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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON MONDAY. JANUARY 14. 1963 News About Servicemen IN CALIFORNIA Two Medford Marines are stationed in California. At Camp Pendleton is Ma rine Lance Cpt. Harold R. Gartin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. Gartin Sr., 2792 East McAndrews rd., who is with the First Service Battal ion, and Marine Pvt. Kenneth J. Eaton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Doyle R. Waltermire, 333S Forest ave., who recently com pleted recruit training at San-Diego. REASSIGNED Two Jackson county Air Force- men have beerf reas signed following completion of their first phase of mili tary training at Lackland Air Force base, Texas. Assigned to Sheppard Air Forte base in Texas is Air man Basic Michael E. Holt, son of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Holt, 1188 Oak St., Ash land. Assigned to K-csler Air Force base, Miss., is Airman Basic Wayne L. Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert N. El lis, 128 Ashland St., Medford. Holt will attend technical training school for utilities specialist and Ellis the radio and radar m a 1 n t e nance school. STATIONED IN FRANCE Pfc. Hudson Ray Bransom, serving with the U.S. forces overseas, is stationed in Or leans, France, at headquar ters communications zone. This headquarters handles all allocations for all of France and parts of Germany. Bransom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bransom, route 1, box 57. Central Point. He is planning to come to Medford later this year on a month's leave to care for business and to attend the wedding of his brother, Doyle. He will return to continue his duties in France. Births PETERSON - To Mr. and Mrs. Axel Albert, 1320 Covina ave., Medford, Jan. 13, 1963, boy, 8 pounds at Rogue Valley hospital. fOWUFUl PLUNGER CLEARS CLOGGED TOILETS in a jiffy! M NEVR AOAIN that tick hdinf whan yeur teller oirerftews TOILAFLEX Toilet kuhsuI Plunger Unlik ordinary plungera, Tbiliflex does not permit compresied air or meuy water to iplash back or escape. With Ibilaftex the full pressure plows through tha clogging mass and swishes it down. Can't miss! DESIGNED TO FLtX AT ANY ANGLE RECESSED RIM TRAPS AIR A WATER CENTERS ITSELF, CANT SKID AROUND TAPERED TAIL GIVES AIR-TIGHT PIT Gtttha .f) AS Genuine Toilaftar AT HARDWARE STORIS IVERYWHIRI OBITUARIES christoper Mcculloch Ashland - Christopher D. McCulloch, Infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Darrcll McCulloch, 1625 Clover Lane, died Jan. 11 in a local hospital. He is survived by his parents and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ken McCulloch, and Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Prettyman, all of Ashland. Graveside service was con ducted by the Litwiller Fun eral home today at 11 a.m. in the Ashland cemetery with the Rev. Gordon Peterson officiating. DONALD FARMER Ashland Donald Ray Farmer, 38, died in a Port land hospital Jan-11 follow ing heart surgery. Born in Ashland on Nov. 26. 1924, Mr. Farmer attended the schools here and had lived all his life in this city. . He is survived by his wife, the former Patricia Wolfton; one daughter, Vicky; his fa ther, Harry Farmer of Ash land, and two brothers, Wayne Farmer in Sumner, Wash., and Carl Farmer, serving with the U.S. Army in Germany. Funeral service will be con ducted Tuesday by Litwiller's Funeral home in the Moun tain View chapel with the Rev. Marvin Horn officiating. Interment will be in Mountain View cemetery. CARL E. JOHNSON Funeral services for Carl Everett Johnson, 60, of Para dise, Calif., who died Thurs day, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hillcrest Memorial chapel on the North Phoenix rd. The Rev. D. E. Millard of the New Age church at Eagle Point will officiate. Committal will be in Hillcrest Memorial park, with Conger-Morris fun eral directors in charge of ar rangements. Mr. Johnson was born April 27, 1902, in Phoenix, Ore., a son of the late William O. and Lucinda Johnson, who were also born in the valley. He was employed as a heavy equipment operator on con struction work. Survivors include his wife, May Johnson; a brother, Leo Loyd Johnson, in Idaho; and three sisters, Mrs. Nlta Mcwes, Redding, Calif.; Mrs. Gayle Dierdorff, Alturas, Calif.; and Mrs. Aletha Cantrall, Medford. ERNEST B. RIPPON Funeral service for ErnesV B. Rippon, 78 of 115 Willam ette st., who died Saturday, will be held at 10 a.m. Tues day at Perl Funeral home. Officers of the Central Point Masonic lodge will officiate, assisted by the Rev. Bernard Andrews, pastor of the First Baptist church. Interment will be in Evegrecn cemetery in Yreka, Calif. Mr. Rippon was born on Nov. 2, 1884 at Stanford, Eng land. He was employed for a few years by the British government and worked in South Africa and in India. In 1910, he came to the United States, and in 1922 he moved to Copco, Calif, where was was an employee of California Oregon Power company. He moved to Medford in 1925 where he continued work for Copco until his retirement on July 1, 1952. He was a mem ber of the Central Point Ma sonic lodge, Scotish Riie and Hillah Temple Shrine. On Sept. 8, 1937, in Reno, Nev., he was married to Vera WT7 I tu 1 TUES. WED. DOORS OPEN 7:30 "CURTAIN AT EIGHT" WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS! "THE RED SHOES" is "ONE YOU MUST SEE"1 "COMPLETELY IRRESISTIBLE"1 "A SCREEN ACHIEVEMENT'" Ihot it "ONE OF THE UNFORGETTABLE FILM EXPERIENCES OF THE YEAR!"4 Truly "A GREAT PICTURE"' "DESIGNED TO PLEASE"' "OAZZUNG"' with its "ENTRANCING ADVENTURE and BEWITCHING PRODUCTION!"' 1 Crewther, N. T. Time 2 Birnei, Hir. Trlb.- 3 Cameron, Ntwl- 4 Wimten, Fsit- S Peliwich, Jiurnal'Amtr.- 6 Crulmin, Sim-- 7 Cook, Wfrll Til.-1 !', HIT to i mm" svioii at CONTINENTAL DISTRIBUTING. INC. Rt RELEASE JACK STONG AT THE HAMMOND ORGAN 7:30 COMING JAN. 20, "A TASTI OF HONEY" D. Mcrshon, who survives. Other survivors include one son, Cyril Rippon, Weed, Calif.; one daughter, Mrs. Irene M. Messner, Long Beach, Calif.; two sisters, Mrs. Ethel Holland, England, Mrs. Elizabeth Burroughs, Eng land: one step-son, Bernard Mershon, San Francisco; three grandchildren, four great grandchildren, several nieces and nephews. Three brothers preceded him in death. Pall bearer? will be em ployees of Pacific Power and Light company. HAZEL A. GILMORE Hazel A. Gilmore, 77, of 331 West Sixth St., died in a local hospital Sunday. Funeral ar rangements will be announced by Perl Funeral home. JAMES M. SPENCER James M. Spencer, 79, of 829 West Second St., son of an Ashland pioneer family, died Saturday in a local hos pital. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, Jan. 16, at 10 a.m. at Memory Gardens Funeral home. SIGURD QUAM Sigurd Quam died this morning at the Veterans Ad ministration domiciliary at White City. Funeral arrange ments will be announced by Perl Funeral home. RUSSELL C. SIMMONS Russell C. Simmons, 1020 East Jackson St., Medford, died this morning in a local hospital. Mr. Simmons had formerly owned and operated the Holly cafe in Medford. Funeral arrangements are en trusted to Siskiyou Funeral Service directors of Chapel in the Trees Mortuary. EDWARD W. SHERMAN Funeral service for Edward W. Sherman, 72, of route 2, box 228, Central Point, who died Friday will be held at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday at Fickcrt Funeral home in Red Bluff, Calif. The Red Bluff Masonic lodge will officiate. Interment will be in Oak Hill cemetery of Red Bluff. Perl Funeral home is in charge of arrange ments. Mr. Sherman was born on July 13, 1890, in Newport, Ky. A building supervisor un til his retirement, he is a vet-' eran of World War I. He was a member of the Masonic lodge and the Scottish Rite. On Nov. 8, 1952 in San Di ego, Calif., he was married to Florence Hazelton who sur vives. Other survivors include a stepson, , Herbert Nemeyer, Red Bluff; one brother, Jo seph sncrman, fiemucny; one sictpr Mrs Harpv Pppnn. Ken tucky; two half-brothers, Wal ter Busher, Kentucky, Hen ery Busher, Kentucky, and two grandchildren. JOHN E. bULLlVAN John Earl Sullivan, 64, of Sacramento, Calif., died Sat urday. He was a former resi dent of Medford, and the body will be returned to Med ford for service and inter ment. Funeral service will be held at 2:30 p.m. Wed nesday in Hillcrest Memori al chapel, on the North Phoe nix rd., with Conger-Morris funeral directors in charge of arrangements. OTTIE R. HODGDON Mrs. Ottie R. Hodgdon, of route 1, box 252-A, Rogue River, died this morning at her home. Funeral arrange ments will be announced by Conger-Morris funeral direc tors. Over-the-Counter Western Slocks The Medical Roundup Emeritus Consultant In Mtdlclna Mayo Clinic Emerltui Profeior of Medlclna Mayo Clinic (Register and Trlbuna Syndicate, 1963) ci pc uui Con Freight Cyprus Mines ... Equltaoie a & l. ... First National Bank Jantzcn Mult Kennels N.W. Natural Gas Oregon Metallurgical PPA-L PGE U S National Bank United Util West Coast Tel .. met Asked .. 374 60' , ..... 24 26 ' .. 13', 14i .. 23 ' 24 's ... 32 34 "4 60 63 'J ..... 21', 26 291. 31 's .... 4'. 4. 32'4 34'. .... I I 2fl' 28', 2T, 29i, 6R"i 72 33', 34's 20', 22', , 25'. 23?, Portland Produce Portland lUPIl Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: AA extra large 47-33c; AA large 44-Slc: A large 43-40c; AA medium 42-48C: A medium 30-36c: AA email 30 37c: cartons l-3c higher. Butter To retailers: AA and A prints 66c: cartons 1c higher: B prints 65c. Cheese (medium cured) To re tailers: 46r 47'ic; processed American 3-10 lb. loaf. 43-45C. Portland (UPli Dressed chickens No. t grade dressed to retailers: Fryen. whole drawn. 33 39c Id.: cut-up. 38-43C lb.: hens light tvpe, whole drawn 21-26C Ih light type hens, cut-up 24-30c lb.; heavy whole 36-3QC lb. A Twisted Spina One of the terrible problems facing many parents is that of the child, usually a girl, who yf" lift f n r reasons tf I n o v e 1 J 4i I known starts I - -Ai I to get a badly twisted back. Often it looks as if the mus cles o n one side were pull ing the spine over. The ah res Question then arises, "What can be done?" Often, we physicians have done nothing, because we knew that even a big opera tion might not straighten up the girl and make her happy. I was just reading an ar ticle by Drs. J. William Field ing and Theodore Waugh of the New York Orthopedic Hospital which says that some surgeons put these girls first into a plaster cast, and later operate to fuse several verte bras. Such fusing can serve to keep at least a part of the spine from getting more and more curved. Some surgeons use a special brace, and later they fuse the vertcgras; some, like Drs. Fielding and Waugh, believe in first fusing some vertebras and then putting the child's chest into a plaster cast, In some cases, the spine Is fused with the help of two strips of bone taken from une of the bones in the leg. in other cases, the necessary bone is obtained from a "bone bank." When the plaster cast is applied, it is kept on usually for nine months. After three months in bed, the child is al lowed to get up and move around. Usually from four to eight vertebras are fused, and in most cases the work is done in two stages. An operation is deemed advisable if the spinal curve measures over 35 per cent by the Ferguson method. The two surgeons are frank in saying that the results have not always been satisfactory. The average maximum correc tion was 45 per cent of the curve as it existed when the child was first seen. Even af ter the operation, in some cases the child's spine kept caving in. Because of this the surgeons say that the "main. tained correction" was 30 per cent of the curve as it was measured before the opera' tions. Two other groups of or thopedists who have tried to keep twisted spines from curv ing further have reported sim ilarly only partial results. Psoriasis I was just reading the re- suits of a statistical study of 392 patients with psoriasis. made by three teachers at Stanford Medical school, head ed by Dr. Eugene M. Farber. Psoriasis is a chronic skin disease that attacks many per sons; It causes red patches to appear on parts of the body patches which are covered with tiny white scales. With treatment, perhaps with an ointment plus some radiation perhaps ultra-violet the patches can usually be cleared up, but there is a tendency for some of them to come back. Often a skin specialist has to try a number of treatments on an individual before he finds one that will work well. And later, when the patient comes back, he may have to find still another remedy. It looks as if heredity must play a role in producing the trouble, but the disease can either skip generations or it may produce in some persons an illness different from the one here described. Dr. Far ber found one family In which in each of four generations there were two or more per sons with psoriasis. He point' cd out that in some ways psoriasis resembles diabetes they both can be made worse by nervous stress, by treat' mcnt with corticosteroids, by bacterial infection, by drink' tag alcoholic liquors and by gaining weight. Of the 392 patients studied, 67.6 per cent first noted the coming of the skin disease be tween the ages of 10 and 40 years. There were, however, some patients who did not get the red spots until they were past 70. I think it hopeful that chem ists are now alalyzing the un involved skin and the diseased skin and are finding abnor malities in the red patches. Out of these studies may come a hint as to what went wrong and how it can be corrected. Everybody has theories on treating ulcers. In his booklet, "Ulcers of the Stomach and Duodenum," Dr. Alvarez gives his professional advice on the treatment of ulcers In general. You may obtain a copy of the booklet by sending 25 cents and a 5-cent stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request to Dr. Walter C. Alvarez, Dept. MMT. The Reg ister and Tribune Syndicate, Box 957, Dcs Moines 4, Iowa. Court Records DISTRICT COURT Darrell LewU Johnson, failure to stop, $15 Jay Andrew Baker, disobeyed stop sign. 7.50. Michael J. Tungate, failure to leave name at the scene of an acci dent, $35. Walter Harvey Embrav, no pub tic utility commission permit, SIS. Samuel Raymond Holsapple, overload. $180. Orval Otto Oliver, overhoight load. SIS. Irving Earl Lupen. overload, SIS. Harry William Garner Jr., viola tion of basic rule. $10. Lewis Emil Severson, one head light. $5. Albert Jackson Kimbrell, failure to stop. $15. Patricia Ann Blondell, no oper ator's license. $3. Clifford Wlnthtr Twenstrup, White City, reckless driving, S7a. Robert Etdon Aperccl, failure to lag deer properly, $50. Robert J. Johnson, overload. 146. Zelda Janet Anderson, improper passing, $10. Lamar Harold Dodd, Medford, drunk on public highway, $100. Glenn Edwin Dean, violation of basic rule, $10. CIRCUIT COURT Betty Mae Rilev vs. John Boyd Riley, divorce complaint. John Kercher vs. Marv Kercher. divorce complaint. Virginia Lrce marxi vs. vnnsion Kcnney Marks, divorce complaint. Rae E. Irvin vs. Larrv Irvin. di vorce complaint. Six Men Appear In Circuit Court; Two Sentenced Roy Ward Jr., 35. of 826 East Jackson st., was sen tenced to three years and eight months in the Oregon state penitentiary in Jackson county circuit court action. Ward had pleaded guilty earlier to a check charge. Richard Leste Curtis, 19, of 918 Maple Park dr., pleaded guilty in Jackson county cir cuit court to receiving and concealing stolen property. A pre-sentence report was ord ered. Kirby Leland LeBaron, 19, of box 183, Arnold lane, Med ford, was placed on probation for uttering and publishing a forged check and imposition of sentence was suspended for four years. He pleaded guilty earlier to giving a forged check for $35 to a local groc ery store on Oct. 25. Ralph Emmitt Glass, 18, of route 2, box 633, Central Point, pleaded guilty to charges of burglary not in a dwelling. A pre-sentence re port was ordered. He Is charged with entering the Tom Thumb Service station at 5017 Table Rock rd. on Jan. 4. A pre-sentence report was ordered for Gary Gene Asher, 18, of 5932 Harris rd., Central Point, also charged with breaking into the service station. He pleaded guilty to the charges of burglary not in a dwelling. Donald Clair Nutt, 602 King st., pleaded guilty to charges of obtaining property by false presentation. A pre-sentence report was ordered. Nutt was charged with issuing a false check for $15 to a local groc ery store on Sept. 3. Local and Personal Remodel Caft - The Med ford building department has issued a permit to the city of Medford to remodel the cafe at the municipal airport at an estimated cost of $15,-000. Ctntral Piont Fir - The Central Point volunteer fire department was called at 4:18 p.m. Sunday when a flue fire was reported at the residence of Dewey Miller, 471 Hopkins rd. Damage was not extensive. FORECASTS Medford and vicinitv: Pair and cold through Tuesday, but with a little cloudiness at limes. Low to mailt 18-33. High Tuesday 40-43. western ureaon: Mostly cloudy with a little drizzle at times through Tuesday. Low tonight SU SS, except 20-23 extreme southern interior, nign tuesaay 33-49. ex- Rt near 30 along south coast, orthern California: Fair tonight nd Tuesday. Little tcmnerature change. I.OCA1, DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yeilcrday 20: below normal 9. Hecord nign this dale 60 in lyjT. Record low this date 4 in 1030. PRECIPITATION : None. Total this month .08 in.. 1.26 In. below normal. Total since sept. i. is.ia in.. 8 30 in. above normal. humidity: Lowest yesterday 24',. highest this a.m. 88. High 4:00 24 C1TY Yester- a.m. hr. day Low Prec. 1i X, Small Worlds Around Us LYNN M. WATKINS (Register and Tribune Syndicate, 193) Just what happened before the advent of the flint and steel or the sharply pointed, rotated stick is pure guess work. But in all the conjec ture surrounding man's first discovery of fire, one fact alone stands out as certain: he didn't discover it by smoking in bed, thereby igniting the bearskins. How he really did discover fire is even more uncertain than is the modern dictionary maker when he tries to de fine fire. How the first domestic fire was started is one of the questions modern day science probably will always seek but never find. Of course, fire was present and occurred rather frequently long before there was a human ancestor on this earth. Ever since, succeeding generations of men have at tempted explanations, but they are all guesses. There is no real evidence to substan tiate any of the theories. Fire is not an element or a substance. It has no weight. When the fuel on which it feeds is consumed, there is nothing of the actual fire left: nothing to offer the most astute scientist the faintest evidence of what it was or how it began. Ignited by Lightning Early fires were ignited by lightning. The prehistoric man would have crawled under his bed when the lightning flashed if he had a bed. But as it was he was scared half to death. He didn't know what it was or why, when soon after the forest or the grass would be aflame. But the fire that raged probably killed many animals too slow to get out of the way. Some of those animals were the same ones the man killed with a club and ate. One day he may have been hungry and, game being scarce after the fire, discov ered a fried animal, tasted it and found It palatable. He dis- Weather Brookings .13 33 Crater Lake 3d 18 Grants Pass 45 18 Howard Prairie .... 36 10 Klamath Falla 36 II MEDFORD 43 18 Portland 30 27 ;1 7 Seattle 31 30 .02 Spokane - 18 13 T. Yakima 21 8 Eureka 50 34 Red Bluff 48 23 Sacramento 47 24 San Francisco .14 42 Los Angeles 37 41 Phoenix - 4.1 23 Denver 2R 1 Chicago 13 7 Miami Beach 77 61) .01 New York 38 in .13 Washington, D.C. .. 42 10 .22 FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through Jan. ID): western Oregon - western wasn. Ineton Temperature to average below normal and precipitation llgm, mostly as oriztie or ngni snow flurries. Highs 3040 in west ern Washington. 34-44 In western Oregon. Nlgnt-time lows Northern California No rain. Temperatures averaging below nor. mal but rising slowly during week. Wall Ignites - Fire origi nating from an oil pot ex tended to a wall and t h e roof at Dclah Timber com pany, White City, about 12:15 a.m. yesterday, Central Point rural firemen said. A 20 by 20-foot area was involved, but damage was described as slight. Houst Fire - A wall behind a stove, an outside wall and an attic of a residence at 550 Wilron rd. were damaged by fire about 10:40 a.m. yester day, according to Central Point rural firemen. A defec tive flue was listed as the cause, flic home is occupied by Joe Covey. Owner is Floyd lluyncr. Diveno Fire- Firemen were called about 1:05 a.m. yesterday to the John Ham merslcy cabin at Pardee court, 20G0 Table Rock rd. They said the occupant re turned to find the daveno burning. The fire was attribu ted to a cigarette. There was some smoke damage to the cabin's interior. Brush Burned - Firemen summoned to a reported brush fire in the 500 block of Ed wards St., about 11:20 a.m. yesterday allowed the burn ing to continue. They said that owner James L. Griffith was burning bushes along a fence. Flut Fires - Chimney fires were reported yesterday at home of Romle Rhodes, 508V3 Edwards St.; Mrs. Marie Cum mins, 1756 Orchard Homo dr., and Shirrel Doty, 46 South Kccne way, firemen slated. Flu Fire - Medford fire men brought a flue fire un der control at the Atone Schindler residence, 531 Pearl St., Saturday. The fire was reported at 7:05 p.m. There was no damage. Oregon Emerging From Deep Freeze Portland -lUPIl- The state of Oregon showed signs today of emerging from Its deep frcczo but streets and highways in many areas remained hazard ous. Snow flurries and light driz zle, some of it freezing, were) forecast. Portland got a light dust ing of snow Sunday which turned into freezing drizzlo during the night. This morn- ' ing streets were sheets of ico and motorists skidded to work during the rush hour. Forecasts called for highs above freezing in western Oregon and parts of eastern Oregon today, but lows down to 26 west of the Cascades and to 12 cast of the moun tains tonight. The southbound lanes of the Baldock Freeway near the Tigard overpass were blocked nearly four hours late Sunday when the rear trailer of a gasoline tanker truck turned over on the ley road. Thcro was no fire. Driver William Bclm of Mt. Angel and his son, Chuck, 15, escaped injury. Portland Firm Fire Damage Estimated Portland tUPB Fire at a northwest Portland industrial plant early today resulted in an estimated $250,000 loss. Four alarms were sounded for the blaze, which broke out about 3:30 a.m. at the Cum mins Oregon Diesel Inc. build ing. There were no injuries. Assistant Fire Chief Ken neth Post said loss was pri marily to equipment, spare parts and office equipment in the 150 by 200 foot one-story concrete building. Firemen battled the blaze, of undetermined origin, for about an hour. HMD' covered that cooked meat is pretty tasty, much more so than the raw flesh he was used to eating. At the time, he and his hump-backed wife, as well as his low-browed children, had been eating raw meat; he hadn't started yet raising veg' etables. Those he gathered from the forest or the jungle he ate raw. They wore hit teeth down, right to the gums, He wasn't very bright because he neglected to wash the sand off. The food was pretty gritty but it was stomach-filling. Cookery Begins He may have taken some burning embers home from the forest fire and attempted to tell his wife how very de licious cooked flesh was. If she bestirred herself and kept fuel on the fire, he may have told her, they could enjoy cooked meat at every meal, If she goofed off and allowed the fire to go out, he would have to wait until the next electrical storm set the woods afire. Then, If they didn't die of smoke inhalation, they could cook again. Up until the electrical storm, they all con tinued to eat raw meat. Another possibility and it could have happened is that the prehistoric man may have made his bed by piling leaves, grass or any other veg etation in a corner of the cave. He probably slept on a leaf bed before he learned how to dress and preserve the skins of animals. Not being loo bright, he may have piled vegetation in the corner that heated up when In a heavy mass. He didn't know what spontaneous combustion was, but if his bed caught fire he knew he had made a mistake somewhere, It must have been uncomfort- blc, fleeing his burning bed in his skin night-dress. Another interesting fact about prehistoric fire making is that any hypothesis may be right or wrong. No one will ever know for sure. Investment Funds Noon auouUons on eeleete stocks! Fund Bid Asked Bullock - 12.47 Chemical Fund . 10.49. Colonial Energy 11. B3 Eaton Howard Stk ...... 13.11 Fidelity , M. Fundamental 0.20 Croup Sec-Avta-Eleo . 7.00 Group Sec-Corn Stk 13.43 Group Sec-Petr 11. B7 Keystone B-3 13.36 Keystone B-4 9.31) Keystone K-2 4.96 Keystone s-i zu.vi Keystone S-2 12.0.1 (3fHRp Candle Room GENUINE CHARCOAL STEAKS Open 5:30 P.M. Til Midnite Every Dy DANCING Entertainment by Tony Martini HOTEL MEDFORD m a A, t'v f Hawthorne it beautifully fj Sf landscaped perk. Visiting it fx -J W --r 'itSsaeT . ' will give you relaxed, Ok Q - Jr pleasant feeling; and re- VI p '0, member, only a block away, tJ fS X S 'j right at the end of Haw- A flk aaaealswL ,h"n' ' HW,horn' Keystone S-3 Keystone a- - Mass Inv Growth, National Growth TV . Elec United Accum United Canada United Continental .... United Income United Science Value Une 13.40 4.0.1 7.62 7.91 7.24 13.38 17.01 6.32 11.39 6.33 3.07 13.67 11.40 12.03 14.17 13.92 10.08 7.78 13.61 13.00 16.9B 10.47 9.42 22.82 13.13 14.73 4.43 8.33 8.64 7.89 14.62 19.14 7.13 12.67 6.94 3.34 19.29 Welllntton 14.03 Portland Livestock Portland (UPI) USDA Cattle 900. Choice steers 27.30: mixed good-choice 27-27.30: heifers mixed good-choice 26; utility cows 13-13; canner-cutter 12-14; utility bulls 18-20. Calvea ISO. Good vealers 29-32; feeders choice 26 steers. Hogs 330. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers 10. Sheen 330. Good-choice wooled lambs 18.30-19.30. in w NOW SHOWING A FINE DOUBLE HIT SHOW! GEE -60' DEE-GO A NEW JOY HAS COME TO THE SCREEN! mm mm mm -swtrj -JtITlirfillir lITll lnilimi IIUIIIII At-ur umu mhii hit ni au v"1 ' ' Ly- aw iwewaww imah BEE-CO 6EE-C0 CEE-60 CEE-fiO' flf PCO GEE-CO 6EE-G0 I not all men ci J THHJ UN1TIO 'n''gjfi j-' tjrjL x JOHN SAXON ROBERT REWORD igspfowtkl? (jib? cm& how do you answer the hunger in a child's eyes, if he lives thousands of miles away? By joining CARE'S Food Crusade, you span the world to help feed hungry school children, orphans, refugees, the aged and sick, desperately poor families. what you do is share our farm abund ance stapiet donated by the U.S. Food for Peace program. CARE adds other foods, pack various units to match coun try needs. Every $1 you give sends one package with your name and address, to bring a personal message of friendship from the American people, where need is urgent, CARE delivers your sifts. You cannot specify persons. but you may choose any of these places: Colombia, Cyprus, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Greece, Haiti, Hong Kong, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Korea, Macau, Mexico, Pakistan, Poland, Sierra Leone, Turkey, West Berlin, Vielnam, Yugoslavia. CARE New York 16, N.Y. or your local CARE office Here Is $.....!........,. for the Food Crusade. (Make checks payable to CARE, Inc.) (Your name) " . (Address) ' Courtesy of Mail Tribune