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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1962)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. ORrftON Patient - Medical patient at Sacred Heart hospital is Glenn A. Shaw, route 1, box 555, Central Point. Convalescing Amon Coth rin of Derby is now at home convalescing from recent sur gery performed at Sacred Heart hospital. He is able to receive visitors. Locals 1 LCalS I 11 ll HSr: IUAN6 HUANG JlIPfe MONDAY, MAY 28. 1962 O'Brien Fire The Illinois Valley Fire department was called Thursday at noon when fire was spotted on the roof of a house on Lone Mountain rd. near O'Brien. The blaze was quickly extinguished and little damage resulted. The house, formerly the Wieting property, is now owned by Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Preston of Ontario, Calif., who plan to retire and move to this area in a few years. Ballet Tonight - The Thurs ton dance studio will present a 40-minute version of the famous ballet "Swan Lake" tonight at Medford High school auditorium beginning at 7:30 o'clock. In addition to this program, presented by advanced students, young er children will present a va riety of songs and dances. The public is invited and no charge will be made. Fire In Car - Firemen were summoned to the home of Charles Fairbank, 2101 West Main st., about 9:45 p.m. Sat urday when a garage fire was reported. Firemen said that wiring under the dash board of a car in the garage had shorted. Considerable damage resulted to the Interi or of the vehicle. No damage was reported to the building. Son Born - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Holtz, Bay Village, Ohio, are parents of a son born May 27. Maternal grand parents are Mr. and Mrs. John H. Holtz, 2121 East Jackson st. Holtz, senior project engi need for the B. F. Goodrich Chemical company, C 1 e v e land, visited recently with his parents after being in Los An geles and San Francisco on business. HELP SOUGHT Portland-(UPI) - The Metro politan Youth Commission has appealed for help in meeting what it calls a critical prob lem of youth unemployment this summer. S0X0T0NE brings you better II EARING not just Hearing Aid! Before you bur ttom ny one. see Sonotone the iruned name id hearing for -over 30 yeaii. SONOTONE OF MEDFORD 105 WEST MAIN Phone 772-5904 Ends TUESDAYl :lz:aaElii On at 8:15 pm & 12:20 am -WILLIAM CLIFTON 1 H0LDENWEBB II -LEO McCAHEYS I SATAN NEVfcK rl" f FRANCE NUYIN i ha 2nd Hit on at 10:30 pm ft II DWM . IIJrliRLtY V3J ITECHHiCOLOfc'-'ff" 11111 fHAiLAN .v.7.v.v.v.y.v. iS.VIETNAM HEBELS ATTACK Communist rebel forces, which American military advisers said appeared to be North Vietnamese, at tacked in force near Houei Sai, on the Me kong river border of Laos and Thailand. American military sources at Vientiane, Laos, said the rebels captured outposts only nine miles from the border city, and fight ing was still going on late Sunday after noon. In this newsmap, the cross-hatched section indicates the area already held by Communist forces. (UPI) Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday. A few sunny periods Tuesday afternoon. Low tonight 40-45. High Tuesday near 70. Western Oregon: Partly cloudy south interior and mostly cloudy elsewhere tonight and Tuesday. A few showers Tuesday, mostly near coast and over north half interior. Low tonight 44-50. High Tuesday 62-72, except 56-60 on coast. Northern California: Fair tonight and Tuesday except coastal over cast. Warmer in central interior. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 59; below normal 2. Record high this date 91 In 1931. Record low this date 34 in 1929. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight None. Midnight to 10 a.m. Trace. Total this month .80 in., .16 in. below normal. Total since Sept. 1 15.23 in., 1.43 in. below normal. HUMIDITY : Lowest yesterday 37. highest this a.m. 93. CITY High Brookings 63 Crater Lake 55 Grants Pass 72 Howard Prairie 61 Klamath Falls 67 MEDFORD 76 Portland 70 4:00 24 a.m. nr. Low Prec. 49 26 .04 Seattle 63 Spokane 72 Ynk i ma 79 Eureka 55 Red Bluff 86 Sacramento 79 San Francisco 55 Loa Angeles 6 5 Phoenix 76 Denver 62 Chicago 56 Miami Beach 85 New York 78 Washington. D C. - 74 45 " 52 48 60 45 53 77 57 62 FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through June 2): Western Oreiton - Western Wash ington Temperatures will aver age near or a little below normal. Maximums mostly 58-68 western Washington and 62-72 western Ore gon, except 70-75 southwest Oregon interior and 50-60 on coast. Pre cipitation more than normal with ococaslonal showers, except little or no precipitation southwest Oregon interior. Northern California Showers likely north portion during latter half of week but no rain otherwise. Temperatures near or below normal. Investment Funds Noon quotations on selected siocks: Fund Bid Bullock 11.87 Chemical Fund 9.54 Colonial Ener . 10.17 Eaton Howard Stk 12.01 Fidelity 14.07 Fundamental Investors 8.59 Group Sec-Avia-Elec 6.55 Grouo Sec-Corn Stk .... 11.78 I Group Sec-Petr 10.25 Keystone B-3 15.45 1 Keystone B-4 9.18 Keystone K-2 4.71 Keystone S-l 19.42 Keystone S-2 11.14 Keystone S-3 12 53 Keystone S-4 3.93 Mass lnv Grth Stk 7.00 Nat'l Growth 7.06 TV - Elec 6.94 United Accum 12.76 Uniteo Canada 16.39 United Continental .... 8 42 United Income 11.19 United Science 5.96 Value Line Inc 4.92 Wellington 13.62 Asked 13.01 10.37 11.11 12 98 15.21 941 7.18 13.90 11.23 1686 10.02 5.15 21.19 12.16 13 64 4.30 7.65 7.72 7.56 13.95 17.82 7.04 1223 6.51 5 38 14.85 Portland Livestock ! Portland (UPI) USDA Cattle 950. Good choice steers 26.75-27-25; heifers good-low choice i 730-BOO lb. 25.50: choice 26: canner- , cutter cows 12-15; Holstelns 15 50; utility-commercial bulls 19-20.50. Caives 150. Good-choice vealers 27-30; medium good feeders 20- '23.50. I Hops 900. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers ' 18-18 50; sows 1 and 2 270-325 lb. 15-16. I Sheep 1000. Choice-prime spring lambs 22-22 50; choice shorn old crop lambs 15 50; choice-prime at I 16.50; cull-good ewes 2-4. I & I The The MOST TALKED SHOCKED ABOUT PICTURE OF OUR YEARS! STARTS TUESDAY DOORS OPEN AT 8:00 "CURTAIN AT 8:30" LA DOLCE VITA . DIRECTED Ml :Tfc, HDCRlCO FEIUW Foreign Briefs BRITISH DOLLARS SMUGGLED INTO SPAIN London-IUPD-British trade union representatives are smug gling hundreds of dollars into Spain to aid the some 70,000 workers in their 52-day-old walkout, it was reported Sunday. QUEEN ELIZABETH MAY VISIT AUSTRALIA London-aPU-A Buckingham Palace spokesman Sunday declined to conform or deny Australian press reports saying that Queen Elizabeth may visit Australia late in 1963 or early 1964. Australian newspapers said Premier Robert Mensies planned to invite the Queen to Australia during a visit to London for talks on Britain's proposed membership in the European common market. 20 PERSONS INJURED IN TRAIN COLLISION Rome-IUPD-Officials said 20 persons were slightly injured Sunday when two electric trains collided head on at low speed near the Ostience station in one of the suburbs here, THREE MORE INJURED WORKERS DIE Belgrade (IPIl-The official news agency Tanjug said three more men injured in the collapse of scaffoldings at a bridge construction site on the Moraca river in Montenegro died Sunday, bringing the death toll to 22. The scaffolding col lapsed Saturday. MACMILLAN RETURNS TO LONDON London-lPIS-Prime Minister Harold Macmillan returned from his country home Sunday night to dine with Foreign Secretary the Earl of Home and Lord Privy Seal Edward Heath. A spokesman at the Prime Minister's London residence said Macmillan acted as host at the dinner, but there was no further information. Funeral Services Set Tuesday'for Mrs. Daugherty Mrs. Fred A. (Maude Ar nold) Daugherty, 68, of 2251 Kings highway, died Satur day night in a local hospital. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday in Conser Morris downtown chapel. The Rev. Fredrick Ross Evans of the First Christian church will officiate. Committal will be in Siskiyou Memorial Park. Mrs. Daugherty was born Dec. 19, 1893. in Sarcoxie, Mo and had lived in south ern Oregon for 48 years. She was a member of the First Christian church, a deaconess and member of the board of directors of the church. She did the floral decorations at the church for many years, and was the church repre sentative for the Jackson County Board of Christian Education. She was a member of Olive Rebekah lodge, was a past nobel grand, and hold er of the Degree of Chivalry. She was a member of the Daughters of Union Veterans, was past tent president and past state president. She was active in political, civic, and educational programs of the community. She was married Sept. 29, 1914, in Jackson ville, Ore., to Fred A. Daugh erty, who survives. Other survivors include four daughters, Mrs. Leona D. Gilinsky, Buena Park, Calif.; Mrs. J. Russell Ache son, Medford: Mrs. Shirrell R. Doty, Medford, and Mrs. Grant H. Hutchins, Ketchi kan, Alaska; her mother, Mrs. Harriet Arnold, Carth age, Mo.; five sisters, Mrs. Ethel Mers, Carthage, Mo.; Mrs. Alice Millican, Modesto, Calif.; Mrs. Gladys White, Ta. coma Park, Md.; Mrs. Opal Robert, Oroville, Calif., and Mrs. Alva Dodson, Carthage, Mo.; two brothers, J. F. Ar nold, Palm Springs, Calif., and Allen Arnold, Vancouver. Wash.; nine grandchildren and three great grandchil dren. Honorary bearers will in clude Charles Swingle, Ed McNew, E. D. Perkins, Ros coe L. Doty, Floyd Crary, Lee Baily and C. M. Hon. Active bearers will include W. H. Dyer, Clarence Hershi- ser, George Swinney, Wayne Wakefield, Marmie Olson and J. F. Evans. OBITUARIES ELLA KNIGHT Funeral services for M r s. Ella Knight, of Rogue River, who died Saturday, will be held Tuesday at 3 p.m. in Conger- Morris downtown chapel. The Rev. Harvey Coo vert of the Zion Lutheran church will officiate. Commit tal will be in Memory Gar dens Memorial park. Mrs. Knight was born July 13. 1879, in Drakeville, Iowa, and had lived in southern Oregon since 1894. She was a member of the Live Oak Grange, at Rogue River. She was married Nov. 13, 1896, to William A. Coverdale, who died in 1927. She was then married Jan. 23, 1930, in Med ford, to Robert G. Knight, who survives. Other survivors include two sons, Ned A. Coverdale, Med ford, and Elvert V. Coverdale, Rogue River; a daughter, Mrs. George Woodcock, Medford; two brothers, Ned Evans, Che halis, Wash., and Warren Evans, Portland; four sisters, Mrs. Ruth Walling, Portland; Mrs. Jodie Smith, Gales Creek, Ore.; Mrs. Vernie Chis holm, Anchorage, Alaska, and Mrs. Delia Little, Canada; two grandd a u g h t e r s, two great grandsons, and two great great grandchildren. Pall bearers will include William White, Phil Strahan, Lee Kyle, Lloyd Smith, Ern est Woodcock and Joseph Woodcock. Freedom 7 Mercury Capsule Duplicate To Be Displayed A duplicate Freedom 7 Mer cury spacecraft will be dis played here June 1, according to Russ Heysell, volunteer chairman of the treasury's savings bonds committee. The craft will be located at Main st. and Central ave. between 5 and 8 p.m. for inspection. The capsule is a part of a savings bond exhibit that is touring the country during the Freedom bond drive in May and June. Residents have been asked to purchase an extra savings bond during this period. The capsule is identical to the one that carried Ameri ca's first astronauts into space. It is mounted on a red, white and blue trailer, flanked by two flags. The public will be able to examine the space craft at close hand. The McDonnell Aircraft corporation, which designed and built the Mercury cap sules for the national aero nautics and space administra tion, donated the capsule to the treasury department for the drive. The Chevrolet Mo tor division of General Mo tors is providing as a public service the truck and trailer on which the capsule is mounted, as well as drivers, display signs, and public serv ice by the American Automo bile association. The spacecraft itself meas ures more than six feet in diameter at the base. Without the escape tower it stands over nine feet tall and weighs over a ton. The escape tower is 17 feet in length and weighs over 900 pounds. The Freedom 7 capsule to be shown here will have the es cape tower attached. On the base of the capsule, or leading face, is the heat shield with three retrograde rockets attached. Over-the-Counter Western Stocks By United Press International Bank of America 50?B calif rac utu (xai 2(M Con Freight 10l.a Cyprus Mines (xd) 22,s Equitable S & L 36 First National Bank .... 5114 Jantzen 29 Morrison Knudsen 3014 Mult Kennels 43s N.W. Nat'l Gas 28 Oregon Metallurgical .... 13s PP&L 24 Vt PGE 22 U S National Bank B7'i United Utilities 24 West Coast Tel (xdl 12 for 1 split) 17' Weyerhaeuser 28 ,i 53 'k 22 Ills 24 li 41 li 59 31 ", 32',i 5'i 30V, l'i 28 " 24 ' 73 26 v; ld'i 30 Portland Produce Portland (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers; AA extra large 39-42c; AA large 35-40c; A large 34-37c; AA medium 29-35c; A A small 24 -29c; cartons l-3c higher. Butter To retailers; AA and A prints 67c; cartons lc higher; B prints 68c. Cheese (medium cured) To re tailers: 47-48!4c: processed Ameri can 5-10 lb. loaf, 45-46 lie. Portland (UPI) Dressed chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers Fryers, whole drawn. Si alic lb.; cut-up. 36-42c lb.; hens light type, whole drawn 23-29C lb.; light type hens, cut-up 26-34C lb.; heavy whole 36-39C lb. TO GRADUATE Cadet David R. Spangler, son of Mr. and Mrs. John S. Span gler, route 1, Talent, is sched uled to graduate from the U.S. Military academy at West Point. N. Y., June 6. Upon graduation, Cadet Spangler will be commission ed a second lieutenant in the Corps of Engineers and will receive a bachelor of science degree. At West Point he was active in the Russian language and ski clubs. Spangler was also a member of the debate council and forum. Appointed to the academy by former Representative Charles O. Porter, he was a cadet sergeant during his sen ior yer. He is a 1958 graduate of Talent High school. An average of 5,100 doctors of medicine are graduated .. U K. 4U .. . i - - T INNERSPRING MATTRESS Chaise Lounge 11197 Value 2388 3" box Innenprlng pad Floral vfnyl cover Aluminum construction Adjustable positions ANGIE H. SUTHERLIN Funeral services for Mrs. Angie H. Sutherlin, 64, of 657 J St., who died Saturday, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Perl Funeral home. Dr. George Roseberry, pastor of the First Methodist church, will officiate. Interment will be private in Siskiyou Me morial park. Mrs. Sutherlin, the daugh ter of Pascal J. and Sylvia E. Halley, was born in Medford on Aug. 16. 1897. She lived all of her life in and around Medford. From 1922 to 1932. she was employed as a secre tary with the California Ore gon Power company in Med ford. May 7, 1932 in Medford, she was married to William L. Sutherlin, who survives. Other survivors Include one sister, Mrs. Charity Lee Reif, Sacramento, Calif., and one uncle. Worth Harvey, Eugene. Friends who wish may make a contribution to the heart fund. A 9 JACK FLIPPIN Jack Flippin, 66, formerly of Gold Hill, died Saturday at his home in Boston, Mass. He was born in Gold Hill and had been a member of the Boston police department (or 35 years. Survivors Include 5 sisters, including Mrs. Gertrude Rose crans, Gold Hill, and Mrs. L. S. Ettlnger, Medford; three brothers, his wife, and 10 children. DORIS L. BOOTH Mrs. Doris Louise Booth, of The Dalles, died there Satur day. The body will be return ed to Medford, where funeral arrange ments will be an nounced by Conger-Morris fu neral directors. It ft DRIVE-IN k J 1 fWTN MCIHC HUHrWvf ' FninsTn1iiTi LAST 2 NITES ;'i A? vMNCHEROS lS8ALISPSrViA(iilNi.?a. - PLUS - fie i nraaoms Fnrnrwrniy wwuhui kSBJ Phone 772-6424 mm TONIGHT Two Complete Shows 7:00 and 9:10 ELUISHITS THE ROAD TO UUGHTERRNO HirSMEWHIGH IN ROMANCE! C ' nneni rif ANHE JOINU BHUfliKJ .HELM MOORE JACK UNmoARmr KRUSCHEN ELVIS RtESLE k FOllOW THAT DREAM A TO PREPARE FOR SUMMER HEAT AND HUMIDITY For Just a few more days, the CalOre Electrical League dealers offer a generous allowance of $30 on indoor weather control for the hot, humid summer months. A $30 allow ance off the regular retail price on home air conditioning units installed as an Early Bird Buyers Bonus Award. The dealers pay you,-in effect, just. to stay comfortable. A wide selection of air. conditioning unit styles offers one certain to suit' the heeds of your home! WINDOW UNITS WALL UNITS MOBILE UNITS HEAT PUMPS Simply keeping cool is only a part of the story-for the modern air conditioner. New, decorator-designed units pro vide not only cool air but filtered, dehumidified fresh air circulated throughout the home to insure your hot weather living comfort and health. (All weather usefulness and convenience too: the fan-only settings provide instant cir culation of fresh air to remove cooking and household odors in any time of year. Don't wait until the temperature soars to 90 stifling degrees . . .. and don't miss out on the CalOre Electrical League Early Bird Buyers Bonus Award ... $30 on units of 8,000 BTU capacity or more . . . just to stay comfortable . . during the next few days . . . before the high tempera ture season hits! This offer is subject to withdrawal with out notice see your favorite. CalOre Electrical League dealer today! Agreeable Part Appliance Mart 772-4131 HOTPOINT Big Y Appliance Center 773-3052 WfSTINGHOUSt Feldman & Olson 773-261 1 FEDDERS Home Appliance Co. 773-3395 GENERAL ELECTRIC Johnston Stores 773-3619 RCA-WHIRLPOOL icipating Dealers: Leonard Electric Co. 773-4541 FRIGID AIRE-AM AN A Modern Plumbing 773-5368 CARRIER Montgomery Ward & Co. 773-7301 VARDS TRU-COLD Paulsea & Gates Thitt Mar 664-2283 AMA0A TrowbriM 773 6241 WESTII Se your fovoriti ColOn Electricol-Ltc-gut participating dealer for fi.ll details of (hit offer. com jcai uj iiativii s if medical schools. o