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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 3, 1959)
ENDS SATURDAY! mm THE 00 Sumner JOANNE WOODWARD PAUL NEWMAN tV ANTHONY FSANCIOSA OS SON WELLES PLUS! PLUS! PLUS! ADVENTURE S SUSPENSE!..., ROMANCE! 3RD BIG HIT! SATURDAY ON L! Three Coins THE if UUSUAICI C&fttm WE3B DorBtby Mc&lflRE -W-3 K3R rllUU IKE JUUKUM a uttn 1 Mm tm U . nCdl AUnAIII jg 4 Miles South of Ashland m on Highway 99 ' Open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. J Closed Tuesdays HOTEL MEDFORD A :toy l. CENTENNIAL Prizes for the best costumes 9 to 1 SATURDAY -April 4 VFW Hall in Rogue River Music by VIC FLOOD and the Rhythm Masters Hardwood Floor . Refreshments served all eve. -Check Room Free Large Parking Area SPONSORED BY VFW - EVERYO'NE WELCOME DANCE Saturday Night at the CORRAL Music by Dick Spain - Bill Lively and the Rogue Valley Boys Featuring Bobby Burton : $80.00 DOOR PRIZE DANCE WALKER'S POPULAR DREAMLAND Locals Sal Planned - Girl Scout Troops 121 and 133, Gold Hill, will hold a rummage sale in the Fehl building Monday, April 6, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Money raised will be used to buy troop camping equipment and for maintenante of "the Scout hall. Dinner - A fellowship din ner for the First Church of God will be held Saturday, April 4, at the Roxy Ann Grange hall 'at 6:30 pjn. The Rev. James Austin, Anderson, Ind., campaign chairman for the church's building fund, .will be principal speaker. V Stray Horse-Jessie Isadora Mittelstaedt, 2494 Buckshot Hill rd., told Medford police Wednesday that a stray horse was in her yard, damaging the lawn and flowers. Police found the horse's owner to be Lilah Viola DeRushe, 332 Mary st. Shingles Taken-Marvin Eu gene Jeska, 4720 Highway 66, Ashland, informed Medford police Wednesday that two squares of cedar shingles val ued at $30 were taken early last month from a house being constructed at 873 Morrison st., Medford. Sale Set - The ReLaDaSa ' women's 'crouD of the Reor- i ganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints will hold a baked foods sale Saturday, April 4, at the Home Appliance store from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Home-made bread, cakes, cookies and candy will be on sale. WEEK END SPECIALS Roast Turkey $1.19 Fried Chicken Baked Ham 1.19 1.19 plus our excellent Swiss Steak $1.09 with mushrooms Our garden terrace J will be open, good g weather permitting. CANDLE ROOM Charcoal Broiled LOBSTER TAILS An especially good place to eat if dieting! SftSlS fl "SBST. FEATURING: Leland Charley on his trombone, playing your favorite music with your favorite orchestra. , Always a Pleasant Crowd! SNACK BAR SERVING REAL COFFEE When There's Better Music. Walker Has It! Neuberger Exfends Legislative Praise Salem - (CPD - Sen. Richard L. Neuberger (D-Ore.), had some complimentary words to say Thursday when he visited the Oregon Senate where he once served. "After serving for five years in the U.S. Senate," Neuber ger said "I have found that the people in the Oregon Legi slature are equally intelligent and industrious as their na tional colleagues. And the people here in Salem don't have 14 assistants to write their speeches . for them, either," Neuberger addeil. Jet Blows Both Tires on Landing Portland - (UPD - An F-89 Oregon National Guard jet blew both tires on a routine landing at the Portland Air Base Thursday. The pilot, 1st Lt. Charles D. Lomax, 26, and radar obser ver, Capt. Lawrence Richard son, 27, were unhurt. Both are from Portland. An Air Force spokesman said damage was confined ts the landing gear of the plane. Sale - The Royal Neighbors of America will sponsor a white elephant sale Saturday, April 4, at the Fehl building. Dinner Shady Cove-Trail Lions will hold a benefit crab and chicken dinner Saturday, April 4, starting at 6 p.m. at the Rogue River lodge. - Medical Patient-Mrs. John W. Kruse, route 1, box 161, Gold Hill, was listed as a medical patient at Medford Osteopathic hospital today. Weather FORECASTS (Through April 8): Medford and vicinity: Consid erable cloudiness through Saturday. Mild temperatures. Low tonight 42. High Saturday 68. Outlook Sunday: i-nance ot snowers. - Western Oergon: Generally fair with patchy valley fog tonight. In creasing cloudiness Saturday. Lit tle temperature change. Low to night 32-42. High Saturday 58-68. Northern California: Fair through Saturday except increasing fog on coast. Cooler most of. north interisr Saturday. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 61; above normal 11. Record high this date 81 in 1951. Record low this date 22 in 1918. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, none. Midnight te 10 a.m., none. Total this month none, .88 inch below normal. Total since Sept. 1, 14.49 inches, 4 Inches below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 40, highest this a.m. Hi. High 4:30 . 24 City Tester- a.n. br. Say Low Ptoc. Brookings , 68 4T crater LaKe oo Grants Pass 74 Klamath Falls 66 MEDFORD 71 Portland 67 44 35 41 37 Seattle OS 3 32 28 .62 Spokane i 54 Yakima SI Eureka .... . 57 49 Red Bluff 83 Sacramento .......... 80 San Francisco 80 Los Angeles 87 SI 58 M 56 64 64 44 44 Phoenix - 93 70 SO 89 Denver . T .8 .17 .43 Chicago Miami Beach . New York 55 Washington, D.C. 64 FIVE-DAY FORECASX (Thruogh April 8): Western Oregon-Western Wash ington Temperatures averaging above normal except near normal in northwest Washington. Highs in western Washington mostly in low fiOr in -western Oregon in hieh 60s. Low tonight 35-45. Precipitation greater than normal except near normal in souuiwesr uregon. Northern California One day of showers likely. Temperature above normal at beginning of period but near normal otherwise. ' Phoenix Saturday Nite April 4 PHOENIX COMMUNITY CLUB Admission: Gents $1.00, Ladies 50c fcWsic by j WESTERN SWING BAND Al Baird Harefcl WUliams Doyle Smith 0 Obituaries HERVEY W. CROCKER Funeral services for Hervey W. Crocker, 63, of 1830 West Main st., who died Wednes day, will be held Saturday at 10:30 a.m. in Conger-Morris Funeral home. The Rev. James W. Neely of the First Baptist church will officiate. Commiital will be in Memory Gardens Memorial park. Mr. Crocker was born Sept. 8, 1895, at Idlewild, Tenn., and married Miss Faul ine Lovelace on April 1, 1931, at Visalia, Calif. He was custodian of the Lone Pine school for 14 years and for the past five years he had op erated restaurants in Med ford. Surviving are his wife, Pau line; two sons, Marvin Crock er of Fullerton, Calif., and Glenn Crocker, of Lakewood, Calif.; two daughters, Mrs. Barbara Edwards of Medford; one brother, Floyd Crocker of Tennessee; one sister, Mrs. W. F. Miller of Obion, Tenn., and 14 grandchildren. Pallbearers will be Norman Thames, Oscar Nordstrom, Byron Ellis, Richard Hart, Gene Cammeron,. and Fred Stevens. HENRY DeYOUNG Ashland - Henry De Young, 58, of route 1, box 93, died April 1 following a brief ill ns. He was owner and oper ator of Cloverleaf dairy here. Mr. DeYoung ' was born Dee. 20, 1900, in Alfen, Hol land, and married Gertrude Amersfoort there in June, 1924. They moved to Canada and then to North Hollywood, Calif. where they lived for 19 years prior to moving to Ashland in July, 1945. He was a member of the Assembly of God church where he was a deacon and trustee and Sunday school teacher. Survivors include his wife, four children, Howard De Young, John DeYoung and Mrs. Elaine Bartol, all Ash land, and Mrs. Laverne David son, Sunnyvale, Calif.; two brothers, John DeYoung, Portland, and Peter DeYoung, Ashland; two sisters, Mrs. Hermine Beukema, Eagle Point, and Mrs. Johanna Bae ner, Holland. Funeral services will be held Saturday, April 4, at 10 a.m. at the Assembly of God church, Ashland, under the direction of Litwiller's Funer al home. The Rev. R.,L. Corn wall will officiate. Interment will be in Mountain View cemetery. DORIS GIPSON Ashland-Doris Gipson, 48, box 352, Dunsmuir, Calif., died April 2, in a local hospi tal. She had been in failing health for the past nine months. Mrs. Gipson was born in Murphy, Ore., on Aug. 26, 1910, and lived in Dunsmuir since 1945. Survivors include her hus band, Leland Gipson, Duns muir, and her mother, Mrs. Eleanor Freeland, San Fran cisco. ' - Funeral services ..will be held Sunday, April 5, at Lit willer's Mountain View cha pel, Ashland, at 2:30 p.m. with the Rev. E. E. Crawford of the Church of the Naza rene, officiating. Cremation will follow. Modern planes carry 70 pounds per square foot of wing space. Firemen's v NEW MUSIC Starting every night at 8:00 STRING DUO Electric Guitar and Bass Viol DELICIOUS FOOD AND DRINKS IN A RELAXING ATMOSPHERE Never a cover charge Dardanelle 99 Highway at Gold Hill Overpass - Big Advance Adds to Market Valuations New York - (UPD - Stocks ran up sharply today. The advance added another $2 billion to market valua tions, bringing the gain in the past two sessions to more than 83.500,000,000. Prime investment issues met good support. American Telephone ran up more than 3 points at its high with the stock at its best price level since 1930. DuPont held a gain running past 2 points near the close. Thiokol added more than 6 at its high in the chemicals. The key factor in the mar ket's improved picture was the strong showing of the rail group. DOW-JOFES AVERAGES New York-flJPD-Dpw-Jones final slock averages: 30 in dustrials 611.93, up 4.41; 20 railroads 162.22, up 1.14; 15 utilities 93.88. up 0.64, and 65 stocks 210.77, up 1.50. Sales today were about 3,680.000 shares compared with 3,220,000 shares Thurs day. , Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical 103 Alum Co Am 83?s American Can 463i American Motors 37Vs AT&T 246?4 Anaconda Copper 65?-s Armco Steel 69 Bendix Aviation 7518 Over-fhe-Counler Western Stocks , The following bid and 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 approiraato price range. Common Stocks Bid Asked Bank of America .... 48 50 s'a Calif.-Pacific Utilities 36 U 38?g Cascades Plywood 34 37 23 Cons. Freightways .. 21i Copco , 37' First National Bank . 55 V4 Northwest Nat. Gas 17U Pacific Pwr. & Lt. ... 39 Permanente Cement 26 9g Portland Gen. Elec. 29s,'a U. S. National Bank 67 United Utilities 33's West Coast Tel 25 i Weyerhaeuser . 45 ,i 39 Vs 59 18"g 41'a 28'4 31s 71 353.4 26 48 Investment Funds Noon Quotations on selected funds supplied by th Mdford Branch of Foster & Marshall, mem bers New York Stock Exchange Fund Bid Asked Bullock 14.05 Chem Fund 10.51 Eaton Howard Stk .. 24.11 Fidelity 16.31 Gas Ind - 13.86 Group Sec Com Stk 13.61 Group Se; Elec Avia 10.84 Group Sec Petr .... 11.71 Group Sec Steel 10.16 Group Sec Tobac .. 7.88 Keystone B-3 16.50 Kevstone B-4 10.23 Keystone K-2 14.28 Keystone S-l 18.59 Keystone S-2 12.76 Kevstone S-3 14.89 Kevstone S-4 13.07 Mass Inv Grth Stk.. 13.57 TV-Elec 15.40 Value Line lnc 5.96 Wellington 14.18 15.40 11.37 25.78 17.63 15.15 14.90 11.87 12.82 11.13 8.64 18.01 11.17 15.58 20.29 13.92 16.25 14.26 14.67 16.78 6.51 15.46 Saturday, April 4 100 42 N. Front BREAKFASTS From 7 a.m. DINNERS 11 a.m. 1:30 a.m. OPEN SUNDAYS NOON TILL 10 P. M. Phone for Small Banquets DANQE SATURDAY NIGHT . APRIL 4th SAMS VALLEY GRANGE A SONNY'S MUSIC DIG THIS SATURDAY NIGHT And Every Saturday Night in Eagle ?oint DANCE - OASIS Music by the Suedes DANCE 9 - 1 Coming THE NERVOUS KATS, MIDNIGHT RAMBLERS Plus Other Top Bands Bethlahem Steel 51?i Boeing Air 41V4 Caterpillar Corp 89 i Chrysler Corp 64 '4 Continental Can 49 Crown Zellerbach 56?b Curtiss Wright 353b Dow Chemical .. 84Ts Du Pont . 2293,4 Firestone 145 Eastman Kodak ..154 General Electric 833s General Foods 80 General Motors . 47 Georgia Pacific 67? 8 Graham Paige , 38 Greyhound 20 Va Gulf Oil 1158 Homestake Mining 43 Vs Idaho Power 44?s I B M 55U2 Int Paper 12234 Johns Manville 55 34 Kennecott Copper lllVi Lockheed Aircraft 37 Katy 6? Montana Power Co 75 Montgomery Ward 4388 Nat'l Biscuit 53 U New York Central 27Ts Pac Gas & Elec ....... SS3 Penney J. C 109 Penn RR 17 Radio Corporation ........ 56 Richfield Oil 93 !4 Safeway 38 Sears 423s Shell Oil 84V2 Socony Mobil Oil 46 Southern Co 36 Southern Pacific 67J,4 Standard California 542 Standard Indiana 493,4 Standard N. J 52 V2 Sun Mines IVa Texas Co 7714 Texas Gulf Sulfur 23 Tex Pac Land Trust I6V2 Transamerica 28V4 Trans World Air 19 Tri-Continental .. .-. AOV2 Union Carbide .....4 131 Union Pacific 34V2 United Aircraft 64 United Air Lines 37 U. S. Rubber ... 54 U. S. Steel 91 Youngstown S & T 125 Vi Striking Drivers To Be Company Guests Elizabeth, N.J. - (UPD - D. B. Brown, Inc., a poultry dis tributing firm, celebrates its 50th anniversary at a dinner party Saturday. Among the guests: Secretary of Labor James P. M i t c h e'l 1 and 14 truck drivers presently on strike against the company. Company President Herbert J. Brown said it won't be a business meeting. BIRTHS REYNDERS - To: Mr. and Mrs. Richard, Grants Pass. April 2, 1959, girl, 5'i lbs., at Medford Osteopathic hos pital. BOUNDS-To: Mr. and. Mrs. Rene, 2399 Emigrant Creek rd., Ashland, April 3, 1959, girl, 7 lbs., at Medford Osteopathic hospital. CHEF Bill Doak Formerly of Brown's BROILED STEAKS From Our Famous lVolf Char-Broiler SP 2-8755 BRING YOUR FRIENDS, COME ON OUT! i Portlanders Claim 'Car Packing Record Portland -ITIk Twenty-two Franklin high school students crammed themselves into a small foreign car Thursday afternoon and claimed a "people packing" record. Nineteen youths had man aged to get inside a similar car in Pendleton and 18 at New York. Portland Livestock Portland (UPIl Cattle for week 2100. Choice steers Mondav 29.25, other choice under 1220 lb. 28.50-29; mixed good-choice 28 28.50; other good 27-28; standard 25.50-26.50; good heifers 26-27; utility 18-20; canner-cutter 15-17. Calves for week 335. Good-choice vealers late 29-34; early t 36; utiN ity-standard 21-28; stock steer calves 29-35. Hogs for week 1900. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers late 19.75-19; mixed 1, 2 and 3 lots 17.50-18.50; sows 13-16. Sheep for week 1535. Good choice under HO lb. fall shorn and wooled lambs 18.50-19; 2 aftd 3 pelt 18-18.50; ewes 4-9.50. Portland Produce Portland (UPD Dairy market: Eggs -To retailers: Grade AA large, 37-39C dor.; A large, 36-37c; AA medium. 34-35c; AA smalls, 30-32c, cartons l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: A A and Grade A prints, 66c lb.; carton, lc higher; B prints, 64c. Cheese medium cured To re tailers: A grade cheddar Single dai sies. 41-5lc; processed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43c. Farm Market Two-layer name brand lugs of Mexican tomatoes were billed to retailers at mostly 4-4.50 a lug with ordinary quality as low as 3.00 on a clean-up basis; fresh rhu barb was mostly 1.75-2 a 15-lb. flat. Poultry, Rabbits ' Live Chickens Quoted to grow ers at Portland, Salem and south to Eugene: f.o.b. ranch. No. 1 qual ity fryers, 23-4 lbs., 17c; light i hens, 10c; heavy hens, 12c. j Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade j dressed to retailers: iryers, whole drawn, 33-35c lb.: cut up. 38-40c; hens, heavy type, whole drawn, 38 42c; light-type cut up 34-37c lb. Dressed Tuikeys To retailers: frozen, ready to cook, A grade young toms, 39-45C a pound, ac cording to weight: A gr ade young hens, same basis. 38 to 40c ib. Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b. killing plants) Live white, 334-4',bc lb., f.o.b. Portland, 20-23c; colored pelts, 5c under. Fresh killed fryers to retailers, 57-60c lb.; cut up, 61-64C. Portland Hay, Grain Portland Wholesale Hay Prices: No. 2 green, alfalfa, baled, f.o.b. Portland and Seattle, $32-33 ton with top quality to S35-36. Wholesale Prices as reported by the Portland USDA market news service. Basis by the ton. bulk, prompt delivery, f .O.b. track, Port land: Wheat. No. 1 soft white S67.00 No. 2 Milo, Eastern shipment $51.50 No. 2 corn, Eastern shipment j ..S56.50-37.00 No. 2 wh. oats, 38-lb. Coast $51.00-51.50 No. 2 Western barley. Coast S49.00 Sovbean meal, 44 "To protein S79.00 Standard Millrun $42-43 TKEj OLD TIMER THE POWER OF THE PRESS! We can remember when the power of the press was in our good right leg! When we were 'Devil' on the old Garland Globe, it fell to our lot to print the weekly Orders of butter wrap pers for the farmer's wives. The old hand fed Gordon press had a big pedal which you pumped with one foot while you stood on the other. Quite a trick to do that and feed large, thin sheets of parchment into the press. Today Reddy Killowat does the job.... ten times as fast, too. Our Modern Offset, and Letterpress Equipment will do your job in Jig Time. May we prove it? ..Wl:WJ.Ti.J.IJ.!.llJ.M.IJ.?l Phone SP 3-4293 DAILY'S U-DRIVE Medford Airport I THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SPring 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRES TONITE AND SATURDAY ONLY! Two Great Stars in One of 1959's Big Ones! sophia LOREN ANTHONY QUINN The SHAME OP A WOMAN... The PASSION OF A MAN... The . MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Health Meeting Ends at Portland Portland (UPD - The annual convention of the American Association for Health, Physi cal Education and Recreation wound up Thursday. Next year's convention will be held in Miami and the 1961 meet ing will be in Atlanta. Maureen "Mo" Connolly, former tennis queen, and golf er Betty Hicks were featured speakers during the final day along with Bill Bowerman, Oregon track coach, and Ralph Coleman, Oregon State baseball coach. Dance Scheduled at YMCA Saturday Night A dance for senior high stu dents will be held at the Young Men's Christian asso ciation Saturday at 8:30 p.m. General chairman of the dance is Miss Sandra Maxson. Adult advisor will be Mrs. Edith Baker. Thete Rho Iota Tri Hi-Y is sponsoring the dance to raise funds for a trip to the youth and govern ment program next week end. The United States has enough automobiles to carry every person in the country wthout using the rear seats. Shady Cove Trail LIONS CRAB and Chicken Feed Rogue River Lodge Saf., April 4, 6 p.m. to 7 All you Can eat $1.30 ANDY'S BEST BUY! Priced from 4.95 S BLACK HILLS C01DJWELRT S&H Green Stamps Tour vrien11y Credit Jeweler 15 North Central THE BOWERY BOYS in JAPOLY LOTS OF CARTOONS and Chapter 7 "CAPTAIN VIDEO" ANDY'S 1 M I Oregon, Friday, April 3. 1939 IS The Union Pacific And Bur lington railroads were th first to use diesel locomotives for their passenger train. Th Santa Fe and Southern were diesel pioneers for freight trains. TONITE & SAT. ONLY! A Swell Show for The Whole Fami.yl PULITZER PRIZE WINNER ZOE AKINS' GREATEST ANIMAL STORY! PLUS EXCITING CO-FEATURE tOIEYoDIM FRANK LOVEJOY JlMES BEST ABIT BtllOK JAN HBl m mtm Affnm nenm TONITE & SATURDAY 3 TERRIFIC HIT FEATURES 9 I THE SIIESS BREED .umuaCOtOt 0L-UII DIUUil ANNE BANCROFT pirHi-n tnrr CARMEN SEtlLU JHpanish Affair VSiifsU TKHKICOlU R TONITE & SAT. NITE "MISTER ROBERTS" Sj. 1M UWWn .oufcPtXLOC . V k tniunn bWL PLUS , JOHN WAYNE in 3 Dimension WMtwrCout WATCH THIS SPACE FOR A SENSATIONAL ANNOUNCEMENT 9 liMwS-fay t -uxe Jl ft That Wonderful lr f if f DAVID CHILL cSl- V I LADD -WILLS yM REX REASON OW 1 PATRICE WYMORE Told in -J all its Sun-hotJffl fCt V N0irnrWFieHi6H vj