Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 30, 1960, Image 7

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    TUESDAY, AUGUST 30. 1960
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
A 7
Local and
; In Hospital - Irene M. Bro-
j phy, 22 Summit ave., Med-
j ford, was listed as a surgery
J patient today at Sacred Heart
hospital.
J
Permit Issued The city
4 building deaprtment issued a
$6,000 permit to Leslie Medlin
f recently to erect an addition
i to a motel at 525 South River-
' side ave.
t -
) Council Meets - The North
i west Mining council will meet
i Thursday. Sept. 1, at the Jack-
sonville Community hall at
) 8 p.m. Ed McGinty will speak,
and a coffee hour will be held
j following the lecture.
?
' Wins Award - The herds
manship award rosette, pre-
' sented at the Jackson county
." 4-H and FFA fair recently.
r went to the Kaper Kids Goat
club. In a news story yesler-
3 day, an article said the ros
elte went to the Korny Kids.
i
j Grass Fires - The Medford
;- fire department was called
' out twice yesterday morning
when two grass fires were re
' ported. At 11:02 a.m., a truck
was dispatched to the 600
; block of South Ivy st., when
' a fire burned about 500
- square feet on a vacant lot.
About 11:15 a.m., a fire broke
: out behind the Rogue drive-in
on Crater Lake highway and
Biddle rd. The fire burned
a 20 by 175-foot strip, with
no extensive damage result-
: ing, firemen said.
ENDS TONITE!
It's Jerry's Hilarious Besll
. ..
JERRy
A Paramount Riat
CO-FEATURE
Rmrre
I'rilVttr Sot "-
ASHLAND. PHONE MU.3-87H
ATTENTION Mr. &
as Tut -Se .O Jf
In the past we have presented many very
unusual foreign films, but we don't think
we could have presenter' any that is as
unusual as this week's film.
BANNED IN THE COUNTRY THAT
PRODUCED IT . .
The picture that caused a government
shake-up in Poland ... SO DARING it had
to break through the barrier of International
Censorship TO BE SHOWN ...
NOW YOU CAN SEE IT . . . UNCUT . . .
"THE 8th DAY OF THE WEEK"
NOTE: NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED
Russ Osborn, Manager
PHONE ' TifcTWiSl
uf I I
At.
i.i uiii;ii:ii;r
TOMORROW!
-.. Gerald Mohr Nora Hayden
O'K'M htl( P'9uCN M Pwe f "WK
PLUS the Picture with
The Koun?
Basques
Personal
Logging Accident Theo
dore Carper, 53, John Day,
was killed in a logging acci
dent near John Day Friday.
Funeral services for Mr. Car
per are being held today in
John Day. Among Mr. Car
per's survivors is a sister,
Mrs. Rosa Holcomb, Medford.
Attending School - George
S. Marine, Medford represent
ative for the Franklin Life
Insurance company, is attend
ing a week-long sales training
school in Yakima, Wash.
About 60 representatives are
enrolled in the school which
opened yesterday and will
conclude Friday.
At Home Marion Hulse,
303 South Fourth St., Jack
sonville, has been released
from Sacred Heart hospital,
where he underwent treat
ment for injuries suffered in
an automobile accident rec
ently, and is now at home,
he has reported. He was a
passenger in one of the ve
hicles involved in the accident
last week.
Births
KEELING - To Mr. and
Mrs. Homer M.. 625 Laurel
St., Central Point, Aug. 29,
1960, a boy, 10'i lbs., at Sa
cred Heart hospital.
HURT - To Mr. and Mrs.
James A., 505 Marie St., Med
ford, Aug. 29, 1960, a girl,
7'2 lbs., at Sacred Heart hos
pital. MARLIA - To Mr. and Mrs.
Roy O., route 1, box 73A,
Eagle Point, Aug. 30, 1960,
a boy. 7 lbs., at Sacred
Heart hospital.
ZANDER - To Mr. and Mrs.
Edward W., 124 North Colum
bus ave., Medford, Aug. 28,
1960, a girl, 5 lbs., at Sa
cred Heart hospital.
BANK SCOOP-UP
Greenville. N.C.-IUPII-A 13-
year-old runaway robbed a
bank here of $171 Monday by
reaching into a teller's cage
and scooping up a handful of
bills. He was arrested several
hours later at a motion pic
ture theater. His father told
police the boy had run away
from home.
WEDNESDAY ONIY
Two Performances
"CURTAIN AT 2:00"
"CURTAIN AT 8:30"
Jtlttl
Mrs. Theatre-Goer
m
Les Tremayne Jack Kruschen
' St'MHn H U tW IMtW lim PtNtW
the Bone-Chilling Howl!
lASHIM
1HC MMIIT
SIR U1HV
com ecru
WTffiQJUTStS
r rA i
fi Ir fi .' I . : "i 1 M - 'h
H i 'IMT' IpNL ' it A- t
ONLY YSJl) CMI ptVNT OBtSt f ' M
REVIEW SIGN Oregon State Forester
.D. L. Phipps, left, and Albert Wiesendanger,
executive secretary for Keep Oregon Green
association, Inc., review a sign which Shell
Oil company is now installing throughout
OBITUARIES
DANIEL WRIGHT
. Daniel Wright, infant son
of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Wright, 2345 Finley lane, died
yesterday in a local hospital.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Conger-Morris,
funeral directors.
LaVELDA McKINNEY
Funeral services for Mrs.
Nellie LaVelda McKinney, 40,
of Rogue River, who died
Sunday, will be held at Hill
crest Mortuary Chapel on the
North Phoenix rd. Wednesday
at 7 p.m. The Rev. Frederick
Evans of the First Christian
church will officiate. Commit
tal will be in Hillcrest Memo
rial park, with Conger-Morris,
funeral directors, in charge of
arrangements.
Mrs. McKinney was born
Aug. 7, 1920, in Los Angeles,
Calif., and had lived in Rogue
River for the past year and a
half.
Survivors include six chil
dren, Allen, Ted, Daniel,
Jayne, Mary, and Mike Mc
Kinney. HARVEY B. PITTS
Funeral services for Harvey
Brackett Pitts, 63, of 130 West
Main St., who died Sunday,
will be held at Hillcrest Mor
tuary Chapel on the North
Phoenix rd. Thursday at 1:30
p.m. The Rev. George Rose
berry of the First Methodist
church will officiate. Commit
tal will be in Hillcrest Memo
rial park, with Conger-Morris,
funeral directors, in charge of
arrangements.
Mr. Pitts was born Sept. 7,
1896 in Williams, Ariz., and
was a veteran of World War I,
serving as a private in the
92nd infantry division. He was
a former member of the VA
Domiciliary at White City.
Survivors include a brother-,
Thomas J. Pitts, San Francis
co, Calif.
MRS. H. A. FREDENBURG
Mrs. H. A. Fredenburg died
at her home, 420 North Grape
St., Medford, this morning.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Perl Funeral
home.
MRS. MARY GRIEVE
Mrs. Mary E. Grieve, 78,
died early today at the Jack
son county farm home, Tal
ent. She and her husband, the
late James E. Grieve, owned
and operated the Prospect Ho
tel and Resort for several
years. Funeral arrangements
will be announced by Perl
Funeral home.
EYE MOVEMENT
A normal human eye oscil
lates ,2mm every half second.
I1.M6I I
ENDS TONITE!
PORGY
and
ESS
TECHNICOLOR
SIDNEY POITIER DOROTHY OANORIDG.
SAMMY DAVIS, Jr.- PEARL BAILEY
2ND s3sne HIT!
"THE TRAP"
TECHNICOt.Ofl
MB
Oregon. The signs are being installed to
draw attention to the forest fire hazard,
which this year is the most critical since
1951, according to Phipps.
LYNN J. LESLIE
Funeral services for Lynn
John Leslie, 60, of 582 C St.,
Ashland, who died Monday,
will be held in the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints on Iowa St., Ashland,
Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. Bish
op William B. Davis will offi
ciate. Committal will be in
Phoenix cemetery, with Ash
land Mortuary in charge of
arrangements.
Mr. Leslie was born July
18, 1900, in Winona, Minn.,
and had lived in Ashland for
the past eight years. He was
married Sept. 19, 1953, in
Reno, Nev., to Grace Steph
ens, who survives.
He was a member of the
Medford Eagles lodge, and
served with the armed forces
in World War I. .
Survivors, besides his wife,
include three daughters, Mrs.
Evelyn Bower, Ashland; Mrs.
Lenora Strawn, Medford, and
Mrs. DcLoris Hanscom, Phoe
nix; three step-children, Wal
ter Stephens, Long Beach,
Calif.; Mrs. Doris Pirtle, Los
Angeles, Calif., and Mrs. Nor
ma Davis, Ashland; his moth
er, Mrs. Evelyn Leslie, Coch
rane, Wis.; three brothers,
Otis Leslie and Simeon Leslie,
Minnesota, and Everett Les
lie, California; five' sisters,
Imogene, Martha, Kiza, Nellie
and Bina; and 14 grandchil
dren. Casket bearers will include
I. J. Hanscom, Glen Pearson,
Ray Watkins, Glen Parker,
Henry Ruch and Bliss Heine.
JAMES A. MARTIN
James Andrew Martin, 79,
died at his home, 400 West
Main st.. Talent, yesterday.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Perl Funeral
home.
VICTOR MASON
Victor Mason died this
morning at the Veterans ad
ministration Domiciliary at
White City. Funeral arrange
ments will be announced by
Perl Funeral home.
Salmon Fishing
Reported 'Fair'
Astoria-IUPU-Salmon fishing
near the mouth of the Colum
bia river was reported "fair"
Monday as several hundred
boats went out.
The boats were chased in
about 11 a.m. because of Na
tional Guard firing practice.
About 20 per cent of the
Monday catch was Chinook,
running from 20 to 22 pounds
on the average.
Today's weather was over
cast, but a good number of
boats were out this morning.
Former Councilman
Visiting in Medford
George H. Millar, Sacra
mento, Calif., and former
Medford city councilman, is
visiting friends in the Med
ford area this week.
Millar, who said he believed
he was the first Socialist
councilman elected on the
West Coast, served as coun
cilman two terms between
1910 and 1914. He lived in
Medford between 1907 and
1915.
He plans to return to Sac
ramento Thursday.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPDUSDA Cattle
300. holdover 160: includes around
7 loads fed steers; trade slow: scat
tered early sales steady, hut nc
ffood or choice steers sold: good
steers 23.30-25; good and low choice
hetfers 22-J4; tew cutter and util
ity heifers 16-18.90: canner and cut
ter cows mostly 10.30-13; no bulls
sold early.
Calves 100; trade slow, steady
good and low choice vealers 24-26;
standard 19-23: cull and utility 12-
18.30; few common and medium
stock calves 18-20.
Hogs 350: demand narrow, no
early sales: U. S. No. 1 and 2 butch
ers 185-230 lbs. Monday 17.73-18;
sows 13-15.
Sheep 300. holdover 150: trtde
slow, steady: scattered lots choice
90-108 In. wooled spring slaughter
lambs 17; good and choice 67-92
lbs. feeder lambs 15-15.50: eull to
I choice cwei 3-3,
FESTIVAL
PLAYS
Tonight: "Richard II"
Wednesday: "Duchess of
Malfi"
Thuriday: "Taming of
the Shrew"
Friday: "Julius Caesar"
Curtain time 8:30 p.m.
Saturday: "The Tempest"
Bus leaves Medford hotel
at 7:30 p.m., and Jackson
hotel at 7:35 p.m. for Festi
val plays.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair
through Wednesday with occasional
high cloudiness. Low tonight. 48;
hiffh tomorrow. 85.
western Ore eon: Fair tonight end
Wrinesdav. excent DBftlv cloudy
in tne extreme norm, raicncs 01
early morning ion on the coast,
Slightly cooler in the extreme
north. Low tonixht. 46-38: hi eh to
morrow. 74-78 in north; 78-88 in
south: and 65-70 on coast.
Northern California: Fair tonight
and Wednesday exemt foe and low
clouds on the coast. Slightly cooler.
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
69, normal.
Record hieh this date 104 In IfMR
Record low this date 40 in 1012.
PRECIPITATION : 24 hours
midnight, none. Midnight to 10
a.m.. none.
Total this month .03 Inch, .14 Inch
below normal.
Total Bince Sept. 1, 15,96 Inches,
217 inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
17, highest this a.m. 7S.
High 4:00 24
CITY Ycster- A.M. hr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 63 SI
Grants Pass 90 47
Ktnmath Falls 82 30
MEDFORD BO SI
Portland 75 SB
Seattle
61
57
33
4S
53
61
55
52
62
Spokane 72
Yakima 76
Eureka 60
Red Bluff OS
Sacramento u
San Francisco 3!
Los Angeles 80
Phoenix .
..102
Denver 92
Chicago 7(1
Miami Beach 8R
70
76
74
76
New York 87
Washington. D. C. 92
Ovei-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 45 48;,i
Callf.-Pacific Utilities .... 22i,a 24,
Cascades Fly wood -it zu
Cons. Freightways ........ 1 2 13!i
Copco 36,i 39 li
Cyprus Mines Corp 25 26V
First National Bank 53 " 57 'i
Morrlson-Knudsen 32 Vs 35
Northwest Nat. uas .... 2.1 zv-.b
Pacific Pwr. & Lt 40i,i 42?i
Permnnente Cem. Co 181s 20
Portland Gen. Elec 32 34!',
U. S. National Bank .... Tt ti
United Utilities 45V 48",
West Coast Tel 20Vs 2BVs
Weyerhaeuser 353s 379s
Investment Funds
Nnnn
quotations on selected
Fund
Bid
12.7.1
11.41
12.48
12.12
15.44
Asked
13.95
12.35
13.64
Bullock
Colonial Ener
Eaton Howara oik
ViAmittir
12.08
16.69
10.18
13.46
10.06
0.92
Group Sec Avia-Elec
9.27
liroup sec LDm am
c...
12.25
9.18
90S
8.70
15.39
9.61
13.35
19.57
11.94
13.39
12 83
14 99
B.2I
3.30
14.21
Group Sec Steel
uroup sec iodic ..
Keystone B-3
9.53
17.01
ieysione o
K.I
10.49
16.75
21.35
13.03
Keystone S-l
neyiionc a-
Keystone S-3 -
Keystone S-4
Mass Inv Grth Stk ..
TV-Elcc
14.61
14 00
16.21
8.93
Value Line Inc
Wellington
3.79
13.40
Hoover To Get Full
Pay On Retirement
Washington -flJPU - The Sen
ate voted Monday night to
pay FBI Director J. Edgar
Hoover his full salary when
he retires.
Sen. Styles Bridges (R-N.H.)
who sponsored the move, said
the full retirement benefits
would be in recognition of
Hoover's 30 years as head of
the FBI.
Hoover, 65, has given no
notice that he plana to retlra
News About
Servicemen
TO GRADUATE
William J. Knorr, son of
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Peterson,
1745 Orchard Home court,
Medford, and Douglas M. Kin
ney, son of Mr. and Mrs.
H. R. Kinney 1314 South
Peach St., Medford, are sched
uled to graduate from recruit
training Sept. 2, at the Naval
Training center, San Diego,
Calif.
QUALIFIES
Army MSgt. Lewis D.
Barnhart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Barnhart, 803 North
west Fifth st., Grants Pass,
recently qualified as expert in
firing the M-l rifle while
serving with the 66th Ord
nance battalion in Germany.
GRADUATES
Sgt. Monty C. Lutz, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Vane E. Lutz,
route 1, Talent, recently grad
uated from the Seventh Army
Non - Commissioned Officer
academy in Bad Tolz, Ger
many. The 23-year-old soldier
is regularly assigned as a
policeman in the 503 Military
Police company of the Third
Armored division in Frank
furt.
TO GRADUATE
Lawrence D. Bradford, ap
prentice petty officer second
class, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard C. Bradford, 307
Main St., Medford, is sched
uled to graduate Sept. 2 from
recruit training at the Naval
Training center, San Diego,
Calif.
FIRST TO JOIN
Dennis Eugene Jensen, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Swain Jen
sen, route 3, box 860, Med
ford, is the first man from
the Medford Navy recruiting
area to take advantage of the
Navy's new high school grad
uate Polaris Electronic Field
program. Jensen, former Med
ford football player, was en
listed in the Navy Aug. 17.
COMPLETES BASIC
James N. Sanger, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore C.
Sanger, 674 Diamond st., Med
ford, has completed basic
training in the Air Force at
Lackland Air Force base, and
has been transferred to Shcp-
pard Air Force base, Wichita
Falls, Tex., for additional
schooling in aircraft and mis
siles. He enlisted in the Air
Force July 12.
COMPLETES TRAINING
Marine Pvt, Leslie McCal
ip, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. M.
McCalip, Phoenix, recently
completed four weeks combat
training at the Marine Corps
base, Camp Pendleton, Calif.
GRADUATE
Jackie R. Young, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Homer B.
Young, 371 O'Gara St., and
William A. Foust, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Foust, 610 Ex
periment Station rd., Med
ford, both apprentice petty
officers third class, graduated
recently from nine weeks of
recruit training at the Naval
Training center, San Diego,
Calif.
ENLISTS
David D. Mansfield, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Mans
field, 1615 Crater Lake ave.,
Medford, recently enlisted in
the Marine corps In Portland.
A 1958 graduate of Medford
High school, Mansfield joined
the aviation training program,
and is now undergoing recruit
training at San Diego, Calif.
Upon completion of the
course, he will spend 20 days
at home, then will be assigned
to the Marine Aviation
schools, Memphis, Tenn.
Portland Produce
The following nrlce Quotations
are from the agricultural marketing
service of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture In Portland.
Eggs: Prices to retailers, cartons.
X large AA 57-61; large AA 56-38;
large A 52-36; medium AA 46-49;
small AA 32-36. Prices to produc
ers: X large AA 46-51 1,-,; large AA
44-49; large A 36-40; medium AA
33-3714; smnll A A 20-23 '.4.
uuttcr: prices to retailers, No. 1
prints delivered, AA and A 68,
66.
Poultry: Prices to retailers, de
livered, for grade A quality, fry
ers, whole 36-38. cut up 41-43;
light type hens, whole 27-30. cut no
32-35; heavy type hens, whole
41-43.
10 FifX-v DIAMONDS
at this unheard of pric
m
231 East Mam
SSI
. ir ,JjYW
I 10 Fitry DIAMONDS
I
WESTERN PINE REGION
MOST ABUNDANT Ponderosa pine is the most abundant
tree species of the western pine region, with sawtimbcr
resource of 216 billion board feet. Its soft-textured, handsome
wood is a favorite from coast to coast. It was Ponderosa
pine paneling that made "knotty pine" a household word In
America.
Actor Heston Can't Escape
Those Costume Epic Films
By VERNON SCOTT
UPI Hollywood
Correspondent
Hollywood - IUPII - Charlton
Heston will never be able to
take his own word for any
thing again.
After completing "Ben
Hur" on the heels of his role
of Moses in "The Ten Com
mandments," the big guy took
a private oath never to appear
in another epic costume
movie.
But Charlton is a man of
small resolve.
'El Cld' Next
Right now he's being mea
sured for a suit of armor for
his title role in "El Cid"-an-other
multi-million-dollar ex
travaganza. With a guilty grin Heston
admitted he had faltered.
"About a year ago I made
a pact with myself and my
conscience that I wouldn't do
another costume picture," he
said.
"Bui I've been offered doz
ens of them from William the
Conqueror to Charlemagne.
"I turned them down and
read modern scripts, most of
which were really terrible. I
did want to do 'Let's Make
Love' with Marilyn Monroe,
but I had to turn it down.
MM in Hospital
For Exhaustion
Hollywood - OJPII - Actress
Marilyn Monroe, 34, was un
dergoing treatment at West-
side hospital today for ex
haustion.
Miss Monroe was stricken
while working in 100-degree
heat on location in Reno,
Nev., for the $3.5 million film
"The Misfits." Her condition
was described as not serious.
Her return here Monday
for admission to the hospital
idled co-star Clark Gable. Di
rector John Huston planned
to continue filming scenes In
which Miss Monroe does not
appear.
CRUDE BOMB, HUMOR
McLean, Va. - (UPI) - Demoli
tion experts called to disarm
what appeared to be a crude
time bomb Monday found the
bomb consisted of an alarm
clock and a note which read:
"Stop smiling. Don't you have
enough work to do?"
The highest elevation on
the Atlantic coast is Mount
Cadillac Main.
LIVE
BOB ANDERSON
Nitely 7:30 p.m.-!. 30 a.m.
No Music Mondays
BROILED STEAKS
PRIME RIB
CHICKEN - SEAFOOD
Opening Soon Nw
'MELODY ROOM'
For
BANQUETS DINING
DANCING
'VVf V??
qtojotrij
PONOEROSA PINE
Diameter 3 to 5 feet.
Heifht 125 to 200 feet.
Bexk Bltck on young treei,
YellowBrown with
Imrfmpfatmton ma
ture troe.
NeeHe 5 to 10 inch long,
in bundles of thrtm.
Born in round
clutter on nd of
branches.
Cone 3 to S inches lon.
Outward pointed
pricklei.
eed li inch long. Large
crop every $ to 5
yeara.
Rang Over entire Western
Pine Region.
tltIN HHI AKOC-ABOM
"Then along came 'El Cid,'
and it looked so good I de
cided to go ahead with it."
Heston must spend the next
five months in Spain. "Ben
Hur" kept him in Italy almost
10 months, and "Command-
mcnls" required him to shuf
fle around Egypt for two
months.
Long-Run Movies
By the time Charlton's
movies have run their course
and it is expected "Com
mandments" and "Ben-Hur"
will be showing somewhere in
the world for the next 25
years - he will probably be
seen by more movies goers
than any actor in history.
"It's not that I don't like
making costume pictures,"
Heston went on. They are
not easy to do.
"I guess I'll just have to
forget about making movies
in Hollywood where an actor
can put his hands in his
pockets, drink martinis or kiss
girls in strapless evening
gowns. That's the easy way
to work."
Is Charlton resigned to
playing king-sized roles in
super-colossals? ,
"No," he said without much
hope. "I would hope that I
will do other parts if I'm of
fered the opportunity."
CHARCOAL
STEAKS
TILL MIDNIGHT
CANDLE
ROOM
aHj imtci
A " . Medford
.4?
Open Daily
5:30 P.M. to Midnight
Sundays 4 P.M. Till 11 P.M.
GLES3 HO
Tens of
fllAlltflftif f
V, btlisvirs iheuttd
hispraisti!
0
1 U h r
IT
m
BURT " '
mm mm
DEftS JAGGER Arthur KENNEDY sum JONES
PAniPA6E-r,5iBR00KS-15SMlTH
wrm-Enrnan
FOI HUlT! HIT
Hi CMdtM IMv tt
140 4 SM
Woman Who Wrote
'Grand Hotel' Dies
Hollywood - IUPII - Vienna
born novelist Vicki Baum, 64,
who wrote the best-seller
"Grand Hotel," died Monday
after a brief illness.
The authoress was stricken
Sunday at her Hollywood
Hills home and taken to Hol
lywood Presbyterian hospital
where she died the next day.
Writer of more than 25 nov
els in addition to plays and
scenarios for motion pictures.
Miss Baum came to filmland
in 1931 from Vienna with her
husband. Dr. Richard Lert,
now conductor of the Pasa
dena Symphony orchestra. .
Her arrival coincided with
the publication of her most fa
mous book, "Grand Hotel." It
was made into a hit movie and
a musical play called "At the
Grand," starring Paul Muni.
THEATRE
INFORMATION SERVICE
CALL SP 3-7323
FOR FULL INFORMATION
ABOUT YOUR THEATERS
ENDS TONITE
FIRST RUN
mm
MAMIE VAN DOREN
MELTORME
RAY ANTHONY
MAGGIEHAYES
PAUL ANKA
ssa- plus
itheGEKE
KRURA
STOUT,
ENDS TONITE
A Double Hit Show
-PLUS-
DavioNiven'MitziGaykwr.
HapW Anniversary
, TONIGHTI
TWO SHOWSI
7:00 I 9:30
COLOR mm iMTEOBumt
NOTICI PlIASI .
REGULAR PRICESI
aj COUTH PACIFIC HI8HWy.T-
fx 1 RU T
vTvm hwmiii
1 1
ISALMIMEO SirS
WIVE-IN
jlAT LAKE HIWWU
JWT jT
CURTIS "rif
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