Image provided by: Central Point School District #6; Central Point, OR
About Central Point times. (Central Point, Or.) 1964-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1965)
THURSDAY, O C T. 21, 1965 Sold Hill Motet *F M l * a d TlU ey «ss. IM S M e m tx n o f the Hanby Elem entary schcx 1 paper, the Hanby Highlights* , are: Editor, Margery Hodson; Assistant Editor, Renee* Holderness; News, Joan Cunowski and Janice Czmowskl; Feature, Melissa Deuel and Arthur Cab ral; Review, Jerry Martin; Sports, Mike Henderson and Dan Estremado; Cover, Mel inda Fluck; Sales, Larry Wash burn and Steve Hen<fcickson; Column, Cindy K ellogg and Elba Corona; Advertising, Tom A-tseth and Jim Lees; Distribution, Ken Foley and Reg Genaw; Manager Bill Eicher. Mrs. Fern Hughes is a hosp ital patient this w eek. Mrs. Earl Moore has cn ex hibit at the Gold Hill Library five paintings. They include the following entitled Lyman House, the Covered Bridge across Evans Creek, Little Log Cabin in the Siskiyou Mount ains, Lonely Cabin and Log Fort at the D ardenelles. Mr. Ashley frowne returned to the Rogue V alle Memorial Holpital for further surgery. This is Mr. frowne's second tim e for surgery in recent week: Mrs. Melvin Johnson of Kanes Creek Road is bus driver for school district 6 . Leroy Sutton, *-ck and Stev en Hendrickson i^ ft over the weekend for EsLt^rn Oregon in hopes that this tim e they w ill get a buck due h the rainy w eather. M s. Beverly Washburn is substitute m ail carrier for a few days for Mr. Hamilton Ecker. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard K ing are spending a few days at Feather River, California, visiting friends. The county road grader is smoothing out the rough spots on Galls Creek Road. Mrs. Rose Wheeler o f Rose burg has been visiting her son and fam ily, Mrs. and Mrs. Jim Wheeler and children on Galls Creek Road. Mrs. Wheeler w ill spend a few days in Washington before returning to her home in Rose burg. Miss Jan Kinney has returned from Boise, Idaho, where she enjoyed a month's vacation, a graduation present from her parents, Mr. and M r . Jess Kinney. Jan graduated from Crater High School this year. Jan's sister, Lynn, now Mrs. Lynn Franks o f Pine Grove, C alifornia, also visited her parents. Lynn was a graduate of 1962 at Crater High School. Mrs. Sam Givens, Mrs. Mary Robbins, Mrs. Tom Burton, a ll of Foots Creek, and Mr. and Mrs. Malcosm Caldwell of Gold H ill were guests at the home of Mrs. Lola Guy on Galls Creek Road. Mr. and Mn. Bryon frown spent the w eekend cam ping and hunting. Mack's room, Lois Newman; M s. A lice Beneka's room Barbara Deuel* Mr. Paul Me Beth's room, Nancy Eicher; W afer Movement, Level Affect Fish Embryo Growth M s . M iller's room, M n . Martin; Mr. Battaile's room, Marlene Pierson; Mr. Parker's room, no mother chosen as yet; Mr. Walter Doherty's room, Carol Dunlap; and Mr. Hollaway's room Jeanne Holderness. The Girls S coua w ill m eet every Saturday afternoon bet w een the hours of 3:00 and 5:00. M n. Marie Pienson is the Scout leader, assisted by Jan Kinney. At the present tim e the girls are working on their cooking badges. M s . Piersson expresses the hope that Saturday is the best day for their m eetings, as an extra hour can be had to help the girls earn their badges sooner. M n. Pierson wants to express her thanks of the parents that transportation has been ready for the girls. If there arc any questions you would like answered con cerning the Girl Scouts please feel free to ca ll Mrs. Marie Piersson, 855-1390. Jimmy V’akely w ill headline the entertainment at the first annual Home G Decorator Show at the Medford Armory which starts tomorrow night through Sunday, October 24. Besides the many outstanding and interesting exhibits there w ill be con tinuous entertainm ent. Mn. Jack Hendrickson and children. The list of room mothers for the Gold H ill schools is com plete with the exception of one mother. At the Margaret E. Patrick The 100-piece Medford H i g h School Band has accepted an invitation from San Francisco to perform at the half-time of the 49er-Ram football game at Kezar Stadium, Nov. 21. The game will be televised in this area. The trip is being financed by band students and the existing band travel fund. The band will leave Medford early on Nov. 20, stay at the Drake Wiltshire Ho tel that night, perform for the crippled children at the Shrul er's Hospital Sunday morning, play at the game that afternoon and return home by early Mon day morning. The group, plus chaperones, will travel on three Greyhound buses. The Rev. and M n. Thomas White visited their son, Ray- mand LaVeme W hite, at Alam eda, California, last weekend. He w ill leav e for a tour of Japan and other far east points on the USS Enterprise this month. THAT HEARTLESS WORLD Oh, yes, I'm it — that heartless world You've oft tim es heard about - - Round which poetic tongues have twirled To rudely bawl me out Because I chuckle at your wit When you've a joke to crack, But should you chance to groan a bit — You must excuse my back. Circulation report for the Gold H ill Library is as follows: September 1964: Gold Hill adult cine dation: 541; juvenile circulation, 225, for a total o f 766. EDUCATION SECRETARIES Reeagabed feeders hi both the Yet even poets - - Bless their hearts! Don't see it all som etim es, And, view ing only scattered parts, Grow partial with their rhymes. They fail to note that when you're blue You too, seek life and fun; Nor do they see I've troubles, too — Ten billion to your one! education and legislative fields are scheduled to address South ern Oregon school secretaries during a regional meeting of the Oregon Association of Educa tional Secretaries Nov. 13 in Klamath Falls. Heading the list of speakers will be Representa tive Carroll Howe and Dr. Win ston Purvien, president of Ore gon Technical Institute, Klam ath Falls. The meeting will be held at Lucile O’Neill School. I've sorrows all along the way Each minute of the w eek. How many tears for me today Have trickled down your cheek? You're right there at my com ic shows; You read my "funnies" through; But sickness, sorrow, kindred woes Have little charm for you. ing trends and events in the pharmacy profession will be held in the auditorium of Sa lem General Hospital on Nov. 13 for members of the Oregon Society of Hospital Pharmacists. The seminar is being offered by the Oregon pharmaceutical so ciety in cooperation with the Division of Continuing Educa tion, State System of Higher Education, and the school of pharmacy of Oregon State Uni versity. by Jack Finel Sept. 2, 1876- July 29, 1965 HONE& DECORATOR SHOW FI a ÎIAM . JHM YW AKE1Y it< "tr»* arta wmi a a • n ana AfTV Hl ATO » f »njw 'nu R# SWW, OCT. 22.23* 241965 CONTINUOUS EM TEITABBOT • CUMUL MOBIL« HOMI «X Ml BIT ¡ s P iis r " *»«»•» st i j m u io s nt Msisn Con Causa Discomfort Some w o m e n insist qn wearing every bracelet they own. A moment's t h o u g h t about th e ir clanking, Jangling costume Jewelry may encour on the age some to cut down I num ber ” HEY LOOK APPLES Buy direct from grower & save! Several varieties $1.50 - 3.00 box Gebhard Orchards Next to Mon Desir Some of the embryos were buried in glass beads so as to simulate natural conditions more closely. Fry that hatched in the cylinders containing beads were larger in size than those with out. This effect is ascribed to the increase of water velocities around the embryos buried in beads. It appears though, the paper notes, that the hatching time does not vary simply with the growth rate of the embryos, in creasing as growth rate de creases. The relation between them is not yet clear, and con siderable more research will be required before the condition is fully understood, it was indicat ed. The comparisons were made in special apparatus, located at the Oak Creek Laboratory near Corvallis, in which conditions of oxygen concentration, water vel ocity, and temperature can be controlled. [CRATER LAKE MOTORS. Phone INC. 664-2864 Central Point Lot UU tfQQfl 4>9 v >U H 0 ara L /U E $350 S A----- ------ I $370 E~ ’60 FORD'/: ton pickup Barden bumper Was $1199 NOW 58 FORD Fairlane 500 Conv. New top. Sharp! W a s * Straub To Speak On Crime Rate At Medford Meet $499 NOW«PU '57 FORD Country Sedan. 4 dr. State Tresurer Robert W. Straub will speak at a public meeting in the Jackson County Courthouse auditorium Thurs day at 8 p m. Straub will speak on Crime and Delinquency in Oregon. As Viewed by a Member of the State Board of Control. Straub will review current trenda in correctional proceedures a n d outline some of the possibilities for reducing high cost of crime in Oregon. A question and answer period is scheduled following the tslk. V -8 Was $499 Whse. price ” '51 GMC '/: ton pickup Was _ $ 4 9 9 Whse. DEALERS NOT WELCOME I Portable 'Bath' First Annual charted the influence of oxygen concentration and water move ment on the growth of trout and salmon embryos. They found that fry from em bryos reared at low and inter mediate oxygen concentrations hatched later and were smaller than fry from embryos reared at concentrations near the air- saturation level. The findings point up a detrimental effect of stream pollution—which reduces oxygen content—on fish life. The effect of water velocity was nearly as pronounced at high oxygen concentrations as at low concentrations, the sci entista report. Water movement is believed to promote growth by delivering oxygen to the em bryos. It may also remove some metabolic waste products that can retard embryonic growth, or perhaps even some special growth-regulating dissolved sub stance, the three experts con clude. PHARMACISTS SEMINAR An alk-dey seminar n The point is: You're a part of me; I'm you and m illions more. That jo lly sm ile we love to see Because our hearts are sore. So, let us doff our Stetsons, then, To that brave scout and true Who m eets us with a cheery grin And bears his burdens, too. »M i H l' ■ JHM.T (< FTYT Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lindsey and children, Amanda, Sandy, and Randy, o f Eagle Point, spent the evening enjoying music at the home o f Mk. and OREGON STATE U N IV E R S ITY —Growth of steelhead trout and coho salmon embryos are •lowed by low oxygen concen trations in the stream and sig nificantly affected by the swift ness of the water movement, a prize-winning Oregon State Uni versity research report reveals. At all oxygen concentrations tested, reduced water velocities reailted in reduced size of hatching fry. The paper by Dean L. Shum way. Charles E Warren and Peter Doudoroff has won the top national award as the best scientific paper published dur ing the past year in the Trans actions of the American Fish eries Society. Shumway and Warren are fac ulty members in the OSU De partment of Fisheries and Wild life. Doudoroff is a U. S. Public Health Service scientist station ed at OSU to do fisheries and water pollution research. T h e work of the two groups is com bined within the Pacific Cooper ative Water Pollution and Fish eries Research Laboratories on campus. Chart Oxygen In the study, the scientists Medford High Band To Play AtKezar M . and Mn. Jack Griffitts visited the Jack Hendricksons last w eek. September 1965: Gold Hill adult circulation: 534 for a loss o f 1.29% ¡juvenile circul ation 311 for an increase of 38.22%. T otal was 845 for an overall increase of 10.31%. July 1964— September 1965; Gold H ill adult circulation 1,604; juvenile circulation, 1562 for a total of 3232. This was a 4.11% increase in adult and a 48. 62% in juvenile with an overall increase o f 31. 73%. Requests to Medford for books were: September 1964; Gold H ill, 7 . September 1965; Gold H ill, 18. July 1964— Sept ember 1964; Gold HUI, 43. July 1965— Septem ber 1965; Gold H ill, 39. This was an 14. 7C% increase for Gold H ill. During September 1965 there were 3 ,4 7 3 books a t the Gold Hill Library. 216 books were sent to Gold Hill with 207 books returned to Medford. Total books at the end of Sept ember in the Gold H ill Library were 3 ,4 8 2 . During September 1965, 231 patrai checked out books at the Gold Hill Library. Big Cavern Room N early one-third of the pop ulation of the U nited States could be contained in the •Big Room" of New M exico’s Carlsbad Caverns, If people could be packed like sardines. B EN EFITS CRUSADE The benefit card party given at the Senior Activity Center in Medford last Saturday was at tended by 78 persons. Ninety- one dollars was realized and has been donated to the United Crusade, one of the supporters of the center. Tuck those washcloths in com partm ent, fo r q u i c k i e from home p re tre a te d the car glove desk or purse, pick-ups away Old Cerem ony The ceremony of the bless ing of household a n i m a l s dates back to the 14th cen tury, when pets and re p re sentative field animals were taken into the churches to be blessed in dedication to St Francis of Assisi. GET READY FOR FALL RAIN! DRAINAGE HEADQUARTERS Gutters DownspoutsAccessories Gutter: 8 ft. length 99$; 10 ft. 1.19 Downspouts: 10 ft. Round 1.67. square 1.99 HUBBARD BROS., INC. The Store With The 2 Front Doors MAIN AND RIVERSIDE SUBSCRIPTION RATE NOTICE! Effective Dec. I, 1965, the subscription rate for The Times will be $3.00 for one year inside Jackson County EXCEPT for Charter Subscribers who will renew .according to your Charter receipt. If you subscribe NOW you can still be a Charter Subscriber for $2.00 Fill in the blank PHONE 773-7777 ONLY JACKSON COUNTY 5 C H A R T «« S U B S C R IB IR CENTRAL POINT TIMES Jackson County Advertiser This e.rtlflee that name I ad« is a Charter Subscriber to the above newspaper for $2 0 0 paid for one year and the right to renew for one year for «2.00 CBNTRAL P O IN T T I M M data Elementary School Room mothea are: M n . Mildred A t