21, of 439 Chestnut st., who
died Monday evening from
injuries received in an auto
mobile accident, will be held
Thursday, Jan. 22, at 10:30
a.m. at Litwiller's Mountain
View chapel, Ashland. The
Rev. Herschel Hall of First
Methodist church, will offici
ate. Interment will be in
Mountain View cemetery. She
was born Oct. 27, 1937, in
Ashland.
Miss Gilbert is a 1955 grad
uate of Ashland High school
and attended the Robertson
School of Business. She was
a member of First Methodist
church, a life member of In
ternational Order of Job's
Daughters, Bethel 22, and the
Daughters of the American
Revolution She was employ
ed by the bureau of reclama
tion at Camp White.
Survivors include her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Gil
bert, a brother, Floyd Gilbert,
all Ashland, and a grandmoth
er, Mrs. Jennie Flint, Grange
ville, Idaho.
MAMIE MAE CONNER
Ashland Mamie Mae Con
ner, 68, a resident of 240 Her
sey. st., Ashland, died here
Monday night.
Mrs. Conner was born Sept.
5, 1890 in Missouri. Her hus
band, B. F. Conner, preced
ed her in death on July 16,
1955.
Survivors include her chil
dren, Clifton Jean Conner,
Samuel Lynn Conner, Frank
D. Conner and Donald L. Con
ner, all of Ashland, and Mrs.
Gail (Donas) Ridenour of Mo
doc Point, Mrs. Ken (Geral
dine) Disrude, Phoenix, and
Richard N. (John) of Copco,
Calif. Another son, Charles S.
Conner, was killed in a log
ging accident in 1943.
She is also survived by two
sisters, Mrs. Ethel Pinegar
and Mrs. Eula Barton of Twin
Falls, Idaho, and two broth
ers, Bert Pate of Filer, Ida
ho, and Paul Pate of Ely,
Nev., in addition to 21 grand
children and one great
grandchild. Funeral services will ,be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday, Jan.
22, at Litwiller's Mountain
View chapel. Interment will
be in Mt. View cemetery.
Oregon Journal Man
Heads Newsman Guild
Portland - (UPD - Robert
Shultz of the Oregon Journal
was reelected president of the
Portland chapter of the Amer
ican Newspaper Guild Tues
day night. '
Proposed Budget for
Fair Said Insufficient
Salem (UPD Howard
Maple, State Fair manager,
said Tuesday a $1,125,000
budget proposed for the fair
for the next two years is not
enough.
Maple told a Ways and
Means subcommittee hearing
that if the budget is approved
several improvements wilf
have to be abandoned. The
Fair Commission has asked
$1,231,274.
SINATRA
(MM
EVERYONE
KNEW DAVE
WAS BACK IN
TOWN... AND
WOMAN-TROUBLE MUST
BE CLOSE
BEHIND I
M-G-M PRESENTS
A SOL C. SIEGEL PPObUCTION
CAME
BY JAMES
"FROM HERE JO ETERNITY'
Ca-starring
MARTHA -
HYER
Dow-Jones Averages
At New Record High
New York-UPI!-Strength in
oils, chemicals, steels and spe
cial issues lifted the Dow
Jones industrial average to a
new record high today,' not
far from the 600-mark.
Gains of one. to more than
two ponts dotted the tape.
Demand for oils followed a
prediction of a 6 to 7 per cent
increase in oil product con
sumption this year. Steels re
flected bigger demand for
that metal as the auto indus
try picks up momentum. Spe
cial issues here and there
rose one to four points.
International Salt at its best
was up eight points at a new
high. Gains of two to more
than five points were set by
Goodrich, Champion Paper,
Interchemical, Philadelphia &
Reading and Pittston Co.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York (CPU Dow
Jones final stock averages:
30 industrials 597.66. up
1.97; 20 railroads 167.24, up
0.04; 15 utilities 92.51, up
0.09, and 65 stocks 208.60,
up 0.46. Sales today were
about 3.940.000 shares com
pared with 3.680,000 shares
Tuesday.
Today's prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 97
Alum Co Am r 86V2
American Can 48
American Motors 40
AT&T. 23034
Anaconda Copper 6714
Armco Steel '72V4
Bendix Avialtion 67
Bethlehem Steel 53 Va
Boeing Air 1 45 Vz
Investment Funds
Noon Quotations on selected
funds supplied by th M-dford
Branch of Foster & Marshall, mem
bers New York Stock Exchange.
Fund Bid
Bullock 13.67
Chem Fund 20.11
Eaton Howard Stk .. 23.83
Fidelity 16.03
Gas Ind 14.85
Group Sec Avia .... 11.39
Group Sec Com Stk 13.57
Group Sec Elec 9.68
Group Sec Petr 1 1 .98
Group Set: Steel 10.58
Group Sec Tobac 8.02
Keystone B-3 ; .. 16.38
Asked
14.98
21.74
25.48
17.33
16.23
12.45
14.86
10.61
13.12
11.59
8.79
17.87
11.38
14.94
20.62
13.69
15.74
12.88
15.48
6.50
15.29
Keystone B-4
10.43
13.69
18.90
12.55
14.42
11.80
14.20
Keystone K-2
Keystone S-l
Keystone S-2
Keystone S-3
Keystone S-4
TV-Elec
Value Line Inc
5.95
Wellington ;.. 14.03
Portland Hay, Grain
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices:
New crop No. 2 green alfalfa, baled
f.o.b. Portland and Seattle, $31-33
ton with top quality to S35.
Wholesale Prices as reported by
the Portland USDA market news
service. Basis is by the ton, bulk,
prompt delivery, f.o.b. track, Port
land :
Wheat, No. 1 soft white $68.00
No. 2 Milo, eastern shipment $51.50
No. 2 corn, east shipment
$56.50-57.00
No. 2 white oats, 38-lb., Coast
$52.00-54.00
.No. 2 western barley. Coast.. $51.00
Soybean meal, 44 protein.. $87.50
Std. millrun $44.00-45.00
Cominon Stocks .Bid Asked
Bank of America 45 47sa
Calif. -Pacific Utilities.... 34 i 36?:,
Cascades Plywood- 32i 36?
Cons. Freightways 21 23i
Copco 37 Ti 40 'i
First National Bank 58 61'i
Northwest Nat. Gas 18'i 19?g
Pacific Pwr. & Lt 41i 44 'i
Permanente Cement 27',g 29 '.8
Portland Gen. Elec. .. 30, 32 Vi
U. S. National Bank .. 79 84 ',i
United Utilities 30i 32 V2
West Coast Tel. 25 'i 27 Vi
Weyerhaeuser 473,s 50 Vi
ANOTHER GREAT 1959 SUPER HIT!
MARTIN
RUNNING
JCfiES. THE UTMOK O
ARTHUR NANCY
KENNEDY gates
Caterpillar Corp 86
Chrysler Corp 53', ?
Continental Can 54
Crown Zellerbach 58V4
Curtiss Wright 28,4
Dow Chemical 79
Du Pont 21334
Eastman Kodak 1453,4
Firestone 136
General Electric 788
General Foods 81
General Motors 497g
Georgia Pacific 58
Graham Paige 2H
Greyhound 1814
Gulf Oil 126 vi
Homestake Mining 49
Idaho Power (XD) 505-s
Kaiser Ind 14Vs
Int. Paper ......1195s
Johns Manville ........ 53 Vz
Kennecott Copper 1031s
Lockheed Aircraft 62Vz
Katy New 7
Montana Power Co 71
Montgomery Ward 4158
Nat'l Biscuit 50
New York Central . 283,4
Pac Gas & EJec ... 62
Penney. J C .. 99
Penn RR 18U
Radio' Corporation 483i
Richiefld Oil - 107
Safeway 41
Sears . 43
Shell Oil 85
Socony Mobil Oil ..... 49
Southern Co ..... 36
Southern Pacific 6834
Standard California 61
Standard Indiana 4834
Standard NJ 58
Sun Mines 8
Texas Gulf 22 Va
Tex Pac Land 16
Transamerica 70
Trans World Air -18
Tri-Continental : '.. 41V4
Union Carbide 125
Union Pacific 36V4
United Aircraft ..: 62
United Air Lines 34 Vi
US Rubber 52
US Steel 97
Youngstown S&T 123
Vet Loan Bonds
Sold by State
Salem - (UPD - The State De
partment of Veterans' Affairs
today sold $20 million in vet
erans' farm and home loan
bonds . to Smith Barney &
Company, New York, at an
effective interest rate of 2.775
per cent.
Today's sale makes $122
million in loan bonds out
standing for the department,
at an average effective inter
est rate of 2.679 per cent. !
H. C. Saalfeld, director of
veterans' affairs, said the $102
millions in bonds outstanding
prior to today's sale had al
lowed the department to make
farm and home loans to World
War II and Korean veterans
in the amount of nearly $154
million.
Two Westerners on
GOP Policy Committee
Washington - (UPD Reps.
Charles M. Teague (R-Calif.)
and Thomas M. Pelly (R
Wash.) have been named to
represent the Far West on the
31-man house GOP Policy
committee.
STARTING
TONIGHT!
Mac LAI WE
Cinemascope
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MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Ore.,
Money Available
For Ft. Clatsop
Portland - The federal gov
ernment has included money
this year's budget for work
on the Ft. Clatsop National
Memorial in northwest Ore
gon, according to Sen. Rich
ard Neuberger.
It was reported that $157,
250 has been allotted for the
project to build dwellings for
personnel, provided a well for
drinking supply, sewage dis
posal facilities, parking lot
and access roads, as well as
rehabilitating a log fort rep
lica. It was reported that funds
are expected to be made avail
able the following years for
a museum and a main build
ing which will be the visitors'
center.
Crown Zellerbach Timber
corporation has donated 11
acres of forested land in the
memorial area to the govern
ment, it was announced. With
the donation federal sums that
would have been needed for
land purchases will be used
for development purposes.
Wasco Alan Leaves
For Swiss Meeting
New York - (UPD - Floyd
Root, Wasco, Ore., president
of the National Association- of
Wheat Growers, left today for
Geneva, Switzerland, as a
member of the United States
delegation that will negoti
ate for renewal of the fourth
international wheat agree
ment. STARTING
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Did You Enjoy
"WHITE WILDERNESS?"
If You Did Here's An All
WALT DISNEY SHOW
Packed With Unusual Entertainment!
the GENERAL CUSTER story...
mu THE LEGEND OF THE DAY
1 3f2
SAL M I N EO DIFFERENT KINO OT POLE
JEROME COURTLAND PHILIP CAREY RAFAEL CAMPOS
ADDED ATTRACTION
HAL TA
m f 7:4m mmm-iL m nil ir
WALT DISNEY'S
J An ALL-CARTOON FeaturtM TECHNICOLOR i
An ALL-CARTOON Featurette TECHNICOLOR j
Distributed by Buenj Vista Film Distribution Co.. inc. Wait Ouney Productions
-AND-
PLUTO'S LATEST FUN-FILLED ADVENTURE
WALT DISNEY'S
"PLUTO'S DREAM HOUSE"
Wednesday, January 21, 1959 11
Portlander Named
Director of Bank
Portland - (UPD - Robert F.
Johnson, prominent Oregon
lumberman and builder, has
been elected a director of the
Security Bank of Oregon,
President George F. Brice Jr.
announced today.
Packed Snow Reported
On Highways of State
Salem - (UPD - Packed snow
was reported at Government
Camp, Warm Springs junc
tion, Willamette pass, Mea
cham, Austin and Seneca to
day. There , were icy spots at
Sunset, summit, Siskiyou,
Green Springs, Bly and La
Grande. ;
TONITE & THURSDAY
"CURTAIN AT 8:30"
UNWED MOTHERS!
A Social Tragedy Revealed in
All It's frankness!!
YOUNG
SINNERS
SEE THIS STIRRING
DRAMA TO REALIZE
THE PITFALLS LIFE
CAN HOLD!
TONIGHT
A YOUNG SIOUX
BECAME A MAN I
32
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m WOODSMAN ii
Avy THE H
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