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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 10, 1957)
Phone KE 5-1462 With KATY JURADO PLUS 2nd ACTION HIT! MONTGOMERY milt FREEMAN fcUSTMM COIOI a m sk h msH W COMPARED TO MOTHER LOVE, i MOUNTAIN IS BUT AN ANT HILL, AN OCEAN A CUP OF WATER ... HOTEL MEDFORD Dining Room Open 8 a.m. Until 8 p.m. CANDLE ROOM Open 2 p.m. Until 10 p.m. Always a quality of good food Efficient service. Gleaming silverware, linen napkins and cloths. Moderate prices. Children's portions. Deluxe (25c) Hamburgers - v oil over five TWis offer good . very dayl HATSON'S STEAK HOUSE 3310 N. 99 - 1 Mile Past Y - Phone SP 3-1 678 Special Mother's Day Dinner Soup and Fruit Cup Choice of: ROAST TURKEY, dressing, cranberry sauce, giblet gravy or VIRGINIA BAKED HAM with ap plesauce or PAN FRIED CHCKEN, cream gravy Coffee . . . Tea . . . or Milk Pudding . . . Jello ... or Sherbet Children's Dinners Also SPECIAL Now Seating 350 People OPENING NEW DINNER GARDEN TWO DINING ROOMS AND COFFEE SHOP Se. Oregon's ONLY Smorgasbord. ENJOY ALL You Want to Eat! OREGON DINING INN South of the Bridge, Grants Pass, Ore. 'Large, Easy Parking in the Rear BRING THE CHILDREN. SILVER GRILL CAFE 413 EAST MAIN STREET MEDFORD hue 1st DRIVE IN RUN! TONITE and SAT. QUNN BONUS HIT! SATURDAY ONLY RAY MILLAND "JAMICA RUN" r TAKE OUT With All The Trimmings )) Park Place Cafe 302 West Main $ 25 DINNERS Fine Foods Sensible Prices Treat Featuring ' PAN FRIED CHICKEN & RABBIT PLUS THE BEST SEA FOODS Open Daily 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. CLOSED SUNDAYS Locals Medical Patient Medical pa- j tient at Osteopathic hospital is ! William Lytle of Butte Falls. ... Holel Impacted A hotel, two i warehouses and one business oc cupancy were inspected yester day by City Fire Marshal Tru man Nelson. He issued seven or ders for correction of hazards. ... Sal Planned The National Secretaries association will hold a rummage sale at the Fehl building Saturday, May 11, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. ... Opens Business D. P. (Pete) Shoup, Oregon PUC auditor for the Medford area, has resigned to enter private business, it was re ported this week. He is now op erating his own business as book keeping, insurance and trans portation consultant. His office is located at 1133 South Riverside ave., Medford. ... Skating Party There will be an Intermediate Girl Scout skat ing party Saturday, May 11, from 1 until 4 p.m. at the Rogue Valley ballroom. Those wishing to complete skating badge re quirements may have instruc tions Saturday from 1 until 2 p.m. ... Roads Graded Access roads to Hyatt lake have been graded by county road equipment and are in good shape, Mr. and Mrs. I John Bowman, resort managers j at the lake, have reported. Grad I ing was done to the routes from j both Dead Indian road and Green Springs highway. ... Meeting Planned The young . adult group of the Medford j YMCA is planning a meeting at : the Y Monday, May 13. at 7:30 p.m. Badminton, volley ball and i swimming are planned during j the evening. Refreshments will i be served. Any unmarried per- I son between the ages of 20 and ! 30 is eligible to attend, i ... Reunion Saturday Rogue I Valley Girl Scout council today reminded all former campers and ! prospective campers of the re ! union at Hawthorne Park, south of the Girl Scout office, Satur day, May 11, from 12:30 to 3 p.m. Campers are to bring a sack lunch and beverage will be pro vided by the camp committee in charge. ... Parents Mr. and Mrs. Rich ard H. Johnson of Eugene are parents of a girl born yesterday in Eugene.. They , baby weighed IVi pounds. Johnson is the son of the Rev. and Mrs. Perry M. Johnson, 819 West 13th st., Med ford, and his wife, the former Miss Barbara S.tickney, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ira E. Stickney,. 530 Benson st., Med ford. . Road Open The road from Butte Falls to Lake of the Woods via Fish lake is open, the forest service reported this noon. A barricade which was blocking the road at Fish lake has been removed. Dead Indian road to Lake of the Woods still is closed by snow in Klamath county, the forest service said, but motor ists can get to Lake of the Woods by traveling Dead Indian road and Deadwood road via Big Elk and Fish lake. Children Patient. Conva lescing after tonsillectomies this morning are Dale Taylor, 10-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Taylor, 908 Alta st., Med ford, and Kathleen DeWitt, 11-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas DeWitt, 320 North Keene Way, both at Rogue Val ley hospital, and Philip Colvin, 8-year-old i son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Colvin, route 1, box 85B. Jacksonville, who is a patient at Osteopathic hospital. There are more than 12,000 trailer parks in the nation to serve more than two million per sons who have become mobile home dwellers. X SAVE MONEY! DO IT YOURSELF! RESTORE BEAUTY TO YOUR FLOORS WITH A RENTED SANDER Easy to Operate Clean and Dustless Low Rental Rates We Handle Everything Yee Need tor Floor Refinishing I Obituaries FRED O. STILLWELL Fred O. Stillwell, 81, former resident of Medford -and fre quent visitor here, died Wednes day in Oroville, Calif. He was born in Medford on May 12. 1876, and lived here until 1937, when he moved to California. Survivors include his wife, Edna; two sons, Ed Stillwell, Medford, and Jake Stillwell, Corning, Calif.; and two daugh ters, Mrs. Saloma B i n g m a n, Boise, Idaho, and Mrs. Mildred O'Brien, Oakland, Ore. Funeral services are pending in Oroville. MRS. MELISSA E. DAVIS Mrs. Melissa E. Davis, 84, of Shady Cove, died in Medford early this mornin. Perl Funeral home is in charge of arrange ments. HARRY GEORGE Harry George, 64, of Jackson ville, died yesterday in a local hospital. Conger-Morris Funeral home is in charge of arrange ments. LEVI H. LANTZ Funeral services for Levi H. Lantz, 80, of Medford, who died Wednesday in Salem, will be held at Conger-Morris at 11 a.m. Saturday. The Rev. William C. Piper of the First Christian church will officiate. Commit tal will be in Siskiyou Memor ial park. Mr. Lantz was born Dec. 7, 1876, in Earl ton, Kans. He came to Central Point from Idaho in 1949, and had made his home for the past several years with his son, Ivan Lantz, at 631 West Jackson st, Medford. His wife, Ina, died in 1949, and a son, Ralph, in 1952. Survivors include his son, Ivan; a brother, Jacob C. Lantz, Sandpoint, Ida.; two sisters, Mrs. Maude Fisher, Pen, Kans., and Mrs. Delia Chrisman, Sedan, Kans.; four grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Pallbearers will include Philip Johnson, Frank Douglas, Floyd Watkins, J. P. Morrisey, K. E. Watson and Walter Wil son. C. G. DUNCAN Hillsboro C. G. (Bert Dun can, 95, formerly of Central Point, died at the home of his son, Wesley Duncan, in Hills boro, Ore., May 8, after a short illness Mr. Duncan lived in Central Point for about 30 years mov ing to Hillsboro in 1950. He was a member of the First Presby terian church in Central Point. He is survived by one son and thre daughters. Funeral services will' be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, May 11, at Donaldson Swells Funeral Home in Hillsboro MLOT1 3AEffTE alt EDEEAMLANED Featuring: Popular VIC WILDER with his talking TRUMPET Latest and Oldest Dance Favorites Walker's Dreamland Ballroom Always A Congenial Crowd Finest of Modern Music Beautiful GOLD HILL GRANGE HALL Every SAT. NIGHT Music ly . . . VIC FLOOD $,2' A fine floor and lora of friendly people Come on out We'll make room fer yey somehow! Free - f) Dining Room Cheek Room Downstairs IIMMCCLE SATURDAY NIGHT EAGLE POINT The Only Spring Floor In Southtrn Oregon DANCE TO THE COMBINED MUSIC OF DICK SPAIN, BILL LIVELY and The Rogue Valley Boys PLENTY OF FREE PARKING Admission Requiem Mass Set For Mrs. Donovan A Requiem Mass for Mrs. Margaret Mary Donovan, 28, of 13 South Newtown st, and her son, William Gregory, who died Wednesday as result of injuries suffered in an automobile-train accident, will be said in Sacred Heart Catholic church Saturday at 9 a.m. by the Rev. Nicholas J. Deis. Recitation of the Holy Rosary will be held in Conger-Morris chapel at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Committal will be in Siskiyou Memorial park. Mrs. Donovan was born March 2, 1929, in New York City, N.Y. On' June 7, 1953, in New York City she was married to William J. Donovan, who sur vives. She had been employed as a secretary in the registrars office at Camp White for the past 10 months. She was a mem ber of the Sacred Heart Catholic church. Survivors, besides her hus band, include one daughter, Diane, at home; parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Greany, New York, N.Y.; and brother, John M. Greany, New York, N.Y. Daily Weather Report FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Continued mild and generally cloudy through Saturday with afternoon and evening showers. Low tonight 48. High Satur day 72. Western Oregon: Coniiderablle cloudiness and a few showers through Saturday. Scattered afternoon or eve ning thundershowers in mountains of southern portion. Low tonight 42-52. High Saturday 64-74. Northern California: Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday with scattered showers. Little temperature change. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 57: below normaU 1. Record high this date 95 in 1931. Record low this date 32 in 1929. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to mid night, .01 inch. Midnight to 10 a.m., none. Total this month .19 inch, .17 inch below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 32. highest this a.m. 93. Hitrh 4:34 24- City Yester- a.m. nr. day Low Prec. Brookings 66 52 .02 Crater Lake 48 32 . .08 Grants Pass ' . 72 51 .11 Klamath Falls 2 44 MEDFORD 72 SO .01 Portland 67 50 Seattle 57 51 .07 Spokane 58 50 Yakima ? 6 1 44 .50 Eureka 67 52 .42 Red Bluff 72 54 .09 Sacramento 72 52 .08 San Francisco .. 64 53 .05 Los Angeles 69 58 Phoenix 83 . 54 Denver 49 39 .23 Miami 80 74 .27 Washington, D.C. 87 62 FIVE-DAT FORECAST (Through May 153: Western Oregon Western Washing ton Recurring showers in western Oregon . and periods of scattered showers western Washington through Wednesday. Temperatures near nor mal. Highs western Washington 60-70. western Oregon 65-70. Lows 45-50. Northern California S cattered showers early in period, otherwise no appreciable precipitation. Tempera tures near normal. The per Person Friday. Mar'lO, 1S57 Bowles Opposed For Water Board Salem (U.P.) The appoint ment of Rollin Bowles, imme diate past president of the Izaak Walton League to the State Water Resources board by Gov. Robert D. Holmes, met with op position Thursday at a hearing before the Senate Natural re sources committee. The committee received letters and telegrams opposing the ap pointment which said that the board now has two Izaak Walton league representatives who have opposed development of irriga tion projects in favor of fishing use of streams. Bowles was de scribed by the governor as a "militant" conservationist. A letter in opposition to the appointment was also received from Senate President Boyd Overhulse. Leaders of the Farm Bureau federation and irrigationists yes terday also spoke against his appointment. Speaking on Bowles behalf were Orville Thompson, legal aid to the governor; L. C. Bin ford, Chairman of the Water Re sources Board; John Amacher, a conservationist supporter from Winchester, and Charles Col lins, Roseburg, member of the Douglas county water resources advisory committee. Governor Predicts Tax Program Approval Pendleton U.R) Gov. Rob ert D. Holmes arrived here to day en route to the Milton-Free-water Pea festival and predict ed that "enough Republican members of the Senate will swing over to the Democratic side" to pass the Democrats' program of higher income taxes. The governor, who had just returned from a trip to Salt Lake City, said he had every hope the Democratic program would be passed. "It's inconceivable to me,' he said, "the Republican members of the Senate can be as obstruc tionist as to defeat this program which is necessary to carry out the legislative program which they have already voted for." EDAMCE Bobby Champion and his Rhythm Butters The Best Dance Band in the Valley SAT. NITE ROGUE VALLEY BALLROOM CHIOILILY DOORS OPEN 6:30 ft "S'l Ia a ' ' WJDREY2 and ASTAIRE TOGETHER .!V f fred ASTAIRE Plus World News nCrDUIxIN KAY THOMPSON MEDFORD (OREGON) Chamber Directors Approve Agreement The Jackson County Chamber of Commerce board of directors yesterday approved an agree ment to help finance a study of the economic feasibility of utiliz ing waste material from the lum ber industry. The study will be made in co operation with the Oregon De velopment commission and the Grants Pass and Josephine Coun ty Chamber of Commerce, and will include the entire Rogue river basin. About S2,000 will be used between the two chambers for the survey. Potential wood chip supply, available water supply, and other aspects regarding industrial use of waste material. M. M. Huggins reported on the House Bill 790, which would allow industrial use of water from the Rogue river. Changes in the bill also were discussed by the directors. A delegation from the Cham ber's highway committee will at tend a meeting of the state high way commission in Portland May 17 in connection with a proposed route to Klamath Falls via Lake of the Woods. The highway has been on the committee's program since 1950. The road would extend from Eagle Point to Klamath Falls via McAllister Springs and Lake of the Woods. It would be construc- ed with forestry highway funds, and later the state would provide funds for its maintenance. The cutworm is not a worm, but the caterpillar form of va rious moths.. TONITE & SATURDAY coi'jmi' ncruti AUDIE MURPHY KATHRYN GRANT A I HOPE EMERSON fll PLUS JEFF DONNELL PEREZ PRAD0 and his Orchestra MARY KAYE TRIO HELEN GRAYCO TONIGHT AND SATURDAY a dazzling musical spree. ..in Fabu jlou 4!. Color Cartoon NOTHING IM BrBBspgggBBPjB All tha Crwit Lotm I 11, AUDREY f J MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN Crash Near Athena Claims Two Lives Pendleton (U.R) The crash of a small, single-engine plane near Athena. Ore., took the lives of two Washington state men Thursday. The Umatilla. Ore. county sheriff's office identified the vic tims as Ted Chandler, Yakima, 30, the pilot, and Robert B. Nor man, 24, Toppenish. Civil Aeronautics Board of ficials here said Chandler rent ed the plane from a privately owned firm at Pendleton airport early and took two other men for a ride over the city. Chandler landed at Pendleton about an hour later to let one of his passengers off the plane. He took off again and minutes later the plane crashed. CAB officials are investigating the cause of the accident. A HERE'S A GREAT SATURDAY FUN SHOW ABOUT A GREAT HORSE "KANGO THE WILD STALLION" PLUS . CARTOON CARNIVAL AND CHAPTER 13 "HOP HARRIGAN" k k k k k k T1 - PLUS - "VlPSk ! ! ADDED SATURDAY ONLYI 3RD BONUS FEATURE ENDS TONIGHT - PLUS UWnMEm SATURDAY ONLY GREAT FEATURES HIT NO. 1 RICHARD CONTE PEGGIE CASTLE a wAturt toi ncn.ti HIT NO. 2 TONITE & SATURDAY I fELVIS PRESLEY M HIMSELF,N' fir RICHARD EGAN DEBRAPpT ft CPU. 1ft ftCTHM m HIT NO. 3 tneiAUSTS IN HOMIWAIISI 3 West 6th St., Medford "FIFTH AVE. TO FIJIYAMA" rlYUB QUTQ U iii r e t"V OK