Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 18, 1960, Image 13

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    LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Jy,tbt?npp?nted fay the Circuit
. me oiaie Of Oregon for
Jackson Countv a rf ; i!i
the Estate of Jack Weisenburger. de-
" oave quaunea. Ail per
son having claims against the es-
. mia aeceaent are hereby
uiiea to present them, with
proper vouchers, duly verified, to
g t th offic of Skyrman &
Heisel. attorneys for said Admin
istratrix at Room 321 Medical
Center Building, in Medford. Ore-
Bvsv Hiuun six monxns xrom tne
date of this notice.
Dted and first published De-
SHIRLEY MAE WEISENBURGER
,amuusxratnx.
Skyrman & Heisel
Attorneys for Administratrix.
- NOTICE OF SnFRTtn mi r
By virtue of an execution issued
out of. and under the seal of, the
Circuit Court of the State of Ore
gon for Jackson County, to me
mreciea. ana aated the 21st day
of December. 1959. in a certain suit
therein wherein Paul B. Rynnine.
trustee, as Plaintiff, recovered
judgment and decree against Henry
R. Byers and Edith W. Bvers, the
Defendants therein, for the sum
of $8,000.00, together with interest
thereon at the rate of 6 per
annum from the 1st day of Sep
tember, 1959. together with the
further sum of $545.00 as attorney's
fees on his first cause of suit, and
the further sum of $25,861.81, to
gether with interest thereon at the
rate of 6 per annum from the
23rd day of June. 1959. until paid,
together with the further sum
of $1,250.00 as attorney's fees on
his second cause of suit, together
with costs and disbursements in the
sum of $23.85. which judgment and
decree was enrolled and docketed
in the office of the Clerk of said
Court on the 18th day of Septem
ber 1959.
NOTICE is hereby given that pur
suant to the terms of said execu
tion I will, on the 3rd day of
February, 1960. at 100 o'clock
Aja. at the front door of the
Courthouse in Medford, Jackson
County. Oregon, offer for sale, and
will sell, at public auction, for cash
to the highest bidder, to satisfy
said judgment and decree, together
with the costs of this sale, all the
right, title and interest that the
said Defendants in said suit had
on the 1st day of December, 1958.
or have since acquired, or now
have, in and to that certain real
property described as follows, to
wn:
Lots Two (2). Three 31 and Four
(4). of HIGHWAY ADDITION to
the City of Medford, in Jackson
-oumy, Oregon.
Dated thi 4th day of January,
JOSEPH D. WALSH.
Sheriff of Jackson County,
Oregon
No. 10558
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
FINAL ACCOUNT
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR THE
COUNTY OF JACKSON; PRO
BATE DEPARTMENT
In the Matter of the Estate of
EMILY CLOE FRAZIER. De
ceased.
NOTICE IS V HEREBY GIVEN
that the undersigned has filed her
Final Account and Report in the
above entitled estate and that, by
an order of the Circuit Court of
the State of Oregon, for the County
of Jackson. Probate Denartment.
the hearing upon the same has
been set for the 27th day of Janu
arv. 1960. in thu Circuit Courtroom
I of the Jackson Countv Courthouse
at Medford, Oregon, at the hour of
iu:w am.
All persons having . objections
tnereto are nereoy nouiiea to
present the same on or before
such time.
Date of first publication of this
notice is the 28th day of Decem
ber, 1959.
Ruth A. Friend.
, ' Administratrix of the Estate
of Emily Cloe Frazier, De
ceased. Duncan, Brophy, Wilson &
Duhaime
Attorneys for Administratrix.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Sealed bids will be received by
the Jackson County Court at the
Courthouse at Medford, Oregon, on
or before 10:00 A.M. on the 27th
dav of January. 1960. for the fur
nishing of motor lubricating oils
and greases for the County Road
Department for the fiscal year of
February 1, 1960, to February 1.
1QR1
Instructions to bidders and speci
fications for the lubricating oils
and greases can be obtained at the
office of the County Engineer of
TaMlrtnn VktlTltV
JACKSON COUNTY COURT
Earl M. Miller
County Judge
Chester H. Wendt
County Commissioner
R. A. James
County Commissioner
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Sealed bids will be received by
the Jackson County Court at the
Courthouse at Medford, Oregon, on
or before 10:00 A.M .on the 28th
day of January, 1960. for the re
capping and repair of pneumatic
tireli for the period of February 15.
1960. to February 15, 1961.
Instructions to bidders and speci
fications for recapping and repair
of pneumatic tires can be obtained
at the office of the County Engin-
eeF JACKSON COUNTY
COURT
Earl M. Miller.
Countv Judge.
Chester H. Wendt.
County Commissioner.
R. A. James,
County Commissioner.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Sealed bids will be received by
the Jackson County Court at the
Courthouse at Medford Owjj.
dVaTuUK 2
15, I960, to February 15. 19J1.
instructions to bidders a, spe
cifications for the tires and tubes
cln be obtained at the office of
the County Engineer.
JACKSON COUNTY COURT
Earl M. Miller
County Judge
Chester H. Wendt
Coupty Commissioner
"R. A. James
County Commissioner
.ninsTKTn!NT FOR BIDS
Sealed bids will be received by
the Jackson County Court at the
Courthouse at Medford. Oregon, on
or before 10:00 A.M. on the 27th
day of January. 1960, for furnish
Injf of gasoline and diesel oil to
the County Road Department for
the fiscal year oi ieu;uj
iakn Tannarv 31. 1961. inclusive.
Instructions to bidders and
for the easoline and
diesel oil can be obtained at the
office of the county tngiiicci.
JACKSON COUNTY COURT
Earl M. Miller
County Judge
Chester H. Wendt
County Commissioner
R. A. James
County Commissioner
No. 1069S
KftVirs: Tfi CREDITORS
to tot nnnnT COURT OF THE
STATE Ut unr,u . f
JACKSON COUNTY IN PRO
PATE In the Matter of the Estate of JER
RY AUSTIN GIESLER. Deceased.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
I have been appointed by the Cir
cuit Court of the State of Oregon
for Jackson County as the Admin
istrator of the estate of Jerry Aus
tin Giesler. deceased, and have
duly qualifeid. All persons having
claims against said estate are here
by notified to present them, with
proper vouchers and duly verified
to me at the of flees of Kelly & Kel
Iv, No. 20 Goldy Building. Medford,
Oregon, within six months from
the date of this notice.
DATED at Medford. Oregon, this
18th day of January, I960.
ROBERT EARL BARRETT,
Administrator.
KELLY & KELLY
Attorneys for Administrator
20 Goldy Building
Medford, Oregon
x-i v xt rnn
Emotion-Packed
Play, Food on Bill
In Soviet Theaters
By ALINE MOSBY
Moscow TOPD An evening
at the theater in Moscow
means a double feature: (1)
fours hours of emotional, ex
citing chest-beating across the
footlights, and (2) food.
In that first respect, the So-
I LODGE NOTICES
Stated Communica t i o n
Central Point Lodge No.
135. AC & AM. wed
Jan. 20, 8 p.m. All Mas
ter masons coraiaiiy in
vi tea. .Refreshments.
H. Padget.. VfM.
Stated Convocation Ore
gon Chapter No. 4 RAM,
J acKsonville, Oregon.
Lodge meeting Jan. 19.
1960, 8 p.m. Potluck 6:30
p.m. All Koyal Arch Ma-
sons cordially invited.
Geo. Redhead. H.P.
Medford Lodge No. 83
I.U.UJ. special meeting,
Jan. 18 Monday at 8 o.m.
Installation with Olive
Rebekah Lodge No. 28.
Ronnie Atkins. N.G
3-PERSONAL
CONSOLIDATE
Your Debts
1 One place to pay
2 A smaller payment
3 Extra cash if you
need it.
$TARK FINANCE CO.
$tan Stark, Manager
Home Owned
Independent
2739 No. 99 SP 3-1817
ANTIQUE piano for sale. SP 2-4495
For Stanley Parties or
Stanley Home Products.
NELDA ROBERTS SP 3-4392
BUSINESS CARDS
$4.68 per 1.000. SP 3-4761
WATKINS Products SP 3-5667
PROMPT TAX SERVICE
3512 Table Rock Rd. NO 4-1352
DENTURES repaired & re-lined
while you wait. Day or eve SP-
3-602625 Lozier Lane.
Miriam's Beauty Shop
809 E. Jackson SP 3-3806
Miriam Ward, operator
Merle Norman Cosmetics
214 Fluhrer Bldg.
ANYONE having a drinking prob
lem is welcome at Alcoholic
Anonymous 8:30 p.m. Tues. & Sat.
Rear of 212 N oakdaie z-bbdt
Rawleigh Products. SP 2-4438
HAVING MONEY PROBLEMS?
See Dick Milestone He can ar
range a loan for you from $50
to $1500. on furniture, automo
bile or salary American Finance
Corp, 123 W Main St. Ph SP-2-!2Cl
4-LOST AND FOUND
LOST Aqua colored Parakeet,
verv tame. Vinicity Kings. Hwy.
& 'Stewart. Reward. SP 2-9962.
LOST: Male Collie, New Years.
Rapid City license No. 151, two
dots tattooed inside right ear,
answers to Feathers. SP 2-7692.
LOST Vicinity of Copper, Ore.,
male blacK Be tan xorKsnire ler
rier. Wt. about 15 lbs. Answers
to name of Chico. Reward. 380
Ashland St.. Ashland. MU 9-3401.
LADY MEDFORD BEAUTY SALON
Good permanents. arj-MU;
5-INSTRUCTlONS
YOUNG MEN & WOMEN
train for
AIRLINES
Prepare now for an airline ca
reer. This exciting field offers
many opportunities. You can
train for Stewardess or one of
the many important ground po
sitions.
unv to Hollywood at no addi
tional charge, upon completion
of basic training. Must be high
school graduate, la-Jo.
Mail coupon today
for complete details.
AIRLINE CAREER DIVISION
NORTHWEST SCHOOLS
Dept. A1-139
Tribune Box 1777
Name
Address
City
Age
State
Ph
Iduc.
Hrs. I work
LEGAL NOTICES
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Scaled bids will be received by
the Jackson County Court at the
Courthouse at Medlord. Oregon, on
or before 10:00 A.M. on the 27tb
dav of January. 1960. for the fur
nishing of furnace oil and Pacific
300 fuel oil to County Road Depart
ment for the period of February l,
1960. to January 31. 1961, inclusive.
Instructions to bidders and speci
fications can be obtained at tne
office of the County Engineer.
JACKSON COUNTY COURT
Earl M. Miller
County Judge
Chester H. Wendt
County Commissioner
R. A. James
County Commissioner
FILE NO. 10697
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR THE
COUNTY OF JACKSON
In the Matter of the Estate of
MARGARET HENRYETTA LEN
DERMAN also known as ETTA
L. LENDERMAN. Deceased,
The undersigned, having been
appointed Administrator of the
above entitled estate by the Cir
cuit Court of the County of Jack
son, State of Oregon, and having
qualified, notice is hereby given
to all persons having claims against
said estate to present them at the
office of the undersigned's Attor
ney at 230 West Main Street, Med
ford, Oregon, properly verified,
and with proper vouchers, within
six (6) months from the date of
the first publication of this notice
which will be the 18th day of Janu
ary, 1960.
s Noah H. Lendertnan
Administrator
O. H. Bengtson
Attorney for Administrator
230 West Main Street
Mediord, Oregon
R
viet Union is the world's best
place for an actor to work, I
decided after inspecting the
winter theatrical program in
Moscow.
For an actor, the audience
is his, all his, for four hours.
The curtain usually rises at
7:30 and most of the plays last
until 11:30. There's no such
thing as being fashionably
late, so latecomers can't dis
turb the actor's orations. They
have to sit out the first act in
the chilly lobby.
Then the thespian can pull
out all the stops. Acting in
Moscow, right down to the
smallest walk-on part, is more
emotional than it is on West
ern stages. At first, that's as
tonishing to a theater fan
used to the relatively subdued
style of Broadway.
But this is a country of
stronger emotions in every
day life, and the theater has
to be that much broader to do
ordinary life one better.
Real-Life Story
One long-run popular play,
for example, is a real-life
story telling how convicts and
prostitutes built the White
Sea Canal after the revolu
tion. The heroine of "The
Aristocrats," a truly buxom
blonde, must have put in a
good two miles striding
around the stage with jaw
outthrust during three acts.
In one hysterical scene, she
cried real tears and literally
rolled around the stage, black
velvet dress and all..
Another play dramatizes
most fervently life in Siber
ia 50 years ago, and could be
called a Western in Russian
boots. In this supercollossal
epic, the hero steals his fa
ther's mistress, kills her to
snatch money his father gave
her, blames the murder on
his best friend, had his father
put in an insane asylum, takes
dope, starts a forest fire, or
ders police to shoot striking
workers at his mines and at
last ends it all-and the play-
by jumping out a window.
The seme effects were just
as flamboyant. Eight comp
letely different sets twirled
on a revolving stage. Snow
storms and fires were aston
ishingly realistic.
Because some theatergoers
skip dinner to make that 7:30
curtain, during the first inter
mission . there's a wild rush
to a room called the buffet.
Limp from the exciting play;
you devour thick salami or
caviar sandwiches, cheese,
beer, sweet Russian drinks or
sweeter pastry.
Then back to your seat for
another hour of emotion. Next
intermission, everybody eats
again. In fact, some foreign
theatergoers don't understand
a word of Russian but give
the caviar sandwiches a rave
review. After seeing one com
edy about love at a machine
tractor station, I decided they
should shelve the play and
just show the chocolate
eclairs.
Theater Loved
Most theaters put on class
ics, from Chekhov to Shake
speare which is easier than
finding a good modern play
that meets, the requirements
of glorifying the march to
Communism.
Whatever the play, the Rus
sians love their theater. For
four hours they sit in rapt
silence, except when an excit
ing moment occurs in the
plot. Then they discuss this
turn of events with each other
and a wave of whispers
sweeps the theater.
Most theaters are more or
nate than in New York,
sparkling with elegant
chandeliers and little gilded
boxes. But you don't see the
elegant folk, eggheads or up
per bohemians of a Broadway
crowd. What appears to be
so-called average people, of
all ages, fill Moscow theaters,
their sturdy figures dressed
informally.
After the play, the Russians
waste little time applauding
the actors. They briskly head
for the cloak room, an ines
capable institution; you. can't
get into the theater without
shedding your outer garb.
Everybody bundles up
again in cocoons of scarves,
fur hats, bulky brown coats
and heavy boots. Then, like a
great brown wind, they surge,
chattering busily, into the
snowy streets.
OFFICIALS VISIT BERLIN
Berlin-flJPB-Foreign ministry
officials from 13 NATO coun
tries, including th United
States today began a three
day visit to both sides of Ber
lin. They will tour West and
East Berlin, inspect a camp
for refugees from Communist
East Germany, and confer
with West Berlin Mayor
Willy Bran.
HIT-RUN TOLL MOUNTS
New York-dJPD-Mrs. Eusta-
auia Hernendiz, 48, struck
and killed by a car Sunday
night became this city s nintn
hit-run victim in 19 days.
' JHarch OF PIMES . v
RCH OP PIMES.
SUPPORTED RESEARCHERS
at uNivERsrry of michkjan
FOUNt? THAT THE JUICE
OPORCWPS PROTECTS
MICE FROM CRIPPLING
FOLIO. OTHERS RXINP THAT
JUICES FROM MUSHROOMS,
ONIONS anp alfalfa
ALSO PROTECT ASMNST
VIRUSES.
Boston policemen lenp'
0UOOP FOR ARTHRITIS RESEARCH
AfCEC WITH MARCH OF PIMES
6RANT. PLASMA IS EXTRACTED
FROM BLOOP ANP BLOOP
CELLS RETURN EP TO CONOR. '
1i :V 1
These Pupils Learn Many
Things Without Teacher
A "school" of fish has little
to do with education, but in
the great "classroom" of the
sea, a lake, pond or river, it
does have a great deal of im
portance in the curriculum of
instinctive "learning."
The tendency to school is
just about the first thing a
baby fish knows how to do;
they execute the maneuver
effectively, even before they
take their first mouthful of
food. Some species of fish
never get entirely out of the
schooling habit as long as
they live. Others, after they
have completed the kinder
garten phase of learning, go
their separate ways.
, Immediately after they es
cape from the egg, the babies
rush together in a compact
little group and re-form it
whenever danger threatens.
Even a passing shadow or a
slight vibration in the water
will send them hurrying into
a huddle.
The fisherman, as well as
the scientist, pretends to know
the reason or this action; per
haps, and then again, maybe
not. We say it is a protective
measure, but every once in a
while the answer doesn't come
out according to plan. It is
supposed that schooling is a
plan for survival; the theory
being that a predator fish
slashing into the school will
succeed in gulping one or two
small fish, while if they are
separated, each little fish go
ing its individual way, they
could easily be picked off one
by one. It is pretty well agreed
among most students that Na
ture will willingly sacrifice
the individual, but will try to
save the species.
Pages Missing
So far in the book' of Na
ture, the chapter on fish be
havior has some pages miss
ing. There are some questions
that have no obvious explana
tion.
It would be easy to under
stand if one or two, who were
preceding at the head of the
school, would react to a given
stimulus and the rest would
follow, but they don't. The en
tire school will turn at exact
ly the same time, not in a right
or left turn, but in a right or
left oblique. The system seems
so elastic the entire group
will go up, down or sideways,
and execute it simultaneously
If they do react to a signal,
how do they all get it at ex
actly the same instant? If it is
only an instinctive action how
does it work so perfectly that
the trigger trips each individ
ual fish to respond in the same
way? Should a predator fish
cut through the school and
scatter all the pupils, each
darts away in a mad scramble.
but immediately they turn and
reform into a compact group
again.
Instinct Triggers Them
Should the school approach
an obstacle, whereby only a
narrow passage leads in the
general direction they wish to
go, they flow out into a Line,
but rusk toto a huddle again
as soon as room is available.
The fact that they all turn at
the same time would seem to
indicate they all react to the
same impetus at the same
split-second; some instinct
triggers their every move.
About the only logical ex
planation so far acceptable is
Oral folio vaccine
PEVELOPEP r5Y PR . ALBERT
SA8IN WITH MARCH OF I7IMES
SUPPORT MAY SOMEPAY BE
6IVEN TO U.S. YOUNGSTERS
IN CANPy.
Small Worlds
Around Us
By Lynn M. Watkins
that some "sense perception,"
a reaction no one knows too
much about yet, operates the
entire complicated arrange
ment. v
A school of tiny fish, bunch
ing up in a group or turning
in unison and swimming
away, is apparently a silly
performance, but there may
be more here than meets the
human eye. For here is a high
ly successful school, whose pu
pils learn many things with
out the aid of a teacher.
(Released by The Register and
Tribune Syndicate, 1960)
Tucson, Ariz.-, gets its name
from the early Indian word
"Skookzone," meaning "at the
foot of a black hill."
Scraps or 4 Colors
Dream - come - true afghan.
yours for the making. You'll
display it proudly to friends
and family.
Mainly single crochet forms
these 7V-inch flowers. Join
for afghan or TV pillow. Use
a large hook; do in wool
scraps or 4 colors. Pattern
7489: directions.
Send THIRTY-FIVE cents
(coins) for this pattern-add 5
cents for each pattern for 1st
class mailing. Send to Med
ford Mail Tribune, Household
Arts Dept., P.O. Box 168, Old
Chelsea Station, New York
11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME,
ADDRESS, PATTERN NUM
BER. JUST OUT! Our New 1960
Alice B r o o k s Needlecraft
Book contains THREE FREE
Patterns. Plus ideas galore for
home furnishings, fashions,
gifts, toys, bazaar sellers-exciting,
unusual designs to cro
chet, knit, sew, embroider,
huck weave, quilt. Be first
with the newest-send 25 cents
now!
Stop Heart Gas 3 Times Faster
Certified laboratory tests prow BELL-ANS tab
lets Miitralize3 times as much stomach acidity
in one minute as many leading digestive tabiets.
Get BELL-ANS today for the fastest tnoM
relief. 35 at druggists. Send postal to BELL
ANS, Oranjeburi, U. V. for liberal free samplf.
Stocks Decline, Ignoring Employment
Rise, Record Industrial Production
New York - (CPU - Stocks
during the past week ignored
record industrial production,
a sharp rise in employment,
Camp Fire Girls
Tweelie Birds
The Tweelie Birds group of
Blue Birds from Jackson
school have been busy since
the first of the year.
The first meeting in Janu
ary was held at the home
of the assistant leader, Mrs.
E. D. Grimes. Games were
played then the group looked
at things Nadine Grimes, Blue
Bird member, had made.
At the January 12 meeting
at the home of the leader,
members were presented with
Camp Fire Girls 1960 Golden
Jubilee pins. The pins com
memorate the 50 years since
the founding of the Camp Fire
Girl group. They were award
ed to the group because they
had brought in new members.
Because the Tweelie Birds
have grown so much, there
are now 14 members, they
plan to form a new group.
Soon Jackson school will have
two Blue Bird groups.
The group is studying about
loyalty to the family, the
school and the country.
Recently the girls visited
the police station where they
were shown a board on which
all the accidents in Medford
are marked. Officer Berle Ste
phens told why members
must be so careful in riding
bicycles.
Returning home the group
saw some big girls with bal
loons. The Tweelie Birds
stopped and made a donation
so each girl was given a bal
loon. Juanita Franks,
Reporter
PLOTTERS INDICTED
Amman, Jordan-(UPD-Four-teen
army officers and three
civilians were accused of plot
ting to overthrow the govern
ment of King Hussein in an
indictment released by the
military prosecutor Sunday.
The 17 have been under ar
rest since mid-1958.
Medford
and moves to bring down our
deficit in the balance of pay
ments abroad.
They declined on tight
money and fears of further
increases in money rates, in
cluding a rise in the discount
rate, a Justice Department ap
peal to the Supreme Court of
the Du Pont case to force it
to divest itself of its 63 mil
lion shares of General Motors;
decision to sell nickel from
the stockpile, and deflation
ary efforts of a budget in
balance.
Du Pont, suffering from the
appeal, fell more than 5 points
on Friday and closed with a
loss of 2SA. International
Nickel fell 3 on the stockpile
news. Weakness in these two
plus a loss of more than a
point in General Electric
brought industrials down on
Friday and left them lower
on the week.
So far in 1960 industrial
shares have fallen in eight of
the ten sessions. The losses
amounted to 30.18 points and
the two gains to 10.50 points,
leaving the average down
19.68 points from the 1959
close.
Rails and utilities had six
losses and four gains each.
Heavy Selling
On Monday the market ran
into heavy selling that knock
ed industrials down 8.57
points, their widest loss since
the market for these stocks
declined 9.14 points on Sept.
8. Tuesday's loss amounted to
6.73 and Wednesday's to 3.99.
The market rallied 4.09 points
on Thursday and dipped 0.85
for the group on Friday.
For the week, the indus
trials closed at 659.68 off
16.05; railroad 157.98 off 0.12;
utilities 87.13 off 0.56; and 65
stocks 216.34 off 3.52.
All sections of the market
were hit. Electronics took a
severe drubbing in several in
stances. Rails outperformed
the industrials and utilities
moved narrowly.
Government reports were
glowing for December. Dur
ing that month industrial pro
duction came within one per
centage point of its record
iy
C55f i inn 1
READ , . , ADVERTISE . . . SHOP ... IN
high, steel operations set a
new record, employment rose
and unemployment fell - each
a contra - seasonal move be
cause of the return to their
jobs of the steel workers.
Auto Output High
For the week auto output
and truck output were at their
best levels since 1955. Steel
held steady above 95 per cent
of capacity. Coal output and
car loadings spurted from the
holiday weeks and. electricity
output set a record high. Re
tail trade rose and was 3 to 7
per cent higher than a year
ago.
December housing starts
surprised everyone by rising
to a rate of 1,310,000 for the
year, against a rate of 1,210,
000 in November. For all of
1959, housing starts totaled
1,341,000 units, against 1,141,
500 in 1958 and set a new
high since the record was
touched in 1950.
Small investors turned to
the treasury bill market and
were able to buy 366-day bills
that will give them a return
of 5.36 per cent. The yield
would have been higher had
it not been for the demand of
the small buyers in this mar
ket which ordinarily is pa
tronized only by the wealthy
and the big industrial and
financial businesses.
Weakened Position
Many took profits in stocks
because of the money situ
ation and what experts called
a weakened technical position
in the general list. Leader
ship generally continued poor.
Sales for the week dipped
to 17,680,696 shares, a daily
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or.
Monday, Jan. 18, 1960 A
average of 3,536,139 shares,
from last week's 18,021,086
shares, and a daily average
of 3,605,417 shares.
In the 1959 week sales were
21,015,080 shares, a daily
average of 4,203,016 shares.
Sales so far in 1960 have
totaled 35.707,782 shares,
against 45,235,801 shares in
1959.
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