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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1959)
I Local and In Hospilal-Victor I. Eakln Sr, 917 West llttx st, Med ford, Is a medical patient at Sacred Heart hospital. Patient Convalescing at Sacred Heart hospital follow ing surgery is Mrs. Lorraine Skeeters, Prospect. - and blackberry bushes burned a strip about 250 feet long, it was reported: Virgil Moon, 4459 Colver rd., Phoenix, re ported the fire. . Grass Fix A state depart ment of forestry crew put out a grass fire today along the Southern Pacific railroad tracks south of Phoenix about 12:15 ajn. The fire in grass mittee of the Democratic Party of Jackson county will meet Wednesday, July 8, at 8 pjn. in the Labor Temple, 24 Va South Grape st. , Police Seek-Medford police today were seeking where abouts of Bill Peck, also known as Bill Hendrickson, the son of a former Medford policeman,' William Peck, in regard to an emergency mes sage. Anyone with informa tion that would help in locat ing the younger Peck was asked to get in touch with the police station. Car Stolen Bert Pinkham, Central Point, reported to state police this morning that someone had stolen his car last night as it was parked in front of his parents' home at 436 Ash st., Central Point. The keys were left in the ignition, state police said. The car is de scribed as a 1958 Ford sedan, black and white, with a li cense number IN-7234. ENDS TOIIITE! ROBERT RYAN ALDO RAY UK LOUUf . MY SPAM 1 1 M.I. T.I. WJ PETER , CUSHING i MCUSSA I STRIBUNG T-h 1 -iMaUft. rt T-V - "11 '" Uanaaaury uoiiins Mixer drink-makingttime "and money ! ft JcahadTI COLLINS MIXER DISCOVER. Canada Dry Collins Mixer with its fresh Lemon taste . . . gives you more mixing pleasure for your money. Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Medford Personal Initallaiion-A joint instal lation of the Medford DAV and auxiliary will be held on Friday, July 10, at 9 pjn. in the Red Cross building. Meeting The Jackson County Medical Society will meet Wednesday, July 8, at Ping's Garden, 2330 North Pa cific highway. Dinner will be held at 7 pjn. followed by the meeting at 8 o'clock. , Tire, Wheel Taken-William Clyde Webb, 915 Reddy ave., informed Medford police of the theft. Saturday or Sunday of a tire and wheel valued at $35 from his car while the vehicle was parked in a ga rage at that address. Saddle, Bridles Taken-Rob-. ert James Cunningham, 24 North Groveland ave., in formed . Medford police Sun day of, the theft during the past six weeks of a $75 sad dle, a $15 Western bridle and a $25 English bridle from a store room at 119 Highland dr. . .' Driver Cited Vernon Charles Scott,' 2939 Madrona lane, was cited for violating the basic rule Saturday fol lowing a collision between his vehicle and one operated by James Barton Johnson, 1320 South Peach st., at Stew- are and Oakdale aves., Med ford police reported. Alaskan Picnic - The first all-Alaskan picnic, for former residents of Alaska, will be held at Upper Lithia park in Ashland on Sunday, July 19. Each family is asked to bring its own food and service; cof fee will be served. Lunch is planned for 1 pjn. For more information, call Mrs. H. J. "Ernst at NOrmandy 4-1817. Caxs Collide Cars driven by CBenna Gaylene Reader, 25, t 65 South Seventh st., Central Point, and by Gary Arthur Winetroat, 18, of route 2, box 414, Medford, col lided yesterday near the inter- section of Ross lane and Sage rd. No injuries were reported and damage was relatively minor, state police said. Theft at Pool Ruth Jeanne Rott, 51 Janney lane, inform ed Medford police Saturday that two pairs of swimming trunks, two towels, two face masks, two snorkel tubes and one white T-shirt total value $7 were taken at Hawthorne pool while her two sons played in the park nearby. - tool Its nf" Hum .j&SSic Improving Mrs. N. T. Hodges, lift West Ninth st., is reported improving at Rogue Valley hospital where she has been confined since a fall at her home June 26. Bool, Motor Taken -Roger Black, 532 Pennsylvania ave., informed Medford police on Monday of, the theft of a 17 foot boat with a 5Vi horse power motor, both on a trail er and worth together about $300, some time Sunday night. Carbine Taken- Charles Franklin Casey, route 1, box 448, Talent, informed Med ford police of the theft Sun day of a .22 Winchester pump carbine and miscellaneous tools from his vehicle while it was parked in the alley be hind 708 Cedar st. . Hits Barricade A vehicle operated by Frank Catalano, 424 Valley View dr., struck and damaged a City of Med ford street . barricade and blinker light on East Jackson st., at Genessee st. Sunday evening, Medford police re ported. No citations were is sued, police said. Patients - Convalescing at Rogue Valley hospital follow ing tonsillectomies are Nan ette Ferrell, 8-year-old daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Ferrell, route 1, box 246, Cen tral Point, and Richard Ham ilton, 7-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Hamilton, 905 Grant rd. Surgery patient there is Randy Smith, 7-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jo seph E. Smith, box 253, Jack sonville. . Grass Fires - Medford Fire department was called to two trash fires Monday afternoon. One was reported at 4:15 pjn. in the 300 block of Effie st. where a small area of dry grass burned around a pile of trash. The second, reported at 5:10 p.m. was in the 3600 block of South Pacific high way. Approximately one' acre was burned ff : along the creek where debris garbage had been dumped, firemen re ported. No damage was re ported in either fire. 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 S35 at Port land. Wholesale prices as reported by the Portland USDA market news service. Basis by the ton, bulk, Srompt delivery, f.o.b. track, Port ind. Wheat. No. 1 white S67.00 No. 2 Mllo, Eastern shipment n :....$53.00-54.00 No. 2 com. Eastern shipment $57.00 No. 2 white oats. Coast $53.00-53.50 No. .2 Western barley, Coast $43.00-44.00 Soybean meal, 44 protein $81.00 Standard millrun . $37.00-38.00 saves or vu to01glit. ......... Obituaries LORRAINE PUCK ' . Funeral services for Mrs. Lorraine Lillian Buck, 51, of 521 Beatty st., who died in a local hospital Monday, will be conducted at 11 a.m. Wed nesday in Chapel Mortuary. The Rev. George G. Rose berry, pastor of the First Methodist church will offici ate. Interment will be in Memory' Gardens Memorial park. Pallbearers will be Milton Acker, Andrew Severson, Hugh McKinzie, Harold Hiatt, C. W. Caldwell and Paul Hug. Mrs. Buck, the daughter of Lome and Leona Hamilton Horner, was born in Anson, Texas, on June 12, 1907. She was married in Las Vegas, Nev., on April 7; 1846, to Ar thur Glenn Buck. The couple came to Medford in 1948 from Los Angeles, and Mr. Buck operated Buck's Auto service here until his death on Oct. 9 of last year. Mrs. Buck was a member of the First Meth odist church. , Survivors include one broth er - by - adoption, Vernon Die trich, stationed on the Air Base at . Klamath Falls; an aunt, Mrs. Loucella Hamilton, Houston, Texas,, and a brother-in-law, Raymond H. Buck, Chicago, 111. MRS. MAMIE- PAUP Services for Mrs. Mamie Paup, 722 Grant st., Medford, who died Saturday, were held in the Conger-Morris Funeral home today at 1:30 o'clock with the Rev. D. Kirkland West of the First Presbyterian church officiating. Committal was in Hillcrest Memorial park. Mrs. Paup was born Jan. 31, 1892, at Scranton, Iowa, arid on Oct. 21, 1908, in Ral ston, Iowa, married Floyd Herbert Paup, who survives. She lived in Klamath Falls for 17 years and had lived in Medford for the past five years. : Surviving besides her hus band are four sons, Edgar F. Paup and Maynard L. Paup of Medford, Maurice D. Paup of Klamath Falls and Lowell Hi Paup of Astoria; three daughters. Mrs. EvelynFaye David of Klamath Falls, Mrs. Kathryn Delia Rountree, Roseburg, and Miss Marie Paup, Clarinda, Iowa; three brothers, Stephen R. Sexton of Klamath Falls, Floyd Sex ton of Jefferson, Iowa, and Merlin Sexton of Arcadia, Iowa; two sisters, Mrs. Jennie Smith of Ralston, Iowa, and Mrs. Fayne Linn of Boone, Iowa; 14 grandchildren and six great grandchildren. Bearers will be Maurice D. Paup, Edgar F. .Paup, Lowell H. Paup, Maynard L. Paup, Joe A. David and Jack B. Rountree. ; RICHARD SAVAGE Richard Savage died yester day at his home in Central Point. Arrangements will be announced by Conger-Morris Funeral home. DOROTHY S. POST Mrs. Dorothy Skeels Post died yesterday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Edmund Ramsay, near Ruch. Funeral arrangements will be an nounced by Conger-Morris, fu neral directors. JACK RICE Services for Jack Rice, 82, a long-time resident of Eagle Point, who died Monday, will be held in the Conger-Morris Funeral home Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. with the Rev. D. E. Millard officiating. Commit tal will be in Hillcrest Memo rial park. Mr. Rice was born in Clack amas county, Ore., September 1, 1876. He had lived in Eagle Point for the past 34 years and had spent his entire life in Oregon. C. W. HENDRICKSON Funeral services for Clif ford Walter Hendrickson,,43, of 303 West Jackson st., who died in a local hospital Sun day, will be held at the Perl Funeral home Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. with T. O. Davis, minister of the Church of Christ, officiating. Interment will be in the Siskiyou Memo rial park. Mr. Hendrickson was born in Harriman, Tenn., on March 28, 1916, and had been a resi dent of this area for the past 36 years. He was a member of the Church of Christ and Mr. and Mrs. Hendrickson were married April 21, 1938. Survivors include his wife, Beatrice . Hendrickson, , Med ford; four daughters, Mrs. Wanda Eidman, Ashland; Miss Jane Hendrickson, Miss Gail Hendrickson and Miss Nancy ffendrickson, all Medford; one son, Carl R. Hendrickson, Medford; four, brothers, Roy Hendrickson," Phoenix; Paul Hendrickson-a n d Cornelius Hendrickson, both Medford, and Marvin Hendrickson, Ida ho; his foster parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Chaney, Ashland, and numerous nieces and nephews. . Pallbearers will be Homer Brown, F. F. Hibbard, Clyde LaFevor, Lloyd Hawley, Lor en McCoy and Henry Friesen. Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF AN OUTRAGED BEAR in the Yellowstone Park area has taken to writing letters of complaint to newspaper syndi cated columnists. Washington, he says, has paid no attention to his demands for simple jus- tice. Virtually every day, says this bruin, some con founded little girl with long golden hair breaks into his little home, eats the bear's porridge, and takes a nap in his freshly made bed! An inquisitive student phoned the Manischewitx bak ery and asked. "Can you give me a precise definition of what matzothis?" I don't know exactly what It ii," replied the girl at the switchboard, "but it sure U my bread and butter." . A couple of tramps sat en a bench in Central Park while the sun lowly set "Have you eaten?" asked the first tramp wistfully. "Ah, yes," answered the other with a sigh. "Quite often'." First term prodigy was asked to name three different kinds of cow. Her prompt reply: "Jersey, Guernsey, and Contented." 1959, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King- Features Syndicate., Industrials Rails Jump Ahead New York - (UPD - Industrial stocks faltered today but rail road issues highballed ahead to assume market leadership. The industrials ran into profit taking after eight straight sessions of advance had carried that average to a new all-time high and had ad ded more than $12,600,000, 000 to market values. But the rails saved the day by picking up the slack. Despite the selling for prof its, the industrial list was gen erally mixed with some issues managing to ring up fairly sharp gains. Addressograph rose around 3 while gains of around 2 or more appeared in Crane, May tag and Victor Chemical. ". Western Maryland, New York Central, Norfolk & Western and Louisville & Nashville all rose around a point or more in the xAih. DOW-JONES AVERAGES New York-fCPC-Dow-Jones final stock averages: 30 in dustrials 663.21, up 3.12; 20 railroads 171.21, up 2.09; 15 utilities ) 88.83, up 0.09, and 65 stocks 221.60, up 1.26. Sales today were about 3.840,000 shares compared with 3,720,000 shares Mon day. Today's prices . on selected stocks: AUied Chemical- II8V2 Alum Co Am 108 American Can 45 American Motors 47 AT&T 8ZVt Anaconda Copper 63 Armco Steel i. 7914 Bendix Aviation '.. 77Vt Bethlehem Steel S8V4, Boeing Air . 36 Caterpillar Corp 117 Chrysler Corp 703A Continental Can 47 Crown Zellerbach 52 Curtiss Wright 353,4 Dow Chemical . 92V Du Pont 256 Eastman Kodak . 91V4 Firestone 147 General Electric 81 General Foods 95 General Motors ; 5S3A Georgia Pacific 45M Graham Paige 3 Greyhound . 23 34 Gulf Oil 110 Homestake Mining 42 Idaho Power 4614 I. B. M 452V4 Kaiser Ind 191,4 Int Paper 124 Johns Manville 54 Kennecott Copper . 105V2 Lockheed Aircraft 3VA Katy . 5Y Montana Power 723A Montgomery Ward 491b Nat'l Biscuit 51V New- York Central 3034 Pac Gas & Elec 60V Penney J. C. 112V4 Perm RR 1938 Radio Corporation ....... 69 Richfield Oil 82V4 Safeway 37 Sears .' ... 48 Shell Oil . 79V2 Socony Mobil Oil ..... 44 Southern Co 37 Vi Southern Pacific ..... 72 Standard California 52 Standard Indiana 4634 Standard N J 50 Sun Mines .'. 7 Texas Co 80 Texas Gulf Sulfur 2Wz Tex Pac Land Trust. 20i4 Transamerica 29 Trans World Air . 23 Tri-Continental 41 Union Carbide 148 Union Pacific 354 United Aircraft .... 5? United Air Lines 43 U S Rubber B8M OREGON GOLD GULCH FRONTIER MINING TOWN ON HIDDEN VALLEY RANCH Thanks Evryen Who Htlpcd Mako Our . - Grand Opening A Wonderful Success OPEN 9 Till 6 EVERYDAY r-7 . Falter; U S Steel 104 Youngstown S & T 138 Portland Livestock P o r 1 1 a n d-(UPI) Cattle 300. Choice 1050 lb. fed steers 29; stand ard 25-25.50; utility 23; utility grass cows 17-18.50; mixed cutter and utility dry ted cows 17-18 with some at 16; most canners and cut ter 14-16. Calves 25. Good and choice veal ers 26-30; utility and standard 20- 25. Hogs 400. U.S. No. 1 and 2 butch ers 190-220 lbs. 18; mixed 1, 2 and 3 lots 180-235 lbs. 17-17.50; No. 3, 365 lb. butchers and No. 2, 160 lbs. 16; sows- around 11-15. Sheep 400. Mostly choice high yielding 88-105 lb. spring lambs 21- 25-21.50: good 80-100 lbs. 20 20.50; mixed good and choice 21; good 80 lbs. shorn spring 18.50; good and choice 75-90 lb. feeder lambs 17.50-18; good 60-65 lb. 16; cull to good slaughter ewes 2-4. Portland Produce Portland (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: Grade AA large, 43-44c; A large, 40-41c; AA medium, 34-45c; AA small, 26-27c; cartons 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 Best mid-Columbia district cab bage sold at $3-3.50 a crate for small heads with an extreme of S3 .75 a crate on the Portland mar ket today. Northwest zucchini squash sold at $1.75-2 a flat. Poultry, Rabbits Live Chickess Quoted to grow ers at Portland, Salem and south to Eueene: f.o.b. ranch. No. 1 Quality fryers, 2-4 lbs., 19c lb.; light nens, 7c; neavy nens, ac. Dressed Chickens No.. 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn, 34-38C lb.; cut up. 39-43c; hens, heavy type whole drawn, 35 38c; light-type cut up, 29-34c lb. Dressed Turkeys To producers for a grade young hen turkeys (nominal) 28c lb. on an oven-ready basis. To retailers, 38-40c lb.; A grade fryer-roaster turkeys, most ly 28c lb., to producers on oven ready basis. To retailers, 39-42c lb, same basis. Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b. killing plants) Live white, 33-412 lbs, f.o.b. Portland. 19-21c; colored pelts, 5c under. Fresh killed fryers to retailers, 56-58C lb.; cut up, 60-62c. Servicemen ON CRUISE Midshipman Edward Loren Cantrall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cantrall, 506 South Newtown ave., is currently on a summer cruise, aboard the USS Ma'ddox whose home port is Long Beach, Calif. Cantrall is a NROTC sopho more student at Oregon State college. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Fair with some cloudiness through Wednes day. Low tonight 50. High Wednes day 82. Western Oregon: Scattered show ers and continued cool and periods of partial clearing tonight and Wednesday morning becoming par tially sunny and a little warmer Wednesday afternoon. Low tonignht 45-55. High Wednesday 65-75. Northern California: Fair to nignt and Wednesday with some high cloudiness in extreme north portion Wednesday. Fog and low clouds locally on coast. Night and morning slightlv warmer inland. TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 63. below normal 7. Record high this date 99 in 1956. Record low this date 42 in 1919. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 ajn., none. Total this month none. .06 inch below normal. Total since Sept- 1. 12.85 inches, 3.00 inches below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 29, highest this a.m. 80. High 4:30 24- City Yester- a.m. nr. day Low Prec. Brookings Grants Pass Klamath Falls MEDFORD Portland 65 75 66 73 66 52 53 41 52 55 -I9 .15 Seattle 62 52 . 66 - 44 ... 70 41 Spokane Yakima . Eureka 62 51 Red Bluff - 89- 62 Sacramento 87 53 San Francisco 64 52 Los Angeles 86 64 Phoenix 108 82 Denver 93 65 Chicago 75 59 Miami Beach 90 74 New York 78 64 Washington, D. C. 82 64 .5 .06 Ernest Holbrook Funeral Thursday Funeral services for Ernest L. Holbrook who died in Port land July 6 will be held at Perl Funeral home Thursday, July 9, at 2 p.m. with Dr. D. Kirkland West of the First Presbyterian church officiat ing. Committal will be in the Jacksonville cemetery. Mr. Holbrook was born at Lakeview, Ore:, July 3, 1910, and attended schools at Malin and Klamath Falls. In 1928 he moved to San Francisco where he worked for the Bank of America and later as an automobile mechanic. In 1932 he joined the motor cycle racing circuit and toured mot of the United States rid ing in all the national events of which he holds the title of three. During World War II he was a civilian motorcycle instructor for the Army at Port Stockton, Calif. In 1947, he and his wife moved to Med ford where he owned and op erated the Harley-Davidson Motorcycle shop, 4661 South Pacific highway. He was a member of the Baptist church, Klamath Falls, the Independent Order of Foresters of San Francisco, a life time member and ref eree of the American Motor- Mrs. Ella N.Rose Dies in Hornbrook Hornbrook-Mrs. Ella New comb Rose, 81, of Hornbrook, Calif., died " this morning at her home. She had visited a son and daughter-in-law, Mr., and Mrs. Courtland Rose in Ashland over the week end. Mrs. Rose was born, Ella Newcomb, May .21, 1878 on the, Caldwell ranch at Wil liams creek, Josephine coun ty, one of three children of pioneer settlers, John and Eva Caldwell Newcomb. As a young girl Mrs. Rose worked for several families in Medford, one of them being that of George White, then prosecuting attorney. Her husband, the late Charles Rose, also was born on Williams creek and he and his bride were married there in 1899. The family moved to Hilts in 1919 and later to Hornbrook where they lived on ,a ranch. They moved to town in 1942 where Mr. Rose died in August of 1952. Survivors include five chil dren, Courtland" Rose, Ash land; Ted Rose, Grenada, Calif.; Mrs. Gino Trinca, Mrs. B. Cavin and Mrs. Joe Vieira, all Hilts. Among her grand children is Leslie Boardnian, Medford. She also had nine adopted children. Funeral arrangements will be announced. ' Over-lhe-Counfer Western Stocks The following bid and asked prices on selected Western securi ties, provided by the Medford branch office of Pacific Northwest Company art unofficial and do not represent ar-tua transactions but are intended as a guide to the appro'Timst price range. Common Stocks Bask of America ... Calif.-Pacific Utilities.... Cascades Plywood Cons. Freightways Conco . First-National Bank Morrison-Knudsen Northwest Nat Gas Pacific Pwr. & Lt Permanente Cement Portland Gen. Elec U. S. National Bank United Utilities West Coast Tel. Weyerhaeuser .. Investment Funds Noon Quotation on selected funds supplied bv th M"dford Branch of Foster & Marshall, mem bers New York Stock Exchange Fund Bid Asked 15.54 12.69 26.54 18.55 1235 Bullock 14.18 Chpm Fund 1 1 .73 Eaton Howard Stk 24.83 Fidelity 17.16 Group Sec A via Elec 11.28 tiroup iec uom but lij.yb 15.28 GroiiD See Petr 10.75 ' 11. 4D 11.99 9.12 17.63 11.22 16.39 21.75 14.45 1730 14.04 15.70 17.91 6.56 15.95 Group Sec Steel GrouD Sec Tobac 10.95 8.32 16.16 10.28 15.02 19.94 Keystone B-3 lieytsone u-4 Keytsone K-2 Keytsone S-l 13.24 TTevtsnne S-3 1 S HK Keystone S-4 1237 Mass Inv Grth Stk 14.52 TV-Elec ,. 16.43 Value I.ine Ine 6.00 Wellington 14.63 Have you heard Bob Coverly Playing all Requests at the NEW PIANO BAR If not... 0 Why not . . . Drop in Say Hello! Danny Marino, Manager HOTEL MEDFORD rr m w t m m cycle Association of Colum bus, Ohio, and a member of the San Francisco and Bay City Motorcycle clubs of the Bay area and an organizer of the Rogue River Ramblers, the Medford club. Survivors besides his wife, Virginia, include his mother, Mrs." Agnes Toomey, Denio, Nevada; his father, G. L.; Hol brook, Klamath Falls; a sister, Mrs. Helen Roahe, Portland; step brother and sister, Doug las and Geneva Pence,' both Klamath Falls; mother-in-law, Mrs. Melissa Cameron. Talent, and many aunts, uncles and cousins. Pallbearers are Lon Skin ner, Vernon Reh, Orth Miller, Don Sample, Lewis Buckley and Al Fenton. Motorcycle es corts are Bill Kidson, Frank Smith, Harold Drydale, and Art Williams. THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SP 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRES ENDS TONITE BRIGITTE BAUDOT in 'THE NIGHT THAT HEAVEN FELL" CO-FEATURE LAUREN BACALL ROBERT STACK i ORIVE-IM Jfc vjV couth pacific mwtmjf" 0" V, V ' I NOW PLAYING if ifTV COLOR wmuo- X' ' v Vols 2aws I W f-MMMMMMMM- I Cupid h a pJWreRLMHIGKWAY fit I V 0,""-Nw HURRY ENDS TONITE S&Zril IfJi Amssr technicolor Qm5-522I Oil CO-FEATURE , PjffilTTO W C (jjUAy ALSO JAMES ROD M. SM TtTI MASON.STEIGER;;:l biOfey Al mob Stevens SPh mm Bid Asked . " " ' j HHHHBaBaH 48 505g 35?i 37 ' f I 1 if ( (BIBIlfiSS 27 ',2 29 i WW f 8 3$ I XNJP'utPt:) tS"UCf 24 i 26 II I . i5Vi 4?'4 STARTING TOMORROW 50W THE CV5' UNCHAINED (' CV AVENGER 1 , "s. EMERGES FROM U THE RAGING- l '1-'S-J RIOTS AND "1 jwAl REVELS OF 1 0.000 Vjl' A tWiH YEARS AGO. IQ i i Ti 1 1 ra w STEVE SYLVA GlANNAMAR'A FabrtZioMiOni-ivoGarram.AriuroDofnmci Drrice koscina canale Mimmo Palmara- Lidia Alfonsi GinaRovere ULLlLw otoV PiETfio Fwnosg e c tt jmxatp- ostmijtid Warner Bros ffi CO - fi:t.filiji)ia:) f ..tw if MAIL TMBUNE, Medford, Or. Q Tuesday. July 7, 1959 ? About one-sixth of the world's oil supply comes from the Near East. WATCH FOR OUR GRAND OPENING Open Daily 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Sundays 9 a.m.-9 p.m. The NEW FOOD FAIR Formerly Lu man's, 4th & Front HURRY! ENDS TONITE! JOHN WAYIIEJiOmEII 3" inuu FPiPrrc: THUNDERING SPECTACLE! OUR k Dtlnt Ma tn UMTEO Dfl AKTISTS - ADDED - JOHANSSON - PATTERSON FIGHT PICTURES FEATURE FURY-onrteStagccoach Run! WawnerColor . STEELE - DANTE i- - -