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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1960)
Locals Patient - Mrs. James R. Neil Sr., 1620 Apple ave., is a medical patient at Osteopath ic hospital. Chimney Blaxe-A flue fire occurred Saturday afternoon at the residence of Elmer A. Barnes, 1817 Oregon ave., ac cording to firemen. Sale Planned Ladies of Tirst Church of God will hold a rummage and baked food sale Tuesday, Jan. 26, at the Fehl building from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Theft Robert Allen Fitz simmons, 273 Lozier lane, told city police someone broke in to his car Saturday night or Sunday morning and took a car coat valued at S12, while it was parked in front of 1951 North Pacific highway. Speaker - Orie Moore, chief sanitarian from the Jackson county public health depart ment, will speak Tuesday, Jan. 26, at a meeting of the Inter-Agency Council at 3 p.m. in the court house health department. Permits Two permits were recently issued by the city building department to Med ford Neon for $3,000 to erect a sign at 2391 North Pacific highway, and to W. L. Moore for $9,000 to erect a residence at 1653 Springbrook rd. Grass Fire - Firemen were dispatched to a grass fire about 1:35 p.m. yesterday at the Jack A. Thomson home, 2558 Roberts rd. The blaze originated from sparks from a trash burner and minor damage resulted to fence posts. Loss City police said that Margery Juanita Gray, 2702 Merriman rd., left a $48 tran sister radio in a dressing room at J. C. Penney 's, 106 North Central ave., Saturday after noon. When she returned about five minutes later to re trieve it, it was gone. Malicious Damage City police report that a car be- lnnpin to Douglas Aian Campron, 321 Vancouver ave., was scratched, splattered with mud and marked with ink while it was parked in front of his residence Saturday night or Sunday morning. Meeting - Cub Pack 101, Wilson school, will hold its monthly pack meeting tonight at the Wilson School cafete ria at 7 o'clock. All boys be tween the ages of 8 and 10 Vz who are interested in becom ing Cubs are invited to at tend the meeting with their parents. Training - Paul Whisenant, employee of Jackson County Cooperative, returned earlier this month from Walla Walla, Wash., where he attended an upper-level manage ment training. The school covered the fields of personnel man agement, member and cus tomer relations, operations, buying and storing and sales. - Cited Richard Ray Rose, 24, of 819 North Central ave., was cited by city police for violation of the basic rule aft tr his car went out of con .rol Saturday at 10:35 p.m. and hit a telephone pole at $e intersection of Second and Woodstock sts. There were no injuries, but Rose's vehicle sustained damage to the bum per and grill. ... 1 , -. I Muffler Smokes - City fire- men were sent to the Med ford airport Saturday morn ing when an airplane fire was reported at Rogue Flying serv ice. They said that flying in structor W. T. Locke, who was with a student flyer, no ticed smoke in the cockpit of a plane. Landing was made all right. It was found that the smoke was caused by a new muffler. A paper tag had burned off after the motor warmed up. Smoke in the residence of Fred A. Bohley, 108 Florence ave., about 6:10 a.m. today was found to have been caused by a motor on a furnace. SHOW STARTS 7:00 ; clam cabeoll I QABEEk BAKER e ; urn mi PALMER '-COBB t BUTFORMEs CO-FEATURE !5 JOSEPH. M. BUTLER Joins Loan Department Federal Sayings Adds Man to Staff Joseph M. Butler has join ed the loan department at Jackson County Federal Sav ings and Loan association, of ficials have announced. He received his bachelor of science degree from the Uni versity of Wisconsin and was in the home construction busi ness with his father prior to moving to Medford in 1956. Butler was employed as as sistant manager by the Cope land Lumber company and in the production department of the plywood division of Tim ber Products here prior to his joining the association last month. He resides here with his wife and daughter at 2097 Melody lane. Paint Firm Leases White City Property The Golden West Paints, Inc. will move in the near future from its North River side ave. factory to a building to be constructed at White City, R. L. Taylor, president, has announced. Taylor said that the whole sale and retail business of the corporation has expanded to an extent where the larger building in an industrial lo cation is necessary for its manufacturing operation. The new all steel building will be constructed on acre age leased on a paved street adjoining a railroad siding. A six-inch concrete slab 50 by 125 feet is already in place awaiting arrival of the build ing steel, Taylor said. Weathor FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Cloudv and mild through Tuesday with threat of a few scattered showers. Occasional clearing periods. Low tonight 40-43. High Tuesday 58. western Oregon: Mostly cloudv tonight and Tuesday with occasion al rain. Brief periods of partial clearing with patchy fog. Little temperature change. Low tonight 32-40. High Tuesday 40-52. Northern California: A few show ers tonight. Partial clearing Tues day but showers continuing Tues day in extreme north portion. Snow level 4.000 feet in extreme north. Little temperature change. Temperature: Mean yesterday 49: above normal 11. Record high this date 60 in 1924. Record low this date 8 in 1949. Precipitation: 24 hours to mid night 0. Midnight to 10 a.m. trace. total this month 2.08 in.. .13 in. above normal. Total since Sept. 1 4.41 in..-5.90 j in. below normal. numumy: Lowest yesieraay 4U',,,, highest this a.m. 94. High 4:00 24 City Yester- a.m. hr. day Low Prec. Brookings 61 50 .22 Grants Pass 53 42 .10 Klamath Falls 45 35 MEDFORD 62 44 T Portland 41 35 Seattle 46 Spokane 33 Yakima 35 Eureka 64 Red Bluff 55 Sacramento 58 San Francisco 61 Los Angeles 63 43 .53 29 T 25 .01 53 48 53 56 56 44 24 14 51 29 22 22 .74 .89 .35 .04 Phoenix 69 Denver 41 Chicago 20 Miami Beach 6o New York 36 Washington. D.C. .. 34 FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through Saturday. -Jan. 30): Western Oregon-Western Wash ington Some cooling by midweek with temperatures averaging near normal and precipitation light to moderate. Highs generally in 40s and lows in 30s or upper 20s. Total precipitation .33 to 1 inch over interior and 1 to la inches on coast. Portland Livestock Portland (UPI I USDA Live stock: Cattle 1.450: beef cows strong to 50c higher: 11-head lot choice 1.145 lb. fed steers 27; 27 head load near 1,100 lb. high good low choice 26.25: few 997 lb. 26.50; 32-head load 850 lb. high good choice fed heifers 24.25: utility cows 15.50-17; canners - cutters 11.50-13.50 Calves 150; stock calves to 50c higher: good-choice vealers 28-33; standard 22-27; cull-utility 12-21; small lot good-choice 375 lb. stock steer calves 28. Hogs 1.400; 1 and 2 butchers 185-235 lb. 15-15 25; mixed 1. 2 and 3 lots 14.25-14.75: few 160-175 lb. 13-14; few sows 330 lb. down 12-13. Sheep 650: slaughter lambs to 25c higher, feeders 50c up: high good-choice fall shorn and wooled lambs 92-110 lb. 19-19.75: 31-head lot 101 lb. 20; good-choice feeder lambs 65-85 lb. 16.50-17.50; good choice ewes 5.50-6.50. Returned Helen Pauline Tompkins, 130 Elk st., told city police that she found a television set which had been stolen from her home in a burglary last Dec. 31, sitting on her front 'lawn early Sun day morning. There was no visible damage to the. set other than it didn't work, po lice said and there " was no clue as to who took it or who I returned it. s California Student Ends Bread, Water Diet as Protest Sacramento, Calif. - (UPD -Bruce Bloomfield, 24, a stu dent from the University of California at Berkeley, ended a bread and water diet today and wondered about some of the citizens he met on the California capitol steps. And the citizens, judging from comments, were wonder ing about him and about why he carried signs asking Gov. Edmund G. Brown to spare the life of convicted kidnap rapist Caryl Chessman. "I bet you'd like to go out and rape somebody yourself," an elderly lady said to Bloom- field last week. Bloomfield, a mathematics student, said that many per sons had called him a crack pot since he began his pro test vigil outside the capitol Jan. 15. At that time, he de clared that he would picket and live on bread and water for 11 days, one for each year that Chessman has been on San Quentin's death row. Majority Opposes Idea About 250 persons have talked to him in the past 10 days, Bloomfield estimated, and slightly more than 50 per cent opposed his plea for Chessman. "Most of them asked me how I'd feel if Chessman had attacked my mother or sis ter," he said. He told them he wouldn't like it, but the point was whether or not Chessman got a fair trial. On Saturday and Sunday Bloomfield eot reinforcement from Bobby L. Jones, 30, a high school teacher from Woodland, Calif. Jones pa raded, with his own picket sign, objecting to Chessman's execution on a kidnap-robbery charge that no longer carries the death sentence. "Why is Chessman being treated differently from the hundreds of others who did the same thing?" he asked. No Word from School Jones said that he heard nothing from his superiors at Woodland High school, where he teaches social studies. Asked what might happen if they objected to his public demonstration, he said, "I hope they don't, but nobody tells me what to think." Both Jones and Bloomfield, who had never before met, said that this was the first time they had made public protestations. But both said they would continue the Chessman appeal, Jones on weekends in Sacramento, and Bloomfield at the university. Asked about their families, Jones said that his wife was in sympathy with his actions. Bloomfield said that he had received a letter from his mother in Portland, where his father owns an auto wrecking yard. "She said that anything I do is all right with her, just as long as I'm sincere about it," he said. Births PAYTON - To Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E., 1101 Loal st., Medford. Jan. 23, 1960, boy, Ws pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. DAW - To Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W., route 1, box 564, Eagle Point, Jan. 24, 1960, boy, 6V4 pounds, at Sa cred Heart hospital. Over-the-Counler Western Stocks The following bid and ask ed quotations, from the Na tional Association of Securi ties Dealers, Inc., do not rep resent actual transactions. They aTe a guide to the range within which these securities could have been sold (indi cated by the "bid") or bought (indicated by the "asked") at the time of compilation. Common Stocks Bid Asked Bank of America 49 Calif-Pacific Utilities 20 Cascades Plywood J5 Cons Freightways 205i Copco 33 'i First National Bank 58 la Morrison-Knudsen 32 Northwest Nat Gas 17'i 5H 22 37Ti 22 35 ',4 62 4 34 . 18', 39 23?4 30', 70 '1 40 i 26 g 40. Pacific Pwr 8c Lt 37? Permanente Cem Co 22 Portland Gen Elec 28' i US National Bank 66 '4 United Utilities 38 West Coast Tel 247i Weyerhaeuser 37? Investment Funds Noon quotations on selected funds: Fund Bid Asked Bullock 12.92 14.16 ChemFund 10.96 11.85 Colonial Ener 12.61 13.78 Eaton Howard Stk . 23.89 25.54 Fidelity 15.57 16.83 Group Sec Avia - Elec 8.80 9.64 Group Sec Com Stk .. 12.48 ' 13.67 Group Sec Petr 9.60 10.52 Group Sec Steel 10.40 11.39 Group Sec Tobac 7.75 830 Keystone B-3 . 15.49 16.90 Keystone B-4 9.68 10.54 Keystone K-2 14.10 1538 Keystone B-l 18.79 20.50 Keystone S-2 n.56 12.61 Keystone S-3 13.88 15.14 Keystone S-4 13.02 14.21 Mass Inv Grth Stk . 13.81 14.93 I TV-Elec 15.63 17.04 Value Line Inc 5.61 6.13 1 Wellinjton 13.75 15.00 -v-A . -.v CAPSULE RETRIEVED Engineers who pended under the lead helicopter) back to helped launch the Little Joe Booster rocket the launching area after retrieving it from which carried a live monkey in its Project its landing site 12 miles out in the Atlantic. Mercury test capsule, watch as Marine heli- The capsule rode to an altitude of 48,900 copters bring the boilerplate capsule (sus- feet. -(UPI Telephoto) Former S.S. Sergeant Sentenced To 16 Life Imprisonment Terms By JOHN A. CALLCOTT United Press International Munich, Germany - (UPI) - When former S. S. Master Sergeant Richard Bugdalle walked into the courtroom flanked by two policemen he looked normal ' enough. Dressed in a dark business suit, with a trim black mus tache and swept-back dark hair, he didn't look like one of Hitler's most cold-blooded butchers.' . OBITUARIES FLOSSIE BLANKINSHIP Funeral services for Mrs. Flossie Blankinship, 88, who died Saturday will be held at the graveside in Siskiyou Me morial park, Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. with Perl Funeral home in charge of arrange ments. Mrs. Blankinship was born at Joplin, Mo., on Dec. 27, 1871. She had lived in Med ford for the past 40 years. Her husband Barnett Blank inship was a Civil War vet eran, and she was a member of the auxiliary. She is survived by three nieces and two nephews, Mrs. Kenneth Murray, Medford; Mrs. John Muschler, Lemon Grove, Calif.; Mrs. M. F. No lan, Pomeroy, Wash.; J. A. Combs, Lemon Grove, Calif., and Sherman Combs of Pack- wood, Wash. The body will lie in state at the Perl Funeral home un til noon Wednesday. CHARLES J. LUTTRELL Hornbrook - Funeral serv ices for Charles James Lut trell, former superior court judge for Siskiyou county and a lifelong resident of the bcou valley and Yreka areas, were held Saturday afternoon at the Masonic temple, Yreka. Mr. Luttrell was 85. Burial was' in the family plot in Fort Jones cemetery. Mr. Luttrell died at Siski you County General hospital the morning of Jan. 20 after a long illness. He served three terms as superior court judge in Yre ka, with 18 consecutive years on the bench from 1920 until his retirement in 1939. He was born in Fort Jones in 1875 and spent his childhood on the Luttrell ranch in Scott valley. Following completion of public schools in this area he passed the county teachers' examination at the age of 18 and taught in Siskiyou public schools until he enrolled in Ann Arbor law school in Michigan. He was graduated with a degree in law in 1901. He returned to this area to begin practice in Yreka that same year and was elected county district attorney in 1902, an office which he held until returning to private practice in 1911. He entered a law partnership with Maj. Horace Ley which continued until his election as superior judge in 1920. . After retirement from the bench in 1939, Mr. Luttrell entered semi-retirement from law practice for several years of rest and travel until re opening a law office in Yreka. He had been hospitalized in Yreka since May, 1958. Mr. Luttrell was a 50-year member of the IOOF lodge with original membership in the Fort Jones lodge. He was a past president of the Yreka ' -PhTie SP 3-4393 DAILY'S U-DRIVZ Medford Airport Only his eyes gave him away. "He looks almost like a gentleman today, but his, eyes are the same - just like a wild and crazed animal," a wit ness said. ' Bugdalle was sentenced last week after only three days proceedings to 16 times life imprisonment at hard labor. Evidence in those three days was enough to brand him a sordid murderer. What turned Bugdalle, born Lions club and a member of the Masons. He was married in 1907 to Winifred Morley, daughter of a pioneer Scott valley family, who preceded him in death in 1949. He is survived by two sis ters, Emma Luttrell, Yreka, and Mrs. Martha Norton, Sac ramento; a brother, George E. Luttrell, Yreka, and several nieces and nephews. PAUL M. WESTBROOK - Hornbrook - Funeral serv ices for Paul M. Westbrook, 53, well-known Yreka paint ing contractor, were held Thursday at 3 p.m. at Gird ner's Funeral chapel, Yreka. Burial was in the Henley- Hornbrook cemetery. The j Rev. Harold Coleman of the Yreka Methodist church was the officiating clergyman. Mr. Westbrook died Jan. 17 at the Siskiyou General hos pital, Yreka, shortly after be ing admitted. He suffered a heart attack earlier in the afternoon, at his home on the Klamath river seven miles be low Hornbrook. Mr. Westbrook was born May 30, 1906, in Kansas City, Kan. and was raised at Mo berly, Mo., where he attended the public schools. On Sept. 7, 1925, in Moulton, Iowa, he was married to Eva Pauline Morrow. The couple made their home in Napa, Calif., for 12 years prior to coming to this area in 1945. He had been associated with his broth er A. (Bud) Westbrook as a painting contractor, the two brothers then founding the Siskiyou Paint and Wallpaper company in Yreka which they sold a few years later to E. W. Peterson. He built the family home, which is located on the bank of the Klamath river, a short distance above its con fluence with the Shasta river. Mr. Westbrook is survived by his wife, a daughter, Mrs. Audrey Langlo, Yreka; a son, Paul M. Westbrook Jr. of the U.S.S. Porterfield, now sta tioned in Hong Kong; a broth er, A. (Bud) West brook, Yreka, and a sister, Mrs. Opal Matson, Ontario, Calif. Funeral services were held up pending the arrival of Paul Jr. from the Orient. He ar rived in Yreka Thursday. CHARCOAL STEAKS TILL MIDNIGHT CANDLE ROOM HOTEL Medford 14 Open Daily 5:30 P.M. to Midnight Sundays 4 P.M. Till 11 P.M. the son of a respectable working-class family, into a tortur er, killer and sadist? The most simple explana tion was given by a court doctor who said: "Bugdalle is an untalented, limited and primitive man. The roots of his atrocities can be found in his sudden change from a nobody to a man with power who felt himself big ger than harmless prisoners." Bugdalle was born Sept. 11, 1907, in Pommsen, Sax ony. His father Wilhelm and mother Emma both worked in factories. After struggling through school he became a wheelwrights apprentice at 12. As in school, his limited intelligence prevented him from learning a great deal. In 1931, when Germany's economic crisis was at its worst, Bugdalle became one of the thousands of unem ployed. Nine months later he joined the National Socialist Party, and the Nazi'S.S. Elite Guard, In 1937, Bugdalle was post ed, in his new rank as S.S. Sergeant, to guard duty in the Sachsenhausen Concentration camp. 'Most Dreaded' There he became, as trial witnesses unanimously testi fied, "the most dreaded guard of them all." What Bugdalle did to earn that title went into trial records as one of the most brutal records of atrocities ever committed in the name of the Nazi sense of perverted justice. He beat, whipped and kicked prisoners to death, suf focated 15 at a time in a broom closet, shot and hung them and tortured and froze them to death. Despite his limited intelli gence, B igdalle was clever enough to keep out of the hands of the war crimes courts. By some means he became an American Prisoner of War and in 1946 was released as "a non-commissioned officer in the 4th Infantry Regi ment." Until 1948 he worked as a laborer for the U.S. Army and from 1948 until his arrest in December, 1957, lived and worked in Munich under his own name with a floor manu facturer and a railroad goods car maker. Police said he managed to live so long undiscovered be cause former Sachsenhausen prisoners knew him only by his nicknames. "Brutalle," "Brutalla," or "Bugdalla." It was a man of one of these three names for whom police searched, not knowing they were only " knicknames. DWAYNE HUTCHINS, Juilder Grants Pass, Oregon ' No duels, no moving parts, it's clean. I'm pleased with Electric Heat." ay Fr naMi Electric Hot. Tef CilOn Trading on Stock Market Declines to Three-Month Low By ELMER C. WALZER UPI Financial Editor New York -l'PI)-Stock trad ing the past week declined to a three-month low with prices again registering a decline in all major departments. A decline that had been in progress since the industrial average hit a new record high on Jan. 5 at 685.47 seemed to have run its course by the Wednesday close. Trading for the week amounted to 14,219,090 shares, or a daily average of 2,843,818 shares. That was the smallest for a full week since Oct. 23 when the weekly total was 13,886,806 shares. So far this year sales have totaled 49,926,872 shares, against 60, 939,271 shares a year ago. At the close Wednesday, the industrial average showed a loss from its I960 high of 41.78 points or 6 per cent. Rails did much better and utilities performed best of all. Louisiana Man Arrested by Ashland Police Ashland - City police offi cers turned "anglers" Friday night to snare a 33-year-old Louisiana Fish. William Gordon Fish of Shreveport, is being held in county jail on a charge of carrying a concealed weapon. Police said a complaint also will be signed charging him with obtaining money under false pretenses. Fish, a traveling magazine salesman who arrived in this area with his wife, Barbara, eight days ago, is suspected of passing at least four "rubber" checks while making pur chases in order to obtain cash. Ashland police, who arrest ed Fish as he was heading south through town, sup posedly back to Louisiana, said the man had a loaded .22 caliber revolver on the front seat of his car at the time of his arrest. Also in the car, they added, were three rifles, numerous hunting knives, and several cameras, radios, binocu lars and other miscellaneous items. Sporting Goods Fish, police stated, wrote a $10 check on a Louisiana bank to purchase a holster at a sporting goods store here Friday. He pocketed the change, they said, and re turned later in the day when he wrote a S30 check to buy a fishing tackle box. He collected his change, po lice said, and went to Med ford, where he traded in an old revolver for a new one, writing another check to pay the difference. Later, they said, he wrote a $93 check for his rent to the proprietor of the Ninety- Nine Motel in Medford. He received $50 in change. Medford police were told of Fish's transactions and alerted Ashland police. Fish was arrested moments after police here had set up a road block at the north end of town; His wife later was released. Fish previously served a prison sentence in Virginia on check charges, Ashland police said. An Ashland police spokes man stated that only four of Fish's checks have been re ceived by the department so far, but "we don't know how many others may be out." MtnuliN m a COPCO Electric Dter. At the close last week the industrial average stood at 645.85 off 13.83 points from the week before; rails 155.63 off 2.35; utilities 86.38 off 0.75 and 65 stocks 212.55 off 3.79 points. The market fell of its own weight. There was a minimum amount of selling. Demand equally was lacking. Bears re mained idle and the short in terest fell off to a new low. The short interest also de clined on the American Stock Exchange. Money remained tight but the Federal Reserve retained its discount rate at 4 per cent, possibly awaiting end of the Treasury's $11 billion refund ing job scheduled for next week before a rise. The Bank of England raised its discount rate from 4 per cent to 5 per cent, and one British source said this was done in antici pation of a rise at New York next Thursday. Inflation received a blow as a market factor when the President released his budget figures, anticipating a surplus of S4.2 billion which was what he had said previously. The selling that took place in 11 of the first 13 sessions of the year hit the blue chips and the glamor stocks hard est. Losses in the former rang ed to $20 a share in Du Pont and in the latter to $11.50 a share in Motorola. Business news continued highly favorable, and several experts were revising upward their anticipations for the re covery movement. At the end of last year they had made rosy predictions for a boom through 1960. These were re vised later to apply to the first half. This week some ex tended their second thoughts of the extent of the recovery movement. Steel operations were around a record high. Auto mobile output hit a four-year high and truck output was the best in four and a half years. Car loadings rose on the week end and were above last year and 1958. Construction slipped a bit but the total for the year to date was well above a year ago. Electricity output and coal output dipped from the previous week but held above a year ago. Retail trade was 1 to 5 per cent higher than a year ago. At the week end steel op erations were 31.9 per cent above a year ago, electric power production up 6.8 per ircent; coal output up 6.4 per cent; and car loadings up 3.3 per cent. Wholesale food prices were down nearly 7 per cent and the cost of living index for December showed a dip of one-tenth of one per cent to a new low since Oc tober. Railroad bonds led bonds higher and lifted the Dow Jones average for 40 repre sentative bonds to 81.09 up 0.12 point. Income rails gain ed 0.49 points to 65.31. THE "JAZZ SCENE" tonight at and every vr n uA-uaiu M)0 schedule: Mondays at 9:00 p.m. Tuesdays at 9:00 p.m. Wednesdays at 9:00 p.m. Thursdays at 9:00 p.m. Fridays at 9:00 p.m. Saturdays at 9:00 p.m. Sundays at 7:30 p.m. courtesy of TROWBRIDGE & FLYI1I1 and KOGAP LUMBER CO. 7 Contract Discussed By Workers, Union The Medford Restaurant as sociation and several inde pendent restaurant operators met Thursday afternoon with the Culinary Alliance and Bartenders Union, Local 329, . at the office of the Industry Council to negotiate a new contract for the local Culinary Union, union officials report. Under discussion were addi tional holidays, more vacation time, health and, welfare and an overall wage increase for persons engaged in all classi fications of restaurant work. The next meeting will be held Feb. 4. Negotiations will begin with the Grants Pass operators Feb. 27 at the Cave Shop, Grants Pass, officials said. Portland Produce Portland rUPIt Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: Grade AA ex tra large. 50-52c: A A large. 46-48c; A large 44-47c: AA medium 42-45c; AA small. 36-39c; cartons l-3c ad ditional. Butter To retailers: AA and grade A prints. 6Bc lb.; carton, lc higher; B prints. 66c. Cheese, medium cured To re tailers: A grade cheddar single daisies. 44-51c; processed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf. 433-44c. GET THE GENUINE in America's Largest Selling TOILET TANK BALL Noisy running toilers can waste over 1000 gallons of water a day. The efficient, patented Water Master tank ball instantly stops the flow of water after each flushing. 75c AT HARDWARE STORES HURRY! HURRY! ENDS SOON evening on it u if i t I MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Monday, Jan. 25, 1960 iVi ibtf 'TOtflTlllllll If. I I