Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 01, 1956, Image 13

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Local and Personal
VliU FrUndt Mr. and Mm.
Ernest Beale, Talent, are to
leave today for The Dalles,
where they will spend the week
visiting friends.
Lot Expanding Work is now
underway to expand the park
ing area by the court house an
nex. The county court said the
lot will accommodate about 20
ears.
Articles Ftfad Articles of
incorporation were filed last
week in the county clerk's office
for the Biggy corporation and
the South Fir corporation. Shir
ley G. Christensen, Dorothy F.
McQuat and btto J. Frohmayer
signed the articles.
mm
Business names Retiring
from assumed business names,
according to records in the coun
ty clerk's office, are Evelyn Pot
ter, Oregon Professional Adjust
ment Service; Neal V. and Ann
B. Preston, South Side Market;
and Norman Anderson, Sacred
Gardens association. Assuming
business names are Neal V. Pres
ton and Meryle L. Preston,
South Side Market; and Clinton
K. Phelps and Douglas G. Stew
art, P and S Sales company.
News of Death Friends here
of Miss Minnette Shanahan, for
mer teacher here for the Jun
ior Service league kindergarten
for deaf children have learned
of her death about three weeks
ago. The teacher died in San
Francisco following surgery, it
was said. Miss Shanahan was
teacher for the kindergarten the
term of 1954-55 and did not re
turn to Medford last fall because
of illness.
Flue Fires City firemen Sat
urday answered flue fire calls
at the Ivan Davies residence,
1779 Spring St., and at the
George M. Baker residence,
route 1, box 368-B. Damage
from the fire which started in
the Davis home at 5:30 p.m. was
confined to the roof. No dam
age resulted from the blaze
which was reported t 7:40 p.m.
Obituaries
AXEL RYDEN
Axel Ryden, 37, of 1052 West
11th st., died Saturday. Conger
Morris Funeral home is In
charge of arrangements.
REV. JOHK KUCHENBECKER
The Rev. John Carl Kuchen
becker, 71, died at his home on
Foot Hills rd. this morning.
Conger-Morris funeral home is
In charge of arrangements.
AMY LANGE
Funeral services for Mrs.
Amy Annetta Fields Lange, 81,
Jacksonville, who died in Med
ford Wednesday, will be held at
2:30 p.m. Monday at Perl Fu
neral home. The Rev. Donal
Maclvor will officiate. Inter
ment will be in Jacksonville
cemetery.
Mrs. Lange was born in St.
Mary's. Kan., April 9, 1874, the
daughter of Ephriam and Saman
tha Fields. She came to Oregon
in 1877, and lived in the Sterl
ing Mine area.
She was married to Melvin D.
Jones of Little Applegate Feb.
24, 1891. After the death of Mr.
Jones, she was married to Wil
liam E. Lange, Grants Pass,
who died several years ago. A
ton, Lloyd G. Jones, died in
1910.
Mrs. Lange was a member of
the Seventh Day Adventist
church.
She is survived by one broth
er, Harrison Fields, Redding,
Calif., and several nieces and
nephews.
Plan Breakfast The auxiliary
to Steelhead post, Veterans of
Foreign Wars, will serve an Eas
ter breakfast this morning in
Shady Cove VFW hall. Serving
will be from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Undergoes Operation Mrs.
Don Ashpole, Eagle Point, un
derwent major surgery at Sa
cred Heart hospital Thursday
the family reported Saturday.
Mrs. Ashpole may receive vis
itors, it was said.
Theft Reported Theft of two
hubcaps from a 1954 Cadillac
sedan was reported to city po
lice Friday by Morris B. Leon
ard, 2503 Hilcrest rd. He re
ported that the caps were taken
while the car was parked at
Hawthorne park between 1 and 5
p.m. Thursday.
Collects Interest Jacks o'n
county collected $5,297.73 inter
est on time deposits in the coun
ty's five banks yesterday. Treas
urer Karl Janouch reported. The
amount was for six months' in
terest on $1,140,000 county
funds.
Breaks Leg Claudia Ann
Potts, 7, student at Roosevelt
school, suffered a broken leg
while at school Friday her par
ents reported Saturday. The
child is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Claude Potts, 418 Barnes
avenue. Mrs. Potts stated that
her daughter fell while playing.
Business Names The business
name, Try R Wood, has been
retired by E. D. and Lona M.
Dameron, and assumed by Rob
ert Edwards. The business name,
Services Unlimited, has been re
tired by Dana Lee Platz and as
sumed by Dana L. and Hazel
A. Platz. The name, S and A
Logging, has been retired by
Dick Souza Sr. and Ben Ander
son, according to records in the
county recorder's office.
Leave for Philippines Paul
R. Doe and Earl Manley, 26 Vi
Laurel st., left for Seattle Fri
day on the first part of a trip
to the Philippine Islands. They
recently sold their interest in
DoeBell Lumber company to
Everett Plywood and Door
corporation, Everett, Wash.
Manley will supervise logging
operations for the Everett firm
on the Island of Mindanao and
Doe will supervise construction
of a sawmill and logging camp.
They will visit Tokyo, Japan,
en route. Families of both men
plan to join them later.
News About
Servicemen
ENLIST IN AIR FORCE
Seven Jackson county men
and one from Hornbrook, Calif.,
enlisted in the Air Force during
March, according to the Medford
recruiting office. Thomas Joe
Tilton, 1032 Jackson st., re-enlisted.
Medford enlistees include
Jesse Marion Chancellor, 510
Marie st.; Woodard David Hugh,
route 2, box 364C; Richard Dean
Randall, 927 Brookdale rd., and
Donald Raymond Breazeale, 150
Mace rd.
Others were Jimmy Parks,
Shady Cove; Richard Henry,
route 1, box 73, Talent; Robert
Lee Gemaehlich, Jacksonville;
and Frank W. Fick, Hornbrook,
Calif.
TRAIN AT BASE
AB Stuart P. Webber, son
of C. O Webber, route 1, Talent,
and AB Larry G. Hoover, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Dale D. Hoover,
Ashland, are undergoing train
ing at Francis E. Warren Air
Force base, Wyo.
Webber is being trained as
a telephone installer and Hoover
as a warehouse supply specialist.
REPORTS FOR DUTY
Fireman Apprentice Allen
Dwaine Smith, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John E. Smith, 3455 Jack
sonville highway, Medford, has
reported aboard the heavy crui
ser, USS Saint Paul, as an elec
trician. He underwent basic training
at San Diego, Calif., and gradu
ated from Medford High school.
MEN INDUCTED
Four Jackson county men
were inducted into the armed
service March 21, at the Port
land induction center, according
to Helen L. McDonnell, clerk of
the local board.
Raymond Lee Abbott of Butte
Falls went into the Army, and
Harold David Hoots, Medford,
Keith Allen Cooley, Butte Falls,
and John Arden Tyrrell, Rogue
River, were inducted into the
Navy.
AT FT. DIX
First Lt. Catherine Holtz,2121
Jackson st., Medford, is serving
in the training and operations
section at the Ft. Dix infantry
training center., She is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
H. Holtz, and received a bache
lor of arts degree at the Univer
sity of .Wisconsin and did post
graduate work at Columbia and
George Washington universities.
Enjoy Your EASTER Dinner at
RSAR'
IN ASHLAND
PHONE ASHLAND
82 21 FOR RESERVATIONS
OPEN 1:00 P.M. UNTIL 2:30 A.M. '
Your Hosts Omar and Hazel Hill
BERT NEEL
Bert Clark Neel, 64, of 790
Ellendale dr., Medford, died at
home early Saturday.
He was born in Trinidad,
Colo., March 22, 1892.
Mr. Neel is survived by his
wife, Mrs. Mary R. NeeL Med
ford; two daughters, Mrs. E. E.
Eddy, Medford, and Mrs. W.
R. Wallace, Kansas City, Kan.;
three sons, Robert D. Neel, Med
ford, John H. Neel, Tennessee,
and Walter R. Neel, , Newport,
Ore.; two brothers, Leonard
Neel, California, and Amos W.
Napier, Seattle, Wash.; and 13
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at Perl
Funeral home. The Rev. D. E.
Millard will officiate. Interment
will be in Siskiyou Memorial
park.
VI ASHLAND
HELL'S
RSfHORIZON
JOHN IRELAND MARIA ENGLISH
I
mm
STARTING TODAY
IT 'SIZZLES THE SCREEN
unkissed.., 0rK)
untamed ...
unashamed! T$1
yoa can J
.jMMMmM&KV fill II
JANE CORNEL
KUSSELL WILDE
man? EaiS)S35l
CinemaScopE: LUTHER ADLER-JOStPH CALLHA
PLUS
TE'CHMICOlOP
4-H Club News
Applagata 4-H Club
A total of $223.80 was netted
from the Applegate Minstrel
ihow, with proceeds to go to
wards 4-H scholarship. The an
nouncement was made at a
meeting at the home of Dona
Brown. . i
The club will meet April 9
at Gwen Krouse's home.
Reporter,
Gwen Rowden.
ApplegeV Knitting Club
Jean Rowden was hostess to
the Applegate Knitting club
meeting March 27. We held our
business session and worked on
projects. We made $8.15 from
the candy booth at the minstrel
show and wish to express our
thanks to those who came.
, Refreshments were served.
The next meeting will be at
the home of Mary Herriott April
10.
Reporter,
Jean Rowden.
She enlisted in the Women's
Army corps in 1943, and has
been assigned at Los Alamos,
N.M., and Ft. Des Moines, Iowa.
VISIT EL TORO
Two Medford studenti were
among Oregon State college
NROTC men visiting El Toro,
Calif., Marine air station recent
ly. They were Thomas G. Jones,
21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
E. Jones, 2508 Jacksonville high
way, and Richard H. Crain, 20,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Herb Crain,
115 Highland dr. Both are grad
uates of Medford High school.
WINS PLAQUE
First Lt. Mary A. Delsman,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles H. Delsman Sr., 1149
Oak st., Ashland, recently re
ceived an engraved plaque and
S100 from the Freedoms Foun
dation at Valley Forge for her
letter on "My Stake in the Am
erican Way."
The topic was the foundation's
1955 subject.
Lt. Delsman, who worked for
the . Mail Tribune for a short
time in 1949, was graduated
from Ashland high school and
the University of Oregon. She
entered the Air Force in April,
1952, and is now an adjutant at
Carswell Air Force Base, Fort
Worth, Tex.
Sunday, April 1, 1958
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRJBUNE THIRTEEN
A Nichol's Worth of . .".
Comment On This and That
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS
United Press Feature Writer
Washington (UR) The
instructions to the panel of pos
sible experts said: "Please drink
lightly, if at
all, in advance
of the judg
ing." And, they
went on; "If
you take a
drink before
you go about
your judging,
w e strongly
Barman Niehois r e c o mmena
that it be a light bourbon high
ball, with either soda or water,
so that your taste buds will not
become dulled."
My buds were in pretty fine
shape, but fortunately, I wasn't
a judge.
Some of my colleagues were.
They were plucked from the
press coop to sniff and sip the
best the bartenders of this area
could serve up in a national mix
ed drink competition.
Real Fancy Stuff
There was stuff dressed up
with fruit and olives and on
ions. Also creme de menthe and
things tasting like cocoa and the
like. Sniffing would have been
enough, but these guys were
"compelled" to sip as well.
It was kind of nice to sit that
one out.
Men in white coats were shak
ing sway and mixing like mad,
in a fight for Brown-Forman's
national award, a $1000 govern
ment savings bond.
The fellow who triumphed in
our regional tests the finals will
be held with considerable
whoop-la in New York later was
one Joseph Schroeder a cocktail
shaker from Wilmington, Del.
He called his concoction "The
Brunette."
Joe, after sweating it out
against 44 other conestants, told
me: "The idea is to knock to
gether a batch of one-third bour
bon, one third Kahlua a liquer
and one third straight cream."
Before it was presented to the
judges to sip Joe's concoction un
derwent considerable shaking
around. The clinking of ice
could be heard above the din of
Twin Plunges
WIM NOW
WATER HEATED TO 80
DEGREES for your comfort
and enjoyment
2 BLOCKS FROM LITHIA HOTEL
OPEN NOON UNTIL 10 P.M.
CONTINUOUS SHOW TODAY FROM 12:45 P.M.
A town. ..a stranger...
and the things he does to
its people, especially
its women!
PICNIC IS
THEIR STORY I
The Drifter. . . who rind
roots in a grfa mart by
lovef
The Pretty Sitter. . . who
wants lore mere then
enythingt
The Mother. . . who'll
anything to keep hergtrH
tecentl
COLUMBIA PICTURES prmnli
WILLIAM HOLD EN
mWmt WTTM
KIM NOVAK
BOTT F1EID SUSHI STUASBERG CUFF R0BESTSM
A NO
CO-STARRIN
ROSALIND RUSSELL
AS ROSEMARY
Scrm Bte t Based wr It tfey "foe" ProducM o tie stage br
DANIEL TARADASH WILLIAM INGE THEATRE GUILD, Inc. JOSHUA LOGAN
om b JOSHUA LOGAN tmeut t FRED K0HLMAR
'"""
The Teen-age Srster...
who come of age A.
eight of the plcnlct
... h
Kith Metr"t Son... who
cant tnry the one thing
be wanta meat!
CINemaScoPE
The Teacher, .atakiag
everything om Iter leaf
chance for tovet
Plus
TECHNICOLOR
"WONDERS OF MANHATTAN"
MAGOO
MAKES NEWS
folks who were more interested
in free bourbon on the rocks.
Want New Drinkt
Matt Downer, who is traveling
for the liquor people to round
up winners for the finals, likes
a thing dreamed up by the win
ner of the Boston contest. Fas
cinated by the name, maybe, and
how it ever got to New England.
This bartender called his stir-up
"Lady RebeL"
This one calls for. two ounces
of bourbon, i ounce of apricot
brandy, M ounce of creme de
cocoa, a tablespoon of grenadine.
You shake it well with cracked
ice, strain into four-ounce cock
tail glasses and yell: "Come and
get it."
Matt said the idea behind the
contests was to bring out some
new mixed drinks.
"We havent had many of
these since repeal, you know,"
he said.
Downer is not too sure the
latest concoctions will be wel
comed universally.
Some bartenders don't care
much about stirring up "Zom
bies" and "Pink Ladies." Iff
much easier to pull the handle
on the beer tap or dump a jigger
of bar juice into a glass of ice
cubes and water, ginger or soda.
Tim EATIW
for EE
Try
th
I Top Notch Cafe
Next to
Craterian Beauty
TONITE!
GLORIOUS'ENTERTAINMENT
UNDER THE STARS!
Gates Open 6:30 p.m.
Show at 7 p.m.
(V W 1 ill I I Hi fJ I ? f 'HON! "
EVERYBODY'S RAVING ABOUT
"MARTY"
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!
ERNEST BORGNINE
Best Actor of the Year!
THE SURPRISE "SLEEPER"
HIT OF THE YEAR!
Vri v..fi t-.. m s r "V--: I
ERNEST BORGNINE BETSY BLAIR,
PLUS
THEY'VE GOT THE
WHOLE COUNTY
IN HYSTERICS!
MOP-
MarjorieMAIN Percy KILBRIDE E
A UMV0tSUnnNAltONAl
nautf
TONITE S
,TJ11 in 1 I It
JjjJlSSXSSXPM
PffERUURIEJUlJAADAMS
A UNtVL5Al4KTWNAT10NAl
AHfAGU-UCM
ftCMf
TECHNICOLOR
.MARIA ENQLISH
RALPH MCEKtR