Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 05, 1960, Image 9

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
A 9
rRIDAY, AUGUST S. i960
Flaming Wreckage
Fatal To Girl, 20
' Portland - IUPU - Susan Hol
man, 20, Portland, was killed
In a flaming one-car accident
on Mount Scott here early
today.
The girls died when the
car in which she was riding
left the roadway, turned over,
pinned her and burned. The
body of the victim was badly
b.urned.
Driver of the car, Richard
Frank Soles, 20, Portland,
was not hurt.
.An autopsy was ordered to
determine whether Miss Hol
man died from burns or other
injuries.
PLAYA
.Southwestern
Oregon's Newest
Lakeshore
Apartments
Trailer Sites
Moorings
at
LAKESIDE, OREGON
Introductory Offer:
Utility Deluxe
Apartments (Sleeps
4) With Complete
Kitchens
$60 per Week
Trailer Sites
$7.00 per Week
For Reservations Call
Congress 7-7623,
Coos Bay, Oregon, or
Write P. 0. Box 937
Locals
IGNITE & SATURDAY
' MlEASfo TMIU UNITED' AtTUtS
It's Taut and Terrific!
'for a U
Gunman
JIM
bAVIS
BARTON
MacLANE
LVN THOMAS
Debris Dumped - City po
lice received a rpnnrt vpct
dayofrom Yetta Alice Flowers,
zus south Holly st., Medford,
that someone dumped debris
on property owned by her.
Bicycle Damaged Allen I
resile House, 2 White Oak
dr., Medford, reported to Med
ford DOlipp latp vostprHav that
someone had damaged his bi-
cycie wnue it was parked in
the driveway of his home.
Released-Mrs. Norma Tay
lor, 543 Grand ave., Central
Point, has been released from
Sacred Heart hospital follow
ing major surgery and is now
at her home, the family re
ported today.
In Hospital - Medical and
surgery patients listed yester
day at Crater Osteopathic hos
pital, Central Point, included
Mrs. Darleane D. Gotchy, Mer
rill, Ore., and Katherine A.
Smith, Dorris, Calif.
Alumni Picnic - The an
nual Oregon State Alumni
30-staters club picnic will be
held in the Elk Picnic grounds
at 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 6.
Food and refreshments will
be furnished. Those attending
have been asked to bring their
own table service.
Theft - Harry Kendall
Smith, 344 Bridge st., Ash
land, reported to Medford po
lice yesterday that a transist
or radio valued at $40 and an
alarm clock were taken from
his car while he was at a local
drive-in.
Boy Injured Thirteen-year-old
Delbert Lynn Crowl,
113 Rose St., sustained minor
chest injuries when he was
struck by a bicycle operated
by Stephen Edwald Fixsen, 9,
of 718 West Fourth St., while
he was playing in the street
in front of 637 Pennsylvania
st., at 8:10 p.m. Thursday.
Crowl was taken to the hos
pital, treated and released. No
citations were issued, police
said.
FESTIVAL
PLAYS
Tonight: "Richard II"
Saturday: "Taming of
the Shrew"
Sunday: "Julius Caesar"
Monday: "The Tempest"
Curtain time 8:30 p.m.
Curtain time c:30 p.m.
Bus leaves Medford hotel
at 7:30 p.m., and Jackson
hotel at 7:35 p.m. for Festi
val plays.
OBITUARIES
LEON GILBERT SHARYON
Ashland Leon Gilbert
Sharyon, 31 Gresham st., Ash-
Concession Raises
Funds for FFA
Gold Hill - Donald Den
ning, president of Crater FFA
chapter, and Bob Marshall are
operating a new cone conces
sion at the Sears Shopping
center in Medford.
About 10 members of the
chapter constructed the stand.
Denning introduced the idea
as a way to raise funds for
chapter projects.
The two boys will operate
the stand seven days a wjk
until school starts in Septem
ber. The stand is open from
9 a.m. until 7 p.m., except
Monday and Fridays when it
remains open until 9:30 p.m.
Alan Bray, radio chairman,
and five other members of
the chapter, Willie Debreck,
Dennis Cornutt, Gary Evans,
Dennis Samples and Delmer
Smith, recently taped four
programs for a local radio
station.
Crater FFA also has strated
livestock and dairy judging
practice. The boys will com
pete in the Jackson and Jo
sephine County 4-H FFA fairs
scheduled for this month. The
four boys scoring the most
points at the practice meet
ings and fairs will make the
trip to the Oregon State .fair
in Salem during September.
Ashland-Forty-f ive students
from Crater High school, Cen
tral Point, attended the Ore
gon Shakespearean Festival
here last Friday. The group
under.: the leadership of Bill
Russell, saw "The Taming of
the Shrew, one of four Fes
tival productions which run
in rotation nightly through
Sept." 3.
TONITE & SATURDAY!
47
.MERVYNUROYm,
IS
Special Agent
Chip
Hardesty
who lived
it all...
from the
in
Oklahoma
to the
manhunt that
turned all
New York
into a
hair-trigger
trap!...
THE
STORY
tTAMRINa
JAMES
STEWART
VERA MILES.
WARNER BROS, newt
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair
through Saturday. Little tempera
ture change. Low tonight near 50.
Hich Saturday 02.
Western Oregon: uenerany lair
through Saturday except patches
of fog or low clouds along coast
and over extreme north interior
valleys during late night and early
morning nours, low lonigni 10-00
High Saturday 74-84 in north in
terior, yu in soutn interior ana o
Northern California: Fair through
Saturday except coastal fog and
low cloudiness. Little temperature
change.
I.OCAT. DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
71: below normal a.
Record high this date 106 in 1932.
Record low this-date 45 in 1950.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, none. Midnight to 10
a.m.. none.
Tntal this month none, normal
Total since Sept. 1, 15.93 inches.
2.03 below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
31. highest this a.m. 86.
High 4.00 24-
CITY Vester- a.m. hr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 71 49
Grants Pass 86 51
Klamath Falls ...... 82 49
MEDFORD 90 5S
Portland 72 51
57, of 215 Iowa St., who died
at her home Thursday, will be
held at Perr FMneral home
Rev. Melvin Dixon o St
Luke's Methodist church will
officiate. Committal will be
in Siskiyou Memorial park.
Miss Markoff was born Feb.
1903, in Russia and had
been a resident of this area for
2 years.
She is survived by one sis
ter, Anna Markoff, and her fa
ther, Alexander Markoff, both
of Medford. She was a mem
ber of the Ashland Methodist
church.
land, died Wednesday night at Saturday at 9:30 a.m. The
me local nospuai. Born in
Appleton, oMinn., he was or
phaned at the agS of two and
grew up in Little Falls, Minn.
Mr. Sharyon married
Angela Kathryn Zerbas in De
troit, Mich., and made their
home in Little Falls where
their two children were born.
The family lived in Montana
for 10 years prior to moving
to Ashland 20 years ago.
For the past several years
he has been employed in the
men's clothing department of
Mann's in Medford. He was
a member of Trinity Episco
pal church, Ashland.
Survivors include his wife,
Angela Sharyon, Ashland;
two children, Robert Sharyon
and Mrs. William Sellman,
both Modesto, Calif., and eight
grandchildren. When a young
man he learned he had a
brother and sister, the broth
er was killed in World War I,
and the whereabouts of the
sister is unknown.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday, Aug. 6, at 1:30 p.m.
at Litwiller's Mountain View
capel. The body will lie in
state from 7 to 9 o'clock to
night at Litwiller's Funeral
home. Friends may contribute
to the Trinity church memo
rial fund or the cancer fund
in his memory.
ALESSIO PINELLI
The body of Alessio Pinelli,
68, of 4323 South Pacific high
way, who died at his home
Thursday, was transferred by
the Perl Funeral home today
to the O'Hair Funeral home
in Klamath Falls for services.
Mr. Pinelli was born June
6, 1892, in Italy, and is sur
vived by his wife, Sarah Pinel-
Medford: five daughters,
Mrs. Margaret Burnett, Bo
nanza, Ore.; Mrs. Frances
Cain, Roseburg; Mrs. June Eit
treim, Klamath Falls; Mrs.
Joyce Fett, Klamath Falls; one
son, Herbert Pinelli, Klamath
Falls, and eight grandchil
dren.
GLEN F. BAILEY
Funeral services for Glen
Frank Bailey, 60, of 813 South
Beach St., who died at his
home Thursday, will be held
at Perl Funeral home Monday
at 10:30 a.m. The Rev. George
R. V. Bolster of St. Mark's
Episcopal church will offici
ate. Committal will be in
Siskiyou Memorial park.
Mr. Bailey was born Feb.
1900, at Drain, Ore., and
was a veteran of both World
Wars.
Survivors include his wife,
Joyce E. Bailey, Medford; two
sons, Glen Bailey Jr., Med
ford, Jack L. Bailey, Medford;
two step-children, William
Rose, Medford, and Nancy
Charley, Medford; four sisters,
Molly Bogus, Medford; Veria
Tanner, El Castro; Jewell Ri-
ans, Medford; Wilma Lem
mon; 16 grandchildren and
seven nephews and nieces.
AGNES MARKOFF
Funeral services for Miss
Agnes Alexandria Markoff,
HAZEL ADAMS
The body of Mrs. Hazel
Jean Adams, who died Thurs
day morning, was forwarded
today by Conger-Morris, fu
neral directors, to her former
home of Vale, Ore., for serv
ices and interment Monday.
Mrs. Adams was born
March 20 1931, in Fruit-
land, Ida., and had lived in
Medford for the past four
years, where she was em
ployed as a secretary by a
local law firm.
Survivors include a son,
Marlin Duane, and a daugh
ter, Lihda Jean; a brother,
Edwin James Lynch, Twin
Falls, Ida.; a sister, Mrs. Nona
Faye Barnes, Vale, Ore.; and
her mother, Mrs. Zoe Lynch,
Vale. Her father preceded her
in death two years ago.
Funeral Services
Set Saturday for
Isaac Frideger
Blunt Words Bring
Man of the Week
To Moise Tshombe
Seattle 70
Spokane 79
Yakima 86
Eureka 59
Red Bluff 102
Sacramento 98
San Francisco 62
Los Angeles 85
TECHNICOLOR IftlBl
sl .own jmjim aw ..tbw Jim ,JestKf
MlHH)!CAMfC0f'EDfN' (rM-toWi
Phoenix 103
Denver 97
Chicago 76
Miami Beach 87
New York 78
Washington, D. C. 91
55
58
59
51
73
63
51
63
83
65
67
81
65
71
.61
9
WESTERN HIT! SAT. ONLY!
FIVR-DAY FORECAST
(ThroiiRh Aug. 10):
Western Oregon - Western Wash
ington Temperatures averaging
near normal and little or no pre
cipitation through Wednesday.
Highs generally 70-76 in western
Washington. 78-90 in western Ore
gon, except 65-70 on coast. Lows
46-54.
Northern California No precipi
tation. Temperatures near normal.
Investment Funds
Noon quotations on selected
funds:
Fund Bid Asked
Bullock 12.45 13.65
Hum Fund . 10.99 11.89
Colonial Ener 11.82 12.92
F.ntnn Howard Stk 11.72 12.53
Fidelity 14.93 16.14
Group Sec Avla Elec 8.96 9.82
Group Sec Com Stk 11.99 13.13
Group Sec Petr 8.79 9.63
r.rnun Sec Steel .... 8 95 9.81
Group Sec Tobac .. 8.31 9.11
Kovstnnc B-3 15.39 16.79
Keystone B-4 9.43 10.30
Kevstone K-2 14.60 15.94
Keystone S-l 1D.02 20.75
K.ytnne S-2 11.45 .12.49
Kcvstone S-3 12.89 14.07
Keystone S-4 12.15 13.26
Mum InV tirth SIK 14.36 10.02
TV-Elec 7.93 8.64
Value Line Inc 5.13 5 61
Wellington 13.82 15.07
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPD USDA Live-
stock for week:
rnttt 2275. Standard steers 21
23; cutter and utility 15-19; bulk
good heifers 23-24; standard 21-22;
cutter and utility 14-19; utility cows
insn-15: caners and cutters 11-12:
utility bulls 20.50-21.50; cutters 16
20; canners down to 14.
Calves 300. Good and choice
vcalers 24-26; standard 20-23; cuy
and utility 11-18: common ana me
dium stock calves 16-20.
Hobs 2025. U.S. No. 1 and i
hutr-hcrc 185-235 lbs. 20-20.25: No.
2 and 3 lots 19.25-19.75: sows over
330 lbs. 16-17; 350-550 lbs. 14-15 75.
Sheep 3725. Choice with some
grime range lype spring lamm n.
ulk choice nearby kinds 16 16.50:
cull to good ewes i.du-4.
Servicemen
SUBMARINE WARFARE
Several local servicemen
recently took part in a joint
Canadian-American anti-submarine
exercise off the west
coast. The exercise was de
signed to train both nations'
anti-submarine forces and to
perfect techniques used in
this type of warfare.
Among those participating
were Laurence G. Meeds, sea
man apprentice, Jacksonville;
William D. Carden, seaman
apprentice, and Calvin J. Car
den, commissaryman seaman,
sons of Mr. and Mrs. O. D.
Carden, route 1, box 169, Ea
gle Point; Lt. (jg) Allan H.
Hanson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles E. Jefferies, 48 South
Stage rd., Medford; Lt. Cdr.
Richard L. Alford, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert L. Alford,
517 West 10th St., Medford;
Allen W. Ford, machinist's
mate third class, son of Mr.
and Mrs. A. W. Ford, 200 West
Jackson st., Medford; and
Larry W. Blunt, seaman, son
of Mr. and Mrs. W. Blunt,
3932 South Pacific highway,
Medford.
CHARLES B. PADDOCK
Masonic services for Charles
Benjamin Paddock, 88, of 41
Quince St., who died Wednes
day, will be held at Conger-
Moms Funeral home down
town chapel Saturday at 11:30
a.m. Medford Lodge 103,
AF&AM, will be in charge of
the services. Committal will
be private.
Mr. Paddock was born May
31, 1872, in Cleveland, Ohio,
and had lived in Medford for
the past 10 years, coming here
from California. He was mar
ried June 4, 1934, in Reno,
Nev., to Cleo Webber, who
survives.
Hew as a member of Seattle
Lodge 164, F&AM; of Crater
Lake Chapter, Royal Arch
Masons, Medford; of Medford
Consistory, Supreme Council
33rd Degree, Medford; and of
Al Kader Temple, AAONMS,
Portland.
Survivors, besides his wife,
include a son, Jon I. Paddock,
Seattle, Wash.; a daughter,
Mrs. Evelyn Paddock Smith,
Santa Monica, Calif., and a
nephew.
Funeral services for Isaac
R. (Ike) Frideger, 74, who
died Wednesday, will be held
at Ashland Mortuary chapel,
Fourth and C sts., Saturday,
Aug. 6. at 10 a.m. The Ash
land Elks lodge will be in
charge of services. Entom8
ment will be private, with
only the family in attend
ance, at Resthaven Mauso
leum.
Mr. Frideger was born Nov.
23, 1885, in Columbus, Ohio.
He came to Medford from
Ohio in 1901, moving to Ash
land in 1916. On Sept. 16,
1915, he was married to
Maude Enders, who survives.
Besides the widow, he is
survived by two daughters,
Mrs. Harry Schulman, of Van
Nuys, Calif., and Mrs. J. W.
MacKenzie, of Merced, Calif.,
and five grandchildren. For
many years he has made his
home at 119 Granite st., Ash
land.
Mr. Frideger had been a
strong factor in the business,
civic and fraternal life in Ash
land. He was a past exalted
ruler of Ashland Elks lodge
and for years was on the
board of trustees of the lodge.
He was a member of Ashland
lodge, AF&AM, as well as
Siskiyou chapter RAM, and
Malta Commandery, KP. He
also was a member of Hillah
Temple AAONMS. He was a
member of Rotary, and in for
mer years was a Kiwanian,
and active in the Ashland
Chamber of Commerce.
He was a plastering contrac
tor until he was employed by
H. G. Enders Sr., in the En
ders Wholesale Grocery. In
1929 he established the Frlde
ger Wholesale Grocery, and
was the proprietor until it
was sold to Morton E. Newton
in 1947. United Grocers and
Northwest Grocery Company
are successors to the whole
sale grocery business.
He was an executor of the
G. S. Butler estate, and help
ed plan and construct the
Butler Memorial Bandstand in
Lithia park.
Mr. Frideger retired in 1947
from active business
He was interested in the
Shrlners' Hospital for Crip
pled Children in Portland, and
the family has suggested that
those who so desire may send
a contribution to the Shrine
hospital in care of box 197
Ashland, Ore.
Active pallbearers will in-
By WILLIAM J. FOX
United Press International
The Man of the Week:
Premier Moise Tshombe of
the Congo's Katanga province.
The Place: Elisabethville.
The Quote: "I don'l want
United Nations troops in my
country. U.N. troops will
have to fight their way into
the Katanga."
In those blunt words, Tsh
ombe set the stage for the
probable denouement of the
tangled drama that been the
Republic of Congo's lot in lit
tle more than a month of
ndependence.
In the chaos that marked
the weeks since Belgium gave
the Congo its freedom on July
Tshombe has sought to
break away completely from
the infant nation and set up
his own state.
Aid From Belgium
When the native Congolese
army mutinied early in July
nd indulged itself in an orgy
of rape, looting and violence
that sent the white populace
fleeing in terror, Tshombe in
vited Belgian troops to pre
serve order and proclaimed
Katanga's secession from the
new republic.
The Belgians moved in
swiftly all over the Congo,
and intervention that brought
bitter protests from Congo
Premier Patrice Lumumba
nd an appeal for help to the
United Nations.
The U.N. Security Council
authorized Secretary-General
Dag Hammarskjold to send an
international force to restore
order, with the first troops
mvlng by the middle of July
and a multi-nation army of
a major tribal chieftain and
they have had 10 children. ,
He furthered his family'!
business ventures, and then
entered politics-moving stead
ily upward.
more than 11,000 men there
by the beginning of August, i
The U.N. force replaced Bel-
gian troops at key points in ,
five of the six Congo prov-1
inces. But the Belgians stayed !
in Katanga, and the U.N. stay- j
ed out. Tshombe said if U.N.
troops entered it would mean ;
war.
It was a gesture based more
on bravado than hope of ac
complishment. I
Wants Better Deal j
Tshombe is a well-off busi-
ncssman, whose affluence un
doubtedly stems from close
ties with the Belgian mining
interests predominant in Ka
tanga. He wants to preserve those
ties and the money and posi
tion they provide. But he also
wants to insure a better deal
for Katanga, which contains
60 per cent of the Congo's
riches and produces two-thirds
of its revenues.
Tshombe was born Nov. 10,
1919, at Musumba, the second
generation of a family that
thrived on business with the
Belgians.
He finished the equivalent
of high school, traveled
through Europe, and acquired
the style and ease of manner
of a European businessman.
He married the daughter of
This Evening
LOBSTERS
SEA SCALLOP
PRAWNS
LIVE
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 tho "asked") at
tne time of compilation
Common stocks Bid Asked
Bank of America 443'-
Callf-Paclflc Utilities .... 2o4j 2214
Cons. Frelghtways 13 14
-opco 34 1',
BOB ANDERSON
Nitely 7:30 p.m.-1.30 a.m.
No Music Mondays
BROILED STEAKS
PRIME RIB
CHICKEN - SEAFOOD
Charcot Sleaks
CANDLE ROOM
HOTEL MEDFORD
5:30 p.m. till Midnight
THEATRE
INFORMATION SERVICE
CALL SP 3-7323
FOR FULL INFORMATION
ABOUT YOUR THEATRES
LJ9SI
DRIVE-IN
COUTH PACIFIC HIOHVWVi
J LL
7
1 J
NOWI NOWT
TWO TOP PICTURES
Cyprus Mines Corp.''."" 22 (J 24'i
First National aRnlc ... RI IL KtiZ
ciuae uan aears, uick rues, 1 Xliu . v, . .
Ivor Erwin, Ivan Farris, Verle I pacific Pwr. s, Lt" . 37? 4014
xsarninouse, ana iarry ijay. 1 T 75" -iiini .... jois 174
Honoray pallbearers will be u. s. National' Bank.'." 71 "
will Jjoage, Arnold uauaer,
W. J. Hastings, Noel Heard,
William Briggs, Tommy Laird,
Raymond Lininger, Leo Con
ner, Clarence Winston, Larkin
Grubb, Clarence Lane, and
W. C. McLaln.
Hollywood - (UPD - Funeral
services will be held Satur
day for Misha R. Bakaleini-
koff, 69, veteran musical di
rector at Columbia Pictures,
who died Tuesday.
RIFLE EXPERT
Army PFC David R. Bliss,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Voyed R.
Bliss, Prospect, recently qual
ified as expert in firing the
carbine while serving in Ger
many. A tank gunner, he en
tered the Army in November,
1958, completed basic train
ing at Ft. Hood, Tex., and ar
rived overseas in May, 1959.
Bliss, whose wife, Sheila,
lives in Eagle Point, is a 1955
graduate of ' Prospect ' High
school. Before entering the
Army, he was employed by
the Frank M. Dolenshek Log
ging company, Trail.
Portland Produca
Portland (UPD Dairy market:
Ebbs To retailers: Grade AA ex
tra large, 53-55c; AA large, 49-S2c;
A large, 47-S0c; AA medium 44-45C;
AA small 33-36c; cartons l-3c addi
tional. Butter To retailers: AA and
grade A prints, 67c lb.; cartons lc
higher: B prints. 65c.
Cheese, medium cured To re
tailers: A grade cheddar single dai
sies. 44-51C; processed American
cheese, 5-lb. loaf. 41 i-42Va.
Portland (UPI) Dressed chick
ens No. 1 grade dressed to retail
ers: Fryers whole drawn, 30-41C lb.;
cut-up, 44-460 lb.; hens, heavy-type
whole drawn. 41 -43c lb.; light-type
hens cut up.31-35c lb.; whole. 26
30c lb.
HEAR DAN SMOOT
Rogue River High
School Auditorium
AUGUST 6th -8 P.M.
General Admission Tickets $1.50
Tickets Available at:
ROBINSON BROTHERS
VALLEY MOTEL
United UtlllHi.
West Coast Tel.
Weyerhaeuser ...
....... 41 4.1 !i
20 28
320, 34 ?J
FEAR 41 DROWNED
Rawalpindi, Pakistan - (UPD
-A boat carrying 64 Pakis
tanis capsized in the River
Indus Tuesday and it was
feared 41 persons were drown
ed.
AND
'RopmJ
1206 No. Riverside
Medford
PHONE SP 3-5474 '
FOR RESERVATIONS
Now Buildinf New
'MELODY ROOM'
For
BANQUETS DINING
DANCING
Vf ffffff
SATURDAY
1:00 P.M.
SPECIAL KIDDIE MATINEE
"ANGELS IN THE OUTFIELD"
A WONDERFUL PICTURE FOR EVERYONE
PLUS , . ;
A GREAT MISTER MAGOO
AND
LOTS OF COLOR CARTOONS
ALL SEATS 25c
A boy In
revolt
darts to
climb
tha world's
moat
dancaroua
THIRD
Mftfl
ONTHE
MOUNTAIN
TECHNICOLOR
iyniNiMiun
Juetll-JwilJIll)
PLUS www
GARY .CHARLTON!
COOPER , HESTON
H 5
TWA I
RJVE-IN
OUTER LAKE HI6KWAYJ
NOWI NOWI
A GREAT FIRST RUN SHOW
COOL AIR CONDITIONED DANCING!
DANCE
Every Saturday Night
beautiful ' '
GOLD KILL GRANGE
Music by the MUSIC MAKERS
Large Dining Facilities and Free Check Room
Dance to the Music of the
ROGUE VALLEY BOYS
. DREAMLAND BALLROOM
WALKER BUILDING
SATURDAY NIGHT
Playing your favorira Walrni, Fox Troti and
Hawaiian numbers, both Modern and Waitarn
Music . . . Greet your old friends and make
new ones!
$1.00 Per Person 9 to 1 a.m.
AN (25fel
hannoTMstorEondcoiox
VFW Hall in Rogue River
EVERY SATURDAY NITE-9 to 1
Music by
Bobby Burton
& Rythm Masters
Featuring Frank Burdick
(Plays 'Em Sad - In Fact Pitiful)
Hardwood Floor Enlarged Dining Facilities
Check Room Free large Parking Area
SPONSORED BY VFW - EVERYONE WELCOME
II
I I ,T'S A SCREAM 1 'jtlil
I I " BJfBw ui'Mi ROBERT LOCCI A
...bring your "Y,, I ! ' I
funny-bon..ll P" V THREE GREAT FEATURES
"trMml for wall-to-wall I II 1
I ( J 1 J "TM F (tf loWfUkTllS .
$ APARTMENT"
SHIRLEY MacLAIHE MJfeJiX'..,
ALFRED MacMURRAT fo5fl
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