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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1960)
M TUESDAY. JUNE 21. 1960 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. Locals Surgery Patient-Mrs. Emily Green, 2414 Sunset court, Medford, was ilsted as a sur gery patient today at Rogue Valley hospital. Obtains Permit Frank Childers recently obtained a city building permit for $7,000 to erect an addition to a resi dence at 316 Mary st. Qualifies For Club - John S. Humphrey, 844 East Ninth St., Medford, has qualified for Mutual of New York's Top club, a sales-honor group com prised of the top 10 per cent of the firm's 3,500 field un derwriters. Smoke in Garage - Firemen were called to the John N. Dodge home, 519 King st., yesterday when smoke was reported in the garage. They said that a small pile of rub bish had been found burning on the floor. The blaze was put out before firemen arrived. Servicemen IN GERMANY Army Set. Clyde E. Suttle. whose wife. Loda. lives at 1316 Beatty st., Medford. is a member of the 24th Infan try Division in Germany. An assistant squad leader in Company A, Sergeant Sut tle entered the Army in 1943. SERVING ABOARD R. H. Babb, seaman appren tice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Babb, 407 Fourth St., Jacksonville, is serving aboard the heavy cruiser USS Helena operat ing out of Long Beach, Calif. Meeting Set - The Jackson County Democratic Central committee will meet at 8 p.m. 3 Wednesday in the Medford t Labor Temple. A new Demo cratic county chairman and central committee officers 1 will be elected. All interest ed Democrats have been ask ed to attend. - - Grass Fires - Two grass fires were reported Monday. One burned a 40 square foot area m a vacant lot in the 300 block on Ridgeway St., Med ford firemen said. The other burned about an acre across from the Desert Service Sta tion, Crater Lake highway, according to the Central Point Rural Fire Protection district. Births ; LINHART - To Mr. and - Mrs. Fred, 105 Fairview dr., Talent, June 20, 1960, a boy, 6 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. mm tftnriiiuitiitffirin.L ENDS TONITE ptit WILLUM WYLEB'S MltcmnuH V-" pj . " QFRANCOISE jm SAOAN'8 jfr-jj rrJ;! if ROSSANO BRAZZI J JOAN FONTAINE 1 Cinemascope colon dclums j 1 sm XU CIHIUtl KM tlCTUM eaeReakH "FeiailssrMe. OBITUARIES JOIN NAVY Larry Dean Huffman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Huff man, formerly of Ashland and now of Bonanza, Ore.. and Clyde Elmer Huffman, son of G. W. (Bill) Huffman, Talent, were sworn into the Navy recently in Portland. The two boys, cousins and grandsons of Mrs. Blanche Huffman, Ashland, and the late Clyde E. (Dewey) Huff man, are now undergoing in doctrination training at San Diego, Calif. Dean was re cently graduated from Bon anza High school and Clyde was graduated from Eagle Point High school. LOUISA COMBEST Funeral services for Louisa Jane Combest, 98, of Talent, who died Saturday will be held at Perl Funeral home at 10:30 a.m. Thursday. The Rev. A. Clark Smith will officiate. Commital will be in the Jack sonville cemetery. Mrs. Combest' was born Feb. 19, 1862, .' in Pulaska county, Kentucky. She was married to Voluntine Combest in 1879, and the family start ed west in 1888 and settled in Oregon in 1894. Most of the years since then she has spent in the Jacksonville and Talent area. Survivors include three children, Cyrenius Combest of Talent, Melissa Cameron of Phoenix, and Tincy Combest of Gold Hill; six grandchil dren, and eight great grand children. Pallbearers will be Jack Lpvell, Forest Gilbreath Ralph Conner, Martin Farn ham, Everet Baley and George Conner. Helman Petrenc, Rudolph Pet renc, and Reinhold Petrenc, all of Germany, and three sis ters, Mrs. Elsa Irwin, Ash land, Mrs. Hedwig Weber, and Alwine Buer, both of Germany. ENLISTED Four young men from the Rogue valley recently enlist ed in the Navy at Portland. They are Robert Henry John son, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl I. Johnson, Elk Creek rd., Trail; Craig Alfred Walstead, son of Mrs. Julia E. Stoll, 1215 West Main st., Medford; William Alfred Foust, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Foust, 610 Experiment Station rd., Med ford; and Jackie Ray Young, son of Mr, and Mrs. Homer B. Young, 371 O'Gara St., Medford. COMMISSIONED Nathan C. Douthlt, son of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Douthit of 3116 Sunnyvale rd., Cen tral Point, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps Reserve during graduation ceremonies June 16 at Harvard university, Cambridge, Mass. IN WESTERN PACIFIC Frank A. Tychsen, aviation structural mechanic third class, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Nute E. Tycksen of Tal ent, is serving aboard the at tack aircraft carrier USS Bon Homme Richard operating with the U.S. Seventh Fleet in the western Pacific. PROMOTED Robert J. Johnstone, elec tronics technician second class, USN, husband of the former Miss Thelma E. Cole of Talent, was promoted to his present rate recently while serving aboard the Pacific Fleet amphibious force flag ship USS Eldorado. ENDS TONITE JAMES GARNER FfltojL uiTiiiruinnn 7 nHinLiL nuuu CASH NINA FOCH DEAN JAGGEK TOP-NOTCH WESTERN key MCsh JAMES CRAIG MARTHA VICKERS EDGAR BUCHANAf FLIGHT A first solo flight was made recently by Naval Cadet Mau rice-R. Butts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice L. Butts, 100 West Main St., Medford. Be fore entering the Navy in De cember, 1958, he attended Southern Oregon college. COMPLETES COURSE Specialist First Class Wil liam C. Downing, USA, for mer Medford resident, has completed a radiological mon itor training course for in structors at the new Western Instructor Training center, Alameda, Calif. Downing makes his home at the Pre sidio In San Francisco. COMFORTS OF HOME Lamberhurst, Eng.-OIPD-The Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava, who recently padded the low beams in her 16th Cen tury country home, said "Now my guests only knock themj-elves out. They' don't split their heads open as well." WED. ONLY Mr. Hulot ';) ' "CURTAIN AT EIGHT THIRTY" hi '.? a MY UNCLEt JZM cot.o : sc. m tm s s.w y ' 'Beit Picture Aware- MRS. ANNA GULLIFER Mrs. Anna F. Gullifer, 80, a resident of Medford for the past eight months, died at the home of her daughter. Mrs. Isabel Mauck, 722 North Riv erside ave., Sunday. Mrs. Gullifer was born in Jordan, Minn. April 9, 1880, and lived most of her life in Alexanderia, Minn. brie is survived tov three daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Uri arte, San Francisco, Calif., Mrs. Luicle Fieldine. Seattle wasn., and Mrs. Isabel Mauck. Medford; 6 grandchildren, and tnree sisters, Mrs. Olea Ol son, Minneapolis, Minn., Mrs. niima low, Portland, Ore., ana miss Time Malmgren Minn. .funeral services will he new at the A. E. Henry Fun eral home in Saint Paul, Minn. Saturday at 2:30 n.m. Perl Funeral home was in charge of local arrangements. JULIE KLIMEK Ashland - Funeral sprvIpAc tor Julie Klimek, who died at her residence Sunday, will be at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at Litwiller's Mountain View chapel. P. Malcolm Hammond will officiate. Interment will Be in the Mt. View cemeterv L,iiwiner funeral home is in charge of arrangements. BRUCE KEVIN KERR Ashland-Bruce Kevin Kerr, infant son of Mr. and Mrs, Donald T. Kerr, Portland, died here June 19. Survivors include his par ents, and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Kerr, Ash land, and Mrs. Louise Thomp son, Colorado Springs, Colo., and Claude S. Thompson. runerai arrangements are to be announced by Litwiller Funeral home, Ashland. HARRY R. WALTER Funeral services for Harry Walter, 58, of Talent, who died Sunday, will be held at Conger-Morris Funeral home downtown chapel Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. The Rev. Earnest R. Bell of the Talent Metho dist church will officiate. Committal will be in Siskiyou Memorial park. Mr. Walter was born Oct. 30, 1901, in Mountain Lake. Minn., and had lived in Talent since 1944. He was married Mar. 10, 1927, in Lakeview, Ore., to Vera Morris, who sur vives. Other survivors include a son, Dale, and a daughter, Garda, at home; two brothers, Irving Walter, Bend, Ore.; and Myron Walter, Richmond, Calif.; and six sisters, Mrs. W. H. Holt, Medford; Mrs. Harold Straus, Talent; Mrs. Bess Guschewsky and Mrs. Goldie Graham, both Lander, Wyo.; and Mrs. Edna Moore and Mrs. Margaret Buell, Richmond, Calif. Another sis ter, Mrs. Evelyn Christian, preceded him in death. Casket bearers will include Gerald Stephens, P. J. Mc Abee, Leo Jacobs, F. W. Gil breath, Robert D. Price, and Wilbur Wood. BERTTIE M. ROGERS Berttie M. Rogers. 79. died at the family home, 1424 Maple Park dr., Medford Monday, 1-uneral arrange ments will be announced by Perl Funeral home. MRS. BLANCHE SIMMONS Mrs. Blanche A. Simmons, 48, died in Central Point Mon day. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Perl Funeral home. MRS. INEZ E. HUFF Mrs. Inez E. Huff, 44, of 1509 East Main St., Medford died in Central Point Monday, Funeral arrangements will be announced by Perl Funeral home. ROBERT A. MORGAN Robert A. Morgan, 22-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerold Morgan, 206 Willam ette st., Medford, died in local hospital late Monday, Funeral arrangements will be announced by Perl Funeral home. . takes precious.. playful... and purely premeditated look at modern times,.. Jehn le at lb FRIEDA JEAN CRAWFORD Funeral services for Frieda Jean Crawford, who died Fri day in San Francisco, will be held in the Ashland Mortuary chapel. Fourth and C St.. Wed nesday at 10 a.m. The Rev. James Sinclair of the First Church of Christ will officl ate. Committal will be in Mountain View cemetery. Mrs. Crawford was born Aug. 6, 1892, in Germany, Her husband, Jack Crawford, preceded her in death. She moved to California in 1922 from Germany and had lived there the rest of her life ex cept for visits to Ashland. Survivors include four brothers, Wilhem Petrenc, Funeral Services Set Thursday for Charles A. Wing CARL W. CALHOUN Carl W. Calhoun, 69, died In a Coos Bay hospital Saturday. He had been a resident of Coos Bay for the past six years, and was born in Wa bash county, Indiana, Feb. 18, 1891. He was a Veteran of World War 1, and a member of the American Legion. He was a former resident of Medford and lived with his brother, Edwin Calhoun the Grand hotel, in 1955 and 1956. Besides his brother, he is survived by one sister, Mrs. Mary R. Clark, of Coos Bay. Funeral services will be conducted In Coos Bay. Weather Funeral services for Charles A. Wing will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday with Dr. D. Kirkland West offici ating. Mr. Wing died in Florence June 17 where he planned to spend a month fishing with his wife. He suffered a heart attack at a cabin on Woahink lake, four miles from Flor ence. Entombment will take place in the Siskiyou Mauso leum, Medford, with the Med ford Lodge AF and AM par ticipating. Mr. Wing was born in Mc- Pherson, Kan., and was edu cated at Bethany college, Kansas, and Northwestern university, Evanston, 111. He participated in many business and civic activities, and moved to the Rogue valley in 1923. Starting as a teller in thes First National bank, he entered the real estate busi ness in Medford, and started the Charles A. Wing agency in 1924. During this time he pur chased orchard properties in the valley, and became an ex porter of apples and pears. He was the former director of the Pacific Northwest Real Estate association, former Medford councilman, member of several committees on land appraisals and finance, past chairman of the Mayoraliiy campaign, past president of the Rogue River Dairymen's association, and builder and owner of many business prop erties in Grants Pass and Medford. A veteran of World War I, he was a Legionnaire, Rotari an, Lion, S. R. Mason, Shri- ner, and a former trustee of the Presbyterian church, Honorary pallbearers will be Frank P. Farrell, Glenn Schneider, Herbert G. Wing, Donald Coulter, Ray Wilson, and Wilford C. Allen. Survivors include his wife, Ruth H. Wing, and daughters, Mrs. John Robert Ebbesen, and Mrs. George H. Lynch. KCMtKCASTS Medford and vicinity: Variable high cloudiness at times today and Wednesday. Low tuntgnt 42-43: high tomorrow K2. Western Oregon: Partly cloudy today and Wednesday with patches of morning fog along northern coast. Warmer today. High both days 72-82. except average of 85 in southern vanos and t3 along coast. Low tonight 43-52 Northern California: Fair today, tonight, and Wednesday. Kising temperature, but probably cooler in central California and coast Wednesday. I.OCAI. DATA TEMPEHATUHE: Mean yester day ,1H; below normal S. Record high this date 99 in 1938 and 125. Record low this date 36 In 1916. PRECIPITATION : 2-1 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 a.m., none. Total this month none. .73 inch, below normal. Total since Sept. 1. 13 84 inches, 1.73 inches below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 18, highest this am. 83';. men 4:uu -m CITY Brookings Crater Lake Grants Pass Klamath Falls . MEDFORD Port 1 a nd Seattle Spokane Y a kin .a F.ureka Yesterday a.m. Low hr. Prec. .fiti . fi.1 57 .... B!) Red Bluff Sacramento San Francisco .... 7H Los A neeli's 8 Phoenix 112 Denver - 95 Chicago 04 Miami Beach 83 New York 7H Washington, D. C. BS 46 39 3 47 73 (8 Investment Funds Noon quotatloni on i funds: Fund Bid Bullock - 12.63 Chem Fund 11.78 Colonial Ener 11.73 tun Howard stK .. ll.liu Fidelity 15.31 Croup Sec Ayia E!ec 9.50 Croup Sec: Com Stk 12 11 croup sec I'etr .... a Croup Sec Steel .... 9 18 Croup Sec Tobac 7 J9 Kcvstone B-3 15.70 Keystone B-4 9 44 Kcvstone K-2 15 33 Kcvstone S-l 19.67 Keystone S-2 11 74 Keystone S-3 .. 13 38 Keystone S-4 13.J6 Mass lnv Grth Stk .. 15 .118 TV-Elec 840 Value Line Inc 5 22 Wellington 1409 Asked 13 85 12 72 12 84 12 82 16 55 1041 13 28 9.38 10.01, 8.76 17 13 10.31 16.75 21 46 12 81 14 82 14 58 18.30 9. IB 3.70 Moscow HTD Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev charg ed in a letter released Satur day that the United States planned in advance to break up the Paris summit confer ence last month. Washington -flJPIl- The Ru ral Electrification Administra tion has loaned $355,000 to the Eastern Oregon Electric Co op, Pendleton, Ore. Over-the-Counter Western Stocks The following bid and ask ed quotations, from the Na tional Association of Securi ties Dealers, Inc., do not rep resent actual transactions. They are a guide to the range within which these securities could have been sold (indi cated by the "bid") or bought (indicated by the "asked") at the time of compilation. Bid 28 14 34 22t Common Stocks Bank of America Cnllf.-Pnclfic Utilities Cascades Plywood ..... Cons. Freightways .. Copco Cyprus Mines Coro. First National Bank 51 " Morrison-Knudscn 31 '4 Northwest Nat. Gas .... 21 Pacific Pwr. & Lt 37 J, Permanent Cement 10r. Portland Gen. Elec ZiP's U. S. National Bank tiO'i United Utilities 40 West Coast Tel 25 Weyerhaeuser 34 's CLARENCE J. KELLEY Clarence Jesse Kelley, 74, of 328 North Fourth St., Cen tral Point, died yesterday in a local hospital. Funeral services will be held at Conger-Morris Funeral home downtown chapel Wed nesday at 3 p.m. Committal will be in Memory Gardens Memorial park. Mr. Kelley was born Dec. 22, 1885, in Kingman, Kan., and had lived in Central Point for the past 12 years, moving there from Greenville, Calif. He was married May 11, 1913, to Ella Litterell, who survives. Other survivors include two sons, Glenn Kelley and Loyal Kelley, Central Point; a daughter, Mrs. Ruth Camp bell, Central Point; a brother, Raymond Kelley, Sacramento, Calif.; three sisters, Mrs. Ag nes Burnett, El Reno, Okla.; Mrs. Jetta Runkles, Benton- ville, Ark.; and Mrs. Nina Pickering, San Leandro, Cal if., and seven grandchildren. Honorary casket bearers will include Bernard Parent, Victor Noel, Howard Alley, Wayne Thompson, Ivan Alley and Loyce Bates. Active cas ket bearers will include Bill Marshall, Bernard Kelley, Bruce Kelley, Bruce Kurtz, David Cook and John Kelley WALL STREET MAN DIES New Rochelle, N.Y.-(UPD-Ed-ward J. Cohan, 55, a general partner in the Wall Street stock firm of Pershing & Co., died Monday. CIGAR MAKER DIES New York (UPD - Alvaro M. Garcia, 69, president of Gar cia Y Vega cigar makers, died Monday. Asked 45 21 'a 31 li 37 24 " 55!, 33 'i 22. 3!)1. 21", ROBERT W. JACKSON To Discuss Buiinesi GE Official to Speak in Valley Ways that Medford may bet ter its business climate will be discussed Wednesday by Rob ert W. Jackson, western re gion public relations manager for General Electric company. Jackson will speak before a ! joint meeting of the Medford ! Chamber of Commerce legis- j lative and industrial develop- nient committees at breakfast in the Jackson hotel, and at noon at the Kiwanis club meeting at the Rogue Valley Country club. Jackson serves as a consult ant to the western compo nents of General Electric, and has responsibility for direct ing its public relations activi ties in the 10-state Pacific re gion. Editors have labelled him "the West's Evangelist of a Better Business Climate." This crusade, in which the General Electric company was a found ing spirit, stresses that it is in the self-interest of all citi zens of a community to main tain an environment which will attract and hold desirable employers. Portland Produce The following price quotations ' are from the agricultural market-1 ing service of the U S Department of Agriculture in Portland. t Eggs: Prices to retailers, canons. ! X large AA 47-50: large AA 46-48: large A 44-46: medium AA 41-44: small AA 33-38. Prices to produc ers: X large AA 34-3il1i: large A A i 33-37'j: large A 30-32; meduim AA 24-301-; small A A 15-22'j. Butter: Prices to retailers. No. I nrints delivered, AA and A. 67, , B 63. I Poultry: Prices to retailers, deliv ered, for grade A quality, fryers, whole 38-40. cut up 43-45; light type hens, whole 30-31. cut up 32 35; heavy type hens, whole 40-45. ENDS TONITE CHARCOAL STEAKS TILL MIDNIGHT CANDLE ROOM V:' HIHM sc Mprlfnrrl IHVHivi mm mf I. 1 IN. Open Daily 5:30 P.M. to Midnight Sunday! 4 P.M. Till 11 P.M. The Gallant ii Hours DENNIS WEAVER PLUS- WEST'S DEADLIEST AMBUSH! m BUSTER CRABBE MX Portland Livestock Portland (UPD USDA Cuttle 250. Good-choice 1000-1125 lb. fed steers 27. 25-27. SO; others shiiic grade 1217 lb. 25.50; utility-stnml-ard 1300-1460 lb. Holslein steer. 20; utility cowg 15-16; canners-cut-tera 11.50-13.50: Ho) stein cutters to 15; cutter bulls 16.50-20; light- weicms aown to ii.au. Calves 50. Good-choice vcalers 25-28; utility-standard 16-24. Hogs 350. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers 183-230 lb. mostly 10.50; some 19.75; No. 2 and 3 butchers 1H0- 235 lb. 18.50-10; No. 2 and 3 at 240-200 lb. 16-17.50; No. 1 and 2 at 14(j-17(J lb. 16.50-1U: sows 350 560 lb. 12.50-15. Sheep H00. Choice-prime 85-100 lb. spring lambs 10; gaud-choice 18-18.50; nood under 80 lb. down to 17; good-choice feeder lambs 15.50; cull-good ewes 1.50-4. Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF MINNIE COLVER Funeral services for Minnie Colver, 79, who died Sunday, will be held at Conger-Morris downtown chapel Thursday at 1:30 p.m. The Rev. D. E. Mil lard will officiate. Neighbors of Woodcraft, of which she was a member 50 years, will have services at the graveside in Siskiyou Memorial park. Mrs. Colver was born in Wagner Creek Aug. 16, 1880, a daughter of the late Robert and Ursula Goddard Robison, and a great-granddaughter of John Robison, who settled on Wagner creek in 1864. On June 18, 1908. she was married to Louie O. Colver, who died in 1949. Surviving is a son, Eldred Colver, Ashland; and a grand son, Louie. Casket bearers wil Include Robert Fury, Raymond Furry, George Bourne, Ralph Rob erts, Walter Germer and Nor man Walters. A. Mutual Investment Fund. Csns. () tM Frnncta 4 olllt VMUwn IM m tmtXm United SCIENCE FUND United ACCUMULATIVE F.nd Q United INCOME Fvnd United CONTINENTAL Fd WADDELL & REED, INC. 20 West th St. Bldf. Kansas City i. Mo. Principal Underwriters 40 Wall St. New York J. N. V. DIVISIONAL OFFICE Ctnturr Bldg 841 I. Main Medrord SF 3-6417 KAMI,., , , . i . ADDSI - f JIHKRE'S NOTHING ROUTINE about motion picture pro-J- duction in Egypt these days. During the shooting of a romantic interlude at a Cairo studio, reports Variety, the hero was called upon to slap the heroine on the cheek. "Make It more realistic," ordered the di rector, whereupon the hero, clouted the heroine so hard that he broke her jaw and left her lying unconscious on the set. When the director sur veyed the damage done to his heroine in private life as well as public, it would appear he socked the hero with a chair and fractured his skull. The name of the film they were makine, Incidentally, is "Sweet and Tender. Out Wichita way a dapper salesman uses a calling card that reads: "World's greatest salesman." 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