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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1959)
Locals Chimney Fire Firemen were summoned to a flue fire at 9:55 a.m. today at the home of Jack J. Gillaspie, 636 "West Fourth st. . Garage Permit - A Medford building permit was issued Tuesday to Ray Chamberlain for construction of a S 1,000 garage at 2312 Roberts rd. Inspections No hazards were noted yesterday in 57 of the 113 residences checked by city firemen conducting the annual home inspection pro gram. They issued 83 recom mendations for correction of fire hazards. Firemen stopped at 259 homes. They found no one home at 123 houses and 23 occupants refused the offer of inspection. Permits Issued A Med ford building permit was is sued Monday to A. R. Dubs for construction of a $16,000 residence at 324 Lindero ave. A permit Tuesday was issued to Johnson estates for 52,000 in repairs to a building at Eighth and Bartlett sts. A per mit was issued last Friday to Paul Andrews for erecting an $11,000 residence at 1333 For tune dr. ' Patients - Surgery patients reported today at Rogue Val ley hospital were Reuben E. Brannan, route 1, box 23, Tal ent; Mrs. Charles E. Collins, 323 Marie st.; Sheryl R. Hock er, 6-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Hocker Jr.,- route 1, box 496, Gold Hill; Mrs. Walter Norum, 921 Oak st., Central Point; and William L. Dunivant, 718 Pennsylvania ave. Kimberly Dungey, 5-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. LaVern Dun gey, 3558 Table Rock rd., is confined to the hospital fol lowing a tonsillectomy. The world's deepest oil well is the Phillips Petroleum Co. No. 1-EE University, in Pecos county, Tex. It is 24,357 feet deep. . . GREATEST HIT OF THEM ALL! ACADEMY ft ft LtGiRL j y, janePdweuI Deluxe 1 Jo ha I to Jli ! to i W I IF YOU THINK j 1 COMFORT MATTERS . ." Station Wagon Investigate Now at '. . . , MORSE MOTORS . 6th and Ivy Medford Moderate Rises Can Be Expected in City budget committees can anticipate a moderate increase in .allocations from state high way and liquor revenue in the coming fiscal year, according to the current news letter of the League of Oregon Cities. The general improvement in business is one factor in these estimated increases, the news letter states. "In the case of highway rev enues," the report continues, "it is significant that, due. in part perhaps to the weather, gasoline tax receipts during the first quarter of 1959 were nearly one million dollars higher than 1958 receipts for the same period. Increase Travel "It is anticipated that the Centennial celebration will in crease tourist travel in the state this summer. Motor reg istration fees and PUC (pub lic utilities commission) mo tor carrier fees for the first quarter also reached an all time high." Some increase in allocations from liquor revenue can also be expected, the news letter states. Cities still receive 10 per cent of net liquor profits, since a bill to increase this proportion died in committee in this year's legislature. A recent increase in prices is expected to yield an addition al one and a half million dol lars for the state, the report states. Per Capita Receipts The League estimates that per capita receipts by Oregon cities from state coffers will rise from $6.49 in 1958-59 to an estimated $7 in 1959-60 in highway revenue allocations, and from $1.25 in 1958-59 to $1.50 in 1959-60 in net liquor profits allocations. Medford's estimated 1958-59 highway revenue allocation, according .to City Manager Robert A. Duff, is $145,000. Estimated allocation for the 1950-60 fiscal year is $158,000, a figure that reflects both increased revenue and increas ed city population. The liquor allocation esti mates, according to Duff, are Final Concert of MHS Set Tonight The final concert of the sea son by the Medford High school vocal music depart ment is scheduled for 8 o'clock in the high school auditorium. Participating in the pro gram will be the choir, girls choruses, boys chorus, madri gal and a soloist, Miss Rose mary Doolen. The combined groups will open the program with "The Oregon State Song," "Be Thou With Me," and a Jewish chanl; called the "Song of Galilee." I Student directors will be Sue Baker, Ted Lawson and John Lacy. BIRTHS BROPHY-To Mr. and Mrs. Carl M., 264 South Modoc ave., Medford, May 20, 1959, girl, 8V2 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. CARR - To Mr. and Mrs. Robert M., route 3, box 227, Medford, May 21, 1959, boy, 94 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. ' ; BENNETT-To Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence R., 2041 Camp Bak er rd., Medford, May 21, 1959, I girl, 8V2 pounds, at Sacred rieart hospital. PFAHL - To Mr. and Mrs. Herman, 331 West Second St., Medford, May 19, 1959, a boy, 8 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. RICE-To Mr. and Mrs. James F., route 1, box 20, Central Point, May 21, 1959, a girl, 7 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. Choose a Volkswagen! It has room for every body and " everything, and takes you quickly and cheaply wherever your heart desires. 1 Revenues $43,668 for 1958.-59 and $46,- 000 for 1959-60. These figures include not only net liquor profits but - allocations from manufacturers' and importers' tax, liquor permit fees, and liquor license fees. Obituaries GUY E. DAVIS Guy Everett Davis, 61, for mer Medford resident, died unexpectedly in Roseburg Tuesday.. ' He was born in Wallowa county, Dec. 19, 1897, and was married to Bethel Alice Hammack on March 20, 1919. He was employed by the Medford school district be tween 1931 and 1945, when he moved to Klamath Falls. In 1952, he moved to Rose burg where he become main tenance supervisor . in the Roseburg school system. He was an elder in the First Christian church of Roseburg and a member of the . Scottish Rite Masonic lodge. Survivors include his wid ow, Bethel; a son, Robert G. Davis, circuit court judge of Douglas county; a daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Scripter, Salem; his mother, Mrs. Katherine Davis; a sister, Mrs. Vera Thompson; five brothers, Donald Davis, Roy Davis and Melvin Davis, all of Enter prise, and Claude Davis of Coos Bay and Vernon Davis of Emmett, Idaho; and three grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Friday at Long and Orr Funeral chapel, Rose burg. Graveside services will be held at 3 p.m. Friday, at Siskiyou Memorial park. Med ford. Medford Masonic lodge, AF and AM, will participate in services. ROBERT C. STEELE Funeral services for Rob ert Charles Steele, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy D. Steele, 345 North Third st., Central Point, who died in a local hospital Tuesday, were cono ducted this afternoon in Cha pel Mortuary. The Rev. D. K. West, pastor of the First Un ited Presbyterian church of ficiated. Committal services in Siskiyou Memorial park were private. . Besides his parents, the in fant is survived by his patern al great great grandmother, Mrs. Dean Sullivan Nampa, Idaho; his maternal great grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. G. H. O'Reilly, Dallas, Tex.; his paternal great grandmother, Mrs. Floyd Williams, Tulsa, Okla.; his maternal grandpar ents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Harris, Medford; and his pa ternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Steele, Salem. THOMAS A. DWYER JR. A requiem mass for Thomas A. Dwyer Jr., 36, of 1216 Win chester st., who died yester day, will be offered by the Rev. John Ilg at Sacred Heart Catholic church at 10 a.m. Saturday. Recitation of the Holy Rosary will be held Fri day at 7:30 p.m. in the Conger-Morris Chapel. The body will lie in state at Conger-Morris Thursday from 5 until 8:30 p.m. BPO Elks, Lodge 1168, will be in charge of graveside services at Hill crest Memorial park. Mr. Dwyer was born May 3, 1922, at Deming, New Mexico, and married on June 7, 1941, at Las Vegas, Nev., to Miss Patricia Stanley, who survives. In 1947 he moved to Grants Pass where he was a partner in the Park-A-Way Inn until 1951. : He then moved to Medford where he operated the Bo hemian club with his father and brother-in-law until his death. For the past three years, he had also operated the Talent club. ' He was a member of BPO Elks, Lodge 1168, and the Rogue Valley Coin club. Surviving besides his wife are two sons, Michael and Dennis; one daughter, Dar lene, all at home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Dwyer, of Medford; and one sister, Mrs. Samuel O. Prough, of Medford. Honorary pallbearers will be Marc Dempster, Vernon St. George, Paul Mitchell, Eldon Tolle, Curly Wilkinson, Stan Peters, Boots Meadows, and Bob MacLauchlin.' Active pallbearers will be Johnny Murphy, :Jim Lewis, Duane Dahl, Butch Zemlicka, Barney Riggs, ..and Chick Tingleaf. : JOSEPH E. MOORE Joseph E. Moore, 64, of route 2, box 378, Gold Hill, died yesterday in Gold Hill. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Conger-Morris Funeral home. THOMAS W. LENDERMAN Funeral services for Thomas W. Lenderman, 1020 Court St., who died Tuesday, will be held in the Conger-Morris Fu neral homje at 9 a.m. Satur day. The Rev. James W. Neely, First Baptist church, will of ficiate. Committal will be in the IOOF cemetery. Mr. Lenderman was born in North Carolina, March 17, Billiard Burglary Reported fo Police A total of $84.50 in change, a set of snooker balls valued at S46 and a cigar box filled with cash register tapes were taken from Foss's Billiards establishment, 415 East Main st., early this morning, Med ford police reported. Police said the burglar broke out a window on the north side of the building, forced a door into the main pool room and broke into a locked wooden cash drawer. The change "consisted of 42 rolls of nickels and one roll of pennies, according to the report. Hospitals Topic Of Kiwanis Club j Hospitals make up the fifth largest industry in the nation, Charles Gustafson, adminis trator at Rogue Valley hospit al, informed members of Med ford Kiwanis club yesterday. He pointed out that "roads to recovery" center in hospit als, that 4,600 patients were admitted to Rogue Valley hospital last year and that hospitals throughout the country had 23 million ad missions in 1958. Gustafson spoke of the cost at Rogue Valley in excess of $35 per patient day and told of the high purchase price of equipment. He brought out that hospital credit is neces sity credit rather than con venience credit. One answer to this, he said is medical in surance. Guests at the meeting were three Medford High school studentswho received Kiwan is music citizenship awards at the annual school band and orchestra award dinner Tues day. The three are Rosemary Doolen, choir; Robert Allen, orchestra, and Judy Wymore, band. They received wrist watches. Charles Crary, business manager of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, was introduced as a new Kiwanian. Gold MB To Have Concert Gold Hill-Gold Hill band and chorus will hold their an nual spring concert Friday, May 22, at 7:30 p.m. in the Gold Hill gymnasium. Popular tunes, marches and novelties will be played by the band. Four numbers will be presented by the clarinet quar tet, composed of Joyce Dye, Gregg Schmidt, Greg Applen and Norma Schatz. The vocal ensemble and girls sextet will be included in chorus numbers. Mrs. Ruth Brewster directs the chorus and Charles W. Cook directs the band. CALENDAR Thursday: 7:30 p.m. Mistletoe camp, Royal Neighbors of America, Pythian hall. 7:30 p.m. - Lively Rogues dance club, Rogue Valley Country club. 8 p.m. Adarel chapter, Order of Eastern Star, Jack sonville Masonic temple. 8 p.m. - Roxy Ann court, Order of the Amaranth, Ma sonic temple, Medford. 8 p.m. - Welcome Wagon club, Girls Community club. 8 p.m. - FOE auxiliary, Eagles' hall. Friday: 12 noon - Women's auxil iary, St. Mark's church. 1 pjn. - Electa Social club, Girls Community club. 3 p.m. - Una B. Inch Chap ter, Oregon School Food Serv ice Association, Shady Cove school. . 1880. In 1901, ' in Coker Creek, Tenn., he was mar ried to Etta Lee, who sur vives. He had made his home in this area for the past 38 years. He was a member of the First Baptist church. Surviving, besides his wife, are three children, Noah L. Lenderman, and Mrs. Edith L. Walden, Medford; and Roy Lenderman, Eureka, Calif.; five grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren. Casket bearers will be Gro ver Nicewood, Joseph Mil lard, Lee Evans, Claude Shel by; Lee Ross, Leonard Ross, and Fred Ross. We Urge You to Attend the CENTENNIAL VARIETIES Songs and Dances of 100 Years Benefit for Medford School of Hope MAY 23 A great show your whole family will enjoy ... 5 big Scenes with 7 and 8 acts each. All proceeds go to Medford School of Hope which trains only the mentally retarded children of our community preparing them for admission into public schools. Tickets available at Roethler's Shell Service, 6th Jnd Front, and Purucker's Piano House.' Non-profit show Sponsored by Medford Active Club Rail Shares Help General Stock List New York - (UPD - Railroad shares, spurred on by a sharp rise in freight movement, to day registered their best gain since Nov. 26, 1958, to help the general stock list. Northern P a c i f i c's gain amounted to 3 points at best. Western Maryland rose near ly 3 and advances of more than a point were set by Bal timore & Ohio, Atlantic Coast Line, Chesapeake & Ohio, and Western Pacific. This strength halted a dip in other sections of the mar ket. In that decline Allied Chemical had lost 2 points and DuPont nearly 2. Steels were mixed and motors about steady. Raytheon, leader in the de cline Wednesday, declined a few points and- then rallied from the low.. DOW-JONES AVERAGES New York-OJPE-Dow-Jones final slock averages: 30 In dustrial 631.65, off 0.22; 20 railroads 169.34, up 3.46; 15 uiilties 91.39. off 0.21, and 65 stocks 215.76. up 0.83. Sales today were about 3.230.000 shares compared with 3,550,000 shares Wednesday. Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical ....116 Alum Co. Am 87 Vz American Can 43 American Motors 38 AT&T 24414 Anaconda Copper 6734 Armco Steel 72 Vs Bendix Aviation 86 Bethlehem Steel 52 V4 Boeing Air ... 37 Caterpillar Corp ...10634 Chrysler Corp 71 Continental Can 46 Crown Zellerbach 5634 Curtiss Wright 36 Dow Chemical 87 Du Pont 25314 Eastman Kodak .'. 82 Vz Firestone 14734 General Electric .. 80 General Foods 83 General Motors 5134 Georgia Pacific Unquoted Graham Paige" 3 Greyhound 23 Vs Gulf Oil . 115 Homestake Mining 45 Idaho Power 461Sj I. B. M 339 34 Kaiser Ind 15V4 Portland Livestock P o r 1 1 a n d (UPI) Cattle 125. Mostly low choice 984 lb., fed steers 29.40; good 911 lb. 29 with some 28; utility dairy type steers 24; utility cows 18-21; canners cutters mostly 15-16.50; utility bulls 24. Calves 25. Good-low choice veal ers 31-34; utility 21-25. Hogs 200. . Mostly No. 2 grade 190-220 lb. 18.50-18.75; 300-400 lb. sows 14.50-19i50. Sheep 250. Mixed good-choice 85 95 lb. spring lambs 23: choice late Wednesday 23.2o; deck good with some choice 112 lb. old crop lambs 18 with some 133 lb. 16; utility ewes 5.50-6; culls down to 3. Portland Produce Portland (UPI! Dairy market Eggs To retailers: Grade AA large. 36-38c doz.; A large 35-36c; AA medium. 32-34c; AA small, 27 28c; carton. l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA and Grade A prints. 65c lb.; carton, lc higher; B prints, 63c. Cheese medium cured To re tailers: A grade Cheddar single dai sies. 41-51c; processed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43c. Farm Market New crop Valencia oranges were quoted 25-50 cents a carton higher today; mid-Columbia lettuce was offered at mostly 1.65-1.75 a 2-doz-en head carton: top California strawberries retailed for as low as 25 cents a 12-ounce hallock. 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,i-4 lbs., 17-18c; light hens, 8-9c; heavy hens, 10-llc. Dressed Chickens No.- 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn. 32-35C lb.; cut up, 37-40c; hens, heavy type whole drawn, 35 38c: light-tvpe cut up.. 29-34c lb. Dressed Turkeys To retailers: Frozen, ready to cook, A grade young toms, 40-43c lb., according to weight: A grade young hens, same basis. 38-40c lb. Breeder Turkeys To producers: (Nominal) A grade hens, 23c on an eviscerated basis; A grade toms, 23c on the same basis; to retailers, A grade hens, 35-36c. Rabbits (average to growers, f.o.b. killing plants! Live white, 33i-42 lb. f.o.b. Portland, 19-21c; colored pelts, 5c under. Fresh killed fryers to retailers, 56-58c lb.; cut up, 60-62c. Portland Hay, Grain Portland Wholesale Hay Prices: No. 2 green alfalfa, baled, f.o.b. PorUand and Seattle. $32-33 ton with top quality to $35. Wholesale Prices as reported by the Portland USDA market news service. Basis by the ton, bulk, promDt delivery, f.o.b. track, Portland. Wheat, No. 1 soft white $69.00 Wheat, No. 1 soft white ....$69-69.50 No. 2 Milo. Eastern shipment S54.50 No. 2 corn, Eastern shipment $58.25-58.50 No. 2 wh. oats, 38-lb Coast .. $53-54.50 No. 2 Western barley. Coast S48.50 Soybean meal, 44 protein ..$75.50 Standard millrun $43.00-44.00 Medford High Auditorium Int. Paper 118 Johns Manville 569 s Kennecott Copper 1143s Lockheed Aircraft 33l's Katy 634 Montana Power'Co. 742 Montgomery Ward 47 ?fc New York Central 2914 Pac Gas & Elec 638 Penney. J. C 112V Penn RR v. 173i Radio Corporation 66 Richfield Oil 88M Safeway ... 37 Sears 45 Shell Oil 90 Socony Mobil Oil .' 463s Southern Co. 38Va Southern Pacific 7034 Standard California 55V Standard Indiana 49 Standard N. J 5134 Sun Mines 7V& Texas Co 82 V2 Texas Gulf Sulfur 21 Tex Pac Land Trust .... 22 Transamerica 28 Vs Trans World Air 22 Tri-Continental 40 Union Carbide 143V4 Union Pacific 35 United Aircraft 60 United Air Lines 39 U. S. Rubber 61 U. S. Steel 9434 YoungstownS & T 122V2 Over-the-Counfer Western Stocks The lollowine 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 at-tua- transactions but are .intended as a guide to the approvTrjat price ranee Common Stocks Bid Asked Bank of America 45 ' 47 .'a Cahf.-Pacific Utilities .. 364 Cascades Plywood 35 Cons. Freightways 22 Copco 37 Vs First National Bank 54 1 4 Morrison-Knudsen 39 ' j Northwest Nat. Gas 185B Pacific Pwr. &Lt 41 Permariente Cem. Co. 2i3'a Portland Gen. Elec 29 'i U. S. National Bank. 70 United Utilities 32 West Coast Tel. 23','s Weyerhaeuser 43 38si 37 24 39 53 42 Vi 20 43H 26'a 31 74 "2 3434 24 4 4638 Investment Funds Noon Quotations on selected funds supplied by th M-dford Branch of Foster & Marshall, mem bers New York Stock Exchange Fund Bid Asked Bullock 14.16 15.52 Chem Fund 11.12 13.03 23.14 18.14 14.97 12.35 14.83 12.51 11.49 8.44 17.94 11.13 16.07 20.97 14.19 16.69 14.71 15.18 17.32 6.48 15.74 Eaton Howard Stk 24.45 Fidelity 16.78 Gas Ind 13.70 Group Sec Avia-Elec 11.28 Group Sec Com Stk 13.59 Group Sec Petr 11.42 Group Sec Steel 10.49 Group Sec Tobac 7.70 Keystone B-3 16.44 Keystone B-4 10.20 Keystone K-2 14.73 Keystone S-l 19.22 Keystone S-2 13.00 Keystone S-3 15.29 Keystone S-4 13.48 Mass Inv Grth Stk 14.04 TV-Elec 15.89 Value Line Inc 5.93 Wellington 14.44 Yeafher FORECASTS Medford' and vicinity: Fair to night and Friday. Little tempera ture change. Low tonight 38. High Friday 78. Western Oregon: Partly cloudy tonight, becoming mostly sunny and warmer Friday. Low tonight 38-48. High Friday 66-76 in inter ior. 60-65 on coast. Northern California: Fair Friday but considerable fog and low clouds on coast Fridav morning. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 53: below normal 7. Record high this date 95 in 1941. Record Jow this date 30 in 1918. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 a.m., none. Total this month 1.31 inch, .53 inch above normal. Total since Sept. 1, 12.49 inches, 3.89 inches below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest vesterday 36, highest this a.m. 94v. High 4:30 24- City ' - Yester- a.m. nr. day Low Prec. Brookings Crater Lake .. 69 48 24 38 38 38 51 50 Grants Pass 70 Klamath Falls 63 MEDFORD 71 Portland 68 Seattle 65 50" Yakima 70 46 Eureka 58 50 " Red Bluff 82 65 Sacramento 84 58 San Francisco 70 54 Los Angeles 75 60 Phoenix 88 62" Denver 52 37 Chicago 77 58 Miami Beach 82 77 New York 86 69 Washington, D.C. 86 70 .40 1.09 .12 LARGEST IN WORLD Scottsboro, Ala. - (UPD -The world's largest steel pressure drum will be put in place at the Tennessee Valley Autho rity's Widows Creek steam plant near here Friday. Of ficials said it would take an hour to hoist the 198-ton pres sure tank into place. At the Jackson Hotel sjII n,ght DANCE Pioneer Room Dancing Starts at 9:30 Informal Sports Jackets for men (no minors please) . Good Live Music Plenty of Fun For All! Oregon Girl One Of Six Victims In Head-on Crash San Jose, Calif .-d'PD-A pick up truck driven by a Moun tain View contractor rammed head-on into an auto carrying five San Francisco student nurses Wednesday night. All six persons were killed. A witness said the contrac tor, Warren Pope Hamilton, 43, Los Altos, had been weav ing from side to side on Bay- short Highway for several miles before his truck, which apparently had no lights,, drifted over the center line and collided with the auto 10 miles north of here. The nurses, who had been returning to San Francisco from attending a birthday party in San Jose, were: Oregon Girl Dies Dolores Godreau, 20, Hay ward, Calif., the driver; Lois Wyrwa, 21, Sherman, Oaks, Calif.; Shirley -O'Netti, 21, Placerville, Calif.; Helen Pa tricia Wilkinson, 20, Soledad, Calif., and Nancy Sullivan, 20,' Roseburg, Ore. Clarence Crouser, San Jose, said he was driving directly behind the southbound truck operated by Hamilton, when the pickup, which had been "weaving from side to side, drifted across the center line." He said he had been followr ing Hamilton for several miles, fearing to pass "be cause you couldn't tell what he would do." "I could see the lights of the oncoming car," Crouser said. "Suddenly there was the crash. "The pickup jumped in the air. I could see the lights of the car go straight up as if a bomb had gone off under neath." Priest Administers Rites Crouser said Hamilton was driving about 35 miles an hour. Other witnesses said the girls were traveling about 45 miles an hour in the outside of the two northbound lanes. A priest driving by the ac cident stopped and adminis tered last rites. Crouser and Highway Patrolman Duri Di tal and others freed the trapped bodies. The girls had been visiting family friends of Miss Go dreau in San Jose to celebrate a birthday of another of the victims, Miss Wyrwa. 'Fine' Students All five girls were described as "fine" students at, St. Mary's Hospital in San Fran cisco.. Miss Godreau was presi dent of her nursing class. All were to graduate June 21. Crouser and other witness es told the Highway Patrol that Hamilton was apparently driving without lights. "I couldn't see any tail light," Crouser said. "And I remember commenting on it to my wife just before the accident." Concert Scheduled By Medford Bands The Medford High school orchestra, combined with string sections from Hedrick and McLoughlin Junior High schools, will present a concert in the Hedrick gymnasium Monday, May 25, at 8 p.m. Conductors will be John Drysdale, high school director; Mrs. Audrey Bartlett, elemen tary string instructor; and Elmer Ayres, McLoughlin di rector. Approximately 90 students will take part. , . West side School Teo Planned Friday Children who expect to enter first grade at Westside school next fall and ' their mothers are invited to a pre school tea at the school Fri day, May 22, at 1 p.m. Miss Gladys Durrand, ele mentary supervisor for Med ford public schools, will speak. Chile has the largest coal reserves in South America, an amount eaual to all other South' American nations. Make it A DATE . . . Y I Martin Clothing To Be Studied Portland The Multno mah county sheriffs ofic6 said today it would send the clothing from the bodies of the two Kenneth R., Martin daughters recently, found in the Columbia river to the FBI laboratory in Washing ton, D.C, seeking a possible clue to the location of the fam ily station wagon. The clothing will be tested along with a sample of water drawn from the river near the Harvey Aluminum Plant at The Dalles. Authorities said if the Mar tin car is in the Columbia near the plant, perhaps the tests would show that" the clothing of the girls contain ed traces of fluids given off by the aluminum plant into the river. Deputies also said a search of the rover in conjunction with the Wasco county sher iff's office would resume to day with the use of an under water metal detector furnish ed by a Portland television technician. The search will be by boat near the Harvey plant. Mr. and Mrs. Martin, a third daughter and the station wagon have not been seen since Dec. 7, 1958. 13 Youths Rescued By Coast Guard Detroit (UPD The Coast Guard cutter Maple today res cued 13 youths who were stranded on Lake St. Clair overnight in their 26-foot sail boat. The sailboat ran aground fin 30 inches of water south of Strawberry Island and the young men and women, all from the Grosse Pointe area, were forced to spend the night on the storm-tossed lake. The Coast Guard said all of the youths were in good condition despite the ordeal. An all-night search by four Coast. Guard boats failed to turn up any trace of the missing sailboat, but planes set out shortly after daybreak and the craft was quickly sighted about a mile and a half south of Strawberry Is land. PRICED H WK I AS LOW AS plus Fed. Tax S&H GREEN STAMPS Your Friendly Credit Jeweler m 15 NORTH CENTRAL A REAL SPECTACULAR OF THRILLING IN FULL COLOR ON S-aST-y-i v.j(h:iote L - iest Bav! 1 17 AN0 a S 1.3 , Aev&?& m ST; WS4 T.TJIilil. fill! , j COLOR b, DELUXE I i . I i Itlll if if 1 """" Jt3 Til STEREOPMCNiC SOUND '" i - """"" m MAIS. TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. 1 O Thursday, May 21, 1959 Maple Expected To Keep Fair Job Salem -(UPI)- Howard Maple apparently will be retained as manager of the Oregon State Fair for 1959. The Fair Commission met here Wednesday for .five hours, but would not comment until all seven applicants for the job had been notified by mail. Indications were, however, that Maple would be given the job again to provide con tinuity on the new Commis sion. The Commission held a pri vate session to interview appli cants and did not admit the press. A decision is expected as soon as the candidates can be informed. Aside from Maple, other ap plicants are: Tom Armstrong, J. W. Sim- eral andi Leslie Morgan, all of Salem; Archie Hold, Os wego; Hatolf Clarno, Myrtle Point, and Lee Boner, Rose burg. . McGovern Returns From Convention ' Eagle Point Don McGov ern, state president of the Ore gon Industrial Arts associa tion, returned recently from the national shop v teachers convention- at Long Beach, Calif. He is shop instructor at Eagle Point High school and a member of the representa tive council of the Oregon Education association, repre senting Jackson county. Theme of the national con vention was "What can the industrial arts teacher do for the gifted child?" HELP US! We Need Clothing, Shoes. Dishes, Furniture. We Pick Up. HELP OTHERS! The Salvation Army .SPring 3-7335 THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SP 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRES' NOW SHOWING TWO TOP 'A' HITS AT ONLY $1 Per Carload Marlon techNIRAMA TECHNtCOLO A WAtNEft PICTURE BUCHANAN 7 v";t luULa AlAiaL 'COLOR! JENNIFER HOIDEM NOW PLAYING Academy Award Winner Best Actress of 1958 In Her First 1959 Role e plus 9 THE SILENT ENEMY TONITEk Please Don't Miss This One! - OVER TWO HOURS ENtERTAINMENT THE GIANT SCREEN! -:a1!,tf -tf&ViiTTiliT n t till 1 II Kf! 8 I II ii' DRIVE-IM JZ Ja COUTH PACIFIC HIOHWAYF- i MiikoTaka Li 'J