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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1961)
r Local and All AiklnnJ 1 sum ' Oil Stove - Ashland firemen answered a call at 796 Oak at. at 8:43 a.m. today. Firemen laid an overheated oil stove had been reported at the John Hamblin residence. No dam age was reported.- Go On Duty - Two more forest wardens went on duty today tor southwest district of the Oregon state depart ment of forestry. They were Steve Rigel at the Moon Prairie guard station and Carl Bennett at the McLeod sta tion. . Dane Planned - The De partment of Oregon, Ladles' auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars, will sponsor a dance at the Veterans' Admin istration domiciliary, White City, tonight at 8 o'clock In the theater . building. The domiciliary orchestra will pro vide music. Hostesses need ing transportation may take a bus at the Trailways depot at 7:30 p.m. To Bt Dischargod-Mrs. Lee Green of Eureka, Calif., ex pects to be discharged Tues day from Sacred Heart hos- pital where she has been a pa- ueilt luuuwiug &uigeiy, 11 was stated today by her mother, Mrs. James Nesom, 2245 Corey . rd. Mrs. Green, the former Velma Swift of Med ford, will be at the Nesom home . for some time during her convalescence. ' Bandings Ignite - Firemen were dispatched to the alley back of 31 North Orange St., about 8:40 p.m. yesterday to -I extinguish a pile of floor sand- ings which ignited sponta- ineously when dumped in the alley. They were called to a flue fire about 11:45 a.m. at the home of M. R. Archibald, 2451 Roberts rd. - TONITE TUESDAY TWO COMPLETE SHOWS AT 7:00 9:30 DEBORAH KERR ROBERT MITCHUM PETER USTINOV 'co-starring 9LYNIS JOHNS DINA MERRILL TuB- WONDERFuL I COUNTRY atuanwiMiAmtt tkchnicch-OW aastiTTTTTesmeVrlirM II I HIHsss SUMMERS B'limflli'llilJ.latTgl P41 S. C. JONES & SONS Acquisition of Cordon & Young Agency The acquisition of the Cordon A Young Agency hat increased the number of clients of the S. C. Jones & Sons to more than 2,500, making the agency one of the largest In the valley. S. C. Jones A Son was established in July, 1883 and have operated Insur ance agencies in Medford and Ash land since 1939. S. C. Jonet & Sons has acquired many ether insurance agencies: W. W. Ferguton Agency H. J. Plymetser Agency Ray Marki Agency . R. E. Mclntyre Agency The Tengwald Agency Langtry-Stantbury Agency OLDEST INSURANCE AGENCY IN SOUTHERN OREGON Corner of 6th and Holly SP 3-6689 Personal Tt &I 1- j-l 1 I Patients - Convalescing at Sacred Heart hospital follow ing surgery is J. Edgar Mori, 1105 Shaffer lane, Medford. A medical patient there is Mrs. A. R. Hopfer, 120 Perry dale ave. n e Singers to Meet - Women of Medford Council of United Church Women who plan to sing In the choir for the com ing May fellowship luncheon are asked to meet Wednesday, May 3, at 10 a.m. at First Presbyterian church for re hearsal. Mrs. Charles Adam son Is directing the group. Loyalty Dinners - Two loy alty dinners are scheduled this week at the First Methodist church. They are scheduled at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and Wed nesday with the entire congre gation attending. Glen Duy sen, general chairman of the budget committee, will ex plain the church's proposed budget at both sessions. Women's Golf Rogue Valley Country club lady golfers play for April 27 was a "braggers event." Winners were: A group, Mrs. T. A. Culbertson; B group, 3-way tie to be played off by, Mrs. Ed Nave, Mrs. William Schei, and Mrs. B. L. Nutting; C group, Mrs. Len G. Melville; D group, Mrs. Charles Gustafson; Nine-hole, tie Mrs. John Nuich and Mrs. J. A. Dickey. All ladies who have been taking the instruction les sons from the pro shops are invited to participate in a three-hole tournament just for them on Tuesday, May 2, starting sharply at 9 a.m. Awards will be given the win ners. , , Washington -0JPD- A NATO defense exercise involving more than 6,000 combat-ready paratroopers of the 101st Air borne division was called off suddenly Saturday. Portland Produce Portland (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: A A extra large 47-48c; AA large 44-45c; A large 43-44c; AA medium 37-40c; AA small 30-33c; cartona l-3c higher. Butter To retallera: AA and A 6 rlnts 70c lb.; cartons lc higher; prints 68c. Cheese, medium cured To re tailen: A grade Cheddar single daisies, 47-48c; processed Amer ican S-lb. loaf. 44-45(ic. Portland (UPI) Dressed chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn 33 37c; cut-up 37-420 lb.; hens, heavy, type, whole drawn 40-43C lb.; light type hens cut-up, 33-35C lb.; whole, 28-300 lb. Portland Livestock Portland (UPI) USDA CatUe 1150. High good-choice steers 25; mixed good-choice heifers 24; uUlity-standard 17-20; utility cows 1S.50-16.29; canner-cutter 12-15.50; cutter-utility bulls 18-21.50. Calves 200. Good-choice vealers 30-32; standard 23-28. Hogs 1000. Not enough sales to establish prices; few 1 and 2 butch ers 18.50. Sheep 2000. Choice-prime spring Iambs 19; choice-prime old crop 2 and 3 pelt 45.75-16.25; cull-good ewes 2.50-6.25. The YEAR'S MASTERPIECE NOMINATED FOR 7 ACADEMY AWARDS! sons A? lovers the Theyll Do It Every Time i SHE WEARS MORE BRACELETS ffhisiS I THAN HOUDINI HAD HAND- Bllfi pPI yllSA I sssss. fflSS&J Iff l The Family Council Editor's Note: The Family Council consists of Judge, a psychia trist, three clergymen, three editors and a women's editor. Bach article la a summary of an actual case history. The Council reports on prob lems that have been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. (Copyright 1861 Genera Features Corp.) Bella H. - Rather than raise a finger for help, she's des troying her marriage. Roslyn A. - I can't stand having my husband around. My feeling for him is dead. - Bella H. - My sister is so cold to her husband it's a wonder he shows up at all. We're heartbroken at what's happened to a beautiful love affair. The family is trying to persuade Ros to go to a clinic or do something to save her marriage, but she refuses. She doesn't seem to realize what she's doing to her children. They're 4, 3, and 2 years old, and the fourth Is an in fant. Because of constant quarreling, either Ros or Jack is always running out. When it's Ros, the kids are parceled out to me and other relatives. When it's Jack, he's away for months, although he sends a check regularly. Separtely, Ros and Jack are charming people. Surely someone can get to the bottom of this trouble and help them stay together. Rotlyn A. - I admit that Jack's running off the way he does may be my fault. I can't stand having him touch me and he knows it. So we quar rel and then theres some peace after one of us has cleared out. That's why I think a separation is best. It would end the quarreling which will soon affect the children, I'm afraid. Belle and the family want me to see a marriage counsel or. What good would that do? I can't even bear the sight of Jack when I'm all alone with him. Maybe the time to have gone to a clinic was after the first baby. The others came fast, Jack ran out each time, and so did my love. I know Jack and I will be better off apart. I'll raise the children, he'll support us and visit them. He'll always be welcome as their father, but not as my husband. Not he, or anyone else. The Council! Roslyn is mis taken If she thinks the quar reling will "soon" affect her OWNERSHIP Ken Jones Stanley C. Jones Hugh Houk Terry Houk SECRETARIES Mrs. Irene Ostrander Mrs. Gladys Messaf Mrs. Francis Kuchler MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. children. It has already af fected them. They know mamma doesn't love papa, and that's bad enough. Now Roslyn proposes to compound the grief by adding a father less childhood, with the grow ing conviction that mamma and papa don't really love us either. We were never wanted in the first place. Bella is right to call for an end to running out and a start toward a mature setting-to-rights of an eminently sal vageable marriage. In the background we see Roslyn's frigidity which is ob viously not physiological, but which set in somewhere among those closely spaced pregnancies. Emotionally it took over a spot in her. heart where great warmth toward Jack once existed. Roslyn must strive to re gain the 'normal sympathy and outgoingness a wife should feel for her husband. Naturally, Jack's patient help will be enlisted by Roslyn's advisors. His restraint and tenderness will play a vital part in the "thawing - out" process. Sister Bella and the family can play a role by frequent baby-sits, to permit the A.'s nights out together on quiet "platonic ' dates. No more running. This isn't hide-and-seek. It's marriage and parenthood. Facing up to the fear that haunts it can bring the "beautiful love af fair" Bella refers to out of cold storage. Investment Funds Noon quotations on selected funds: - Fund Bid Asked 15.54 16.26 14.76 18.83 11.25 10.98 15.12 12.66 16.98 Bullock 14.18 Colonial Ener 14.88 Eaton Howard Stk .. 13 B0 Fidelity 17.42 Fundamental Inv .... 10.27 Group Sec-Avla-Eleo 10.02 Group Sec-Corn Stk 13.81 Group Sec-Petr 11.56 Keystone B-3 15.58 Keystone B-4 9.26 Keystone K-S 18.23 Keystone S-l 22.63 Keystone S-2 12.92 Keystone S-3 15.49 Keystone S-4 16.46 Mass Inv Grth Stk .. 17.60 National Sec Grth .. 9.87 TV - Elec 8.83 Value Line Inc . . 5.62 Wellington 15.20 10.11 19.89 24 14.10 16.91 17.96 19.23 10.79 9.62 6.14 16.76 Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Variable cloudineiB and scattered showers tonight and Tuesday. Low tonight 42. Htgn Tuesday 70, Western Ore son Showers and oerioda of partial clearing clearing tonight Tuesday partly sunny with isolated showers. Cooler ton! ant. Low to night 36-48. High Tuesday S2-64 in interior, 62-58 on coast. Northern California: Cloudy in north portion with occasional light rain near coast from San Francisco northward and over interior early tonight. Fair Tuesday except a few scattered showers In northwest por tion. Slightly cooler. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday SO; above normal 4. Record high this date S3 in 104!!. Record low this date 26 In 1911. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight 0. Midnight to 10 a.m. .03 In. Total for April .98 In., .23 In. below normal. Total since Sept. 1 14.83 in., .77 in. below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday lllrh 4:00 24- CITY Ynter- a.m. hr. day Low Prec. Brookings .. 59 31 .6? Crater Lake 47 32 .09 Grants Pass 74 48 .16 Klamath Falls .. SS 47 MEDFORD 73 46 Portland 64 53 .01 Seattle 60 49 .01 Spokane 61 45 .05 Yakima 67 49 T. Eureka 66 50 Red Bluff 76 53 Sacramento . 79 46 San Francisco 61 62 Los A ngeles 7 6 5 5 PhoenTx - 96 57 Denver 56 40 Chicago 65 37 Miami Beach 80 73 New York 60 48 Washington, D C, .. 64 52 Mothers Day Cards : MAY 14TH MEDFORD, OREGON By Jimmy Hatlo Why. TO THE CONCERT WALL, TO DROWN OUT THE WORLD'S GREATEST VIOLIN VIRTUOSO Cub, Boy Scouts Plan Roundtables Cub Scout and Boy Scout Rountables will both meet at the Hedrick Junior High school at 7:30 o'clock tonight. There will be someone available to discuss and give frther details on the Scout Circus scheduled for May 20. Cub Scouters will review "Treasure Chest U.S.A." as their June theme. Fix-Up Day suggestions will be presented for backyard den meetings, Treasure Hunt ideas, safety precautions and places appro priate for fishing will be sug gested. Conservation activities that can be used throughout the summer activities will be pre sented. A short craft session will start at 8 o'clock featur ing homemade games. All packs who entered the Pear Blossom festival have been asked to take their floats for display and anyone hav ing suggestions for backyard activities and equipment should take them to share with the rest of the group. Boy Scouters will highlight "Tune Up for Camp" and dis play a complete camping equipment kit. Bob Hawkins of the St. Mary's Troop 7 will give highlights of the "Im portance of a Troop Commit tee" and buzz sesions will be held on the specific require ments of second and first class ranks. Procedures will be re viewed on the four phases of advancement. Over-fhe-Counfer ' 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, i Common Stocks Bid Asked ttank ot America 55 Calif. -Pacific Utilities 2514 Cascades Plywood 27 Cons. Freightways 83s Copco 51 - Cyprus Mines Corp 351,' First National Bank 58 (a Morris-Knudsen 33 ',4 Northwest Nat. Gas ...... 284a Pacific Pwr. tc Lt 451s Permanente Cement .... 18 ',5 Portland Gen. Elec 424 U. S National Bank .... 70 Unltad Utilities 2T,i West Coast Tel 30 ',1 Weyerhaeuser 38a,i 581, 27 i, 914 541. SOli 481, 431, 73 29 , 411! Half of all the child pedes- train injuries result from playing in roadways or dart ing out between parked cars. f' jf '' lsJLessasssei - '-"V . sssii'ii'.tC'X.sl Unas CANDLE ROOM Serving Charcoal Foods 5:30 till Midnight Motel AAedfford OBITUARIES MRS. SUSANNA KICK Funeral services for Mrs. Susanna Katrina Eick, 71, of 1215 East Ninth St., who died in a local nursing home Fri day, will be held at the Perl Funeral home Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. with the Rev. H. C. Coovert of the Zion Lutheran church officiating. Committal will be in the Siskiyou Memo rial park. Mrs. Eick was born Aug. 20,. 1889 in Appleton, Wise, and was a member of the Lu theran church and of the La dies Aid Emanuel Lutheran church, Portland. Survivors include her hus band, Edward C. Eick, Med ford: three daughters, Eliza beth E. Tesdal, Salem; Kth ryn G. Tesdal, Medford, and Dorothy R. Caruthers, Seattle, Wash., and 14 grandchildren Honorary pall bearers will be Irma Milledge, Marian Mil ledge, Eolna Rhodes, Dana Taylor, Ruth Haralson, Zoet- ta Morales, Helen Unger ana Eunice Raph. Active bearers will be Bruce Braaten, Ar thur Brown, Leon Evans, Douglas Gordenler, Lloyd Hubbard and Arthur Schar- seth. SIMEON W. BURRILL Simeon W. Burrill, 78, of 5611 Table Jlock rd., died Sunday in a local hospital. Funeral services will be held at Conger-Morris Funeral home downtown chapel Wed nesday at 11 a.m. ETTA L. SHAW : Mrs. Etta Loena Shaw, of 1044 West 13th st., died Sun day at her home. Funeral ar rangements will be announced by Conger-Morris, funeral di rectors. RAY F. MOHAN Ray F. Moran, 71, died at Heppner, Ore., Saturday. Fu neral arrangements will be announced by Perl Funeral home. MRS. VERNA BOWEN - Funeral services for Mrs. Verna Marie Bower, 35, of 3622 Bursell rd., Central Point, who died in a local nursing horrfe Friday, will be held at the Perl Funeral home Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. with the Rev. Edward C. Bush officiat ing. Committal will be in the Siskiyou Memorial park. Mrs. Bowen was a member of the Community Bible church and had been a resi dent of this area for five years. She was born Oct. 8 1925 in Klamath Falls, Ore. Survivors include her hus band, Wallace P. Bowen, two daughters, Linda and Rosetta Bowen; two sons, Douglas and Mark Bovren, all Central Point; three ulsters, Mrs. Mar iorie Ford, Mrs. Virgl Mitch ell, Mrs. 'Anna Powell; two half-sisters, Mrs. Bill Lowery, ail of Medford, and Mrs. Ken neth Kegg, Mesa, Ariz.; one THEATER INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SP 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATERS The Entertainment Hit of the Year! Where thpgoys tee STARTING THIS EVENING at the brother, .Herman St. Clair Jr., Medford, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. St. Clair, Medford Active pall bearers will be S. M. Hilliard, the Rev. Lewis Collins, Joe A. Gray, Law rence Leonard, Willis Bilder back and Ray Chavis. Honor ary bearers will be Kenneth Harger, Tom Harger, LeRoy Collins, Ira McDonald and Ed Walker. JAMES W. BURK ' Funeral services for James William Burk, 54, who died Saturday at his home, 340 Vt North Central ave., will be rnnducted at 2 P.m. Tuesday in the Meeker chapel of the First Methodist cnurcn. ine Rev. "George G. Roseberry, nnatnr of the church, will of ficiate. Interment will be in Memory Gardens Memorial nark. ChaDel Mortuary is in charge of arrangements. Pallbearers will be James Cirbtener. Melvin Simmons, vater Simmonds. R o b er t Stewart. Raymond VanLiew and Tom West. Mr. Burk. the son of Mar shall T. and Ida Benkert Burk was born in Fairfield, Nebr., on Dec. 20, .1908. He was mar ried in Neosho, Mo.,, on July IV 1030. to Leona May BurK who survives. The family came to the Rogue Valley 10 years ago, where Mr. Burk was known as a painter. He was also a cook and for sev eral years was the manager of the kitchen ot tne Big lunch counter. Besides his wife, he is sur vived by two sons, Billy War ren Burk, Medford, and Le- roy Burk, Portland; one daughter, Mrs. Carl Burk, Medford; three brothers, Rob ert Burk. Whlttier. Calif.: Earl Burk, Manhattan Beach, Calif., and Joseph Burk, Okee- T. j J-al HURRY ENDS TUESDAY Two Show Tonito 7:00 and 9:10 DOLORES HART GEORGE HAMILTON YVETTE MIMIEUX JIM HURON BARBARA NICHOLS PAULA PRENTISS MNNlf FRANCIS ran ONLYMORENITES ,.M Mttt frltMwint mttn lictafMhnmiMtf X - AND - asj ... .. The "Two Eddys" GIPSON and MACE A Duo known throughout Orogon for thtlr Wonderful Dane Muticl 7:30 p.m.-2:30 a.m. NO COVER CHARGE Just Enjoy Yourself Serving Your Favorite Beverages and Fine Food - MONDAY, MAY 1. chubee, Fla.; two sisters, Mrs. Jennie Lisell, Hoquiam, Wash., and Mrs. Gladys Borsey, Aberdeen, Wash., and five grandchildren, In Medford. W. BERNARD ROBERTS W. Bernard Roberts, 65, of the Wagner Creek rd., died Yesterday in a local hospital. Funeral services will be held at Conger-Morris Funeral home Thursday at 10 a.m. Ex-Representative In Legislature Dies Portland-IUPD-John Dickson, 92, who served in the Oregon legislature for eight years, died at St. Vincent Hospital Sunday. Dickson served as a Republican represe n t a 1 1 v e from Multnoriah county from 1943 to 1951. John Dickson was the grandfather of Dr. John P. Dickson, dentist in Medford from 1952 to September, 1960. Dr. Dickson was associated with Dr. Eugene Ray at 1117 East Main st. prior to accept ing a position at the Univer sity of Oregon Dental school. Other survivors include his daughter-in-law, Mrs. Hazel (Lawrence) Dickson, Medford. Washington- IUPD -Nearly 33 million American families, better than three out of five, own their own homes, the Census Bureau reported Sun day night. The total of 32, 796,087 home owners in 1960 was a record high and an in crease of 9.2 million from 1950. ' TO - w u Plan NOW SISTER CITY . TOUR IN V zfl I jrfnm ii - i. rtrii iiri 3 !?P OCTOBER 1st MEDFORD -ALBA A WONDERFUL AIR TRIP TO MEDFORD'S SISTER CITY SEND FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION! THERE'S NO OBLIGATION . . . SEE HOW YOU CAN TAKE PART IN THE GREAT PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE FRIENDSHIP PROGRAMI MAIL THIS COUPON r -j I Offico of tho Mayor 1 City Hall Building- I Madford, Oregon I Please send, without obligation, full Information on the MEDFORD-ALBA SISTER CITY TOUR OCTOBER 1st Name Addret Courttsy Madford Mail Tribune 1981 Hardware Groups' Merger Approved Portland-ROT-Merger of the North Coast Retail Hardware Association and the Pacific Northwest Hardware and Im plement Association was ap proved Sunday by trustees of the two trade groups. Robert D. Carey, La Grande, was elected president of the new organization, to be call ed the Pacific Northwest Hardware and Implement As sociation. Headquarters of the group, which will have about 1,000 dealers as members, will be Portland. 4a. OIT THI OINUINI UJHTER mnsHR TOILET TANK BALL Noliy running toilets con wast over 1000 gallons ot water a day. The efficient patented Water Master tank ball instantly stops the flow of water after each flushing. 75C AT HAftDWAM STOWS r r To Join The ROME PARIS Visit Rome, Paris, exciting European Cities . . . Enoy the people and scenery of beautiful ALBA. W 11 If 1 A. I I ,117 I. Male St. Medfor!