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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1962)
Sarden-Gay Cloth Simple stitches, . yet these lovely pansies make an ele gant lunch or dinner cloth. Pansies cascade gracefully over corners of cloth. Em broider' them on scarves, towels, too. Pattern 7141: Iwelve VAxWt to 3x13 inch motifs. THIRTY- FIVE CENTS coins) for this pattern - add 10 cents for each pattern for irst-class . mailing. . Send to Alice Brooks, care of Med tord Mail Tribune, Needle craft Dept., P.O. Box 163, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11. N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUM BER. i NEVER - BEFORE VALUE! 21)0 designs to knit, crochet, sew, weave, embroider, quilt -in our 1982 Needlecraft Cat alog. Beautiful Bulkies in a complete fashion section plus bedspreads, toys, linens, af ghans, slipcovers, plus 2 free patterns. Send 25c now. Portland Produce Portland (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: AA extra largo 40-44c; AA large 37-42c: A large 36-39C: AA medium 32-38c; A small 24-30c; cartons l-3c lugher. Butter To retailers: AA and A ratints 67c; cartons lc higher; B prints 66c.1 ;. Cheese (medium cured! To re tailers: 47-48'2c; processed Ameri can 5-10 lb. loaf, 43-46',2c. Portland (UPII Dressed ?hickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers:- Fryers, whole drawn, 30 30c lb.: cut-up, 36-43C lb.: hens, rght type, -whole drawn 23-2flc lb.: light type hens, cut-up 26-34C lb.; rieavy whole 36-39C lb. (X) VOTE for HENRY F. PADGHAM Democratic Candidate for STATE SENATOR Pd. Pol. Adv. by H. Padgham 1309 Court, Medford Plan Your End-of-School-Year PARTY "NOW"! 9 R0LLARENA Ashland 482-3321 With AU The Pnde And Porer 01 Hit Aeademt Award-Wtnninff Performance In "The Bndpe On The Rner Knot," ALECGUINSESS Create Hit Mott Memorable Screen Role ON OUR STAGE TUESDAY ONLYI Exploiting of Ear Muscles May Curb Damage To Hearing Br DELOS SMITH WPI Science Editor New York -UIPD-. A promis ing new avenue of scientific research is aimed at exploit ing ear mus cles which most people don't know they have. If they could be K exploited with , any precision S they could ? prevent the j sense of hear- Deios smith ing from get ting damaged in an increas ingly noisy world. These are not the muscles which some people learn to control enough to wiggle their ears. They cannot be used at will by anyone because they're reflexive muscles of the middle ear, the good old tensor tympani and sta pedius. When they contract they cut down the amount of noise which is transmitted from the eardrum across the middle ear to the inner ear. It is the latter1 unit of hear ing which gets damaged by being bombarded by much noise for a long time. They contract by reflex ac tion and it takes noise to set off the reflex. Thus they've always served to protect the sense of hearing, but in the modern world the big noises can come too suddenly to per mit them to work. Almost Instant According to Dr. John L. Fletcher, who is pursuing this research, it takes nine - mil lionths of a second for a noise to flex them into contracting. If the noise hits them at a higher velocity - that is, the noise is ultimate of sudden ness - it goes right through to the inner ear unimpeded. There are many such noises these days, especially in in dustry and in rocketry and jet-propelled supersonic air craft. But Dr. Fletcher's ex perimental noises were those of gunfire, since he works in the Army Medical Research Laboratory at Fort Knox, Ky. Whether the inner ear is damaged by noise depends upon the intensity of the noise which reaches it. His research so far has demon strated that the intensity of the noise which will flex the muscles into contracting much less than that likely to damage the sense of hearing. . Therefore, in inoisy sur roundings where the noises are explosive in their sudden ness (he cited the vicinity of industrial stamping machines as an example) an intermittent but steadily maintained lesser noise will keep the muscles contracted and thus cut down the intensity of the big noises. Suggests Clicking Sound This noise could be a pulsed clicking, he suggested in a preliminary report on his re search to the Acoustical so ciety of America. It would have to be fairly loud to act on the muscles but the loud ness would do no physical Reserve ANY Morning or Afternoon For Your Class LOW RATES Medford, Oregon PHONE KE 5-1551 or SP 3-7852 TUES.-WED.-THURS. "CURTAIN AT EIGHT-THIRTY" Doors Open at 8:00 ASHLAND'S FAMED "KILTY BAND"! I at it-..". MEDFORD MAIL harm and people would get used to it. "Noise-induced hearing loss is an expensive problem that has long confronted the armed forces and'industry," he said. "Trained personnel in criti cally short supply frequently must be removed from noisy jobs which require normal hearing. Hearing loss also serves to reduce efficiency and causes errors that may be costly." Industry pays for the dam age through insurance and workmen's compensation, he added, and the armed services pay through premature retire ments because of medical dis ability. A solution of the big noises problem would pay off in money as well as in human well-being, he said. Lucky Find Sew-it-in-a-Day Dress - no waist seams, fitting problems or fussy details. .Choose a cheery, washable ' print to wear at home or shopping, Printed Pattern 9236: Half Sizes 14V4, 16V4, 18V4, 20'2, 22'4, 2i'i. Size 16V4 takes 3Vfe yards 39-inch fabric. FIFTY CENTS in coins for this pattern - add 10 cents for each pattern for first-class mail. Send to Marian Martin, Medford Mail Tribune, Pat tern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUM BER. Extra Big Summer Pattern Catalog - over 106 styles for all sizes, occasions. Send 35c. Investment Funds Noon quotations on selected m J 79236 lanfa p fill f stocks: Fund Rid Asktd Bullock 12.72 13.95 I Chemical Fund 10 .16 11 48 ( Colonial Ener 11 84 12 94 I Eaton Howard Stk ...... 13 04 14.10 ! Fidelity 15.0B 1B.28 I Fundamental Investors 9.17 10.05 Group Sec-Avia-Elec .. 7.27 7.97 Group Sec-Corn Stk .... 12.42 13.00 Group Sec-Pctr 10.77 11.80 I Keystone B-3 15. 5B 17.00 Keystone B-4 . . 9.33 10.19 Keystone K-I 5 17 5 65 Keystone S-l 20.B8 20 54 ' Keystone S-2 . 11.84 12.92 ' Keystone S-3 13.39 14 83 ! Keystone S-4 4.35 4.76 Mass lnv Grth Stk .... 7.76 8.48 Nat l Growth 9 82 8 55 Stocks 17.98 19 44 I TV - Elee -7.54 8 22 i Value Line Inc 5 08 5 55 j Variable '6 61 7.14 I Wellington 14.30 15.59 Over-the-Counter Western Stocks Rid Asked By United Press International Bank of America 51 i. 54'(. I Calif Pac Util 22V, 24s, t-on rreiKnt iu1. ii'4 Cvprus Mines 23 'i 25sii Equitable SAL 40', 44', First National Bank 56 60 '2 Jantzen ...... 29 32'3 Morrison Knudsen 30si 33 Mult Kennels 4, 5", N W. Natl Gas 30 32' Oregon Metallurgical 1 I3. PP&L . 24'. 26i, PGE -.. 24', 26i US National Bank 68', 74 United Utilities 27 29', West Coast Tel 38 'i 41 '. Weyerhaeuser 2D1, 31 7, Ends TUESDAY! On at 8 p.m. & 12:10 a.m. MN FQRO - rVARIA SCHFLL in-ttiin ram aCiem'iCtHll'XlW 2nd Hit on at 10:50 p.m. ENEMY GENERAL JIMMMI .IMWNT. DANT UHWI. MR TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON Obituaries ROY LINDERMAN Roy Linderman, 58, of box 226, Prospect, died in a local hospital Sunday. Funeral services will be announced by reri t unerai home. DOROTHY KNOX Ashland Mrs. Dorothy Knox, 111 Gresham st., Ash land, died last week end. Fu neral arrangements will be announced by Litwiller Fu ner home. MABEL OLLOM Ashland-Mabel Ollom. 76. died this morning in a Med ford nursing home. Funeral arrangements will be an nounced by Litwiller Funeral home. Mrs. Ollom was born April 19, 1886, in Spencer, Neb. LUCY C. SIMMONDS Funeral services for Mrs. Lucy C. Simmonds, 79, North Phoenix rd., who died Friday, will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday in Hillcrest Memorial chapel on the North Phoenix rd. The Rev. Charles T. Richardson will officiate. Committal will be in Eastwood Odd Fellows cemetery, with Conger-Morris Funeral directors in charge of arrangements. 'Mrs. Simmonds was born Sept. 8, 1882, in Reno county, Kan. She was married Oct. 5, 1900, in Kingman, Kan. She moved to southern Oregon 27 years ago from Colorado, with her husband, Joseph W. Sim monds, who preceded her in death in 1952. She was an ac tive member of the Gideons for many years. Survivors include four sons, Melvin A. Simmonds, Merle W. Simmonds and Otis L. Simmonds, all of Medford, arid Marshall Simmonds, New port, Ore.; four daughters, Mrs. Carrie L. Barnes, Turpin, Okla.; Mrs. Mildred R. Lub bers, Hilmar, Calif.; M r s. Pauline A. Barlow, and Mrs. Gladys M. Harris, both of Medford; four sisters, Mrs. Cora Moore, Sacramento, Cal if.; Mrs. Lulu Moore, Phoenix, Ariz.; and Miss Margaret Wil burn and Mrs. Edith Sickmon, both of Sylvia, Kans.; 32 grandchildren, 62 great-grand children, and 10 great-greatgrandchildren. Casket bearers will include J. D. Lubbers Jr., Duane L, Lubbers, Verle L. Lubbers, Vester V. Simmonds, Gene L. Barlow and Gary Lee Sim monds. Calendar Monday 6:30 D.m. - Mother-daughter banquet, First Methodist church. 7:30 p.m. . - Shady Cove PTA at school. . . 7:30 p.m. - Degree of Hon or lodge, Girls Community club. Tuesday 9:30 a.m. - Elizabeth, West minster Presbyterian church circles: Mrs. J. S. Richards, 509 Eastwood drive; Martha, Mrs. Clarence Young, 2418 Hillcrest; Ruth, Mrs. T. P. Barss, 332 Windsor ave. 9:30 a.m. - First Methodist church WSCS circles; 6, Mrs. Selma Rae, 819 Bennett ave.; 7, Mrs. Alfred Mercer, 736 West Jackson st.; 8, Mrs. W. R. Peabody, 922 Murray st.; 10, Mrs. Eugene Winters, 3254 Britt ave. 10 a.m. - First Methodist church, WSCS circle 9, Mrs. E. Cuffel, 909 North Central ave. 10:30 a.m. - Sam Valley Extension unit, home of Mrs. Edgar Pleasant. 12:30 p.m. - First Methodist church, WSCS, Circle 4, Mrs. Floyd Lewis, 710 Sherman st. 1 p.m. - First Methodist church, WSCS, Circle 2, Mrs. George Distell, 156 Vashti way; 3, Mrs. George Watson, 1638 Stewart ave.; 8, at church. 1 to 4 p.m. - Ashland Sen-1 ior club, Trinity Episcopal church recreation hall, 44 North Second st., Ashland. 1:30 p.m. - Rogue Valley Herb society. Girls Commu nity club. 1:30 p.m. - First Methodist church, WSCS, Circle 1, at church. 1:30 p.m. - Ladies of Elks, Elks temple. Portland Livestock Portland (UPIt USDA r."i 1100. Mixed -Rood choice lte.--i 950-1100 lb. 27-27.50; 82.1 lb. licit. n mostly choice 2B.S0; utlllty commercial cowi 13 50-18; canner cutter 12-15; good-choice feeder tteera 685-725 lb. 23-25 Calvei 150. Good-choice vtalera 21-30; moM medium Rood feeder calves 24-28; tome good 430 lb. itcer calves included at 28. HoKi BOO. U S. 1 and 2 200-230 tb. butchen 18-1825; few 2 and 3 grade 16.50-17; 1 and 3 iowi 350 lb Id Sheep 1000. Choice-prime 80-107 lb. nprfng Iambi 20 50-29.75: Rood choir 70 lb. 20: thorn old crop Iambi 1 1o 3 pelt around 107 lb. 15.50-15 75; twn utility-good 3 50-4. rTTiTSjrjjrja aitlllMWa. kirn DEBT LIMIT NO LIMIT ON DEBT As a limit on the growth of our Federal Government's debt, the U.S. debt limit is a massive failure. Only a few weeks ago, Congress raised the debt ceiling "temporarily" to $300 billion because it had no tolerable alternative except to lift It back to this record established at the the height of World War a deficit, it had to borrow billions to pay for the spending program authorized by Congress itself, the debt was pusing against the ceiling then in effect, a piercing of the legal ceiling would have created an unthinkable financial crisis and so Congress had to hike the limit. Before midnight June- 30, Congress will have to raise the ceiling "temporarily" again, because once more, it will have no tolerable alternative. If it doesn't do this, the ceiling will revert to the "permanent" maximum of $285 billion, and with the debt slated to total around $297 billion as June ends, part of our government's debt then would be "illegal" The ramification! that could result from this for in stance, a successful challenge in the courts of the legality of billions of dollars of U.S. debt, national default defy the imagination. So Congress will have to go along. Before it adjourns, Congress will have to boost the limit to above $300 billion, an all-time high in war or peace. In July-August, the Treasury will be borrowing around $5 bil lion, in September-October it will be borrowing another $5 billion. These borrowings are minimum, are certain, will come, I repeat, on top of a debt already around $297 billion. The totals will be swelled as the year rolls on and a deficit in the budget for fiscal 1963 is piled on top of the $7 billion or so budget deficit with which we're winding up fiscal year 1962. So the ceiling will be raised to the accompaniment of loud cries and bitter condemnation from Virginia's Dcino cratice Senator Harry Byrd whose nickname is "Mr. Debt Limit." Year after year, Byrd has used Administration re quests for increases in the debt limit to denounce the trend toward ever bigger budgets again. But he 11 get no farther this time than he has in the past for as Byrd admitted when he went along with the hike this past March, "Failure of this government to pay its bills would create chaos at home and abroad in the free world." The plain fact is that the spending programs which wtll peirce the debt ceiling are now being authorized by Con gress. The Treasury has the responsibility to raise the money to finance the programs. Collecting taxes is one way it can get the money needed. Borrowing and piling up debt is the other way. No matter what the debt ceiling, that's the way 11 is. rerioa. With minor and rare interruptions, up and up has gone the national debt ceiling since 1918, when it was initially placed at $28 billion. It is now at $300 billion, the World War II peak. Soon this record will be smashed and Ken nedy earlier this year indicated he would like a new celling ot $308 billion. Here's the story since 1954. In billions. Year-President Permanent 1954- Truman $275 1955- Eisenhower 275 1956- Eisenhower .275 1958-Eisenhower 283 1959- Eisenhower 285 1960- Eisenhower '285 1961- Kennedy 285 1962-Kennedy 285 1962-Kennedy 285 Debt ceilings are traditional, widespread throughout the world, a symbol of restraint on a government's power to build up debt. But any limit times in eight years is hardly a real limit-and the ninth rise in eight years is on the Better Times Due Castro Tells People Havana fUPD Premier Fi del Castro told the people of shortage-plagued Cuba Sun day that things would be bet ter in 10 or 20 years. In a 58-minute Mothers Day speech to about 60,000 students gathered at the air base outside Havana, Castro said that the duty of Cuban students now is to "study, study and study." Castro spoke hoarsely, and at times his voice was very lovi. A few hours before he spoke, the National Supply Board had announced that current rations of milk, soap and toothpaste would con tinue in force during May. Members of the Executive Board of the CTC Union Fed eration went- to a sugar plan tation near here Sunday to help get in the crop, drama tized government efforts to make up a lag of nearly a mil lion tons in this year's sugar production. AL BRADFORD 1.1 .' i iT, . WW MEET YOUR DEMOCRATIC CANCJDATES FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE Your Money's Worth By SYLVIA PORTER Copyright, Hall Syndicate, Inc. II: The Treasury was running and debt. He's set to do it coiling "Temporary" ceiling- $281 278 288 295 293 298 300 308? which must be raised eight way . To Seattle - Mrs. E. Donald Rice, 215 Saginaw drive, left Saturday for Seattle where she was called by the. death of her mother, Mrs. Hazel Bamb- cr. Mrs. Bamber, who hod spent much time here with the Rices, had been making her home with another daughter, Mrs. Helen B. Miller, Seattle. Funeral services will be held in Seattle, and interment will be in Fairmont cemetery, Spokane, Wash. Mrs. Rice was accompanied north by a daughter, Mrs. David Shearer, Klamath Falls. Son Born - Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Holzgang, Portland, are parents of a boy born re cently. 1 He weighed 7 pounds. Mrs. Holzgang is the former Miss Darrelyn Ettcl, daughter -of Mr. and Mrs. Et tel, 724 West Second st., Med ford. Holzgang is the son of Mr. and Mrs.' George Holz gang, 620' Park St., Medford. , - - ....... . j CHARLES CRARY Locals COFFEE HOUR Jackson Hotel Blue Room 10 a.m. Tuesday, May 15 Pd. Pol. Adv. by Jack-ton County Democratic Central Committee Chmn., George Lottin Semj Valley, Ore. Rugs From Scraps NEW RUGS from scraps! Clear instructions tell how to weave, braid, hook, or crochet rugs at so little cost. Pattern 7331: directions for 9 different rugs; necessary patterns; list of materials in cluded. Make a "rag" rug. THIRTY- FIVE CENTS (coins) for this pattern - add 10 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing. Send to Alice Brooks, care of Med ford Mail Tribune, Needle craft Dept., P.O. Box 163, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUM BER. NEVER-BEFORE VALUE! 200 designs to knit, crochet, sew, weave, embroider, quilt -in our 1962 Needlecraft Cat alog. Beautiful Bulkies in complete fashion section plus bedspreads, toys, linens, af- gnans, slipcovers, plus 2 free patterns. Send 25c now Weather FORECASTS Medford and vlpinltv. rnnairfnp. able cloudiness tonight with scat tered showers over mnunl.in. Partly cloudy Tuesday. Low tonight 35. High Tuesday 88 Western Oregon: Partly cloudv tonight and Tuesday. Low tonight iiii-m. . nix n lunaay on-iu. northern California: Fair tonight ana lucsaay. warmer in norm in terior ana near central coast Tuea- day. LUCAI, DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yester day 51: below normal a. Record high this date OS In 1939 Record low this date 33 in 1943. PRECIPITATION: None. Total this month .34 in., .18 Jn. below normal. Total since Sept. 1 14.77 in., US in. oeiow normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday urn, nigncst tnis a.m. nu'?.. High 4:00 24 CITV Vester- a.m. hr. day Low Prec. Brooklncs .. 59 39 Crater Lake Grants Pass 3B 20 .1(1 1 Howard Prairio .... 46 Klamath Falls 411 MEDFORD 60 Portland 59 Seattle 59 Spokane Yakima 60 42 Eureka ....... M Her! Bluff 6 Sacrnmento fit 4.1 411 40 no 33 San Francisco ........ oh Loi A nRelen A6 Phoenix 83 Denver 74 Chicago 85 Miami Beach 83 New York Washington. D C. . 61 FIVE-DAY FOTtEGAHT (Throuih May 19): , , Western Oregon Western Wasli i ........ warming tr.nri with tem peratures averaging near normal, eXCCp SIIKIHIV JVIV". ." .no. a.. ... western Oregon. Light showera llkelv Wednesday or Thursday and at ciid of week. High temperatures 58-08 western Washington and 60 72 western Oregon. Lows In 40s. Northern California No precipi tation likely except anowera ma.nu In mountalna at beginning of per iod. Temperatures below normal becoming near normal around mid dle of week. JAMES REDDEN jaieis iaie ..III Mjy VUI.V MONDAI. MAY 14. I3b2 BARRON - To Mr. and Mrs. Milton'H., post office box 126, Talent, May 11, 1962, a girl, 4 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. YOUNG - To Mr. and Mrs. Leslie H., 234 West Fifth St., Medford, May 11, 1962, a girl, pounds, at Rogue Vallev hospital. GILBERT-To Mr. and Mrs. Buddy. 527 Haven St., Med ford, May 12. 1962. a girl. pounds, at Rogue Vallev hospital. BARRY - To Mr. and Mrs. Thomas, 28 North Groveland ave., Medford, May 12, 1962, girl, 6J,4 pounds, at Roaue Valley hospital. JONES - To Mr. and Mrs. Jackson, 438 Weightman ave., Ashland, May 13, 1962, a boy, 7 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. LIME - To Mr. and Mrs. Frank, 825 North Central ave., Medford, May 14, 1962, a girl, 74 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. SMART - To Mr. and Mrs Charles, route 1, box 748,. Eagle foint, May 12, 1962, a boy, 6V4 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. IVvW - Best Qualified ... M&) "De" LEIGH p'SSy For SHERIFF I I ly 8 V". Chial Deputy Jackson Co. 5 I , 11 7rs total law enforcemant Cj Si: nl 8 yni local buiincsimin H - ifiill tirapa U laaasaj 4 y' military Native Oregoniln "W REPUBLICAN 34 yean in Jackson County I jj' Pd pol. adv. W. T. Clark7P.O. Box 534, Medford, TONITE, MAY 14th .l T S.O.C. presents, in concert I TlckcU on sale at Purucker't .nd at afcajlaiaeWMi I " The Mart, In Ashland. VuHT jr I - $3.00 $2.50 $2.00. ' - yV- I ,. liTCITITI'SWfRi- ROAD SHOW t I I JmiMvltlnjyM . attraction at yVa .iff " ' V WW REGULAR PRICES 5J I MtTpn. m i NT A 25 II Goldwyn- ml J" I Mayer f,-lfintl ai av m .-. r a . . m OP TUliLlAPOXaUlLYPOS GLENN FORD INGRID THULIN CHARLES In ClmmtSccpe , ORtVE'lM ft: LfvVTH NOW NIIMrVaV ' asaaam ONLY ONE COMPLETE SHOW tidieta Fiedrk BURTON MARCH delta I100M CinbmaScoPE: uxniiDC me i Shown Once 10:00 P.M. HERE! In SAM VOa.;i Friday, May 18 9 P.M. to 1 A.M. HETJCm ARMORY . Jpomored Ijy mmbri of lh Provldnc Oulld BeneHt of the Sacrtd Heart Hotpital Building Fund OBTAIN YOUR TICKETS NOW AT ... Purucker Mu5ic Houie, Swem't, th Finl Notional Bank, the United Stalet National Bank, ond the Columbian Optical company. A O Thli Adv. Courtesy of Medford Mell Tribune no limit - no Reseitve REMANUFACTURING AND PLANING MILL AUCTION tS3l.e00.t0 EVALUATION ALL INSTALLED NEW IN 19531 FORMER GEORGIA-PACIFIC HAMMOND LUMBER PLANT No. 2 FOOT OF WHIPPLE STREET EUREKA.CALIF. Thurs.MAY 24 10 A.M. EQUIPMENT HIGHLIGHTS Stetson Ross CV121-A and 6-I01-A PlsnarMatchtrs; (2) Station Ross 503-C S03-A P'appls Faad Tabl.i. Turner S2" Twin Band Rasaw (NEW '58) and Tatas American 54 ' Hor izontal Resaw. Irvlndon st Statson Ross Hula Trim Saws: Marshon 44" Band Rip; 20 n. ail aieai ia-aaw inmmer. Live Roll 4 Chain Transfers; Bart conveyors; an &iaei nreaaaown Hoist; Blowers; compressor. DRV KMTEIt SHID Kit 54- Sliil Hiui dawn Haiti; Imniten Hula Saw; Sumnsr FOWM PANELS: Sw.IcMk.hi, 600 Amp Mais Pin. I. HOllIrM STOCK: Hystii DT ISO an (2) Cil.niw Ferkl.ttt: (2) Hjntai Lumbar bamait. Pl.i m.., u,mt I.. n.,,i I. fix Sana far Clm.Hr. laaaect from Mai 17 MILTON J. WERSHOW CO. Utd.mg Amrliiwnrn tk facite Cwt 7213 Malrota Avt. WE. 3-8541 LOS ANGELES 46, CALIF. 2130 S.W. 5th Avt. CA. 2-9151 PORTLAND 1, OREGON JULIAN BUM raoucim dllKlad by VINCENTE MINNELLI BOYER LEE J. COBB PAUL HENREID AND UCTKOCOLOK MICliBI TONIGHT TWO SUPER PRODUCTIONS ESIIIETl J0ANC01UNS RICHARD EGAN DfMSO'DEA Shown Once 8:00 P.M. Person . . . DONAHUE I a Oa