Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 29, 1959, Image 9

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    Local and
Palienli - Medical patients
at Osteopathic hospital are
Mary F. Smith, and Mrs. John
W. Roe Us, both 714 Dakota
ave.
Correction In an item in
this column Sunday concern
. ing . a dog bite incident the
victim was reported as "Linda
Newton, 318 South Newtown
st." The correct name should
be Linda Lawton, of that ad
0 dress.
Medical Patients - Medical
patients at Sacred Heart hos
pital are George Frey, 336
South Riverside ave., Mrs. Ce
lestia Kirker, Paso .Robles,
Calif., and Mrs. Gertrude
Spencer, 310 North Bartlett
st.
"
Tonsillectomies Convalesc
ing at Osteopathic hospital
following tonsillectomies are
Patricia Higinbotham, 3 5 9
North Eighth st., Central
Pointy and Johnny Summers,
15, soft of Mr. and Mrs. John
Summers, 220 Marion lane,
Grants Pass.
Maul Misiing-Judd Warren
Doty, 532 South Fir st., in
formed Medford police of the
theft Friday night, or early
Saturday morning of a $9
splitting maul from the bed of
a pick-up truck while the ve
hicle was parked in the alley
behind 522 South Fir st. .
Correction - An article con
cerning Medford auto acci
dents which appeared in Sun
day's paper, reported incor
rectly that Betty Emma Agee,
124 Lincoln st., was cited
after one collision for having
no operator's license on her
person. This citation, accord
ing to Medford police, was
actually issued to another of
the three drivers involved in
the collision, Thomas Carrol
Turner, 513 Alder st. The Mail
Tribune regrets the error,
and apologizes to Mrs. Agee:
Plan Entertainment - As a
substitute for the usual Mon
day night business meeting,
Talisman lodge, Knights of
Pythias, has planned enter
tainment, cards and a cake
walk for tonight. The last
gyent is sponsored by Rosebud
council, Pythian Sunshine
girls. Knights, Pythian Sis
5y parents of Sunshine
Girls, visiting members and
friends are invited to attend.
Refreshments will be served,
according to Dan R. Kadin,
chancellor commander.
Grass Fires - Medford fire
men were dispatched to four
grass fires over the week end.
Largest was in the 2100 block
along Crater Lake highway
about 6:45 pjn. yesterday. It
covered 10 acres. Firemen said
the name of the property own
er and the origin of the blaze
were not known. A fire on
th R. L. Glather property at
Vashti Way and Jacksonville
hiffhwav at the edce of the
Central Point rural district
was put out about 2:25 p.m.
yesterday. Medford firemen
made the run under the mu
tual aid terms with Central
Point rural. Fires Saturday
afternoon were on the Arthur
Buettner land. 151 Mace rd.
and at the Floyd Hostetter
place, 2289 Corona ave.
mm
ENDS TUESDAY!
IN THE SAME
TREMENDOUS
CLASS AS
Gone With The Wind!
BUZA8CTH
TAYLOR
r marx SAINT
For EXTRA fun
iUA
18
Arrange foryour
America's best-known
clift !:f'irki:144
TAKE W
ALDUS
AN HFC
OUSEHOLD FINANCE
128 E. Main St., 2nd Floor ' Mion $P 3-5301
Open Monday Evening till 8:00 p.m., Saturday till 1:00 p.m.
Personal
House Ransacked June
Mayvis Lindgren, 325Vi South
Riverside ave., informed Med
ford police that her house was
ransacked last night. No arti
cles were taken, according to
the report.
Fall - Maude Clay " Lovell,
123 Almond st., informed Med
ford police Saturday she had
fallen on a sidewalk in poor
repair on Almond between
East Main and East Ninth sts.
and skinned her knees.
.
Mirror Taken-Robert Fran
cis O'Connor, 510 Wilson td.,
informed Medford police Sun
day of the recent theft of an
$8 rear-view mirror from his
car while the vehicle was
parked at the Club 21, 1909
North Pacific highway.
Smoke .Investigated Fire
men, investigating the cause
of smoke at Leon's store, 21
North Central ave., about 8:45
p.nu Saturday found it to be a
trash burner in the basement.
On a similar check at the
Reter Fruit company, 11th
and Fir sts. this morning they
found a transformer of a flu
orescent light fixture burned
out.-
Machines Damaged An 8-
year-old Medford boy today
admitted he was responsible
for damage Friday to a pair
of earth-moving machines be
longing to Frank William
Kanehl, Portland contractor,
while they were parked on
Gary st. between Roberts rd.
and Crater Lake ave., accord
ing to Medford police. Kanehl
estimated damage to one ma
chine at $200, police reported,
Disorderly Conduct-Charles
William Griffin, 23, of 310
North Bartlett st.,.and Doug
las Charles Stevenson, 30, of
305 Edwards st., were arrest
ed early this morning on dis
orderly conduct charges in
connection with a fight on
North Riverside ave. between
East Main and East Sixth sts.,
Medford police reported. Grif
fin pleaded guilty and was
fined $25 in Medford munici
pal court today while Steven
son's court appearance is Fri
day, according to the report
TERRY MOORE MARRIES
Glendale, Calif. -.(UPD - Ac
tress Terry Moore and busi
nessman Stuart W. Cramer
III were married Sunday
night in a Mormon ceremony.
It was her third .marriage and
his second. Miss Moore Yre-
viously was married to foot
ball player Glen Davis and
Eugene McGrath. Cramer is
the former husband of actress
Jean Peters.
Births
CARTER-To Mr. and Mrs.
James E., 36 Glenoak ct., Med
ford, June 26, 1959, girl, 6V4
lbs., at Sacred Heart hospital.
JOHNSON - To Mr. and
Mrs. Richard A., 440 Iowa st.,
Ashland, June 28, 1959, boy,
8J lbs., at Sacred Heart hos
pital. THORNILEY - To Mr. and
Mrs. Michael, post office box
177, Talent, June 29, 1959,
girl, 8 lbs., at Rogue Valley
hospital.
SEMON - To Mr. and Mrs,
John 2516 Sandy terrace,
Medford, June 27, 1959, boy,
734 lbs., at Rogue Valley hos
pital. 1
WATERBURY-To Mr. and
Mrs. John Roger, 194V4 Mead
st., Ashland, June 26, 1959,
girl, 93A lbs., at Rogue Valley
hospital.
BEAMS - To Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry, 1600 Ellendale dr.,
Medford, June 27, 1959, girl,
6 lbs., at Osteopathic hos
pital.
- McCARTY - To Mr. and
Mrs. Donald, 1463 Ken Baker
rd., Medford, June 29, 1959,
girl, 7 lbs., at Osteopathic
hospital.
Call or visit Household
today. You'll do business
in complete privacy with
a friendly, capable HFC
manager. He's an "ex
pert" in arranging loans
for any good purpose,
from $20 to $1500. You'll
choose your own repay
ment plan. You'll leave
with a feeling of confi
dence because you've
done business with
America's oldest con
sumer loan company.
Life insurance is avail
able on all loans at low
group rate. -
vacation money at
consumer kn company
T. C . m B :
DECLARED SANE Gov. Earl K. Long of Louisiana enters his car at Covington, La.,
after a specially convened court released him from further confinement for in
sanity. Long's wife, who had him committed for treatment, has fled the state.
If av;
y''lv lillill fcllpil 0
. r
CALIFORNIA PAGEANT Two of the contenders in the
Miss California beauty contest pause outside contest
headquarters at Santa Cruz, Calif. At left is Miss Solano
County, Charlotte Jean Wood of Vallejo, and (right) Miss
Sacramento, Patricia Ann Williams.-Miss Williams is the
first Negro to have ever reached the finals of the Miss
California contest.
Obituaries
INFANT C. F. PRICE
Chester Floyd Price, infant
son of Mrs. and Mrs. Floyd
Price, Gold Hill, died at a
local hospital Sunday. Funer
al services will be announced
by the Perl Funeral home.
HAROLD M. SHUTT
Services for Harold M.
Shutt, 66, who died June 21,
will be held Tuesday at 11
a.m. In the Conger-Morris Fu
neral home with the Rev. Ray
mond W. Hurn of the Church
of the Nazarene officiating.
Committal will be in Hill
crest Memorial park.
Mr. Shutt was born in Con
don, Ore., on Sept. 13, 1892,
and had lived in Medford for
the past 20 years. He had
served in the U. S. Army
during World War I.
Surviving is one brother,
Howard Shutt, Simi, Calif.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair to
night and Tuesday, except for some
afternoon cloudiness. Low tonight
45. High Tuesday 82.
Western Oregon: Partly cloudy
with a few scattered showers over
mountains tonight and Tuesday. A
little warmer Tuesday. Low tonight
14-52. High Tuesday 68-78. - -
Northern California: Fair tonight
and Tuesday. Warmer along coast
today and inland sections Tuesday,
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day 61; below normal 6.
Record high this date 106 in
1924.
Record low this date 39 in 1955.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight 0; Midnight to 10 ajn.
o. -
Total this month -27 in, .68 in.
helow normal.
Total since Sept. 1 1235 in., 4.92
in. below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
29. highest this a.m. 90.
High 4:30 24-Yester-
a.m. hr.
City
.day Low Prec,
I Brookings
..72
74
..67
..75
52
44
42
46
Grants Pass
Klamath Falls .
MEDFORD
Portland .
. 66
52 22
Seattle
Spokane
Yakima
69 52
62 . 48
71 47
.02
Eureka
Red Bluff
60 53
92 68
89 62
Sacramento
San Francisco 68 56
Los Angeles 7 7 64
Phoenix
Denver
101
85
96
78
58
73
76
68
81
.02
Chicago
Miama Beach 90
New York 7l
Washington, D.C. 99
FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through
juiy 4):
Western Oreion-Western Wash
ington Temperatures averaging
about normal with cooling trend
near week end. Highs in 70s and
lows in 50t. Precipitation about
normal in western Washington with
a few shower southwestern Wash
ington at beginning and again near
end of period. Western Oregon pre
cipitation a Dove normal witn snow
ers Tuesday and again about Satur
day. Northern California No preci
pation. Temperatures near normal.
r tot.
NUDIST BUSINESS BOOMS
London - (UPD - Britain's
nudist camp business is boom
ing as a result of hot weather
Dr. Douglas Gibson, head of
the British Sunbathing associ
ation, said he expanded his
retreat from 5 to 50 acres
because of increased business.
Charles McCaskie, - 74, dean
of-British nudist camp lead
ers, said the number of sun
bathers has doubled at his
Hertfordshire camp on Sun
days.
I
MOSCOW WEDDING Two new Jersey citizens will be
getting married in Moscow's only Catholic church. Mary
Louise McMahon, shown packing her veil at home in
Tenafly, N. J., will go to Russia to wed Dennis O'Connor,
of Maplewood, N. J., an exchange student at Moscow Uni
versity. They will honeymoon in the Caucasus Mountains
and at the Black Sea.
REID ISRAEL-BOUND
New York - (UPB - Ogden
Reid the new U.S. ambassa
dor to Israel, left Sunday
night to take up his new post.
Reid, former president and
editor of the New York Her
ald Tribune, said he would
present his credentials to
Israeli President Itzak Ben
Zvi on July 2.
STORE PRESIDENT DIES
Hudson, Y. - Dorothy
Shaver, 61, president of the
Lord and Taylor Department
Store in New York City, died
Sunday of a stroke. . Miss
Shaver was the first woman
Time Capsule To
List Entertainment
Orlando, Fla. (UPD The
best in American entertain
ment during the past 100
years will be represented in
a "Merry Missile" time cap
sule to be planted this fall at
Circusland, a year-round tour
ist attraction being planned
near Orlando.
Contents of the capsule, ac
cording to Maurice Marshall,
executive vice president of
Entertainment Enterprises,
Inc., are designed to show
people a century from now
what made Americans happy
from 1860 to 1960.
Films, photographs, books,
newspapers, theater programs
and so on will be placed in
the "Merry Missile", when it
is "launched" at ground
breaking ceremonies for Cir
cusland. The seven-and-a-half
million - dollar, 200 -acre fun
center is scheduled to open
formally in December, 1960.
Soldiers Car Has
Luxury Equipment
Columbus, Miss. (UPD Air
Force Sgt. Dallas Alexander
boasts a car equipped with
luxuries which even the top
brass of the armed forces
don't find in their swankiest
staff cars.
Alexander, stationed at Co
lumbus Air Force Base, owns
a seven-passenger 1928 Cadil
lac. The car, with only 42,000
miles on the speedometer, has
an inter-com system, a built-
in pump which starts pump
ing air into the tires at the
press of a button, a cigar
lighter equipped with cord
for passengers in the back
seat and an interior upholster
ed in plush velour.
An in case the big vehicle
doesn't respond to the self-
starter, there's a hand crank
ever elected president of
such a large retail corpor
ation. HOTEL MEDFORD
Coin Changer Taken
From Laundromat
A S125 coin changer ma
chine containing about $25 in
dimes was stolen from the
Westinghouse Laundro mat,
634 Crater Lake ave., Satur
day night or Sunday morning,
Medford police reported.
Police said the machine was
apparently pried from its
place on the wall. The theft
was reported by Luddie Val
po McMahon of the 634 Crater
Lake address.
Buffaloes Start
Tavern Owner's Zoo
Henry,' Ill.-OIPD-Two "van
ishing Americans," a pair of
buffalo, are being housed on
Fred Ely's farm near here for
a tavern owner who wants to
develop a zoo.
Max Eckhardt bought the
buffalo recently from a Ne
braska cattle dealer for $250
apiece. Each animal - weighs
500 pounds.
Eckhardt said the animals
are 'gentle they eat out of
their keeper s hand - but ex
pensive. For example, it cost
auu to snip xnem nere, aue
to an old railroad regulation
that considers buffalo ex
tremely dangerous.
Eckhardt apparently is try
ing to bring a touch of the
Old West to Illinois for, along
with the buffalo, he has three
deer on the farm and plans to
buy two antelopes from the
Brooklyn Zoo in Chicago.
Then he will have a home
"where the buffalo roam and
the deer and the antelope
Play."
Bank Conveniences
Cut Human Contact
Ann Arbor, Mich. - (UPD -Drive-in
banks, night depos
it boxes, bank-by-mail plans
and new electronic account
ing devices are a mixed
blessing, according to one
banking executive.
They widen the gap be
tween the bank on the one
hand and its customers and
community on the other, said
vice president Robert ' Lind
quist of Chicago's Harris Trust
and Savings Bank at a con
ference here'.
"Every time a customer
takes advantage of one of
these conveniences," Lind
quist aid, "we lose the oppor
tunity for warm, human con
tact." '
He urged that banks make
up for this lack by other
means, such as writing cus
tomers an occasional letter of
appreciation, by telephoning
them and by inviting them "to
come into the bank whenever
they are nearby."
Woman Notifies
Friends of Sunrise
Robertson, Ga. -(UPD When
the dawn comes up like thun
der, Mrs. Paul Westmoreland
Sr. grabs the telephone. "This
is Bea," she says. "Go look at
the sun. Then she bangs up
A beautiful sunrise" is a de
light to Mrs. Westmoreland.
For years she has been calling
friends, on the more spectacu
lar mornings, to let them
share her hobby.
She doesn't bother those
whose view is cut off by near
by mountains, Mrs. Westmore
land says. "But when I know
folks have an open view, and
I'm sure they're the kind to
appreciate it, then I call right
away."
How do the neighbors react
to the calls? "They look for
ward to them," she says. Her
reason for calling: "I know
what it means to get a lift like
that early in the morning."
Three Terms for
College Year Urged
Amherst, Mass.-(UPD-An Am
herst College faculty commit
tee has recommended split
ting the college year into
three terms with the middle
session used for a "change of
pace."
Under the proposed system,
there would be 13-week terms
in the fall and the spring and
a five-week midwinter term
during which students would
concentrate their studies on
one or two general subjects.
The committee's report said
the short midwinter term
"makes it possible to derive
greater educational benefits
from a portion of the year
which, under existing condi
tions, cannot always be put to
the best use."
CANDLE ROOM
Charcoal Broiled
STEAKS
An especially good place
to eat if dieting!
5:30 p.m. till 12:00 Weekdays
Sundays 4 p.m. till 11 p.m.
Stocks Move Ahead
In Reduced Trading
New York-flJPIK-Stocks mov- vidiial gains of a point or more
ed ahead smartly all along the were numerous in the main
line today in slightly reduced list and new highs exceeded
trading.
The market hit its best lev
els of the day around 1 pm.
when the industrial average
was at a new all-time high.
Profit taking set in at that
time which brought down the
average from its best level.
Despite profit taking, indi-
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPD Cattle 1750.
Average choics 1142 lb. fed steers
28.75; other good with some choice
under 1150 lb. steers 27.50-28;
standard steers 25-26.50; high good
with choice around 850 lb. fed heif
ers 27.50; utilitv and standard heif
ers 21-25; utility cows 16.50-18;
canners and cutters 13.50-1530.
Calves 200. Trade very slow; early
bids weak to unevenly lower.
Hogs 1150. U.S. No. 1 and 2
butchers 190-225 lbs. 17.75-1825;
mixed 1, 2 and 3 grade 180-240
lbs. 17-17.50; No. 3 grades 272-336
lbs. 15-16; part load 319 lbs. 15;
some 425-450 lbs. 12-12.50.
Sheep 2350. Predominantly choice
83-99 lbs. spring lambs 22.25-22.50;
bulk good and choice 85-107 lbs.
21.50-22; good grade 21; good and
choice 75-90 lbs. 17.50-18.50; cull
to good slaughter ewes 2-4.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPI) Dairy market:
Eggs To retailers: Grade AA
large, 42-43C doz.; A large, 38-40c;
AA medium, 34-35c; AA small, 26
27c; cartons l-3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA and
Grade A prints, 6oc lb., carton, . lc
higher: B prints. 63c.
Cheese Medium cured To re
tailers: A grade Cheddar, single
daisis. 41-51c; processed American
cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43C.
Farm Market'
Fresh picked Oregon raspberries
brought $2.75-3.00 a 12 basket flat
on the Portland market today. Mo
sier district Bing cherries brought
32 ',2 cents a pound while fair
quality from Maryhill, Wash, sold
down to 27 cents.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens Quoted to grow
ers at Portland, Salem and south
to i-ugene; f.o.b. ranch. No. 1
quality fryers, 23,i-4 lbs., 18-19c;
light hens, 8c; heavy hens, 9-10c.
Dressed UhicKens No. 1 flrade
dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole
drawn. 33-36C lb.; cut up, 38-4 lc;
hens, heavy type whole drawn. 3d-
38c; light-type cut up, 29-34c lb.
Jjressed TurKeys to retailers:
Frozen ready to cook A grade
young toms, 40-43c lb., according
to weight: A grade young nens.
same basis, 38-40c lb.
Breeder Turkeys to producers:
A grade hens, 24c on an eviscerated
basis: A grade toms, 30c on the
same basis: to retailers: A grade
hens, 30-33C lb.
Rabbits (Average to growers
r.o.D. killing plants) uve white,
33t-i'2 lb. f.o.b. Portland, 19-21c;
colored nelts. 5c under. Fresh kill
ed fryers to retailers, 56-58C lb.;
cup up, eo-ezc.
Portland Hay, Grain
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices:
New crop. No. 2 green, alfalfa,
baled f.o.b. Portland and Seattle.
$32-33 ton; some to $35 at Portland.
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 white $66.50
No. 2 Milo, Eastern .
shipment $55.00
No. 2 corn. Eastern
shipment ......$57.75-58.00
No. 2 White oats, '
Coast $53.00-54.50
No. 2 Western barley,
Coast ....$44.00-45.00
Soybean meal, 44
Protein . :....$80.00
Standard millrun $37.00-38.00
Nurse Helps Solve
Logistics Problem
Los Angeles-(UPD-Logistics-the
Army term for moving
men, supplies and equipment
to the right place at the right
time-is also a problem in hos
pitals but it has been solved to
a great extent by a nurse at
Mount Sinai hospital here.
Hospitals throughout the
nation are copying the meth
ods of Mrs. Margaret Lee, su
pervisor of the Mount Sinai
central supply department.
Perhaps her most important
innovation is a "Cardiac Cart"
which contains equipment and
drugs for treatment of emer
gency heart cases. The mo
ment a cardiac patient is as
signed a room at Sinai, a cart
is wheeled into the room,
ready for instant use.
Mrs. Lee also has re-designed
trays to the specifications
of physicians and surgeons,
using lighter and quieter ma
terials. In addition, she has substi
tuted paper and other disposa
ble materials for linen used
on the trays, thus chopping
costs and eliminating laundry
and sterilization problems.
thru
Jury 12
BILL HARRAH presents
WITH AL SCNORY CONOOCTINO
and the unusual artistry
SID KROFFT
Will Osbocrs's Orohrtra
. . end In the Statellne Lounge
JERRY COLONNA
, ARTHUR ELLEN
ISH KABBIBLE
new lows once again.
The steels stood out on the
up-side. Gains of 2 points or
more at the highs appeared in
Youngstown, Inland and Lu
kens. Advances of around a
point or more appeared in a
long list of other steels.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York-fflPD-Dow-Jonts
final stock averages: 30 in
duslrials 643.06, up 3.81; 20
railroads 168.18. up 1.01; 1
utilities 86.62, up 0.S2, and
65 stock. 215.70. up 1.25.
Sales today were about
3,080,000 shares compared
with 3.100,000 shares Fci
day.
Today's prices on elected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 119V
Alum Co Am ...100V4
American Can 44Vs
American Motors 44
A-T & T 79
Anacondaopper 62
Armco Steel 7..-. 75
Bendix Aviation 76V4
Bethlehem Steel 56
Boeing Air .". 1... 3734
Caterpillar Corp 107V2
Chrysler Corp 68
Continental Can 47
Crown Zellerbach 51V2
Curtiss Wright ...... 33
Dow Chemical 89
Du Pont 24
Eastman Kodak 86
Firestone :.....1433,4
General Electric .... 79
General Foods .... 88 14
General Motors 50
Georgia Pacific 46 Vi
Graham Paige . 3
Greyhound 22
Gulf Oil ...110
Homestake Mining .. 42
Idaho Power ..... 46
IBM . 445
Kaiser Ind
Int Paper ...
.. 17
.119
Johns Manville 52
Kennecott Copper 104
Lockheed Aircraft .. 31
Katy 6V4
Montana Power 73
Montgomery Ward .. 47
Natl Biscuit 50
New Yonk Central .... 28V2
Pac Gas & Elec 59V4
Penney J C 111V4
Penn RR . 19
Radio Corporation 67
Richfield Oil 85V4
Safeway 37
Sears 48
Shell Oil 78
Socony Mobile Oil - 44
Southern Co 37
Southern Pacific 74
Over-the-Counler
Western Stocks
The f olio win bid and asked
prices on selected Western securi
ties, provided by the Medford
branch oifice of Pacifio Northwest
Company are unofficial and do not
represent actua1 transactions but
are intended as e guide to the
approximate price range
Common Stocks Bli Atk4
Bank of America 47 V 4H
Calif-Pacific Utilities M 8f 38 '
ocr-oilAe PIvurnnH 33 3fi!i
Cons Freightways Wt
,2
IV4
55i
li
40 3
7
2
72,i
31i
24
46
copco - eo
First National Bank
52 'a
Morrison-Knudsen
Northwest Nat Gas
Pacific Pwr & Lt
Permanente Cement
Portland Gen Elec
US National Bank
United Utilities
West Coast Tel
Weyerhaeuser
6ij
17
3'i
25.
26V
29 ;
23 'i
43
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 14.03
13-381
Chem Fund 1151
Eaton Howard Stk .24.39
Fidelity 16.90
Gas Ind 13.03
Group Sec-Avia-Elee 11.19
Group Sec-Corn Stk 13.66
Group Sec-Petr 10.8S
Group Sec-Steel 10.81
Group Sec-Tobae 8.14
Keystone B-3 1632
Keystone B-4 . 10.23
Keystone K-2 14.77
Keystone S-l 19.43
Keystone S-2 1255
Keystone S-3 .15.58
Keystone S-4 13.70
Mass Inv Grth Stk 14.08
TV-Elec 16.16
Value Line Inc 5 SI
Wellington 14.41
12.44
26.07
18.27
14.24
12.26
14.95
1139
11.84
8.94
18.03
11.16
16.12
2120
14.14
17.00
14.95
1522
17.61
6.4
19.71
plus the LATE SHOW
THE LANCE II
SOMETHIN' SMITH
1 AND THE IEDH4AM
- 4L -ai
1 I J - i, I
Monday, June lv, K93g)
Staridard California fg)
Standard Indiana
Standard N J ..
Sun iMnes .....
Texas Co . lii
Texas Gulf Sulfur 20Vi
Transamerica .. 23,i
Trans World Air 223,i
Tri-Continental ' 41 U
Uftion Carbide 143 5 i
Union Pacific .. 34T4
United Aircraft 52i
United Air Lines 4014
U S Rubber - 62Vi
U S Steel ... 9934
Youngstown S & T ..13034
BECOMES PRIEST
Trenton, N.J. -(UPD- A Mad
ison Avenue publishing ex
ecutive has been ordained
priest of the Protestant Epis
copal Church. Warren Cf
sell, who retired last month
as director of printing at
Triangle Publications, Inc.,
was ordained at ceremonies
Saturday at Trinity Cathedral
here.
LAT TWO DAYS
SANDRA DEE - DAN O'HERUHY
ROBERT ALDA
19
MFqX&TIQN SERVICE
CALL SP3-7323
FOB, FULL INFORMATION
ApUT YOUR (THEATRES
MOW SHOWING
Ql IP CIDLOAD
CO-FEATURE
m
Scott BRADY Margia DEAN
ENDS TOHITE!
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