!
Locals
Meeting Set - M e d f o r d
American Legion and auxil
iary will meet at 8 p.m.
Wednesday, June 13, in the
American Legion hall. This
will be the first meeting of
the new officers.
Meeting - Griffin Creek
Grange will meet at 8 p.m.
Thursday, June 14. Mrs.
Mabyl Buchanan and Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Bierma will serve
refreshments.
Rummage Sale- Central
Point Navy Mothers Club 466
will hold a rummage sale
Thursday, June 14, at the
Fehl building, 108 North Ivy
St., Medford. Persons having
items for the sale may call
Mrs. Hugh Glenn, 664-2534,
or Mrs. Frank Glenn, 664
2439, for pickup.
...
Runaway - A 15-year-old
girl who used to reside in Ash
land was picked up by Ash
land police about 10 p.m.
Monday. She was a runaway
from Hillcrest school at Sa
lem. Police transferred the
girl to Jackson county juve
nile home.
Permits - Two building per
mits to construct residences
have been issued by the Med
ford building department.
They were obtained by War
ren Arnold to erect a resi
dence valued at $11,500 at
2000 Delta Waters rd., and to
Peter Schmitz, to build a $12,
000 structure at 109 Ashland
ave.
Over-lhe-Counfer
Western Stocks
Bid Asked
Bank ot America 48 'i 5Us
Cal Pac Util 21 3i 24
Con Freight - Wi IHi
Cyprus Mines 23 Va 25 i
Equitable S & L 36 39 'i
1st National Bank txdl 54 5Bi
Jantzen 26 29
Morrison Knudsen 30 32'
Mult Kennels 4s 5a,a
N.W. Natural Gas 273i 291a
Oregon Metallurgical .. I1' 14
pp&L 24.i 263,i
PGE 23 24 ti
U.S. National Bank (xd) 67 72
United Util 25 ' 26n
West Coast Tel 18 W,
Weyerhaeuser 26 ,i 28','a
TIMBER ROOM
PACE 5 S0UTH
UHrC riverside
Complete
LUNCHES
Complete
DINNERS
75c up
1.00
Featuring from 5 to 10 p.m.
MEXICAN FOODS
STEAKS As You Like Them
Hours 5 A.M. to 10 P.M.
ON SCREEN 8:25 P.M.
Where
thegoys
noire
ACADEMY AWARD
Best Picture Comedy!
ON SCREEN 10:20 P.M.
'THE
OFTHE YEAR! W
mm
63
r
LESLIE PHILIPS SfiSVEV WON -
OBITUARIES
ELNORA FROST
Funeral services for Mrs.
Elnora Frost, of 3151 Delta
Walters rd., who died Sunday,
will be held at II am.
Wednesday in Hillcrest Me
morial chapel on the North
Phoenix rd. The Rev. Ber
nard Andrews of the First
Baptist church will officiate.
Committal will be in Hillcrest
Memorial park, with Conger-
Morris Funeral directors in
charge of arrangements.
Mrs. Frost was born Aug.
28, 1890, in Kansas. She
moved to Oregon in 1918, and
to Medford in 1947. On the
Delta Waters rd., she first
owned and operated the Delta
Aviary. In 1950, she opened
the Delta Pet Ranch, and had
been a prominent breeder,
especially on the West Coast,
of the tiny Maltese dogs since
then.
She was married April 11,
1909, in Rogers, Ark., to Arlie
A. Frost, who survives.
Other survivors include two
sons, Victor A. Frost, White
City, Ore.; and Donald M.
Frost, Medford; three daugh
ters, Mrs. Cleo E. Shopp, To
ledo, Ore.; Mrs. Lena White,
Roseburg, Ore.; and Mrs. Mil
dred Test, Page, Ariz.; three
brothers, Willard Hopper,
Kansas City, Mo.; Leonard
Hopper, Rogers, Ark.; and
Frank Hopper, Stillwater,
Okla.; a sister, Mrs. May
Wright, Dresden, Kans.; 11
grandchildren, and 17 great
grandchildren.
Casket bearers will include
Warren Dunlap, John Dun
lap, Lyle Brown, James Mar
tin, Lyle Heitz, and Donald
Ivie.
FUNERAL SERVICES
Funeral services for M.
Thomas Wray, 74, who died
Sunday, will be held at Perl
Funeral home at 10 a.m.
Wednesday.
Dr. D. Kirkland West of the
First Presbyterian church will
officiate. Entombment will be
in the Siskiyou Memorial
Mausoleum.
Honorary pallbearers will
be Glen Fabrick, Rolland Hub
bard, Herb Grey, Mark Goldy,
Eugene Thorndike, C. E. Wim
berly, Frank Van Dyke,
Thomas Popham and Carl
Von der Hellen.
Active pallbearers will be
Chester Hubbard, John Laird,
Dee Newton, Vince Claflln,
Claude Gunter and Arthur
Smith.
ARTHUR CLEMENT
Arthur R. Clement, 89, died
in Medford Monday evening.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Perl Funeral
home.
HENRY GOBER
' Funeral services for Henry
McCullock (Hank) Gober, 70,
of 2348 Griffin Creek rd., who
died Monday, will be held at
2:30 p.m. Wednesday in Con-
& 12 M.
ENDS TUES.
itirrtnj,
DOLORES HART
GEORGE HAMILTON
YVETTE MIMIEUX
JIM MUTTON
BARBARA NICHOLS
PAULA PRENTISS
ana nuwronj
CONNIE FRANCIS
"THE
APARTMENT"
"jack lemmon
SHIRLEY MacLAIHE
FRED MaoMURRAT
Rmy WalmtonEdm Admmm
HUAiEO THtU UNITED ARTISTS
ERIC BARKER
iwmm
i w. n v . i i
ger-Morris downtown chapel.
The Rev. Gilbert O. Skaar of
the First Southern Baptist
church will officiate. Commit
tal will be in Jacksonville!
cemetery.
Mr. Gober was born April
12, 1892, in Brady City, Tex.
He had lived in Oregon for 60
years, and for the past eight
years in the Griffin Creek
area.
He was a veteran of World
War I, serving In the Navy
from Nov. 24, 1917, to Oct. 21,
1919, and was a member of
the Veterans of Foreign Wars
of Medford, and of the Veter
ans of World War I.
Survivors include six broth
ers, Kusseu Gober, won
Creek, Ore.; Marion Gober,
Seattle, Wash.; Lawrence Go
ber, Medford; Elmer Gober,
and Clarence Gober, Klamath
Falls; and Lemuel Gober, Sac
ramento, Calif.; and five sis
ters, Mrs. Mennie Jones, Cen
tral Point; Mrs. Elsie Close,
Central Point; Mrs. Mary Col
bert, Medford; Mrs. Eva Tuck
er, Central Point; and Mrs.
Mae Fry, Trail, Ore. A broth
er, Lute Gober, preceded him
in death in 1957.
JOHN HENRY KORNER
John Henry Korner, 73, of
443 Oak St., Central Point,
died Monday at a local hos
pital. Funeral services will be
held at 11 a.m. Thursday in
the Chapel of Memories at
Memory Gardens Funeral
home, Medford.
Association To
Hold Photo Contest
A photo contest will be
featured at the July 2 meeting
of the Southern Oregon Pho
tographic association.
The contest will include
both color and black and
white prints on any subject.
Mrs. Mildred Nelson was ap
pointed publicity chairman
and custodian of club proper
ty at the association's last
meeting. She has offered to
open her dark room for mem
bers to use in preparing con
test prints.
At a meeting last week, Wil
liam C. Mowris, sales repre
sentative for Kodak Process
ing Laboratories in Palo Alto,
discussed color film handling
and processing.
Photography enthusiasts
have been invited to the open
meeting July 2.
Practical Nursing
Course Set in Fa!!
Applications are now being
accepted for a practical nurs
ing course to start in October
by the Southern Oregon
School of Practical Nursing.
The course is 12-months
long and consists of both class
room work and on-the-job hos
pital training. It will qualify
applicants for examination by
the Oregon State Board of
Nursing.
Although the course will
not start until this fall, inter
ested persons have been en
couraged to apply now be
cause of limited enrollment.
Brochures and application
forms may be obtained by con
tacting the Adult Education
office, Medford High school,
815 South Oakdale ave. The
office is open between 8:30
a.m. and 12:30 p.m. daily.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Continued
fair with not much change in tem-
Serature. Low tonight 40 to 43.
igh tomorrow 80 to 83.
Western Oregon: Mostly fair to
night and Wednesday, except for
some morning cloudiness along the
coast and over northern valleys.
Little temperature changes. Low
tonight 40 to 50. High tomorrow
70 to 78 in the north and 80 to 85
in the south, except 60 to 65 along
the coast. , , ...
Northern California: Fair tonight
and Wednesday, except high fog
near the coast. Little change in
temperature.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yestcr
dav fia; belnw normal 1.
Rernrrt hlffh this date 04 in 1939.
Record low mis date 31 in 1952.
PRECIPITATION : 24 hours
midnight, none. Midnight to 10
m none.
Total this month .15 Inch, 33
inch below normal.
Total since Sept. 1. I5.3B Inches,
t an Inch below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
25-,,, highest this a.m. bj
lilth 4:00 24
CITY Vester- a.m. nr.
day Low Free
Brookings ....
Crater Lake
Grants Pans
, 64
44
30
45
. 61
Howard Prairie .. 73
Klamath Fail , 75
MEDFORD 83
Portland 73
"ScatVle 72
Spokane 73
Yakima 79
Eureka 56
Red Bluff 91
Rrrmntft R3
50
"47""
I San Francisco 56
Los A n geles B 2
Phoenix 94
Denver S3
Chicago 79
Miami Beach 84
New York 80
Washlgnton. D. C 85
BRILL
METAL WORKS
Commarclll Industrial
Residential Sheet Metal We
57
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
A FRANTIC publisher sought out a psychiatrist and an
nounced, "I need help. Every night I find little men
running around under my bed." The doctor put him right
on the couch, but the
next day the patient
called to say, "It won't
be necessary for me to
come back. I got rid of
those nasty little men all
by myself." "How did
you accomplish that?"
asked the doctor. "I had
an inspiration," was the
happy reply. "I just cut
the legs off the bed."
At New York's Dutch
Treat Club, the late Frank
Crowninshield was once
obliged to introduce a poli
tician who had just been clobbered unmercifully in a bid for re
election to Congress. "Gentlemen," began Crowninshield in silky
tones, "our next speaker bears a strong resemblance to the earth.
You will recall that the earth is not a perfect spheroid, because
it is flattened at the poles. That's precisely what happened to
our next speaker."
The late Alice Duer Miller once caught a thief purloining her
silverware. "What are you doing in my dining room?" she de
manded. "Madam," admitted the thief, "I am at your service."
"I'll guarantee," added Miss Miller later, "that this is one
criminal who won't waste his time in Jail. He'll probably writo
his alibiography!"
1S63, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features SyndlcsU
The Family Council
Editor's note: The Family Council coniiiti of a judge, a
phychiatrlst, three clergymen, three editors and a women'i editor.
Each article is a summary of a family disagreement presented to the
Council. The Council deals with problems, major and minor,
encountered by guidance counselors and social workers. Edited by
by Mrs, Alma lenny. (Copyright by General Features Corp.
George H. His play is a
flop. You'd think he'd quit
now.
Randolph S I'm -not dis
couraged. I learned a lot and
I'll keep trying.
.
George H. As an old
friend, I'm begging Randy to
quit a losing game. The Broad
way bug has bit him and to
satisfy it he's giving up jobs,
friends, savings and a normal
life.
He finally got an off-Broadway
group to included a play
he wrote in their repertory of
Experimental Theatre. The
critics found it unintelligible.
Can't he take that expensive
hint and get back into some
thing solid? After all his wait
ing and sacrifices, what did
they get him? Just a chance
to look foolish.
He can get a job tomorrow
as an office manager, his old
field. But instead he's holing
up in a cheap room to write
another play.
Randolph S. Okay. I'm no
O'Neill. But I'm still not con
vinced that I ought to go back
to ordering carbons and
watching the secretarial pool.
I've taken a few courses in
playwriting and the instruc
tors liked my work. The only
way I'll ever find out wheth
er others will like it, too, is
to stick my neck out and dis
play my stuff. If the critics
lambaste me, okay. I'll learn
what I can from them, but
they won't silence me. Not yet,
anyway. If I was unintellig
ible, maybe it wts their fault.
Maybe they were unintelli
gent. I appreciate George's con
cern. I ll try not to stick him
for tickets and production ex
penses again. But I owe it to
myself to try again.
The Council: An old prov
erb reminds us that people
only throw stones at a tree
thats loaded with fruit. No
critics are flaying George be
cause he s not growing any
interesting fruit. It's safer and
more comfortable not to. All
the more credit then to Ran
dolph who, renouncing the
conformist humdrum life
which can be his, sticks his
neck out and takes it on the
chin in an effort to determine
the extent of his creative tal
ent.
At this stage we're on
Randolph's side. He's like the
piccolo player who can t un
derstand why what he puts
in sweet comes out sour! We'd
like to encourage him to pur
sue that "why,", at least long
enough for a considered and
definitive verdict from a body
of detached experts. We gath
er that there's no money
emergency. George's objec-
TONIGHT
Two Shows 7 and 9:20
THE YEAR'S
BIGGEST WESTERN
tion is mainly to Randy's total
absorption in what may be a
dead-end project. Perhaps one
of the foundations which aid
promising play wrights can
be approached. Theirs would
be one of the verdicts Ran
dolph could be guided by,
rather than George's.
The important thing for
this aspiring playwright to
determine is whether he has
real talent. Some pluggers
turn out to be merely stub
born and delusional. The
friends and relatives who tel!
them they're geniuses fan
their hopes by promoting
(and paying for) what the
profession calls "vanity" pro
ductions. Hence it is urgent
that Randolph get the low
down fast, the brutal truth if
must be, from objective pro
fessionals. Failure then won't matter.
There is no disgrace in fail
ing when one has reached out
for a high goal and tried one's
best. Perhaps the real dis
grace Is not trying anything
hard and, worse, mocking
those who do! Or, to put it in
the words of a sign outside a
church we passed, "it is better
to shoot at something and
miss than to aim at nothing
and hit it."
And there's still the chance
that Randolph may succeed.
Surprises come to him who
undertakes a thing without
realizing how hard it is.
Education Degree
Received by Student
Miss Mavis Peters, daugh
ter of Mrs, Fay M. Christian
son of Jacksonville, received
a bachelor of arts degree in
education at Arizona Slate
university, Tempe, last week.
Miss Peters plans to teach
in the Phoenix area this fall
and continue her education in
special education with empha
sis on speech correction.
Some 1,715 degrees were
given at the largest com
mencement exercises in the
history of the university. Prin
cipal speaker was George W.
Romney, gubernatorial candi
date in Michigan.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPIT Dairy marketr
Eggs To rctailen : A A extra
larpe 39-42; AA large 3S-40c; A
large 34-37c; AA medium 29-3Sc;
AA small 24-29c; cartons J-3c
hijrhpr.
Butter To re1ailer: AA and A
prints f)7c; cartons lc higher; B
print 88c.
Cheese (medium cured) To re.
tailers: 47-481ac; processed Ameri
can 3-10 lb. loaf, 43-48iiC.
Portland (UPIi Dressed chick
ens No 1 (trade dressed to re
tailers: Fryers, whole drawn, 31-
38e lb.; eut-up, 3fi-42c lb,; hens,
light tvpe. whole drawn. 23-2f)c lb.;
light type hens, cut-up 26-34c lb.;
heavy whole 36-39c lb.
ENDS TONITEI
foe me ee$r of rut hmwI
Mawjui
HalWaws
3UCMMI-UWS6UI'f'lln.'irinuslius
H'wsS TBCMH1C0WR
Quotes From the News
By Uniitd Press International
Pittsburgh Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, disclosing that a
force of 57,000 counter-guerrilla specialists will be trained
in the coming year:
"Many of us in Washington feel that we've been put on
notice that a new front has been opened. The current events
in Southeast Asia shows that this is not just talk or bluff
but very real threat,"
New York James Patrick Mullooly, arrested for shoot
ing an oil company executive who was dating his sister:
"The man needed killing. Somebody had to kill him. I
took it on myself. I juit couldn't tee a married man taking
out single girl."
Mobile, Ala. Former Gov,
intimating he will leave the field of politics to younger men
With my folksy style of
point where a candidate for
every family in Alabama."
Sherman, Tex. Farm hand
charges of killing a farmer's son:
"I guess I'll get the electric chair ... I want it."
Exposition To
Icecap Subject of Talk
Experiences on the Green
land icecap during the Inter
national Geophysical year ex
position were related Monday
noon by Odd Bjerke, survival
specialist, at the Medford
Chamber of Commerce Round-
table.
Bjerke is in Medford this
summer as YMCA camp di
rector at Diamond lake.
Stressing the need for
knowledge of how to survive
in the extreme cold, Isolated
regions of the Far North,
Bjerke explained that the
same basic knowledge should
be known by all who hunt,
camp or go Into wilderness
areas.
"Snow is nature's best In
sulation, if you know how to
use it," the speaker continued.
"Your clothing is a shelter
and your body is the stove,"
he continued. He stressed the
importance of a person dig
ging himself a shelter if lost
in cold weather.
Seven Arctic Trips
The speaker, who has made
seven trips to the Arctic and
two to the Antarcttc, said that
on the Greenland Icecap there
is no density to the surface
Births
SURGEON - To Mr. and
Mrs. John L., 1119 East 11th
St., Medford, June 9, 1962, a
boy, 9 pounds, at Rogue Val
ley hospital.
de BROEKERT - To Mr.
and Mrs. Gary J., 1337 Win
chester ave., Medford, June
9, 1962, a boy, 9Vi pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
RAINES - To Mr. and Mrs.
James Earl, box 416, Central
Point, June 10, 1962, a girl,
714 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
McDANIEL - To Mr. and
Mrs. John W., 989 Old Stage
rd., Rogue River, June 10,
1962, a girl, 7:i,4 pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
WAGER - To Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Francis, 1300 Murray
st Medford, June 11, 1962,
a girl, 5!i pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
NAGLE - To Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Henry, route 1, box
514D, Willow Springs rd.,
Central Point, June 12, 1962
a boy, B pounds, at Rogue Val
ley hospital.
KEITH - To Mr. and Mrs.
James Russell, route 1, hox
55, Evans Creek rd., Rogue
River, June 12, 1962, a boy,
654 pounds, in Rogue Valley
hospital.
CROY - To Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Leo, 32 Ross court,
Medford, June 12, 1962, a boy,
7 pounds, in Rogue Valley
hospital.
NORTH
WA CAR LOAD
TUES.-WED.-THURS.
ELIZABETH TAYLOR
IN TWO OF HER GREATEST HITSI
TENNESSEE
CatlL (91.
Lrcoto. J
ELIZABETH TAYLOR
PAUL NEWMAH BURL IVES
IICK fUOITH
CARSON ANDERSON
James E. (Kissin Jim) Fotsom,
campaigning, it's come la the
governor has to meet almost
Eugene Welch, who faces
Greenland
snow and that a snow block
IVs feet in diameter will yield
about one pint of water.
During his stay In Green
land with five scientists,
Bjerke said that the tempera
ture dropped to 88 degrees
below zero with winds 125
miles per hour. The purpose
of their exposition was to
measure the earth's surface
to see if it is possible to
establish rocket sites on the
icecap. He said that this re
gion was possibly the hardest
place on earth to live.
The naturalist showed
colored slides of the Green
land Icecap and reviewed var
i o u s problems experienced
due to the weather. He said
that planes could not rely on
radar in the area due to the
density of snow crystals in
the air.
These same snow crystals,
which comprise the Icecap,
are so fine that they can sift
in through the smallest crack.
He said that the particles with
the wind succeeded in cutting
an igloo in two within four
days.
Frost Formed
Bjerke said that the exposi
tion found that frost formed
on their radar antenna,
phenomena which was not
supposed to occur in the re
gion, thus changing the stand
ard operating procedures.
Experiments showed that
the darker the smoke, the bet
ter it could be seen from the
air in that area, and that
sun mirror, used for slgnai-
Hna. is visible for 65 miles
The speaker explained that
85 oer cent of the deatns
caused bv exposure while per
sons are lost could be avoided
if the person had known the
basic survival techniques. He
sniH that that was what he
was trying to teach the YMCA
hnys at the camp this sum
mer. The speaker was intro
duced by Bob Jones, YMCA
director.
Investment Funds
Noon quotations on lactad
stocks :
vunil Bid Askrd
Bullock 11.60 I2.T2
Chamlcal Fund 0.17 0.08
Colonial Bner tOJ UM
Eaton Howard Bin .. n.oi " '
Fidelity 13 00 14 "
Fundamental Invest. 8.34 S.1J
Group Sec Avla-Eltc 8.00 6.58
GroupSec Com Sill 1168 .12.70
Group 3ec Pair .... 10.24 1121
Kevstone B-3 15.31 16.71
Keystone B-4 0.03 0.86
Keystone K-2 51 4.03
Keystone S-l 10.05 20.70
Keystone 8-2 100S 11.08
Keystone S-3 11.00 13.08
Kevstone S-4 3.72 4.08
Mom tnv. Grth Stk am 7.2a
Nat'l Grnwth 6.60 7.31
Stocks 18.32 17.64
TV-Elec 8.81 7.20
United Accum -. 12.44 13 80
United Canada 1S.OS 17 4S
United Continental.. 8.23 681
United Income 10 62 11.83
United Science 5.87 6.20
Value Line Ino 4 B8 8 31
Variable 5.75 624
Wellington 13.33 14.52
rUIFIC HIGHWAY
ELIZABETH TAYLOR
LAURENCE HARVEY
EDDIE FISHER
THE iTORT
OF GLORIA...
who wtket up
htmtd!
BUTTERFIELD
&
"
TUESDAY, JUNE 12.
Polly Adler, Famed
Madam, Dies at 62
Los Angeles - tUPH - "I was
determined to be the best
damned madam in all Amer
ica."
Polly Adler made no ex
cuses for her life nor the
course it took.
For more than 25 years she
ran one of the most exclusive
-and notorious - bordellos in
New York. Her clientele in
cluded gangsters, police offi
cers, well known politicians
and members of the socially
prominent set.
Now Polly Adler is gone, a
victim of cancer at the age of
62. She died Saturday at the
Cedars of Lebanon Hospital
here.
Telephone Firm
Signs Welcome
Tourists to Sfafe
"Operation Welcome Mat"
received a welcome boost this
week when Pacific North
west Bell 'started placing
special signs welcoming tour
ists on about 550 company
trucks and rigs throughout
the state.
The official green welcome
mat in the telephone com
pany signs appears as an in
Station to step through an
open door into the typical
Oregon vista of trees and
mountains beyond.
This design, according to J.
H. Creager, Bedford PNB
manager, was developed for
variety of promotion mate
rials to be used by his com
pany as a result of the spe
cial "sell Oregon" meeting
called last month by Gov.
Mark O. Hatfield. The gover
nor called upon all Oregon
ians to give a friendly wel
come to the thounands of Se
attle World's fair tourists
who will be passing through
the state this summer.
Some of the other ways in
which the telephone company
is backing the program:
Special inserts carrying
the "Welcome Mat" message
will be included with some
425,000 telephone bills dur
ing June. The envelopes will
bear the postage meter slo
gan "Lets tell the world
about Oregon.
A statewide employee In
formation program, bolstered
by special posters urging
friendly welcome for
the
World's fair tourists,
they will help us tell the
world about Oregon."
Posters in all company
business offices ana cards In
thousands of telephone
booths.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPII USOA Cattle
250; standard Holstein steer 20;
few ctttter-titlllty heifers 15.50-18;
few utility range cows 16-17.50;
canner-cutter 12-15.
Calvea SO; aood-chofca vealers
25-27: medium feeder calves 25-26.
Hoaa 3QQ; 1 and 2 butchera
18 50-10; lot 3and3 at 2401b. 17.58.
Sheep 500: chotce-prlme spring
Iambs 21-21.25: good-choice 77-81
lb. 10.50-20.50; cull-good ewes 2-4.
AWARD
T206 N. Riverside
How Features BUFFET DINNERS
Chuck Wagon Style 5Q
5 to 8 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.
Also Features
Weitreu Served)
From 4-1 1:30 p.m. Sunday, too. up
J OUR BUFFET will offer-templing ulads, cold
eui, meatf, relishes, barbecued prime ribs
and chicken-vegetables.
J OUR REGULAR DINNERS offer prime rib
$2.00, fillet $2.75, New York $2.50, fop air
loin $3.75, club $2.35, tenderloin $2.55.
PLUS SEAFOOD, CHICKEN AND MANY OTHER
MENU FAVORITES. ,
' Dinnert include Tower totted salad with dress
ing, baked potato, dainty bread loaf, beverage
and dessert.
-COCKTAILS AVAILABLE-
Now Appearing In Our Melody Room
fJjtlS Starting t 9 P.M.
"BOB and DONA DUO"
Featuring Outstanding Pianist-Bob Anderson
We'll Have Wednesday Nile Dance-Part
(Latin MusicJ
Sleaks
Chicken
A 9
But still remaining is the-
memory of the penniless Rus
sian immigrant who molded
an illicit empire that reaped a
fortune and carved a life both
praised and pitied. -
In her best-selling book
summing up her flamboyant":
and baudy career, she wrote:"
"I am one of those people who ;
just can't help getting a kick ";
out of life - even when it's
a kick in the teeth."
Gbscana End -
For Polly Adler, life was a .
rollicking rampant surge ;
through the highest echelons''
of society parenthetically in- "
serted between a frugal be
ginning and an obscure end.
But Polly Adler's enchant- "
ment with the stark realities "
of life and its mortal quirks
was never dimmed.
Nine years before her death.
In her nationally acclaimed
autobiography, "A House is
Not a Home," she wrote:
"Sure it was a tough life. It
was a hell of a life. But as I -hasten
to point out before ev--J
erybody else does, no tougher '
for me than for plenty of -working
girls who didn't bo--!
come madams."
Despite her notoriety as a
madam, she spent only 30
days in Jail after pleading
guilty to a charge of running
a disorderly house in 1935.
NOW
Something
NEW
at the
GROTTO
Enjoy A Complete
7 Course
ITALIAN
DINNER
Served From
5 p.m. to 10 p.m
Also Your Choice of
American Dinners
AS USUAL
The Grotto's Famous
Chuck Wagon
Lunch
Served from 1 1 a.m. to
Attulr $1 ,00
Children Under 10 60c
Air Conditioned
For Your Comfort
Closed Mondays at 2 p.m.
(Lunch Onfy Served Mon.)
WINNING
Regular Dinners
$195
l
Prime
Rib
Seafood
1962
The ManWio Shot
ZibertyValance
1v m rum
BUS KARVSH OBWEM - 5e- wmY
hasMIIIW MMf KUM t01 VX&X
Stainless, Gsl'snirtd
end Ceppii Fabricatisn
2287 West Main
Si?(EY JAWES r-x nwvrMK- o-kw h i '
PLUS
TUES.-WED.-THURS.
sue
DINA MEWRILL
VARSITY
"CURTAIN AT
IIGHT-THIRTY
lH0H8 772-4440
mo-m noun
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