I
V J
I a , . v v
m ft v
MANAGER NAMED - John
J. McHugh, above, has been
appointed branch manager of
the newly established General
Motors Acceptance Corpora
tion office in Medford. For
mer credit manager in the
Portland branch, he is a
graduate of the University of
Washington, and joined the
Seattle office of GMAC in
1928. The local office is
located at 1005 East Main st,
and will provide financing
service for General Motors
dealers in Jackson, Josephine,
Klamath and Lake counties
and part of Douglas county,
company officials said.
Al Lightner
To Quit As Ref
Spokane -(UPD- Al Lightner
said Monday he planned to
quit being a basketball ref
eree after more than 15 years.
Lightner, sports editor of
the Oregon Statesman in
Salem, told Inland Empire
Sportswriters and Broadcast
ers he plans to turn in his
whistle at the end of the cur
rent season.
Lightner has worked in 10
regional NCAA and in five
national championship tournaments.
LEGAL NOTICES
No. 60-59-E
Suit to Quiet Title
SUMMONS
IJT THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR JACK
SON COUNTY
JEWELL W. BENNETT AND
OLA G. BENNETT,
Plaintiffs,
H. E. BOWDENand DAISY LEE
BOWDEN his wife; the unknown
heirs of R. E. Bowden; the unknown
heirs of Daisy Lee Bowden; also
all other persons or parties un
known claiming any right, title.
estate, lien or interest in the real
estate described in the Complaint
herein.
Defendants.
TO EACH, EVERY AND ALL OF
THE ABOVE NAMED DE
FENDANTS:
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE
OF OREGON. You and each of
you. are hereby required to ap
pear and answer the Complaint
filed against you in the above en
titled suit on or before the last day
of four weeks from the date of the
first publication of this summons,
and if you fail so to appear and
answer said Complaint, for want
thereof, the Plaintiffs will apply
to the Court for the relief demand
ed in their Complaint, succintly
stated as follows, to-wit: That a
Decree be entered adjudicating any
and all right, title, estate, lien or
claim which you. or any of you.
have, or claim to have, in. to or
upon the real property situated in
Jackson County, Oregon, described
as follows, to-wit:
All that certain real property
described in that certain deed of
A. C. Luttrell and Mary O. Lut4
trell to Canna B. PhlDDS. record'
ed in Volume 474 of the Deed
Records of Jackson. County, Ore
on. at page 276 thereof as doc.
ument No. 469891. and which
property is situate in the North
east uuarter ot section is
Township 36 South. Range 2
West of the Willamette Meridian:
and declaring any and all such
claims to be null and void: and de
creeing that the said Plaintiffs are
tne owners, in xee simple, oi anu
Dremises. and of the whole thereof,
free and clear of any and all right,
title, estate, lien or interest of said
Defendants, or any of them, aud
that Plaintiffs' title to said premises
be forever quieted and set at rest.
The date of the order for publi
cation of this summons is January
25, 1960. The time prescribed for
publication of this summons is
once each weeK lor lour consecu
tive weeks. The date of the first
publication of this summons is
Januarv as. ihbu.
SKYRMAN & HEISEL
Attorneys for Plaintiff
321 Medical Center Building
Medford. Oregon
Locals
Assumes Nam The as
sumed business "name of
Courtesy Cab has been filed
in the county clerk's office by
John Hill, 2541 Howard ave.,
Medford.
Surgery Patient Pat
Featherstone, 16-year-old son
of Mrs. Esther Featherstone,
route 2, box 228L, Medford,
is a surgery patient at Med
ford Osteopathic hospital.
Returns Sam Zier, X-ray
technician at Medford Osteo
pathic hospital, returned early
this week from Seattle, Wash.,
where he attended the North
west Osteopathic Hospital In
At Home - Mrs. Miriam
Ward, 907 East Jackson st
owner and operator of Mir
iam's Beauty Shop, is conva
lescing at her home following
her ' recent release from the
hospital.
Injures Arm James W.
Gibbs, 1355 South Columbus
ave., Medford, is in Rogue
Valley hospital for treatment
of an arm he injured while at
work Friday, his family re
ported.
Permits Issued Thecity
building department recently
issued permits to J. Langley
and W. H. Mitchel for $18,-
000 to place a service station
on foundations at 1005 Sum
mit ave., and to Paul An
drews to erect a $10,000 resi
dence at 2817 Elliot st.
In Hospital Medical pa
tients at Sacred Heart hospi
tal today included Mrs. Eva
Segessenman, Shady Cove;
Mrs. Louise Harvey, 1501
Stratford Way, Medford; Mrs.
Delia Lawson,. 1155 James
rd., Medford; Mrs. Belle Leu-
thold, 813 West 11th St., Med
ford; and Jack Hibbard,
Klamath Falls.
Meter Stolen A parking
meter and post were taken
from the west side of River
side ave. at Fifth st. recently,
according to city police. Po
lice reported that the meter
and post, which are valued at
$85, were apparently forced
out of the cement by hand
and removed from the scene.
Police searched the area but
were not able to locate them.
N
Recovered Vehicle-City po
lice impounded a car Monday
morning which had apparent
ly been abandoned on North
Bartlett st. Police said the
name of the registered owner
of the car is the same as a
man wanted by the Marion
county sheriff's office in Sa
lem for embezzlement by
bailee. They were not able to
loca'te the driver or owner,
police said.
Obituaries
DOORS OPEN 6:45
SHOW STARTS 7:30
GARY GRANT-TONY CURTIS
m ?&ti fin gnu
. .7 "U1IUM UUUHI1UX
PETTICOAT'
mt COLOR
Rollicking Co-Hit
the WILD 1 Mi5r
AND THE I otu
XHHOCEZIT f
4-H NEWS
J'rille 4-H Livestock Club
The J'ville 4-H Livestock
club held its first meeting at
the home of Truman Bishop
under the leadership of War
ren Dunlap. Officers were
elected. They are Dick Wil
son, president; Kathleen Neal,
vice president; Marsha Dun
lap, secretary and treasurer;
Donna Smith, reporter.
Meeting was presided over
by Junior Leader Patrick
Neal. Other business dis
cussed was future meetings
and fair preparation.
Refreshments were served
by Kathleen Neal.
A combined meeting of the
TvUl 4-H club will be held
Feb. 23 at the home of Jim
Smith.
Donna Smith
Reporter
MYRTLE E. PFEFFERLE
Funeral services for Mrs,
Mytle Edith Pfefferle, 81, who
died Monday, will be held at
Conger-Morris Funeral home
downtown chapel Wednesday
at 11:30 a.m. The Rev Harold
Sanner of the First Church of
the Nazarene will officiate.
Committal will be in Laurel
cemetery at Kerby, Ore., at
2 p.m.
Mrs. Pfefferle was born
March 31, 1887, at Loving-
ton, 111., the daughter of the
late F. M. and Josephine
Newlan. After her mother's
death, she made her home
with her grandmother, Sophia
Grindol, near Dalton City, 111.
She was married Sept. 6,
1896, at Mt. Zion, 111., to
Herny Pfefferle, who died at
Klamath Falls November 26,
1941. Mr. and Mrs. Pfefferle
came to Oregon in 1896, tak
ing up a homestead at Kerby.
They lived there many years
and at Brookings several
years, moving to Klamath
Falls in 1937. For the past
six months she had made her
home with her daughter,
Mrs. Josephine Durgin, at
1120 East 11th st., Medford
Survivors include two
daughters, Mrs. Durgin, and
Miss Iona Pfefferle, Sacra
mento, Calif.; two sons, Phayo
Pfefferle, Cave Junction, and
Paul Pfefferle, Klamath Falls;
six granddaughters, Mrs.
Myrtle Beth Gress and Mrs
Ruth Masterson, Burns; Mrs.
Frances Summers, Coos Bay,
Ore., Mrs. Marian Mepham,
Garden Grove, Calif,, and
Mrs. Donna Meengs and Miss
Alice Pgeggerle, of The
Dalles, Ore.; and six great
grandchildren. A son, Allen
Pfefferle, preceded her in
death in 1958.
MRS. LOTTIE SPENCER
Funeral services for Mrs.
Lottie Spencer, who died in
Salinas, Calif., will be held
at 2 p.m. Thursday at Perl
Funeral home instead of Wed
nesday. Interment will be in
Shady Cove.
Survivors include one
brother, Alvin Conover, Eagle
Point; two sisters, Mrs.
Blanche Zimmerlee, Trail;
and Mrs. Estella Geary Fair-
less . of - Pennsylvania; and a
half-brother, Charlie Math
ews, Salem.
Court Records
MUNICIPAL COURT
Paul A. Hennick, improper left
turn. S5.
Mack E. George. , no operator's
license in possession. $10.
Shelden Clyde Sanders, dis
obeyed traffic signal. $5.
Jacalyn Faye Lawgston, violation
of basic rule, $10.
Allen James Dickson, disobeyed
traffic signal, $10.
Delia Irene Thompson, violation
of basic rule. $10.
Idabelle James Bayliss, dis
obeyed traffic sign, $5.
Jean Adams Mowry, U-turn, $10.
Jack Patrick Doyle, following too
close, accident, $25.
Robert Joseph Wells, disobeyed
traffic signal. $10.
Michael Alex McDonald, exces
sive noise, $5.
James Frank Conner, after
hours, $10.
Joseph Albert Freese, Ashland,
vagrancy. $20.
ASHLAND PHONE MIL I-IIU
TJ WCUINC3UAT UPiLI
Ef "CURTAIN AT
EIGHT-THIRTY"
ADULTS ONLY
ALL THE ECSTASY OF YOUTH...
ALL THE JOY OF FULFILLMENT.
-it
MARGIT CARLQUIST. m iMrtfttt sot IKUnt. trooweui
ONLY FROM SWEDEN . . .
COULD COME A FILM OF
SUCH UNBOUNDED ECSTACYl .
JOHN LUSK AT THE CONSOLE OF THE
BALDWIN ORGAN - 8:00 - 8:30 P.M.
JOSEPH BECKER
Funeral services for Joseph
Becker, 55, of Happy Camp,
Calif., who died in a local hos
pital Monday, will be held in
the Immaculate Conception
Catholic church in Corning,
Calif., Wednesday morning.
The Hall Brothers Corning
mortuary is in charge of ar
rangements there. Interment
will be in the Corning Sunset
cemetery. The body was taken
to Corning today by Chapel
Mortuary, who has been in
charge of local arrangements.
Mr. Becker, the son of Jacob
and Josephine Kapen stein
Becker, was born in Yakima,
Wash., Nov. 29, 1904. The
family moved to California in
1907 where Mr. Becker grew
up and at the time of his death
was a road construction fore
man at Happy Camp.
He is survived by one
daughter, Mrs. Loretta Harri
son, Sacramento, Calif.; two
brothers, Paul Becker, Mn
eral, Calif., and Albert Beck
er, - Corning, Calif., and one
grandchild.
I
"
gw-i! r, ,
CRASH KILLS TWO -An A4D Skyhawk Hungarian freedom fighter, and the pilot,
jet attack bomber from . Moffett Field Lt. (jg.) Gordon N. Blake, who ejected but
crashed into a house near the base Monday, ' landed in the middle of the flaming house,
killed Mrs. Margit Halmi, 48, wife of a (TJPI Telephoto)
Wealher
FORECASTS -Medford
and vicinity: Increasing
high clouds tonight and Wednes
day. Chance of fog patches
Wednesday morning. Low tonight
28-30. High Wednesday 58.-
Western Oregon: Fair in the
south. Increasing cloudiness in the
north portion tonight. Wednesday,
cloudy on the coast and over the
northern interior with a chance of
a few showers. Partly cloudy
south interior. Low tonight 28 to 32
south interior, to 38 to 44 on the
coast and over north interior. High
Wednesday 46 to 5G.
Northern California: Fair tonight
and Wednesday. Cooler tonight.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day 47: above normal 4.
Record high this date 70 in 1957.
Record low this date 14 in 1956.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hour s to
midnight trace. Midnight to 10
a.m., none.
Total this month '4.0o inches,
2.94 inches above normal.
Total since Sept. 1. 8.73 inches.
3.25 inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
43, highest this a.m. 95.
Hish 4:00 24
City Yester- a.m. hr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 58 ' 39
Crater Lake 27 4 .06
Grants Pass 57 30
Klamath Falls 46 ' 22 T
MEDFORD 56 30 T
Portland 48 34 .11
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Seattle .
Spokane
Yakima
47
42
.. 50
Eureka 54
Red Bluff 61
Sacramento ... 60
San Francisco 60
Los Angeles 73
Phoenix 64
Denver 47
Chicago 34
Miami Beach 69
New York 36
Washington, D. C. 36
36
27
30
39
43
45
50
48
38
27
31
66'
27
20
.10
Investment Funds
quotations on selected
CLIFFORD SHOEMAKER
Funeral services for Clif
ford Shoemaker, 59, of 330
North Front st., who died in
a local hospital Thursday, will
be held at 9:30 a.m. Thursday
in the Camp White chapel.
The Rev. Joe Munshaw, pas
tor of the Eagle Point Com
munity church, will officiate.
Interment will be in the Camp
White cemetery at Eagle
Point. Chapel Mortuary is in
charge of funeral arrange
ments. Mr. Shoemaker was born in
Indianapolis, Ind., April 17,
1900. He was a veteran of
World War I, having enlisted
in the U.S. Navy at Indian
apolis May 28, 1917. He re
ceived his honorable dis
charge at the Great Lakes
Naval training station in Illi
nois Oct. 9, 1919, as an elec
trician third class. He came
to the Camp White Domicili
ary from Montana, where he
was a member until April of
last year.
He was not married, and
no known relatives survive.
HAROLD W. WELBURN
Funeral services for Harold
W. Welburn, 2419 Howard
ave., who died Sunday, will
be held Wednesday at 2 pjn.
at the Chapel in the Trees
with pastor Clynton Crisman
of the Friend's Church of
Medford officiating. Inter
ment will be in Siskiyou Me
morial park.
Mr. Welburn was born July
12, 1901, in Laurel, Neb. On
Jan. 1, 1928, in Medford, he
was married to Miss Delia
Young, who survives. Mr.
Welburn came to Medford
from South Dakota in 1924
and has been employed as a
millwright for Timber Prod
ucts company since 1928.
Surviving, besides his wife,
are one son, Burle Welburn,
U.S. Marines, Camp La Jeune,
N.C.; three sisters, Mrs. Mable
Stanley of Dixon, Neb., Mrs.
Clara Beale, Talent, Ore., and
Mrs. Jessie Wreyford, Sacra
mento, Calif.; his father,
Noon
funds :
Fund
Bullock
Chem Fund
Colonial Ener
Eaton Howard Stk
Fidelity ...
Group Sec A via Elec
Group Sec Com Stk
Group sec f etr
Group Sec Steel
Group Sec Tobac
Keystone B-3- .
Keystone B-4 ....
Keystone K-2
Kevstone S-l ..
Keystone S-2
Keystone S-3
Keystone S-4
Mass Inv Grth Stk
TV-Elec
Value Line Inc
Wellington
Bid Asked
12.46 13.66
10.55 11.41
12.32 13.46
23.15 24.76
15.02 16.24
8.38 9.18
12.07 13.22
9.14 10.01
9.39 10.29
7.44 8.16
15.58 17.00
9.66 10.54
13.49 14.72
18.16 19.81,
11.32 12.35
13.19 14.39
12.48 13.62
13.40 14.49
7.51 8.19
5.35 5.85
13.56 14.78
Samuel J. Welburn, Talent,
Ore., and a half-brother, Ted
Welburn, also of Talent.
The body will lie in state
at the Chapel in the Trees
from 6 until 9 o'clock this
evening at 2100 Siskiyou
blvd. Siskiyou Funeral Serv
ice directors are in charge of
arrangements.
Pallbearers will include Ed
ward Olson, Cecil Barker, Joe
Silva, Lowell Ditch, Clarence
Black and Joe Mayerle.
EARL C. BENNET
Funeral services for Earl C.
Bennet, 66, who died Sunday
at the Veterans Administra
tion Domiciliary, Camp White,
will be held at the Camp
White chapel at 3 p.m. Wed
nesday. The Rev. Lawrence
Eskay will officiate. Com
mittal will be in the Camp
White cemetery with Perl
Funeral home in charge of
arrangements.
Mr. Bennet was born Sept.
15, 1893, in St. Louis, Mo and
was a veteran of World War
I.
Survivors include one
brother, William D. Bennet,
Brewster, Wash.
TRUMAN L. MILTON
Funeral services for Tru
man Lee Milton, 20, of For
tuna, Calif., who died Mon
day, will be held at Conger
Morris Hillcrest Mortuary
Chapel, on the North Phoenix
rd., Thursday at 1:30 p.m.
The Rev. Marvin M. Lumley,
of the Phoenix Church of the
Nazarene, will officiate. Com
mittal will be in Hillcrest
Memorial park.
CHARLES J. BUTLER
Funeral services for Charles
J. Butler, 53, who died Mon
day at the Veterans Adminis
tration Domiciliary, Camp
White, will be held at the
Camp White chapel at 9:30
a.m. Wednesday. The -Rev.
Lawrence Eskay will officiate.
Committal will be in the
Camp White cemetery with
Perl Funeral home in charge
of arrangements.
Mr. Butler was born July
17, 1906, in Fitchburg, Mass.,
and was a veteran of World
War n. There are no known
relatives.
Well, the French went and
did it.
They made an atom bomb
All by themselves. Nobody
helped them. In fact, nearly
everybody implored them
NOT TO TRY. The instinc
tive feeling of common, ordin
ary, everyday people all over
the world is that the grim and
awful secret of The Bomb is
shared too widely already
for it is obvious that the more
widely, the secret is shared
the greater the danger that it
will be USED AGAIN IN
WAR.
Once The Bomb is used
again in war, the fat will be
in the fire.
BUT- .
Knowing all this
The French went ahead and
made a bomb. Having made
it, they took it out in the wide
wastes of the Sahara and SET
IT OFF. Thus they joined the
END OF COALBURNERS
Wilhelmshaven, Germany-(UPD-The
last coal-fired war
ship in the navies of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organi
zation was decommissioned
here Monday. German naval
officers said the minesweeper
Seeschlange (Seasnake) built
in World War II to burn coal
in order to save oil, would
be converted into a stationary
naval headquarters.
FOUNDER DIES
New York-flJPD-Dr. George
Louis Meylan, 86, retired
medical director and profes
sor1 of physical education at
Columbia university and one
of the founders of the Amer
ican Academy of Physical
Education, died Monday.
small company of nations that
share the awful responsibili
ty of possession of the most
dangerous weapon ever placed
in the hands of man.
May the Lord have mercy
on their souls.
pRETTY grim?
Well, things have been
grim before.
piORMER President Hoover
made a speech the other
day at a luncheon meeting of
United Presbyterian Men, in
New York. In it, he pointed
out that our nation is now 184
years old, older than any
other great representative
government in history. In
these 184 years, he said, our
nation has demonstrated the
strength to survive distress.
TTE went on to say:
-"We have gone through
seven wars, with a series of
crises before and after each
one. We have gone- through
three great inflations, with
accompanying crises. We have
gone through a dozen crises
of corruption in government."
But -
He added
"THE BILL OF RIGHTS
STILL STANDS AND WE
ARE WELL FED, WELL
CLOTHED, FAIRLY WELL
HOUSED, AND WE STILL
HAVE THE RIGHT TO KICK
ABOUT ANY CRISIS."
OO-
He thinks -
We will come through our
present troubles as we have
come through the troubles of
the past. Especially if we have
the fortitude to face up to
our problems instead of run
ning away from them.
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF-
-rrj . ..
v. -tea- : . 1
mem
NEW CORVAIR Available through Cour
tesy Chevrolet, Medford, is the Corvair, new
model of the rear-engine compact car. The
two-door model shown above has the same
basic dimensions as the four-door Corvair
sedan, but has its own district styling motif.
This is accented by a split front seat and a
new roof design which features a large slop
ing rear window.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPI) USDA Cattle
250. Good-choice 1240 lb. fed steers
25.50 with some 1287 lb. 24.50;
good-choice 830 lb. heifers 24; oth
er good heifers 22-23; fed utility
commercial cows 1855; other util
ity 16-17: canners-cutters 12-14.25;
cutter-utility bulls 16.50-22.
Calves 50. Good-choice vealers
28-33; standard 22-27; cull-utility
13-21.
Hogs 350. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers
180-230 lb. mostly 16; No. 2 and
3 lots 15-15.50; 255 is. 14.50 and
157 lb. 14; No. 3 sows 567 lu 11.
Sheep 200. Good-choice around
90 lb. wooled lambs 20; 108 'o No.
3 pelt 19; utility-good ewes 5-6.50.
Portland Produce
The following price quotations
are from the agricultural market
ing service of the U.S. Department
of Agriculture in Portland.
Eggs: Prices to retailers, deliv
ered; cartons. X large AA 48-51;
large AA 45-49; large A 43-47: me
dium AA 41-46; small AA 32-41.
Prices to producers: X large A A 38
40 '-,; large AA 36-38 'i; large A 34
35; medium AA 33-35 12; small AA
28-31 '2.
Butter Prices to retailers. No. 1
prints delivered, AA and A 68, B
66.
Poultry: Prices to retailers, de
livered, for grade A qualitv, frv
ers, whole 36-40. cut up 41-45; light
type hens, whole 27-31. cut up 32
33; heavy type nens, whole 35-40.
FIRST HAWK. THEN IAN
Ruislip, England - (UPI) - It
seems that everywhere his
dog goes, 2-year-old Ian Ful
ler is sure to follow. Mrs.
Marie Fuller reported Ian
missing Monday but later said
she found him when she
whistled for the dog, Hawk.
The dog, followed by Ian,
came crawling through a hole
it had dug under a fence sur
rounding the Fuller's backyard.
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. J
Tuesday, Feb. 16, 1960 A '
Over-the-Counter
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 are 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 46a. 49'.
Cahf.-Pacific Utilities 204 21
Cascade Plywood ...
Cons. Freightways ...
Copco
Cyprus Mines Corp.
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 ...
.. 32
18,
.. 33 '2
25 U
56
.. 32
.. 18 'i
361,
20
28
66 j
37
23 T,
38
34,
19a
35S
27
59
34 ,
19
38,
22
29T,
70',
39'b
25,
411a
Use Tribune Want Ads
CHARCOAL
STEAKS
TILL MIDNIGHT
CANDLE
ROOM
HOTEL
f k Medford
r i
4
Opcn Dtfly
5:30 P.M. to Midnight
Sundays 4 P.M. Till 11 PM.
THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE
CALL SPring 3-7323
FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRES
RED DEAN PROTESTS
Canterbury, England- (UPD -Dr.
Hewlett Johnson, the
"Red Dean" of Canterbury,
led a protest march against
the French A-bomb test
through the streets of this ca
thedral town Monday. In ad
dition to the 86-year-old John
son, paraders included 10
women, eight men and one
dog. '
OLDEST SWEDE DIES
Halmstad, Sweden- (UPD-Jo-hannes
Persson, who at 103
was Sweden's oldest male
citizen, died Monday at Tro
enninge. He was born July
20, 1856.
B3
HURRY !
2 SHOWS TONITE
7:00 & 9:25
The INN!
The GUESTS!
The SINS...
of the
BEST-SELLER!
s
TECHNICOLOR
Richard EGAN Dorothy McGUIRE
SANDRA DEE
noutt r t v r mil
AN INQUIRING student visited old Farmer Abernathy one
evening. "Tell me, Mr. Abernathy," he suggested, f'how
can a farmer manage to save a million dollars?"
"It's a long story," said
Mr. Abernathy, "and
while I'm telling it we
don't need these electric
lights. The moon is very
bright tonight". He
switched off the lights.
"Thank you, Mr. Aber
nathy," said the student, -reaching
for his hat. "You
needn't go on. I under
stand." Humor-loving airline per
sonnel at the St. Xouis base
have erected a sign at the
exit from th fiM thf
probably is nearer truth than poetry. It reada: "Warning! Ton
are now entering a danger zone: the public highway. Good luck!
You'll need it!"
Hank Grant angling for the American agency for a new
foreign sports car called Mafia. It comes with a hood under tha
hood.
1360. iy Bennett Cert, Distributed hyJOog Feature! Synaieat f
THJESMY
FEBRUARY 16 .
RETURN ENGAGEMENT
by Popular Demand
EDDIE SMITH TRIO
at the -
WOODEN SHOE
Holland Hotel Corner 6th and Fir
ATTENTION
ALL FOOD CLERKS!
ASHLAND - MEDFORD - GRANTS PASS
SPECIAL ELECTION lEFJIHG
Monday, February 22nd
Medford Hotel
9:15 P.M.
GUEST SPEAKERS WILL DISCUSS:
i Local Union Operation
S Health and Welfare
j Union Contracts
This Meeting Sponsored by
RETAIL CLERKS UNION, LOCAL 265
AFL-CIO