O
TUESDAY. JANUARY 31, 1961
Local and
Membership - William
Diericx, Medford, has been
accepted as a member of the
National Association of Sani
tarians. Dieriex is with Jack
son county health department
as a sanitarian.
Great Granddaughter - Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Myers, 1127
West 10th St., Medford, have
received word from Wood
land, Calif., of the birth of a
great granddaughter born to
-their granddaughter, Mrs.
Joseph Baker.
Home From Hospital - Mrs.
T. D. (Gladys) Hershey, 5465
South Pacific highway, is con
valescing at her home after
spending four days in Ash
land General hospital with a
sinus infection. Mrs. Hershey
who is a staff member at the
Jackson Counts' Farm home
may have visitors, it was re
ported.
Car Prowl-Howard Eugene
Freeman, Gold Hill, told tity
police that someone took a
transistor radio valued at $27
from his car while it was park
ed on a downtown Medford
parking lot Monday night. It
was one of four car prowls
reported to police during the
past 24 hours.
Erects Building - The city
building department recently
issued Neil Davidson a permit
to erect a $26,000 store build
ing at 401 East Fourth st.
Other permits were issued to
Jordan Construction to erect
a $10,500 residence at 1441
Oleander St.; and to Medford
Neon to erect a $6,000 sign at
1015 South Riverside ave.
Hit and Hun - Galen Henry
Shaw, 2374 Sunset st., told
city police Monday that an
unknown car struck and dam
aged his car while it was
parked on Court st. between
Manzanita st. and Central ave.
about 8:40 p.m. The other ve
hicle did not stop, he said.
The Shaw vehicle sustained
damage to a rear fender, ac
cording to police.
STEAKS
TILL MIDNIGHT
CANDLE
ROOM
HOTEL
f 4 g Medfar d
Open Daily
5:30 P.M. to Midnight
Sundays 4 P.M. Till 11 P.M.
GENEVA
Engagement Ring S 125.00
Wedding Ring 65.00
EASY TERMS
231 East Main
STARTS WEDNESDAY
DOORS OPEN 6:30-SHOW STARTS 7:00
BEST ACADEMY
PICTURE AWARD
OF THE YEAR CONTENDER
U:
JERRY WALO'S,..
FffiL; "TifT; i mrot tnu knot mvt ww
NiW-T'yr f HOWARD STOCKWELL HILLER - URE SEJUIS
No On Under 16 Admitted-All Seats 95c
Personal
Wednesday Meeting - The
Jackson County Labor council
will meet Wednesday, Feb. I,
at the Labor temple at 8 p.m.
Home from Hospital - Mrs.
Edwin (Irene) Calhoun, 202
North Front st., has been re
leased from Sacred Heart hos
pital, and is now at home,
visitmg ner is ner sister-in-law,
Mrs. Mary Clark, Coos
Bay.
Great Books Meelinq - The
Great Books discussion group
will meet in the Public Li
brary of Medford and Jackson
County at 7:45 p.m. Thurs
day, oFeb. 2. Francis Bacon's
Novum Organum" is the dis
cussion selection.
Hospital Patients-Mrs. Don
ald Moulton, 217 North Ross
lane, Medford, and Fred W.
Edens, post office box ft,
Jacksonville, were listed as
surgery patients today at
Sacred Heart hospital. A medi
cal patient there was Alan
M. McQuade, post office box
315, Central Point.
Recognition - Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Strauss, Gold Hill,
local representatives for
United Fram Agency, have
been named to the company's
"men and women of the year,
1960" recognition. Selection
for the honors was based on
outstanding sales accomplish
ment for the year.
Revival Services - Mr. and
Mrs. R. W. Lutz, Howard. Pa.,
will conduct a series of re
vival services at the Pilgrim
Holiness church, East Jackson
and Bessie sts., starting
Wednesday, Feb. 1. Mr. and
Mrs. Lutz, who play a num
ber of musical instruments,
will sing and speak each eve
ning at 7:30 o'clock.
Appointed - Oliver A. Gus
tafson, Medford, has been ap
pointed divisional manager of
Waddcll and Reed Inc., na
tional distributor of the United
Funds Inc., group of mutual
funds. Gustafson, who will be
headquartered in Medford,
was associated with W. A.
Whilelaw and company for
ten years prior to joining Wad
dell and Reed.
News About
Servicemen
IN EXERCISE
Army Pfc. Richard G. SI.
Arnold, husband of Susan St.
Arnold, 1802 Barnett rd., is
scheduled to participate with
other personnel from the 25th
Artillery stationed at Mohr
ingen, Germany, in Exercise
Winter Shield II to be held
next month at the Grafen-wohr-Hohenfels
training area
in southern Germany.
St. Arnold attended Ash
land High school. He is the
son of Mrs. Audrey E. Bow
ers, 4886 South Pacific high
way, Medford, and Gail J. St.
Arnold, Suncrest Orchard,
Talent.
PROMOTED
Lt. Col. Galen C. Morey,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
E. Collom, 629 Lozier lane,
Medford, was recently pro
moted to his present rank
while assigned to the Defense
Atomic Support Agency in
stallation at Sandia Base, Al
buquerque, N.M.
An Army officer for 14
years, Colonel Morey resides
at the base with his wife and
two children.
GRADUATED
Garv L. Cason. aviation
machinist's mate airman ap
prentice. USN. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Coy E. Cason, 243 East
Minor st.. Yreka. Calif., was
graduated this week from the
Aviation Familiarization
school at the Naval Air Tech
nical Training center, Mem
phis, Tenn.
London - lUPli - The London
Daily Mirror today quoted a
tycoon as saying, "I collect
gold' bars. They don't burn,
and if you keep them in a safe
they don't wear a hole in your
pocket like money."
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
TRAVELING BY TRAIN recently from West Palm Beach
- in Florida, I sought out a porter when my connection
was a full hour overdue. "I know this train originates in
Miami, I said, "Will you
tell me how it can lose
an hour in something like
geventy miles?" "That's
easy, mister," explained
the unperturbed porter.
"It hasn't left Miami
yet."
I made one last protest.
"On your bulletin board,"
I pointed out, "this train
is distinctly marked 'O.
TV"
"Hell's bells, mister,"
chuckRd the porter. " 'O.
T.' doesn't mean 'On
Tffne.' It only means that the train is still 'on the track'."
I made the return trie) by plane.
Overheard in the Sheraton East bar: "He's one of the nicest
guys on two feet if he could only stay on them." o
O 1961, by Bennett Ccrf. Distributed by Klnc Features Syndicate)
OBITUARIES
SHELDON WILCOX
Ashland Funeral services
for Sheldon Charles Wilcox,
33, of 77 Iowa St., Ashland,
who was killed in an automo
bile accident in Ashland Mon
day will be held at 1:30 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 2, at Lil
willer's Ml. View chapel.
The Rev. Cecil Goins will
officiate. Interment will be in
Mt. View cemetery.
Mr. Wilcox was born in Ft.
Dodge, Iowa, Sept. 4, 1927,
and moved to Ashland about
16 years ago.
Survivors include his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Wilcox, Ashland; two broth
ers Dean Wilcox, Central
Point, and Don Wilcox, Ash
land, and two daughters, Shel
deane and Jody Wilcox, both
Ashland.
He was employed at the
Double Dee Lumber company,
and was a veteran of World
War II.
HENRY C. BURNETTE
Fuileral services for Henry
C. Burnette, 80, of 425 North
Holly St., Medford, who died
Sunday, will be held Thursday
at 11 a.m. at the Chapel of
the Trees Mortuary, in Siski
you Memorial park, Dr. Kirk
land West of the First Pres
byterian church will officiate.
Private interment will follow
in Stearns cemetery, Talent.
Mr. Burnette was born July
13, 1880, of a pioneer family
in the Coleman Creek area.
On July 15, 1903, in Medford,
he was married to Miss Edith
Works, who survives.
Mr, Burnette had lived in
southern Oregon all of his life
and for the past 20 years had
resided in Medford. He had
been an employee of the
Southern Pacific Railway
company for 32 years, hav
ing retired about 11 years ago.
Survivors, besides his wife,
include three sons, Laurence
Burnette, Talent, Howard
Burnette, Gold Hill, and Or
ville Burnette, Medford; two
daughters, Mrs. E. A. Pringle,
Lindsay, Calif., and Mrs. Roy
Strom, Springfield, Ore; one
brother, G. W. Burnette,
North Sacramento, Calif.; four
grandchildren, and four great
grandchildren. One son, Har
old Burnette, preceded him
in death in 1942.
Siskiyou Funeral Service,
directors of Chapel in the
Trees mortuary, are in charge
of arrangements.
MARY DAVIS
Mrs. Mary Davis, rt. 2, box
205 Medford, died this morn
ing in a local hospital. Fu
neral arrangements will be
announced by Conger-Morris,
funeral directors.
GRAYDON A. SLACK
Funeral services for Gray
don A. Slack, 61, who died
Saturday at the Veteran's Ad-
Over-lhe-Counfer
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") st
the Itme of compilation.
Common Stocks
Bank ofAmerica
Callf-Paclflc Utilities
Cascade Plywood
Com. Frelghtwsy ....
Copco .
Cypruf Mines Corp.
Flnt National Bank .
Morrlson-Knudien
Northwest Nat. Gai ...
Pacific Pwr. Lt.
Permanente Cem. Co.
Portland Gen. Elec. ..
LI S National Bank
Uted Utilities
West Coast Tel
Weyerhaeuser
Bid
Asked
521
25
2(1',
ll'i
49',
211',
SB'
33 'a
2fi.
4Q1,
21
37",
53',
31 ,
li'i
. 23
. 34 ' i
. 10',
. 46',
. 241,
. 55
, 31 U
. 25".
.43',
ID',
, 35',
. na
. so
, 29,
. 36',
Portland Produce
The following; price quotations
are from the agricultural market
ing service of the U S Department
of Agriculture In Portland.
Ergs: Prices to retailers, cartons.
X large AA 53-58: large AA 50-55;
large A 49-52; medium AA 45-50;
small A A 38-4 1 . Prices to produc
ers: X large AA 41-44',; large AA
38-42',; large A 37-39; medium AA
34-37',; siftlll AA 27.30',.
Butter: Prices to retailers. No. 1
prints delivered. AA and A 70.
B US
Poultry: Price to retailers, de
livered, for grade A quality fry.
ers, whole 38-36. cut up 41-43; light
type hens, whole 28-30, cut up 33
33; heavy type hens, whole 39-43.
MEDFORD MAIL TBUNi3 MEDFORD, ORE.
ministration Domiciliary,
White City, will be held at
the White City Chapel at 9:30
a.m. Wednesday. Chaplain
Roger Pryor will officiate.
Committal will be in the
White City cemetery. Perl Fu
neral home is in charge of ar
rangements. Mr. Slack was born July
23, 1899, in Eiroqa, Wise, and
was a veteran of World War
I.
Survivors include a sister,
Lona E. Barry, of California.
FRANCIS MARTIN
Francis E. (Frank) Martin,
85, of 419 NoVth Grape st.,
Medford, died in a local hos
pital this morning. Funeral
arrangements will be an
nounced by Perl Funeral
home.
Over 1,000 Students
To Attend Model UN
Eugene - More than 1,000
students from colleges and
universities of the 13 western
states are expected on the
University of Oregon campus
April 12 to 15 to .attend the
Model United Nations con
ference. Arrangements for the Model
United Nations session are be
ing made by a student com
mittee headed by Paul R.
Ward, Eugene, designated as
secretary - general, and Gary
C. Sala, Portland, assistant
secretary-general.
Other key members of the
MUN committee include: Kay
L. Wald, Portland; Phil Cass,
Eric H. Carlson, Margaret
Gregory, and Gordon C.
Jones, all of Eugene; May J.
Alden, Albany; Jerry R. Hra
bal, Oregon City; Judith A.
Richards, Saratoga, Calif.,
Howard A. McGlasson, Glen
dale, Calif.; Judith A. Vail,
Oahu, Hawaii; and Barbara
Chantry, Seattle, Wash.
Faculty advisors are Dr.
Herman Cohen, assistant pro
fessor of speech, and G. L.
Best, instructor in political
science.
Crater Hospital
Registers With AOA
Central Point-Crater Osteo
pathic hospital, Central Point,
has met the required stand
ards for registration by the
American Osteopathic associ
ation, it has been announced.
To be registered by AOA, a
hospital must pass an annual
inspection of its physical
plant, staff qualifications, and
receive approval for equip
ment and procedures. It must
also comply with all city and
state laws governing hospital
operation.
The rating was approved at
the mid-year meeting of the
AOA board of trustees held at
Miami beach, Jan. 19-22.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Jncreajinf
cloudiness tonight with rain late
tonight and Wednesday morning.
Partly cloudy Wednesday after
noon. Low tonight 40. High tomor
row 52.
Western Oregon: Fair tonight and
Wednesday morning, becoming
cloudy on coast Wednesday after
noon. Rain likely on coast late
Wednesday. Lows 30 to 40. Highs
tomorrow 48 to 56.
Northern California: Variable
cloudiness tonight. Rain in vicinity
of Stockton northward Wednesday.
Little change in temperature,
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE. Mean yesterday
34: above normal 14.
Record high thiji date 68 in 1034.
Record low this date l in 1030.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight. ,11 inch. Midnight to 10
i.m.. fi7 inch.
Total this month .43 Inch, 1 SB
Inch below normal.
oTntal slPfe Sept. 1, 7 42 Inches.
3 37 inrnps eiow normal
HUMIDITY: Lowest
yesterday
45, highest this a m.
High
CITY O yester
98.
4:09 24-
day
Lo
Prer.
Brookings
Crater Lake ... ,
Grants Pass
Klamath Falls
MEDFORD ft .
Portland
SeaMte
Spokane
Yakimi ,
. BH 32
?.
1 SB
.11
.41
.42
... 34
28
. 52
59
34
. 42
46
.IB
.15
'l 43
36
3fT
32
Eureka 81
Red niuff M
Sacramento 81
San Francisco ...... 81
Los A n g eta s 7 1
Phoenix 88
Denver 38
Chicago 23
Miami Beach 68
New York . 23
Washington, D, C. 39
50
31
Truckers Claimed
Paying Enough To
Support Highways
Salem-IUPU- The manager of
the Oregon Truckers Associa
tion said Monday truckers
alone are paying more than
enough to support major high
ways in Oregon, but that log
haulers were not paying their
share.
Robert Knipe spoke before
the Senate Highway Commit
tee in support of a bill that
would repeal the optional flat
fee now granted to log truck
ers and would force them to
pay the same weight-distance
fees now paid by other truck
ers. 'Privilege' To Loggers
The flat fee is a "privilege"
now granted to log-truckers,
Knipe said, and other truckers
are paying for It.
Log haulers said earlier
they would be willing to pay
the weight-mileage fee if they
could also set minimum rates
for hauling. Otherwise, they
said, the higher fees would
"break" many small opera
tors. Protest 'Limited' Use
Log truckers also protested
they were limited in highway
use, but Knipe replied they
had special considerations as
well that were not granted to
other truckers.
Knipe said he disagreed
with remarks by highway
commissioner Milo Mclver
that truckers were responsible
for at least half of highway
costs, and were paying less
than their share.
Would Pay $223 Million
He told the committee over
a 14-year period interstate
highways 99 and 30 would
cost a total of $189 million,
while Oregon would collect
$372 million from the users.
Trucks and buses alone
would pay $223 million, he
said, more than enough to sup
port the entire highway cost.
"Highways are good busi
ness in Oregon," he added. He
said he supported a bill to re
duce truck fees over 44,000
pounds because it would give
more equitable rates to truckers.
Medford Girl Escapes
Injury in Accident
Patricia Louise Cranston,
17, of 2233 Siskiyou blvd.,
Medford, escaped injury when
her car rolled over in a ditch
on Highway 99 north of Gold
Hill yesterday.
The car rounded a curve at
Miller's gulch bridge, slid
across the highway and rolled
over into a ditch, coming to
rest on lis right side, police
said.
Heavy damage resulted to
the car. A seat belt probably
kept the girl from becoming
injured, state police said.
SCHELL - To Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis L., 420 Western ave.,
Medford, Jan. 30, 1981. a girl,
6'4 lbs., at Rogue Valley hos
pital. GOODMAN - To Mr. and
Mrs. Jacky Ray, 214-A Lin
coln st Medford, Jan. 30,
1961, a boy, 5 lbs., at Rogue
Valley hospital.
CARRIER - To Mr. and
Mrs. James E., 507 South
Peach st Medford, Jan. 30,
1961, a boy, 9'A lbs., at Rogue
Valley hospital.
SON BORN
Atlanta - llPIt - Mrs. Martin
Luther King Jr., wife of the
South's best known Negro in
tegration leader, gave birth
Monday to the couple's third
child, a son.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPDUSDA Cattle
400. Good-choice steers 25.75;
standard-Rood heifers IB. 50-22:
utility cows 14.50-10; canner-cut-ter
11-13.
Calves 50. Good-choice vealers
26-31, few 31.30; standard 20-25.
Hons 250. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers
10.75-20; sows 13-10.
Sheep 350. Choice-prime 1 and
2 pelt shorn lambs 17.75; good
choice shorn lambs 16-17.25.
SWEATER
SALE!
sale regular
price price
$8 9.95
$8 10.95
J8 11.95
$8 12.95
$10 13.95
$10 14.95
S10 15.95
4 1 0 16.95
$10 17.95
$14 18.95
$14 19.95
$14 22.95
$14 23.95
$20 39.95
BARKER'S
MAIN AT
CENTRAL
Panic by People Not Expected
If Thermonuclear War Comes
Washington -HIPII- If ther
monuclear war should come,
would the people themselves
- those who survived - ad
minister the final death blow
to society by giving way to
panic?
The answer, according lo
Charles E. Fritz of the Uni
versity of Florida medical
College, is no.
Fritz, a psychiatry teacher,
participated in a national
academy of sciences sympo
sium on how human beings
could be expected to behave
in fallout shelters. The pro
ceedings of the symposium,
financed by the office of civil
defense and mobilization,
have just been published.
Basing his conclusions on
about 140 field studies of
disaster and the history of
past catastrophes, Fritz said:
"We can immediately agree
to lay to rest all the ghosts
that haunt the attic of popular
thinking about human be
Quotes From the News
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Washington President Kennedy, calling for improving
the physical fitness of Americans:
"Physical fitness goes with menial fitness."
Los Angeles Barry Raleigh, 17, telling police how he
held an 8-year-old boy over a roof edge and then let him
drop to his death:
"I wanted to scare him so I held him over the roof . . .
Then I let him go. I don't know why."
New Orleans John Thompson, on his determination
to fight an order that his family vacate their apartment
because his son broke the boycott of a previously all-white
school:
"I had a hard time finding this place."
New York Cuban refugee Pedro Miranda, after the
U. S. government granted him and 74 other Cubans political
asylum:
"I knew they wouldl I knew they wouldl This is America."
Investment Funds
Noon quotations on selected
funds:
Fund Bid Askwed
Bullock 1320 14.511
Chem Fund 11.09 12.64
Colonial Ener 13 62 14.811
Eaton Howard Stk .. 12 94 13.64
Fidelity 1605 17 33
Group Sec Avia Elec 0.13 10.00
Group Sec Com Stk 13.03 14.27
Group Sec Petr 10.81 11.84
Goup Sec Steel 9.1(1
Group Sec Tobac .. 9.92
Keystone B-3 15.33 16.75
Keystone B-4 9.42 10.29
Keystone K-2 16.03 17 4!l
Keystone S-l 21.31 23 25
Kevstone S-2 12.26 13.33
Keystone S-3 13 01 15.21
Keystone 8-4 13.46 14.60
Mass Inv Grth Stk .. 16.12 17.43
TV-EIec 8.07 8.80
Value Line Inc 5.27 3.711
Wellington 14.47 15.77
Organization Event
Held by GOP Board
An organization meeting
was held Monday noon by the
executive board of the Jack
son County Republican Cen
tral committee at the Jackson
hotel.
Chairman J. Verne Shangle
led a discussion of plans in
forming new committees for
budget and finance, precinct
education and organization,
candidate recruitment and as
sistance, and study and re
vision of the current by-laws.
Several innovations pro
posed by the state committee
were presented to the group
for consideration, including
the newly devised T.O.P.
fund-raising system.
In addition lo the eight
board officers, the meeting
was attended by ex-officio
members Mrs. E. A. Littrcll,
president of the county Re
publican Women's club, Mrs.
Carlcton Sandeen, president
of the Rogue River Republi
can Women's club, and Mrs.
Lloyd Bishop, president of the
local Young Republican club.
Other party leaders present
were Mrs. William Miller,
Mrs. C. B. Collins and Thomas
Helman.
MEDFORD
OREGON
havior in disaster.
"If people throughout his
tory had actually engaged in
all the mass panics, stampedes,
looting, pillaging, mutual ex
ploitation, and other nasty
forms of behavior commonly
attributed to disaster-struck
societies, we would not be
here today to talk about dis
aster because organized hu
man societies would have long
ago ceased to exist.
"If disaster studies have
taught us nothing else, they
have taught us that man is a
highly adaptive social animal
when he is directly confronted
w'th clear challenges to his
continued existence.
"He has survived every
conceivable form of danger
and horror in the past and,
short of total annihilation, he
will continue to do so in the
future."
Having stated that basic
assumption, Fritz addressed
himself to the problems of
Three Men Appear
In District Court
Leo Patrick Davis, 1122
Sunset ave., Medford, was
sentenced to two years in the
Oregon State penitentiary by
Circuit Judge James M. Main
Monday for burglary not in a
dwelling.
Davis had pleaded guilty to
the charges previously. He
was charged with breaking
into the Graff and James Con
struction company tool shed
near the Ashland sewage dis
posal plant on Nov. 20.
Richard Allen Brown, Sac
ramento, Calif., received a
five year suspended sentence
from Judge Main on charges
of grand larceny. He had
pleaded guilty previously to
taking $300 from Stan's Mar
ket on the Crater Lake high
way on Oct. 11.
Eugene Allen Crandall, 145
South Grape St., pleaded guil
ty in circuit court Monday
to charges of forgery. He was
sentenced to the Oregon state
penitentiary for three years.
Crandall was charged with
forging the name of Alfred
Bendickson to a $15 check
and giving it to the Palace
cafe on Jan. 4.
THEATER
INFORMATION SERVICE
CALL SP 3-7323
FOR FULL INFORMATION
ABOUT YOUR THEATERS
"BUTTERFIELD 8"
TWO SHOWS 7:00 and 9:15
STARTING TOMORROW
GREAT STARS!
GREAT EXCITEMENTI
GREAT LAUGHS!
IT'S JUST
GREAT!
It shouts and sings with
Um Mt neiciiM pistrtt
GI3hleiMoiiroeWCIift
HhnlirHMW
JohnHuslonJlliairilMIIH
It IM
Gt-rtirrififl
Thelma flitter EliWallach Arthur Miller
Frank ETaylor John Huston ai North uiti
instituting a realistic shelter
program in time of peace,
getting people to respond to
warning of attack, and operat
ing shelters in such a way as
to assure preservation of so
ciety as well as survival of in
dividuals. He said that:
Must Plan System
-National leadership must
plan the shelter system and
not leave it to individuals,
communities or states. If an
attack comes there must be
"a highly organized federal
defense force" with complete
authority to do what needs to
be done.
-Shelters should have
peacetime uses that will make
them familiar when disaster
conies and not symbols of
horror. The farm family's
"cyclone cellar," Fritz said,
is "primarily a place to keep
the beer cold and to store
perishables" and only second
arily a place of refuge.
-A clear, unmistakable
warning system should be
devised, one not associated
with trial runs. Fritz believes
the siren system has been
used too often to cry "wolf"
to be any good.
-Emphasis should be on
neighborhood, com in u n a I,
large-group shelters. The in
dividual family shelter idea
should be abandoned except
in isolated areas where group
shelters are not feasible.
Productive Work
-People in shelters should
have productive work to do;
the shelter period should not
be one of listlessly "waiting it
out." Shelters should be
stocked with hand tools and
raw materials for making
"survival items."
-Shelters should be tied to
gether by communications,
provided as quickly as pos
sible on how the rest of the
nation fared and what the na
tional leadership was doing
to put the country back on its
feel.
-It should be made clear
that the nation intends to
survive, that everybody in a
given shelter is in the same
boat, and that "previous dis
tinctions in wealth, power,
and prestige" no longer mean
anything.
For a shelter and recovery
system to work, Fritz said,
the evcry-man-for-himself at
titude must be scrapped for
"mutually cooperative be
havior." HURRYI
LAST TWO NITES
6
. ,v
slULIKT PROW!
Doors open 7:30, Show at 8
LAST TIMES
TONIGHT
life,., explodes with love
A 9
We Are
Overstocked!
We
Need Room!
Take advantage of these
TERRIFIC
BARGAINS
in
Builders Supplies
$4.99 ea.
48
V-grooved Birch 8.90 ea.
V4x4x8 V-grooved
Senwood $9.30 ea.
DOORS
Mahogany "A" Grade
2'0"x6'8"-li" ..$4.70
2'6"x6'8"-H" .... 5.90
2'8"x6'8"-lH" . 6.20
3'0"x6'8"-H's" .. 6.70
DOOR JAMBS
Pine $3.38
"x4x8 FIR
Sanded Plywood
$3.90 sheet
Door Latches,
$2.03
Brass..., ca.
Door Locks, CO 711
Door Hinges
3'i x 3'2 .
Towel Bar, CO AO
Chrome Qt.40
Kitchen
RANGE HOODS
Coppertone Finish
30" or 36"
$27.50
ROOFING
ROLLS
45 lbs $2.25
55 lbs 2.60
65 lbs 2.90
90 lbs 3.60
THICK BUTTS
ALL KINDS
No phone quotes
CABINET HARDWARE
Early American
T-Hinges 55c pr.
H-Hinges 43c pr.
CABINET
CATCHES
5c
HARD BOARD
'a-4"x8" 1.70 sheet
i44"x8" 2.70 sheet
316-4"x8" Green
$3.20 sheet
NAILS
8d&16d
$090 P
V keg
CASH & CARRY!
ALL SALES FINAL!
LEWIS
Wholesale
Builders Supply
443 S. Riverside
Phone SP 2-7135
illmil P'ellnisned
If IE ! PLYWOOD
Ifflll V-Groovcd .
I l mV Mahogany
Brass ca
MEDICINE CABINETS
16"x26"
HOT Only.',
li nJ $7.75
rS