Crater To
Grizzlies,
Central Point-Four
on the Crater High school
squad will get the starting
call as the Comet basketball
team meets Ashland and
Grants Pass in its season con
cludes. The Comets go to Ashland
. this evening and nnnnA
Grants Pass at Central Point
on baturday.
- Jim Allen, Tom White,
Dennis Edwards and Loyal
Higginbotham are the seniors.
Carry-Over
Of Bucks
Said Good
Portland - A good carry
over of bucks and fawns sums
up the reports of game biolo
gists throughout the state up
on completion of the annual
deer herd composition stud
ies to determine the ratios of
bucks, does, and fawns in
each herd.
During their travels on the
big gamp ranges this winter,
game agents classified more
than 23,00U animals as to sex
and age and found about one
buck for eve: tnree does ob
served and about three fawns
for every four does observed.
The sex and age ratios dis
close practically no change in
the status of the herds from
a year ago.
The tally on the mule deer
population in eastern Oregon
shows a slight decrease in the
buck-doe ratios from a year
ago but a slight increase in
the fawn production. Counts
on eastern Oregon ranges
were just under one buck for
each four does observed com
oared to exactly one to four
last year.
Buck Count
Eastern Oregon fawn tallies
stood at just over three fawns
for each four does while a
year ago the count was less
than three to four. The buck
count on the blacktail ranges
was up slightly from last year,
while the fawn-doe ratios re
mained almost the same.
Unusually mild weather
this winter has permitted big
game animals to .remain scat
tered over extensive areas.
On a few ranges the animals
have made little attempt to
migrate to wintering areas,
preferring to remain at the
higher elevations. Biologists
are finding many animals well
back on the normal summer
ranges.
Game managers are now in
the process of sampling the
big game ranges to determine
trends in the total population
numbers. Counts will contin
ue into late spring. Mortality
winter food conditions, and
other factors affecting the
herds will also be recorded
during the trend survey.
Hedrick 9th
Trips South
Hedrick Junior High school
ninth graders wrote the end
to their basketball season yes
terday by clubbing South
Grants Pass 66 to 40.
South won the eighth grade
game 36 to 28.
Larry Vowell with 19
points, Steve Root with 17
and Chris Rasmussen with 14
paced the Hedrick ninth with
Vowell getting 13 of the Hor
nets' 231point first quarter.
Ireland had 21 points for
SGP-
Coach Barney Riggs Mcd
ford team scored its 10th win
in 14 games. The Hornets hit
at a .500 clip from the field.
They had a 21-point last quar
ter to go with the hot opening
quarter.
Lee Wimberly had 16 re
bounds and Root nine for Hedrick-
Quarter gaps were 23 to 17,
32 to 27 and 45 to 37.
South s eighth led 11 to 8,
22 to 17 and 2a to 23 at the
quarters. Duchein had 12
markers for South and Rusty
Spikcr nine for Hedrick.
sfi Hrdrt'ckSlh South CP 9th 40
F 17 Root Bf IV
r 14 C. Rasmussen .Jr?lnd 21
C 9 Wimberly Manaley
O 19 Vowell Stalcup J
G 3 Knight . y'??kJ
Substitutions For Hedrick,
r Ir.ulrala HIU3 Tft . .
Brown vi an -!
Rasmuwn. Anderson; lor fouin.
Grant, .Newiana. -
Pclky.
LA Lakers Near
Playoff Spot
United Press International
The Los Angeles Lakers
have all but locked up a play-
.. . -.i- : . .w SJatinnnl RaS-
Oil OCrill lit 1"
kctball association's Western
division.
With star Elgin Baylor
pumping in 34 points the Lak
ers defeated the Syracuse Na
lu.iin nt Srranton.
lionais, -
Pa Thursday night and need
oniv three more victories in
five remaining games to lock
urn
Take On
Cavemen
They'll likely be joined by
sophomore Louis Alvarez.
Crater can't change its
fourth place finish in the
Southern Oregon conference.
Still the Comets would like
to improve their record for
the final standings.
Seek First Win
Ashland, of course, will aim
to make the most of its last
chance to win a game this
season. The Grizzlies have
been beaten 21 times over the
1960-61 season. Victory over
the Comets, who upset Klam
ath Falls, last week would
make a bright finish to a dis
mal campaign.
Grants Pass is secure in
third place. The Cavemen
have beaten the Comets three
times this season and Crater
desperately wants victory in
this final game. Crater has
three wins over Ashland.
Possible Ashland starters
are Jerry H a u c k, Larry
Pierce, Dallas Brownson, Sid
DeBoer and Larry Johnson.
Grants Pass could open with
a crew picked from among
Dave Hauntz, Jim Hamilton,
Clyde Murray, Jim Black
smith, Bob Lewellyn, Mel At
kins and Jim Davis.
Grants Pass entertains
Klamath Falls this evening.
BASKETBALL
THURSDAY COLLEGE GAMES
United Press International
EAST
Colgate 66. Hobart 61
Manhattan 82, Syracuse 76
Providence 81, Fairfield 59
Boston U. 77, Brandeis 65
St. John (NY) 86. Rhode Island
74
Georgetown DC) 92, New York
U. 69
SOUTH
Atlantic Coast Tournament
(First Round)
Maryland 91, Clemson 75
S. Carolina 80. N. Carolina St. 78
Duke 89, Virginia 54
Southern Tournament
(First Round)
William & Mary 86, Furman 84
West Virginia 89, VMI 71
The Citadel 70, Richmond 66
Geo. Washington 84, Va. Tech 83
MIDWEST
Drake 73. St. Louis 69
Wichita 96. Oklahoma City 86
Missouri 95, Iowa St. 82
Cincinatl 89, Xavier (Ohio) 53
SOUTHWEST
North Texas St. 58. Tulsa 55
Baylor 77, Southern Methodist 63
Texas A&M 70, Arkansas 68
Centenary 106, Hardin-Simmons
93
Rice 81. Texas unristtan 71
Texas Tech 63, Texas 60
Prep Basketball
THURSDAY GAMES
United Press International
DISTRICT 2-A-2
Ncstucca 45, Yamhill-Carlton 28
Sherwood 69, Salem Academy 46
DISTRICT 5-A-2
Pleasant Hill 59, McKenzie 53
DISTRICT 2-B
Detroit 72, Sllctz 59
Pcrrydale 69, Santtam 61
Colton 56, Falls City 53
Jefferson 53. St. Paul 50
DISTRICT 5-B
Prospect 53. Chiloquin 35
DISTRICT 6-B
Maupin 40, Condon 33
Dufur 55, Mosicr 40
Wheeler 49. Sisters 44
Culver 57, Cascade 51
DISTRICT 7-B
Ml. Vernon 50, Pilot Hock 40
Weston 63. Long Creek 40
Umatilla 53. McEwen 52
lone 56. Prairie City 42
DISTRICT 8-B
Huntington 51, Joseph 35
HOCKEY
NATIONAL LEAGUE
United Press International
The Chicago Black Hawks
were "in" today and the New
York Rangers were practical
ly "out."
The, Hawks ripped the Ran
gers, 7-1, Thursday night to
clinch a berth in the National
Hockey league's Stanley Cup
playoffs. The loss diminished
Rangers' chances of gaining
the playoffs, even though the
fourth - place Detroit Red
Wings, who in turn lead the
fifth-place Rangers by another
10 points. Both the Red Wings
and Rangers have eight games
left to play.
Rudometkin Retains
Lead in Pointmaking
San Francisco- IliPn -South
ern California's John Rudom
etkin and California's Bill
McClintock, the "big two" of
the Big Five's statistical
basketball battle, safely held
their leads today in scoring
and rebounding.
"Rudo" was far ahead of
tht- shooters with a point per
game average of 25.1 and Mc-
Clintock's .151 mark showed
the way for the backboard
men.
Roger Niva cf Washington
took over the free throw lead
with a percentage of .875.
Paced by Ed Corell's .542,
the Huskies also held down
the first three spots in field
goal shooting accuracy.
Central Pointers
Defeat Hanby Teams
Central Point-Central Point
Junior High beat Hanby of
Gold Hill 42 to 28 in varsity
basketball Wednesday.
Larry Branch had 18 points
for Central Point which led
14 to 3 at the half. David
White scored 12 for the Gold
Hill club.
Central Point won the
jayvee mix 35 to 21.
McLoughlin
Ninth Grade
Champion
McLoughlin Junior High'i
Bulldogs arc Southern Ore
gon conference ninth grade
titlists.
They garnered the mantle
Thursday afternoon by
bouncing Ashland 66 to 39
in their final game of the
season.
In their clincher the Bull
dogs were headed by the
(coring of Ron Edmonds.
Don Kengla and Bill Hous
ton and the board work of
Mike Barnes. Chuck Kim
ball and Kengla.
McLoughlin, guided to
title by the coaching of Bob
Radcliffe and Vern Craft,
wound up league activity
with a 9-2 record. The fresh
man crew had a 12-2 stand
ing for the full season.
Against Ashland Edmonds
scored 17 points, Kengla 16
and Houston 14. Don Ras
pone had 14 for Ashland.
The Bulldogs were on top
15 to 5, 36 to IS and 49 to
30 at the intermissions.
LINKUPS;
K U.I nii.hll. ..kl I in
F 14 Houston Trost li
r o names nunoy j
C 16 Kengla Raspone 14
G 7 Allen Susee 5
G 17 Edmonds Samuelson 2
Substitutions For McLoughlin.
Larson, Walker. Coovert. Bottgcr
2. Kimball 2, Hinman. Banks. Tur.
Sin. tui niiuana. nogers , nnoaes,
eBocr 2. Yapllc, Nelson Boyce 2.
Registered
Shoot Here
This Sunday
Medford Gun club will be
host here Sunday for its ninth
annual early spring trapshoot
with entrants expected from
all over southern Oregon.
The club will offer 250 reg
istered targets with the pro
gram divided among 16-yard,
handicap and doubles events.
A non-registered backerup
shoot was also on the sched
ule. Trophies are being offered
in four classes in 16 - yard
shooting and to high junior
and high lady in that event.
Trophies will be presented in
three classes in the doubles.
Awards go to winners and
runnersup in the events, in
cluding handicap.
Moreno Takes
Scoring Honors
Portland - (UPD - College of
Idaho and Lewis and Clark
trailed champion Linfield in
the Northwest conference bas
ketball chase but they wound
up with two individual tit-
lists.
Bob Moreno of College of
Idaho won the individual
scoring race with 298 points
in 15 games for a 19.9 aver
age. Dan Ayers, also of the
Coyotes, too the rebounding
title with 244 in 15 games, a
16.3 average.
Royce McDaniel of Lewis
and Clark won the free throw
accuracy title with 70 out of
82 for an .854 mark. And Jim
Boutin of Lewis and Clark
was the leader in field goal
accuracy with 83 out of 162
for a .512 percentage.
Effort Made
To Catch Team
Wooden' Shop. MpHfnrH
which won the District 5, title
reportedly headed for Hnrmis.
ton this morning for the state
AAU basketball tourney.
But an pffnrt wnc mnrio in
stop it and delay the trip.
ine bnoe was scheduled to
play the District 6 (northeast
ern Oreson) winnpr at m an
o'clock tonight. But, District 5
Commissioner Bob Haworth,
Medford, got word that the
District 6 team would not
make it to the tourney.
This means that Wooden
Shoe draws a hvp until Q n m
Saturday when it is to play
tne Liisirici i entrant or Her
miston, whichever won tonight.
NOTICE!
To All Our Customers, Old and New . .
MEDFORD MUFFLER CO.
Has HOT Changed Owners !
Due to an accident, I have been in the hos
pital since December. John and Roy are both
back on the job to give you our SPRING
SPECIALS.
MUFFLERS GASKETS TAIL PIPES DUALS WELDING (Gas and
Electric) TRAILER HITCHES INSTALLED 15 MINUTE INSTALLATION
FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY FREE CHECKUP
1130 North Riverside,
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE.
A-2 Aggregations
Battle for Crown
Ashland - Four teams will
battle for a state tournament
berth in the District 6 A-2
playoffs here tonight and
Saturday in the Southern Ore
gon college gymnasium.
Entrants are Glide and
Sutherlin, co-champions in the
Upland Bird
Populations
Get Boost
Portland - Wild upland
game bird populations will re
ceive a slight boost in num
bers this year by the release
of around 35,800 farm reared
birds according to the 1961
production schedule set for
the Hermiston and E. E. Wil
son game farms of the Ore
gon state game commission.
Production plans call for
the rearing of 24,100 ringneck
pheasants, 10,500 chukar par
tridge, and 1,500 grey par
tridge. Release of pheasants for
this year is already under
way with the planting of 4,
700 adult holdover birds, 900
going to eastern Oregon and
3,800 stocked west of the Cas
cades. Three thousand more
adult birds will be released
during the spring months.
Partridge Here
About 11,000 young pheas
ants will be released during
the summer and early fall
and an additional 5,400 adult
birds prior to and during the
upland bird season this fall.
The planting of chukar
partridge will follow a simi
lar pattern with the release
this spring of around 1,000
adult birds. Releases of young
birds in late summer will
number about 5,500 followed
by the release of 4,000 adults
during the fall.
Most of the grey partridge
will be stocked in western
Oregon in Columbia, Lane,
and Jackson counties, where
the game commission has
been trying for several years
to get populations of these
birds established. A planting
of 300 grey partridge will be
made in Wasco county in
north central Oregon.
World Record
Eyed by Brumel
New York - (UPII - Three
Olympic stars from foreign
soils, including Russia's Val
ery (Beau) Brumel, will at
tempt to set world records to
night in the 42nd annual
Knights of Columbus Track
Meet at Madison Square Gar
den. Brumel will meet sad-faced
John Thomas of Boston uni
versity for the third and last
time this season in the high
jump. The 18-year-old Russian
hopes to clear seven feet, five
inches - which would break
all existing marks, indoors or
outdoors.
George Kerr of the British
West Indies will be out to
crack the world indoor record
of 1:09.5 in the 600-yard run
and Hungary's Istvan Rozsa
volgyi will attempt to lower
Ron Dclany's meet and world
record of 4:01.4 in the Colum
bian Mile.
SPORTSCASTS
Radio station KMED will
carry the Prospecl-Chilo-quin
High basketball game
tonight at 8 o'clock and will
broadcast their game again
at the same hour Saturday
if the District 5B playoff
goes to a third game. If the
5B playoff ends tonight,
KMED will air the Medford
Klamath Falls hoop fray.
Radio station KYJC will
broadcast the Crater-Ash-
land High basketball game
at 8 o'clock tonight and the
Medford-Klamath game at
the same hour on Saturday.
Guaranteed Satisfactory Installation and
Materials or Your Money Back
John J. Beaman
Medford
3T
MEDFORD. ORE.
TJmpqua Valley league with
identical 9-3 win-loss records,
and Henley and Lakeview,
one-two finishers in the Rogue
league.
Lakeview, which finished
league play with a 7-3 record
will tangle with Sutherlin in
the first game at 7 p.m. Fri
day while Henley, champion
in the Rogue loop with a 9-1
mark, clashes with Glide in
the second contest. Friday's
winners will meet Saturday
in the second game for the
District championship and a
trip to the State A-2 tourney
in Coos Bay. The Friday loos
ers will play the first tilt
Saturday for consolation
honors.
Henley's Hornets are led by
Ray Brown, 6-7 sophomore
Kent Gooding and 6-2 senior
Bert Allbritton, a high-scoring
trio which led the Klam
ath county quint to a 17-3
season record. Other starters
for the Hornets will be sen
iors Ray Brown, Floyd Ken
dall, and Bob Chapman.
The Sutherlin Bulldogs, who
defeated Glendale 63-49 last
Saturday to earn the playoff
berth, is led by high-scoring
Jim Foster. Other teammates
who may draw starting nods
are Marcus Mann, Jim Trim
mer, Ed Hill, and Tom Wall
ing. Lakeview, which dropped a
55-50 battle to Henley last
week end but still finished
second in the Rogue league,
will floor a starting five of
Gary and Larry Peters,
Charles Cosscy, Troy McCoy,
and leading scorer Doug Max
well. Glide's Wildcats will be
making their third straight
playoff appearance when they
send starters Glen Fortune,
Ron Polley, leading scorer,
Darrell Ccllers, John Hat
field, and Tom Charon against
the Honkers from Lakeview.
Tot Died As Dad
Rejected Food,
Police Declare
Richmond, Va.- IUPII -Police
say Carol Ann Dudley, 7,
whose parents are accused of
murdering her through ne
glect, died at a highway truck
stop of hunger after her father
turned down an offer of food.
Carol Ann was one of five
of the six children who died
of malnutrition as their par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E.
Dudley, roamed the country
in a dilapidated car looking
for carnival jobs. Christine
Dudley, 2, is the only sur
vivor. Police said Carol Ann,
weighing only 35 pounds and
suffering from the effects of
a leg fracture that her father
had treated, perished of hun
ger and other complications.
Offered Family Food
Mrs. T. O. Butler, a clerk
at a truck stop just north of
this Virginia capital, said she
offered the Dudley family
food on a wintry night four
weeks ago as they sat in their
parked car.
"We went down to see if
they had enough to eat," Mrs.
Butler said, but were told the
Dudleys were just wailing for
a money order. She said they
spent the night in the car,
with the windows curtained
and an oil stove apparently
going inside, and drove on.
Police said the bodies of
Carol Ann, Claude Arthur,
Norman James, Charles Aug
ust and Deborah Jane were
dumped casually about the
country after the Dudleys
started on a circus-following
trip from Syracuse, N. Y., in
1958.
CHURCH CUSTOM
Chicago A church may be
come a cathedral when it is
designated as the official scat
of a reigning bishop.
Ph. SP 3-4818
St. Mary's,
UCLA Must
Produce
United Press International
The task is crystal clear for
UCLA, St. Mary's and Gon-
zaga's Frank Burgess tonight.
They either produce or wind
up second best.
UCLA intercepts Southern
California and a Trojan vic
tory could just about wrap
up things in the Big Five. The
three survivors in the race
are USC (6-2), UCLA (4-4) and
Washington (6-4).
The Huskies will not only
be hoping for a Bruin win,
but also trying to defeat re
bounding California at Ber
keley. The Huskies have had
a disastrous time on the road
this season and will be under
dogs. To add to the Bruins and
Huskies woes, they meet each
other Sunday night in Los
Angeles.
St. Mary's (7-2) is at Santa
Clara in a high-pressure West
Coast Athletic conference bat
tle tonight. The Gaels are la
boring to keep up with Loyola
(8-2) wnich should breeze past
UOP tonight in Los Angeles.
St. Mary's has won five
straight - 10 of its last 11 -
and their season mark of 18-5
is the best on the coast. But
none of it will mean much if
the Gaels can't get past the
Broncs tonight. Santa Clara
has a 16-9 mark.
Burgess is involved in a
torrid duel with Tom Chilton
of East Tennessee State for
the national scoring title. All
depends on what happens to
night at Moscow, Idaho.
Chilton has concluded his
season with 771 points in 24
games for a 32.1 average. Bur
gess has meshed 805 in 25
games and must score 31
points in tonight's game with
the Vandals to keep the
crown.
In Thursday night's only ac
tion, Seattle closed its season
with a 57-55 win over upset
minded Idaho State.
The Chieftains thus ended
the season with a seven-game
win streak and a good 18-7
record.
DODGERS FEARED
Fort Myers, Fla. - IUPII -
General manager Joe Brown
has picked the Los Angeles
Dodgers as the club his Pitts
burg Pirates will have to beat
to retain the National league
pennant. Although he did not
sell the other contenders
short, Brown said the Dodgers
should prove the toughest be
cause of the young players
they have coming up.
GUIDES MINORS CLUB
New York - IUPII - Enos
Slaughter, who epitomized
spirit and hustle during 19
years in major league base
ball, will manage the Raleigh,
N. C, club of the Class B
Carolina league this year. The
club is a farm club of the
New York National league
team which is scheduled to
begin competition next year.
Dallas Loggers
Feared Drowned
Sweet Home - IUPII - Two
Dallas loggers were lost and
feared drowned in the Santi-
am river about 10 miles north
east of here Thursday.
They were identified as
Glen Cooper, 26, and W. H.
Rowcll, Jr., 38, both employ
ees of the Shipler Logging
Co.
The men, working to clear
the site for Green Peter Dam,
were reported missing short
ly after noon. Their 12-foot
aluminum boat, which they
nact been using, was found
capsized about one and a half
miles from where they were
last seen.
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Reviewer Finds HS
Class Play Is Well
Done by Seniors
The 'class play," a time
honored tradition in this coun
try, has been undergoing a
revolution, at least in some
communities of the western
states.
There was a time when few
dramatic teachers and coaches
in high schools and colleges
dared to tackle anything diffi
cult or meaningful. This is no
longer true, for which we
should be grateful.
James Conant wrote, not
long ago, that Americans in
some districts have forgotten
that the function of the school
is not to entertain the parents
and public, but to educate.
This function is being ful
filled, we believe, when a
high schuol cast can produce
a piny such as "The Cruci
ble." This powerful work from
the pen of Arthur Miller,
American playwright, was
chosen by Mrs. Lcnore Zapell,
drama instructor at Medford
High school, as the 1961 class
play.
It opened last night, and
mere must nave been many
adults in the audience who
wondered what a high school
cast could do with a play as
difficult and complex as this
one.
Students Do Well
They did well very well
indeed. These students took a
plot which deals witii witch
craft, hale, fear, ignorance,
superstition, misdirected re
ligious zeal and adultery and
came up with a believable, at
times deeply dramatic produc
tion.
Terry Wiek Is cust as John
Proctor, the sturdy and intel
ligent young resident of early-
day Salem, Mass., who goes to
the gallows rather than give
up his good name. Mark Good
man plays the Rev. Samuel
Parris, a minister whose God
is one of fear rather than
love, and Dean Miser takes the
role of another minister, John
Hale, who realizes loo late
that he is helping send inno
cent people to their denth-
that the courts of Massachu
setts are dealing in vengeance
instead of justice.
Linda Jo Waltermire is
Abigail Williams, the beauti
ful girl whose desires and
fancies set off a dreadful
chain of events; Beverly Geb-
hard plays Elizabeth Proctor,
John's cold and ailing wife.
and Sara lliukle portrays
Mary Warren, one of the fool
ish and silly girls who claim
they have been bewitched
Others In Cast
Others in the cast include
Carolyn Finch as Tiluba, Ros
alita Patch as Ann Putnam,
who believes that her seven
dead children were taken
from her by sorcery, Dan
Campbell is Governor Dan-
forth, more concerned with
the status of his courl than
with justice, and Bob Walker
plays Giles Corey, who won
dered to his neighbors why
his wife read so many books
and as a result sees her exe
cuted as a witch.
If there are those who be
lieve a high school casl cannot
successfully handle a play of
this depth, let them go and
judge for themselves. Further
more, it should be remem
bered that while residents of
this country no longer are
charged with witchcraft, as
they were In l(il)2, there is
still tremendous pressure
brought to bear on everyone
to conform to certain ideas
and ideals, and those who do
nol sometimes have the finger
pointed at them unjustly.
There was sustained and ap
preciative applause lasl night,
nol only for the ploy cast but
EASY AS
FALLING
OFF A
LOG
TRIHV1IX
Concrete & Equipment
FRIDAY, MARCH
for those who planned and ex
ecuted the excellent costumes,
for the lighting crew and for
John Drysdale and his school
orchestra who were in good
music form for the overture
and between acts music.-O.S.
Marilyn Monroe To
Remain in Hospital
New York OIPll Actress
Marilyn Monroe probably
will spend a few more days
in hospital because of a sore
throat.
A spokesman for the curvy
blonde said she should be re
leased from Columbia-Presbyterian
Hospital Monday o r
Tuesday.
Miss Monroe, who recently
divorced playwright Arthur
Miller, has been hospitalied
since Feb. 11 for a nervous
condition.
NO ROOM TO SWIM
London - IUPII - So many
people have tossed coins into
the fountain at London air
port's new hotel that all the
goldfish have died.
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MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
3. 1961
B 3
Boys To Start
Selling Candy
Starting tomorrow, boys
who are earning their way to
YMCA Camp Diamond Lake
by selling candy mints will
start to work. This is the sec
ond year that boys have sold
the candy to go to camp.
Boys will go from house lo
house throughout the city, and
will be located at many o
the supermarkets, The boxes
will sell for $1, and the boys
will get 50 cents of it to go
toward the camp fee.
If there are any boys who
wish to help out by earning
part or all of the camp fee
by selling candy mints, they
may be checked out at tho
YMCA Saturdays from 9 a.m.
to noon. The candy will ba
available to sell from now
until June 15.
According to YMCA offi
cials, many of the boys who
are earning their camp money
would not be able to go to
camp if it were not for the
program.
Additional information con
cerning the candy mint or
camping program at the
YMCA may be obtained from
the Medford YMCA.
2D
LisHJO
ooo
AIL MAKES
All MODELS
American Cars
- 8 to 6 Saturday-8 (o 5
Medford
4.00 I
u
I IITn!TDtNJ
up a post-season Derm.