Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 16, 1956, Image 9

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    Local and
Barber Certificates O.
Charles Clemans, Medford, and
John H. Mallon, Shady Cove,
have been granted journeyman
barber certificates by the Ore
gon state board of barber exam
iners, it was announced in Port
land last week.
Red Crow Tea A tea, one
of several county fund raising
vents' for the Jackson county
chapter, American Red Cross,
will be held Tuesday, April 17.
at 3 p.m., in the home of Mrs.
Lillian Salade, Central Point.
The event was postponed from
last week.
ADDED!
TONITE ONLY
"THE
GRACE KELLY
STORY"
Warner Pathe News
Walk In
Hungry
Walk Out
Refreshed
Top Notch Cafe
Next to Craterian Beauty Shop
TP
Personal
From Portland Mr. and Mrs.
Edmond E. Hass and son, Mor
gan, arrived home yesterday
from a four-day trip to Portland
where Hass was on business.
He is manager of the Medford
branch, Pacific Northwest com
pany, investment securities.
Splinter Removed Donald
Drake, 1101 Loal St., was taken
earlv Sunday morning to Com
munity hospital for removal of
a large splinter received while
working at the dry chain at Med
ford Veneer and Plywood com
pany, it was reported at the hos
pital today. He was released
later that day.
Convention Plans Epsilon
chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma,
will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday,
April 17, in the cafeteria of the
Phoenix Grade school, according
to the president, Mrs. Kathryn
Stancliffe, who said it is the last
general meeting before the state
convention to be held in Med
ford April 27, 28 and 29.
V
Ruch Clinic A clinic for pre
school age children will be held
at Ruch school Thursday, April
19. Physical examinations will
be given by Dr. A. E. Merkel,
county health officer. Those
eligible to attend are children
who will enter the first grade
at Ruch school next September.
Immunizations will be offered.
Buy Home Mr. and Mrs.
James Sheldon and children,
Jimmy, 10, and Susan, 7Vfc, ar
rived here recently from Coos
Bay and have ' purchased the
former Menno Bachmann home
at 117 Laurel st. Sheldon is with
the General Credit service in
Medford. The children have en
rolled at Washington school.
The Bachmanns have moved to
25 South Orange st.
News of Death News of the
death Friday of R. E. Talbot,
Grants Pass, has been received
here by friends. Among surviv
ors is a daughter, Mrs. Gordon
Brainerd, well-known here, a
sister-in-law of Phil Brainerd
of Brainerd's studio. The fun
eral has been set for Tuesday,
April 17, at 2 p.m., in Hall Fun
eral home. Among Medford
residents who will be in Grants
Pass to attend the funeral are
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Brainerd.
The
The car that speaks
Of the many pleasures of owning Lincoln, none is more
satisfying than what this totally new car says about you.
For here is the fine car that says you have a feeling for
trend-setting style that you admire the sweep of clean
flowing lines ... the scant five feet of lowness ... the sleek
new length that is so unmistakably Lincoln. And, as so
many others now turn to this Lincoln making it the most
sought-after of all time this superb new car says that
your judgment is of the kind others follow.
This Lincoln says that your heart lifts to spirited per
formancethe kind that comes from teaming 285 high
torque horsepower with Lincoln's incomparably smooth
Poisoned Glenn C. Wll
liams, 615 Pennsylvania ave.,
reported to police Sunday that
his dog had been poisoned Satur
day.
At Community Mrs. Rob
ert Thompson, 924 Maple Park
dr., had surgery today at Com
munity hospital, attendants re
ported.
Treated Joseph Giesch, 9,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Nick Giesch,
Central Point, was treated and
released April 14 at Community
hospital for a back injury he re
ceived in an accident at his
home, attendants reported today.
Returns Miss Lotus Eaton,
industrial nurse at Timber Pro
ducts company, arrived home
Saturday after being in Port
land a week. She was called
there by the unexpected critical
illness of a brother-in-law.
Overheated Stove Firemen
were called at 5:15 p.m. Satur
day to 421 North Bartlett St.,
where an oil stove became over
heated. No damage resulted to
the house, which is occupied by
Chester A. Brown, they said.
Theft Reported ' Carlos
Reed Sander, 511 Hamilton st.,
today reported the theft of four
hubcaps valued at S50 from his
car between 3 and 9:15 p.m.
Sunday. It was parked either at
his home or in Ashland, he said.
At Osteopathic Albert Har
ris, 340 Effie st., is a medical
patient at Osteopathic hospital,
and Mrs. Ruth Davis, Rogue
River, had minor surgery there
Saturday, and dismissed the
same day, attendants reported
this morning.
Gold Hill Lodge Members
of Amethyst Rebekah lodge,
Gold Hill, who plan to attend a
Friendship night observance at
Olive Rebekah lodge this eve
ning are asked to meet at the
Gold Hill IOOF lodge hall, to
day at 7:15 p.m.
Firemen Stand By City
firemen stood by with a pumper
at the airport yesterday while an
Air Force B-26 made an emer
gency landing. They said that
the plane landed without 'diffi
cutly. An apparently faulty gas
oline gauge led the pilot to be
bieve that the plane's tanks were
nearly empty, firemen reported.
They were summoned by the
airport control tower.
LINCO
longest, lowest, most powerful Lincoln of all time
as well of you
Obituary Notices
JERALD RIDDLE
Jerald Marvin Riddle, 26,
died last week in Klamath Falls,
where he had lived for the past
year. He was born in Medford.
He leaves a brother, Francis
Nickell, Paskenta, Calif.; two
sisters, Marjorie Sealy, Pasco,
Wash., and Vida Phillips, Klam
ath Falls; and a nephew, Maurice
Dorman.
Funeral services will be held
at Wards Klamath funeral home
Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. Inter
ment will take place in the
Brownsboro cemetery Tuesday
at 3 p.m. with Perl's Funeral
home assisting.
MRS. EMMA BLANKENSHIP
Mrs. Emma C. Blankenship,
27, Mistletoe st., died Sunday.
Services will be held in Conger
Morris chapel at 1:30 p.m.
Thursday. The Rev. J. Thomas
Dixon of the First Methodist
church will officiate. Committal
will be in Siskiyou Memorial
park.
VINCENT GOSSMAN
Funeral services for Vincent
Gossman, 74, of 806 Wabash St.,
who died Friday in a local hos
pital, will be held in Conger
Morris chapel at 1:30 p.m. Tues
day. The Rev. Sherman Moore
of the Pilgrim Holiness church
will officiate. Committal will be
Classes Scheduled The first
of two public classes on bee
keeping, sponsored by the Rogue
Valley Beekeepers association,
will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday
in the courthouse auditorium,
it was announced today. Meet
ing place for the second class,
slated for 8 p.m. April 24, has
not yet been determined. Dr.
W. P. Stephen, assistant profes
sor of entomology at Oregon
State college, will be discussion
leader. The classes will include
tips for beginners and general
information on beekeeping.
Lone Pine Unit Several
matters of importance to mem
bers of Lone Pine Home Exten
sion unit will be conducted when
they meet Thursday, April 19,
at the Mitchell home, 3082 Buck
shot Hill rd. Officers will be
elected, a plant sale conducted
and plans will be made for the
annual May Homemakers festi
val. Making draperies will be
subject of the lesson led by Mrs.
A. Sidener and Mrs. B. Griffen.
Child care will be available at
the home of Mrs. R. Hutchins.
Children should have sack
lunches.
as you will speak of it
Turbo-Drive. And yet it also says that you expect such great
power to be beautifully balanced with comfort to soothe you,
stability to ease your mind, and a feel of the wheel to put
you completely in control.'.
There's so much more that Lincoln says and so much
you will say. But why not let thus new fine car speak for itself?
Stop in tomorrow or today if you can and slip into
the driver's seat Make your own appraisal of this Lincoln
that's so long and so longed-for I
LINCOLN
Unmistakably . . . the finest in the fine car field
in Siskiyou Memorial Dark.
Mr. Gossman was born Dec.
28, in Cedar Rapids, la. On Feb.
7, 1938, in-Pasadena, Calif., he
was married to Addie Goad,
who survives.
Pallbearers will include Roy
Simmons, John Blair, James
Pleyer, Dayton Warner, Robert
Lull and Edwin Hayes.
Other survivors include the
following children: Mrs. A. W.
Lloyd, Talent; Albert Gossman
and Mrs. Gordon Bates, Nor
walk, Calif.; Mrs. Mack Groves,
Pasadena, Calif.; Mrs. Charles
Demmon, South Pasadena,
Calif.; Lawrence Gossman, San
Francisco, Calif.; Mrs. Delbert
Smith, Azusa, Calif.; Ray Goss
man and Mrs. C. I. Shepherd,
Central Point; Mrs. Hugh Kadin,
Chico, Calif.; Mrs. Mattie. Mc
Coy, Los Angeles, Calif.; John
Goad and Mrs. M. E. Hodge, Al
tadena, Calif.; and Mrs. T. L.
Stanage, Van Nuys, Calif. Broth
ers are Lawrence Gossman,
Holden, Alberta, Canada, and
Frank Gossman, Tacoma, Wash.,
and sisters, Mrs. Katie Havens,
Jasper, Alberta, Canada; Mrs.
Myrtle Carr, Saskatoon, Canada,
and Mrs. Bessie Kirsch, Auburn,
Wash.; also 25 grandchildren
and five great-grandchildren.
CHARLES GILE
Funeral services for Charles
H. Gile, 81, Medford, who died
Saturday, will be held in Conger-Morris
chapel at 10 a.m.
Wednesday. Dr. Raymond E.
Balcomb of the First Methodist
church will officiate. Committal
will be in Siskiyou Memorial
park.
Mr. Gile was born Aug, 16,
1875, in North Lawrence, O. On
July 31, 1898 in Wellington,
Kans.,' he was married to Eva
Haynes who survives. Mr. Gile
came to the valley in 1923 from
Kansas. He purchased an , or
chard at Marsh Lane and Kings
Highway, where he resided un
til his death. He was an acti'e
lifelong member of the First
Methodist church.
"Other survivors include a
daughter,' Mrs. Dorothy Wald
ron, Medford; three sons, Eth
bert Gile, Caldwell, Ida.; Norris
Gile,' Santa Rosa, Calif, and
Kenneth Gile, Phoenix, Ariz.;
two sisters, Mrs. Eileen McDon
ald, Puente, Calif., and Miss
Lulu Gile, Gresham, Ore.; six
grandchildren and 12 great
grandchildren. JOSEPH McDUFFIE
Funeral services for Joseph
W. McDuffie Sr., who died
LN
Monday, April IB, 1951
Wall Street
New York (U.R) Prices on
the Stock Exchange turned ir
regular late today.
Railroad shares, however,
managed to hold a good part of
their earlier gains. They were
up around a point or better.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T 182V4
Anaconda 78
Chrysler Unquoted
Curtiss Wright 34Vs
General Electric 61
General Motors 44
Montgomery Ward 93 Vi
Penn. R. R. 26 Vi
Penney, J. C. . 93
Radio 455&
Southern Co 21Vi
Southern Pacific 56V
S. Oil of Calif 105
Texas Gulf Sulphur 3 6 i
Transamerica 38
Tri-Continental : 27Vi
United Aircraft 71
U.S. Rubber 57
U.S. Steel 59
Youngstown 100
Saturday, will be held at the
Sacred Heart church Tuesday at
9 a.m., with the Very Rev. N. J.
Deis officiating. Interment will
take place in Siskiyou Memorial
park.
Recitation of the holy rosary
will be held at Perl funeral home
at 7:30 p.m. today.
Honorary pallbearers will be
Claude Mclntyre, Robert Mcln
tyre, Oliver Overmeyer, Charles
Reames, Richard Payne and Ed
ward Gordon. Active pallbear
ers will be Paul Meyers, Dr. W.
W. Stevenson, Myron Andrews,
Neil Aitken, Paul Antony ,and
Hugh Friel.
MRS. MABEL WARD
Funeral services for Mrs. Ma
bel Ward, 145 North Oakdale
ave., who died Wednesday in
Long Beach, Calif., where she
was spending the winter, will be
held in Conger-Morris chapel at
3 p.m. Tuesday. The Rev. J.
Thomas Dixon of the First Meth
odist church will officiate. Com
mittal will be in IOOF cemetery.
Mrs. Ward was born ' Septem
ber 9, 1883, in Fargo, N.D. On
Sept. 29, 1942, in Reno, Nev.,
she was married to Harry Ward,
who survives. She was a mem
ber of the First Methodist
church.
LAKE E. SANFORD
The body of Lake Earl San-
ford, 57, Medford, who died at
1576 Stewart ave. Friday, are
being forwarded today by Conger-Morris
Funeral home to
Denver, Col., for services and in
terment.
Mr. Sanford was born Feb.
8, 1899, in Illinois. He formerly
lived in Colorado, coming to
Medford about six months ago
Survivors include one step
daughter, Mrs. Nellie Lee Nel
son, Denver, Colo.; two sisters,
Mrs. Thelma Baumgart, Mt. Car-
mel 111.; and Mrs. Sarah Jane
Cronk, Idaho Springs, Colo.;
four brothers, Elvis and Adnal
Sanford, Detroit, Mich., and
Clinton and Bruce Sanford, and
a granddaughter, Mrs. Lawrence
M. Sears, all Aurora, Colo.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (UP) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large 50-5 lc; A large
47-49c; AA medium 46-49c; A medium
46-48c; A small 38-39c; cartons 2 to 3c
additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints, 66c lb; cartons 67c; A prints
66c; cartons 67c; B prints 64c.
Cheese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar, single daisies, 401,i-45I,i c; 5-lb.
loaves, 46I,i-49',ac. Processed Amer
ican cheese, 5-lb loaf 39!,i-41c.
Farm Market
Idaho russets of No. 1 grade topped
the potato market today at 5-S5.75 a
hundredweight with bales of 3 sacks
weighing 10-lbs each higher at 3.25
$3.50; Willamette valley rhubarb was
lower with strawberry-type stalks at
1.90-$2 a 15-lb flat.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers (No. 1
quality f.o.b. Portland) Fryers 2li to
4 lbs 23c: at farm 22c; roasters 23c lb
f.o.b. Portland; light hens 19-20c. Port
land; 18-19c at ranch; heavy hens 5
lbs and up 23c lb; at farm 22c ; old
roosters ll-14c.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers N Y style 36-37c lb;
whole drawn, 41-43c; cut up 45-49c;
hens, light type. New York style 30
31c; cutup 42-44c; hens, heavy type
N Y style 35-36c; whole drawn 44-48C.
Turkeys To producers: Fryer tur
keys, live weights, 27c lb.
Dressed Turkeys To retailers: nom
inally A grade young hens 55-56c lb;
eviscerated, depending on weight;
eviscerated fryer-roasters, 57c lb.
Rabbits (Average to growers f.o.b.
killing plant): Live, white. 3 to 4i
lbs 23-26c: 5 to S lbs 18-21c; colored
pelts, 4c under; old does 10-14c lb, a
few higher. Fresh killed fryers to re
tailers, 58-61c lb cut up 62-65C
WOMEN!
for Summer
sw
ENROLL
NOW!
M
ml
Daily Weather Report
Sunset tonight. 6:53 cm.: sunrise
tomorrow. 5:28 a.m.
FORECASTS:
Medford and vicinity: ParUy cloudy
tonight and Tuesday. Increasing cloud
iness luesday night. Low tonignt Jt.
High Tuesday 70.
western Oregon: Partly cloudy to
night and Tuesday with' increasing
cloudiness and rain showers north por
tion Tuesday night. Low tonight 38-48.
High Tuesday 56-66.
Ivorthern California: Fair tonight and
Tuesday. Rising daytime temperatures.
LOCAL DATA:
Temperature: Mean yesterday 52.
Record high this date 87 in 1954. Rec
ord low this date 32 in 1940.
Precipitation: 24 hours to midnight,
trace. Total this month .30 in.. .30 in.
below normal. Total since Sept. 1,
28.08 in.. 13 in. above normal.
Humidity: Lowest yesterday 55,
highest this a.m. 87.
City
Hi
Lo
44
21
44
33
45
43
Prec.
Brookings
Crater Lake
Grants Pass
... 58
... 40
... 56
... 52
56
trace
.02
Klamath Falls
MEDFORD
trace
Portland 58
Seattle 58 38 .01
Spokane 67 43 trace
Yakima - 71 45
Eureka 52 48
Red Bluff 63 48
Sacramento --- 62 45
San Francisco 58 50
Los Angeles 65 52
Phoenix
Denver
Chicago .
Miami ....
... 74
63
,.. 49
. 77
53
... 64
50
35
36
.10
.35
71
48
57
New York
Washingotn. D. C.
PORTLAND HAY, GRAIN
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices:
No. 2 green alfalfa, baled f.o.b. Port
land. 43-$16 ton; some sales higher.
wholesale prices as reported By tne
USDA market news service; Wheat,
No. 2. soft. whit. $74.50 ton: No. 2
white oats 38-lb test. Coast delivery
57.50-$58 ton; No. 2 Western barley,
$50.50 ton f.o.b. Portland Coast de
livery: soybean meal, $81.7o ton de
livered Portland; Standard mill-run
42.50-S44 ton; No. 2 vellow corn, East
ern shipment f.o.b. Portland $68.90.
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Portland (UP) Cattle 2100. High
choice fed steers $21; choice around
100-1100-lb steers $20.25 and $20.50:
good steers 18-S19: choice fed heifers
above $19 50; canner-cutter cows most
ly 8.50-$10; few $10.50: utility cows
)1-S13; utility bulls 15-S16; light cut
ters down to $12; good stock steers
17-S18.
Calves 125. Good-choice vealers
20-$28: commercial grades 15-S19:
culls down to $7: medium and good
stock steer calves 16-S18.
Hogs 850. No. 1 and 2 barrows and
gilts 180-235 lb 17.50-S18: No. 3 bid
r Peggie CASTLE
: v C I a ni
PLLJS witMii not news
RIOTOUS IHCIDENTloC?p
DELIVERY
IMTNI PftTTTlI
VaJ
evaBARTOK 'd
Get Ready
Learn to
FOR FUN ,
FOR HEALTH
FOR BEAUTY
FOR SAFETY
g) MEMS jjgjp.
I Baked Chicken 1 1 gj
V $50 J VI TONITE & TUES.
A Dressing jf JU jjL EUiiJJ
It iaJ V ?X-- ?
ifXl ) AND LUNCH VI " q pyj q .
gj NOW! NOW! :'f
T5lLSPe99; castle VI JTZ MM! 5
Yi8 Fr.d clark tAnyS
YMU.
PHONE 2-6295
Beginning Tues., Apr. 17
Beginners at 7:30 P.M.
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NUTS
$16; few 250 lb $16; sows 320-390 lb
13.50-S14.
Sheep 500. Choice 104 lb wooled
Iambs $18: mosUy choice No. 3 pelt
lambs $16.25: good wooled lambs
$16.50; good feede- lambs $13.50.
HURRY!
ENDS TOMORROW!
vfcvjr nit mnwr joi naA fii
r : ' 5v
RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN V
WIOUS!
COLOI by DE IUXE
IN STEREOPHONIC SOUND
FRIDAY
FROM FAME fTT
TO SHAME!
The story of
Lillian Roth's
best-seller,
now a great
M-G-M film
HDesert lEGion
iSaa AKLINE DAM
MMtW
fcn
PLUS
Bur v
o ASHLAND
Katharine Hepburn
mTPPTi now!
1
fit "
IS
9Ni 1 of Troy
V ,AmbbMBJ wirwii nerval
3 X7ir
BiEIDFQEtD MOT
inc.
Advanced at 8:30 P.M.
4 a- ' '--"ft.
6th & lyy
Phone 2-6157
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