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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 26, 1961)
pinner Scheduled -Phoenix Grange will serve a potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 28. Members who attend are asked to bring their own table service. The degree team will practice following the meeting. ' Dynamite Found - Ed Ad kins, route 1, box '560, Eagle point, notified sheriff's depu ties recently that he found several boxes of dynamite and roll of fuse at his trailer site. Hit and Hun - A car owned by William Lorren Frazier, 3340 Dark Hollow rd., was struck and damaged by an un known vehicle about noon Thursday while it was parked on Melrose st. near Oakdalel ave. Police said the damaging vehicle apparently left the scene of the accident without leaving any information. The Frazier vehicle sustained dam age to the left side. TURKEY & HAM (Sunday Special) with all aiiaitjni v in ino oven to you! G0MPLFTF niWWFDC Jumbo Shrimp Oysters Steak Fillet of Sole BREAKFAST This Sunday , taervea Anytime) Befer. After Church... at tha Hotel Medford Dining Room CHILDREN ALWAYS WELCOME THE GROTTO Medford's Newest Downtown Restaurant SUNDAY DINNER Served II A.M. Till 7 P.M. ALL YOU CAN EAT! Fried Chicken, - Pork Chops, Red Snapper Enjoy the Comforts of THE ALLEY Lounge Before or After Dinner NUMBER 10 FRONT STREET lAni0Hl pMOHOUAJi M-tntlltt pmicilDns.iiiiiioiMicuDOvgiTUii VIEDU KOTT - HIIOSHI ttUEtl JilEt MMEt III MOOUell If IlltCm IT miikowra WILLIAM GOETZ - JOSHUA LOGAH IIIIISITirilllllf ICIUIMlrll iwlnHMiMrf TECHNIRAMA TECHNICOLOR NOTE FEATURES PLAY "SAYONARA" 4:20-8:45 NOW OPEN DEBBIE REYNOLDS 1991 ,s JUKI.) OBrl 'j WTCCHNICOLOB ! Local and Tontillectomies - Linda Kidd, 10, and Leona Kidd,' 6, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam Kidd, 530 Redwood hieh- way, Grants Pass, underwent tonsillectomies at Crater Osteopathic hospital, Central Point, Friday, Attends Conference - W. D. Woodcock, manager of the Canada Dry Bottling com pany, White City, recently re turned from Seattle, Wash., where he participated in. a two-day conference on mar keting and advertising condi tions in the northwest. The annual affair provides work shops to permit two-way dis cussions between Canada Dry officials and bottlers. DINNERS S1 the trimmings Pork Chops Halibut Steak Your Choice Open 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Every Day TIMBER ROOM 5 South Riverside JT yar flJh 11 m. $1.24 Children 79e . STARTS TODAY Doors Open 1:15. Continuous From 1:30 TinMa HEFUN- RAY-FRtEMAN-OIS0N -HUNTER DOROTHY ANNF JAMFS fiivUriNfi UAIDUr FDAMrtQ .UlUITUnPC .UAQCEV """-"HI. I iinnuiu iiiinmuni -IWULI 7JLhIV" lrtltl"iiVli w J2H?L-JfflH H CINEMASCOPE WARNERCOLOR li ONLY AT TIMES LISTED "BATTLE CRY"-l:30-6:55 EVERY NITE! 3" tllin'mi:aiif.w7i?i SHE HANDLED MEN TEXAS le-fi STYLE! MEDFOHD MAIL Personal Permit Issued - The city building department Friday issued the Imperial "400" Mo tel company a permit to erect a $117,000 motel at 345 South Central ave. . .' ' , . Patients - Anton Derwick, 635 Diamond st., Medford, and Ralph C. Jones, 3995 South Pacific Highway, Medford, were listed as surgery patients rriday at Crater Osteopathic hospital, Central Point. Medical Patients - Listed as medical patients Friday at Sacred Heart hospital were Debra Ann LaCombe, 6-month-old daughter of Mr. and "Mrs. Robert LaCombe, 605 Angess ave.. Grants Pass; and Mrs. William Kerr, 14 Al mond st., Medford. Reunion Set - Members of the Medford High school class of 1946 will meet in the fire place room of the First Metho dist church, Medford, at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 28. Any one interested is invited to at tend. Surgery Patients - Listed as surgery patients at Sacred Heart hospital Friday were James' Kleutsch, 4V--year-old son. of Mr. and Mrs. Urban Kleutsch, 2168 Crest brook rdr, Medford; Smith Trend, 539 Pennsylvania ave., Med ford; and William Knox, 2978 Sunnyvale rd., Central Point. Hospital Patients - Listed as medical and surgery pa tients Saturday at Sacred Heart hospital were Vern E. Dunn, 1059 North Mountain avef Ashland, and John Pres ton, 4-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Preston, 195'6 Roberts rd., Medford. Young Preston is now convalescing at home, In Hospital - Medical rja- tients listed at Crater Osteo pathic hospital, Central Point. Friday included Mrs. Joe Lind- sey, 3372 Roberts rd., Med ford: Mrs.- Winfred H. Ar nold, Lucky lane, box 2522, Meaiora; . David R. Morgan, 689 Union ave., Grants Pass; and Mrs. Carol Converse, star roule Box 78, Ashland. . NOMA Meeting - The regu lar meeting of the Medford- Ashland-Grants Pass chapter of the National Office Man agement association will be held Monday at 7 p.m. in the Medford hotel. A member of the Bar Association will dis cuss .commercial law 'during the evening's program. : Any one interested is Invited. , . . ' Death - Reported - James Lee Brigmah, 44, a frequent Medford . visitor, died of . a heart attack Feb. 6 in Oak land, Calif., according to word received by friends here. Mr. Brigham was born Aug. 11, 1916, in Wheeler, Tex., and is survived by his wife, Lydia Wood Brigman, and three .daughters. He has had many friends in the Medford area. Princess-Pretty Stepping right out of your favorite fashion pages - the dress with the widely caped collar above a slim, princess waist. Sew it now for a gay Spring -to -Summer whirl in vivid cotton. Printed Pattern 9401: Jun ior Miss Sizes, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17. Size 13 takes 5i yards 35-inch. Send Thirty - five cents (coins) for this pattern - add 10 cents for each pattern for first - class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, Medford Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. 100 FASHION FINDS - the best, newest, most bcau-i tiful Printed Patterns for! Spring-Summer, 1961. See! them all in our brand-new i Color Catalog. Send 35c nowl ! TRIBUNE. MtDr'ORD. ORE. Obituaries DAVID THOMASSON Funeral services for David Dean Thomasson, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. J. David Thom asson, of 309 Chestnut St., who died Friday, will be held at Conger-Morris Funeral home downtown chapel Mon day at 1 p.m. The Rev. Har vey C. Coovert of the Zion Evangelical Lutheran church will officiate. Committal will be in Memory Gardens Memo rial park. David Dean was born March 27, 1960, in Medford. Survivors, besides his par ents, include grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Thomas son, Burns, Ore.; and Mr. John Vettrus, Everett, Wash, FREDDA E. DAVISON Mrs. Fredda Elsie Davison, of 431 South First St., Central Point, died Thursday in a lo cal hospital. Funeral services were held in Conger-Morris Funeral home downtown chapel Saturday morning. Committal will be in family plot in Chicago, 111. Mrs. Davison was born Feb. 26, 1897, in Chicago, 111., and had lived in southern Oregon since 1946. She was married April 17, 1925, in Chicago, to Laurence W. Davison, who survives. Other survivors include a son, Bert Clark Davison, Cen tral Point, and three grand children. Graveside services were held at the Siskiyou Memorial park Saturday for the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Norbert M. Omann, 211 Jeanctte st., who died in a local hospital Friday, The Rev. William McLeod officiated, with Perl Funeral home in charge of arrange ments. Survivors include the par ents, ' one sister, Jane E. Omann; three brothers, Don ald, Glenn, and Roy Omann, all of Medford; and his grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Omann, Grants Pass, Ore. MARSHALL WARREN Vancouver, Wash. - Marsh all Warren, 58, died in the Barnes General hospital here Feb. 21, following an illness. Mr. Warren, originally from Emporia, Kan., but more" re cently from Medford, is sur vived by his sister, Mrs. Mary E. Watkins of Sahna, Kan. A graduate of the Univer sity of Kansas, the former resident saw military service during World Wars I and II. During the latter, he was a warrant officer in the U. S. Marine corps on submarine dutv. Burial, will be in Emporia, Kan. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Fair to dav with increasing cloudiness to night and Monday. Chance of showers Monday. High today 52. Low tonight 30. High Monday 50. Western Oregon: Partly cloudy this morning, with increasing cloudiness this afternoon. Cloudy with occasional rain tonight and Monday, except for a few scattered showers in south portion. A little warmer today and tonight. High both dava 45 to 55. Low tonight 36 to 44. Northern California: Partly cloudy todBy with a few snow flur ries in high mountains. Fair to night and Monday. Warmer in northern interior Monday. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yester day 30; below normal 5. Record high this date 74 in 1032. Record low this date 20 in 1020. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight .02 in. Total this month 2.47 in., .66 in. Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF- 7- THE TYPE in some of the mammoth new paperbacks gets smaller and smaller and one anguished reader has struck back at his tormentors. "I propose," he writes, "that these typographical mon- HUMPr pAPEBBACK-Eye-TIS sirosuies nencexortn cany this legend on the last page: A NOTE ON THE TYPE IN WHICH THIS BOOK WAS SET. "The tjpe in which this book was set is known, quite unfavorably, as one half point Myopia, and was designed in 1622 by that noted sadist, Feodor Astigmatism. It bids fair to become one of the most heartily disliked . faces this side of Fidel Castro. It is perfect for engraving the complete text of 'The Brow- eis Karamazov' on the head of a pin." Eyeing the scantilly clad chorus girls at a popular night club, Comedian Joe B. Lewis sighed, "They don't make them like they used to." Even more wistfully, he added, "At least I don't!" 1961, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate- ALPHA RHO CHAPTER Beta Sigma Phi presents ... ANNUAL CARD PARTY AND STYLE SHOW Friday, March 3rd at the Rogue Valley Country Club Lunch Starts at- 12 Noon Prizes For Reservations Call SP 3-7091 or SP 3-3170 (Reservation Deadline Wednesday, March lit) LOOK OVER BOOKLET Tom D. Conklln, left, Oregon deputy state supervisor for the bureau of land management, and Robert D. Hostetter, plans forester of the Medford BLM district, look over a booklet, "Project V -i)r- . jf i' i " 1 FIRST PLACE :- Miss Ruby McCullough, daughter of Mrs. Vada McCullough, 1220 South Stage rd., Medford, has been awarded first place in the American Legion Auxiliary Essay contest sponsored by Unit 15. A ninth grade stu dent at McLoughlin Junior High, the youth wrote one of about 160 essays on "What My Flag Means To Me." She will receive the Americanism med al and a cash prize, besides being invited to read her pa per at. the annual Legion Birthday dinner next month Receiving honorable mention were Pam Hosick, Dennis Bo- shears, and Sylvia Smith, all students at McLoughlin. Con test judges were Mrs. E. H. Hedrick, Mrs. Leland A. Mentzer, and Vern Wollhoff, above normal. Total since Sept. 1 10.56 in in. hrnw normal. 2.12 HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 49, highest yesterday lotl'.i High 4:00 24 hr. CITY Brookings Klamath Falls MEDFORD Portland Yester- a.m. 55 37 31 , 37 , 48 30 30 ...45 ..40 34 Spokane "Z.... !42 30 Yakima 52 26 Eureka 52 3B.- Red Bluff i 61 43 Sacramento 60 44 San Francisco 57 - 51 Los Angeles 72 51 Phoenix 74 . 34 Denver 63 33 Chicago 33 2B Miami Beach 84 71 New York 52 45 Washington Hostetter Award for In Bureau Robert D. Hosteller, plans forester of the Medford bu reau of land management dis trict, was presented an award last week by Tom D. Conklin, Oregon deputy state super visor for the BLM. Conklin presented the award on be half of the secretary of the interior. The award was in recogni tion of excellence of service performed by Hostetter on a special assignment to Wash ington, D.C. The assignment was at two different times, for about a six weeks' period late in 1959 and an additional six weeks' period in early 1960. The award was a personal Clubs Discuss New Teen-Age Projects Representatives of several local service clubs and youth organizations attended a spe cial meeting last week at the request of Arthur Tropple, representing the Medford Ac tive 20-30 club. The meeting, held at the juvenile department offices, was to discuss the possibilities of service clubs and other or ganizations sponsoring a teen age service club or pooling their energies into developing projects beneficial to the bet terment of local youth. Attending were George Bruse, Elks; Dick O'Dcll, Ac tive 20-30 club; Don Dar neille, McLoughlin Junior high; Bruce Nelson, Hedrick Junior high; Fred Slock, county public welfare depart ment; Circuit Court Judge Ed ward C. Kelly, Kay Crowell, Lawrence L. Tweedy, Robert! Swan, L. E. Wells, and Robert Schmidt, all from the county juvenile court and juvenile department. Tropple agreed that he would set up a committee to report to various civic organ izations the findings of the meeting. Births YOCOM To: Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, slor route box 40, Prospect, Feb. 21, 1981, a girl, Wi lbs., at Crater Osteopathic hospital. The first known inks were made by the Chinese and Egyptians around 2500 B.C. 14-OZ.T-BONE STEAK $2 COOKED AS YOU LIKE IT It's Graded USDA Choice Lots of Golden Brown French Fries or, Ir it s Attar 5 O Huge Baked Russett Potato Soup and' Salad Our Own Hot Bread You qer no veqetable, dessert il not Included and the drink is extra, but vou sure do get a lot of iteak and potatoes of the finest quality money can buy. OPEN 6 A.M. to 8 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS IN THE MEDFORD Twenty-Twelve," to whlcli Hostetter con tributed his services in a special assignment. Hostetter received an award from Conklin for his work in the assignment. Presented Service Project recognition of Hosteller's per formance in connection with a unit award granted to other members of the committee which performed outstanding work on a bureau of land management project known as Project Twenty-Twelve. Designed for Presentation Project Twenty-Twelve was a program designed for pres entation to the Congress of the United States of what the bureau of land management is planning to do on the 477, 000,000 acres of public land in the continental United Slates and Alaska through the year 2012. Hosteller contributed a lot of overtime, including Satur days and Sundays, directed to get the Project Twenty Twelve out by the target date. The award is significant and unusual in that seldom is such an award presented, and it is always the result of outstand ing performance by a Bureau employee or employees. Project Twenty-Twelve, as prepared by the assistance of Hostetter, will provide syste matic, balanced, and coordi nated development and use of the public lands and re sources such as minerals, tim ber, forage, wildlife, walcr and recreation. The program for the Medford district of the bureau of land manage ment was likewise cranked into Project Twenty-Twelve. WATCH REPAIRS Have Your Watch Completely Checked Case Cleaned and While You Are in Pick Out a New Watch Band PRICED FROM East Main (.lock, Tou (.an nave a SHOPPING CCMD S095 231 bUNOAl. ti,i)nuAni 603 Complaints Received by Dog Control Officer The county dog control of fice has received 603 com plaints regarding dogs since the first of the year, Chris Hagler, county dog control of ficer has reported. He said the number Is ap proximately double the num ber received by this time last year. Since dog control went into effect in Ashland Feb. 13 the number of complaints have increased, he said. On Feb. 22 the department received 21 complaints. He added that the department has two full-time employees in addition to him self. Hagler explained that since dog control went into effect in Medford a higher percent age of owners are claiming animals at the pound. He add ed that previously the depart ment mainly picked up strays, which would account for the difference. The dog control officer re ported that the sale of dog licenses is behind the number sold last year. He reminded residents that dogs are re quired to have the licenses. After March 1 a penalty fee is added to the price of the license. Dog licenses may be pur chased on or before Feb. 28 at the county courthouse; the county dog pound, 2872 How ard ave., Medford; Phoenix police department; Talent po lice department; Ashland po lice department; Rasmusscn Super service, Jacksonville; Applcgate shopping center; Central Point city hall; Gall's Gold Hill market; Rogue Riv er iced and Farm supply; Eagle Point city hall; Cove Valley Supply, Shady Cove; Boothby's in Prospect; and from the city recorder in Butte Falls. Starting March 1, a penalty of $2 will be charged in addi tion to regular dog license sees. STEAKS TILL MIDNIGHT CANDLE ROOM y a "u. CL. menrord Open Daily 5:30 P.M. te Midnight Sundays 4 P.M. Till 11 P.M. THEATER INFORMATION. SERVICE CALL SP 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATERS FOUR GREAT DOORS SHOWS AT 1:00 Firing the Living Screen With CLASSIC BEAUTY and BOILING ADVENTURE! JOHN MILLS DOROTHY JAMES MacARTHUR JANET MUNRO SESSUE HAYAKAWA : TOMMY KIRK KEVIN CORCORAN CECIL PARKER Adults 90c-Loges $1.10-Students 75c-Chlldren 50 A 13- Soda pop came into general! use after 1832. Lignite has been found inv; many parts of the world. 'i art show and benefit tea today only 1-5 P.M. 35 paintings by the art class Senior Activity Center 601 East Jackson public invited sponsored by Rogue Valley Council on aging voluntary donations will be added to building fund for Senior Activity Center are you 50? . . . join art class or other activities at . i Senior Activity Center 601 E. JACKSON today 1-5 P.M. SHOWS TODAY OPEN 12:30 3.40 6:20 9:00 McGUIRE 0, iaoi