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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1962)
WEDNESDAY, JUNj 13. 1962 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORECON Court Records Jl RTirK COURT AshUnd IHHrirl Wayne C. Filloon. overload. $38. Howard E Burdge. overload. V22 Freeman M. Allen, overload, $2fi Harold D Lawler. overload, $28 Marvin S. Cook, inadequate emergency brake, $10. Esielle P- Dodd, expired vehicle license, $5. George h Ferguson, viola'eon of bacic rule, (10. George R. Pedrantl, overwidth. Allan E Oakea. violation of ba air rule. $10 Wayne E- Berg, violation of ba nc rule, $10 Billy A Langley, no operator licence. $5. Clarence B. Foitcr, disobeyed top sign, $1.V J , Mervln J. Utter, disobeyed atop ign. $15 t , Harvey W. Gibson, no operator t license. $3 I ma E. Carter, violation or basic rule. $10 Larry E. Hibbard. no atop light, tin. Robert h LaKaunce. inadequate emergency brake. $10 Marvin R. Erects, failure to dia plav PUC permit. $100. Edward A. Ciesiensky. over width. $1.1. Walter M. Scott, overload. $13. Freeman M. Allen, overload. $22. Roland M. Roberta, no kafety chain. $10. Albert C. Livingston, inadequate emergency brake, $10. Onu B. Boyd, no horn. $10. Gavlon H. Br u baker, no head lighti $10. Dennis R. Mitchell, overload. $2fi. Michael E. Holt, improper muff, ler $10. Frederick H. Kerhy. diiobeyed top oign. $13. Marv Y Dugan, violalion of ha gtc rule $10. Riley M. Amrlne, improper chancing nf lane. $13 Loren Wilbur Walter, overload, 1 3 Adrien L. Wigley, overload, $40. AKHl.AND MUNX'IIMr, COURT Ltlbern Victor Peterson, viola tion of bflnic rule, $13. Llnyd Harold Stewart, diiobeyed traffic signal. $3. MKIIFOKI) MUNICIPAL (Ol'RT Wendell Morns Carson, disobey ed traffic signal, $10, violation of basic rule. $10 William Ray Reynolds, improper lane ubage, $10 William George Oilman, exces sive noise cures), $10. William Jackson Warner, dis obeved traffic signs. $10 Frank Louis Roberts Jr., expired vehicle license tabs. $3. Diana Lee Nordstrom, improper lane usage, $10. Myrna Joyce Hanson, disobeyed traffic signal. $10. Jack Edward Jones, violalion of basic rule, $10. Nattie Loui.se Phillips, no visible registration. $3 Robert Charles Mount, violation of lasic rule $10 Don Hurler! William, four in fron' seal, $10 Philip Gordon Johnson, failure to slop betore entering public street from a private drive. $13 Edward William Chrtmensen. violalion of basic rule, $23 Wavne Monroe Brandon, dis obeyed trallic signal. $10 Donald Kenneth MrGovrrn. wrong wav on one wav street, $10. Robert Stanley Sloehr, violalion nt basic rule. $10 Darlene Jean Plakenhnrn. fail ure to obtain Oregon operator's liceiihe $23. Gene Wyall, excessive noise (tires). $10 Claude Stevens, following too close. $23. Grange News IlISTKIC'T COI'RT Alan B. Cnttrpll. vinlaltnn nf bade rule. $111 Clarence Edward Smith, viola tion nf bfmif rule. tin. Jernld Wayne Denham. violation of haute rule. J2.V John Ruter, no vehicle llceniie, S Ronald Lee Smithhlnler. over heigh! load. $l.v Everett Woorirow Brlttaina. over helcht load. $I.V Charlc Albert Wallace, over heiKht load, l.v Luther Laverne Lambert, over load. $4. Rupert Emmel Wood, overload, Sun Don LrRoy Kiliera. overhelght load. $7,311. Shady Cov. Gran?. The Shady Cove Grange honored the mothers on Moth ers' day with a fried chicken dinner served by the men be fore the regular meeting. Grange Sunday was ob served with many members attending the Community Church in Shady Cove. Those receiving the first and sec-Md degrees of the Orange were Jan and Lan Duscnberry. John and Wilma Patrick, Howard and Laura Murphy. Richard. Chester, and Phyllis Calloway and Gary and Glenda Kaiser. They are to take their third and fourth decrees at Roxy Ann. The Grange properly on Long Branch has been sold and the money placed in the building fund. The day HF.C meeting was held at the A. B. Clark home on Butte Creek. The June meeting will be held at Mrs. Mary Cassals home on Crater Lake high way. During the lecturer's pro- Wllliam Ruben Peyton, overload, 23. CIRCUIT COl'ICT ' John Karl Muller. divorce decree. MAItrtlAriK LICENSE AI'I'I ICATION Georce Kwone Jr.. 212 Mtasi nve Carmirhar . Calif.. Sylvia Phipna. S2I6 Kauai Way Fairnaka. Calif. nd gram John Patrick spoke of his coming trip to Europe. He was presented with a $25 check from the Grange. Sev eral Grange members gave him another $25 to help fi nance his trip. A number of the members plan to attend the state Grange session in Grants Pass. Several are also lakinfi part in the stale lecturer' program. The June 16 meeting will honor Father's Day with the ladies of the Grange serving the refreshments. Central Point Grange Central Point Grange will meet Friday, June 15. The lecturer is preparing a varied program. During the business session, final plans will be announced for the pancake breakfast to be open to the public Sunday, June 17. liie Oregon Slate Grange will convene Monday morn ing in Grants Pass. The state lecturer's program will be Monday June IB, at 8 p.m. This is open to the public. The sixth degree will be giv en later in the week. Burbage, England - OIPD - Yorkmen investigating why the parish church clock slop ped found three bird's nests and enough straw to fill two buckets. V' ' ' W t t.im Tlma was when t chair was hardly more than a few V. i v ref F'A'Vf crude pieces of wood. Today, however, it must provide ' f f J , i "t 1 both distinguished beauty and a wonderful feeling of f ' S':"5y'4; relaxation and comfort. V&f ' jR V m At McGuIre's you'll find choosing the right chair fiV'7 most pleasant experience a chair that is the perfect I complement to your home and other furnishings be- 1 p Vjf ff(J cause it has been selected from hundreds of the mot v: 'f beautiful contemporary styles in a wide array of rich j J fabrics and decorator colors. Every chair at McGuire's CM $ is a model of superb styling, comfort, and craftsman- fy jf ship, yet prices are pleasingly low. ,t ' v -J'j TAKE THE TIME ' tfJ TO BROWSE A I 1 I! tf THROUGH THE STORE 7'" V V WW . . . YOU'U FIND IT ' (.l , .... f,i4-' ! TRULY REWARDING : ( " frM WHERE You Buy h Just i Important i WHAT You Buyl 1 220 NORTH BARTLETT Nexl to Greyhound Phone 773-4394 OPEN FRIDAYS 'TIL 9.00 1 fed 9s , .i M .'. l I ' ft! fg . W I J I hi J L4 . r ISSUE 'SERIOUS WARNING' Tokyo - (UPC - Communist China Tuesday charged that an American 'warship entered its waters. It issued the coun try's 206th "serious warning" against the alleged violation, according to the Communist New Chtrla News Agency. DAIRY PRINCESS St. Helens -HPIj- Pat Kail berg, 18, has been named Columbia county's 1962 Dairy Princess. Pat will compete in the statewide contest later this month. The last two state Dairy Princesses have come from Columbia county. ) GYM-DANDY feims) Vs&S' V 2 Swing Gym Set $34.95 ALL FOR 2 Ball Croquet Set 3.98 M Qf) 25 Foot Garden Hote 1.49 VA.OU 10 Foot Fence Witkets 1.29 rVTT TOTAL VALUE $41.71 $4.88 Down, $5.00 Mo. OTHER SETS From $17.83 'FAIREST OF THE FAIR' - Judith Down- eyed brunette will reign over Southern Call ing, 17, Miss Vista, was named San Deigo fornia Exposition and County Fair at Del County's "Fairest of the Fair." The hazel- Mar on June 29. (UPI) Won't Give An Inch Congressman Gross of Iowa Noted For Standinq Firm on Convictions Bv DICK WEST United Press International Washington -tUPII- Rep. H. rt. Cross of Iowa has the repu tation of standing firm on his convict! o n s. Once he takes a position for or against something, he won't give an inch. Or, put inn it another way, he won't budget 2.54 centimct e r s. u'.. Last month. Gross became an unmovable object in the path nf a bill to provide $500,000 for a study on whether it would be practicable for the United States to adopt the metric system. The bill came to the House floor requiring unanimous consent for approval, and Gross was not in the mood for unanimity. Therefore, sponsors of the measure are now seeking to circumvent this obstacle by bringing the bill back to the floor under a rule requiring only majority approval. Gross says he will continue to oppose it. His opposition is not based so much on adoption of the metric system as on spending Jobless Benefits Cut Being Studied Salem -(UP1- The advisory committee to the Oregon De partment of Employment has under advisement a sugges tion that unemployment in surance benefits be curtailed for short term seasonal work ers who draw benefits. The suggestion was made in Portland Monday by Irvan Congleton, general manager of Associated Oregon Indus tries, and John T. Matthews, chairman of AOI's unemploy ment insurance committee. A. restriction on the period that seasonal workers could draw benefits was proposed. They said employers with stable wage earners are sub sidizing the payment of bene fits to employees of seasonal industries, Wilderness Area In Heart of N. J. Trenton, N. J. - IUPI) - New Jersey is the most urbanized state in the union, yet it con tains a vast primitive wilder ness abounding with Revolu tionary history and with ac tivities for the vacationer. Situated in the middle of South Jersey, a two - hour drive from New York and an hour from Philadelphia, lies lhe 98.000 - acre Wharton Tract which embraces swamps, forests, ghost towns and backwoodsmen. The area may be reached by traveling south from New York on the Garden State Parkway and then west on Route S42 or east from Phil adelphia on Roule .10. The tract is interlaced with lakes and the Mullica River and its tributaries. This plen tiful water supply provides abundant fishing grounds, swimming areas and accom modations for boating. Its slunted forests and swamplands contain an abun dance of game for hunting. Camping, hiking trails and botanical rarities are enjoved by vacationers who visit the tract each year. $500,000. He figures that is a sizeable chunk of money re-; gardless of how it is measured. Gross contends that the Na tional Bureau of Standards al ready knows everything there is to know about the metric system. Giving it $500,000 for. further Ihree-year survey would in his view be super fluous. It remains lo he seen hnw the issue wHl be resolved, but I one doesn't need to know as much as the Bureau of Stand ards to know that the metric system would greatly alter the pattern of American life. The machinist's union re-1 cently looked into the situa-j tion and reported these find ings: -Many familiar advertising slogans would need revision. Prune juice, for instance, would no longer be sold in the "giant half-quart" size. Under the metric system, it would be sold in the "giant half-liter" j size. ! -Steaks, chops, roasts and other meat would be sold by i the kilogram, plus, of course, the weight of the butcher's thumb. A kilogram equals 2.204R2 pounds, of which per haps the five digits behind the decimal point would repre sent the thumb. -Department stores would no longer sell yard goods. They would sell B1.44 centi meters goods. Eventually. I suppose, all of us would become accustomed to the new measuring system as it would apply to most of our everyday activities. But there is one aspect that dis turbs me deeply. The machinists' union has figured out that under the metric system the ideal femi nine measurements would be "85, 59. 85." I don't think I rnuld ever learn to enjoy girl-watching in centimeters. , .,, Jtu.uNtnDj ) GYM-DANDY fc) TANGLE TOWER FOR CLIMBING FUN!!! SAVAGE ROTARY MOWERS CLOSE OUT 3r i ' -N 1 FOR I 66c Mada of super strong Polystyrene. It It durable, withstands rough treatments. Sanitary and practically non-breakable. Corrugated carrying case. 1 For All Favorite Dads on Sunday, June 17 FATHER'S DAY CARDS and GIFTS for DAD Leather Goods Smoking Accessories Chess Sets Books Records Bar-B-Q Supplies and Many, Many Others "The Store of a Thousand Thoughtful Gifts" Roller Skates 1.98 to 4.88 i wri I,, i.i 13 1 V "Ill TASCO 5VTE 60 PO ALL-PURPOSE iLi'W.V;vJj LUNAR TELESCOPE Brings the moon to within 4,000 milesl Four different power settings -15-30-45 & 60 power, pre cision rack-and-pimon focusing Sturdy, steady hardwood tri pod gives firm support. Long sunshade for no-g'are daytime viewing. Handy gift carrying container. Come in, see this and other outstanding telescope values. 88 Other Taico Telescopes Availale 4 VTE $ 9 88 TE $19 88 SIM CYCLE & HOBBY SHOP Phone 772-2472 23 North Fir