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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1959)
I ; Patient-Mrs. William John son, 305 North Fourth st., Jacksonville is a medical pa tient at Rogue Valley hos pital. "" Dog Shot Robert Eugene 'McLoughlin, Foots Creek, re--ported an unknown person shot a dog while it was near lis. daughter, sheriffs officers eported today. f School Damaged-Mrs. Rob ert Richardson, Talent, report ed a window was broken and jthe screen torn off at the Wag ner Creek school, sheriff's of .ficers were informed Satur day. ' ... - Windows Broken-Windows .-were broken out of the old ..Talent sawmill recently, Tal ent police discovered Sunday. JVs far as can be determined nothing was taken from the mill, police said. . . . Building Permit - M. M. Huggins was issued a build--ing permit at Medford city ;hall Monday for $10,000 in ..remodeling to the Coca-Cola Bottling Co. building at 600 .North Grape st. ... - Convalescing Sandra .Baker, 7-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Baker, - route 3, box 77. Medford, is convalescing at Rogue Valley -hospital following a tonsil t lectomy. i Permits Issued Medford building permits were issued ' last Friday to Don Jacobs for $8,000 in remodeling at 46 North Front st. and to Med ford Neon Sign Co. for erect J ing a $2,000 sign at 703 East Main st. ... Meeting The monthly board meeting of the Siski tyou Pioneer Sites Foundation Twill be held Thursday, April 29, at 8 p.m. at the offices of TT. J. Hight, . realtors, 221 North Central ave. All inter r ested persons are invited to attend. Watch Taken A stop watch was taken from Jackson school sometime over the weekend when burglars en tered the building througn a fire escape door, city police reported today. A money bag used for the school's lunch money had been split open, but it contained no funds, police said. -... . Cited-Denese Lorrain Wil cox, 17,ferants Pass, was cited for failure to stop at a stop sign when the car she was driving went out of control at the intersection of Kirkland rd. and Table Rock rd. about 8:50 p.m. yesterday, accord ing to state police. She was treated for bruises, officers . said. She apparently lost con trof of the car when she real ized she was too near the inter section to stop, police re ported. Sale Planned-A rummage sale sponsored by the Ameri can Legion auxiliary will be held in the Fehl building, 106 North Ivy st., Thursday, April 9, from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m, Donations will be appreciated, the chairman said, and those wishing pick-up service may call Mrs. Merle Jarmin, SFring 2-6674, or Mrs. H. C Goldsmith, SPring 2-2519. Pro ceeds from' the sale will be used for the auxiliary's child welfare aid program. Money secured from past sales has paid for several tonsillecto mies, for glasses and for vita mins for underprivileged chil dren. Household Goods Damaged by Fire Hornbrook-Inspectors at the California state line quaran tine station near Hornbrook last Friday extinguished a fire in a trailer load of house hold goods, which was ignited by friction of a tire rubbing on the trailer bed. The trailer was being taken - from Seattle to - Redding, Calif., by Mr. and Mrs. Gary Taylor. Damage to the trailer and contents amounts to about $600, which was mostly cov ered by insurance, Taylor said. Taylor and his wife and 1-year-old child plan to make their home in Redding while he attends college there. He was recently discharged from the Marine corps. rTiTTiTiS ENDS TUESDAY! The Sun Also Rises unema: COLO. asic SHoot of Youihfu fl mna said o raceame i o (Editor's note: Chief Justice Irvinsr Special Sessions of New York City, one of the largest criminal courts in the world. His court inrlnripc .- vuvici is jietfu ui me toon 01 jurisdiction over youne offenders between IS and 19. After 21 years on the bench, he has some strong ideas about Juvenile delinquency. This is the second of three des patches presenting his views.) By CHIEF JUSTICE IRVING BEN COOPER As told to Jack V. Fox United Press International New York -IUPD- Who is to blame for juvenile delinquen cy, its great increase and steady rise across our nation? Is it due to comic books, tel evision, movies, slums, lax ness in the schools, too lenient courts, some wild upsurge in the new generation, an aban donment of responsibility be cause the H-bomb hangs over our heads? I can tell you where the fault lies. As a matter of fact, you know it already. Every one really knows it, but al most none of us is willing to face up to it. In the vast majority of cases the parents are to blame mothers, fathers or both. Oth er factors at times enter into it, but let's face up to it the Holmes Agency io Observe 50th Year The R. A. Holmes Agency operated by Cole Holmes, will observe its 50th annivers ary Thursday. The firm was established in Medford April 9, 1909, after the late R. A. Holmes, with his wife, had traveled from Roswell, N. M., through the Pacific coast area. The couple left Roswell by train, in March, 1909, stop ping at various towns in Cali fornia, Idaho and Oregon, and choosing Medford for their home because of its climate and recreation resources and its growing fruit industry. Holmes purchased the in surance agency then operated by. W. H. Canon, mayor of Medford in 1909. His son, Cole Holmes, joined the busi ness after graduating from college in June, 1909. He remained with the Med ford agency until June, 1916, when he left to worft wijh various insurance offices in San Francisco and learn more of the insurance . business. ! Cole Holmes returned to Med ford in April, 1920, after two years' military service. He took over management of the firm after the death of R. A. Holmes in 1926 and preserved the name "The R. A. Holmes Agency." Mrs. Holmes joined the office in 1935, handling all accounts. Also on the staff are Mrs. Edith Harwood, who began work there in 1923 and is in charge of loss claims and underwriting, and Mrs, Agnes Weir, who handles policy writing, endorsements and expirations. The agency confines its writing to the Aetna Fire Group, Liverpool - Globe Group, Springfield Fire and Marine Group and the Cali fornia Insurance company. is the oldest continual repre sentation of the Springfield company in Oregon. Court Records MUNICIPAL COURT Franklin Dale Walker, Olympia, wasn.. vagrancy, 5 days. Edmund Henry Buchholz, Camp wnite. aruriK in public, sio. Elmer James Johnson, 338 North Front St., drunk in public. $10. Henry Orland Waeltz, 808 East Ninth st., drunk in public. $10. Ralph Vincent Magney. Spokane, Wash., drunk in public. $10. Vernon Richard Wynkoop, 2642 spring uruun la, urunK in puDllC, sou. Thomas Gardner Randall, 203 North Ivy St., drnnk in public, $10. Harold Davis Shuck, 628 ',4 North Riverside ave., driving under the influence of intoxicating beverages $100. Elbert Jayson Mocabee, disobeyed trainc signal, siu. Barry wayne fayton, excessive noise (exhaust). So. William James Young, violation of basic rule, $15. . Lawrence Dale Edwards, viola tion of basic rule. $10. Georgians B. Wehren. violation of basic rule, sio. Leonard Randalf Pekaret. viola. tion of basic rule. $10. Jacqueline June Smith, followine too close, $25. Wesley Odell Nelson, violation of basic rule, siu. Marlene Puddy. no Oregon ODera tor's license, $5. DISTRICT COURT Thedford R. Beddell. failure to stop wniie scnooi bus unloading, $15. iMewton J. Mancuin, violation of basic rule. Sio. Jerry w. Krous, violation of ba sic rule, sis. Mel Rose, violation of basic rule. sio. Evelyn C. Straus, no motor ve- ncle license. $10. Vere L. Jacobson. oermittins un licensed person to drive, $10. Clara Sykes, failure to make traf fic stop. $10. Kusseu w. nail, no anglin li cense. 5JU. Azalea L. Moshen, failure to make traffic stop. $10. Raymonn A. Jennings, failure to I make traffic stop, $10. i Herbert H. Lage, inadequate muf fler. $6. ! Floyd Hawkins, illegal possession on venison. S55. William M. McKenzie, no horn, $6. Loyal E. Higinbotham, failure to make traffic stop. $10. Harold L. Grave, operating motor vehicle while license is suspended, $155. James L. Reel, angling without a license, $30. CIRCUIT COURT Janice Elaine Rider vs. Franklin Gene Rider, divorce complaint. p fl wem basic root of youthful misbe- havior is traceable to the home. I sit in my court and watch this endless stream of youth ful offenders. Theirs are not the sensational cases you read about in your newspapers -the young hoodlum with the smoking gun. Those cases real ly make up only a small part of the total number of youths enmeshed in the criminal law. The ones I am talking about are young people very much like your own. In almost every case, mark me, the youngster's attack on society is the result of an in adequate home life, neglect in parental upbringing, a lack of guidance, an absence of basic moral principles. So far as parents are con cerned, Dr. Albert Schweitzer put his finger right on the sit uation with his observation: "Example is not the main thing in influencing others; it is the only thing." Poverty is by no means the principle factor in the vast jority of cases. The boys who come before me are far better dressed and fed than my con temporaries and I ever were in our young manhood. They have jobs, they have money that would have been a for tune in that day of hand-me-downs and patched elbows and anemic faces. I remember speaking to a high school student body not long ago. I was trying to es tablish a bond with them and I began talking of my own youth. I recalled the misery of our own poverty. They were unimpressed. Believed Gag Afterwards the principal told me the youngsters could not envision anyone in my po sition ever having had to scrape for a bare existenc they thought it was a gag. They had never heard or ex perienced anything like it themselves, although they came from low income fam ilies. inis problem is not con fined . to America. Here is report on London from a re cent issue of the "Atlantic" magazine: ' 'Crimes of violence are four times more prevalent now in Britain than in the poorer but more peaceful years between the two world wars. R. A. Butler, Home Secretary, told the House of Commons. "This is no sudden crisis, but a deep disorder in society. Two Main Causes "The British have always considered the two main causes of crime to be poverty and slums. But crime has in creased almost in proportion to the rate at which those two evils have been successfully combatted. During a decade of full employment boys and girls straight out of school have been able to command immediate jobs at high wages, Yet in 1956 juvenile crime reached a new high. And in 1957 the number of boys .un der 17 convicted of indictable offenses topped the 1956 rec ord by 20 per cent; the num ber aged 17 to 21 who were convicted of indictable of fenses increased by 26 per cent." . Here in America, our break down of home life has wid ened into a community pat tern. Young people constantly encounter this indifference to life's real values "make the fast buck," "just don't get caught," "don't stick your neck out." Integrity, honor, responsibility "that's for the birds." Beyond Computation On the one side of its face the community registers hor ror of the situation presented by crime rates. On the other, public consumption of vicar ious crime by way of newspa pers, magazines, books, radio, movies,, television and gossip on the part of adult and child population is literally beyond computation. Short of an act which disturbs the communi ty's peace and comfort, we im merse ourselves and luxuriate in delinquency. We pay dearly for injecting bigness" into the house of law. It is the sensational or "outstanding" crime that seems to be the criterion of what is important to the com munity. We must not look to the degree of the crime alone. One thing is certain. The community cannot permit courts to fail in their efforts to understand and meet the needs of young offenders who can be saved. Rehabilitation under the court's guidance is as much an arm of correction as Sing Sing and Alcatraz, and not less important. Parents Brought In Whenever I sentence a young man or girl, I get the parents into court if it is at all possible. I want them to feel the burden just as much as the youngster. And if I put thq boy or girl on probation, 19 IS mome I want them to share his or her effort to make good. Some of the homes, ,of course, are hopeless and noth ing a judge can say or do is going to change them for the better. That is where the prop erly trained probation officer is of such great value. He becomes for many of lthese young people the most important person in their lives. He becomes the father they never had. He is tough with them if they don't be have, but he gives them what every youngster needs: a sym pathetic person of authority who has the means of enforc ing that authority. In most cases, he gives them real friendship, a sense of belong ing, a feeling that they, too, count. Had Burglar Tools I want you to hear the words of one boy and what he had to say about what proba tion meant to him. His first name was Leo. His father was shiftless and irresponsible. The boy, then 16, had bur glar's tools in his possession when arrested. He had tried to demolish a parking meter to secure 15 cents to ride rath er than walk home. He summed up what he conceived the attitude of the world to be toward him in an unforget table phrase: "This hollering world." Here is a transcript of conversation I had with him in my office after his proba tion period ended: Q. Was there a time in your life when you used to feel that because you had a couple of strikes against you, the whole world was against you? A. Yes, before I got into trou ble I always felt that way, felt that r didn't care about nothing and nothing cared about me. I felt that I'd just go about my business and do what I pleased of doing and I wasn't worried about the next guy or the guy after him. was just me me for myself. Q. What happened when you came up for sentence? A, The judge sent me on proba tion for three years and there was a big commotion over it The district attorney, I don't think he liked me quite well, with all my record, and he was talking with the judge up against the jury stand; and the judge was saying, "No, don't believe that's what should do" arid the district at torney was saying, "But, Your Honor," and giving him my school record. . And then the judge told me I was going on probation, but he said, "I'm going to watch your record very carefully and if I see that you don't report as you're sup posed to . . . you're going away." Q. Before you got into trou ble, Leo, did you ever think that the way you were going was wrong? A. If I hadn't got ten into trouble and going to see my probation officer, would still be the same way I was. Q. Do you like to have peo pie sympathetic with you? A. Yes, sir. Q. You like to know the pro bation officer was concerned about your getting some place in life? And that the judge was anxious that you should Births RAE-To Mr. and Mrs. Rob ert E., 918 Park st., Medtora, April 4, 1959, a girl, 8V4 pounds, at Rogue Valley hos pital. LANE -To Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth, 417 Kenwood ave., Medford, April 4, 1959, a girl, 8V pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. NICHOLS-To Mr. and Mrs. Everett, 392 Wilson rd., Cen tral Point. April 6, 1959, a girl, 6 pounds at Rogue Val ley hospital. SCHMIDT-To Mr. and Mrs. Walter A., Ever Shady Auto Court. Phoenix, April 6, 1959, a boy, 7U pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. BROWNING - To Mr. and Mrs. Robert L., 122 Vancou ver ave.. Medford. April 5 1959, a girl, 5k pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. OLSON-To Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A., 190 Clover lane, Medford, April 4, 1959, a boy, 7 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. MORROW-To Mr. and Mrs. Kenard, 543 Vz South Ivy st., Medford, April 4, 1959, a girl, 6Vi pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. TAYLOR-To Mr. and Mrs. David W., route 1, box 524, Talent, April 6, 1959, a girl 734 lbs., at Sacred Heart hospital. HITE-To Mr. and Mrs. Wayne, 1597 Camp Baker rd., Medford, April 6, 1959, a girl, 7 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. isbehavior nviroEiifien! go right? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you want to do something to help the other guy, don't you? A. Yes, sir. I feel I can help them as the probation officers and the judge helped me. ( Q. Did you ever have that feeling before in your life? A. No, sir. . Q. You heard in your church very often that a per son should help the next per so? A. Yes, sir. Q. But it never meant any thing to you, did it? A. No, sir, it didn't. Q. If people don t care about one another, we are go ing to have no end of trouble We have got to help one an other. Right? A. Yes, sir. Just today when I came out of the subway, this guy walking with a dog fell down and cut his cheek near his eye and was bleeding. And I seen all the people look at him, but no body stopped to pick him up So I went over and I told him "Could you stand?" I thought he was drunk or something, or sick, so I asked him first. And he said,"Yes, if you could help me up." So I picked him ud and some nice woman came along and picked up his hat. So I started walking away and he says, "Thank you, bless your heart." I just "waved my hand and says, "all right (Next: The Cures.) Festival Official Seeks Volunteers Phoenix -Phoenix Festival Coordinator Allen Harris made a plea today for volun teers to aid in this year's Phoenix Festival. Harris indi cated that many committee posts are unfilled, with the tentative Festival date not more than a month away. Harris asked that all clubs and groups in the Phoenix area send representatives to a meeting of the Community club board Wednesday at 8 p.m. At that time the board will make the final decision on holding the Festival this spring, or perhaps postponing it until fall, according to Harris. "I hope all who are inter ested in the Festival will at tend the meeting," he said, "we must make the final deci sion, and that decision will be based on how much inter est there is in the Festival It cannot succeed unless the community is behind it." This year's Festival group had planned similar activities to past years, plus an added Centennial breakfast and a Centennial theme. A queen is selected each year, based on which candidate sells the most tickets to the Festival. So far no queen candidates have been named: Obituaries ROY JAMES CUSTANCE Rov J. Custance. 46. of 1310 West Main st., died yes terday of a self-inflicted gun shot wound. Mr. Custance was born Oct. 17, 1912, at New Westminster, B.C., and was married on Oct. 30, 1936, at New Westminster, B.C., to Edith Alice, who sur vives. He was a member of the Knights of Pythias of Brit ish Columbia. Surviving besides his wife are four cniiaren, Lieonara, Carol, Bob, and Gary at home; his mother, Mrs. Edna Cus tance, Vancouver, B.C.; two sisters, Mrs. A. Peterson of Richmond, B.C., and Mrs. E. M. Turner of Merritt, B.C. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 10 a.m. in the Conger - Morris Funeral home. The Rev. D. Kirkland West, of the First Presbyter ian church, Medford, will of ficiate. Private committal will be in the Siskiyou Memorial park". Honorary bearers will be LeRoy Williams, Frank Elrod, Frank Williams, Walter Neece, George Lovenbarg, and Otto Ewaldson. WILLIAM SHEPHERD Shady Cove - William A. Shepherd, 71, father of Wil- J liam A. Shepherd Jr., princi pal of Shady Cove school, died in a hospital at San Pedro, Calif., today. He is survived by his wife, Mary Shepherd of - Harbor City, Calif., in addition to his son here. Other survivors in clude three brothers, one sis ter, grandchildren and great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held in San Pedro, Calif., Fri day. The family has requested that in lieu of flowers dona tions be made to the local can cer society. Electrical Wiring & Repair Industrial Commercial Residential Call Jack Henbesr ROGUE ELEC. SERVICE SP 2-6603 104 S. Grape Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Fair through Wednesday. Cool again to night. Airport low 32. High Wednes day near 75. Western Oregon: Clear and cool again tonight. Low 32-42. Sunny and warmer Wednesday. High 60-70 except locally 75 southern interior. Northern California : Fair through Wednesday. Little change in tem perature. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 51: normal. Record high this date 80 in 1939. Record low this date 26 in 1949. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 a.m., none. Total this month none, .24 inch below normal. Total since Sept. 1, 10.49 inches, 4 16 inches below normal. ' HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 18 Vc. highest this a.m. 89 rv High 4:30 24- City Tester day Brookings 73 Crater Lake 42 Grants Pass 67 a.m. nr. Low Prec. 53 23 31 36 33 36 "38 28 28 43 60 59 48 55 58 38 42 Klamath Falls 57 MEDFORD 68 Portland 57 Seattle 52 Spokane 52 Yakima 59 Eureka 55 79 Red Bluff Sacramento 82 San Francisco v72 Los Angeles - 66 Phoenix . Denver 84 80 54 Chicago .... Miami Beach 79 New York 55 Washington, D.C. 63 74 40 40 .01 Portland Livestock Portland UPI) Cattle 300 Choice 1060 lb. steers 28.50; good steers 27; utility cows 18-20; can-ner-cutter 15-17; utility bulls 23.50- 24. Calves 50. Good-choice vealers 29-34. odd head 35. Hogs 400. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers 190-220 lb. Monday 18.50-18.75; mixed 1. 2 and 3 lots 17.50-18.25. Sheep 250. Good-choice 102-lb. No. 3 oelt lambs 18.50: 114 lb. No. fpelt 18.25; good 109 lb. 17.50; ewes 4-9. Portland Produce Portland (UPI) Dairy market Eggs To retailers: Grade AA large, 37-39C doz.; A large, 36-37c; AA medium, 34-35c; AA smalls, 31 32c: cartons l-3c -additional. Butter To retailers: AA ' and Grade A prints, 66c lb.; carton lc higher; B prints, b4c. Cheese medium cured To re tailers: A grade cheddar single dai sies, 41-41c; processed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43C Farm Market First Northwest asparagus was quoted at wholesale at a:ou tor JU lbs. today and will retail at about 18 cents a pound; Arizona lettuce held unchanged at mostly 2.10 2.50 a carton: Yellow Newtown aDDles sold at 4:50 tor extra lancy grades; Oregon cauliflower was 2- 2.25 a crate to retailers. Poultry, Rabbite Live Chickens Quoted to grow ers at Portland, Salem and south to Eugene: f.o.b. ranch, No. 1 qual ity fryers, 2-4 lbs., 17c; light hens. 10c; heavy hens, ic. Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn. 31-33c lb.; cut up, 36-38c; hens, heavy type whole drawn. 37- 40c; light-type cut up jj-doc ip. Dressed Turkeys to retailers frozen, ready to cook, A grade young toms, 39-40c a pound, ac cording to weieht: A erade young hens, same basis. 38 to 40c lb. Breeder Turkeys to producers: A grade hens, 24-25C on eviscerated basis: A erade toms. 26-27c on the same basis; to retailers: A grade hens, eviscerated, ajo-jtc; A graae toms. 37-39C. Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b. killing plants) Live white 334-4V2C lb. f.o.b. Portland, 20-23c; colored pelts, 5c under." t resn 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 $35-36. 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 $52.50 No. 2 corn. Eastern shipment S56.50-57.00 No. 2 wh. oats, 38-lb. Coast 551.CO-51.50 No. 2 Western barley. Coast $49.00 Soybean meal. 44 protein 79.00 Standard Millran $42-43 Over-the-Counfer Vesfern Stocks The following bid and asked prices on selected Western securi ties provided by the Medforr branch oifice of Pacific Northwest Company are unofficial and do not represent actua1 transactions but are intended as a guide to the approximate price range Common Stocks Bid Asked Bank of America 471a 50'j Calif. -Pacific Utilities 36 4 38 V Cascades Plywood 34 37 Cons. Freightways 22 Copco 37 ?4 First National Bank 55 Northwest Nat. Gas 17 '4 Pacific Pwr. & Lt 38 "' 233, 40 58' i9V 41i 28 H 31H 72 V 354 26'8 47?, Permanente Cement 263i Portland Gen. Elec. 29 '2 u. b.-xsationai aeiiK oa1 United Utilities 33i West Coast Tel. 25 Weyerhaeuser 44 ;4 Maine was admitted to the Union as the 23rd state on March 15, 1820. HAVE AN " E EXTRA VACATION; - ON THE WAYSrE See us NOW-even if rou'rt going NEXT SPRING! "" Com en in for FREE (wily illustrated Bttroturo. SEE GEORGE LEWIS ROGUE TRAVEL . SERVICE We Reserve and Sell Airline and Steamship Tickets PHONE SP 2-6779 111 E. 8th W GO BY Profit Taking Holds Market Irregular New York -(DPI)- Strength in Ford, Zenith and Bayuk Ci gars featured an irregularly lower stock market today. The only thing wrong with the stock market was profit taking. Hardest hit by realizing were stocks which have en joyed a sharp rise in recent sessions. Vick Chemical, which soared 18 points Mon day on reports of a drug, lost about 7 points. Bristol Myer and American Home Products were down around 3 points each near the close Ford was strong and active in the motors. It rose around 2 points at its best. Chrysler added more than a point American Motors was firm. Zenith ran up mor.e than 3 at its best in the electronics. DOW-JONES AVERAGES New York-(IIPD-Dow-Jone final stock averages: 30 in dustrials 6 10.34," off 0.82; 20 railroads 162.62, off 0.20; 15 utilities 93.69, off 0.24, and 65 stocks 210.47. off 0.32. Sales today were about 3.020,000 shares compared with 3,510,000 shares Mon day. Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical '. 102?s Alum Co Am 84 American Can 454 American Motors . . 36 AT&T 248V Anaconda Copper 67. Armco Steel . 69V4 Bendix Aviation . 75 Bethlehem Steel 51 Boeing Air .. 41 Caterpillar Corp 88 Chrysler Corp 64 Continental Can 47 Crown Zellerbach 56 Curtiss Wright 38 Dow Chemical 87 Du Pont 226 Eastman Kodak 155 Firestone 144 Hospitalized Man Hurts HST's Feelings ' Lot Angeles-diPD-Stephen Wells, in a hospital for a physical checkup, picked up his bedside telephone Monday lo hear: "This is Harry Truman. How are you?" "I'm the Prince of Wales." snapped Wells, and slammed down the phone. Then Wells, a public re lations man who handled Truman's 1948 campaign in southern California, had a second thought. He called the former President's ho tel. - "Really, Sieve," a Tru man secretary told him, "I think you hurt his feel ings!" Investment Funds Noon Quotations on selected funds supplier) by ' th" M-dford Branch of Foster & Marshall, mem bers New York Stock Exchange Fund Bid Asked Bullock ....... 13.98 Chem Fund 10.58 Eaton Howard Stk 24.08 Fidelity 17.57 Gas Ind 13.81 Group Sec Com Stk 13.64 Group Sec Elec-Avia 10.82 Group Sec Petr 11.64 Group Sec Steel 10.09 Keystone B-3 16.56 Keystone B-4 10.25 Keystone K-2 14.31 Keystone S-l 8.59 Keystone S-2 12.79 Keystone S-3 14.87 15.82 11.44 25.74 18.99 15.09 14.93 11.85 12.75 11.05 18.06 11.19 15.61 20.28 13.96 16.22 14.27 14.70 16.78 6.51 15.46 Keystone S-4 13.08 Mass inv Grtn stk I3.eu TV-Elec 15.40 Value Line Inc 5.96 Wellington 14.18 RABBI DIES New York-(UPD-Rabbi Abra ham M. Hershman, 78, He braic scholar and early sup porter of the Zionist move ment, died Monday. ANILW'S BEST BUY! JcEtiat" INTERLOCKING DIAMOND RING! DnimM hriitnn wi tow. im Ohiwi toy rMn (X.lirr.nfrt kr It (Vfafr S&H GREEN STAMPS AMDVS Your Friendiy Credit Jeweler 15 North Central J eOHViNIlM MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, General Electric . 82? 4 General Foods 792 General Motors 47?s Georgia Pacific 65 Ik Graham Paige 3V4 Greyhound 20?4 Gulf Oil 115 Homestake Mining 43 4 Idaho Power 44 IBM 551-4 Kaiser Ind 141a Int Paper 1207s Johns Manville 54 Kennecott Copper 110V4 Lockheed Aircraft . 3914 Katy 6Ts Montana Power Co 37V2 Montgomery Ward 433s Nat'I Biscuit 54 New York Central 29 V2 Pac. Gas & Elec 66V4 Penney, J. C HOVi Penn RR , 17 Radio Corporation 55V2 Richfield Oil 93V4 Safeway 38Vs Sears 43 V4 Shell Oil 85 Socony Mobil Oil 464 Southern Co . 36Vs Southern Pacific 66V2 Standard California 53 Standard Indiana 50 V Standard N. J 51 Sun Mines 1 1V Texas Co. 79 Texas Gulf Sulfur 23 Tex Pac Land Trust 17V2 ! Transamerica 27 ; Trans World Air 20 Tri-Continental 40 V4 Union Carbide ........ ..130V2 Union Pacific 35 United Aircraft 64 Vz United Air Lines 36 U. S. Rubber 54 U.S. Steel 91 Youngstown S & T 124 V4 i NOW SHOWING mBRYNNER WOODWARD JOANNE THE IMS) AND THE COLOR wMum GisjeniaSczopE' a cMutr-va MAM ' 1 . I AWAID 1 a YOU'VE BEEN WATCHING' THIS SPACE HERE IT IS! THE MOST SENSATIONAL ENTERTAINMENT VALUE IN HISTORY! THE DRIVE-IN COUTH PACIFIC HIGHWAY A"-S- VI SOUTHERN OREGON'S LARGEST AND MOST BEAUTIFUL OUTDOOR THEATRE WILL BRING YOU TWO TOP HITS IN EVERY SHOW!! AND FOR ONLY SEE TOMORROW'S MAIL TRIBUNE FOR OUR TERRIFIC SPRING OPENING DOUBLE BILL!! Oregon, Tuesday, April 7, 19Sf 9 Second Man Struck By Automobile Dies Madras-4'PD-A second man who was struck by a car west of here Sunday night died Monday afternoon. He was identified as Willie Thomp son, 35, Celilo. The other man, Sam Hov totat, 46, Toppenish, Wash, died Sunday night. THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SP 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRES I I I . I If KTjVV r : I I I U LA AwoVJ Vl I I J I Mi now SHOWING "I WANT TO LIVE" Which Wen an Academy Award with Susan Hay ward, EBest Actress of the year! 1 and "DEFIANT ONES" Won Academy Award for BEST STORY and BEST PHOTOGRAPHY Susan Hayward ENDS TONITE! BEU.B001C mcmm JACK LEMMON ' ERNIE KOVACS i coijmaia nctw J I TCCMMICOLO TOUT CURTIS jTS fIDNIT POITIERf Wuamo rwm wnt ingti I .Kr4 II 2SSn I PER CARLOAD