Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 27, 1956, Image 13

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    Veteran Affairs Head
Names Service Director
Salem U.R) Vere A. Mc
Carty will head up the newly
created service division of the
State Department of Veteram
Affairs, it was announced today
by Director H. C. Saalfeld.
McCarty has been in the de
partment since 1950. The state
wide program of services to vet
erans and their dependents will
operate with veterans organiza
tions and county service officers.
rmfELi
.1
BREAKFAST
AND LUNCH
7ajn.to2pjab
Sweltering?
Try On
of Our
Crisp,
Cool
Salads
THE CIXKK
Main at Birtlatt. PheM 2-6766
T
COMING!
Tues., July 3
at the
Rogue Valley
Ballroom
2
SJO to too p. M.
I Baked Chicken I
$150
Dressing I
19 T-BONE
er with meat en
complete dinner,
The
Ntxl
IT T.nite!(Mm50
sua a!B o&fflm xro me mm gican mm
SWM:
WKSV
VTT, Z-7.- r.
fill III El fr.vl ,w? i
Local and
To Hospital Mrs. O. M. John
son, 411 King St.. entered Com
munity hospital Monday for sur
gery, the family reported toaay.
Rlasd From Hospital
Alva Z. Reed, 1357 JLawnnoge
avp wa dismissed from Sacred
Heart hospital today. Reed, who
was injured in an accident ai
the Elk lumber company June 8
will be at his home for an in
definite length of time.
Browns Residents Mr. and
Mrs. Harold C. Brown and
daughter, M i c h e 1 e, recently
moved from Eagle Point and are
now living at 205 North Holly
st. Brown is an agent for the
Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance
company.
Bike Stolen A bike belong
ing to Bruce Harold Bromley,
1925 Corona ave.. was stolen
from the alley beside the Cra-
terian theater between 7:30 ana
10:30 p.m. last night, according
to city police records.
Business Nam Leonard P.
and Ethel Hilsenhoff have re
tired the assumed business name
Talent Market and Bernard and
Mabel Morrow have assumed the
business name Talent' Thrift
Market, accordinnto records in
the county recorder's office.
Meeting Set The regular
monthly meeting of the Jackson
County Farm bureau will be held
in the courthouse auditorium at
8 p.m. Thursday, June 28. A
round table discussion of voter
qualifications in bond issues is
on the agenda. All Farm bureau
members have been urged to at
tend.
Car Hit Betty Susan Hawks,
route 2. box 211, Central Point,
reported to city police that an
unidentified vehicle struck a
parked car belonging to Lloyd
Hawks, route 2, box 211, Cen
tral Point, on North Fir st. be
tween Third and Fourth sts., at
about 12:30 p.m. yesterday.
Gasoline Spills Seven gaso
line spills were flushed away
from parked cars by firemen in
downtown Medford yesterday.
Firemen were called at 11:25
a.m. to investigate the cause of
smoke at the home of Mrs. Dora
Hilton, 607 West 11th st. The
smoke was traced to a fireplace.
There was no damage.
Morse Will Stick
To Campaign Issues
Klamath Falls (U.f) Rep.
Jean Lewis of Portland, state
chairman of the Morse for Sen
ator committee, said here last
night that Sen. Wayne Morse
would wage his campaign for
reelection on issues and would
not indulge in name-calling.
She told a group of Morse sup
porters here that the Senator
would conduct an intensive
campaign in every city and
county in Oregon but that he
I would refrain from personal at
tacks. Mrs. Homer Knight was
I named chairman of the women's
division of the Morse committee
i in Klamath county.
T-Bon and a
$2.50
Top Notch Cafe
to Crattrian Beauty Shop
asrr m
A TIDAL 'WAVE OF TERROR
ENGULFS THE SCREEN!
r CAMEFR03
F btlitAIII lilt dtA
RV Ir CB1KE KORTHnC YATB Mi SMTNI
M IM CimM to RAT HAMYHNBEX
bKVtnt Tnttcm SAM MTZMAN
CHARIES H. SCtWEOt
Personal
Square Dance The Medford
YMCA will hold a square dance
between 8 and 10:30 p.m. Thurs
day at the Y. Dancing is free to
Y members. Doug Fosbury will
call squares.
Sacred Heart Patients Medi
cal patients listed at Sacred
Heart hospital this morning
were Gordon Self, 13, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William Self, 493
Linn st., Ashland; Larry Jones,
18 months, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gale Jones, 1221 Thomas rd.
Everett Manley. 416 King st.
Mrs. Charles Pipes, Phoenix;
James O'Brien. Jacksonville;
Robert Baize, Williams, Ore.;
George Snodgrass, Prospect, and
Larry Stevens, Jacksonville. In
the hospital for surgery were
Mrs. Harvey Hannons, Grants
Pass; Mrs. John Eads. 356 South
Groveland ave.: and Earl Durfee,
Montague, Calif.
Daily Weather Report
Medford and vicinity: Tair and
warm through Thursday. Threat of
thunderstorms in mountains Thursday
afternoon and evening. Lovr tonight
37. HiRh Thursday S3.
Western Oregon: Fair through
Thursday except late night and early
morning low cloudines along coast
and valleys of northern interior.
Chance of scattered afternoon thun
derstorm in southern mountains. Low
tonight 50-36. High Thursday 70-80
inland of north part. 90-95 southern
interior, 65 on coast.
Northern Cal if ornia : Fa ir through
Thursday except for increasing coastal
fog tonight and early Thursday. Cool
er in coastal valleys Thursday.
TEMPERATURE; Mean yesterday
4i: a Dove normal 4.
Record high thig date 100 In 1937.
Record low this date 42 in 1949.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to mid
night 0. Midnight to 10 a.m. 0.
Total this month 80 in.. 11 In. below
normal.
Total since Sept. 1 33.40 in., 13.60 in.
above normal.
HUMIDITY :Lowet yesterday 28
highest this a.m. 86,
CITY His-h Lnw Pree.
tsrooKingd ... 78
Crater Lake . 73
Grants Pass J5
Klamath Falll 87
MEDFORD !3
Portland 81
51
42
A3
."in
55
59
"60
S3
34
54
72
70
58
59
Seattle
Spokane
Yakima ..
. 77
. 80
. 86
- 62
..107
, 102
- 90
.. 74
Sacramento
San Francisco .
Los Angeles
Phoenix
..107
79
63
Denver
Chicago 87 62
Miami 88 71
Ne wYork 84 . 69
Washington. D C '. 87 73
FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through
July ?.):
Western Oregon Showers or
thunderstorms late Thursday night or
Friday. Otherwise little or no precipi
tation. Temneratures averarinr lieht.
It above normal with highs mostly 78
86 inland and 60-70 along coast.
Northern California raft-rrf
afternoon thundcrshowers in high
mountains, otherwise no precipitation.
Temperatures above normal inland.
near normal along coast.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (UJ T.av Tn re
tailers: Garde AA laree. 48-49c: A
grade 45-46c: AA medium. 42-43c: A
medium. 41 -42c: A small 29-3 le: ear-
tons, no charge to 3c additional.
cutter to retailers: AA grade
prints. 67-68c lb.; cartons. 68-69c; A
prints. 67-68c; B prints, 63-66c.
uneese TO retaueds: A rrad chri.
dar. single daisies.. 431i-47iac: 5-lh.
loaves. 483-51c: processed American
cheese. 5-lb. loaf. 42-44c. .
Farm Market
Top quality Bing and Lambert cher
ries from The Dalles sold at 25 cents
a pound at the East Side Farmers'
market today; best red - raspberries
changed hands at 2.30-2.75 a flat:
strawberries held firm at 2.75-2.85:
load Walla Walla new crop dry onions
quoted at 4-4.25 a 50-lb. bag.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers (No. 1
quality f.o.b. Portland;. Fryers, 2'i-4
lb. 23c lb.; at farm. 21-223c; light
hens, too few transactions for Portland
firice. 16c at ranch heavy hens 3
bs. up. not enough trading for Port
land price: at country, l?-18c lb. up;
old roosters. Il-I2c.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade
dressed to retailers: Fryers. New York
style. 35-36c lb.; whole drawn. 41-43c;
cut up. 47-30c; hens, light tvpe. New
York stvle, 29-30c: cut up. 40-44c;
hens, heavy type. N. Y. style, 31-32c;
whole drawn. 43-46c.
Turkeys To producers: Fryer tur
keys, live weight, 27-28c lb"; young
turkey hens,. 38c lb. on eviscerated
basis.
Rabbits f Average to growers, f.o.b.
killing plant): Live white. 34- lbs.
20-23c: 5-6 lbs.-13-18c; colored pelts.
4c under: old doei, 10-1 2c lb. a few
higher. Fresh killed fryers to retailers,
56-58C lb.: cut up. 60-63c.
-Maw.,.
or saw . gag im
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1
KEYNOTER Gov. Arthur
B. Langlie of Washington
state (above) has been
chosen to make the keynote
speech at the Republican
National Convention in San
Francisco August 20.
Wall Street
New York (U.PJ Stocks
advanced 1 to 3 points today on
their largest volume in nearly
three weeks.
The same items swayed buy
ers as in the previous session,
namely hopes of a peaceful
settlement of the steel wage con
tract negotiations, the $32,900,
000,000 government road ' bill,
and special items for individual
issues.
KxamDles of the latter were
a stock split and higher dividend
for McGraw Hill Publishing
which sent the stock to 109 up
6'i points; and a higher dividend
for White Motors wnicn sent u
up 2U to 464. Part of McGraw's
train evaDorated on realizing.
Dow-Jonet Avaragas
Dow- Jones final stock aver
ages- an industrials 492.04. up
2.67; 20 railroads 167.16, up 0.14;
IS utilities 67.14. up U.3H, ana
63 stocks 175.78, up 0.73.
Sales tndav were about 2.090.-
000 shares compared with 1,730,-
000 Tuesday.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T 179Ts
Anaconda 72Ts
Chrysler : 65V4
Curtiss Wright 32Ts
General Electric 60
Reneral Motors 45V4
Montgomery Ward 42Vi
Penn R R "
Pennev J C 93Ti
Radio 42
Southern Co
21
Southern Pacific
505s
51
32'8
40 V
26?i
71 tt
49;
58
92 V4
S Oil of Calif
Texas Gulf Sulphur
Transamerica
Tri-Continental
United Aircraft
U S Rubber ........
U S- Steel .. :
Youngstown .
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Portland (UJ.1 Cattle 300.' Mostly
choice 1112 lb. fed steers 21.50: choice
835 lb. 22.23; cuttes-utility steers 11
13.50: cutter-utilitv dairy type heifers
9-12; canner-cutter cows mostly 7-8 50;
utility cows 9.5U-U.3U; uumy ouus
15.50-16-50; light canner-cutter bulls
10-13.
Calves 100. Good-choice vealars
16.50-19, some around 20. '
Hogs 500. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers
180-235 lb. mostly 19.25-19.75 with
some at 19.75; mixed 1, 3 and 3
grades 18.75-19; sows 300-500 lb. 12-
15.50.
Sheen 500. Choice spring slaughter
lambs 18-50-19; good-choice 17-18;
cull-choice shorn ewes 2-4 JO.
PORTLAND HAY, GRAIN
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices:
New crop No. 2 green alfalfa baled
f.o.b. Portland nominally S35-36. some
sales higher. New croc prices not es
tablished.
Wholesale nriees as renorted nv the
USDA market news service: Whest.
No. 2 soft white. $71 ton; No. 2 white
oats. 38-lb. test. Coast delivery. $57.50-
98 ton: soybean meal, $89 f.o.b. Port
land; barley. Coast delivery, $49.50
ton; standard mill run. $43.50-44 ton:
No. 2 yellow com. Eastern shipments.
i.o.o. roruina, soa.ou.
Admission
C P.r
Parson!
News About
Servicemen
IN TRAINING
Four men from southern Ore
gon are training with the Sixth
Oregon "Beaver" platoon at San
Diego, Calif., according to Staff
Sergeant William M. Allen, local
Marine recruiter.
Those from southern Oregon
include Frank H. Lagesen, 18.
son ot Mr. and Mrs. Haakon M.
Lagesen, 24 Lincoln st.. Med
ford: Jerry D. Stewart, 17. son
of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey D. Stew
art, Shady Cove: James D. White,
18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harland
V. "White, 928 Alta st.. Medford;
and Joseph S. Brasnyo Jr.. 17,
son of Mrs. Mariorie T. Shaffer.
2100 South Highway 99, Grants
Fass.
Lagesen and White are 1956
graduates of Medford High
school. Steward attended Jack
sonville High school before mov
ing to Shady Cove, and Brasnyo
is a graduate of Grants Pass High
school.
VISITING HERE
Lt. Ernest A. Rtamm snn nf
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Stam, 20
South Peach St., Medford, is vis
iting his parents for a week rrinr
to renortinff to th Naval Air
Station, Pensacola, Fla., for
flight training.
He has been serving aboard
the destroyer USS Swenson in
Formosa, and was serving as
first lieutenant and legal officer
when he received orders for
flight training. He erartnatert
from the Naval academy in June,
1H34.
ON LEAVE
Carl Jesse Harsin, airman ap
prentice, son of Mrs. Mary Har
sin, 624 Sunrise ave., Medford.
is on a 14-dav recruit leave hp-
fore reporting to the Navy air
man scnooi at Norman, Okla.,
for an eight-week instruction
course. Harsin enlisted through
the local recruiting office earlier
this year.
GRADUATES
Charles A. Lewis
tionman in the Navy, son of Mr.
ana Mrs. Gerald Lewis, 1058
Barnett rd.. Medforri
from the 13-week course at the
Naval ponstnintinn AlaMriniar,'
mate school in Port Hueneme,
Calif., recently.
He has been transferred In thp
Naval station at Ariak Alaska
for duty. He attended Medford
High school prior to joining the
service last October.
RECEIVES DEGREE
Naw Lt. Richard T. Alfnr1
son of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Alford,
517 West 10th St., Medford. has
Been assigned as commanding
Officer aboard a - mntnr min.
sweeper in the Pacific fleet after
receiving a master of science de
gree at the Naval nostsraduate
school, Monterey, Calif.
Lt. Alford entered the service
in 1944.
ON LEAVE .
Two Jackson county men are
visiting' their parents while on
a 14-day leave from the Navy.
They are Charles Richard
Perdue, son of Mr. and Mrs. Her
bert T. Perdue, post office box
487, Eagle Point, and Carl Ran
dall Orgain, son of Mrs. Doris
Forbes, 40 North Peach st.. Med
ford. .
Perdue is to report to the
Great Lakes Naval Training cen
ter for instruction in gunner's
mates school. He enlisted in
Medford in March.
Orgain recently completed a
class in Navy radio school and
will report to the submarine base
at New London, Conn., for a
course in basic submarine school.
RECEIVES WINGS
Eugene Second Lt. Lawr
ence D. Tycer, a 1954 graduate
of the University of Oregon, re
cently received his Aircraft Ob
server wings during a gradua
tion ceremony at James Connal-
ly Air Force base, Waco, Tex.
Tycer, son of Mrs. Jessie" M.
Tycer, route 1, Eagle Point, was
commissioned a second lieuten
ant through the university's Air
Force Reserve Officer Training
corps program.
Tyeer is qualified to serve as
a navigator aboard long range
Air Force airplanes.
His wife, Virgean, and their
two children reside at Camp
White, Oregon.
FIREWORKS SHOW
JULY 4th
8:30 P.M.
SENIOR HI STADIUM
Adm. $1,00 - Children 50c
nr
Courtesy of M. C. LININGER & SONS
READY MIXED CONCRETE SAND & GRAVEL
Mtdford
Wtdntiday, Juna 27, IS5S
Funeral Services for
Baugus Family Set
Funeral services for Chester
D. Baugus, his wife, Anne Geme
trul, and son, Jimmy, will be
held in Ashland Mortuary cha
pel at 1:00 p.m. Thursday with
the Rev. W. H. Tillman of the
Baptist church officiating. Inter
ment will be in Mountain View
cemetery.
Mr. and Mrs. Baugus and
their son were killed in an acci
dent on Highway 62 north of
Medford early Sunday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Baugus were
married in April, 1937, in
BIytheville, Ark., and are sur
vived by a son, Jerry, and a
daughter, Janice. Mr. Baugus
was born July 14, -1910, in Dun
can county. Mo.
Other survivors include five
brothers. Homer Baugus, Oracle,
Ariz.; Allie Baugus, El Dorado,
Ark.; Abner Baugus, Grand Rap
ids, Mich.; C. W. Baugus, Manil
la, Ark., and G. , C Baugus,
Cardwell, Mo.
Mrs. Baugus was born Noy. 8,
1916, in Arkansas and surviving
her besides her two children are
her mother, Mrs. Mildred Smoth
ers, Paragould, Ark.; three sis
ters, Mrs. Allen Roberts, Seat
tle, Wash.; Mrs. Hugh Cox, Pio
neer, La., and Mrs. Harry Hen
ry, Ft. Seward, Calif.; three
brothers, Walter Smothers, Ft.
Seward, Calif.; Otis Smothers,
Paragould, Ark., and Connie
Smothers, with the Army in
Germany. Jimmy was born July
15, 1938, in Arkansas.
The Baugus family moved to
Ashland 10 years ago from Pros
pect and before, that had lived
in New' Mexico and Arkansas.
Obituaries
ROSA MAY PERKINS
Rosa May Perkins died this
morning at her home 334 South
Grape St. Conger-Morris funeral
home is in charge of arrange
ments. JOHN HALL
Funeral services for John
Hall, who died Tuesday in
Klamath Falls, will be held in
Conger-Morris chapel at 1 p.m.
Friday. The Rev. G. Herbert Hil-
lerman of the Zion Lutheran
church of Medford will officiate.
Committal will be in Mountain
View cemetery in Ashland.
Mr. Hall was born Jan. 19
1832. in Ilwaco, Wash. He had
been a resident of Medford for
the past 13 years.
Survivors include four daugh
ters, Mrs. A. E. (Alma) Christen-
sen, Medford; Mrs. R. E. (June)
Mann, Bremerton, Wash.; Mrs.
R. R. (Patricia) Linville, War
renton. Ore.; Mrs. J. W. (Myr
tle) Cal well, Klamath Falls,
Ore.; seven sons, Claude Hall
and Willard Hall, both of Wald
port, Ore.; Ted Hall and Clifford
Hall, both of Newport, Ore; Les
ter Hall, of Yachats, Ore; Ce
cil Hall of Medford. and Leland
Hall, of Crescent City; two sis
ters, Mrs. J. W. Baker, Med'
ford; and Mrs. Annie- Fry, Pow
ers; one brother, Charlie Hall,
Ilwaco, Wash.; 28 grandchildren
and six great grandchildren.
First Major Change Made
In Bookbinding Process
Chicago U.R) The first ma
jor change in bookbinding proc
esses in 50 years is claimed by
a Chicago publishing house.
The process was developed (by
the Follett Publishing Co.) for library-bound
books for young
people and is called "Picture-in-Buckram."
A jacket cover in four colors
is printed directly onto the
buckram, the publishers said.
A plastic coating keeps the book
waterproof and bright through
out its life which is claimed to
be five times longer than that
of books with regular covers.
HIGH IN CLASS
Navy Ens. Lowell D. Bran
nock, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. T.
Brannock, 917 Alta St., Medford,
graduated 19th in a class of 332
"men from the Navy's officer can
didate school at Newport, R. I.,
June 1. -
He is scheduled to report to
the aerology postgraduate school
at Monterey, Calif.
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday; 10 a.m. Monday for
nonasr, oineraaya eraviouaaay.
Attend the BIG
Set This Spetcacular
Y. M. C. A. CAMP
BENEFIT SHOW
Ytu'll have fun and
yey'll htlp a worthy cauM
Plantt in Mtdford and AsAUnd
Phona 2-333 AshUnd, Phm
MEPrOftP tOHEQOW) MAIL TRIBTTrTZ THMTH
Gates, Mill C'rty Voters
OK Union High School
Mill City, Ore. U.PJ A
union high school district has
been approved overwhelmingly
by voters of Gates and Mill City.
Gates voted 99-24 and Mill
City, 114-2. Earlier, Fox Valley,
Ore., had voted to stay out of
the proposed district and the
new election was called.
The taking over of the Mill
City hip school for the union
high diMrict also was approved.
Quarterly Dividends
Declared by Copco
Directors of the California
Oregon Power company have
rteclared quarterly dividends of
$1.75 per share on the 7 per
cent preferred stock for the sec
ond quarter of 1956.
Other dividends include $1.50
per share on the 6 per cent pre
ferred, and $1.17Va per share
on the preferred stock, 4.70 per
cent series.
Directors also declared a divi
dend of 73 23 cents per share
for the period May 9 to June 20
this year on the new issue of
preferred stock, 5.10 per cent
series.
The latter dividend is at the
rate of $1,27'.' per share quar
terly. All preferred dividends
are payable July 16 to stock
holders of record June 30.
Also declared was a dividend
of 40 cents per share on the com
mon stock for the second quar
ter of 1956, payable July 20 to
shareholders of record June 30.
Supreme Court Denies
Rehearing for Anderson
Salem (U.R) The Oregon
Supreme Court today denied a
petition of James Quinton An
derson for a rehearing of his ap
peal from a second degree mur
der conviction.
Anderson was given a life
sentence for the 1954 slaying
of Richard Miller in Klamath
county. He was tried in Harney
county.
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RICHARD B.I'.TON - RLT3WC MARCH
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ASHLAND
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ROBERT GORDON
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