MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1961
Local and Personal
Meeting Monday-The Jack
son County Board of Christian
Education will hold its annual
meeting Monday, Feb. 20, at
7:45 p.m. at the Westminster
Presbyterian church, 2000
Oakwood dr. Reports will be
given by the two teachers who
teach the Bible history classes
and officers will be elected.
Interested persons are invited
to attend.
Patients - Surgery patients
listed at Crater Osteopathic
hospital, Central Point, today
included Mrs. Jack Little, 805
West Second st., Medford; and
Mrs.- Woodrow V. Person,
2860 Dark Hollow rd., Med
ford. Medical patients there
included William R a p h k e,
route 2, box 673A Central
Point, and .Mrs. Harry R. Ran
dlcinan, post office box 108,
Rogue River.
SKATING
TUES. NIGHT 7:30
SAT. NIGHT DOUBLE
SESSION 7:30 TO 12:30
Sat. Afternoon Children's
Safety Club 1 to 4
Sun. Afternoon 2 to 4:15
PHONE 6-5664
ROLLERDROME
GRANTS PASS
Medical Patients-Mrs. Onis
Boyd, 105 Bush St., Ashland,
Mrs. Marion Fry, box 161,
Hilts, Calif., and Shelton B.
Moss, post office box 1253,
Lakeview, were listed as med
ical patients today at Sacred
Heart hospital.
In Hospital - Surgery pa
tients at Sacred Heart hos
pital today included Mrs.
Lloyd Oliver, box 223, Trail:
Mrs. Donald Fullmer, 2751
Dayton st., Klamath Falls;
Harold E. Bormuth, 539 NW
Savage st., Grants Pass; and
John Asplund, 1456 South Jas
per St., Medford.
Arraigned - Joyce Lee Ann
Johnson, 19, of 204 South
Grape St., was arraigned in
district court yesterday on a
charge of forgery. She waived
the right to an attorney and
preliminary hearing and was
bound over to the grand jury
by Judge L. L. Sawyer. Bail
was set at $1,500.
Flue Fire - City firemen
were summoned to a flue fire
about 8 p.m. yesterday at the
home of Alex M. Barnett, 470
DeBarr ave. The residence of
Robert L. Mason, 414 Valley
View dr., was checked about
9 o'clock this morning when
smoke was reported in the
house but the cause was not
found, firemen said.
glftm'irnjiiJAj;! sun.
tfm1 ' IN HIS TWO
V&f 3NF TERRIFIC
I A " i?M WESTERNS!
USUE NIELSEN MICKY SHAUGHNESSY . Wm Braderick PRAWFfRI1
EDGAR BUCHANAN. J V g ! . UliHIII WW
h Cinemascope km METR0C0L0R IgElBfr
Buss AM3LYN
SfO BIG HIT sturdy only!
TON I YE & SATURDAY!
010 TWIN-TERROR SHOW!
iLiJj.TTTf.iif.y.n
Justice Enters
Plea of Innocent
Salem-IUPll-Oregon Supreme
Court Justice William C. Per
ry has pleaded innocent here
to a charge of speeding.
Perry was cited Jan. 9 by
Salem police for going 38
miles-per-hour in a 25 mph
zone. Trial has been set in
Municipal Court here for Jan.
27 but was postponed at Per
ry's request.
Municipal Judge Douglas
Hay has not set a new trial
date.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford artd vicinity: Partly
cloudy tonight and Saturday. Low
tonight 28. High Wednesday 48.
Western Oregon; Partly cloudy
tonight and Saturday with a few
brief showers persisting early to
night. Cooler. Low tonight 30-40.
High Saturday 43-50.
Northern California: Clearing in
north portion this evening and in
other portions later tonight and
Saturday. Cooler toniRht.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day 41; below normal 2.
Record high this date 72 in 1916.
Record low this date 22 in 1932.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, trace. Midnight to 10
a.m.. 01 inch.
Total this month 2.07 inches, .89
inch above normal.
Total since Sept. 1. 10.16 inches,
1-89 inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
38 ri, highest this a.m. 97.
Hish 4:00 24-
CITY Yester- .m. hr.
day Low Prec.
Brookincs 56 42 .42
Crater Lnke 32 8 ,2ft
Grants Pass 51 37 .03
Klamath Falls .... 39 30
MEDFORD 47 3fl T
Portland 4 9 4 2 .09
Seattle t 44 38 Tl5
Spokane 39 30 T
Yakima 48 36 T
Eureka 50 44 T
Red Bluff 58 3!)
Sacramento 60 35
San Francisco .... 59 48
Los Angeles ........ 66 5 1 .15
Phoenix 7fi 47
Denver i4 28 T
Chicago 47 39
Miami Beach 7fi 72
New York 39 30
Washington, D. C. 47 32
F1VK-DAY FORECAST
(Through Feb. 22):
Western Oregon - Western Wash
ington Temperatures averaging
below normal and precipitation
moderate with some rain likely
tonight and again Sunday or
Monday. High temperatures in 40s
and lows 30-40.
Northern California Precipita
tion in extreme north at begin
ning of period and over most of
area Mnndny or Tuesday. Tem
peratures slightly below normal.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPI) Dairy market:
Eggs To retailers: A A extra
large 47-50c; AA large 45-47c; A
large 43-44c; AA medium 41 -42c;
AA small 33-36c; cartons l-3c
higher.
Butter To retailers: AA and A
prints 70c lb.; cartons lc higher;
B prints 68c.
Cheese, medium cured To re
tailers: A eradc cheddar sinclc dai
sies. 47-48c; processed American 5-
1D. lOai, 43 ',3-IDC.
Portland Dressed chickens
No. 1 grade dressed to retailers:
Frvers whole drawn. 36-48c lb.;
cut-up. 4l-43c: lb.; hens, heavy
type whole drawn. 39-43c lhi: light-
type . nens, cui-up, jj-jdc id
whole 28-30o lb.
Investment Funds
Noon quotations on selected
funds:
Fund Bid Asked
Bullock : 13.61 14.81
Chcm Fund 11.89 12.88
Colonial Encr 13.95 . 15.25
Eaton Howard Stk .. 13.23 14.28
Fidelity 1U.45 17.78
Fundamental Inv. .. 9.75 10.88
Group Sec Avia Elec 9.45 10.33
Group Sec Com Stk 13.24 14.50
Group Sec Petr .... 10.79 11.82
Keystone B-3 15.44 16.84
Kcvstonc B-4 9.51 1038
Kevstonc K-2 16 56 18.07
Kovstone S-l 21. B4 23.83
Keystone S-2 12.55 13.70
Kcvstone S-3 14.38 15.69
Keystone S-4 14.15 15.44
Mass Inv Grth Stk 16.43 17.711
National Sec Grth .. 9.40 10.27
TV-Elec 8.22 8.96
Value Line Inc 5.41 5.91
Wellington 14.67 15.01)
Liquor License Requests Are
Considered by City Council
Liquor licenses, in one
form or another, have pre
sented the Medford city coun
cil with some perplexing
problems lately, and this was
nonetheless true last night
when two more license re
quests were laid before it.
With about a dozen high
school students participating
in Student Government day
activities looking on, the
council was asked to approve
a new liquor license for the
former Port O'Call, Fourth
and Front sts, and an expand
ed license for the Gay Nine
ties Pizza parlor, 1132 North
Front st. r
In considering liquor li
cense requests the council is
faced with the knowledge
that Medford already has far
more liquor outlets than a
city of this size should have.
Obituaries
HOWARD HICKS
Yreka - Howard M. Hicks,
71, died in his sleep early
Thursday morning at his home
in Yreka.
Mr. Hicks was a retired dis
trict superintendent for Copco.
He had lived in Yreka for
more than 45 years. He was
active in community affairs
and was a Mason.
Mr. Hicks was born in Ash
land Dec. 28, 1889. His wife
Edith died in 1957. He is sur
vived by a daughter, Beverly,
of Berkley, a sister, Ernestine
Hicks, of Medford, and one
nephew, Olan Snced, of Med
ford. Funeral services will be
held Saturday at 2 p.m. at
Girdner's of Yreka. Burial
will be in Evergreen cemetery.
SIDNEY R. BROWN
Sidney Raymond Brown,
owner of Rath's motel, 1474
Siskiyou blvd., Ashland, died
yesterday at his home. Fu
neral arrangements ; will be
announced by Ashland Mortu
ary, Fourth and C sts., Ashland.
Yet, in the final analysis it Is
not the council, but the Ore
gon State Liquor commission
that must approve liquor li
censes and regulate the num
ber of liquor outlets.
The liquor license problem
was further compounded last
night by an alleged mis
understanding in the case of
the Gay Nineties Pizza par
lor, and a dispute between
creditors in the case of the
Port O'Call.
Requests Approved
Joe Curto, co-owner of the
Gay Nineties, requested that
the council approve the sale
of wine by the glass in his
establishment. He now has a
license to sell beer only.
Councilman R. L. Van
Sickle, and several other
councilmcn, questioned Curto
regarding earlier statements
made when he applied for his
beer license about a year ago.
Van Sickle said he remem
bered Curto as saying he
would partition his establish
ment in order to separate
beer-drinking adults, and
pizza-eating teen-agers.
Van Sickle noted that this
has not been done, and that
teen-agers are allowed in the
same room where beer is con
sumed. Curto denied that he
said his establishment would
be partitioned, and said there
may have been a misunder
standing at the time of his
original request.
But, Van Sickle replied
that "I'll have to vote against
it (the license) until he clari
fies what he says is a mis
understanding, and I don't
believe there was a mis
understanding." On a motion by Council
man Jimmy Dunlcvy, the
council voted to make an of
ficial inspection of Curto's
operation and determine his
degree of control over the
patrons of his establishment.
Councilman Bill Singler
opposed the motion. He noted
that the council has approved
similar licenses in the past
where teen-agers and drink
ers can sit in the same room
and said: "If we're going to
do it to one, we should do it
to all."
The request for a new li
quor license for the Port
O'Call was made by a group
of creditors calling them
selves Gourmet Inc. Walter
Nunley, vice-president of the
corporation, said the credi
tors wanted to operate the
establishment in order to
gain back some of the invest
ment they lost when the place
went broke.
Not in Corporation
Max Culby, 120 Genncsscc
st., was at the meeting, and
said he was also a creditor of
the establishment, but was
not represented in the cor
poration, and expressed a
fear that he would not get his
investment back.
The council was subjected
to a prolonged, and some
times almost heated, argu
ment between Nunley and
Bill Taylor, the former owner
of the Port O'Call. Taylor
contended that Nunley and
the other creditors had re
fused to accept a fair return
on their investment.
Nunley said the creditors
he represents have a $30,000
investment in the place, and
they would like to get part
of their investment back. He
said Taylor has had a number
of chances to pay the money
back, but has not done so.
Nunley said that if Culby
has an investment in the res
taurant the corporation will
make "a mutually satisfac
tory agreement" with him,
and with all other creditors.
Several councilmen, not
ably Van Sickle and Fred
Robinson, said they tcel the
council has an obligation to
the creditors. The new linens'!
was approved by a 6 to 1
vote, with Councilman Don
ald Hanson opposed.
LEWIS B. HART
Hornbrook Word has been
received here of the death
Feb. 13 in Lakeport, Calif., of
the Rev. Lewis B. Hart, for
mer pastor of the Hornbrook
Methodist churchl He was
born in London, England,
approximately 80 years ago.
Mr. Hart with his wife had
made their home in Lakeport
since . moving . from Horn
brook nine years ago. While
in Lakeport, Mr. Hart was
organist at the Episcopal
church. He was a United
States citizen.
Funeral services were held
Feb. 15 in Lakeport. Friends
may contact Mrs. Hart in care
of Mrs. Hazel Bordon, gen
eral delivery, Lakeport.
IRA ROSEWALD
Ira James Rosewald, 65,
died at his home, route 1,
box 60G, Jacksonville, Thurs
day. Graveside services will be
held Saturday at 11 a.m. at
Memory Gardens Memorial
park with Perl Funeral home
incharge.
if lM
S"INO jLvieV"' b
PETER CUSHING - CHRISTOPHER LEE p $
YVONNE FURNEAUX -reSSnsm f
SCBttNPLHV 1Y PROOUCCD BY 5SOCITt OODUCIW V 3 l"H
ilMMY SANGSTER MICHAEL CAfiRERAS ANTHONY KEISON-KEYS ""-. jf i h
H'U"C rilM PRQPUCTIOW UKIVilSH-HTlHHHllOIKL UlWl jj
D3;.3BflBai'liS Jt,rr-"VT MICHAEL PATE! t
Have fun . . . ROLLER SKATING
TOWIPUT First Session 7:30-10:00
lUillUni Second Session ....10:00-12:00
Children (under 13) 35c
Adults 50c
Shoe Skate Rental 25c
SAT. MATINEE Admission (everyone) 35c
Shoe Skate Rental 25c
in.nni9.nn
Admission 50c
ne SKaie itemai sac
Smooth Floor, Acoustical Ceiling, Best
Music, Reasonable Prices, Friendly
Folks, For the Most Skating Fun.
ASHLAND SKATEWAY
PHONE MU 2-0032
w
COMPLETE DINNERS
$00
JUMBO SHRIMP
OYSTERS
STEAK
PORK CHOPS
SERVED DAILY OPEN 6 A.M. to 10 P.M.
TIMBER ROOM
5 SOUTH RIVERSIDE
This Evening
LOBSTERS
SEA SCALLOP
PRAWNS
K-as "iS
tfU -ts.
Charcoal Steaks
CANDLE ROOM
HOTEL MEDFORD
5:20 p.m. till Midnight
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPI) Weekly Live
stock :
Cattle 1600. Choice ileers 24.2.V
26; most Rood steers 22-24. 30;
sjandard 10-21; eutler-utiliiy 13.50;
good-low choice heifers 21-23.30;
standard 18-20; cutter-utility 14.30
17.n0; canncr-cutter cows 11-Id;
cutter-utility bulls 16-20.
Calves 225. Good-choice vealers
27-Jl: tew 32; standard and Rood
slaughter calves 22-27; culls down
to 12.
Hogs 1900. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers
20-20.30; 2 and 3 (trades IB. 30-20;
sow 14-17; under 300 )h. 17.30-18.
Sheep 1330. Choice-prime wooled
and shorn tanms under 120 lb.
mainly 17-18; choice-prime over
120 Hi. 14.30-lfi; good ewes 3-5.30;
feeder lambs 15-17 for good-choice.
We Will Be Closed
Monday, Feb. 20
Open
Tuesday,
As Usual
THE CLOCK
Main at Bartlett
Ph. SP 2-6766
mm
Floor Show and Dance Party Tonite
"THE SHADOWS" and "THE TRIO"
Saturday Nite we'll have
"TOWER TRIO PLUS ONE"
Tht Best Dane Music in So. Oregon
' Dancing and Live Music Tuesday through Saturday
With m 'Trio' on Wednesday Friday Saturday
Fine Dining Every Day of the Week
' Cafeteria-Style Lunch 11 a.m. Monday-Friday
ti STEAKS SEAFOODS CHICKEN
DANCE
SATURDAY
NIGHT
SAMS VALLEY
GRANGE HALL
Good Music!
During Lent
We Are Again Serving
THOSE THREE DELICIOUS DELIGHTS
From Louisiana
SHRIMPBURGERS
CRABBURGERS
OYSTERBURGERS
OPEN 6 A.M. TO 8 P.M.-CLOSED SUNDAYS
Ifi THE MEDFORD ZU0PPIN6 CENTER
DANCE sanThdtay
AT OLD DERBY SCHOOL
DANCE SATURDAY NITE
DREAMLAND
417 E. Main-Walker Building
Where you greet old friends and meet new
friends! Finest in popular music: Waltzes,
Foxtrots, One-Steps and Circles where
everyone joins in. An Ever-Increasing Con
genial Crowd. When There's Better Music
W.ilkcr Will Have If!
6 Miles up Butte Falls Highway
Music by the RANCHEROS
Western and Popular
Dancing
9 p.m. till
1 a.m.
NOW AGAIN!
.... .......a
:an tKIU fUM Nul
'KATHLEEN CROWLEY!
MICHAEL PATES
gWl -jOHNHOYlj
J. ffeW BRUCE GORDOfi
VFW Hall in Rogue River
EVERY SATURDAY NITE - 9 to 1
Music by
Bobby Burton
And the Happy Valley Boys
Featuring BILL LIVELY
SPONSORED BY VFW EVERYONE WELCOME
Gold Hill Grange Hall
EVERY
SATURDAY NITE
MUSIC BY
VIC FLOOD
and the RHYTHM MASTERS
Featuring
DAVE ARLANDSON ON DRUMS
Everyone Welcome Good Clean Fun
Checkroom Free Refreshments Served All Eve.
r
WATCH
REPAIRS
Have Your Watch
Completely Checked
Case Cleaned
and While
You Are in
Pick Out a
New Watch Band
PRICED
FROM
231 East Main
TONIGHT and SATURDAY!
ROAD SHOW ATTRACTION!
ONE SHOW EACH NITE - STARTS 8:00 P.M.
WILLIAM
NANCY
HOLDEN KFJAU
Enter Suzle's world... and you enter a
world of fantasy and Far East frenzy I
THEATER
INFORMATION SERVICE
CALL SP 3-7323
FOR FULL INFORMATION
ABOUT YOUR THEATERS
J AOMlr I I
Lti FILMED IN I J
ni! FABULOUS a I
rjl MONO
iJ KONG!
nE"WORM Of
SUZiE
JUu OlUmng
SYLVIA MIUHALL WILUINU p
TECHNICOLOR
ADULTS $1.00 CHILDREN SOe
Children Not Admitted Unless With Adults
STARTS
TONIGHT!
2 SHOWS
7:00 and 9:15
ONE OF THE FUNNIEST PICTURES OF THE YEAR!
3rtiMG with Laughter?
4 4
A COLUMBIA X '
j ncre5 ine
laugh low-down
the Nav
Slipped
over f
on the Z$,
JACK IIMMON WCKyNHson
Key man In "Tht Anrlmenf D'fmboat hit . "If
. .. ,.,gn c sf
The
ljui'ii'drun
intKe
COLUMB'A
PiCTuFteS
JOHN LUND CHIPS RAFFEFtTYTOM TuUY
JOBY BAhJR -WARREN BERUNGER no PADliCiA DaiSCOLi-
In CiNEWSCOPE nd EASTMAN DEI
nana
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