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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1958)
Recovering . Pamela Kay Gilstrap, 18-months-old daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gilstrap, 1120 East Jackson at., was reported to be recov ering today from a major Ill ness. The child is a patient in Eogue Valley hospital. Patients Convalescing at Osteopathic hospital follow ing major surgery is Mrs. John Kercher, route 1, box 287, Central Point. A medical patient at the same hospital Is Roy Junge, 4068 South Pacific highway, Medford. Child Patient Convalesc ing at Rogue Valley hospital following a tonsillectomy is Stewart Penington, two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ste wart Penington, 408 Korth Barneburg rd. Stolen Jack Roy Sides, 926 Murray st, reported to city police Wednesday after noon the theft of a five-gallon gasoline can containing five gallons of gasoline from his wrecker. To See "Giant" It Will Not Play Again for Years! $lPerCari I J&V JLlL. ELIZABETH -Lfffcl TAYLOR f "W1 rt HUDSON "GIANT" Will Show Onca Only at 8 p.m. Each Nit Local and Personal Inspections City Fire Mar shal Truman Nelson inspected five business occupancies and an apartment house yesterday and issued eight orders for correction of fire hazards. Flue Fires City firemen reported the flue blazes this morning at the homes of Mil lard O. Payton, 2191 Canal St., and Lester J. Stevens, 1016 Mt. Pitt ave., and yes terday afternoon and evening at the residences of William P. Jeffery, 521 Mayette st., and Richard A. Loros, 804 Broad st. Milk Cans Taken Two cans of milk were taken from the E. A. Moore place near Rogue River Sunday, Jackson county sheriffs deputies re ported. Milk cans have been taken also from Jerry Leon ard, Central Point; A Steven son, Eagle Point; Knowland Bowman, Medford; and Lee Roy Welch, Talent, they said. Injured Mrs. C. H. De Busk, Pioneer rd., Medford, suffered serious injuries when a tractor she was driving re cently rolled over onto her in an irrigation ditch west of Phoenix on Pioneer rd., ac cording to friends. She was taken to Sacred Heart hos pital, where her condition was reported serious by friends. Pot Damaged Several orchard heating pots have been burned and dumped in the Budge orchard on South Old Stage rd., a spokesman for the Pinnacle packing com pany told sheriff's officers. Some others have been shot up, it was reported. Juveniles were seen tampering with pots Saturday, officers were told. The first conference of the Southern Methodist church was held in Batesville, Ark., in 1836. ' Gas TfieTf Reported In Central Point Central Point Three dif ferent reports of gasoline thefts within the city were re ported to Central Point city police this week. Gasoline was reported taken from several Sunday school buses at Central Point Community Bible church, po lice said; Gordon Jones, Grants Pass, reported gaso line taken from his pickup while it was parked on Oak st. near Sixth st., and Elmer Wiggins, route 1, box 412, Central Point, reported the theft of gasoline from his truck while it was parked on Pine st., Central Point. YOUTHS FINED Central Point Two Med ford lVfc-year-old boys were arrested by Central Point city police Tuesday night on charges of discharging fire arms within the city. They pleaded guilty in Central Point municipal court and were fined $25 each and the police confiscated the wea pons, police said. k 1 847 ROGERS BROS. 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I 79 CHARGE LIMITED TIME OFFER! , J 8M 112 E. Main - Medford Phone SP 3-5348 Store Hours: 9:30 am to 5:30 pm. LIMITED TIME OFFER! COMPLETE WATCH CLEANING . . Only WE WILL LOAN YOU A WATCH WHILS TOURS IS BEING CLEANED &f ic NO MONEY DOWN 25c Obituaries JOHN A. CORUM John A. Coram, 65, of 31 Myers court, died last night at the Veterans Administra tion Domiciliary, Camp White. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Conger-Morris Funeral directors. ROY DAVID McGARITY Funeral services for Roy Wavid McGarity, 45, who died Wednesday, will be held in the Ashland Mortuary chapel, Fourth and C sts., Friday at 1:30 p.m. Elks Lodge 944 will officiate. Committal will be in the Mountain View cemetery. Mr. McGarity was born on Dec. 5, 1912, in Norton, Kan.. On Oct. 6, 1937, in Lakeview, he was married to Ethel Alv stad who survives. He came to Trail from Kansas in 1934 and then moved to Lakeview in 1935. In 1944 he moved to Talent, where he was living at the time of his death. He was a member of Elks lodge of Ashland. Other survivors include two sons, Eldon and Gary, both at home; three brothers, John T. McGarity, Roseburg; Max W. McGarity, Eureka, Calif.; Gerald D. McGarity, Los Angeles, Calif.; five sis ters, Mrs. Georgia Hays, Al mena, Kan.; Mrs. Ruby Gar ton, Klamath Falls; Mrs. Elva Cox, Denver, Colo.; Mrs. Thel ma McDonald, Eureka, Calif., and Mrs. Echo Dean, Redding, Calif. MAJORIE L. MURRAY Funeral services for Mrs. Marjorie L. ' Murray, 68, of 816 Dakota ave., Medford, who died Tuesday, will be held at Perl funeral home at 10 a.m. Saturday. The Rev. George A. Trobough will of ficiate. Burial will be in Sis kiyou Memorial park. Mrs. Murray was born in Madison, Calif., Nov. 19, 1889, and had been a resident of Oregon for the past 30 years, and a resident of this commu nity for five years. She was a member of Ada rel Chapter Order Eastern Star, Jacksonville, Olive Re bekah Lodge, Pythian Sisters, and Past Noble Grand club. Survivors include her hus band, Floyd Murray, Medford; five sisters, Mrs. Marie Smith, Calousa, Calif.; Mrs. Mae Beckwith, Capay, Calif.; Mrs. Hazel Taylor, Capay, Calif.; Ms. Irene Alexander, Capay, Calif.; and Mrs. Eula Truitt, Espardo, Calif. Pallbearers will be George Ice, Clarence Jordan, Jens Jensen, William Dyer, Earl Scripter and Wheeler Hughes. Members of Olive Rebekah Lodge 28 will participate in the services. Births MILLER To Mr. and Mrs. Tom, general delivery, Cen tral Point, Jan. 23, 1958, a boy, weighing IV pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. GWIN To Mr. and Mrs. Francis, box 635, Hilts, Calif., Jan. 21, 1958, a boy, weighing 734 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. EVANS To Mr. and Mrs. Don, 931 Queen Ann ave., Medford, Jan. 22, 1958, a girl, weighing 8 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. BENNETT JR. To Mr. and Mrs. Charles, 41A Myers court, Medford, Jan. 22, 1958, a boy, weighing 634 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. MILLS To Mr. and Mrs. Richard, post office box 31, Talent, Jan. 22, 1958, a boy, weighing 7V4 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. GODFREY To Mr. and Mrs. William, route 1, box 20A, Jacksonville, Jan. 22, 1958, a boy, 8V pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. Thursday, January 23. H38 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN Crater Lake Grants Pass Klamath Fall MEDFORD Portland Seattle Spokane Yakima . 53 39 47 35 . 39 48 46 35 -?9 53 54 49 57 43 17 37 29 34 42 43 31 30 .02 Eureka Red Bluff Sacramento ... San Francisco Los Angeles 6S Phoenix 61 Denver . 33 Chicago 36 Miami 70 New York 53 Washington. D.C. 46 44 35 36 40 47 31 4 22 63 33 37 .03 .09 Dead Line on Classified Ads: 5:30 n m. for followine day. except 10 Northeast Whipped By 50-Mile Winds By UNITED PRESS The last gasp of winter's most devastating storm whipped the northeast corner of the nation with winds up to 50 miles per hour today, and its possible successor be gan building up in Northern Mexico. The storm, which blanketed the Midwest with up to 18 inches of snow and drifts several feet deep, hammered the Northeast during the night with high winds and ' light snow in the Northern Appa lachians and the interior of New England. Earlier, parts of New Eng land were hit by flooding rains which forced the closing of some schools. Rain con tinued during the night along the northern coastal sections. Meanwhile, a storm center in Mexico today spread rain into Central Texas and dump ed two inches of snow at Al pine, Tex. Weathermen said the storm center was intensifying. Far East Target of Soviet Campaign Tokyo OPI The Soviet Un ion has opened a massive cam paign of economic penetration in the Far East. ' Russia's economic wooing of A s i a's underdeveloped countries came into sharp focus at the trade meeting of the United Nations Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East (ECAFE) this week at Bangkok. It aroused the concern of free Asian leaders. The Soviet Union, previous ly conducting economic infil tration of individual Asian countries, made its first blan ket "no-strings" offer of aid to Asia at the Afro-Asian "P eopl e's Conference" In Cairo this month. It followed this up by offer ing a loan of $100 million to Indonesia where Western ob servers already had express ed fear of Communist encroachment. Police Report Hems . Taken from Schools Items were reported taken from three Medford schools 'Wednesday, according to city police. John William Childers, 607 Sherman ave., reported the theft of a billfold from Roose velt school at 8:48 a.m., and Evelyn Leonard Van Pelt, 64 Rose ave., reported the theft of a sweater from McLough lin Junior High school at 11:32 a.m. .Jimmie Lloyd Sutton, 335 South Riverside ave., reported to city police the theft of his bicycle from Lincoln school at 3:55 pan. The oldest golf course in continuous use in America is located in Foxburg Country Club have been playing since 1887. 4 Daily Weather Report FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Cloudy with wind and rain tonight. Par tial clearing and showery Friday. Low tonight 42. High Friday 50. Western Oregon: Rain tonight. Showers and partial clearing Fri day. Mild temperatures. Southerly coastal winds 35-45 miles per hour early tonight diminishing to 20-30 mph Friday. Low tonight 40-48. High Friday 42-52. Northern California: Rain tonight and continuing intermittently through Friday except snow in high mountain areas. Slightly colder extreme north portion Fn- j aay. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 34: below normal 4. Record high this date 59 in 1942. Record low this date 16 In 1949. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, trace. Midnight to 10 a.m.. trace. Total this month 1.63 inch, .16 inch below normal. Total since Sept. 1 10.27 inches, .12 inch above nomal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 74i, highest this a.m. 100. High 4:00 24- Clty Yester- a.m. nr. day Low Prec. Brookings CLUB -mi HEWS Central Point Beef Club - The Central Point Beef club met at Eldred Charley's house on Beall lane Monday night, Jan. 20. We discussed the different parts of the beef. Floyd Charley and Mr. Peek discussed some of our steer's problems. They also talked about the feeding pro gram for our steers. The refreshments were served by Mrs. Eldred Char ley. The next meeting will be held at Susan Wright's house on Jacksonville highway. Floyd Charley will tell us about the history of beef. Scott Eaton, Reporter. Industrial Shares Up in Quiet Market New York (W Firmness in motors, tobaccos, chemicals and special issues lifted indus trial shares higher in a quiet stock market today. Rails managed to register a small average gain despite another year to year decline in car loadings. Utilities dipped slightly on profit-taking. The main list generally held in a narrow range while the wider changes centered on the special issues. In addition to the dip in car loadings the market had to contend with further soft ening in copper prices, poor earnings for Pennsylvania Railroad, and a decision of Detroit Steel management to defer the dividend declaration until the next directors' meeting. Today's prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical 76 American Can 42s,s AT&T 1723,i Anaconda Copper 41 Vs Bethlehem Steel 29V Caterpillar Corp ...... 623,4 Chrysler Corp 54 Continental Can .... 44V4 Crown Zellerbach 4734 Curtiss Wright 267s Du Pont 183V4 Eastman Kodak .... lOOU General Electric 635fc General Foods . 51lA General Motors 35 Vi Georgia Pacific 29 V Graham Paige IV Homestake Mining 37V4 Kaiser Frazer 9 Kennecott Copper 16V Lockheed Aircraft .'. 41 V Katy Pfd .' 3334 Montgomery Ward 33 V RAILROAD TO ART Crawford Notch, N.H.- The railroad station here has a switch coming up. No long er in use for railroad service, the building is to be turned into an art center for this popular vacation resort Art classes and exhibits are planned. New York Central Penney J Penn RR Radio Corporation Richfield Oil Sears Socony Vacuum Southern Co Southern Pacific Standard California - Standard Indiana Standard NJ Sun Mines Texas Gulf .. Transamerica 357i Trans West Air 12H- Tex Pac Land Trust 8' Union Carbide 9438 Union Pacific 264 United Aircraft 5414 UAL 25s U S Rubber 33! s U S Steel 55 Youngstown S & T 77 15 -88 -123s-33i: 6038 26Vi. 485. 45 Vi 373i 5014 83i 167 s Portland Livestock Portland (UJ.) Cattle 100. Utility-commercial cows 16.50 19.50; canners-cutters 12.50-14.-50; heavy Holstein cutters to 16; good choice fed steers 24-26. Calves ' 25. Slaughter calves 21.50-23; stock steer calves 22.50 26. Hogs 100. No. 1 and 2 butchers 190-220 lb. 22.50; mixed 1. 2 and 3 lots 21.50-22; sows 300-500 lb. 15.50-18.50. Sheep 50. Choice wooled and shorn lambs 22.50-23: good-choice feeders mostly 20-22; cull-good ewes 5-10. Portland Produce Portland (U.P.) Eggs To re tailers: Grade AA large, 45-46c doz.: A large. 42c; AA medium, 42-43c; A medium, 41-42c; carton, l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA and A grade prints, 68-69c lb.; carton, lc a pound higher; B print. 65-66C. Cheese medium cured To re tailers: A grade Cheddar, single daisies, 45'i-52c: 5-lb. loaves. 51',i 57c; processed American cheese, 5 lb. loaf, 412-42c. Farm Market Most markets offered extra fancy grade rhubarb at 29-33 cents a pound today; asparagus went at mostly 14.50 for 30 lb. pyramids. Poultry, Rabbits Live Chickens Quoted to grow ers as ranch No. 1 quality fryers, 2-4 lbs.. 22-23c lb.; light hens, 10-llc lb., ranch; heavy hens, 5 lbs. up, 18-19c lb.; old roosters, 7-8c lb. Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn, 41-44c lb.; cut up, 46-49c; hens, light type, cut up,; 34-36c; heavy type, whole drawn, 40-45c lb. Rabbits (Average to growers, f.o.b. killing plants) live white, 3'a 4i lbs., f.o.b. Portland. 22-25c lh colored pelts. 4c under. Fresh killed fryers to retailers, 59-61C lb.; cut up. 62-65C lb. Portland Hay, Grain Portland Wholesale Hav Price : New crop No. 2 green alfalfa baled f.o.b. Portland, S24-25 a ton. Wholesale Prices as reported by the USDA market news service: Wheat. No. 2 soft white, $76.50 ton; No. 2 white oats, 38-lb West Coast delivery, S49.50 ton- No. 2 Valley White oats. S48 ton: snvhpan meal. $76 ton. f.o.b. Portland; bar ley No. 2 West Coast delivery. S47 ton; standard mill run, prompt de livery, numinaiiy .-40 ton t o o. Portland; No. 2 yellow corn. East ern shipment f.o.b. Portland, $53-55J0. DON'T niss THE FUN Remember the a vxrmzs? DANCE Jn TONIGHT AT THE Jackson Hotel PIONEER ROOM Informal Dress Sport Coats and Slacks for Men SPONSORED BY Arthur Murray Dance Studio (NO MINORS PLEASE) Agency Joins Local Listing Service Fidler - McKenzie agency this week joined the Medford Multiple Listing service, Keith Bates, salesman for" Fidler-MacKenzie, represent ed the firm at the meeting. The agency brings to 28 the number of firms affiliated with the listing service: Twenty-one members were" present at the meeting at the Jackson hotel. ; BREAKFAST .7 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. SUNDAY Christian Men's Fellowship First Christian Church 9th and Oakdala $1.00. Adult. 30c Children under 12 3 MON DESIR Your Favorite Dining Inn OPEH EVERY EVENING Except Monday I I Half rOrder DOLLAR HOT CAKES GOLDEN BROWN Served with Whipped Butter, and Your Choice of Strawberry, Blackberry or Maple Syrup. w 25c Served Until 2:30 p.m. fKE CLOCK Main at Barrier! Ph. SP 2-6766 NOW SHOWING Jfb, , Av YOU'LL HEAR v . ABOUT IT I" 9. 1 nrrpvwjuuue. j mm IS mr WaltDisneyJ w froir of O VTV I 1 J "first ttutiife Tahtastt mmmmnCHMKOLQ MMtfblSUtlUreTt CO-FEATURE Guns ClNBMASCOPe BARBARA STANWYCK BARRY SULLIVAN ; VIf 1 1 mil ft,! Ton ire & Friday Only TWO SPINE-TINGLERS I HOPPER TAYLOR r'&jS3f TERRIFYING CO-HIT .: a.m. for Monday; ior Sunday, coon Saturday.