Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1959)
I Locals Flue Fixes Flue fires oc curred yesterday evening at the homes of Darrell Leavens, 610 South Oakdale ave., and Lewis Doane, 3315 Hollywood ave., city firemen reported. In Hospital Surgery pati ents at Rogue Valley hospital today are Roy D. VanOrtwick, 1369 Poplar dr., Medford; Mrs. Leonard E. Franek, 1679 Beall lane, Medford; and Patricia Barron, Klamath Falls. Sheriffs Picnic-Members of the Jackson County Sheriffs Reserve will hold a potluck picnic at McKee bridge on the Applegate river Sunday begin ning at 10:30 ajn. The group will provide ice cream and soft drinks. Members of the Jackson county sheriffs de partment have been invited. Youth Arresied-A 13-year-old Medford youth was ar rested Wednesday on a charge of forgery in connection with passing a $40 check Aug. 8 in a Medford store, police re ported. Police said the youth was confined to the Jackson county juvenile detention home. Business Names-The assum ed business name "Lake O Woods trailer sales" has been recorded by Earl T. Newbry, for Ashland resident and for me secretary of state. He said the name was acquired in con nection with a license to sell trailers at his Lake of the Woods home. Other assumed business names recorded at the county clerk's office were "Gmilin' Bill's Sales," by Wil liam and Marita Kyker, 120 Vancouver ave., and Pruitt's Fountain lunch, by Wilsie and Geneva Pruitt, 19 South Orange st. The Kykers are dealers for Dreamer travel coaches. FOILED BY FAINT New York -(UPD- Bank teller Mrs. Mary Downes fainted Thursday and therewith thwarted a holdup. Mrs. Downes blacked out when a man handed her a note, saying he had a gun and demanding $3,000. As she fell, she set off an alarm gong that sent the bandit on the run. He es caped, emptyhanded. - The FOOTLIGIITERS Present "On The Bridge at Midnight" A Real "Mellerdrammer" Beautiful Costumes OLIOS Fun Between Acts Lots of Coffee Plan a Theater Party; Take the Family Just Don't Miss This Play AUG. 21 - 22 and AUG. 25 thru 29 Ai the Fairgrounds Theater Curtain at 8:30 - Admission $1.00 DART (C IE VFW Hall in Rogue River Every Saturday Nite 9 to 1 Music by VIC FLOOD & the Rhythm Masters Hardwood Floor . Refreshments served all eve.. Check Room Free Large Parking Area VJ SPONSORED BY VFW - ENDS SAT. Shrplmi SANDRA JAMES DARREN P '-tLlQ You'll FIDGET Q fK'M ft tl :mM'F 0ver GIDGET! uuizy V-Sf Mi COLUMN COLOR -JlV , r-r ... " ' t 'IClNEMASeoPe. UL- ----i-f i r N-' VW AUDIE MURPHY -'J tfZ IJ iL Ja Vi3 I "JDIl WESTERN HIT! I VjLAvV A c JcA I nllv SAT. ONLY Unmourned Convict Goes To Death in Prison Chamber San Quentin, Calif.-(UPD-Stephen A. Nash, 36, who bragged that he killed 11 per sons "just for kicks," was ex ecuted today in the, San Quen tin gas chamber. As he was strapped in the death chair, the lanky, admit ted homo-sexual said: "I didn't live like a man because circumstances pre vented me. But I'm going to try to die like one." Associate Warden Louis Nelson said Nash "did just exactly what he said he would." He needed no sup port as he was led into the apple green death cell. The first cyanide "eggs" were dropped at 9:03 a.m. (P.S.T.) into the vat of hydrochloric acid beneath Nash's chair. At 9:12 ajn., Dr. Herman Gross, prison medical officer, pronounced him dead after listening through a stethe- Nixon May Attend Dam Dedication The Dalles - (UPD - Dedica tion date for The Dalles dam on the Columbia river may be changed from Sept. 26 to Oct. 10 so Vice President Richard Nixon can be the featured speaker. Paul Walden, chairman of the dedication committee, said word had been received that Nixon could appear either on Oct. 10 or Oct. 24, but would be unable to appear on Sept. 26, the previously scheduled date. A meeting of the committee was scheduled today to discuss the matter. Several commit ments have been made for the Sept. 26 date, Walden said. The committee will have to decide if another speaker of sufficient stature can be ob tained or if a change in dates to accommodate N i x o n's schedule will be made. CUTS SHORT HONEYMOON Colorado Springs, Colo. (DPD U. S. Air Force Col. Bill Edwards and his new bride had to cut short their honey moon and return to Lowry Air Force Base . so Edwards could complete a course called "disaster control." EVERYONE WELCOME f A COLUMBIA DEE CLIFF ROBERTSON scope outside the gas cham ber. The other end of the in strument was attached to Nash's chest. Victim's Father Present Thefather of one of Nash's victims was among the wit nesses at the execution. He was not identified. A chaplain stood by, but Nash did not ask to talk to him. The Long Beach, Calif., killer, who once said, Me," I'm cold-hearted . . . I'm as rotten as they make 'em-and I hate people," went to his death unmourned. Even fel low inmates on death row re fused to give him the custo mary, "chin up" farewell as he was led to a cell next to the gas chamber Thursday night. Nash stayed awake all night, eating steak, hambur gers and ham sandwitches and drinking almost a gallon of milk. 'The Most Evil Person A Los Angeles judge once referred to him as "the most evil person who ever appear ed in my court." There was even contempt for Nash among the other condemned .prisoners on Death Row, where a prison officer said he was so "foul mouthed and offensive" that he had to be segregated. Guards said he would scream the obscene details of his crimes to the other con victs awaiting execution. Nash was tried for the mur der of Larry Rice, 10, whom he lured under a bridge in Santa Monica in 1956 and stabbed 50 times, and for kill ing John William Berg, 20, in Long Beach two days later. Among the other nine vic tims that he bragged about was Robert T. Eche, 21, who was killed in 1955 in San Francisco. Nash said he stab bed the youth eight times and then pushed the body and the youth's car off a pier into the Lbay. Gave Him Laughs "It gave me the only laugh I'd had in months," Nash chuckled when he was ar rested. Prison officials said Nash would die as he lived with out a soul in the world who has anything but contempt or hate for him. He has no next of kin, and ho hasn't had a visitor since he entered San Quentin in the spring of 1957. No one even wants his body -so the state will cremate him without a funeral. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Partly cloudy through Saturday. Mild temperatures. Low tonight 50. High Saturday 80. Western Oregon: Party cloudy tonight and Saturday except late night and early morning overcast on coast. xw tonight 48-34. .High Saturday 68-78 northern interior, 80-85 southern interior, 65 on coast. Northern California: Fair through Saturday except increasing fog on coast, warmer inland. LOCAL, DATA Temperature: Mean yesterday 37; below normal 14. Record high this date 101 in 1945. Record low this date 44 in 1947. Precipitation: 24 hours to mid night .28 in. Midnight to 10 a.m. 0. Total this month .28 in., .18 in. a Dove normal. Total since Sept. 1 13.13 in., 4.93 in. below normal. Humidity: Lowest yesterday 67, highest mis ajn. B. High 4:30 24 Y ester- a.m. nr. City day Low Prec. Brookings T. 62 52 Grants Pass' 63 55 .18 Klamath Falls 52 48 .61 MEDFORD 61 54 .28 Portland 78 59 Seattle 75 58 Spokane 58 54 1.07 Yakima 75 44 Eureka 60 55 Red Bluff 71 53 .03 Sacramento 73 53 San Francisco 64 56 Los Angeles 79 59 Phoenix 96 79 Denver 88 62 Chicago 91 77 Miami Beach 88 73 .46 New York 89 71 Washington, D.C. 91 74. FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through Aug.26): ' . Western Oregon Temperatures averaging below normal with a warming trend. Highs in 70s warm ing into 80s over week end. Lows in mid-40s. Little, if any, rain. A little drizzle along coast. Northern California No preci pitation. Temperatures near normal, JOHN PAYNE tOMAlO 1IAGAN flWfcwtilW FESTIVAL PLAYS Tonighl: "Twelfth Night" and "Maske." Saturday: "King John." Sunday: "Measure for Measure." Monday: "Antony and Cleopatra." Curtain Time 8:30 p.m. Bus from Medford leaves Medford hotel at 7:30; Jackson hotel 7:35 pjn. Dull Session in Stock Market Noted New York - (UPI) - The stock market went through a dull session today. Gains and losses ran past two points in some issues, but the list for the main part was a scramble of minor gains and losses. American & Foreign Power was weak in the utilities on news Cuba had ordered a sharp reduction in the com pany's utility rates. Steels, motors, and chemicals were generally mixed. Some drugs and electronics advanced. A few specialities managed to move in wide arcs. Amer ican Home Products, Anchor Hocking Glass, Johnson & Johnson, Owens- Corning, Texas Instruments, and War ner Brothers all chalked up good gains. . New York - (UPI)-Dow-Jones final stock averages: 30 industrials 655.39, up 0.37; 20 railroads 163.20. off 0.78: 15 utilities 91.28, up 0.02, and 65 stocks 218.80, off 0.14. Sales today were about 2.000,000 shares compared with 2,450,000 shares Thursday. Portland Livestock Portland (UPI) USDA Cat tle for week 2575: Low and aver age choice 1039-1092 lb. fed steers 28.75,29; mixed good-low choice under 1200 lb. 28-2850; good 26.50 27.75; utility-standard grass steers 20-24.25; good-low choice fed heif ers 27-27.25; utility cows 13-1450; utility bulls 22-23; medium-good feeder steers 23-23.50. Calves for week 425. Good-choice vealers 27-30; good-choice under 350 lb. slaughter calves 25-28; utility-standard vealers and calves 19 25; culls down to 13. Hogs for week 2525. VS. 1 and 2 butchers 17.25-17.50; some 17.75 late; mixed 1, 2 and 3 grades 16.50.17; No. 2 and 3 sows 350 550 lb. 11.50-14; good-choice feeder pigs 14. Sheep for week 3625. Choice southern Washington and central Oregon range type slaughter lambs 20-20.50; choice nearby lambs 19 19.50; good down to' 18; cull-good ewes 2-4.50; good-choice over 75 lb. feeder lambs 15-16. Portland Produce Portland (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: Grade AA extra large, 50-53c doz.; AA large, 47-50c; A large, 44-47c; AA medi um. 37-40c; AA small, 26-28c; car. tons l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: A A and grade A prints, 67c lb.; carton, lc higher; B prints, 65c. Cheese Medium cured To re tailers: A grade Cheddar single daisies, 41-51c; processed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43C. Farm Market Best Oregon and Washington roasting ears sold to retailers at 3-3.25 for 5 dozen ears today: Milton-Freewater tomatoes brought producers mostly z-i.Zo for 24 ID. lugs with No. 2's at 1-1.25; Dillard cantaloupes cleaned up within 4 450 a standard crate range. 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., 19c lb.; light hens, 7-8c; heavy hens, 9-10c lb. 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: A grade young hens, up to 28c lb. on an oven-ready basis; A grade young toms, 20 lbs. or over, 26c lb. on same basis. To retailers, A grade young hens, 36-39c on same basis; A grade young toms, 34-45c lb., depending upon weight; A grade, fryer-roaster turkeys, most ly 28c to producers on oven ready basis and 39-43c to retailers. . Rabbits (Average to growers f.o.b. killing plants): Live white, 334 -4 Vi 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 Portland Wholesale Hay Prices: New crop No. 2 green alfalfa, baled f.o.b. Portland and Seattle, S33-34 ton; some to $36 at Portland. Investment Funds Noon Quotations on selected funds supplied- bv th M-dford Branch of Fostei & Marshall, mem bers New York Stock Exchange Fnnd Bid Asked Bullock c 14.02 15.36 ChemFund . 11.66 Eaton Howard Stk 24.82 Fidelity 16.87 Gaslnd . 13.40 Group Sec Avia-Elec 1027 Group Sec Com Stk 13.70 12.61 26.53 18.24 14.64 11.25 15.00 11.84 12.56 8.76 17.75 11.29 16.27 21.72 1439 16.84 13.63 15.57 17.19 6.36 15.96 Group Sec Petr Group Sec SteeL Group Sec Tobai Keystone B-3 Keystone B-4 Keystone K-2 Keystone S-l Keystone S-2 Keystone S-3 Keystone S-4 -. Mass Inv Grth Stk 10.81 11.47 7.99 16.27 1034 14.91 19.91 13.19 15.43 12.49 14.40 15.77 5.82 14.64 TV-Elec Value Line Inc Wellington Over-the-Counter Western Stocks The toliOwme bid and asked Slices on selected Western securi es provided by the Medford branch office of Pacific Northwest Company are unofficial and do not represent artua- transactions but are intended as a guide to the appnrnraat once range Common Stocks Bid Bank of America . 475i Calif-Pacific Utilities 34i Cascades Plywood . - ,. 37 Cons Freightways 22 i Asked 50 3S 36 ' 39a 233, 39 60 357s 18s 41 1,8 27,i 28 ',i 71 ',i 357s 27 8 Copco 37 First National Bank Morrison-Knudsen Northwest Nat Gas Pacific Pwr & Light ' Permanente Cement Portland Gen Elec US National Bank - United Utilities West Coast Tel Weyerhaeuser . .'- 56'i 33 i 173. 383i 25Ts 27, . 67,s . 33U 258 44 z City Recreation - Summer Schedule Friday. August 21 9:00 ajn. Touch football. Pirates vs. Bulldogs at Medford H.S. 10:00 ajn. Small games, etc, at Hawthorne park. 1:00 pjn. Touch football. Hawk eyes vs . Hornets at Mc Loughlin Jr. H. 1:30 pjn. Small games, arts and crafts at Hawthorne park.. Saturday, August 22 9:00 ajn. Touch football. Pirates vs. Eagles at Medford H.S. Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical ... IIZV2 Alum Co Am 1073i American Can . 43 American Motors 43 AT&T 80 Anaconda Copper .... 64 Vi Armco Steel . 76 Bendix Aviation 6834 Bethlehem Steel 57 Boeing Air 31V& Caterpillar Corp 102V Chrysler Corp 65 Continental Can 59 V2 Crown Zellerbach 57Va Curtiss Wright 41 Dow Chemical 84 Du Pont . 267 V Eastman Kodak 90 Firestone 130 General Electric 80 General Foods 98 General Motors 54 Georgia Pacific 43 Vi Graham Paige 2 Greyhound , 31 Gulf Oil 110 Homestake Mining 41 Idaho Power . . 46 Vfc IBM. ...426 Kaiser Ind .. . 16 Int Paper 129 V2 Johns Manville 54 Kennecott Copper 102 Lockheed Aircraft ... ; 27 Vi Katy ...... 5 Montana Power Co ... 26 Montgomery Ward '. 51 V4 Natl Biscuit . 52 New York Central . 28 Pac Gas & Elec 62 Penney J C ..... 107Va Penn R R 17 Radio Corporation 62 Richfield Oil . . 80 Safeway .. 38 Sears j 47 Shell Oil 81V4 Socony Mobil Oil 44 Southern Co ; : 40V4 Southern Pacific 74V4 Standard California 52 Standard Indiana 46 Standard N J . 51 Sun Mines .. .6 Texas Co 84 Texas Gulf Sulfur 20 Tex Pac Land Trust 21 Transamerica 32 Trans World Air . Tri-Continental Union Carbide Union Pacific United Aircraft United Air Lines U S Rubber U S Steel 19 40 ....144 .. 33 42 37 .. 62 .102 Youngstown S & T 137 BIRTHS TERRY To Mr. and Mrs. Francis Jr., route 1, box 142, Eagle Point, Aug. 18, 1959, a boy, 7 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. MALLON-To Mr. and Mrs. John, 518 North Bartlett st., Medford, Aug. 19, 1959, a boy, 8 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. SCUDDER-To Mr. and Mrs. Eoremus, 325 Vancouver ave., Medford, Aug.. 20, 1959, a girl, 8 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. The Japanese have doubled their use of soap in the past six years or so - 3.98 pounds per person to 8.31 pounds per person. TENTION EAGLES LADIES CHOICE NIGHT SATURDAY, AUGUST 22 Always Good Music EAGLES AND GUESTS WELCOME The Heat Wave Is Over So . . '. DANCE ?22r at Walker's mmm a TJtV A tVttr SATURDAY NIGHT OASIS BALLROOM ' Eagle Point, Ore. Enjoy Rock & Roll Music by Lyman Stubbs and the Suedes. Good spring floor Bring your friends, and have fun! Kiwanis County Fair FOOD PRODUCTS Breads and Rolls White bread, Betty Ellis, third; whole wheat bread, Roberta Boyd, fifth; white rolls, Betty Ellis, first; rolls (other types), Betty Ellis, fourth. Cakes and Cookies Fancy decorated. Mrs. J. W. Ste vens, second; cookies, Mrs. Fred Reich, first; Pat Cranston, second. Pies Your choice (date), Betty Ellis, second. Food Preservation ' Canned pears, Mrs. Fred Reich. third; canned cherries, Mrs. Fred Reich, fourth. Canned vegetables: Carrots. Pat Cranston, first; mixed vegetables, Pat Cranston, second: green beans, Pat Cranston, first, Roberta Boyd, fourth. Jellies: boysenberry. Emogene Abbott, second; blackberry, Mrs. Fred Reich, third; plum. Mrs. Fred Reich, fourth; crabapple, Mrs. Ernest Santo, fifth. Strawberry jam: Mrs Fred Reich, first: peach jam, Mrs. Fred Reich, second. Dill pickles, Mrs. Ernest Santo, first. Apricot jam: Mrs. Fred Reich, first; raspberry jam, Pat Cranston second; boysenberry jam, Emo gene Abbott, third; bell pepper pickles, Mrs. Ernest Santo, fourth; watermelon pickles. Emogene Ab bott, fourth; rhubarb conserve, Velma Casey, fifth. OBITUARIES MRS. MYRTLE GREEN Funeral services for Mrs. Myrtle McNeff Green, oi 212 Suth Ivy st., who died Thurs day, will be held at Conger Morris Funeral home at 9 a.m. Saturday. The Rev. A. Clark Smilh of the Talent Friends church, will officiate. Committal will be in Siskiyou Memorial park. Mrs. Green was born July 26, 1881, in'Centerville, Iowa, and was married Dec. 27, 1900, in Jennings, Okla., to Walter D. Green, who died last November. She came to Oregon from Colorado in 1925, and for many years she and her husband owned and operated the Green newsstands and confectioneries on Main st. Survivors include two sons, Ralph Green and Horace A. Green, both of Medford; and five daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Pruitt, Mrs. , Fae . Miksche, MrsI Nila Hornecker and Mrs. Betty Lewis, all of Medford; and Mrs. Nelle Hearn, of Eu gene; ten - grandchildren and one great grandchild. Pall bearers will include Eugene Bennett, Joe Fliegel, Cash Davis, Burdette Sulli van, Jack Blake, and Oliver Gustaf son. ; WILLIAM H-. WOOD Funeral services for Wil liam H. Wood, 68, of 528 Pennsylvania ave., who died Thursday, will be held at Ward's Klamath Funeral home, Klamath Falls, Monday at 11 a.m. Committal will be in Linkville cemetery, Kla math Falls. Conger-Morris, fa neral directors, are in charge of arrangements. Mr. Wood was born April 12, 1891, in Cabool, Mo., and had lived in Medford for the past four years. Survivors include a son, Jack Wood, Medford; four daughters, Mrs. Mrie Mc Lane, Klamath Falls; Mrs. Mildred Darley, Corning, Calif.; Mrs. Mary Billups, Los Angeles, Calif.; and Mrs. Merle Barker, Medford; three brothers, George Wood, Kla math Falls; and Daniel Wood and Robert Wood, Medford; and 14 grandchildren. A son, Joe, preceded him in deathh in 1942. ROBERT C. LOUDERMILCH Ashland-Robert C. Louder milch, 68, of 1045 Mary Jane ave., Ashland, died Thursday. He had lived here for shortly over four years, since arriv ing from Anchorage, Alaska. A native of Upper Sandus ky, Ohio, Mr. Loudermilch was born Aug. 19, 1891. He was a retired funeral director. His wife, the former Mae r Where you greet old friends and meet new friends! Finest in modern music: waltzs, foxtrot, one step and circles where everyone joins in.' An ever-increasing congenial crowd. SNACK BAR SERVING REAL COFFEE When There's Better Music, Walker Has It! TEXTILES Baby Goods Bonnet, bootie and sweater: Mrs. Iva F. Tuggle, first. . Bedroom Linens' Bedspread: Dorothy Wright, third; crocheted afghan, Janet Chandler, second: knitted afghan, Janet Chan dler, first Pillow cases: Mrs. Glen' Allen, first; Mrs. Glen Allen, second; Min nie Green, third; Dorothy Wright, third;- Velma Casey, fourth; Jean nette Chandler, fourth. Rugs and quilts: Mrs. Myra Dut ton, ' second; Mrs. Stella Northly, third. Sewing: Dorothy Wright (daily), first; Jeanette Chandler (luncheon cloth), second;,. Dorothy Wright (doily), third; Dorothy Wright (doily), fifth. Dresser scarf: Jeanette Chandler, third. Hand weaving . - . 5 . Apron: Ellen Hay, first; stole. Dorothy Wright, first; Jeanette Chandler, second; slippers, Jean nette Chandler, second; Mrs. Ernest Santo, third. Towel set: Dorothy Wright, first; knitted doilies. Mrs. J. W. Noel, first; potholders. Mrs Ernest Santo, second; Ellen Hay, fourth. Knitted Clothing Men's "' socks: Janet Chandler, first; man's sweater, Janet Chan dler, first; -Janet Chandler, second. Blouse: Jeanette Chandler, first; lady's sweater. Jeanette Chandler, first; Mrs. Elsie Davidson, second; J. Zima of Chicago survives him, as do two children, Rob ert C. Loudermilch, Utica, N.Y., and Mrs. Marjorie M. Johnson of Seattle, Wash. Mr. Loudermilch was a vet eran of World War I and a holder of the purple heart decoration. He was wounded in the ; St. Mihiel " offensive, while retrieving injured sol diers. - He was a member of the Elks lodge in Ashland and the Masonic lodge of An chorage. Funeral arrangements will be announced by, Litwiller Funeral home. ROLAND ALBERT MAURER Roland Albert Maurer, 51, of 4264 Hilsinger rd., Medford, died near Klamath Falls yes terday. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Perl Funeral home. UNIDENTIFIED SNORES Pisa, Italy -(DPD Dulia Bra caloni woke up her husband Thursday night and told him to stop snoring. The husband, Guido, woke up but the snor ing continued. Beneath the bed, they found Sabino Gian nelli, 24, asleep. He later told - police he entered the house while the couple was out, then hid under the bed when he heard them return ing and eventually fell asleep. clogston's Metal Weather Stripping and Screens Estimates Gladly Phone SP 3-1014 Evenings Phone SP 3-4293 DAILY'S U-DRIVE Medford Airport r I ssm WALT DISNEYS 9- 0 aFlbyHili LHtlePcopte I" and the SrS 2 3 f KT- ' ALBERT SHARPE ) JANET MUNRO Vr V. 3, &SS SEAN CONNERY J lL34?Yt JIMMY O'DEA . . tfct00'?' j I f- KIERON MOORE ESTELLE W1NWOOO S7 CO-FEATURE l'SV"'1 i.tnLr r Ngg' JtkW KELLY In Rodiont COIOR NOTICE SPECIAL MATINEE TOMORROW-FRIDAY, 1 P.M. PRICES THIS ATTRACTION Loges . Adults Students 75c Judging knitted jacket. Jeanette Chandler. second. Sewing Man's shirt: Donnalee Archibald, third; boy's shirt. Donnalee Archi bald, third; child's dress. Donnalee Archibald, second: lady's dress, Donnalee Archibald, second. . FLORAL ARRANGEMENTS Amateur Arrangements Living room: Mrs. Ben Fulton, second; Mrs. Charles Tuggle, fourth. Smaller arrangements, Mrs. Charles Tuggle. second. Professional Arrangements Living room: Mrs. Wallace West fourth; patio. Mrs. Wallace West, fourth; smaller arrangements, Mrs Wallace West, second. Special Mrs. Burt StanclifTe. first; Mrs. Charles Tuggle, second. LAND PRODUCTS Tree Fruits Pears: Chuck Taylor, first; Chuck Taylor, second; Chuck Tay lor, third. Peaches: Mrs. Burt Stancliffe. first; Beebe Farms, second; Ernest Santo, third. Apples: Walter Gebhart, first; Cliff Smith, second. Rhubarb: Ernest Santo, first; nec tarines, Marshall Weidman, second; Barcelona filberts, Ernest Santo, third; soft shelled almonds, Ernest Santo, fourth; quince, Cliff Smith, fifth. Satsuma plums, Mrs. Burt Stan, cliffe, first; Ernest Santo, second; elephant heart plums. Ernest Santo, third; Santa Rosa plums, Ernest Santo, fourth: bradshaw plums, Walter Gebhart, fifth. Vegetables Tomatoes, Mrs. Fred Reich, first; red torpedo. Ann Baillio, first; on ions. Ben Fulton, second; peppers, Beebe Farms, first; beets. Ben Ful ton. second; mild garlic. Ernest Santo, first; herbs, Ann Baillio. sec ond; husk tomatoes, Ernest Santo, third. Melons and Squash - Muskmelon, Earl Miller,' first: squash, Earl Miller, first; Earl Miller, second. Grain Six row barley, Ernest Santo, first; spring oats, Ernest Santo, second. Here's the A GREAT WESTERN STERLING HAYDEN in "ARROW IN THE DUST" PLUS CARTOON CARNIVAL . and CHAPTER 11 "TEX GRANGER" TONITE & SAT. NITE . One Showing Only Doors Open 7 P.1VL Show Sarts 7:30 Academy Award Winner COLOR - ALSO - ORSON WcUB ' DIANE VMS DEAN ST0CKWEU. BRADFORD DIUMAN ClNCMASCOK TONITE fir SAT. ONLY .$1.10 . . 90c Children 50c ar i 1 1 i i ........ DAM MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. 1 1 Friday. Aug. 21, 1959 Ai: About 85 per cent of Ameri cans lived on farms in colon ial days compared with only, 13.5 per cent of the U. S..' population today. THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SP 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRES SI Per Carload TONITE & SATURDAY ONLY THE bL4?n I IN THE FonEST .FESS PARKER JOANNE DRU WENDEU. COREV JAMES Mac ARTHUR fWHHtif tUMsn mnir MURPHY A JOAN EVANS CHARLES DRAKE MH9U,TKUl ;ciiirMkscoP6 In etman colow ADDED SATURDAY ONLY 3rd BONUS FEATURE 1 CtOKCt NADER 2 3i RIVE-IN itcd f x uieuufiw J TONITE & SATURDAY TWO OF THE GREAT COMEDY HITS OF THE YEAR! liiTVlrw. fels TQ1Y CuRHS ..TECHNICOLOR I with KAH 8RY TONITE & SATURDAY THE ALL TIME FAVORITE SHOW! ,4f l NmltfOw Wr. miikl (ODD wrrti Omrto GropMmi ; AND A THIRD HIT! : the JSocneiori ni i DRIVE-IN JZ -Jk couth pacific wowfmr' i4 IVV! J T W 1 1 V-WTK I VKCINtA i ivjaiy i mayo mm 739 n , I NORTH rWlOCHIWWW U H'CM " ViJ .1MJlfili.1l.il J t HON DA niMINO tCHmcouw 21