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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1962)
Local and Fir Pul Out - Firemen extinguished a fire in a trash barrel in the 1100 block of North Central ave. about 7:45 a.m. today. They said that the barrel was too close to a building and grass. Dinner Planned - Grants Pass, Medford, and Ashland chapters of the National Asso ciation of Retired Civil em ployees will hold a potluck dinner in Grants Pass Wed nesday, July 11, at noon. Those attending should take some item of food and table service. Those needing trans portation may call Edwin Eg- gers. 773-4376. or A. E. Hutch- lllsuii. i " I SHAK1TS PIZZA PARLOR TRY OUR FAMOUS PIZZA SUPREME MADE WITH 7 KINDS OF CHEESE, BAKED IN 750 OVENS FRIENDLY FAMILY ATMOSPHERE large or Small Parties ALWAYS WELCOME OPEN NOON DAILY ORDERS TO GO 773-7721 BETWEEN RIVERSIDE AND CENTRAL ON EAST JACKSON 215 E. JACKSON MEDFORD 1MB Here TOIITE! HOW MUCH BIG EXCITEMENT CAN THE BIG SCREEN HOLD? ...miS MUCH! .., -rv Iv&r WCURI1S lANCASTElCURTIS SJERNESTBORGNINE X L0L10BRIGIDA XTU JANCT LEIGH CINEMASCOPE: Color bv Ds luit ....leased thru UNIUO MUSIS On at 8:25 pm & 12:20 am : KENNEDY ! ROCK HUDSON. -' UtEND OF : THE RIVER ! TECHNICOLOR ' ; lULIt lOlMS-UW NtlSOH-afflT M0RG1W Iiiiiiiiiiiiiiw DOORS OPEN AT EIGHT ,! STEWART VfflE k4EM ARTHUR LWm i TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY! A COLD WIND IN SO TORRID. SO TENDER AUGUST Personal Meeting Set - Crater Lake chapter. Oregon State Em ployees association, will meet Tuesday, July 10, at 8 p.m. in the Carpenters Union hall 123'2 West Main st. Car Entered - A car owned by Rich McDowell, Central Point, was broken into during the week end, the owner told state police Monday. Thieves cut the top of the sports car convertible and stole the chrome gear shift, he said. Dead Fith Found - A pile of dead fish just off the River rd. out of Shady Cove was reported to state police dur ing the week end. Officers say the fish might have been dynamited. Grange To Meet - Griffin Creek Grange will meet Thursday. July 12, at 8 p.m. Mrs. C. V. Calkins and Mr. and Mrs. Norman Smith will be in charge of refreshments, i Picnic Planned - The an- nual Montana state picnic will j be held in the Grants Pass ; city park Sunday, July 15. j Luncheon will be served at ! noon, with coffee, beverages, j and ice cream furnished, j Those attending should take I table service and an article to I be sold at a white elephant ' sale. Presented Award -Fred Lyon, parts sales manager for Crater Lake Motors, Inc., has been presented the first an nual Golden Circle award by Ford division of Ford Motor company. The award is based on accomplishments in mana gerial responsibilities. The winner received a certificate of qualification and a coat lapel gold pin. Investment Funds ! Nnnn quotations on selected stocks: fund Rid Asked Bullock 11 35 12.45 I Chemical Fund 8 96 9.75 I Colonial Ener 10.20 11.15 I Eaton Howard Stk 11.53 12.46 . Fidelity 13.46 14.53 i Fundamental Investors 8.17 8.95 ' Group Sec-Avia-Elec 6.05 6.64 Group Sec-Corn Stk .. 11.56 12.66 Group Sec Petr 10.21 11.18 Kevstone B-3 14 60 15.93 Kevstone B-4 8.86 9.67 Keystone K-2 4.39 4.79 Kevstone S-l 18.89 20.62 Kevstone S-2 ' . 10.B2 11.82 Kevstone S-3 1176 12.84 Kevstone S-4 3.50 3.83 Mass Inv Grth Stk .... 6.56 7.17 Natl Growth . 6.66 7.26 I TV - Elcc 6.53 7.12 I United Accum 12.16 13.29 I United Canada 15.40 16.74 lTnltprf rnntinentai .... 5.95 6.50 United Income 10.61 11.60 l!i!H s,.fnc 5.48 5.99 I Value Line Ine 4.85 5.30 1 Welllnston 13.22 14.41 B neHHIKSMt u. - TICHUCOtoe I e-relIM !' 0"10 BTIS" On at 10:25 pm WINCHESTER "73" THE GUN THAT . WON THE WEST : o.t r. f.i.is: n at -Thirty" LOLA ALBRIGHT scon MARLOWE 4k Family Council Editors note: The Family Council consuls of a Judge, a psychiatrist. three rlerrymen, three editors and a women's editor. Each article is a summary of a familv dtsacreemenl presented to the Council. The council deals with prublems. major and minor, encountered by guidance coun selors and social workers. Edited bv Mrs. Alma lienny. iCopyritht by General features Corp.) Mrs. I. B. He refuses to entertain his brother on the campus. Jeffrey B. He should make friends with kids his own age. Mrs. I. B. We have two sons, six years apart in age. The older one, Jeff, is 21 and is remaining at college over the summer to earn credits toward a graduate degree in fine arts. Since our younger boy has no special plans, we've asked Jeff to invite him up to the Maine campus for a week, or at least a long week end. Ronny was up there two years ago with my husband and me, and loves the place. But Jeff says no. He thinks we're just pamper ing Ronny by letting him get away from home. The truth is that Ronny is at an awkward stage. He's too old for camp and loves to be among adults and older stu dents. Most of the kids his age bore him. He's extremely bright, an A student. We feel he'll find just the right group of friends when he's older. Meanwhile. Jeff should help us add to his contacts and ex periences. Jeffrey B. Ronny insists on ignoring all the attractions which are right in his own back yard. Distant hills look green to him, especially the ones around me. The truth is he's snobbish toward most of the kids in the neighborhood and he has no reason to be. He's brainy, yes, but he can learn plenty from them, even if they don't get A's. They know how to be friendly and how to fill their time pleasant ly. They don't walk around moping with a long face on them, like Ronny. What gets me is the way my parents fall for his big act. He's unhappy at home, he has no friends, he has noth ing to do. Boohoo. So what? So send him to Jeff. Jeff will cheer him up. They're also planning to send him to Vir ginia to visit our uncle, and maybe to Canada for a French course. They should force him to join in with the teen-agers at home instead of being so standoffish. The Council: Jeff knows all the rules. Now he must learn about the legitimate excep tions. In general, yes, a teen ager should hobnob with teen agers. Most of them do. But occasionally one of them, for a psychologically valid reason, is a holdout. We believe this is true of Ronny and that his deviation from the norm is a temporary one, not an ingrain ed isolationism. In finding some justification for Ronny's dim view of local pickin's, we point out to Jeff the circumstances which may make his brother a "special case." Being a 6-year-young brother, he's grown up to the tune of advanced and adult conversation. He's always been at home with older age groups. This, in turn, may have made him rather poor company for his contempor aries. Who knows but that his early efforts at joining in, at becoming one of the guys, met with rebuff. He may have I been hurt and discouraged from trying to "crash" groups where the only common bonds (for him) were age and neighborhood. Il isn't neces sarily snobbery which makes Ronny keep his distance, n may Well be self-protection. And forcing him to mix local ly, as Jeff suggests, might re sult in further emotional hurts and really turn him j antisocial. No. we agree with Mrs. B., who hopes that Ronny will en rich his social sense through far-ranging personal contacts during this period of his life when his peers and he may not see eye to eye mentally and emotionally. By the time Ronny reaches college age, ' two factors will ease his way socially. First, glaring differ ences in height, weight, tastes and talents aren't as conspicu ous on a college campus as on a high school playground. Second, there's a varied in gathering of young people, providing a wide choice of friend?: attachments occur through similarities of out look and enthusiasms, cross ing lines of age and back ground. Ronny will find his com fortable' niche in a few years. Meanwhile Jeff should coop erate in permitting him to fish f"r social experiences from a larger pond than runs past his front dnor. The im portant thing is that he learn how i enjoy a group. It doesn't matter where. MfcDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF FATHER wandered into the kitchen late cne night and found a persistent and in the father's eyes utterly undesirable suitor of his daughter chewing on a succulent turkey leg. "Tell me," rasped the father, "what other kinds of work do you do besides cleaning out refrigerators?" Mr. Thompson came home from the office one even ing with a horrendous tale of the lunch he had eaten. "The restaurant looked in viting." he said, "so I tried It for a change. Sine enough, the soup, salad, and rjeef were delicious. But the pie was inedible and the coffee was slop. Do voti know what I discovered? The place had changed hands right In the middle of my meal.'' A young man who was making quite a name for himself in a Western TV series mined everything by resorting to an analyst's couch. Now, reports Hank Giant, every time the sheriff asks him, "Which way did the varmint go?" our hero bursts Into teals and cries, "I'm not sure, I'm not sure." One of old Deerfield's thriftiest citizens bore the quaint name of Consider Dickinson. Consider paid his serving maid the prince ly wage of one dollar a week. Then he found she was saving' money on it. So he married her. C 1962, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by Ktnt Features Syndicate In the Day's News By FRANK Hodgepodge in the news; In Washington, the big question is whether or not to cut taxes (meaning federal taxes) and if so WHEN. A tax cut is endorsed by such oddly mated organizations as the Chamber of Commerce of the United Slates and the AFL CIO. At his new? conference, President Kennedy said he will stand by his intention to wait until next year for a gen eral tax reduction. The AFL ClO says he is dead wrong in not asking for it RIGHT NOW. The AFL-CIO statement adds: "The economy is not re sponding as it should. Every thing looks bad and nothing looks good." WHY a tax cut? The theory is that it will leave more money in the peo ple's pockets for the people to spend. If the people spend more money, the theory goes, business will gel belter and there will be more jobs. SOMETHING to think about: J A tax cut will also IN CREASE the NATIONAL DEBT if we don't stop spend ine and putting it on the cuff The conservative viewpoint: SPEND LESS, and then in time we can safely TAX LESS. A RUGGED moment came the other day to Mrs. Ed mund Brown, wife of Califor nia's governor, when she dis covered while riding with her husband in a motorcade of cars carrying delegates from the Governors Conference at Hershcy, Pa., to nearby Inde pendence Hall in Philadelphia to listen to President Ken nedy's speech, thai she had left her money and her valu ables behind at the hotel in Hershey. The Hershey police were notified and they has tened to the hotel, but found the dresser drawer where she had left them EMPTY. IT HAD a happy ending. An AIDE to Governor Brown (a REAL aid, let's add) had frirked the room, in cluding the dresser drawers, found the valuables and took them to Philadelphia for safe keeping. It's aides like that that are worth while. TjROM Wichita Falls, Tex.: A 100-pound blonde, wav ing a spike-heel shoe like a war club, sent a 215-pound The Songs and Piano of FRED SKINNER AT THE PIANO BAR HOTEL MEDFORD "A FLASHBACK TO THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF BOOGIE AND BLUES" ". . . Hal had it all , . . radio, rtn, TV, re cordings, nam engagements!" Featured at the Hollywood Ambassador, the Chicago Congress hotel, and the Kit Kat Club, WABC-New York. He has also appeared with George Raft in "The Class Key" and "Whistle Stop". He has toured Mexico, Hawaii, end Europe. -s JENKINS wrestler to the hospital with lacerations that equired sev eral stitches to close. The blonde was a young woman named Sue McFarland. She said the wrestler had pinched her. So she waylaid him out side his dressing room and bushwhacked him with the deadly shoe when he came out. TRIPLING was apparently right. The female of the species IS more deadly than the male. Especiall.- since the advent of the spike-heeled shoe. Over-fhe-Counter Western Slocks Dv United Press International Bid Asked Bank of America 49 u Cl Pac Util 22 Con Freiftht 10 Cvprus Mines 23' 4 Equitable S & L. 35 First National Bank .... 55 Jantzen 25 "i .12 34 lls 25'. 38',, .19', 2B', 32 Is S'.a 29', lis 2fi 2S, 71'j 2.1's IS". 21Ak Morrison Knudsen ...... 30' Mult KenneU 4'i, N.W. Natural Gas 27a Oregon Metallurgical ., 1 PP&L 24' PCE 24 U.S. National Bank flR'i United UH1 24 West Coast Tel 18 'i Way erhae user 2Mb Portland Livestock Portland (UPII IfSDA Cattle 1400. Choice 985 lb. steers 27.40; mixed good and choice 900 1080 lb. 26.50-27: standard and good 20-26: slaughter heifers 825 lb. 26: cutter cows 12-16; canner cows 10-12. Calves 200. Good and choice vcalers and slaughter calves 24-27. Hogs BUO. f ully aieaay on an hogs: 1 and 2 butchers 19.75-20: 2 and 3 at 19-19.30; sows 1 and 2 13-16.30. Sheep 2.000. Choice and prime slaughter spring lambs 20.50-21; good 70 lb. 19 Portland Produce Portland (UPII Dairy market: Eggs To retailers; AA extra large. 34-37C; A large 36-41C: A large 34-37C; AA medium 31-37c: AA small 24-34C cartons l-3c higher. Butter To retailers; AS ann A prints 67c; cartons lc higher; B prints 86c. Cheese (medium cured! - To re tailers: 47-48' 2C: processed Ameri can 3-10 lb. loaf. 43-46,c. Portland (UHli uressea chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn, ju 38c lb.: cut-up. 36-42C lb-: hens light tvpe. whole drawn. 23-29C lb.; light type hens, cut-up 26-34C lb.; heavy whole 36-39C lb. PROMOTED Jack M. Shoemaker, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Shoe maker, 2070 Ridgeway dr., was recently promoted to the rank of lance corporal in the United States Marine Corps He is serving with Marine Air Base Squadron 11 in Iwakuni, Japan. Funeral Tuesday For E. W. Brown; Former Plumber Funeral services for Km mett W. Brown. 70. of 121 Genessee St., who died Satur day, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Perl Funeral home. Officers of the Medford Masonic lodge will officiate. Entombment will follow in the Medford IOOF mauso leum. Mr. Brown, the son of George Brosvn and Adeline Tibbctts, was born on Jan. 13, 1892, in St. Joseph, Mo. He i came to Medford from Port Angeles, Wash, in 11118 and worked as a plumber for var ious plumbing shops. In 1940, he opened his osvn plumb ing business at 339 Mae si. known as Brownie's Plumb ing. Later he moved Ihe shop to 519 Crater Lake ave. and retired in 1957. He was a member of the Port Angeles Elks lodge, the Medford Masonic lodge, and the Crater Lake chapter, Roy al Arch Masons. He was a life member of the Malta Com mandery Knights Templar, Medford Consistory Scottish Rite and the Hilah Temple Shrine. On Feb. 21, 1931, in Klam ath Falls, he was married to Fern I. Lewis, who survives. Other survivors include one sister, Mrs. Harry Egbert, Ya kima, Wash.; two nephews, Sherwood Egbert, South Bend, Ind. and W. E. Egbert, Tacoma, Wash. Honorary pnllbearcrs will be A. C. Lcighton, Lewis Jantzer, Henry Enders. Ches ter Hubbard, Paul Lea and J. H. Creagcr. Active bearers will be Charles Bottjer, How ard Bush, A. K. Morse, Joe Jorgen.en, Ray Frisbie and Les Taylor. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Fair through Tuesday. Chance of brief early morning cloudiness over the valley. Low tonight 43-50. High Tuesday 63-88. Western Oregon: Low cloudiness along coast, spreading Inland dur ing late night and early motning. A little drizzle in morning; o.ner wise, fair through Tuesday. Low tonight 48-35. High Tuesday 60-78. except 85 in extreme south Interior and 60-65 on coast. Northern California; Fair lonlglil and Tuesday, but fog a.ul low clouds on coast. Little temperatura change. TEMPERATURE: Mean yester day 73; above normal 2. Record high this ante ltn in inn. Record low this date 44 in 1011. PRECIPITATION. None. Total this month 0, .08 In. below normal. Total since Scnl. 1 13.38 in.. 2.40 in. below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday l.Vr. hlghesl this a.m. 80',;,. High' 4:00 34-'" CITV Vaster- a.m. Iir. day Low Pre.'. Brookings 64 Grants Pasa fin Howard Prairie .. . 70 Klamath Falls .. . 82 MEDFORD Ill Portland 70 36 Seattle 73 Spokane 83 Yaklma 91 Eureka 37 Red Bluff 94 Sacramento 90 San Francisco .. . 36 Los Angeles . 87 Phoenix . Denver -.108 Chicago 68 7fl 73 73 Miami Beach .. .. New York . Washington. D.C. 88 96 94 FIVK-I1AV FORKCAST (Through Julv 14): Western Oregon - Western Wash ington Little if any precipitation, except drizzle at times along coast. Temperatures averaging near or a little below normal. Highs mostly 63-75 western Washington and 72 82 western Oregon. Night time lows mostly 4o-35. Northern California No pre cipitation likely. Temperatures averaging near normal. COMPLETES COURSE Pvt. Robert L. Eastman, son of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Eastman, Trail, recently com pleted a seven-week machine operators course al the Engi neer school, Ft. Belvoir, Va. Eastman, a 1961 graduate of Eagle Point High school, entered the Army in Febru ary, 1962. He completed basic combat training at Fort Car son, Colo. SI HIS, p I ajavjasssssisss .fcWrt-lsW--sJ, OBITUARIES EDA RICHARDSON Funeral services for Mrs. Eda Richardson, 91, of Trali, who died Saturday, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hillcrest Memorial chapel, on the North Phoenix rd. The Rev. Thomas McNeil of tht First United Presbyterian church will officiate. Commit tal will be in Hillcrest Mem orial park, with Conger-Morris funeral directors in charge of arrangements. Mrs. Kicnardson was born March 7. 1871, in Germany, and had lived in Trail for the past eight years, coming from Gold Beach. Her husband, Charles Richardson, died in 1949. She was a member of the First Presbyterian church; Nevita chapter. Or der of Eastern Star, Central Puint; and of the White Shrine, in San Francisco. Survivors include a niece, Mrs. Ross Lynn, in Florida; and a nephew, Carl Tamm, Hollister, Mass. Pallbearers will include Al len Rodger?, Wayne Jamison, Kennedy Warned Racial Order May Reduce Housing Washington-lUPII - The Na tional Association of Home Builders has told President Kennedy that an executive order barring racial discrim ination in housing could cause a 75 per cent drop in new home construction. Association President Leon ard L. Frank said Sunday a survey showed 51 per cent of the builders replying to a questionnaire believed the anti discrimination order would force cutbacks if il ap plied to Federal Housing Ad ministration, Veterans Admin istration, and privately fi nanced housing. Forty two per cent predicted a decline if the order applied only to FHA and VA financing, he said. Of the builders expecting a cutback, Frank reported, one third predicted it could be as deep as 75 per cent. A total of 5,905 of the 15, 335 members of the associa tion replied to the survey. Plan Offered Frank offered Kennedy a plan designed to help lessen the Impact of the proposed federal order. He suggested that the While be held on Thursday, July House organize "a major, na tion-wide education campaign to lessen tensions over hous ing discrimination." Kennedy told his news con ference Thursday he would sign the non-discrimination order at a "useful and ap propriate time." Frank said he felt a nation al program could develop greater public awareness the significance and conse quences of housing discrimina tion. He said it also could stimulate means of "improv ing community acceptance of changing living patterns." Valley Student In Graduation Class Donald E. Wisely, Central Point, was one of more than 550 students awarded degrees and certificates at the 1962 commencement exercises at Idaho Stale college in Poca tcllo. He received a bachelor of science degree in pharmacy. London Sir Winston Chur chill, 87, battling against a possibly dangerous side effect to his broken thigh bone, spent a "comfortable night," Middlesex Hospital officials said today. A hospital spokes man said the wartime British leader was being given anti coagulant drugs to treat phle bitis, a condition in which the vein is inflamed and which could lead to the formation of blood clots. TWIST-TWIST :,f -TWIST- tl w MONDAY. JULY 9. Oliver Gustison, Wallace Brill. Clarence Young, and Russell Fair. KENNETH R. WOLGAMOT Funeral services for Ken neth Rae Wolgamot, 50, of 285 High St.. Ashland, who died Wednesday, will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday In the First Presbyterian church, A s h -land. The Rev. B. J. Holland will officiate. Committal will be in Mountain View cem etery, Ashland, with the Ash land mortuary in charge of ar rangements. Mr. Wolgamot was born Aug. 9. 1911. He had lived in Oregon for 40 years, the past 12 years in Ashland. He was married Sept. 20, 1961, in Ashland, to Doris Henry, who survives. Other survivors include two sons, Terry Wolgamot and Toby Wolgamot; his mother, Mrs. John Brant, a sister, Mrs. Lila Cunningham, Gresham, Ore.; and two brothers, Myrll Wolgamot, The Dalles, Ore. and Wendel Wolgamot, Port land, Ore. HOMER W. MARSHALL Homer Woodrow Marshall, 57, of Talent, died Sunday at his home. Funeral services will be held at 10 a m. Wed nesday in Hillcrest Memorial chapel on the North Phoenix rd. Committal will be in Hillcrest Memorial park, with Conger-Morris funeral direc tors in charge of arrange ments. CHARLES M. McKINNIS Charles M. McKinnis, 73, of 502 Pearl St., died Sunday morning in a local hospital. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Conger-Morris funeral directors. ALF BREWOLD Alf Brewold, of 2646 Jack sonville highway, died yester day at his home. Funeral ar rangements will be announc ed by Conger-Morris funeral directors. CAMERON PARR Cameron Parr, of Grants Pass, died Sunday in a Grants Pass hospital, runeral ar rangements will be announc ed by Conger-Morris funeral directors. CLIFTON E. GUERINGER Funeral services for Clif ton Earl Gueringer, 44, of 6131 Azalea rd.. Central point, who died Thursday in Vancouver, Wash., Veteran's Administration hospital, will at 11 a.m., in the Chapel Memories, Memory Gardens Funeral home. of POSITIVELY Hg DRIVE-IN A' JWjrrl .(! HIkMv I ' M-4-M nr ! I jjjjl JAN PAW j Academy A ward Winner, Only 1 Show Nitely Doors Opan 7:30 Show Start 8:00 soencer Tracv Burt Lancaster Richard Wlilmark MaHene Dlcirtch Judy Garland Maximilian scticll UHAHQIIUH Mnn nnmp.rv r IHUIilJiUlnui j win All Seats Children . $1.00 50c TO THE MUSIC -SUN BAR of MUSIC Open at 7:30 P.M. ADULTS ONLY Pleese Medford Hotel 1962 Sen. Byrd Breaks With U.S. Chamber Washington - iUPII - Sen. Harry F. Byrd, a former member of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce board, has pub licly broken with the organi zation, terming its call for a tax cut "dangerous and pan icky." Byrd. chairman of the Sen ate Finance Committee, Sun day questioned whether thn Chamber's stand on the lax cut had the backing of th membership. In a letter to President H. Ladd Plumley, Byrd said h was inviling stale Chambers of Commerce "to comment" on the action. Byrd, a long time budget watchdog, said the Chamber call for an immediate tax cut in the upper and middle in come brackets would cost tlu government $9.5 billion in revenues annually. GRADUATES Pfc. Rodney L. Snyder, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin C. Sny der, 343 South Grape St., was graduated recently from Avia tion Electronics Fundamen tals school at the Naval Air Technical Training center, Memphis, Tenn. Snyder attended Eagl Point High school before en tering the Marine Corps. 772-6424 LAST 2 NITES DON'T MISS IT! BlNCj CROSBYi BOB nope JOAN COLLINS DOROtHY 12, LAM0VIR of i MimtD TMU UtltfW AMIIH TONITE ,TWO TOP HITS America's BOLD and MAGNIFICENT ADVENTURE! ENDS TONITE ENDS TONITE Limited Road Show Engagement t Best Actorl . MiKlmltlan ScAtf sif ScreenDlavl Abby Mann Judgment j AT Nuremberg ALL-NEW OF THE RAYS- ON THE ROAD AGaInT 9 tdr f!Am l ,.-ViS yMflfifjnnni. W 'rW HMflMMSCHfll . . . PLAYING SAX - ACCOR DION - TRUMPET - PIANO -DRUMS AND VOCAL NO COVER CHARGE JUST ENJOY YOURSELF Bar of Music