Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 03, 1963, Image 9

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    MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON
THURSDAY. JANUARY 3. 1863
ii iiMiniiimWrmriiumtta
JOHN L. SHERMAN
Resident Offica Manager
Insurance Firm
Opens Office Here
The Oregon Automobile
Insurance company will open
Its fifth claims office In Ore
gon at 27 Korth Ivy St., Med
lord, tomorrow.
John L. Sherman, who for
the past two years has been
In the company's Portland
and Salem claims depart
ments, will be resident man
ager of the Medford office, ac
cording to W. A. Brooks, pres
ident. Brooks, who will be in Med
ford Friday for the office's
open house from 3 to 6 p.m.,
aid Oregon Auto made the
move "because of the grow
ing number of our insureds
in Jackson and Josephine
counties and in adjacent
northern California counties.
Oregon Auto has more than
$500,000 of property and au
tomobile Insurance in force
in this area, plus five agents
in Medford and one each in
Ashland and Grants Pass."
Sherman plans to move to
Medford. A University of Ore
gon graduate, he operated his
own insurance agency in Day
ton for five years prior to
joining Oregon Auto's claims
department.
Oregon Auto also maintains
claims offices or adjusters in
Salem, Eugene, Coos Bay, and
La Grande.
With total assets of $10 mil
lion, the firm and its wholly
owned affiliate, North Pacific,
has an annual premium vol
ume of $9 million, employs
163 people in Us Portland
headquarters offices and has
a statewide network of 185
agents.
Portland Produce
Portland (UTIt Dairy market
Eggs To retailers: AA extra
large 49-53c; AA large 4b-31c: A
large 45-49c: AA medium 44-48c:
A medium 31-34c: AA small 30-
S7c: carton l-3c higher.
Butter To retailers: AA and A
prints 66c; cartons lc higher; B
prints 65c.
Cheese (medium cured) To re
lallers: 46'a-4713c: processed
American 5-10 lb. loaf, 43-4J.
Portland lUPIl Dressed chick
ens No. 1 grade dressed to retail'
era: Fryers, whole drawn 33-3fc
lb.; cut-up 38-43C lb.; hens, light
tvpe, whole drawn 21-26c lb.; light
1vpe hens, cut-up 24-30C lb.; heavy
whole 36-39C in.
Russia Building
Dams To Surpass
U. S. Projects
Washington - IUPD - Two
Soviet dams now being built
in Siberia will far over
shadow the John Day dam
under construction on the
Columbia river, destined to
be America's most powerful.
The Russian dams alto will
loom higher than the 735-foot
earth-fill OroVille dam now
being built in California r-5
the nation's highest dam.
These are among conclu
sions in a report based on a
tour of Russia last year by
United States power experts.
Six Million Kilowatts
The report said the Kras
noyarsk dam being built in
Russia will have a capacity of
six million kilowats, more
than twice the ultimate 2.7
million capacity of John Day.
It said another Soviet dam
under construction will pow
er, among other things, an
aluminum plant that will out
produce the entire aluminum
industry of the Pacific Northwest.
One Soviet dam, the Ingur-
skaya project, will tower to
988 feet. Unlike the Oroville
dam, but like the 726-foot
Hoover dam on the Colorado
river, the Soviet Union's high
est dam will be of concrete
construction.
A rock-fill dam, the Nurek
project, will rise to 984 feet-
only four feet short of Rus
sia's highest dam.
Other Dams Planned
The Soviet government also
has approved the construction
of two other dams which will
overshadow the highest U.S.
dams.
A comparison of the Soviet
and U.S. dams was made in a
recently released report by a
U.S. delegation which toured
Soviet dam-sites late last year
under Interior Secretary
Stewart L. Udall.
Despite their height, how
ever, no Soviet dam can touch
the massive Oroville dam in
volume. Ranking only third
among U.S. dams, Oroville
will have a volume of 78 mil
lion cubic yards compared
with 63.3 million cubic yards
for the Sayanskaya rock-fill
dam, which will be Russia's
largest. Sayanskaya, Russia's
fourth highest dam, will top
Oroville by a mere three feet.
For sheer bulk, the grand
daddy of them all remains the
Fort Peck dam in Eastern
Montana, where American
dam builders of the 1930s
scraped and scooped 125.6
million cubic yards of earth
to dam the mighty Missouri
river.
The great new Soviet dams
are part of a vast electrifica
tion program which Premier
Nikita Khrushchev says will
result In the Soviet Union
overtaking and passing the
United States by 1980.
I Locals
SHOW STARTS AT 7:00
raw
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"THANK YOU,
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News About
Servicemen
ABOARD DESTROYER
Gunner's Mate Second Class
Garrett L. Larson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Roscoe L. Larson,
Prospect, is serving aboard
the destroyer tender USS Isle
Royalc, which recently com
pleted under way training at
Fleet Training Group, San
Diego.
School Conducted - A ra
diological defense monitoring
school was being conducted
today at the southwest dis
trict headquarters here of the
state department of forestry,
John Langrell, Grants Pass,
assistant district warden, was
instructor. Attending the
class were four men from the
southwest district and five
from the Klamath Forest
Protective association.
Flu Fir - Medford fire
men were summoned about
3:30 p.m. yesterday when a
flue fire occurred at the home
of Dale Osborne, 619 West
Second St.
a
Runaway Arrested - Med
ford city police Wednesday
arrested Betty Jane Hicks, 17,
Bentonville, Ark., as a run
away juvenile. She was
lodged in Jackson county ju
venile detention home.
Permits Issued - The Med
ford building department is
sued permits Wednesday to
American Oil company to
erect a sign at 308 Barnett
rd. at an estimated cost of
52,000; to Mrs. Don Penwell
to remodel a garage at 2049
Gary st. at .n approximate
cost of $1,000; and to John
Ports to remodel a residence
at 232 Valley View dr. at an
anticipated cost of $6,600.
Surgery Patient - Morris
F. Wood. Yreka, Calif., was
listed today as a surgery pa
tient at Sacred Heart hospi
tal. Contact Adjusters - Area
residents whose clothing may
have been destroyed in the
Big Y Cleaners fire last week
may contact the General Ad
justment Bureau, 1005 East
Main St., Medford, between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m., represent
atives of the cleaning stablish
ment announced today.
Meeting Scheduled - The
California Oregon Chrome
Producers association will
hold a special meeting at the
Veterans' hall in Cave Junc
tion at 2 p.m. Sunday, Jan.
6, to further plans for build
ing a sulphuric acid plant.
Members anticipate ultimate
development of chro m i u m,
copper and other minerals.
Revival Set A prayer re
vival with nightly meetings is
under way at the Philadelphia
church, 1901 Grandview ave.,
Medford. The services, to con
tinue through Saturday, are
held at 7:30 p.m.
Memberi to Meet Olive
Rebekah Lodge members are
asked to meet at the down
town Conger Morris Funeral
home at 12:45 p.m. Friday to
attend the funeral of Mrs.
Eva True.
To Meet - Welcome Wagon
club will meet at 8 o'clock to
night at Girls Community
club, Medford.
Pritchard Named
To Prospect Post
Vernon D. Pritchard, from
the Okanogan National for
est in northern Washington,
was recently transferred to
Prospect, where he is district
ranger of the Rogue River
National forest.
Pritchard succeeds Doug
las Baker, who has been
working in the Medford of
fice since last May. Robert K.
Krell served as acting dis
trict ranger during the sum
mer. He was transferred to
the Okanogan in early De
cember. Pritchard began his forest
service work in 1950 as a sea
sonal employee on the Wallowa-Whitman
National for
est in northeastern Oregon.
He served as fire control and
forestry technician until
1958. He was then promoted
to an assistant ranger posi
tion and r. year later trans
ferred to Tanasket on the
Okanogan National forest.
Pritchard is a graduate of
Washington State university
where he received his bache
lor of science degree in agri
culture in 1950. He is a vet
eran of World War II having
served with the Navy 1944
1946 and saw service in the
Asiatic-Pacific area. He is
also a member of the Ameri
can Society of Range Management.
Medco Buys Forest
Service Timber
Medford Corporation, Med
ford, was high bidder yester
day for 9,620.000 board feet
of national forest timber in
the South Fork area, Butte
Falls Ranger district, Rogue
River National forest.
Forest Supervisor C. E.
Brown reported the high bid
totaled $238,967.50, compared
to the forest service appraised
price for the timber of $110,
974, an increase of 155 per
cent.
Next high bidder in the
oral auction for the timber
was Steve Wilson, While City.
Other bidders were Fir Ply,
Incorporated, Oregon Veneer,
Lane Plywood, Cheney Forest
Products, S t o m a r Lumber,
and K o g a p Manufacturing
company.
The timber In the unit con
sisted of 5,130,000 board feet
of Douglas-fir bid at $40.25
per thousand board feet, 930,-
000 board feet of pines bid at
$8.90 per thousand board
feet, 3,560,000 board feet of
white fir and other species bid
at $6.80 per thousand board
feet.
'Mary, Mary1 Keeps
Audience Laughing
Weather
FALLIBLE MACHINES
New York-flJPD-The notion
held by some persons that an
adding machine is infallible is
far from true. Buyers Labora
tory says. Worn parts can
cause an adding machine to
make mistakes.
Over-the-Counter
Western Stocks
By L'ntted Preu IntrrnaUnn.it
ma liKcg
4 I 0. StJ-SW
Bank of America
Cal Pac Ulll
Con Freight
Cvprus Mines
Equitable S It L
, First National Bank ...
; Jantzen
I Morrison Knudscn ...
Mult Kennels
I N W. Natural Gas
Oregon Mettallurgical
PP&L. .
PGE
U S. National Bank ...
United Util
West Coast Tel
Weyerhaeuser
5'i
23
3i
2Ps
30,
(ill
22 'i
2K'
.V
31'
24's
30'.
4'i
33
l'
2.V.
23
704
32i
2m,
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Valley fog
tonight and Friday with brief lilt
ing in afternoon. Fair above fog
rriaay. low tonigni mgn
Friday 38-43 in fog area, 45-50
above fog.
Western Oregon: Fair with
patchy night and mnrning fog to
night and Friday. Cooler tonight.
Low tonight 32-44. High Friday
44-30.
Northern California; Mostly fair
tonight and Friday. Colder in
northern mountains.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day 36; below normal 1.
Record high this date 37 in 1927.
Record low this date 12 In 1919
PRECIPITATION : 24 hours In
midnight. .03 inch. Midnight to 10
a.m., .o men.
Total this month .03 inch, .17 in.
below normal.
Total since Sept. 1. 16.11 Inches,
7.39 inches above normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
79, highest tnu a m. luu
CITV
Brookings ...
Crater Lake
Grants Pass
Howard Prairie ..
Klamath Falls ....
MEDFORD
Portland
Seattle
lllgh-
yeler
day
Investment Funds
Noon quotations on lelectcd
stocks:
Fund Bid Ask
Bullock 12.17 1334
Chemical Fund 10.20 11.09
Colonial Energy .... 11.36 12 63
Eaton Howard Stk . 12 71 13.73
Fidelity 14.75 13.93
Fundamental Invest. 8.97 9 83
Group Sec Avia-Elec 6.71 7.36
Group Sec Com Stk 12.05 13.20
Group Sec Petr .... 11.61 12.71
Hamilton C7 4.76 5 20
KcvstoneB-3 . 15 35 16 75
Kevstone B-4 9 46 10 32
Kevstone K-2 4 82 3.26
Keystone S-l 20.42 22 27
Keystone S-2 11.77 12 85
Keystone S-3 13 04 14 23
Keystone S-4 3.88 4 24
Mass Inv Growth . 7 37 8 05
National Grth. Fund 7.65 8 36
Slocks 17 19 1838
TV-Elec 6.98 7.61
Value Line lnc 4.99 .143
Variable 6.14 6 64
Wellington 13 83 13.08
Just about the time this
theater patron - and a good
many others, had decided they
couldn't bear another "Broad
way comedy," along comes
"Mary, Mary." The Jean Kerr
play, still running in New
York after a year and with
three casts on the road, ap
peared in Medford last night
as a Broadway Theater
league production, and the au
dience loved it.
The difference between
"Mary, Mary'" and other
Broadway comedies of recent
years is, of course, the fact
lhat Jean Kerr wrote it.
This playwright is mighty
skillful with words and a past
master with the impertinent
remark and the razor-edged
retort. There's nothing new
in the plot of "Mary, Mary,"
-but it does have love, mar
riage and divorce as its
theme. Everyone has been in
love, or married, or divorced,
or all three, and everyone in
the audience "identifies" with
those on stage, as the psychi
atrists say.
Laughter Ii Constant
The laughter was almost
constant last night during the
acts, but the play has suffi
cient sober and tender scenes
for dramatic contrast.
The New York cast, of
"Mary, Mary" has Barbara
Bel Gcddes and Tom Poston
as the leads, but we doubt
that they are much more out
standing' than the troupe
which played here last night.
Patricia Smith is very like
Miss Gcddes as to the way
she handles her voice and de
livers here lines; she is a sea
soned and expert actress, and
she turns in appealing per
formance as the young wife
who has been divorced with
out quite knowing what has
happened, or why it happened.
John Lasell. playing oppo
site Miss Smith as the div
orced husband, is completely
assured in his role of a prac
tical and somewhat high
minded member of a publish
ing firm who discovers after
leaving and divorcing his
wife that life without her
wasn't what he wanted after
all.
Burst of Applause
When Jeffrey Lynn came
on stage for the first time
last night he was greeted with
a burst of applause. Medford
audiences like this actor, and
his role in "Mary, Mary" is
made to order. He plays
handsome movie actor, no
longer young, who decides he
is falling in love with Mary.
Clinlon Sundberg is anoth
er one of those character act
ors who are the mainstay of
traveling troupes. He was ex
cellent last night as a lawyer
-one with a delightful sense
of humor. He has some good
comedy lines and rose to ev
ery one.
The cast was completed
with Heddie Bates as Tiffany
Richards, the young and beau
tiful girl to whom the hus
band turned "on the re
bound" from his divorce. Miss
Bates is really young and
beautiful and she gives an
impression of freshness and
vitality.
The next Broadway Thea
ter league play is icheduled
Jan. 20.-O.S.
Births
WKNZEL - To Mr. and Mrs.
George E., 210 Jeanettc St.,
Medford, Dec. 28, 1962, a girl,
7' 4 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
OBITUARIES
GRIZZLE - To Mr. and
Mrs. Robert H., route 1, box
318, Walen lane. Talent, Dec.
29, 1962, a girl, 8:4 pounds,
at Rogue Valley hospital.
DANIELS - To Mr. and
Mrs. Robert John, post office
box 145, Butte Falls, Dec. 29,
1962, a girl, 84 pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
PETERSON - To Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd R., Union Creek
Ranger Station, Union Creek,
Dec. 29, 1962, a boy, 7Vi
pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital.
MARY F. SMITH
Funeral services for Mrs.
Mary F. Smith, 81, of Pioneer
rd., who died Tuesday, will
be held at 10:30 a.m. Satur
day in Conger-Morris down
town chapel. The Rev. Bruce
O. Rogers of Trinity Baptist
church will officiate. Commi;
tal will be in Hillcrest Me
morial park.
Mrs. Smith was born Jan.
12. 1881, in Williams county,
Texas, and had lived in south
ern Oregon for the past four
years. She was married Aug.
10, 1901, to Arthur Leroy
Smith, who preceded her in
death.
Survivors Include a son,
Lewis R. Smith, Los Angeles,
Calif.; three daughters, Mrs.
Jack Rarick, Ingle wood,
Calif.; Mrs. Nora Jenks, Med
ford: and Mrs. John Roelfs,
Medford;'cight grandchildren
and six great grandchildren.
Casket bearers will include
Ralph Wilson, Lester James,
Gilbert Mack, Virgle Gribble,
Walter Miller, and Vine
Smith.
WILSON - To Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin J., 49 West Vilas rd.,
Central Point, Dec. 30, 1962,
girl, 6J4 pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
EVANS - To Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar H., 929 Newtown St.,
Medford, Dec. 30. 1962, a boy,
82 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
HAYES - To Mr. and Mrs.
Odcll Jr., 2821 North Pacific
highway,. Medford, Dec. 31
1962, a boy, 6-I4 pounds, at
Roogue Valley hospital.
YOST - To Mr, and Mrs
Fred E., 3527 Delta Waters
rd., Medford, Jan. 1, 1963, a
girl, 73,4 pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
STEELE - To Mr. and Mrs.
James A., 1428 Camp Baker
rd., Medford, Jan. 1, 1963, a
boy, 6 pounds, at Rogue Val
ley hospital.
YOUNG - To Mr. and Mrs
Robert, route 1, box 563, Tal
ent, Jan. 2, 1963, a girl, 8'4
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital.
STATEN - To Mr. and Mrs
William Louis, 851 V4 Haven
si., Medford, June 3, 1963
girl, 6 1 4 pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPllUSDA Cattle
200. Slaughter cows utility dairy
bred 13.30-16; cutters 12-13; few
canners 11-13.
Calves 25. Good and choice 250
306 Ins., 30-33.
Hogs 50. No. 1 and mostly 2.
220-240 lbs. 18-1850: No 2-3
283 lb 17.50; sows 325 lb. 14.30.
Sheep 23. Not enough . to teat
trade.
JARV1S - To Mr. and Mrs
Wayne E., box 94, Trail, Dec
30, 1962, a girl, 6 pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
which was later turned over
to the Ashland fire depart
ment. Survivors include his wife,
Alice Moon; two sons, Dan
Moon, Ashland, and Harold
Moon, Sacramento, Calif., two
daughters, Mrs. J u a n i t a
Baughman, Dunsmuir, Calif.,
and Mrs. Isabel Bradford,
Klamath Falls; five grand
children, seven great grand
children, one great great
grandchild: one brother, Dal
las Moon, Pendleton; and two
sisters, Mrs. Ruby Reed, Fres
no, Calif., and Mrs. Gladys
Farris, Los Angele.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced by Litwiller's
Funeral home.
OLIVE G. WOMACK
Funeral services for Mrs.
Olive G. Womack, 70, of 845
West Second St., who died
Tuesday, will be held at 11
m. Friday in Conger-Morris
downtown chapel. The Rev.
George Rosebcrry of the First
Methodist church will offici
ate. Committal will be in
Siskiyou Memorial park.
Mrs. Womack was born
Oct. 22, 1982, in Wallowa,
Ore., and had lived all her
life in Oregon, the past 20
years in Medford. She was
married Dec. 23. 1915, to
Marion R. Womack, who died
in 1947.
Survivors include a son,
Ross E. Womack, Portland,
Ore.; a daughter, Mrs. Shir
ley Sommcrcr, Medford; a
brother, Walter Tulley, Boise,
Idaho; and one grandson, Da
vid Sommerer, Medford.
Casket bearers will include
Floyd Wisely, John Wisely,
Kenneth Meadows, rrann
Meadows. Owen Pratt, ind
Jerry Witter.
Two Accidents Are
Reported to Police
Medford police investigated
two non-injury vehicle acci
dents in the city Wednesday.
One driver was cited, officers
said.
Oscar Throdur Heyerman,
48, of 125 Winema Way, was
cited for failure to operate a
vehicle on the right side of
the road following a collision
about 1:49 p.m. on Bartlett
st. between Main and Sixth
sts. Driver of the other car
was Charles Evans Koch, 39,
Hermislon,
Vehicles operated by Cleone
Lucille Hastings, 39, of 3095
Crater Lake ave., and Ursula
Ann Drysdale, 15, of 23 North
Orange ave., collided about
3:10 p.m. at Jackson st. and
Riverside ave. No citations
were issued, officers said.
.A 7
GP Councilmen Are
Sworn into Posts
Grants Pass - City council
men ior Ward I through III
were sworn into office
Wednesday night at the regu
lar city council meeting. The
resignation of Councilman
Chester Wilde, Ward IV, was
accepted.
New councilmen are Roland
Stearns, Ward I; William
Wrightson, Ward II, and E.
Bobby Pruitt, Ward III.
The new council will elect
a replacement from ward iv
to fill the vacancy left by
Wilde's resignation.
Other council business in
cluded the acceptance of the
recommendation made by the
planning commission to annex
property east of the city own
ed by Gerald Sommers, who
plans to subdivide the property.
The city also has purchased
two lots in the West Home
Park addition in the south
west section of the city for
future use as a park.
Federal Escapee Is
Arrested in Valley
Jackson county sheriff's
deputies early today arrested
an escapee from the Federal
Correctional institute, Lom
poc, Calif.
James Walter Farnsworth,
20, Porterville, Calif., was ar
rested about 1 o'clock this
morning while he was hitch
hiking north of Central Point
on Highway 99. He was lodg
ed in the county jail for fed
eral authorities. Farnsworth
was reported to have escaped
May 1, 1961.
ROSEMUS - To Mr. and
Mrs. Richard T., 5171-2 J St.,
Medford, Jan. 2. 1963, a boy,
63,4 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
BURTON - To Mr. and
Mrs. Bob, 6121 Table Rock
rd.. Central Point, Jan. 2,
1963, a girl, Ti pounds, at
Crater Osteopathic hospital.
WINNIFRED C. HORNER
Private funeral and com
mittal services for Winnifred
C. Horner, 62, of route 1, box
82. Jacksonville, who died
Tuesday will be held Friday
at the Perl Funeral nome,
Thu Rev. T. S. Gapen, pastor
of the Applcgate church, will
officiate.
Mrs. Horner was born Aug,
3. 1900. at Conrad. Iowa. sne
had lived In the Applcgate
area for the past 14 years,
moving from Los Angeles,
Calif.
On Dec. 26, 1935, In Pasa
dena, Calif., she was married
to John W. Horner, who survives.
PASSES BILLION MARK
New York - IUPD - Harold S.
Geneen, president of Interna
tional Telephone & Telegraph
Corp., reported Wednesday
that the firm's sales and rev
enues had exceeded $1 billion
for the first time in history
in 1962. Sales and revenues
reached a figure of about
$1,066 billion, compared with
$930.5 million in 1961.
LEOTIS IRL MOON
Ashland - Leotls Irl Moon,
83, of 286 Third St., Ashland,
died last night at his home.
Mr. Moon, a former Ash
land police officer, was re
tired from the U. S. govern
ment where he worked with
the alcohol tax administration
and office of price administra
tion, and as a private Investi
gator in Portland and Klam
ath Falls. He retired from the
civil service In 1947 and
moved to Ashland. He was I
veteran of World War I.
He, -with an Ashland wom
an, started the Christmas toys
repair program In Ashland
Spokane
akima
Eureka
Red Bluff
Sacramento
San Francisco
Los Angeles
... 53
32
.... 45
48
S5
53
63
Phoenix 86
Denver 60
Chicago 31
Miami Beach .... 73
New York 31
Washington. D. C. 33
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613 MEDFORD SHOPPING CENTER
Free Parking
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HoUy 773-1902
HELD OVER
A FEW MORE DAYS!
only One sHoW nitILY
doors opin 7:30 show starts :00 f.m.
"ILLUMINATIN6 EXPERIENCE!"
ALL St ATS SI. 00
CHILDREN SOc
sunti
"BARABBAS"
Ml It DWO K LM)CNiS MOOUCTQN
unu (emir un jiun um mmews
nMft USflUI-JAOL fMJtttt-lNUT MMMl
M)6mtor
Uugtelbr ,
TONIGHT
TWO SHOWS
7:00 A 9:15 .
Jem I
...tOOKIIIG FOR WfX
A LOST HEIR.
(tsliMi, lit Caasal
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ITC
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, ,rT , w irr"- 1W nfiTitm. A PARAMOUNT
OBRIEW-SOOTT-WeSTON-WHIIE-OUtSTEl-JONES-TASHUN-HURRAT RELEASE
FIRST in the hearts
of his COUHTRYMEH
join the MARINES
For Full Information Todoy Visit the
Rteruiror's Offieo in th Modford Post Office
Medford Mail Tribiina
at