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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1959)
Local and Smolders - A fire found smoldering in an oak log since an earlier grass fire at Brookdale and Roberts rds. was extinguished yesterday by city firemen. Sawdust Fir - Firemen were called about 6:45 ajn. today to put out a fire in a sawdust pile at Surles Poul try farm, 2392 South Stage rd. They said that the dam age was confined to one-half load of sawdust and that origin of the fire was not determined. - Grandson '- Dr. and Mrs. John Bullock, Milwaukie, . Ore., are the parents of a son, David, born June 29. The baby is the couple's fourth child, Grandparents are Dr. and Mrs. George S. Jennings, 218 Saginaw dr., Medford. Mrs. Bullock is the former Hor- tense Jennings. Trying To Locale-Donald E. Overstreet, Camp White, 'is attempting to locate Jua- nita Overstreet, 36, who was known to have lived in the area in 1941 and an Andrew Overstreet, formerly of Rogue River. Persons having infor mation on. either of these persons are to contact Donald Overstreet or the Medford city police. FAT OVERWEIGHT Now available to you for first time without a doctor's prescription, our new drug called ODRINEX. You must lose ugly fat in 7 days or your money back. No more starva tion diets, strenuous exercise, laxa tives, massage or taking of so called reducing candies, crackers, or cookies, or chewing gum. ODHI NEX is a tiny tablet and easily swallowed. Absolutely harmless When you take ODRINEX, you still enjoy your meals, still eat the foods you like, but you simply don't have the urge for extra por tions because ODRINEX depresses your appetite and decreases your desire for food. Automatically your weight must come down, because as your own doctor will tell you, when you eat less, you weigh less. Get rid of excess fat and live longer ODRINEX is sold on this GUARANTEE: You must lose weight within 7 days or your money back. Just return the pack age to your druggist and and get your full money back. ODRINEX costs S3. 00 and is sold with this strict money back guarantee by: Western Thrift Store 30 N. Central j Mail Orders Filled. ' 1 RULVI DIANE BREWSTER-DEAN JONES MmtOCOLOI CMtMASCOM WALKER'S POPULAR 2 "A" HITS .... . r1 L J 1 1 V V eliHM) today's SAGA Of lull. III! BTTTTTr tl ci.dci I " 1 1 1 1 uuSjuD young The SUBS! f ' rzT 1 1 ' ' . , , , Lj?ra.j) ..ai,-a . j&BMflni J LOVERS! DA C Featuring: LESLIE WALDEN on His Clarinet Playing Music You Seldom Get to Hear. EVERYONE WELCOME! SPECIAL 4th of . July Celebration Dance TALENT TROUT FARM PUBLIC 'FISHING POND Open Daily RAINBOW TROUT From FOR STOCKING YOUR FOR PRICES CALL -KE 5-2322 4th of July Centennial DB Am IB IE CUE Eagle Point Grange Park 2 P.M. TILL FOOD RUNS OUT ADULTS $1.50 CHILDREN (3-12) 75c Personal New House - John Gritsch was issued a Medford build ing permit Monday for con structing a $12,500 residence at 324 Mae st. Firemen Called - Ashland firemen yesterday noon were called to extinguish a minor grass fire at 900 North Moun tain st. Patient-Medical patient at Rogue Valley hospital is John nie Triller, 8-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs. George Tril ler, post office box 432, Gold Hill. ' . Meeling-The annual elec tion of officers for the Jack son County Centennial asso ciation will be held Monday, July 6, at 7:30 a.m. at the Jackson hotel. . Groat Books Group - The Medford Great Books study group will meet at 7:30 o'clock this evening at radio station KMED. Subject for discussion , will be "Demo cracy in America" by Alexis de Tocqueville. County Minerals to Be Meeting Subject Minerals and their produc tion in Jackson county, "past, present and future" will be discussed by Dave Chase at the Northwestern Mining council meeting at 8 o'clock tonight in the Jackson county courthouse auditorium. Chase, a graduate of Massa chusetts Institute of Technol ogy, has done considerable re search, on his subject. He is ac tively mining quicksilver in this area and is also a chemist. The council will formulate plans for the picnic to be held in August. Members also will discuss the International Gold Panning contest it will sponsor at the Jacksonville Gold Rush jubilee. All gold panners are invit ed to participate in the con test. CLINK! Burlington, -Vt.' -(UPD- Two Burlington High school stu dents admitted they didn't have a chance when they were caught trying to steal a case of soft drinks destined for the cooler of the city po lice department. GENE NATALIE KELLY WOOD CUM TMV0R WAiNst not. noun SATURDAY NIGHT 1" Vo8" FOND Fire Destroys Empty Crates, Equipment at Ontario Plant Ontario, Ore. (UPD Fire be lieved started by children de stroyed 50,000 empty onion crates, a conveyor shed and equipment here today at a loss estimated at $50,000. The blaze was discovered about 12:35 a.m. today at the J; R. Simplot Co. plant on the east side of Ontario. It took 15 city firemen until well after daybreak to bring the blaze under control. Foreman Louis Pando made Pentagon Damaged Washington -flJPD- Fire that started in a highly secret un derground area today drove hunderds of persons from their offices in the Pentagon- headquarters of all the U.S. armed forces and biggest of fice building in the world. At least 30 men were re ported to have been overcome by smoke. About two hours after the fire started, the De fense Department said 15 guards and firemen had been hospitalized, and another 15 had been treated at the scene. Damage in Millions The fire raged out of con trol for about two hours in a small portion of the enormous building before it was "con tained." Damage was expected to run into millions of dollars. Pope John Warns On Destruction In Nuclear War Vatican City (UPD Pope John XXIII warned today that a nuclear war would bring "appalling destruction and ruin" to both victory and van quished. The 77-year-old pontiff also warned leaders of both" East and West that the world may be "slipping in complete blindness towards a new and frightful" nuclear war unless valiant efforts are made for unity and peace. The warnings came in the first encylical of the- new pontiffs reign. The 10,000 word document was present ed as a continuation of the in struction work begun by the apostles who wrote the New Testament of the Holy Bible. In the main, the encyclical was a sweeping call to Roman Catholics to renew the fervor of their faith and to all Chris tians separated from the church of Rome to rejoin "the Father's -House." Valiant Efforts Urged But Pope John revealed the gravity with which he views current political trends and said valiant efforts must be made by leaders of both. East and West, of all faiths, to pro mote "truth, unity and peace." "We exhort to this harmony and peace particularly, those who hold the reigns of govern ment in their hands," the papal encyclical said. The Pope said it was un certain whether the world was moving toward peace or "slipping in complete blind ness towards a new and fright ful warlike conflagration." Over-the-Counfer Western Stocks The lollowln 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 actua) transactions but are intended as a guide to the appnyriiaat price range Common Stocks Bid Asked Bank of America 47 74 50 Vi Calif-Pacific Utilities. 352 37 i Cascades Plywood 34 36 '2 Cons. Freightways 2674 28 V2 Jrmrr '(11 V aj f 091 First National ank 52 H 56 Morrison-Knudsen 364 38 Northwest Nat. Gaa 17 ?4 18 Pacific Pwr. & Lt. 39 4 42,4 Permanente Cem. Co. 27 29 V, Portland Gen. Elec 27 29 U. S. National Bank 70 74 United Utilities 30 32 West Coast Tel 24 25 Weyerhaeuser 45 47 Investment Funds Noon Quotations on selected funds supplied by th wdford Branch of Foster & Marshall, mem bers New York Stock Exchange Fund Bid Asked Bullock 14.23 15.60 12.65 26.41 18.53 12.45 15.17 11.87 11.94 8.93 1737 11.18 1635 21.58 14.36 17.27 14.03 15.35 17.92 652 15.91 Chem Fund 11.69 Eaton Howard Stk 24.71 Fidelity . 17.14 GrouD Sec -Avia-Elec 1137 -Com Stk 13.86 Group Sec Group Sec Petr 10.81 Group Sec Steel 10.90 Group Sec Tobac 8.15 Keystone B-3 . 16.10 Keystone B-4 10.24 Keystone K-2 1459 Keystone S-l 19.78 Keystone S-2 13.16 Keystone S-3 15.83 Keystone S-4 12.86 Mass Inv. Grth Stk 14.20 TV-Elec .. 16.44 Value Line Inc 5.97 Wellington 14.60 We Give GREEN STAMPS CENTRAL REXALL DRUG .Main and Central the estimate of the loss. He said the crates alone were worth $35,000, that a conveyor belt and shed were worth another $35,500 to $55,000 and that about $10,000 worth of other equipment was either lost or badly damaged. Pando said he felt children were responsible for the fire. He said he has had consider able trouble with youngsters in recent weeks who have built tunnels in the stack of Building by Flames Five alarms brought , hun dreds of fire fighters from ad jacent Virginia communities and the city of Washington. The fire broke out shortly before 8 ajn. (p.s.t.) in the basement of the gigantic, five sided, five-story building which houses about 29,000 Defense Department employ ees, mostly civilians. Although the building is of masonry and concrete, and ba sically ' fireproof, the fire spread in false ceilings and partition. ' Shortly after 10 a.m., a building official said he be lieved the fire was being "con tained." The fire started in the high ly secret Air Forces "data processing" section which con tains $30 million worth of electronic machines some of them apparently used in code work-leased to the Air Force by International Business Ma chines. The heat of the fire buckled the stone and concrete floor of the buildings main first floor concourse, which' con tains numerous stores. The entire concourse area was evacuated. Man Appointed to District Position E. Ronald Rice, Medford, has been appointed to serve the remainder of this year as lieutenant-governor for Di vision 15 A of the Pacific Northwest district of Kiwanis International. He replaces A. M. Neslin, Ashland, who resigned. Rice has previously served as a lieutenant-governor and is a past-president of the Med ford club. He is at present secretary of the club here. Davis Transfer Gets Distribution Contract Davis Transfer and Storage company, Medford, was awarded the contract this week for distribution and storage of poll booths for this fiscal year, County Commis sioner Chester Wendt report ed. Davis was the lower of two bidders at a unit price of $2.89 for transportation or a total price of $2,554.76 for 884 voting booths. No charge is to be made for storage. The only other bidder, Dave Franklin - Mayflower company, Medford, offered a total bid price of $3,049.80 or $1,989 for transportation and $1,060.80 for storage. Woodrow Lane Water Main Work Begins 1 Work on the Woodrow lane water main began this week, according to Robert L. Lee, Medford water superintend ent. . The main between Crater Lake ave. and Wabash ave., is being installed by R. A. Heintz Construction' company, Portland, contractor for the Kenwood - Grandview sani tary sewer and other projects here. The $9,459.80 Woodrow lane project is expected to take three weeks, Lee said. Births HASS-To: Mr. and Mrs, Ed mund, 1615 Crown ave., Med ford, June 30, 1959, boy, 6 lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. GILSTRAP - To: Mr. and Mrs. Robert, 1008 Queen Anne ave., Medford, July 1, 1959, boy, 634 lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. PRATT-To: Mr. and Mrs. Dale, 3232 Lone Pine rd., Medford, July 1, 1959, boy, 5Va lbs., at Rogue Valley hos pital. SCHMELZER-To: Mr. and Mrs. Harold L., P. O. box 23, Talent, July 2, 1959, boy, 8V4 lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP Sponsored by Oregon July 3 July 8 P.M. 2 & 8 Klamath Falls crates. He said they'had a reg ular? playhouse in the center and that he had tried to keep them away from the stack fearing one of them might get hurt. Pando said he believed the children either may have started the fire in the center of the huge pile or have care lessly thrown matches or light ed cigarettes into the area. . Flames Whipped by Wind Nobody was hurt, according to Fire Chief Bob Prahl. Ap parently none of the children was still in the. area when the fire was discovered. Hugh columns of smoke spi ralled skyward, lighted eerily by the flames. Firemen had to battle a 20 mile per hour wind from the west which whipped the flames along. Fortunately, Prahl said, the wind was blowing in the wrong direc tion. Wagons Negotiate Steep Mountain Lava Hot Springs, Idaho-(UPD-Drivers of the seven Ore gon Centennial wagons said Wednesday they felt sure a 700-fbot climb through Fish Creek Divide was the steep est and hardest mountain road thus far negotiated by the Conestogas. The wagons made it through the divide and camped Wed nesday night at the rodeo grounds here. Operators of the local min eral baths threw open their doors to the Fifty-Niners and members refreshed them selves in the hot waters. A feature of the stay near Grace Tuesday was a port able soda fountain brought to the wagon encirclement by Grace residents. Ice cream treats were dished up for the modern pioneers, and the chuck wagon larder was stocked with dairy products, fruit juice and soda pop tjy the townspeople. Today's trek takes the wagons to McCammon and then to the Idaho town of Inkom where camp will be set up.- FAMILY SERVES Burlington, Mass. (UPD- Mr. and Mrs. George H. Ganley treasure a letter from Presi dent Eisenhower congratulat ing them as the parents of 10 sons in the service six sol diers, three sailors and one Marine. Portland Livestock Portland (UPD Cattle 50. High yielding utility cows 17-18.50; can ners and cutters 13.50-15; light cut ter bulls 19-22. Calves 10. High choice vealers 29; otherwise nominal. Hogs 200. U.S. No. 1 and 2, 200 220 lb. butchers 17.50; no other sales. Sheep 250. High good and choice 80-95 lb. spring lambs 21.50; good 80-92 lbs. 20-22; mostly good shorn spring lambs No. 3 pelts 19 19.50; cull to good -slaughter ewes 2-4.50. Portland Produce Portland (UPI) Dairy market: Eees To retailers: Grade AA large, 42-43c dpz.; A large, 38-40c; AA medium, Ji-Joc; AA small, 26 27c; cartons l-3o. 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 Retail watermelon prices slipped to' a new seasonal low on the Port land market today with several outlets offering the melons at 3 cents a pound. Top quality Willa mettte valley strawberries brought growers $2.75 a flat. Red raspber ries continued at $2-2.50 a 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, 2-4 lbs., 19c lb.; light hens, 7-8c; heavy hens, 9c. Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn, 33-36c lb.; cut up, 38-41c; hens, heavy type whole drawn, 35 38c; light-type 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: A grade hens, 24c on an eviscerat ed basis; A grade toms, 30c on the same basis; to retailers: A grade hens, 30-33C lb. Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b. killing plants) Live white, 33,i-4'2 lbs., 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: New crop No. 2 green alfalfa, baled, f.o.b. Portland and Seattle, S32-33 ton: some to S35 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 S66.50 No. 2 Milo, Eastern shipment S55.00 No. 2 corn, Eastern shipment .$57.50-57.75 No. 2 Wh. oats. Coast ..$53.00-5330 No. 2 Western barley. Coast $44.00-45.00 Soybean meal, 44 protein ..$81.00 Standard millrun $37.00-38.00 RODEO Technical Institute 4 July 5 P.M. 2 P.M. Fairgrounds Obituaries VIRGIL RAY McDOUGALL Ashland Funeral services for Virgil Ray McDougall, 20, airman second class, former Ashland resident who was killed in an automobile acci dent Sunday will be held Fri day, July 3, at 10 a.m. in Lit willer's Mountain View chapel. The Rev. Joe Yates, Eugene, and the Rev. Leo Wine, Ash land, will officiate. Interment will be in Mountain View cemetery. Airman McDougall was born Sept. 20, 1938 in Eu gene. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. E. H. McDougall, Eu gene. MRS. MARIE SMITH Private services were held this morning at the Siskiyou Crematorium for Mrs. Marie Smith, 63, of route 1, box 542, Central Point, who died at the family residence Wednes day morning. v Mrs. Smith was born in Milton, Ontario, Canada, and had been a resident of this area for the past 13 years. Survivors include her hus band, William L. Smith, Cen tral Point. , Perl Funeral home was in charge of arrangements. RALPH WOOD Ralph Wood, a resident of Mount Shasta, Calif., died at a local hospital Wednesday afternoon. Perl Funeral home is in charge of the arrange ments. MARYPOLLY FROBSON Ashland Funeral services for Marypolly Frobson, 80, of 872 Siskiyou blvd., who died June 21 will be held Friday, July 3, at Litwiller's Mountain View chapel. The Rev. John Thompson III of Trinity Episcopal church' will officiate. Cremation will fol low. She was born Oct. 3, 1878, in Lansing, Mich. Survivors include a sister, Mrs. Gurdon B. Smith, Lansing. LURA ORR Mrs. Lura Belle Orr, 85, who lived in Merrill, Ore., from 1933 until about three years ago, when she moved to Jacksonville, died in a local hospital Tuesday. Funeral services will . be conducted at 1:30 p.m. Fri day in Chapel Mortuary, with the Rev. William C. Piper, pastor of the First Christian church officiating. Interment will be in Siskiyou Memorial park. Mrs. Orr, the daughter of Alfred and Mary McKean Busby, was born in Inde pendence, Kan., on July 31, 1873. Her marriage to Wyley Thomas Orr ended in divorce in Portland in 1932. She came to Merrill a year later from Canada. Survivor! include one son, Lee A. Orr, Medford; three grandsons, Wayne W. Orr, Newhall, Calif.; Victor D. Orr, Tulelake, Calif.; and Delbert L. Orr, Norwalk, Calif.; three .granddaughters, Mrs. Dallas Williams, Los Angeles; Mrs. Gail Smith, Merrill, and Mrs. Duffie Kenyon, Tulelake; and nine great-grandchildren. MARTIN BEAL ROBUCK Services for Martin B. Ro buck, 49, who died Wednes day, will be held in the Conger-Morris Funeral home Fri day at 1:0 p.m. with the Rev. James Neely of the First Baptist church officiating. Committal will be in Hillcrest Memorial park. Mr. Robuck was born April 16, 1910, at Texico, N. M. he had lived in this area for f oxt years and in Oregon for 30 years. He is survived by one son, Lester Bruce Robuck with the U. S. Air Corp. in California; two daughters, Mrs. Elbert Swearingen of Glendale, Md., and Phyllis Robuck, Sheridan, Ore.; one brother, H. Lester Robuck, Medford; two sisters, Mrs. Lavyrne Farris, Port land, Ore., -and Mrs. Verdie SPECIAL NOTICE - , AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY of Medford, Oregon are conducting their 1959 SUBSCRIPTION CAMPAIGN to buy More Sick Room Equipment r for FREE home. use to all. residents of Jackson County NO DONATION Be sure and check credentials signed by these officers President. Betty Fichtner, 227 H. Oakdale Vic President. Mrs. Clark Walker, 3222 Lone Pine Road Treasurer. Mr. Ross Minneci, 224 Vancouver Ave. Equipment Chairman Mrs. Leo Williams, 1003 Raddy Street Child Welfare Chairman. ...Mri. H. C. Goldsmith, 150 Ross Lane Stocks Set Record With Rails Stronger New York-OIPD-Stocks set a new high record again to day ' with railroad issues stronger. Steel shares turned strong when the steel union an nounced moves to end a series of wildcat strikes that have been unsettling wage contract negotiations. These moves to keep the men on the job left the im pression a steel strike may be avoided. TJ. S. Steel at its best price was up 25s points at a new top. General Motors set a new top as did Fordt although the latter lost its gain. Goodyear had another spurt and lost part of it. Alcoa set new high and several other top-ranking favorites forged ahead. Baltimore & Ohio stood out in the rails by setting a new high. At their best the rails showed a rise of a point in their average. UOW-JOHfS AVERAGES New York .(CPB - Dow Jones final stock averages: 30 industrials 654.76, up 3.88; 20 railroads 168.92, up 0.52; 15 utilities 88.10, up 0.39, and 65 stocks 218. 92. up L10. . Sales today were about 3.610,000 shares compared with 3,150,000 shares. - Wednesday. Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical . 117V4 Alum. Co. Am. . 105 American Can . 45 American Motors i 444 A T & T 814 Anaconda Copper 63 Armco Steei 77 Bendix Aviation 774 Bethlehem Steel 58 Boeing Air 3734 Change Taken From Centra Market Here A total of $16.50 in change was taken from the cash reg ister of Central Market, 437 South Central ave., Tuesday night or early Wednesday morning, according to Med ford police Police said the building's front door had been pried open. A fire box containing company records was m6ved but not taken from the store, according to the report. Hom er AUen Sullivan, 1533 Whit man ave., the store owner, reported the crime. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight and Friday. Warm er Friday. Low tonight 50. High Friday 90. Outlook Saturday fair and warm. Western Oregon: Clearing condi tions tonight. Mostly sunny and a little warmer Friday. Low tonight 46-56. High Friday 75-85. Northern California: Fair tonight and Friday except fog on coast. Slightly cooler from Merced north ward tonight. Probably fair Satur day. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 73; above normal 5. Record high this date 108 in 1922. ' Record low this date 39 in 1921. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 a.m., none. Total this month none, .01 inch below normal. Total since Sept. 1, 12.85 inches, 4.95 inches below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 20, highest this a.m. 82. High 4:30 24- City Tester- a.m. hr. day Low Prec. Brookings : 64 48 Grants Pass 92 ' 49 Klamath Falls 81 49 MEDFORD 90 53 Portland ..... 78 58 4 Seattle 72 54 60 57 T Spokane - 87 Yakima ai Eureka Red Bluff 61 98 97 67 85 54 72 60 52 67 83 56 58 79 64 76 Sacramento San Francisco Los Angeles Phoenix 103 Denver 81 Chicago 75 Miami Beach .... 88 New York 82 Washington, D.C. 91 .05 Farmer, Mountainair, N. M. Bearers will be Wendel Tolle, Glen Watson, Albert Johnson, William R u 1 1 e r, Clyde Wilkes, and Loyal Goodnough. Caterpillar Corp. 114 Chrysler Corp 695S Continental Can 47 Crown Zellerbach 52Ji Curtiss Wright 34T-8 Dow Chemical 9114 Du Pont . 2524 Eastman Kodak i 87?8 Firestone 145 General Electric 80 General Foods 92 General Motors . 53 V4 Georgia Pacific 47 Yb Graham Paige 2Va 23 ,111H Greyhound Gulf Oil Homestake Mining A2Vs Idaho Power 4634 I. B. M. 447 Kaiser Ind. 18 122 V 5334 104 3134 r 6V4 483.6 5134 2834 Int. Paper Johns Manville Kennecott Copper Lockheed Aircraft Katy . Montana Power Montgomery Ward Nat'l Biscuit New York Central Pac Gas & Elec .... 5934 Penney J. C. IIOV2 Penn RR 19 Radio Corporation . 69 Richfield Oil 83 Safeway . 37 V2 Sears 48 Shell Oil. - 18 Socony Mobil Oil 44 Southern Co 37V Southern Pacific 73 V2 Standard California 52Va Standard Indiana 47 Standard N. J. - 51 Sun Mines 6 Texas Co. 81 Texas Gulf Sulfur 20 Tex Pac Land Trust 24 Transamerica (xd) 28 Va Trans World Air ; 23 Vs Tri-Continental 41 Union Carbide 146 Union Pacific 34 United Aircraft 52 Yi United Air Lines 41 U. S. Rubber 675s U. S. Steel 103 Youngstown S & T L..130 WATCH FOR OUR GRAND OPENING Open Daily 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Sundays 9 The NEW FOOD FAIR Formerly Lu man's, 4th Front Have you heard Bob Coverly Playing all Requests at . the NEW PIANO BAR If not... p Why not... Drop in Say Hello! Danny Marmo, Manager HOTEL MEDFORD ONE OF THE GREAT MMSCHCOUMWpi il nil TULT JOHM Vf WILLIAM ItaE EiOLDEII if i -CONSTANCE TOWERS Was-John IE mahi jm rackw ..JOHN FORD tmmnoMmum ADDED SCOOP ATTRACTION FIGHT w OFFICIAL WORLD'S HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHT FILMS! -V felMM4 Ikr. SEE THE KNOCKOUT IN SLOW MOTION WIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Thursday, July 2. 1959 ENDS TONITE! ONE SHOWING ONLY DOORS OPEN 7:00 fM. SHOW STARTS 7:30 PM. Party Gihl TAYLJDRCHARiSSE-COBB iSd ALSO THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SP 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRES NOW SHOWING $1 Per Carload NIGHTMARE f" of HORROR! !( (AIUUA IHtUIY j ' U A UVriSt.MTHNAT!ONl miMjf I THRILLING CO-FEATURE ' RIVE-IN Mm 1 Vt m I airP IHMiUiau , ENDS TONIGHT! "TANK COMMANDOS" sUrrinf WaNr Camps Miggie Lawrence Robart Birroe AN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL PICTURE "OPERATION DAMES" starrinc Em Meyer Chuck HendersonDoo Dcvlis AN AMERICAN-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE NOW SHOWING PICTURES OF ALL TIME WILLIAM AS THE RAIDER ON HORSEIACK WHO ROSE UKE THUNDER ...AND STRUCK UKE LIGHTNING! JOHN FORD'S THUNDOWS SPECTACLE! colon : .uMTangigrsij FILMS! UNITED ARTISTS EARTHA KITT SAMMY DAVIS. JL pj couth rwcjimwwi It strike with I J? ARTHUR FRANZ JOANNA MOORE 7C09 Br - DYNAMSIfJ TAtilMi'DOS'