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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1960)
THURSDAY, OCTOBER it, W MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOHD, ORE. Local and Addi to Hosidence-The city punaing aepartment recently issuea a permit to Allen S Markee, to erect a $2,500 ad dition to a residence at 316 South Groveland ave. Revival Metingt-The Rev. Don Webster will conduct a revival meeting at 7 o'clock tonight and 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Pentecostal Church of God on Mace rd. In Alaska - Doris Hlckson. personnel manager lor the F. W. Woolworth company here, is in Anchorage, Alaska. for a month assisting in open ing the first woolworth store in Alaska. Parents - Sp4 and Mrs R. K. Schefers' are parents of a daughter, weighing 7 pounds, V6 ounces, born in Muenchweuer, Germany, Oct, 8. He is serving with the Army. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Wilfrsd Schefers, 8179 Crater Lake highway and Mr. and Mrs. William B Konopasek, 434 Haven st. Medford. . HALLOWEEN DANCE Lake Greek Grange Ron Nelson and The Melody Mountaineers HANK MARVS KEITH Refreshments 9 to 1 New Management HIDEAWAY CAFE Ham, Bacon or OR Sausage & Eggs........ OsJB Special Tender- $125 loin Steak OPEN 24 HOURS Alyce Fitzsimmons Manager CHARCOAL STEAKS TILL MIDNIGHT CANDLE ROOM V i w nuicu I Medford Ooen Daily 5:30 P.M. to Midnight Sundays 4 P.M. Till 11 P.M. IN 1 MIGHTY I HIS L HITS! WAYNE j ...Thoy called him licndo GERALD) NE PAGE WMNEiCWM I ft IE f .-i mm TONIGHT - FRIDAY - SATURDAY FIRST SHOWING AT SPINE-TINGLING lit J fW. . 11. Sf fuawMeTm KWSHri Alive with thrills WAN) MStT n".'B Personal Museum Hours - Miss Mary L. HanlfiV. (Miratnr nf .Talrcn ville museum, has announced that the museum will be closed on Mondays starting ov. i. Hours will be noon to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Sat- muay, ana noon to 5 p.m. on Sundays and holidays. Voter Transportation - The Medford Moose lodge will pro vide transportation to the polls and back to persons who need it on election day, Nov. 8. They ask, however, that persons needing transporta tion be sure and know ahead of . time at which precinct tney are supposed to vote Persons needing transporta tion should call SPring 3-3171. Hunting Illegally-City po lice contacted three Medford men who were reported to have been pheasant hunting on municipal airport property Wednesday and informed them that hunting at the airport and within the city limits of Mediord is Illegal. The three men said they were not aware of this and assured officers they would not hunt there again. ' Collided - Vehicles oper ated by Elmo Don Stallings, 54, of route, 2, box 288, Cen tral Point, and Flora Dale McDowell, 31, Suncrest rd., Talent, collided Wednesday at 3 p.m. on Table Rock rd. about two miles north of By bee bridge, according to state police. Police said that the McDowell vehicle attempted to pass the Stallings truck as it was making a left turn. No citations were issued. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Cloudy with rain toniffht. Showers and partial clearing Friday. Low to night 38. High Friday 62. Western Oregon: Intermittent rain on the coast and in the north half tonight and Friday except some nartial clearing likely late tonight and Friday morning. Mostly cloudy In south interior and a little rain likely tonight. Not much temperature cnanse. Low tonight 48-53. High Friday 56-62. Northern California: Fair tonignt and . Friday, except occasional cloudiness in extreme north por tion. Slowly rising daytime tem peratures. TEMPERATURE: Mean yester day ao, oeiow normal i. tucara men mil aaie la in mil Record low this date 26 in 1948. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight .02 Inch. Midnight to 10 a.m., none. Total this month .37 inch, 1.15 inch below normal. Total since sept, i, .39 men, 1.62 Inch below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest vestrday 90, highest this a.m. 100. nign 4:uu -CITI Tester- a.m. hr. day Low Free. Brookings 60 46 Grants Pass 62 Klamath Falls 47 38 22 35 MEDFORD 60 Poruana a .26 SeatUe - 53 45 .15 Spokane 54 35 .02 Vakima 62 35 Eureka : 61 45 Jl Red Bluff - 71 53 Sacramento 74 58 San Francisco 66 55 Los Angeles 70 59 Phoenix 59 38 Denver . 74 55 Chicago 47 T 75 2.29 49 4B Miami Beach 80 New York 60 Washington, D. C. .56 SUGAR OUTPUT In 1850 world sugar pro duction was 1,500,000 tons. TflTfKTf tjA N TH.ii.mi.iTO. REGULAR PRICES! TN0W...MGM brings you "3 h. fehnlnuc II ft Wollc' adventure that SMASHES THE TIME BARRIER.- 2ND SHOCKER!! Nixon Critical of Kennedy's Wealth; Tells Test Ban Plan 'Aboard Nixon Train In Michigan-uTPD-Vice President Richard M. Nixon became in creasingly critical of Sen. John F. Kennedy's back ground of family wealth to day as the Republican candi date whistle-stopped across Michigan where unemploy ment and the cost of living are vital election factors. Opening his first day in Michigan at Monroe, the state's only port on Lake Erie and a town of about 25,000 population, Nixon attacked the federal spending policies of his Democratic opponent. He predicted a Kennedy victory with its resultant fis cal policies would result in generally higher prices across the country and a heavy fed eral deficit. Promises Budget Prudence "My opponent apparently has an obsession," he said. "I don't criticize him because if I had his background. I might react' the same way. But he has an automatic re action whenever there's a problem, he says spend more money, I could not react that way because I never could afford it." "I know the problems of meeting a family budget," Nixon said in promising pru dence in dealing with federal expenditures. Nixon chugged along the whistle stop rail with a multi purpose plan, including a summit conference next year, to prod the Russians into a nuclear test ban agreement. The Republican presiden tial candidate, obviously in close consultation with the White House and the Atomic Energy Commission, offered his new test ban proposals as he wound up two intensive days on the stump in Ohio and headed into Michigan where the Republicans are striving to put 20 electoral votes in the Nixon column next month. Willing for Summit The vice president added drama to his test ban propos als, normally an exceedingly grave subject for injection in a political campaign, by an nouncing in Toledo, Ohio, Wednesday night: - 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. Common Stocks Bid Asked . 471', . 49 ft . 20(a 2214 . 22 24i,i Bank of America Calif.-Pacific Utilities Cascades Plywood Cons. Frelghtways ...... 9 uopco 36 21 38"., 27 ',4 Cyprus Mines Corp. .. First NaUonal Bank v Morrison-Knudsen 53 0 . 29 "i 3114 231', 24 .. 38 40 ... 15i 17 ... 30,i 32Va 63 6714 40 43!4 26', 28 ... 31)4 33 Northwest Nat. was Pacific Pwr. & Lt. .. Permanente Cemen,t .. Portland Gen. Elec. .. U. S. National Bank .. United Utilities . ,. West Coast TeL I.. Weyerhaeuser , Portland Livestock Portland IUPI1 USDA Cattle SO. holdover 30. High good-choice steers 23.50; good 22.50; good standard heifers 20; canner-cutter cows 9-11. Calves 25. Good-choice vcalcrs 24-27; feeders good-choice 21-23. nogs luu. u.9. L ana 2 Dutcners 19-19.25; few 400-500 lb. sows 12.50-14. SheeD 50. Good-choice slauehter lambs Wednesday 16.75-17.25; good-cnotce feeders 14-10; cuu- gooa ewes d-4.ou. Portland Produce The following nrlce Quotations are from the agricultural market ing service of the U.S. Depart ment of Agriculture in Portland. Eggs: Prices to retailers, cartons, X large AA 58-61; large AA 55-56, large A 53-55; medium AA 50-53; smaU AA 32-39. Prices to nrodu- cers: X large A A 45-46 14; large AA 43-40',4; large a i-4z; meoium AA 37-41 ,; smau AA 23-:ilf',4. Butter; Prices to retailers, No. 1 prints delivered, AA and A 70, B 68. Poultry: Prices to retailers, de livered, for grade A quality, fry ers, whole 34-38, cut up 39-43: light type hens, whole 28-30, cut up 33-35; heavy type hens, whole Turkeys: Prices net to growers for grade A quality birds on evis cerated weight basis generally 33 for hens, 29 for toms. ESQUIRE ROOM for Elks and Invited Guests Only ELKS TEMPLE FOOTBALL PARTY Friday Night After the Game Open 4 P.M. Till 2 A.M. John Lusk at die Baldwin Organ Friday and Saturday Nights , The Russians, according to government experts, may have set off a large under ground nuclear explosion a few days ago, showing they cannot be trusted to observe a test moratorium without adequate inspection. If elected, he will ask President Eisenhower to rush his running mate, Henry Ca bot Lodge, to Geneva the day after election with instruc tions to get some sort of test ban agreement out of the Rus sians by next Feb. 1 or the United States will resume underground tests "necessary to advance our peaceful tech nology." Would Meet Khrushchev If Lodge and a Soviet negotiator are able to bring an agreement "in sight" in the period between election and Feb. 1, Nixon then would be willing to meet with So viet Premier Nikita S. Khru shchev and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan "to make the final agreement at the summit." Kennedy has opposed re sumption of underground nu clear tests "at this time" and Nixon, believing the Russians have been "cheating" on underground explosions, thought Kennedy's recom mended course of starting new test ban negotiations with new participants next year might take the United States, far beyond any margin of safety. Poultry, Rabbit Slaughter Rules Set Salem-(UPD-New regulations are In effect on the construc tion and sanitation of poultry and rabbit slaughtering estab lishments, the State Agricul ture Department said Wednes day. The new order requires that a building used for slaughter must contain one or more roqms for rabbit slaughter and two or more rooms for poultry slaughter. The department said copies of the new rules containing all the new regulations may be obtained at the depart ment offices here. Local Man Pleads Guilty to Charge . John Hads Jr., 124 North .Columbus st., entered a plea of guilty to ' a charge of dis orderly conduct in Medford's municipal court this morning and was fined $10 and given a five-day suspended jail sen tence. Police arrested Hads at the Chung King Inn, 28 North Front st., where Hads was reportedly involved in a fight with another unidentified man. Police said Hads cut his hand during the fight and was arrested after he used "lewd and profane language" In front of investigating offi cers, i - Harrolson's Motors Opens in Medford Harrolson's Motors recently opened for business at 3867 South Pacific highway, Med ford. . The company, owned and operated-by Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Harrolson, will handle auto mobiles, trailers, jeeps and trucks. Mr. and Mrs. Harrolson re cently moved here from Sac ramento, Calif. To Teen-Agers Said Not Exception Ames, Iowa - Teen-agers who tower above their parents are the rule rather than the exception, according to re searchers at Iowa State uni versity. ' The researchers found to day's youngsters taller and heavier at almost every age than in past years. They attributed the Increas ed size of young people to better diets, improved eco nomic conditions, improved control of disease and more outdoor recreation. OBITUARIES CLAUDE E. JONES Ashland - Claude Emerson Jones, 83, of 111 North Front st., Talent, died this morning in a local hospital. He was born Oct. 11, 1877, in Pleasantville, Iowa. He moved to Medford in 1900, and to Talent in 1922. He was married to Leelah Plymire in the Jacksonville courthouse Aug. 26, 1923. He is survived by his widow. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Litwiller's Funeral home. OUIDA M. COOK Mrs. Ouida M. Cook, 611 Riverside ave., Medford, died yesterday at her home. Fu neral arrangements will be announced by Conger-Morris Funeral home. MAE E. LiWDNER Requiem Mass for Mae Elizabeth Lindner, who died Tuesday, will be offered by the Rev. William S. Walsh at Our Lady of the Mountain Catholic church Monday at 10 a.m. Recitation of the Holy Rosary will be held Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in Ashland mor tuary. Committal will be in Mountain View cemetery. Mrs. Lindner was born in Spencer, Iowa. In 1911, in Kenmare, N. D., she was mar ried to Ray Lindner, who sur vives. She had been a' resi dent of Ashland for 31 years. She had worked for t h e Ashland Tidings for 25 years before retiring, She was a member of Neighbors , of Woodcraft, Royal Neighbors of America, Rebekahs, Ladies Auxiliary Patriarch Militant IOOF, Lady Elks, National Federation of Grandmother's club, Women's Civil club of Ashland, Thimble club, past Noble Grands club, and the Past Oracle club. Survivors, besides her hus band, include a son, Leroy Lindner, Ashland; two sisters, Mrs. Glenn Messinger, Sooke, B. C, Canada, Mrs. J. J. Wal ton, St. Paul, Minn.; three nephews, a niece and three grandchildren. NELLIE MAE JENNINGS Funeral services for Mr s. Nellie . Mae Jennings, ; 50, : of 543 South Ivy st., who died at the Jackson county farm home Wednesday, will be held at Perl Funeral home Satur day at 10:30 a.m. The Rev. Robert Cull of the Assembly of God church will officiate, Committal.will be in the Jack sonville cemetery.-. Mrs. Jennings was born March IB, 1910, at Amherst, Neb., and had been a resident of this area.for 22 years. She was a member of the Full Gospel church. Survivors include her'hus band, Raymond Jennings, Medford; one daughter, Lei Lani Jennings, Medford; two sisters, Mrs. Avis Parker, Au burn, Wash.; Mrs. Corda Fell wolck, Alameda, Calif.; two brothers, Lyman A. Rice, Bil lings, Mont., and Logan Rice, Kearney, Neb. Investment Funds Noon quotations on selected funds: Fund .1 Bid ' Asked Bullock 12.14 ,13.31 Chem Fund 10.29 ' ' 11.34 w.uiii.i . 'lA.Od Eaton Howard Stk.. 11.37 12.18 Fidelity 14.46 18.63 Group Sec AviaElec 7.99 8.76 uroup aeo torn etlK 11.00 13.70 Group Sec Petr .... 9.26 10.15 Group Sec Steel 8.1S 8.93 Group Sec Tobao 8.60 9.42 Keystone B-3 1S.43 16.83 Keystone B-4 ..' 9.10 9.94 Keystone K-2 13.92 19.19 Keystone S-l 18.28 19.95 Keystone S-2 11.05 12.06 Keystone S-3 11.76 12.84 Keystone S-4 11.27 12.30 Mass Inv Grth Stk 13.46 14.56 TV-Elec 7.41 8.08 Value Line Inc 4.95 5.41 Wellington 13.64 14.87 Choice of , . y Fruit or Seafood Cocktail or French Onion Soup Choice of '1 Tossed Green Salad or Molded Fruit Salad Entrees Roast Oregon Tom Turkey, Cranberry Sauce and Sage Dressing 3.75 Broiled Ham Steak Glazed fruit garnish 2.75 Shrimp Newberg En Casserole,, Rice Pilaff 2. SO . Baked Stuffed Pork Chop-Spiced Fruit l:.2.25 Potted Veal Sherry Mushroom Sauce 2.00 Pan Fried Brook Trout Lemon Butter 2.25 Baked Potato or Candled Yam French Green Peas Cup Custard or Sherbert Hot Dinner Rolls Coffee Tea Milk (Beverage) BANQUET FACILITIES PORTO' GALL No. Front and 4th JAMES C. COLLINS Private funeral services for James C. Collins, 68, of 2224 East Main St., who died Wed nesday in a local hospital, were held Thursday afternoon at Perl Funeral home with Dr. D. Kirkland West of the First Presbyterian church of ficiating. Private committal services were held at the Sis kiyou Memorial park. Mr. Collins was born Jan, 18, 1892, in' Springfield, Mo., and had been a resident of this area for 38 years. He was a member of the Malta Commandry, Knight's Templar of Ashland; Crater Lake chapter, RAM of'Med ford; Hillah Temple AAON MS; Medford lodge AF&AM; of the American Legion and a veteran of World War I. Survivors include his wife, Elizabeth Collins, Medford; two sons, Hugh B. Collins, Medford; James C. Collins Jr., San Leandro, Calif.; one daughter, Mrs. Kent W. Bon ney, San Jose, Calif., and five grandchildren. Portland Coliseum Opening Scheduled Portland - (UPD - Portland's newest attraction, the Memo rial Coliseum on the east side, was being readied for its opening a week from today. An ice show and a trade fair will be held starting next Thursday in the giant pa vilion, . V, . The building has a perma nent seating capacity of 9,000 but more seats can be added. It will be the home of the Portland Buckaroo Hockey team and many basketball games are scheduled there this winter, Including the Far West Classic and next March's Western NCAA regionals. PP&L Appoints Albany Manager ' Pendleton -WPB- Thomas M. Keenan has been appointed manager of the Pacific Power and Light Company in Al bany and the Linn County Service District in the Wil lamette Valley, according to an announcement Wednesday by D. R. McClung, president of PP&L. Keenan, a long-time resi dent of Pendleton, has been with the company for 37 years. Speech Contest Set Tonight in Phoenix A district speech contest sponsored by the Rogue Soil Conservation district for all high school students will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in the Phoenix High school. The Phoenix FFA chapter will be host to students from Crater High school in Central Point and Medford, according to Clem Ault, work unit con servationist for the Rogue Soil Conservation, district. Winner of the district con test will receive a cash award and will compete in the area contest scheduled in Grants Pass Nov. 3. Subject of the contest this year is wildlife conservation. The student must speak on wild life con servation activities in the dis trict in which he lives or rep resents, i Court Records MUNICIPAL COURT Stanley Boyd McCullough, dis obeyed traffic lignal, fio. Ray Alfred Anderson, failure to yield right of way to through traf fic. 25? Dennis Glenn Loper, violation of battle rule, 23. Margaret Ann Neahelm, dis obeyed traffic signal. $10. -4 SPECIAL SUNDAY MENU Dining Room Open 12:00 Si00 SP 3-8281 Kennedy Garment Workers In New York Rally New York -fflPD- Sen. John F. Kennedy, speaking to the biggest rally of his 1960 cam paign, called on New York garment workers today to join him in "sweeping the Repub licans all the way back to Cal ifornia." . The Democratic presiden tial nominee got his second tumultuous motorcade wel come in Manhattan from a crowd estimated at between 200,000 and 250,000 between 34th st. and 42nd st. along 7th ave. Clouds of confetti, ticker- tape and odd lots of paper soared down on the senator and his party as they arrived for his first big rally spon sored by the International Ladies Garment Workers Un ion and presided over by its president, David Dubinsky. Chants of "We want Ken nedy" interrupted Dubinsky several times but the crowd quieted down for Sen. Herbert H. Lehman, who also joined in the introduction. The plat form behind the presidential candidate held a lineup of mo tion picture and theatre fig ures including Melvyn Doug las, Henry Fonda, Tallulah Bankhead, Shelley Winters, and Janet Leigh. 'Can't Stand Still' TCpnnpHv'a Knffnh uino a strong re-emphasis of his ap Deals for suDnnrt to move thn country ahead. He said he does not believe that in 1960 "America can stand still," "I ask you to join us in sweeping the Republicans all the wav hack- to California." Kennedy shouted to the cheers of his huge audience. Wonderful Spot To "EAT OUT"! Delicious Bar-b-cues lunches Salads HIE CLOCK Miln at BarHaH Ph. SP 2-67 McQueen ONE V V . '.t is I mf ("r ff e Hi Y I fought like seven hundred J ' I r ij i j 1 i Yjj ffV' It a r YUL BRYNNBR a WALUlCHIcQullll'eSN'vB' BUCHHOLZ Speaks To Kennedy arrived at 2 a.m. EDT from Detroit where Wednesday night he said Nix on is ignoring evidence that this country is "slipping Into its third recession in six years' and not paying atten tion to the problems of the next generation. The senator got a rousing reception In the auto capital. Wants Report Revealed Kennedy also renewed his demand that Nixon get the ad ministration to make public the secret U. S. Information Agency report said to show that American prestige abroad MON DESIR Dining Inn East of Central Point Closed for Remodeling We hope that our Rogue River Valley friends will boar with ut during thit axtonsiva r-a modi ling program. Watch for tho RE-OPENING of Jullio Tummors' Mon Dasir now changes and facilities so that we may serve you better than ever! JT FUN NIGHT! Every Thursday at the I DARDANELLE n Music by Peg & Lon On the Old "Rinky-Tink Piano" & Drums -V Nov Is The Your Holiday 99 OF "WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE" IN HIS FIRST STARRING ROLE WE GUARANTEE OF THE BEST WESTERNS EVER MADE - -'w. .TV?".., I J WW V T V:, V V 09 m w T 99 fought like seven hundred!- w WILLIAM ROBERTS a ueUM news nmt t Psnivision - WALTER MIR1SCH . u. A Mirisch Company mm is at a new low-a condition which Nixon has denied. Nix on contends it is at an all-time high. Columbia "TRU-FIT" 231 EAST MAIN Time to Make Reservations PHONE UL 5-1230 Hwy. at Gold Hill Oy.rp.il STARTS TONITE Two Shows 7:00 ft 9:30 f 90 OJT m m. JOHN STURGES u w CM.ua ELMER BERNSTEIN UNTfEDBARnsfS Jm i i Mr l S V I