Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1956)
Local and Hand Burnad Edgar M. Gar- wood, 4284 South Pacific high way, was treated at Community hospital yesterday afternoon for severe hand burns following tractor fire at 1255 Sweet rd. Firemen, who gave Garwood first aid, said that gasoline ig nited as Garwood was filling the tank. The tractor, owned by Garwood, was not damaged, ac cording to firemen. The rural pumper truck was dispatched to the scene about 3:05 p.m. r- mi K ifj.ajif J1MCS KA Low in Cost! Quick in Results! Use Tribune Want Ads SPECIAL MONEY - $1 Per il Car Show Starts 8:15 P.M. IfEfsrlti III Of JP TAKE ADVANTAGE of Royal Crown's big, money-saving offer today! Buy a carton of new RC. Get acquainted with this lighter, fresher cola. That's all we ask. Then send two RC bottle caps (or caps from Nehi or Par-T-Pak flavors) and only 50 in coin to RC, Box 15-A, Brooklyn 1, N. Y. Your magnetized oven mitts will be mailed promptly. Order now supplies are limited! Better Taete calls for JUMBO MILK SHAKES JACK'S Now Open 7 Days A Week FRIED CHICKEN 't Fried Chicken In Nest of Golden French Fries Try Our Own Special A BAG OF FRENCH FRIES FREE With the Purchase of a Bar-B-Q Big "T" Steak 7" for JACK': Personal Mating The Northwestern Mining Council will noia its reg ular meeting at auditorium in the Jackson county court house tomorrow night. Hazards Found City Fire Marshal Truman Nelson issued six orders yesterday for correc tion of fire hazards. He inspect ed a dry cleaning plant and six other business occupancies. To ConTntion George Lewis of Lewis Travel agency, left today for Seattle. Wash., to at tend 50th anniversary observ ances of the Gamma Pi chapter of theAlphaTau Omega fraterni ty, at the University of Washing ton. He and two brothers, Dr. M. Leonard Lewis, Seattle, and Frank E. Lewis, Bellingham. Wash., are past presidens of the chapter and will be honored dur ing a banquet. Lewis will visit his brother, Frank E. Lewis, a forest ranger, stationed near Bellingham, before returning home June 12. Assumed Names Records in the county clerk and recorder show the following have as sumed business names: Schnitzer Steel Products company. Wood- bury Hardward company and Woodbury and Company: Wes ley M. Fry, Wayne H. Kemmer er and Alvin L. Fry, F. K. and F. Logging company; Earl E. Nelson, Western Oil and Burner company of Medford: Ralph E. Bell and Merle E. Stover, Bell Stover Insurance agency; and Benjamin B. Anderson, Econ omy Market. Retiring business names are Glenn L. Gingery. Wesley M. Fry and Wayne H. Kemmerer, JT.K. G. Logging company, Ralph E. Bell, Med ford Real Estate Center; and L. H. and Veta M. Clocksin, Econ omy Market. SAVING 0FFERI They're magnetized! That means they stick to your oven, kitchen cabinets any iron or steel sur face. Or hang these colorful, heavily-padded mitts by their handy loops. Perfect for kitchen and cook-outal 20c JUMBO MILK DRIVE - UP Shrimp Gr Fries. .59c Fish fir Fries 49c 69c Sandwich Tasty - "T" For Tender BECAUSE OF WINDOW Slate Grange Delegates Face Many Resolutions Pendleton U.R) The Oregon i the Ashland Nazarene church, State Grange state convention i officiated. Interment was in the . . . .. . . , . . Mountain View cemetery in Ash rolled into its third day here to-1 j day with some 700 members! Mrs. Long was born in Wil slated to take up a variety of j hoyt Springs, Ore., Aug. 2, 1369. questions hrniisht hffnr them i in 70 resolutions that are up for action. At yesterday's second day ses sion. Master Elmer McClure said that Oregon wheat farmers got "shoddy treatment" in the Presidental veto of the original farm bill. McClure also took the state legislature to task for the 45 per cent surtax on incomes passed by the last legislative body and called for the Grange to main tain its historical opposition to the passage of a state sales tax. Blow To Farmars McClure charged that the presidential veto of the farm bill was a blow to western farmers while the politically powerful Midwest received preferential treatment. He said that in contrast to the rigid restrictions on wheat, corn men in the Midwest can ignore their planting allotments and still get high price supports. McClure charged that the state surtax on incomes was "a deliberate attempt to make the impact of the income tax burden so great that people would turn to a sales tax as easier to pay." He called for dropping the surtax to 30 per cent and restor ing the exemptions to $600. Theft Cletic Ivey, 620 South Ivy st., has reported the theft of a tire and wheel from his pickup truck parked at the Rogue Valley ballroom May 26, between 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m., according to Medford police. They were valued at $33, he said. Mere? Flight Ted Schoener mann, Gold Hill, was flown to Portland Tuesday afternoon in a Mercy Flights, Inc., plane, for surgery at the Veterans Admin istration hospital. He was the 502nd patient flown by planes of the non-profit air ambulance organization. Head Injury Carlton D. Dick, 22. of 806 West Main St., an employee of the West Main St., Safeway store, received a cut on his scalp when a crate fell on him while working Tues day afternoon at the store, ac cording to store officials. He was taken to Community Hos pital by Medford ambulance at tendants where he was treated and released. - On Trip Paul Lea, owner of Lea Motor company, and Tim Welch, a salesman for the deal er, left Tuesday for a two-day trip to Lake Wilderness resort near Renton, Wash. The trips were awarded as prizes in a re cent sales contest sponsored na tionally by Nash Motors. They plan to stop in Portland en route to take pictures of floods near there. They will return to Med ford the end of the week. At Osteopathic Patients who have had surgery this week at Osteopathic hospital include Sharon Hoyt. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Hoyt, Rogue River; Maureen Hunter, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hun ter, Central Point;' and Marilyn Green. 9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Green, also Rogue River, who had appendectomy. attendants reported. Herbert Til ley, Jacksonville, a medical pa tient for the past week, was dis missed Tuesday. SHAKES 20c Medford's Largest 19c Hamburger Palace, i short drive out No. Riverside "THE PLACE TO MEET AND EAT." BAR-B-Q BEEF SANDWICH SERVED ON A JUMBO BUN THIS THURSDAY Beef Sandwich.... 39c SERVICE YOU PAY LESS' DVE-UP1 Obituary Notice MRS. EFFIE LONG Funeral services for Mrs. Effie Long, 86, who died in Au burn, Calif., June 3, were held at 1:30 p.m. today jn Litwiller's Mountain View chapel, Ashland. The Rev. R. W. Hohn, pastor of ne moved w Asniana in iso from Klamath Falls. She was a member of Ashland Na2arene church for 19 years. She is survived by three child ren, Arthur F. Long, Ashland; Mrs. Alta Ashcroft, Auburn, Calif., and Ezra A: Long, Oak land; three- sisters, Mrs. T. G. Bradley, Medford; Mrs. John Knapp. Seattle, and Mrs. Lester Rice, Elkton, Ore. HENRY ANDREWS Jacksonville Henry Andrews, 68, former Jacksonville resident, died June 4 in Portland Veter ans administration hospital. He moved to Cottage Grove about 10 years ago. His wife died in 1942. r Survivors include three daugh ters, all former Jacksonville resi dents. They are Mrs. Clement Dang and Mrs. John Ahuna, both of San Francisco, and Mrs. Howard C. Grover, Coos Bay. Funeral arrangements are pending at Perl funeral home. Interment will be in Jackson ville cemetery. MRS. ROSEMARY FURRER -Private funeral services for Mrs. Rosemary Furrer of 200 Sunrise ave., who died Friday night, were held at 10 a.m. Tues day in the Sacred Heart Catho lic church. The Rev. Nicholas J. Deis officiated. Committal was in the Medford mausoleum. Conger-Morris funeral home was in charge of arrangements. CLARENCE TAYLOR Funeral services for Clarence Clyde Taylor, 74, of Medford, who died Sunday in a local hos pital, will be held in Conger Morris chapel at 1 p.m. Thurs day. The Rev. J. O. Morgan of the Sunshine Gospel Mission will officiate. Committal will be in Siskiyou Memorial park. Mr. Taylor, was born Feb. 8, 1882. in Belfast, la. On May 29, 1929, in Fort Dodge, la., he was married to Anna Heath, who survives. He came to Medford in 1948 from Iowa and had been an employee at Swift and Co., in Des Moines, la., for 23 years prior to moving to Medford. Survivors, besides his wife, include two sons, Calvin Taylor, Ottumwa. Ia.; and Marvin Tay lor, Medford, Ore.; and two grandchildren. MRS. MARGARET M. HAMILTON Funeral services for Mrs. Margaret M. Hamilton, 66, of Central Point, who died Monday in a local hospital, will be held in Conger-Morris chapel at-2:30 p.m. Thursday. The Rev. Nor man K. Tully of the Central Point and Jacksonville Presby terian church will officiate. Committal will be in Memory Gardens Memorial park. Mrs. Hamilton was born in Carluke, Ontario, Canada, Nov. 3. 1889. She served as music in structor in Mission schools in Assuit, Egypt, for five years dur ing World War I, and then for three years in Sitka, Alaska. On Feb. 2, 1935, in Filmore, Calif., she was married to James M. Hamilton, who survives. She had made her home in Corvallis from 1935 until 1951 when she moved to Central Point. She was a member of the Central Point Presbyterian church and had served for five years as their pianist. Survivors, besides her hus band, include one sister, Mrs. Homer Jeffries, Central Point; a brother, Frank L. Tinkham, Los Angeles; and four nieces and a nephew. JUMBO MILK SHAKES 20c TO SERVE YOU POODLE DOGS Dipped in Batter Baked in IQ Bun Tummy Turn Yum I wtt 49 Pizza Burger ...34c T.M. Reg.' A new taste thrill exclusive at Jack's 911 NORTH RIVERSIDE THOMAS YOCOM Thomas Jefferson Yocom, 73, died Tuesday at Brookings. He had lived most of his life in the Medford area. Funeral arrange ments are pending at Perl Funeral home. Mrs. Lyle Wilcox Dies Here Monday Mrs. Lyle P. Wilcox, 54, of Old Military road, died in a lo cal hospital late Monday. Mrs. Wilcox was born in Lari more, N.D., Nov. 23, 1901. She was educated at Long Beach, Calif., and graduated from Ore gon State college in home eco nomics in 1925. While at OSC, she was a mem ber of the Chi Omega sorority. She also was a member of the Daughters of the Nile, Zuleima temple, chapter AA of PEO sis terhood of Medford. For the past five years she had been associated with Bro phy's Jewelry store here. She is survived by her hus band, her mother, Mrs. W. A. Tucker, Medford; two sons, Lyle T. Wilcox, Walnut Creek, Calif, and Robert F. Wilcox, Fort Collins, Colo., and three grandchildren. Private funeral services will be held at Perl Funeral home at 11 a.m. Saturday. The Rev. George R. V. Bolster of St. Mark's Episcopal church will officiate. Interment will be in Siskiyou Memorial park. The family has requested in lieu of flowers, a donation may be made to the American Cancer fund in care of the local post master. Unander To Sign Education Bonds Salem (U.R) State Treasurer Sig Unander will leave Salem Sunday for New York City to sign $1,900,000 in State Board of Higher Education bonds. The bonds were sold by the board on competitive . bids to Juhn, Loeb and Co., and five otfier bond dealers. They will be repaid eut of revenues received from students using the build ings. The buildings are two dormi tories and a cafeteria for men at Oregon State College. Unander said the board plans ' selling an additional $2,400,000 in building bonds Aug. 7 to pro vide funds to construct a dormi tory at the University of Ore gon, a student center at Port land State College and a college union building at Southern Ore gon College at Ashland. Unander win return to Salem late Monday. RIVEIN i J AH flMSfCC iS ' Til - f& V ? a- " rUemnmM tm Africa W Dr. A. TtfYMNMO KAMfS M.D. mmA ALLAN STtMSVOlfi, AXC Plus Wadntsday. June t, 1956 Mrs. Grainger Dies in England Sunday Mrs. T. H. Grainger, whose daughter, Mrs. Mark W. Hoefft lives at route 1, box 83B, Eagle Point, died at her home in Eng land Sunday, June 3. She had re cently returned to England after visiting her daughter and son-in-law here for six months. Mrs. Grainger is survived by her husband, two daughters, Mrs. Hoefft of Eagle Point, and Miss Gwendoline Grainger; three sons, Norman Grainger. Kenneth Grainger and Alan Grainger; and three grandchil dren. Another son, Geoffrey Grainger, was killed in Burma during World War H. During Mrs. Grainger's visit to the United States, she was scheduled to be aboard a United Airlines Mainliner which crashed in Wyoming. She appar ently missed the flight, and was the subject of an extensive search for several hours before it was determined she was not aboard the plane. Mrs. Larry Solomon Dies Unexpectedly Mrs. Larry Solomon, 24, the former Miss Loveta Anderson, died 'unexpectedly May 29 in Guam where her husband is sta tioned with the Air Force. She, with their children, Jerry 2, and Mike, 4, left Medford last Oct ober to join Solomon. He and the children returned here Mon day evening. Mrs. Solomon was the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Elroy An derson, 414 Union ave., and was a Medford High school graduate. She also is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Ned Starnes, the former Miss Joan Anderson, who returned Monday evening with her husband from Pullman, Wash., where he was graduated from Washington State college; and Mrs. Melba Wallace, Med ford. . Solomon is a son of Mrs. Ru dolph Baysinger, Jacksonville. Funeral arrangements are pending at Conger-Morris fun eral home. TURKEY AND VEGETABLE POT PIE Thii Pi il prepared in our own Sporlen Kitchen by our Chef who uin nothing but the best selected Turkey.. Vegetables, and Potato. That ar combined with rich Turkey Gravy, topped with a Flaky Cruit, and tarved direct to you, piping hot, in th Casserole in which it was baked! TOP NOTCH CAFE Next to Craterian Beauty Shop T GATES OPEN 6:30 3 POSITIVELY NO ONE StAUO DURING BILL WILLIAMS GEORGIA LEE in "WIRETAPPERS" ROARING ADVENTURE . '. DRAMA . ... SUSPENSE! MEDFOHD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE FTtTSEH Mrs. Evelyn Johnson Dies in Grants Pass Gold Hill Mrs. Evelyn Es telle Johnson, 47, wife of Otis Johnson, principal of Grants Pass Junior high school, died June 5 at Grants Pass, after a prolonged illness. She was a daughter of Roy D. Cameron, Gold Hill. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m., Thursday, June 7, at Newman Methodist church. Grants Pass. Interment will be in Hillcrest Memorial park. She also is survived by a son, Otis Jr., Grants Pass; four sis ters, all of Grants Pass, Mrs. Richard Todd, Mrs. Pete Smith, Mrs. Cecil Johnson and Mrs. Millard Hodges; two brothers, LeRoy Cameron Rogue River, and Douglas Cameron, Gold Hill. Mrs. Johnson was a member of the Ladies of the Elks. Order of Eastern Star, Lady Lions, and Business and Professional Wom en's club. ' HOTEL I EST ' il fc' 1 -TT ml W MENS 3 '30 to ICO P. M. I PRIME RIBS I OF BEEF I jJV,,,,,, iiimi.'J ) ( I BREAKFAST ' V l AND LUNCH y 7 a.ro. to 2 p-im. 1 PHONE 3.2924 ID A Y P.M. - SHOW AT DUSK .BI.lTAiliTll I BP HHIW1 HILL BE HER MATE... MAN or BEAST LAST 5 MINUTES Of FtMORMANCg FOR GOODNESS SAKE EAT WITH US THE CLOCK Main at Bartlert. Phono 2-6766 1 ASHLAND JANE WYMAN VAN JOHNSON vP PLUS i h 1 "Tr r 1 HURRY ENDS SOON1 , MAMIE 1 HAD EVERYTHING- "tdL ABILITY! The Beo' GATES OPEN 6:30 P.M. SHOW AT DUSK 2g h EIN I? rDIE.9aJ DRIVE i form pacific iTirrm? PHONE 2-6501 iivf Tar Tr ' neien of Troy S3 m 23 Jane WYMAN Chariton HESTON PHONE 2-5562 Broderick Ralph CRAWFORD MEEKER lirt mm ' Ik tlnrta IA0UT - TLM CTAXET tRONS0 PIUS nONI-lOW YliW Of r'oji n THt WHiSOUt WOOD Moritya 'MONROE ' JEKGENS lono' BROOKS ton ThelOm BRYANT TU! two Delicious Tf5fVi'5SS5 hot isS3s; LUNCHES Bar-B-Ques C Mam, Br-el (fl'VSf or Pork ' l- Served on a iXJA French Ron jjajWui 3UC lit Wl Ot" CALHOUN tlHrVCOfft W & MAtTMA HTtX fit r- , f - a, b JANERUSSEU Tgaj, V-.. y pirutpn rr.iN r 0THrcineloMIr M j 1 A CAR LOAD 1H SUNDAES 15e & 20c SUNDAES 15c & 20c SUNDAES 15c & 20c SUNDAES 15c & 20c Use Tribune Want Ads