Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 25, 1961, Image 9

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    0
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G
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WEDNESDAY,
o
JANUARY 25, 1961
Invitational HS
Speech Tourney
Set at Campus
Ashland The thirteenth
annual Invitational High
School Speech conference will
be held at Southern Oregon
college, Jan. 27 and 28.
Schools planning to par
ticipate are Ashland, Crater,
Eagle Point, Klamath Falls,
Medford, North Bend, Phoe
nix, Roseburg, South Eugene,
and Illinois Valley.
Critics who will judge stu
dent's ability to communicate,
include many of the SOC fac
ulty, attorneys, doctors, and
civic and social leaders.
Activities included in the
speech conference are debate;
topic: "Resolved: That the
United Nations should be
transformed into a federal
government." Extemporane
ous speaking; topic: Current
social, economic, political and
military affairs of the United
States and Canada including
possessions and territories.
Program for Festival
The program for the speech
festival starts Jan. 27 at 1
p.m. with registration in Britt
Student center followed by
debating I from 2 to 2:55 p.m.,
oratory I from 3 to 3:55 p.m.,
impromptu I and extempor
ary I from 4 to 4:55 p.m. and
in the evening from 6 to 7:30
p.m. dinner and after dinner
speaking.
On Saturday, debating II
starts at 9 to 9:55 a.m., fol
lowed by oratory II from 10
to 10:55 p.m., radio I, poetry
reading I, impromptu II and
extemporary II from 11 to
11:50 a.m., with a break for
lunch from noon until 1 p.m,
In the afternoon, debating
III is scheduled between 1 to
1:55 p.m. with oratory III be
tween 2 to 2:55 p.m., ramo n,
nnetrv reading II, impromptu
II and extemporary III from
3 to 3:55 p.m. following to
complete the tourney.
Butler Returns from
Corvallis Conference
Ashland Larry E. Butler,
Southern Oregon college audio-visual
aids director, has
returned from the annual win
ter conference of the Oregon
Audio-Visual association at
Corvallis. The conference
theme was "Creativity in the
Audio-Visual Field."
Highlights of the confer
ence, Butler said, included ad
dresses by Dr. Curtis Reid,
head of the office of visual in
struction for the Oregon state
system of higher education;
Art Kirkham, Portland news
caster; Dr. Lester Beck, Port
land State college psychology
professor; and a number of
demonstration and panel pre
sentations of value to the
audio-visual field.
Portland Produce
T-tinnri .mteui riairv market:
Eggs To retailers: Grade AA
extra large, di-ooc; iaige, 10
52c; A large, 47-49c; AA medium,
43-47c; AA small, 36-38c; cartons
l-3c additional.
Butter To retailers: A A and
grade A prints, 70c lb.; cartons lc
higher; B prints, 6Bc.
Cheese, medium cured To re-
sies, 46-51c; processed American
cneese, 0-10. iuai, u-ot..
Portland (UPI) Dressed chick
ensNo. 1 grade dressed to retail
ers : Fryers, whole drawn, 36-38c
lb.; cut-up, 41-43c lb.; hens, henvy
tvpe whole drawn, 39-43c lb.; light-
type nens, cui-up, oo-ot ij,
whole, 28-30C lb.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPDUSDA Cattle
250. Good steers 23-24.50; utlllty
cows 14.50-15.50; canner-c u 1 1 e r
11-14.
Calves 50 Good-choice vealers
26-31; standard 20-25; utility down
to 16.
Hogs 400. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers
20-20.25; some 1, 2 and 3 grades
19.75; feeder pigs 18.
Sheep 150. Choice wooled ilaugh-
xer inmos 10; inn snum n,
choice feeder lambs 16-17.
GROUND HOG
DINNER
EAGLE POINT GRANGE
SUNDAY
January 29th
12 Noon to 4 P.M.
ALL YOU $125
CAN EAT I
Children Under 12 75c
NOW PLAYING
DOORS
OPEN
AT 6:30
Tops in Acting . . .
Beit morit
tod itv
the morie emeriti u whoppinf
entertainment
"EXPRESSO BDW
'"hi.
NOT RECOMMENDED
News
Hedrick Junior High
By Sarah Madden, Steve Root,
Ricky Heisel, and Susan
Reavis
The preparation of buffet
breakfasts by the cooking
classes was completed Jan. 20.
Classes were divided, making
a total of 14 breakfasts given.
Part of each girl's grade will
be determined by her helpful
ness and cooperation in pre
paring and serving the break
fasts. The cooking and sewing
classes have now had one full
semester in their classes, and
on Monday, Jan. 23, they ex
changed classrooms and sub
jects for the remainder of the
year.
A "Keep Hedrick Clean"
campaign is being sponsored
by the Stinger club. Everyone
is urged to use the trash cans
for paper.
Despite cold weather, the
grass planted last fall in the
new patio area is finally show
ing a greenish tinge.
Girl Scouts from Hedrick
Junior High who took part
in the tree planting ceremony
held at Hoover school Mon
day, Jan. 23, were Theresia
Emmerich, Carol Konschot,
Sharon Chipman, Julie Bar
clay, Penny Forbes and Mary
Zier.
Art work to be entered in
the National Scholastic Art
contest has been sent to J. K.
Gill by Miss Catherine Fon
ken. On Monday, Jan. 16,- home
room polls were taken to find
out the number of annuals to
be purchased. The Hornets
at $1.50 each, and include
various information about the
school, pictures of organiza
tions, and of classes. An ap
proximate total of 800 buyers
were counted in the poll.
These will be published in
May.
The ninth grade Hornet bas
ketball team rolled over Ea
gle Point 48 to 24 Wednesday,
Jan. 18, at Eagle Point. Larry
Vowell scored 10 points for
Hedrick. Thursday, Jan. 19,
the ninth grade team beat
Ashland 47 to 18 on the Hor
net court.
This week the Hornets play
Crater at Crater High school
at 7 o'clock tonight. Saturday
the Hornets travel to Klam
ath Falls.
The eighth grade Hornets
beat Ashland 45 to 17 Friday
at Hedrick. The seventh
grade Red team beat Ashland
at Hedrick Friday, 25 to 21.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Cloudy
with occasional rain tonight and
early Thursday. Partly cloudy
Thursday afternoon and night. Low
tonight 35-3B High Thursday near
50.
Western Oregon: Increasing
cloudiness tonight with rain likely
in southern portion. Mostly cloudy
witn snowers rnursoay. uow 10
nieht 35-45. Hfeh Thursday 46-56.
Northern California: Cloudy with
showers in north portion tonight.
Partly cloudy Thursday with snow
flurries in mountains. Colder
Thursday,
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
36; below normal i.
Record high this date 60 in 1924.
Record low this date 8 in 1949
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, trace, Midnight to 10 a.m
trace.
Total this month .27 inch, 1.68
inch below normal.
Total since Sept. 1, 7.24 inches,
3.07 inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
90, highest this a.m. 100.
HI ch 4:00 24
CITY Yester- a.m. nr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 57 43
Crater Lake 40 17
Grants Pass 47 37
Klamath FalU .... 47 23
MEDFORD 41 35 T
Portland 49 3 1
Seattle 47 32
Spokane 28 20
Yakima 35 24 T
Eureka 52 45
Red Bluff 63 44
Sacramento 50 4fl
San Francisco B0 51
Los Angeles 66 56
Phoenix 61 43 .02
uenver i
Chicago 12 6
Miami Bench 75 70
New York 25 ,1 ,04
Washington, D. C. 33 9
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
(Through Jan, 30):
Western Oregon - Western Wash
ington Precipitation less than nor
mal. Temperatures averaging he
low normal. Highs generally in low
40i and lows in-io.
THRU SATURDAY
SHOW
STARTS
AT 7:00
Topt in Entertainment
of 1960. Both itory
ire it superior that
and a imge satire."
-virln Ollktrl, ttllf Mlrrer
LAURENCE HARVEY i.
CO-HIT - PACKED WITH
EMOTIONAL DYNAMITEI
JENNIFER
WEST
RICHARD
EVANS
FOR THOSE UNDER 16
o
Locals
Surgery Patient - Verni
Stephenson, Butte Falls, was
listed as a surgery patient to
day at Rogue Valley hospital.
Legion Meeting - The Med
ford American Legion post
and its auxiliary will meet at
8 o'clock tonight in the Legion
hall, 404 Walnut St., Medford.
A social evening is planned.
Permit Cliff Hammill was
issued a building permit rec
ently by the city to remodel
a building at 827 West Jack
son st. for a Laundromat. The
remodeling project will cost
$1,200.
Confined to Bed - Edwin G.
Calhoun, manager of the
Grand hotel, reported today
that his wife is confined to
bed. Mrs. Calhoun suffered
a relapse of a recent illness,
he said.
Window Broken-A window
valued at $60 was broken
sometime during the night
Monday at the E. D. Perkins
Real Estate office, 1236V4
North Riverside ave., accord
ing to city police. The window
measured six by five feet.
Hand Truck Missing - Dar
rell William Rolls, 915 Mt.
Pitt ave., notified city police
Tuesday of the theft of a hand
truck from the back of a truck
parked on the lot at Second
and North Fir sts. The hand
truck, painted yellow, is val
ued at $25.
Attend Funeral-Mrs. Thom
as Burcell , Hornbrook, Calif.,
returned last week from Oak
land, Calif., where she attend
ed the funeral of her grand
mother, Mrs. Mary Silva. Mrs.
Silva lived in Oro Fino, Calif.,
for many years, and also was
a resident of several areas of
Siskiyou county.
Bicycle Stolen Richard
Morris Rose, 414 Kenwood
ave., notified city police Tues
day afternoon that someone
took his bicycle from Mc
Loughlin Junior High school.
Jay Robert Poulos, 2130 Cap
itol ave., also reported the
theft of his bicycle from Roos
evelt school sometime during
the day.
In Hospilal-Henry V. Mun
day, 1235 NW Conklin st.,
Grants Pass, and Earl F.
Cook, route 1, box 499, Coos
Bay, were listed as surgery
patients today at Sacred Heart
hospital. Medical patients
there today included Alice
Shaver, route 2, box 209, Cen
tral Point, and Camille H.
Jacobsen, 620 Park Place No.
5, Medford.
Returns - Hugh C. Ingle re
turned to his home in Medford
Monday after attending the
funeral of his sister, Mrs.
Rowena George, in Santa
Rosa, Calif. Mrs. George died
Jan. 9, and funeral services
were held in the Church of the
Incarnation in Santa Rosa
Jan. 12. She was a recent
visitor in Medford.
Visits Texas - Ray Blanken-
ship, Hornbrook, Calif., re
turned last week from Sher
man, Tex., where he attended
the funeral of his father. The
Blankenship family spent the
holiday season in Sherman
with his father. The elder
Blankenship had been a vistor
to Hornbrook several times.
Named Agent Al Wolff,
route 3, box 55B, Medford,
has been appointed agent for
the Medford agency office of
Prudential Insurance com
pany, E. Paul Jaffarian
agency manager, has an
nounced. Wolff is a native of
Elk Grove, Calif., and attend
ed public schools in Forbes
N.D., River Forest, 111., and
Ashland. Mr. and Mrs. Wolff
have three children, Laura, 7,
Steven, 4 and Melame, 2,
.
Visit Hornbrook - Mr. and
Mrs. J. N. Acousta, Calexico,
Calif., are staying in Horn
brook with her brother,
Charles Greive. They were
called to Hornbrook last week
by the death of Mrs. Florence
Greive, 92, mother of Mrs.
Acousta and Charles Greive.
Mrs. Dorothy Menzies, Val
lejo, Calif., a cousin, is also
with the family.
Over-the-Counfer
Western Slocks
The following bid and as
ed quotations, from the Na
tional Association of Sccurl
ties Dealers, Inc., do not rep
resent actual transactions
They arc 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 Storks Bid Askrd
Hank of America 50'i, 53'.,
CalM-Paclfic Utilities .. 22i 24',
I Cascades Plvwoorl 24'4 261,
! Cons. FrelRhways 107, IP,,
Copco 48 49
I Cvprus Mines Corp 24j 2n
; First National Bank .... 54', 56
Morrlson-Knutsen . 32
'Northwest Nat. Gas .... 25",
Pacific Pwr. Ai I.t 4.1i
Permanente Cement .... 20
Portland Gen. Elec 35'
: U. S. National Bank .... 67
j United Utilities 47i
! West Coast Tel ... 2ia
Weyerhaeuser 37
.14 ,
27',
46',
21 '.
37J,
71',
50',
31 ',
39',
iJTV . I .t.jfV.n - - -1 j . - ft-- . , 7
I ,U .r! - a A u w :
' I ' r .'. -s , - . 4 ' it M ,
f
, t-
i It 4,,ttV. tV
4
i 'rf',
m ,ikW'
POINTER, IKE READY
Blue Springs plantation's pointers, holds a the whole day
point as former President Eisenhower stands Albany, Ga.
ready for Georgia quail to fly. Mr. Eisen-
OBITUARIES
CHARLES F. WALL
Funeral services for Charles
Francis Wall, 63, of 408 First
st., Phoenix, who died Mon
day, will be held at Conger-
Morns Funeral home down
town chapel Thursday at 1
p.m. The Rev. W. Elwood Irby
of the Jacksonville Assembly
of God church will officiate.
Committal will be in Mt. View
cemetery, Ashland.
Mr. Wall was born Jan. 11,
1898, in Ft. Smith, Ark., and
had lived in Medford since
1949, moving here from Klam
ath Falls. He was married
Nov. 19, 1922, in Paris, Ark.,
to Anna May Lee, who sur
vives. He saw service during
the Mexican War with the
Company E, Second regiment,
ANG.
Survivors, besides his wife,
include a son, Charles Wall,
Phoenix; three daughters,
Mrs. Wanda McCuan, Duns-
muir, Calif.; Mrs. Ruby Har
ris, Phoenix; and Mrs. Gloria
Steele, Phoenix; five brothers,
Homer Wall, Upper Lake,
Calif.; Amos Bench, Chicago,
111.; Norman Bench, Bell Gar
dens, Calif.; Trafton Bench,
Bell Gardens, Calif.; and Her
man Bench, Dover, Ark.; four
sisters, Mrs. Ruby Bartley,
Yreka, Calif.; Mrs. Jewel
Goutier, Sacramento, Calif.;
Mrs. Pearl Dodson, Yreka,
Calif.; and Mrs. Beatrice Mor
ris Medford; nine grandchil
dren, and several nieces and
nephews.
Casketbearers will include
John Lilly, Claude Kerns,
Olon House, Everett Blake,
Roy Baker, and Clarence
Morris.
A. M. ROGERS
Funeral services for A. M.
(Art) Rogers, 46, of 315 Char
lotte Ann rd., who died Mon
day, will be held at the Hill
crest Mortuary Chapel on the
North Phoenix rd. Friday at 1
p.m. The Rev. Robert Dowry
Electronic
Brains...
Are Better Than
People For
Most Things!
See
"Those Talented Machines
How They 'II Run Your life."...
and learn what Ihe "Brains"
are doing now.
in Family
Weekly
Jcnuory 2lh issu .
with
Medford
- Mail Tribune
I ' J:IH '
l ' i ....V.
"Rap,'
one of hower and his
of the First Methodist church
will officiate. Committal will
be in Hillcrest Memorial park,
with Conger - Morris, funeral
directors, in charge of ar
rangements. Mr. Rogers was born Aug.
7, 1914, in Winfield. Kans. At
the age of 14, he moved to
southern Oregon with his
mother, the late Hatlie Ru
perta Whaley Rogers, gradu
ated from Butte Falls High
school in 1933, and returned
to Kansas in 1935, where he
lived with his father.
While there, he was mar
ried Dec. 31, 1936, in Wichita,
Kans., to Dora Rosabelle
Yazel, who survives. He re
turned to southern Oregon in
1942, living here since that
time.
Survivors, besides his wife,
include two sons, Darrell
Rogers and Ronald Rogers, at
home; two daughters, Sharon
Rogers, at home, and Roberta
Rogers, Lackland Air Force
Base, Texas; his father,
Claude Rogers, Wichita,
Kans.; a brother, Perry Rog
ers, Trinidad, Colo.; a sister,
Mrs. Irene Drinkwater, Med
ford; one grandson, and a
number of aunts, uncles, and
cousins in southern Oregon.
Casketbearers will include
Phil McCormick, Bruce Mof
fetl, J. D. Conner Jr., J. R.
I Some women I pK I
I STARTING TOMORROW NITE . j I WfVS I
ANOTHER GREAT III never give a name .. . r I i (Mm
ROAD SHOW I just a phone ( l
ATTRACTION I J w liM",l,i'lt-
only one show each evening III number i '"V'-hi'X
Doors Open 7:30 Show Starts 8:00 P.M. I x ... r
-, mimrmmvmm III metro-goldwyn-mayer V-jw' if
p f A Great New 1 I gOMM) 11011 IM jS
I lirVflf IFB' AinnQnAN . ? I Onlvbcsi-scllmgaulhorJohnO-Hara JJ M tAi J
VtrlUWnLILIb VJVJilV,",, hfa Bill would dare to itll Gloria's story. N
,vtstv ir I -."iDINA MERRILL 1
fvLr O ' I mm MILDRED DUNNOCK-BETTY FIELD ADVANCE
R(i lill 1EFFR0UVAERMEDF0R0 J .
I'lu'xe1' VTTVw I UT CHARLES SCHNEE md JOHN MICHAEL HAYES
1 wini wm. I 5- arreted b DANIEL MANN PRICES!
'mt"""," ' I & A PANDRO S. BERMAN PRODUCTION rmuwl
PRICES gg----. r-j-l' ii
All Seats $1.00 - Children Under 12, 50c I :- ssg
- O
host, W. Alton Jones, spent
Tuesday in the fields near
(UPI Telephoto)
Morris, Harold Culver,
and
John Adams.
JOHN DICKINSON
John Adams Dickinson, 81
Ashland, died yesterday in a
local hospital. Funeral
rangements will be announced
by Memory Gardens Funeral
home, The Chapel of Mem
ories. MRS. LELA MORRILL
Mrs. Lela Morrill, 82, Med
ford, died this morning. Fun
eral arrangements will be an
nounced by Memory Gardens
Funeral home, The Chapel of
Memories.
Investment Funds
Noon quotations on selected
funds:
Fund Blrl
Bullock 12.95
Chem Fund 11.54
Colonial Ener 13.38
Eaton Howard Slk 12.7fi
Fidelity 15.84
Group Sec Avia-Elec 9.04
Group Sec Com Stk 12.74
Group Sec Petr 10.55
Keystone B-3 15.27
Keystone B-4 9.37
Keystone K-2 15.81
Keystone S-l 21. OH
Keystone S-2 12.07
Keystone S-3 13.72
Keystone S-4 13.27
Mass Inv Grth Stk .. 15,80
TV-EIec 7.8fl
Value Line Inc 5,37
Wellington 14.31
crHTs Oregon terrace!' Med- I W M fl f STARTS I
plgurvey'h kW.yPtcrt TONIGHT I
Industries Give
Attention to Image
Created in Public
Larger industries today are
giving serious attention to the
"image" they create in the
minds of the public, Dr. Ken
neth Baker, vice president of
research and market develop
ment for California-Oregon
television, told the Medford
Rotary club Tuesday.
Speaking at the Rogue Val
ley County club, Baker point
ed out that the increasing im
portant problem of creating a
favorable corporate or brand
image that will attain public
acceptance often goes under
the name of public relations
or community relations pro
grams. "Images," Dr. Baker said,
"are the pictures we carry in
our minds." They predispose
an individual to certain kinds
of action. Certain images will
lead people to accept; other
images will lead people to
reject an offer, a sale, a sug
gestion or even a command.
There has been a shift in
emphasis recently to the soft
sell; today the public is ofien
unable to detect any differ
ence between many brands of
tires, cigarettes, beer, flour,
batteries, fabrics, which
means market strategy must
be changed. Avertising is now
aimed at creating needs,
wants, desires in the consum
er, and then show a product
to satisfy these needs.
The American Management
association claims that every
corporation president after
1965 will be a marketing man
instead of coining up through
production as he has in the
past, Dr. Baker said. More
and more, efforts are directed
toward creating the best pos
sible image in the mind of
the public, a natural result of
this entirely new approach of
business to merchandising.
No one can guarantee just
when a favorable predisposi
tion on the part of the con
sumer will be needed, Dr.
Baker emphasized. Working
toward it is like paying prem
iums on an insuance policy
or putting money in the bank
No one knows exactly when
it will "pay off." But no truer
words were spoken than
"when you need good public
relations it is too late to start
developing them."
Grange News
Jackson County Pomona
Grange will meet at the Sams
Valley Grange hall Saturday,
Jan. 28. The meeting is to start
at 10 a.m. All members are
urged to attend.
12.411 vaucy urange nan saiuraay,
la 64 Jan- 28' The mcetin8 Is ' start ' Dancing Wed. thru Sat.
3 7.12 "t 10 a.m. All members are Live Music Mon. thru Sat.
13 is urged 10 atlend- ' Fine Dining Every Day of the Week
J THEATER I STEAKS PRIME RIBS CHICKEN
Hm INFORMATION SERVICE SEAFOOD
j;!! CALL SP 3-7323 in THE ALL NEW Hi
ij:, FOR FULL INFORMATION MELODY ROOM
"a? ABOUT YOUR THEATERS " ' wwyi
9' I 1 nMMHMMMHj
4-H NEWS
Howard Bake-N-Stitchers
The Howard Bake-N-Stitch-ers
4-H club held their first
meeting of the year Jan. 21
at the home of Mrs. Jerome
Maehren. Members this year
include Diane Maehren, Carol
Millard, Mady Drennen, Lin
da Chisum, and Tari Martin.
It was Just an organizing
meeting with the election of
Tari Martin, secretary-treasurer.
The next meeting will be
held Feb. 11. The remaining
officers will be elected then.
Tari Martin,
Secretary.
Have Needle, Will Sew !
The first meeting of the
Have Needle, Will Sew 4-H
club was held recently at the
home of its leader, Mrs. Vera
Ashton. Five members were
present.
We elected ofticers for this
year. They are Doris Young,
president; Carolyn Gandt, vice
president; Linda North, secre
tary; Alene Mitchel, song
leader, and Georgia Mitchel,
news reporter.
After election of officers,
Mrs. Ashton passed out some
of the project books. We dis
cussed the projects we will be
making this year.
At our next meeting we
will discuss more fully the
things we want to make. All
members of the club are en
rolled in sewing projects. Re
freshments were served by
Mrs. Ashton. The next meet
ing will be held at Mrs. Ash
ton's Jan. 26.
Georgia Mitchel,
Reporter.
Whip and Stitch
The Whip and Stitch 4-H
club met recently at Leta Nor
ris' home. Five members were
present.
We discussed and set up
goals for the coming year and
planned the first part of the
club program.
Mrs. Norris, our leader,
demonstrated step one from
the booklet "Know Your Sew
ing Machine."
The next meeting will be
held al Terry Grover's house
at 1:30 p.m. Feb. 18.
Gail Fosbury,
Reporter.
STEAKHOUSE
BIG WEDNESDAY NITE DANCE PARTY
Tonite with "BOB ANDERSON TRIO"
FRIDAY NITE "THE TRIO" Plus
-O-
Columbia, S. C. (OPD Fire
men were called out Tuesday
to douse a blaze in a fira
hydrant. A practical joker had
wrapped the hydrant with
kerosene-soaked blankets and
set it afire.
REMOUNT
YOUR PRESENT
DIAMOND
Your Diamond
Is Forever But
Your Setting
Wears with the
Passage of Time
Why Not Choose
A MODERN
SETTING
231 East Main
STEAKS
TILL MIDNIGHT
CANDLE
ROOM
nV' hotel
IIIGUIUIU
7
Open Daily
5:30 P.M. to Midnight
Sunday! 4 P.M. Till 11 P.M.
supper club
f. low
As i &m
I
o
a 9