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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1958)
Q 14 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, uoo.y, Juat 8. 1958 oUll SMOOTHES JOINT Al Allen above, who, with his father, run the Roguewoods boat factory at their home on the Rogue River, is shown above sanding a joint on the deck of a Tru-V runabout prior to putting on the finish, a polyester resin. All Tru-V hulls are completely glassed on the outside to give maximum strength. Planking is of- 3a inch marine plywood that is bonded between layers of a special plastic, Crezone. The plywood, made especially for marine construction, is a fairly new product put out by Harbor Plywood corporation. The "V" shape of the fore part of the Tru-V hull can be cleary seen in the angle of the ribs in the picture above. OVER RAPIDS The provin grounds" G 'for Tru-V boats is the rough rapids .along Qie Rogue river. For the next month or two, $hile the river is high, Jim and Al Allen, who operate the Roguewoods boat factory, will give demonstration rides to prove what the boat will do. Wide flare on the prow of the boats makes them more FRONT VIEW A head-on view of a Tru-V boat shows the accented '"flare" or "V" shape of the forward section of the hull. Sitting in the boat, which is mounted on a trailer ready for delivery, is Al Allen's wife, Muriel, who helps out at the boat factory occasionally. A 15-foot runabout, zi &iTt-s,7'' 1 T-t h- " " r-v -Jv,-!sls x SHARP TURN Going at a good clip into Q sharp turnOabove, boat builder Jim Allen lays a 15-foot Tru-V runabout over on its - side until the gunwale touches the water. - Powered by a 35 horsepower outboard, the boat literally jumps into planing position, PSDgni T?MTfe - QSSeb sea-worthy, the makers claim, and gives a considerably softer ride in rough water than ordinary boats. The flare also throws the water far to the side, keeping passengers and the inside of the boat dry. The picture above was taken on the rapids just below the Allen home. stretches of similiar to the one above weathered a bad storm on Pudget sound when Al got caught miles from shore. Jim Allen spent many years developing a hull design that would be more seaworthy than an average boat. The runabouts can be seen at Littrell Parts, marine division, East Sixth st., Medford. but instead of slapping every wave it is cushioned through them by the extreme V shape of the foreward section of the hull, which aids maneuverability. (Note the long section of the prow that is out of the water.) By BOB VROMAN Mail Tribune Staff Writer The secret to outstanding performance in any boat, large or small, is in the hull design and little else, accord ing to valley resident Jim Allen, who has been building boats as a hobby for 29 years. Whether a boat cuts through rough water or "slaps" on top of it or whether it tracks smoothly in a tight turn or not depends mainly on the shape of the craft on its underneath side. . Allen learned how much hull design means by making and testing many different boats from his own plans and noting their characteristics on all kinds of water in lakes and streams of the northwest. Hit Upon Design A few years ago he hit upon a design that out-performed any boat he had ever built or had ever seen and his noDDy nas turned into an other new southern Oregon enterprize. Last year he and his son, Al wno make tneir home on Rogue river several miles north of the old military bridge site, decided to manu facture the boats on a com mercial basis because they felt their design was better than any on the market. Extreme flare in the for ward section of the hull gives a soft, cushioned ride in the roughest water by slicing through the waves instead of hitting them with a bump. and. in addition, the flare throws the water wide, keep ing the passengers and pilot dry. Steering of the boat is positive with any size out board and it maneuvers like a cat in fast turns. The Aliens call the particu lar design the Tru-V (the name is registered in the U. S Patent office) because of the "V" shape of the forward sec tion, and the name of their factory is Roguewoods boat works. Original Hobby Allen's original "hobby,: boat shop, located amongst the trees behind their river home, didn't need many changes to become a factory The addition of a tempera tUre-humidity controlled paint room and the construction of special jigs and templates was all that was needed to go into stepped-up production. Before deciding to manufac ture the boats for sale, Allen and his son spent several years testing a lo-foot run about and an 18-foot cruiser with the special "V" design on Lake Meade, Klamath and Shasta lakes and even on the waters of Puget sound. (A fea ture story on one of their Puget sound cruises was car- died in the Mail Tribune last year.) , They also used the rapids of the Rogue river for. a "prov ing ground," where there was water rough enough to shake some boats apart at the seams, but their test models took all 1 e pounding they could put them through. h ""sH Storm One year on Puget sound, Iij? one of the 15-foot runabouts, hit the worst storm he had ever encountered and after hours of buffeting by the huge waves, the boat and Al came through unscathed. All of the Aliens' boat building know-how is incor porated in the construction of the rugged hulls. Ribs are sci entifically spaced arid vary in width, depending on points of stress, and the boats are planked with a special 38-inch plywood which is coated on both sides with Crezone, a waterproof plastic compound. The planking, a product of Harbor Plywood corporation, is comparatively new and is especially made for boat con struction, giving additional strength to the wood and forming a hard, protective surface coating. All Tru-V hulls are also completely glassed on the outside, making for strongest possible construction. Brass screws and special annular- ringed clincher nails are used throughout and all the boat fittings are of brass or bronze. Special Feature Another special feature oi the boats is the finishing of the deck. Instead of the tradi tional varnish over natural wood, the Aliens use multi color polyester resin to pro vide a non-skid, durable sur face. The same material is Lused on the interior of the hulls. Although the Aliens have what they call their "stand ard" model, a customer may order special seating arrange ment, and extra wide motor vell to accommodate two out boards or other changes at no extra cost. This is one of the advantages of running a small operation, Allen said. ' Though their factory is small and their maximum out put is one boat every ten days or so, a customer can be sure he can buy no better boat for the money anywhere. This is partly due to . low operating costs and the efficiency of a two-man shop plus the fact BOAT' FACTORY This building, located among the trees on the banks of the Rogue river, is where Tru-V boats ,are built. Jim and Al Allen, owners, are setting a transom in place to begin construction of another 15-foot runabout. A finished hull can be seen sillouetted against the door opening on the far end of the shop. A temperature and that both men know well the business of building boats they have risked their own necks on rough, open water to prove their theories were right. Finished Runabouts The Aliens have already iimshed and sold 14 6i the 15 foot runabouts and five fish ing-type boats and now they are working on another 18 foot cabin cruiser that they will take to the sourfd later this year. They are also work ing on plans for a deluxe 21- foot Tru-V cruiser that they will make on special order. Now, and as long as the river stays high, the Aliens will give demonstrations to prospective customers who want to see what the boat will do. The ride includes a fast trip on a long stretch of still water, a few sharp turns and a run over a 100-yard stretch of rapids if the passenger has the nerve. just last week a prospec tive buyer was taken for a spin on the river by Allen and was given the "works." When the ride was over, the man had no moj e than gotten both teet on the dock when he said, "I'll take it." After going over all that rough water he was completely dry and had not had the liver shaken out of him as he was sure he was going to nave, mat was enough to convince him that a Tru-V boat had something to offer that other boats didn't. Set Up Dealerships The only dealer now hand ling Tru-V boats is Littrell Parts Marine Division, East Sixth st, Medford, but the men plan to set up dealerships in other towns on the coast in the future. Littrells have on display at the present time one of the standard 15-foot runabouts. One of the boats was sold to a Portland man after he had taken one of the demonstration rides. To get out to the Rogue woods boat works, one crosses Bybee bridge on the Rogue river, keeping right at the next road junction. From Modoc orchards it is approxi mately three miles straight ahead. A small wooden sign on the right hand side of the road designates where to turn. Once a person has ridden in a Tru-V, he knows at once it is not just "another boat" it is an example of a fine piece of engineering and credit to its southern Oregon manufac turers, Jim and Al Allen. $500 in Prizes Set For Rooster Rogue River "The biggest and best Rooster Crowing contest ever held" is rapidly taking shape in Rogue River for the annual Rooster Crow ing Jubilee, according to H. Norwood, parade chair man. A total of $500 will be awarded to the crowingest roosters, Norwood announced. A $250 prize will be awarded to the top crower with other prizes going to the most orig inal and best cages. Beetlebaum, the rooster who crowed 109 times in 30 minutes in 1953, holds the world's record, he said. The color guard of Rogue River post 3114, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will lead the parade which will begin at 10 a.m. The crowing contest at 12 noon. There is no entry fee. A square dance and peewee baseball game will be held in the afternoon, followed by a dance in the evening. Anyone wishing to enter the parade is invited, Nor wood said. United States exports of cotton in fiscal 1957 were 7.6 million bales, valued at $1,115,000,000. ) P humidity controlled paint rooms is located on the wing to the right and various power tools are kept in the left wing of the build ing. The men also build fishing-type boats, molded fiberglass dinghies, like the one leaning against the door in the picture above, and larger Tru-V cabin cruisers. Med Treasure Most Pennies Worth Just That To Coin Collectors It is true' that there are very few spectacular values to be found among the pen nies which the United States has coined during the past 50 years that go through your hands each day. Including pennies with the same dates but different mint marks such as the D for Den- ver or the S for San Francis- co there are now nearly 100 that have been coined during this century. To realize the top value of a complete collection of 20th Century pennies, it would be necessary to have all of them in uncirculated condition an It was a 1914 Lincoln head almost impossible task. But cent with a Denver mint the value to be obtained from mark. The condition was ex even a partial collection of . cellent. There were tiny nicks pieces that are in good condi- and scratches on it that in tion though taken from evitably come with passing coins in actual circulation through a few hundred hands, is still considerable in rela- but none that actually defaced tion to the effort involved and any part of the coin's design, amount of money invested. Had the coin been in un- For example, one collector I know recently sold a collec- tion of 60 20th century U. S. pennies for $35. The collection cost him 60 collection of 60 pennies. AUTHOR'S INSCRIPTION ADDS VALUE TO 1ST EDITION The value of a first edition of any book by a well known the price was $75. He sug author is always enhanced if gested I look inside for an ex the book is inscribed by the planation of the increase, author, but there are other On the inside front cover ways by which its value can be increased. A book dealer bid in a copy of Robert Frost's "Mountain Interval" for the not so very low price of $20. Signed copies None of the three letters have brought as high as $60 had any significance of im at auctions in recent years, portance regarding either but this one was unsigned. Frost or the book, "Mountain It was in excellent condi- tion, however. Its blue cloth binding was not stained or worn. None of its -100 pages were loose, and the white end papers had not been dam- aged as so often seems to hap- pen. In fact, it looked almost as good as on the day in 1918 when it came off the presses of the Henry Holt and Com pany, in New York. I saw the book on the deal er's first edition shelf. He had put it in a slip case and marked it at $40. Some three months later I LORD'S PRAYER QUOTE GIVES PLATE HIGH VALUE When ever you come across The piece, in clear glass and a plate or platter on which of the common pressed glass are inscribed the words "Give type of manufacture, had little Us This Day Our Daily Bread," the chances are that you have a piece with a pre- mium value. Glass bread plates with that inscription are fairly common in salvage and curio shops, and untold thousands of them are still in use in homes across the country. Though most of them are not particularly attractive, they have a value to collectors x. - r i i - j v pan ox wmcn lies in now ine me mai sue leu nerseii quite piece serves as a nostalgic re- lucky to get it. She had ac minder of the relatively sim- quired the same piece a few pie life of the late 1800s. weeks before, but in amber Recently I saw one of these glass which obviously would bread plates in what is known do nothing for the set she was as the Egyptian design. It was collecting in clear glass. And of an oblong shape with a since she had twice turned large oval center. Around the down lower priced, Egyptian rim was the biblical inscrip- design bread plates in clear tion Somewhat to one side glass, only to have someone in the oval was the seated fig- else snap them up, she was ure of a woman holding wheat not going to pass up a third kernels in her lap and looking opportunity, off over, a rather Egyptian , (Released by McClur appearing landscape. ' Newspaper Syndicate) fa cents in money and about 15 hours in time spread over a period of nearly four years. All he did was examine each nennv that went through his hands. Only a glance would be enough to eliminate all those that were badly worn or in merely fair condition, and not much more than a glance was needed to deter- mine whether a good looking coin had the desired date and mint mark to fill a gap in his growing collection. The most valuable piece he found was, a penny that he got in change while buying a cup of coffee in a cafeteria. circulated condition, it would have had a value of from $40 to $50. As it was, it added about $10 to the value of his noted it again, but this time were two short letters by the author and a third by one of the leading critics of the 1930s commenting not too favor- ably on Frost's work. Interval." I said so. The dealer laughingly agreed. That was the reason, he said, that he had got them for only a dollar each. "Just the same," he went on. "Letters like that take on a special meaning when en- closed in a first edition of an important .work, enough to justify an - increase in the price." When r called again some weeks later the book was gone. He had sold it to a Frost enthusiast after letting him beat down the price to $60. charm to'it. The workmanship was certainly no better than mediocre, and though I knew the glass of that design also known as "Partenon glass" because of the inscription on the goblets in the set had a value to collectors, the $20 price on the piece seemed at least a third too high. it soia almost wniie I was looking at it, however, and the lady who bought it told J a. a. i .u i i r j 1 PORTLAND (UPI) Donald E. McPherson, of As toria, was fined $200 in Fed eral district court here Friday after pleading guilty to a charge of possession of hali but caught outside the halibut fishing season in 1956. McPherson, a fish dealer, was accused of the possession of 10,500 pounds of halibut in violation of a fisheries agree ment between the United States and Canada. CORN REMOVER Civ mttaiit Mlif frmn pom n4 pit! rty rwnovM hard conn, toft con batwM K tas, coIIoums, war papillomas, dub noflt. It coMami oral fiffrnt oils that sofa, 'mini and do aot hum (ho Witaliow os do strong odd miittwros. WKon of mors kav faifod try this on, try vr tun ion toliof, wtoc follows pain, soronoss, swoHing first or iscond application, oath romodios told wanojr bock gvarantoa. Exclusively at WESTERN THRIFT ILLINOIS VALLEY Library Hours Changed Br RUTH RAUSCH Cave Junction Mrs. Ralph Messenger, head librar ian of - the Cave Junction branch of the Josephine coun ty library, announced that the new summer hours for the library will be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 pjn. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 10 a jn. to 1 p.m. on Sat urday. New hours started yesterday and will continue through Aug. 31. A reading club will be formed beginning Monday, June 9, and awards will be made to those youngsters at- tending the club 10 times dur ing the summer. On Thursday, June 19, a story hour will be started for children between the ages of four through the fourth grade at 11:30 ajn. every morning through the summer months. Out of town guests who were in the valley to attend the Knight-Preston wedding June 1 were Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Mellow, brother-in-law and sister of the bride from Santa Rosa, Calif.; Larry Sanders of Forest Grove, Ore.; Mrs. Hollis Bell and Mrs. Jen nie Knight, both of Medford, aunt and grandmother of the bride; Mrs. Clara B. Smith of Victor, Mont.; and Mrs. Joe Ripp and children, Norma, Nancyi Kathy, Janice and Jerry of Woodland, Wash., aunt and cousins of the bride. The Rev. Don Preston, brother of groom from Braw ley, Calif., and the groom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Meryle Preston of Ashland. According to word received by Mrs. Marvin Crots, George Hicks entered Rogue Vtlley hospital in Medford for mtjor surgery. Mrs. Valerie Rauber -ill b employed at Oregon Ctve re sort for the summer in the office and gift shop. Mr. and Mrs Pat Syming ton were in Sacramento, Calif., with Pat's "parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Symington, for merly of Selma, for the Memo rial Day weekend. Mrs. Pat Symington, the former Do lores Smith, came north to be with her family, the L. E. Smiths, for a visit." Another house guest at the Smith home for the summer is Mrs. Clara Smith, of Victor, Mont., mother of L. E. Smith. Mrs. Stanley Tellyer of Ray Del Mar, Calif., was here to attend the graduation of her sister, Cecile Zimmerman, from Kerby Grade school. When she returns to her home, Mrs. Tellyer will take Cecile with her for the summer. Mrs. Marvin Cross enter tained at a luncheon given in honor of Mrs. Tellyer, the former Donna Zimmerman, on Tuesday of this week. Those attending were Mrs. Don Zimmerman, daughter, Cecile, the honoree, and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Cross. Mr. and Mrs. Harper Mann of Glendale, Calif., were visit ors at the John L. Spitz home. On Thursday both couples went to Ukiah, Calif., where they spent Memorial Day with ho Wanwr's enn Alan TVT ann Mr. and Mrs. Spitz returned I to the valley Tuesday. Finest of Modem Facilities Conger-Morris continually strive to provide the finest of facilities. Here, to make yours a beautiful Memorial, you .will find the Orchid, Gold Green, Rose Room Private Business Offices , Arrangement Rooms Pallbearer Room ' Family Room Chapel FUNERAL DIRECTORS W. MAIN AT SIXTH The Illinois Valley Federat ed Womens club will meet at the home of MrsPRobert Wil son in Kerby, Friday, June 13. The date for. the installa tion of officers to be held at the Oregon Caves resort has been changed from June 19 to Wednesday, June 18. The installation will follow a lun cheon served in the Cnatteau dining room. Mrs. Carl Peter son of Ashland, district presi dent, will be the installing officer. Mr. and Mrs. Dan. Phillips and their three daughters of Cheyenne, Wyo., are visiting Dan's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Phillips, of Kerby. House guests of the Ortis Seats are Mr. and Mrs. By rum Gray of Walnut Creek, Calif., and Mrs. J.' P. Embury with son Jimmy of San Jose, Calif. Mrs. Embury and By rum Gray are sister and broth er of Mrs. Seat. C. H. Strong and Robert DeCamp of Eugene, stopped for a short visit with Mr. atd Mrs. Halsey DeCamp of Ker by. Robert DeCamp, nephew of Halsey, is superintendent of construction 'for the Strong constriction and engineering company of Eugene. Both men were on a Business trip to San Francisco for the company ind Stopped for a brief visit this- -ee. Th Rev. Robert Kingsbury, Mrs. Albert Kellert, lay mem ber, and Mrs. John Smith, al ternate lay jgembejrj are the official representatives from the Immanuel Methodist church to attend the annual conference of Oregon Meth odism to be held in the First Mesthodist church in' Port land from June 17 to 20. There will be a meeting of the Democratic club Monday night, June 9, in the Legion auxiliary rooms. MotherrSon Hurt In One-Car Crash Mrs. Betty Davis, 33, and her son, Larry Allen, 8, of 55 North ftlain st., Ashland, are in Rogue Valley hospital for treatment of injuries suf fered in a oge-car accident on Friday afternoon, according to state police. Mrs. Davis, wife of LeWy att Davis, received a broken pelvis and hip and her son suffered facial cuts and a skull fracture, police said. The car Mrs. Davis was driving went off Highway 99 on Billings hill north of Ash land and rolled over ajter apparently skidd jkg on slick pavment, according to inves tigating officers. STUBBORN SOIL? Lew Rates en Sawdust Mulch McGINTY FUEL CO. , Phone SP 3-6297 1 1 o