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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1960)
o I TUESDAY. JUNE 7. 1960 In Hospital - Mrs. Maecle . Courtright, Gaston, Ore., was a medical patient today at sacrea nean nospitai. ENDS TONITE The Glorious Story of AMERICA'S GREATEST ENTERTAINER) I N TECumCOlO jlsg: " y - RY PARKS '1Tarry pi EVELYN KEYES WILLIAM DUUHST TOP NOTCH 2ND HIT ENDS TONITE J ANl IIIDNID . MUU DAUIH SANDRA DEE OAH O'HIRUHT f AUDIE MURPHY GIA SCALA , f , ,' v I JANET LEIGH I JACK UMMOIt -.nr V 1 BETTY GARRETT fA'--.-MBPwrT'W-:;'v 3 Ride a It ,ij i BILL SALADE . M Joins P 1 SECURITY , . i I Eminently qualified by 12 years professional Insurance H experience, Bill Salade now Heads SECURITY'S New Life, Ml Accident and Health department. fnl Complete AU Professional r hanJJglKBa Insurance IWj II1ItSS lilt F Service O Wj GENERAL 1 DC las- WW- 1 JL Hugh Jennings W-1 - , Jk m 48 Hawthorne LHJ LIFE INSURANCE! m ST X Phone SP 3-7325 tih n Bill Salade ILJI X "Insurance is Security" JC Locals Opens Cafe Mrs. George Hubbard has opened Mill creek cafe at Prospect for the summer months, Surgery Patients - William T. Ivy, route 2 box 181, Cen. tral Point, and Mrs. Lola Downing, box 367, Central Point, were listed as surgery patients today at Sacred Heart hospital. Association Meeting - The Jackson County Motor Court association will meet at noon Wednesday, June 8, at North's Chuck Wagon. Mrs. Evelyn Nye, state representative, will speak. All motel and trailer court members are invited. Awarded Certificate - Al A. Sodaro, local representative of the H. K. Coffey Associates of Portland for Mutual of Omaha and United of Oma ha, was awarded a certificate of proficiency for successful completion of an intensive course In life insurance un derwriting. Tonsillectomies - Larry Da vid, 9-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. William David, 1931 Narrigan St., Medford, and Clayton Netzel, 6-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton J. Netzel, box 571, Gold Hill, were listed as tonsillectomy patients today at Sacred Heart hospital. Return Home - Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Acosta left Horn brook, Calif., Friday to re turn to their home in Cal exico, Calif., after visiting her mother and brother, Mrs. Flor ence Grieve and Charles Grieve, for the past few weeks. Mrs. Grieve has been moved to Siskiyou General hospital, Yreka. Servicemen ASSIGNED Army Pvt. Perry A. Le Clerci son of Mrs. Rex L. Johnson, route 1, Central Point, was recently assigned to the Second Artillery, a Nike-Hercules missile unit at Walker Air Force base near Roswell, N. M. LeClerc, a member of the artillery's headquarters bat tery, entered the Army last February after attending Crater High school. GRADUATED Airman First Class Lloyd Mann, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Mann, 1423 Stewart ave., was recently graduated from missile school at Biloxi, Miss. The course was four months in length. Mann, who joined the Air Force in 1956 after attending Medford High school, is now assigned to an Air Force base at Omaha, Nebr. COMPLETES TRAINING Miss Kathleen M. Stewart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Neil Miller, 303 North Fir st., apartment 5, Medford, has completed her Air Force basic military training at the Lack land Air Force- Base, Texas. Miss Stewart, an airman, has been selected to attend the technical training course for account and finance spe cialists at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas. She is a gradu ate of Crescent City High school. GAVE SHIRT OFF BACK Dallas, Tex. (UPD Alvin Clewis, a departme.it store porter, changed into work clothes Monday and started helping pack clothing for shipment to Chilean earth quake victims. When he fin ished he discovered that an other conscientious worker had packed his other clothes and shipped them off to Chile. V" Vf v 1 COLOR GIRL KISSED Marilyn June Moen,, of Gresham, Ore., 1960 Color Girl of the U. S. Naval Academy, receives the traditional kiss from Midshipman John Dirksen of Trout dale, Ore., color company commander for the annual Color Parade, one of the June Week highlights at the academy. Waterusers, EPID, Copco Legal Fight Renewed in Court The legal battle between! four water users in the Eagle Point Irrigation district and the district and the California Oregon Power company was renewed in Jackson County circuit court Monday with the filing of an amended com plaint against, the district and Copco by Ann Todd, one of the water users. The other plaintiffs are Paul D. Conrad, Fritz M. Carlson and Howard F. Todd. Mrs. Todd seeks $50,000 from Copco for the district for lost revenue and damages in curred since Sept. 1, 1957, when Copco, according to the complaint, failed to complete its contract with the district, thereby Preventing the dist rict frr furnishing water for lrr! i purposes to ap- proxirr " 000 acres of ir rigable within the dist rict. Portland Livestock Portland (UPI) USDA: Cat tle 200. Good 1149 lb. fed steers 25.50; standard heifers 21: utility cows 15-16.25; canner-cutter cows 11.50-13. Calves 100. Good-choice vealers 25-28: utility-standard 16-24; me dium and good with few choice 150-2OO lb. stock calves 25-27. Hoes 400. U.S. l and 2 butchers 195-225 lb. 19-19.25: No. 2 and 3 at 18-18.50; 408 lb. butchers 16; 400-450 lb. sows 15. Sheeo 800. Choice-prime spring lambs 80-110 lb. 20.50; choice 80 90 lb. 20: good-choice old crop shorn lambs 117-119 lb. 14-15: 77 lb. 16; cull-good ewes 3-5. Portland Produce The following nrice quotations are from the agricultural marketing aervice of the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Portland. Eees: Prices to retailer, cartons. X large AA 47-50; large AA 46-48; lame A 44.46: medium AA 41-44: small AA 33-38. Prices to producers: x large AA 34-3fl'i: large aa 33 37 large A 30-32; medium AA 26-3Ui. small AA 20-2,1 Vi,. Butter: Prices to retailers. No. 1 prints delivered, AA and A 67, B 65. Poultry: Prices to retailers, de livered, for grade A quality, fryers, whole 38-40: cut Up 43-45; light type hens, whole 30-31. cut up 32- neavy type nens, wnoie w-ta. Investment Funds Noon quotations on f elected funds- Fund Bid Asked Bullock 12.63 1384 Chem Fund 1160 12.54 Colonial Ener 112 12 92 Eaton Howard Stk .. 12.01 12 94 Fldelllv 1538 16.83 Group Sec Avla Elec 0.2R 10.17 Group Sec Com Stk 12.05 13.20 Group Sec Petr .... 8.72 0.56 Group Sec Steel .... 0.63 10.55 Group Sec Tobac 7.80 8.65 Keystone B-3 15.73 17.16 Kevstone u-4 n u.so iu.33 Keystone K-2 15.13 16 51 Keystone S-i ... 10 33 21.09 Kevstone S-2 11.57 12 63 Kevstone S-3 ... 13.52 14.75 Keystone S-4 13.23 14.44 Mm J Inv Grth Stk .. 14 95 16 15 TV - Elcc 8 26 9.00 Value Line Inc 5.25 5 74 Wellington 14.04 15J0 starring lilLLLLUX'-'- '.'J-"-L -. 1. 1 1 1 1 u 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 iiiiinrog "388F -fbr4 ' CURT JURGENS Fete Will Las &eanl yimVlMON EASTMAN COLOR ADULTS MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. (UPI Telephoto) An accounting of gifts, pub lic moneys and public prop erties belonging to the dist rict "and donated to Copco during the period of the con tract" by the directors is also asked. . The complaint, in part, fur ther asks that the district di rectors "be personally re quired to make restitution of $4,500 in public funds belong ing to the district, that they donated to Copco, in 1956." Also sought is interest, le gal expenses, and attorney's fees. Directors listed as defend ants are J. Harvey Stanley. Clarence J. Greb, Elbert M. Bigham, and E. Greenwood Restitution is sought from them and Ted R. Flury. for mer secretary-manager of the district, and Thelma Short, In the complaint Mrs. Todd charges that the orginal contract with Copco was void as the parties involved in it had personal financial inter ests in the contract, in viola' tion of the law. The original agreement be tween the district and Copco was made in January, 1955, and authorized the district to sell water of the district to Copco to maintain a power plant. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vlclnitv: Variable cloudiness tonight and Wednesday. Low toniKht 42. Hiah Wednesday 82-85. Western Oreaon: Fair tonieht and Wednesday, except for some late night and early morning cloudiness along the coast and over northern interior valleys. Lows to night 40-50. Highs Wednesday 72 82. except 65-70 along coast. Northern California: Fair tonight and Wednesday except for coastal fog and low clouds. Little change in temperature. I.UIAI, DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yester day 67; above normal 4. Record high this date 08 In 1026. Record low this date 39 in 1910. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 a.m., none. Total this month, none. .24 inch below normal. Total since sept. 1, 19.84 incnes. 1.22 Inches below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 21. highest this a.m. 74. Hlffh 4:00 24. CITY Yester- a.m. hr day Low Prec. 65 45 Brookings Grants Pass ... 85 ... 77 ... 85 Klamath Fa s . MEDFORD Portland 46 ' 50 48 36 39 4 SB 55 62 7B 52 54 75 67 Seattle 64 Spokane H 74 Yakima 72 Eureka 58 Sacramento 83 San Francisco ...... 63 Los Angeles 70 Phoenix 95 Denver , Chicago Miami Beach .... New York Washington, D. .. 74 .... 62 .... 85 .... 79 C. 82 WEDNESDAY ONLY "CURTAIN AT 8:30" John lusk at the Baldwin Oman iiiiiiiiiMiiiniitvrtiiniiiiiHp. ONLY anV f 1 I nveal J MEDFORD. 09C nAtif n Talanl ii vii iiiiwnn iuiviii Resident Dies Ashland George Karl Yocel, 62, of Talent, well known in this area, died in a Medford hospital yesterday. He was born April 8, 1898, in North Dakota, and was in the wood business for many years after moving to Ashland about 1923. He was a member of the Ashland Elks lodge and the Medford Eagles. Funeral arrangements will be announced bv Litwlller Funeral home, Ashland. Obituaries GEORGE W. GOLDY Ashland Funeral services for George Washington Goldy, 72, of Cutler City, Ore., who died Friday, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Lit- willer's Mt. View chapel. The Rev. Don Grist will officiate. Interment will be in Memory Gardens Memorial park. Mr. Goldy moved to Cutler City last fall after living in Ashland for many years. Survivors include his wid ow, Jennie Goldy; two chil dren, Mrs. Velona Dixon, Portland, and Benjamin Gol dy, Hudson Falls, N.Y.; five grandchildren; three great grandchildren; two brothers, Floyd Goldy, Klamath Falls, Sam Goldy, Shirland, 111.; a sister, Mrs. Alice Paton, Lynn haven, Fla., and a nephew, Mike Goldy, Medford. He was the son of the late Benjamin and Velona Goldy. SUSAN JANE GRAHAM Funeral services for Mrs. Susan Jane Graham, 59 North Quince St., who died Monday, will be held at Conger-Morris Funeral home downtown chapel Thursday at 10 a.m. The Rev. George Roseberry oi tne first Methodist church will officiate. Committal will be private in H i 1 1 c r e s t Memorial park. CLARA L. POLLARD Mrs. Clara L. Pollard, 80, South Pacific highway near Talent, and a resident of the Rogue valley for the past 50 years, died in Ashland yester day afternoon. She was the widow of Sam K. Pollard, who died July 31, last year. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Chapel Mor tuary. School News Medford High School Br Jim Fraks Caps and gowns were, dis tributed to all seniors im mediately after the first bac calaureate practice in the MHS girls gym Thursday aiternoon. The pep club held a meet ing in the auditorium during reg. room Thursday morning lor an junior and sophomore members. Plans for next year were discussed. Also thinking of next year is the International Relations league. Students who were interested in joining for next year were asked to sign up in Room 205 Friday afternoon. A similar opportunity will be bffered Monday. Members of the orchestra and choir have also been ex cused during some of the bac calaureate practices. These organizations, including the band, are scheduled to play roles in the graduation ex ercises. - Helping to distribute the caps and gowns this week were Karen Aeschelman, Christy AUIngham, Barbara Baccus, Karen Bengston, Pat Cranston, Stephanie Hertagcr, Sandra Jewett, Laurene Kel low, Vickie Kingsley, Betty Kyker, Janet Crawford, Martha Gifford, Evalynn Pleyer, Cheryl Potucek, Sandy Shugart, Marlene Klyn, Nancy Huckaba, Susan Wa trud, and Harriet Witt. 1 Friday morning a special bulletin was given to the girls. The bulletin was issued by the Home Economics de partment and offered to the girls membership in Future Homemakers of America club or Home Economics Service club, joint organizations. De Ann Taylor is president of the organization, with Mrs. Ruth Hackersmith as advisor. Deadline for ordering class rings for the sophomores was Friday afternoon. DcVcra Taylor, class counselor, ad vised that the rings would ar rive some time In early Oct ober. Three Medford High regis tration rooms participated in a vocational survey conducted by Southern Oregon college last week. 4 scries of 39 questions concerning future plans were askc the juniors and seniors twice, Wednesday and Thursday mornings. School officials stared that it was a study In the field of guidance to ascertain the cer tainty of vocational choices of the students. Results of the survey Is to tell two things: if the students are secure In their vocational choices; and Cj Americans Buried On Hill Overlooking Russian Port City Editor'! note: Followlnr It the second of several dispatches writ ten by UPI Moscow correspondent Aline Mushy on (he first visit of western correspondents to the So viet Union's fftr north in several yean. By ALINE MOSBY Murmansk, Russia -. (UPD -On a snow-swept hilltop over looking this onetime famous war port lie the graves of three Americans killed while bringing supplies to the Rus sians during World War II. The graves are part on an Anglo - American cemetery that citizens of Murmansk maintain in this Arctic out post. The other graves in the little cemetery contain the coffins of 20 Britons, includ ing nine Indians, and three unknown victims who died so far from home. We American and British correspondents visiting this port to see how it is faring IS years after the war were al lowed to ir.cpect the graves. Our tour bus groaned over a rutty mud road, past a larger Soviet war cemetery, to the plot for the foreigners en closed by a low, blue picket fence. Brought Funeral Wreaths As a remembrance from their fellow countrymen, we brought two funeral wreaths of fir branches and artificial white flowers In the city and laid them at the cemetery en trance. There a stone marker said in Russian: "In memory of British and Americans who brought help to the Soviet Un ion during the great patriotic war." It was placed there four years ago when the cemetery was dedicated by military at taches from the American and British embassies in Moscow. We were the first foreign vis itors since. The graves of the Ameri cans were marked, "Maurice Llebman, messman; James O'Brien, wiper; Russell Ben nett, seaman." All three mem bers of the U.S. Merchant Ma rine were killed in April, 1942. Could See Port Fuddles of melted snow sloshed around the graves. A raw wind whistled over the hill and a blinding snow flur Hews About Books From the Library Following is a list of new books received by the Public Library of Medford and Jack son county. ADULT NON-FICTION General works: The Indi vidual and the World, 3 vols., Delphian Society, Patterns for Modern Living, 3 vols., Del phian Society. Religion: The New Testa ment in Modern English, John B. Phillips; The Story of Christian Science Wartime Activities, 1039-1946, Christ ian Science Publishing Soci ety; Christian Science, Robert Peel. Social Sciences: A Roman Catholic in the White House, James Albert Pike; Career Opportunities, New York Life Insurance company. Gardening: Camellias for Everyone, Claude Chidamian. Geography, travels: Amer ica's National Capital, Edward John Long. Biography: My Father, Charlie Chaplin, Charles Chaplin; Victoria of England, Edith Sltwell. ADULT FICTION Sail a Crooked Ship, Nath aniel Benchley; Greenwillow, Beatrice J. Chute; Three Circles of Light, Pletro Dl Donato; Jury of One, Mignon G. Eberhart; Fiction of the Fifties, Herbert Gold; Night shade, Helen T. Miller; Set This House on Fire, William Styron; The View From the Fortieth Floor, Theodore H. White. If they end up In these posi tions,' Southern Oregon college personnel administered the test, and will make follow-up surveys. Perfume 'Round the Clock Q. Dear Olive: I adore perfume, but for some reason or other Its fragrance Just does not last on me. I have told several of my friends that I want a new perfume, but first 1 must find out about last In one. Mrs. G. B. A. A pan cularlv good Idea for women who claim that perfume does not "stay with them is a Liquid Skin Sach et. It smoothes on the skin very easily, and lingers longer because of its sachet base. It has a slower rate of diffusion ind evaporation than any D'.her type of fragrance and was originated by Houblgant, Try their Chantllly Liquid Skin Sachet. Only $2.25 plus lax at Wliinscott'f Pharmacy, hi c. oiain. fa Adv. ry began. Down the hill we could see the shadowy port of Murmansk where the men gave their lives on convoys of supply ships for the Rus sians. The graves are but one sym bol of the war that the people of Murmansk have refused to leave behind them, even IS years later. We visitors were taken to a series of World War II monu ments in the city. The main museum has one room devoted to war mementos. At a press conference at the Communist Party's Agitation Propaganda Department four war heroes were paraded out to tell their stories, exactly why was not clear. Some cit izens we talked to even be came heated over World War I, demanding to know why American troops "interven ed" in the area during their Communist Revolution. We further were given an unprecedented glimpse of some Soview warships tied up in the harbor. Some appeared to be under repair, although possibly they were being dis mantled In line with new So viet policy to abandon cer tain types of ships. When our fishing trawler got to the end of the commer cial se.lion of the harbor and into the warship area, how ever, it suddenly made a swerving U-turn and headed back to the dock. Filled With Seamen Although foreign service men no longer come here, Murmansk still is filled with uniforms of merchant seamen from all over the world. A sign in English at the docks directs them to the "Seamen's club." Some of us invaded the club uninvited. At the en trance some pretty young girls were talking to some seamen, a scene from any sea men s club. But inside, tne club was unique. Two West German soilors were playing table tennis In a room whose walls were covered with charts and proclamations showing the Russians are sur passing the Americans at this or that. , JUVENILE NON-FICTION Young Scientist Takes a Walk, George Barr; The Story of Yankee Whaling, American Heritage: Virginia Dare, Au gusta Stevenson; George East man, Joanne L. Henry; James Monroe, Mabel a. Cleland; Knute Rockne, Guernsey Van Riper; John Philip Sousa, Ann Weil; Jeb Stuart, Gertrude H. Winders; George Washington, Augusta Stevenson. Easy books: The Buttons and Mr. Pete, Edith S. Mc- Cflll; The Buttons Take a Boat Ride, Edith S. Mcuali. London-IUPD-Gen. Josef Hal- ler, 87, commander of the Polish Army In France In 1917-18 and the last surviving member of the Order of the White Eagle, Poland's highest decoration, died here Sunday. CHARCOAL STEAKS TILL MIDNIGHT CANDLE ROOM V 1 nuiti. .. aa naotora Open Dally 1:30 P.M. ta MUnlahf Sundays 4 P.M. Till 1 1 P.M. PLUS Bt 'l m TtCMNlCOLOW I V 1 JOHANSSON-PATTERSON FIGHT TICKETS NOW ON SAU 11 Births $ONES - To Mr. and Mrs. Donald D., 126 North Third St., Central Point, June 6, I960, a girl, 6t lbs., at Sacred Heart hospital. BUSS-To Mr. and Mrs. Al vin George, 1517 Whitman, ave., Medford, June 3, 1980, a boy, 8U lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. FLOWER - To Mr. and Mrs. George Lester, 355 Clover lane, Medford, June 4, 1960, a boy, 7 Vi lbs., at Rogue Val ley hospital. SHEA - To Mr. and Mrs. John K., 34 Portland ave., Medford, June 5, 1960, a boy, 8 lA lbs., at Rogue Valley hos pital. BARKER - To Mr. and Mrs. Louis J., 343 South Grape St., Medford, June 5, 1960, a girl, lbs., at Rogue Valley hos pital. PATTERSON - To Mr. and Mrs. George W., 690 Modoc ave., Medford, June 5, 19t)0, a girl, 7V2 lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. NEELEY - To Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L., 1012 East 11th st., Medford, June 6, 1960, a boy, 9 Vi lbs., at Rogue Valley hos pital. GOLDENPENNY - To Mr. and Mrs. Gus E., 58 Bigham lane, Central Point, June 6, 1960, a boy, 74 lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. PEDERSEN - To Mr. and Mrs. Clifford D., 4871 South Pacific highway, Grants Pass, June 6, 1960, a boy, 7'2 lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. WELLS - To Mr. and Mrs. 342, Jacksonville, June 7, I960, a boy, 734 lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. NOT OVERRULED St. Louis, Mo.-ftlPD-Circuit Judge Franklin Fcn'ss in stalled a suggestion box in his court room so attorneys can tell him how they think his court should be run. "A Judge, like everyone else," Ferriss sair", "can profit from good advice." THEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SP 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATERS 1 w I II IV. rains mm KB fiBnc.iu ri bin ntmc nmwy, ENDS TONITE Battle Hymn HOWAID HUSNir JET PILOT. KWN WAYNEJANET LEIGH --- U.S. AIRFORCE RIVE-IN CRATER LAKE HIWWAVJ ENDS TONITE 1ST' RUN R00NEY JONIf $ .- J tit Mnwt fjf T AND THE FANTASTIC STORY OF "BDtTTV r r s. iii BOY FLOYD" HURRY ENDS TONITE YUL BRYNNER KAY KENDALL OncafAore L- n GREGORY RATOI I SF 7 3 " ...,. 3 -AND-