Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 14, 1955, Image 13

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    I Local and
Carpenters' Auxiliary is
sponsoring a rummage sale to
be held Wed., June 15th from
9 to 5 at 106 N. Ivy. Sale is to
finance their charity work. ,
To Arrive Judy Goodrich
of Yoncalla is to arrive this week
to visit her uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Miller, 542 North
Bartlett st.
In Hospital Mrs. Chauncey
Florey, route 3, box 441E, Med-
ford, is a surgery patient m Com
munity hospital, it was reported
this morning. Another patient at
the same hospital is Mrs. Donald
B. Whallin, 128 Valley View dr.
Club To Meet The Town
send club auxiliary will meet on
the south side of Hawthorne
park Wednesday noon for a pic
nic lunch. All attending are to
bring a covered dish and their
own service. A short business
meeting and program will fol
low the lunch.
In Corvallis Mrs. Addison
Robinson of The Hub has re
turned from Corvallis where
she attended high school gradua
tion exercises. Her son Lyle
Younger, was graduated. He
plans to enter the Oregon State
college school of predentistry in
the fall.
To Meet Several Jackson
County Poultry raisers are ex
pected to attend meetings of the
Oregon Poultry Hatchery asso
ciation Thursday, June 16, and
the Oregon Poultry Improve
ment association Friday, June
17, at Oregon State college in
Corvallis. Noel Bennion is sec
retary for both groups.
Moad Returning Jack Moad,
University of Oregon student
who was stricken with polio on
May 17, is to return to the home
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs
Jack Moad Sr., 1012 East Main
st., Wednesday. Young Moad is
now walking around and has no
paralysis, his father Said this
morning. He has been confined
in Sacred Heart hospital in Eu
gene. Patients Reported Patients
reported by Sacred Heart hos
pital this morning included Rob
ert Kinney, 227 North Krbeley
way; Cyril Hancock, 821 West
11th st., and Mrs. George Dror-
baugh, route 2, for medical care;
Mrs. Arlie Clyburn, Ashland:
Logan Foster, 6-year-old son of
Mr. and Mrs. William Foster,
Sunny Valley; Mrs. Nolan
Vaughn, 1016 West Second st.,
all for surgery. ' ""' ""'
Firemen Called A fire de
partment pump truck was called
to the Girl Scout day camp off
Barnett rd. yesterday at about
10 a.m. to extinguish a fire
which burned part of a tree,
firemen said. At 3 p.m. firemen
extinguished a grass fire report
ed at 3297 Madrone ave. No
damage resulted from either
fire. Four gasoline spills were
flushed away yesterday. Fire
Marshal Truman Nelson yester
day inspected an office building,
a dry cleaning establishment and
two busines occupancies, issuing
eight orders for the ' correction
of fire hazards.
TD
a
TONITE! SHOW STARTS AT 8:25 P.M.
mil's
TOO GREATEST
The SUPREME
ADVENTURE
of th Future!
IE
II aS
..aag wean wit tiMiia
...tCHNICOLOR Q
AND!
THE SUPREME ADVENTURE OF OUR TIMEI
Also DANNY KAYE in
"ASSIGNMENT CHILDREN! n Technicolor
Personal
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Amos
Brinker, Elma, Wise, are visit
ing Mr. and Mrs. Bert Bel lof
Talent. Brinker is a brother of
Mrs. BelL ' ' (
MOC Meeting Gold Stripe
Pup Tent No. 3, Military Order
of Cooties, will meet at 8 p.m.
today at the Veterans of For
eign Wars hall, 42 North Front
st.
Auxiliary Meeting The
; auxiliary of Barracks 14, Vete
- -r nr u tit t : n
i ana Ui. vvuuu Well x, wui uuii-
vene at 8 p.m. Friday at home of
Mrs. Goldie Brooks, 335 South
Riverside ave.
-
To Nursing Home Mrs. C.
A. Myers, 315 South Orange it.,
was taken from Community to
Parkview Nursing home yester
day, the hospital reported this
morning. Mrs. Myers, who frac
tured a hip May 20, has been a
patient at Community since that
time.
Director Coming State Di
rector Charless Skill, Portland,
will visit Medford Loyal Order
of Moose at a meeting set for
Wednesday, June 15, at 8 p.m.in
the Moose hall, 11 Newtown st.
He w i 1 be accompanied by
State Secretary Jim Addcox,
Roseburg.
i
At School Mrs. June Clauss
and Mrs. Winifred Mack, of Mc
clain's Drug center, returned
last week from Portland where
they attended a Dorothy Gray
beauty consultant school at the
Heathman hotel. They made the
trip by plane.
Visit Grandmother Melinda
and Johnnie Kennedy, children
of Mr. and Mrs. William Kenne
dy, 152 Highland dr., are in Pa
cific Grove, Calif., to visit their
grandmother during summer va
cation. They expect to make a
trip into old Mexico.
From Topeka ' Miss Jean
Parker and her grandmother,
Mrs. Edna Bersuch, Topeka,
Kan., are visiting here for the
summer with Mrs. Bertuch s son-in-law
and .daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. L. A. White, 443 Haven st.
While here 'Miss Parker is em
ployed at the White's cafe, the
Clock, on East Main st. at Bart
lett St. . . !
River at Vancouver
Above Flood Stage
Portland (U.R) The Colum
bia river-at Vancouver was 3.7
feet over flood stage today and
was expected to rise another foot
by Thursday, River Forecaster
Elmer Fisher reported.
The Columbia's reading at 8
a.m. was 18.7 feet, same as the
Willamette in Portland. Flood
stage in Portland is 18 feet and
at Vancouver 15 feet. The
streams rose four-tenths of a foot
yesterday in the local area.
However, Fisher said the' Wil
lamette above Oregon City was
falling today. Tributaries east of
the Cascades in Washington also
were reported falling.
Only minor lowland flooding
has been reported along the Co
lumbia. iES!
"CAN MAN LIVE
IN SPACE?"
J
N LSP "D..
WW-WW ' ' l "j.i-MH - .. . . . MJ.Ui,U, i J i iM ii .. ' ,j
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y ' " ' I y "
su i&f&tf. jf Gin w J 4 I.:.- , t
HUMAN CANNONBALL Hugo Zacchini, the "human cannon
ball," provides one of the spectacular moments in the Clyde Beatty
Circus when he is shot from the mouth of a huge cannon. Zacchini,
who travels the length of the big
mated at 100 miles an hour as he leaves the cannon's mouth. The
circus, sponsored by the Allied Veterans Council, will be held at
the county fairgrounds at 2:30 and 8 p.m. Thursday. .
Portland Contractors
Portland U.R) Members of
the building contractor industry
in Portland declared today they
would stand pat on their dispute
with AFL Carpenters over wages
and charged that leaders of the
union were seeking "extraordi-
Prosperity Seen
From Automation
South Bend, Ind. U.R)
Play-right Emmet Lavery says
the spread of automation, with
"the three or four-day week"
will bring new prosperity to the
American stage.
He said when that time comes
"people will find in the theater
which they create themselves a
key to the understanding and
enjoyment of the new leisure
which will be theirs."
Lavery, former president of
the Screen Writers Guild of Hol
lywood and author of "The
"Magnificent Yankee," was key
note speaker yesterday at the
biennial convention of the Catho
lic Theater Conference.
The theater of the future, he
said, will be "an acute social
necessity." He said it will be
found "in every town and city
where people of imagination
have the courage to face the
challenge of the new era."
BUDGET. APPROVED
; Portland (U.R). Portland
school district No. 1 last night
approved a budget for 1955-56 of
?26,830,010. Of this, $21,119,031
is for instruction, operation and
administration and the rest for
new building.
TEXT FOR TODAY ..
Minneapolis (U.R) Pastor
Elmer Hjorland made his final
remarks to the large Eastern
Sunday throng thaft attended
services at Central Lutheran
Church here: "We also are hav
ing services here next Sunday."
CHEESE NEWS
Plymouth, s Wis. (U.R) R. W.
Leffler, president of the Wiscon
sin Cheese Exchange, reported
that 5,000,000 more pounds of
cheese were traded on the ex
change in 1954 than in any
previous year.
Dead Una Sunday Classified' fc at
nooa Saturday : io ajn. Monday for
Monday: other days 5:30 orevioiuday
MEDFORD-
' CO. fairgrounds
ONI DAY ONLY
AFT. NITI ' "
2:30 k 8 p.m.
Span. Allied Veterans Council
Gail aril Admiuioa Jnd Reserved
Only at CENTRAL REXALL
f" UNRESERVED SEATS
EACH PERFORMANCE :
Children . 75 Adults $1.35
INCLUDES ALL TAXES
tent.is said to gain a speed esti
To Stick To Demands
nary personal power."
Clell Harris, secretary of the
Portland district council of car
penters, countered that contract
ors were trying to "get him" at
a forthcoming union" election
Carpenters have struck two
divisions of Associated General
Contractors and the Portland
Home Builders Association, halt
ing some 100 million dollars
worth of construction in the
Portland area.
Employers charged that Har
ris conduct of wage talks mark
ed "a complete perversion of
honest negotiations and morality
in labor-employer relations."
They added that they had no
intention of buckling under."
Daily Weather Report
DATE June 14, 1955 -Sunset
tonight 7:49 p.m. Sunrise to
morrow 4:34 a.m.
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Considerable
cloudiness, few light showers, mild
temperatures through Wednesday. Low
tonight about SO. High Wednesday 75.
Western Oregon: Mostly cloudy to
night and early Wednesday, with par
tial clearing Wednesday afternoon.
Few light showers tonight, little
change in temp. Lows 42-57. Highs
tomorrow 65-75 in interior; 60 along
coast. .
Northern California: " Cloudy to
night and Wednesday. Few scattered
showers in mountains. Low overcast
and drizzle near coast. Continued cool.
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
Western O r e g o n Temperatures
averaging slightly below normal, with
fey scattered showers tonight and
Wednesday night. Warming thereafter
to above normal temperatures by
Thursday or Friday. Highs of 60 to 70
rising to 70 to 85. Lows about normal
for the period. 45 to 55.
Northern California No appreciable
rain except scattered showers and
thunder storms occasionally in higher
mountains. Overcas t coastal areas.
Temperatures below normal.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
64: normal 0.
Record high this date 100 in 1916.
Record low this date 39 in 1945.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to mid
night, none: Midnight to 10 a.m.. none.
Total this month none, .32 in. below
normal.
Total since Sept. 1, 8.81 inches,
8.53 inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 13,
highest this a.m. 60.
- CITY High Low Pree.
Brookings .. 56 49
Crater Lake . 59 33
Grants Pass .:. 82 41 .01
Klamath Falla 76 46 .02
MEDFORD ... 81 56
Portland 66 49
Seattle .
Spokane
Yakima
59
78
82
43
52
53
Eureka
Red Bluff
Sacramento
San Francisco
Los Angeles
. 51
83
. 70
58
65
49
53
50
51
60
Phoenix
Denver . .
Chicago
Miami
New York ....
Washington, D C.
86
83
55
89
72
72
63
50
51
73
62
60
.19
01
.01
CLYDE BEATTY
IN PERSON -
TIIUR.
JUNE
Chair Tickets en Sale Circus Day
DRUG Main Central
EXTRA ATTRACTION
Doug Autry, "Singing
Cowboy" in person
and His Congress of
WILD WEST ROPERS
AND RIDERS
Wall Street
New York (U.R) The . pro
longed stock market rise ran
into opposition today.
The list had risen in seven out
of eight sessions with the indus
trials setting a record high and
the rails a new high since Oct.
26, 1929.
Realizing took hold first in
the rails which had been strong
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
Dow-Jones final stock aver
ages: 30 industrials 438.20, off
1.97; 20 railroads 161.09, off
0.76; 15 utilities 64.11, up 0.13,
and 65 stocks 162.11, off 0.57.
Sales today were about 2.860,
000 shares compared with 2,770,
000 shares yesterday.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T ....184V
Anaconda 68?s
Chrysler 775g
Curtiss Wright 2QVs
General Electric 54
General Motors lOOVa
Montgomery Ward . 79Vi
Penn. R. R 2994
Penney, J. C. 94V
Radio ... 54 :
Southern Co 20 la
Southern Pacific ..... ;.. 60
S. Oil of Calif. 80 .
Texas Gulf Sulphur ........ 42Va
Transamerica 42
Tri-Continental 28
United Aircraft 71 M
U. S. Rubber 48l2
U. S. , Steel 49
Youngstown 81 H
Portland Livestock
Portland (U.P.) Cattle 200. Choice
910 lb. choice steers S23.25; other
good steers $21-22.25; utility-commer
lb fed heifers S22 with some S20;
viincr-cuuer cows sio-11.50: utility
commercial bulls S16.50-17.50.
Calves 50. Commercial-good vealers
$19-20.
Hogs 350. Choice 1 and 2 barrows
and gilts 180-235 lb. $21.50-22.50:
choice 1 lots 200-235 lb. $23; 260 lb..
$20.
Sheep 1000 . Mostly choice 83 lb.
spring lambs $20; good-choice 18.00
19.50; good choice shorn slaughter
ewes $5: ntilitv-BYiorf S3 3n.d 5n-
$2.30 down. ' '
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (U.P.) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large. 53c doz.; A
large 47-49c; AA medium 47-48c doz.;
A medium, 46-47c doz.; A small. 36
40c doz.; cartons 1 to 3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints 65c lb.; cartons 66c; A prints
65c; B prints 63c. .
Cheese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar. Oregon singles. 42,i-45i,ic: 5-lb.
loaves, 46V2-49',2C. Processed Ameri
can eheese, 5-lb. loaf. lb.
Farm Market
strawberries sold at $2.50 2.75 with
i, o.uu ior ugnter supplies today.
Other items were about Bteady. i
Poultry, Rabbits
- - w w. ........ u. bjuwcis in u. x
quality f.o.b. Portland): Frvers 2'i to
m iarm, aac; ngnt nens,
17-18c: heavy hens all wts.. 20-21c lb.;
old roosters. 12-14c lb.
r)rciri fViiftlrAn 1 J 1 ...
retailers: Fryers New York style. 38-
o-ouc id.: wnoie arawn. 5i-52c lb.;
cut-up. 55-57c lb.: hens, light type,
New York style, 31-32c: cut-ups, 43
44e: hens, heavy type. N.Y. style, 34
35c: whole-drawn. 45-4 7c lb.
Turkeys To producers for A grade
breeder hens, f.o.b. farm. NY. dressed.
26! visrmt.t 91m A T.T v
style. 31c lb.; eviscerated. To retail
era. n graae young nens. ready to
cook. 48-50c; N. Y. dressed. 37-38c lb.;
A grade toms, oven ready, 40-44c;
N. Y. Style. 34-35e lb frvr fiirlrov
4-8 lbs.. 49-51c.
Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b.
lbs.. 21-23c up; 5-6 lbs., 17-19c: colored
pelts4c -under; old does. 10-I2e lb.; a
few higher. Fresh dressed frvers to
iciauers, ox-ouc; cut up, tSZ-tjoc.
PORTLAND CASH GRAIN
Portland Prices as reported bv the
USDA market news service: Wheat,
No 3 mntt wHit CD1) Mn kii
nrnmtlt (I 1irM t A Tn DAWTonfl. KTa o
white oats 38 lb. test, Coast delivery.
oa ion; roruana aenvery. $32.50;
Nn 9 Wmimn ha.Uv .nn t n I.
Portland Coast .delivery: soybean
meal. $81 ton, cars prompt delivery
Portland; standard millrun. $48.50.
cars; No. 2 yellow corn. Eastern ship
ping points. $69.50 69.75 ton.
No. 2 green alfalfa, baled, f.o.b. trucks'
FROM DIME -
Powerful absorbing drama
of real people . . . highlighted
with memorable songs . . . captur
ing the lusty excitement of
M G M PRESENTS IN COLOR AND CINEMASCOPE
DORIS DAY JAMES CAGNEY
"Lovo f.1c orloavo Mo"
M-tMflc wrrW 1 see ecu PUSt w -
.CAMERON MITCHELL-Robert keith-tomtuiiy-danieifuchs
ISOBEI, IENNART STJS, Eastman COLOR CHARLES VIDOR-JOE PASTERNAK
- SONG HITS AVAILABLE IN COLUMBIA RECORD ALBUM
HOLLY STARTIHG FRIDAY!
Tuesday, June 14, 1955
DEATH "due to heart attack,"
is decision of Rochester, N. Y.,
coroner's office after actor Robr
ert Wilcox, 44-year-old husband
of .'actress . Diana Barrymore,
was found dead in his sleeper
berth' aboard a New York Cen
tral train. (International)
Retiring Railroad
Superintendent
Honored at Lunch
L. P. (Hoppy) Hopkins, retir
ing superintendent of the Port
land division of the Southern
Pacific railroad, was honored at
a luncheon meeting here yes
terday. '
' The gathering was attended
chiefly by fruit packers and
shippers, lumbermen.and others
who have used the freight fa
cilities of the SP, and who have
known Hopkins for years.
Hopkins spoke briefly in ap
preciation of the tributes paid
to him- He was presented with
a "hatful" of money for the pur
chase of a gift for himself or
Mrs. Hopkins for a trip to South
America the couple is planning
after his retirement takes effect
at the end of this month.
49 Years With SP
Hopkins began with the rail
road "sweeping out the shops"
in San Francisco almost 49 years
ago, and has worked in various
divisions of the railroad through
the years. He has been a fre-i
quent visitor to the Rogue Val
ley since becoming superintend
ent of the division.
Brief talks in his honor were
made by B. L. Nutting, repre
senting lumber interests; H. B.
Murphy, representing fruit
men; Bob Holmes; representing
Southern Pacific employees, and
Mayor Earl Miller, representing
the city of Medford. Raymond
Reter'was master of ceremonies.
About 40 persons attended the
luncheon at the Medford hotel.
NEW KIND OF RAID :
Oxford, England (U.R) Men
students raided all five women's
colleges at Oxford University
yesterday but no panties were
stolen. Instead, police said, the
students whitewashed the walls
with Latin slogans.
HANGS SELF
Milwaukee, Wis. (U.R) Mrs.
Beatrice. Trostel Rathbone, 42,
Louisiana socialite and daughter
of a prominent Milwaukee fam
ily, was found hanging this
morning in her brother's home.
A - DANCE TO ZIEGFELD FOLLIES!
. a glittering era. I
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN
DELPHINE KEHOE
Mrs. Delphine P. Kehoe, 83, of
1009 North Central ave., died in
a local hospital today. Chapel
Mortuary is in charge of funeral
arrangements. x
EARL IMHAUSEN
Funeral services for Earl Her
man Imhausen, 28, of Route 3,
Box 180, Medford, who died Sat
urday, will be held In Conger
Morris chapel, Wednesday at j:30
p.m., with the Rev. Sherman
Moore of Pilgrim ' Holiness,
church officiating; Committal
"vill be in Siskiyou Memorial
park.
The deceased was born May 2,
1927, in Greencastle, Ind., and
had ; lived . in Medford for 25
years.' ' N
Survivors include his parents,
Mr. and Mrs.' Ira H. Imhausen;
Medford; six sisters, Mrs. Mary
Skaggs, Medford; Mrs. Eula Mc
Manus, New York; Mrs. Alberta
Schipper, Chicago, , 111.; Mrs.
Doris Christie and Mrs. Phyllis
Webb, both of Rogue River, and
Miss Patricia Imhausen, at home;
four brothers, George W., Rich
ard W.j Don . C. and' Ira H., Jr.,
all of Medford, and his grand
mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Imhau
sen, Gosport, Ind. - .
LULA RIKARD-
Mrs. Lula Rikard, 57, wife of
Edward G. Rikard, Gold Hill,
died yesterday ' in Grants Pass.
Conger-Morris funeral home is
in charge of. funeral arrange
ments. . . ' , ... -
MARY BRADSHAW
Funeral services for Mary H.
Bradshaw, 81 who died in North
Bend Saturday, will be held in
Conger-Morris chapel Thursday
at 10:30 a.m.
BIRTHS
BAILEY To Mr, and Mrs.
Roy. 254 North Main St., Ash
land, June 13, 1955, a girl, 7
pounds at Community hospital.
THE
Elbow inn
300 6th & Bartlett
Will Be Open
Wed. Eves.
Until 10 P.M.
For Your Convenience
57 Disease Cases -Reported
to County
Fifty - seven , communicable
diseases were reported to the
county health- department last
week. Measles with 38. cases,
led the list..;- . : : ,;
Others listed were- influenza,
with 10; german measles, 3;
chickenpox and rheumatic fever,
2 each, and pneumonia and in
fectious hepatitis, 1 each.
I now siiovImX
IfflR
lotwoseoioe ZJZ
MAUREEN CHARA
ANTHONY QUINN
. EXTRA-
FEATURETTE
'3 CHEERS FOR
THE GIRLS'
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