Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 28, 1962, Image 19

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MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGOU
THURSDAY, J UN TC. 1962
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MEDFORD
APPLIANCES
Divtnport Appliance Shop, 405 N. Cen
tral Ax.
AUTO REPAIRS
John's Tuna-up & Repair, 702 Stewart
Park Moron, Inc., 134 So. Riverside
AUTO SUPPLIES
Bill Scarlott'i Auto Supplies, 40 So. Bart
lert AVIATION CAS
Valley Aviation Service, Medford Mu
nicipal Airport
BULK OIL t GAS
Frisbie Union Oil Co., 103 McAndrewi
Road
CLEANERS & LAUNDRIES
Rio, Y Cleaners, 1928 Table Rock Road
Modern Cleaners, 211 W. Main
DRUG STORES
West Main Pharmacy, 135 W. Main
Wainscort's Pharmacy, 400 E. Main
Central Rexall Drug, Main & Central Sri.
FLORISTS & GREENHOUSES
Rogue Valley Greenhouses, 625 Fran
quette FLOORING
S & W Floor Covering, 709 S. Riverside
FUEL OIL COMPANIES
Olympic Petroleum & Equipment, 1050
S. Riverside
Medford Fuel Co., 265 E. McAndrewi
Road
TIRE SERVICE
Medford Tire Service, 123 S. Riverside
GROCERIES
Corner Grocery. 2211 Table Rnck Rnad
Court Street Grocery, 940 N. Central
Ellis Market, 820 Crater Lake Ave.
Gilman's Dairy Farm, Inc., 482 Beall
Lane
Snowy Butte Grocery, 5010 Crater Lake
Hiway
Piggly Wiggly Store, Stewart ft King
M 4t M Market, Griffin Creek Road
HARDWARE
Floyd Hibbard's Hardwart, 310 E. Main
Siskiyou Hardware, 225 W. Main
JEWELRY
Andy's Jewelry, 218 E. Main
MULTIBARK
Kogap Lumber Industries, 2080 S. Pacifie
MOTEL
"99" Motel, 816 N. Riverside
MOVING i STORAGE
Franklin Van & Storage, 340 N. Fir St.
OFFICE EQUIPMENT
Voight's Medford Office Equipment, 41
S. Grape
OPTICAL SERVICE
Columbian Optical Co., 335 E. Jackson
St.
PAINTS
Ekersnn Paint & Roofing Store, 619 E.
Jackson
Medford Paint i Wallpaper Co., 6th I
Holly
PHOTO SHOP
Anders Photo Shop, 232 E. Main St.
WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS
Superior Rubber Stamp Co.,
38 N. Harriett
SPORTING GOODS
(Ski & Skate Equipment)
Rogue Ski Shop, 619 E. Jackson
Rogue Valley Sporting Goods, 4768 Cra
ter Lake Ave.
SEWING MACHINES
Morse Sewing Center, 219 S. Central
SERVICE STATIONS
Bud's Easrside Texaco Service, 529 E.
Main
Crosby's Mobil Service, Jackson & Me
Andrews St.
Desert Service, 6779 Crater Lake High
way Ed Ross Mobil Service, 1 1th & Central
Hal's Flying A, 836 Crater Lake Highway
Jim Clark's Signal Service, 6th & Grape
St.
Horton's Richfield Service, 1120 E. Jack
son Jim's Signal Service, 300 Crater Lake
Highway
Kennedy's Union Service, 1251 S. River
side St.
Learn'.n Service, 3628 S. Pacific Highway
Messer's Mobil Service, Central & Jack
son St.
Medford Truck Terminal, 1050 S. River
side Oakgrove Service, 2809 W. Main
Pruirr's Mobil Station, W. Main & Ivy
Read's Mobil Service, 700 Stewart
Richfield Truck t Auto Service, 2390 N.
Pacific Highway
Rothler's Shell Service, 6th & Front
Sandy's, 1504 N. Riverside
Ed's Downtown Shell Service, 101 E.
Sixth
Fred's 99 Chevron, 820 N. Riverside
Harold Jones Union Service, 201 N. Riv
erside Jim's Shell Service, 2101 Barnett Road
Ray's Texaco, 1816 W. Main
Ron's Richfield, 2300 Jacksonville High
way Side's Richfield. 1175 Court St.
White's Shell Service, 530 Crater Lake
Ave.
TENTS AND AWNINGS
Burk's Tent & Awning, 314 E. Main St.
WELL DRILLING
Goff Bros. Well Drillers, 22S W. Main St.
ASHLAND
APPLIANCE SALES & SERVICE
Maytag Shop, 1606 Hwy. 66
BEAUTY SHOPS
Ashland Beauty Shop, 69 E. Main St.
Charm Center Beauty Salon, 1257 Siski
you DRY CLEANERS
Wardrobe Cleaners, 45 N, Main
DRUGS
Ideal Drug. Inc., 1475 Siikivou
East Side Pharmacy, 264 East Main St.
FURNITURE
Herndobler's Furniture Co. (New), 125 E.
Main St.
Wick's Furniture (Unpainted), 297 E.
Main St.
George B. Icenhower (Used), 389 E. Main
St.
FUEL
Frisbie Union Oil Co., Fuel Oil
GARAGE
Foothills Garage, 2445 Siskiyou Blvd.
HARDWARE
Ashland General Hardware, 90 N. Pioneer
JEWELRY
B & J Jewelry, 283 E. Main St.
LAUNDROMAT
Laundromat, At the Campus
MARKETS
99 Market, 172S Siskiyou Blvd.
Oregon Food Store, 1475 Siskiyou Blvd.
Plata Market, 59 N. Main St.
Pioneer Market, 2nd and Oak
SERVICE STATIONS
Bowman's Signal Service, 1765 Siskiyou
Blvd.
Ivan's Shell Service, 449 East Main St.
Pruett's Mobil Service, 1307 Siskiyou
Blvd.
North Main Union Service
Wolff Bros. Chevron Service, 105 N.
Main St.
LADIES' APPAREL
Bon Baxaar, 1475 Siskiyou
MEN'S SHOP
Bobbett's, 167 East Main St.
STATIONERY & RECORDS
The Mart, 270 East Main St.
CENTRAL POINT
CLEANERS
Central Point Cleaners, 40 W. Pine St.
DRUGS
Central Point Pharmacy, 236 E. Pine St.
HARDWARE
Alexander's Hardware, 317 E. Pine St.
MARKETS
Glass Grocery, 3284 Hanlcy Rd.
Table Rock Store, Rt. 2
NURSERY
S ft H Landscape Nursery, 3358 Bursell
Rd.
SERVICE STATIONS
Bob Stewart Chevron Service, 441 S.
Front St.
Krupp's Flying A Service, 16 No. Pacific
Hwy.
Midway Shell Service, Table Rock Rr.
Pine St. Service, 414 Pine St.
EAGLE POINT
Eagle Market
Roy's Chevron Servicn
Hat's Market, Groceries & Ga
Midway Country Store, Groceries & Gas
BUTTE FALLS
Butte Falls Shell Service
PROSPECT
Prospect Store
Ray's Prospect Chevron
TRAIL
Sunset on the Rogue, Groceries & Gas
SHADY COVE
The Cove Drug
Cove Variety
Hammond's Signal Service
Cove Motor Service
PHOENIX
DRUGS
Gier Drug Store, 104 South Main St.
HARDWARE
Phoenix Hardware, 106 1st St.
MARKET
Norton's Food Market, 4223 South Pac.
Hwy.
SERVICE STATIONS
Phoenix Richfield, 101 1st St,
Webb Signal Service, No. Pac. Hwy.
RADIO S TV REPAIR
Pete's Radio ft TV, 100 No. 1st St.
TALENT
FOOD LOCKERS & MKTS.
Valley Locker, Groceries and Meats
HARDWARE
Talent Hardware
SERVICE STATIONS
Galbraith Mobil Service
Snappy Service, Hiway 99 South
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ORPHANS AIDED Two of 40 Chinese new parents for more than 10.000 children
orphans from Hong Kong are welcomed by since it was founded by Miss Russell eight
actress Jane Russell, left, and WAIF worker years ago. One-year-old Lai Siau, left, is
Mrs. A. Lee, at Los Angeles. WAIF is an going to a home in Ohio and Yuknie Lai is
intercountry adoption program of Interna- going to a home in Palo Alto, Calif. (UPI)
tional Social Service that has helped find
Oregon Supreme
Court Deciions
Salem -(UPD- The Oregon
Supreme Court, in a 6-1 deci
sion, said Wednesday that ev
idence which could be law
fully seized with a search
warrant in a suspect's home
can also be seized without a
warrant upon a lawful arrest.
By so ruling, the court af
firmed the rape conviction nf
Raymond H. Chinn, Portland.
The question involved in
Chinn's appeal was seizure of
Brownlon affirmed; decree
which modifies a previous di
vorce decree and denies a fa
ther custody of two children
affirmed; the decree also de
clares him to be the father
of a child born after the di
vorce, and requires him to
support the third child.
Eileen Raz vs. Ruth Mills,
appellant; appeal from Yam
hill county; opinion by Jus
time Goodwin; Judge Arlie
certain items in his apart- G. Walker affirmed; $23,504
ment
Going on information sup
plied by the rape victim, of
ficers went io Chinn's home
He was not home but the
officers were admitted by
other occupants.
The policemen looked
through the apartment and
noticed the items in question,
in plain sight. Later, when
Chinn returned home, he was
arrested and without a
search warrant the officers
confiscated the items later
used as evidence.
May Be Reasonable
Writing the majority opin
ion, Justice Alfred T. Good
win said "If there is a bona
fide arrest for a known of
fense and officers make the
search as a true incident of
the arrest rather than as an
effort to discover some
grounds for the arrest, then
fairly intensive search may
be reasonable, depending up
on all the facts of the case."
Goodwin said "This excep
tion is necessary to gather the
fruits of the crime, the imple
ments thereof, and possibly
to prevent the destruction of
evidence thereof."
Justice Kenneth O'Connell
dissented. He said the items
in question weren't within the
class for which the law calls
for a search warrant. Also,
he sard, the officers had pre
vious knowledge of the items
and had plenty of lime to gel
a search warrant.
The majority ruling affirm
ed Multnomah County Circuit
Judge J. J. Murchison.
Other decisions:
Slate vs. Edward Everett
Cruse, appellant; appeal from
Marion county: opinion by
Chief Justice William McAl
lister; Judge George R. Dun-
ran affirmed; conviction of
Cruse, of Salem, on a charge
of obtaining money and prop
erty by false pretenses affirmed.
O. Jay BrogoittI and Mar
jorie C. Brogoitti, appellants
vs. Dons M. Brown, C. W.
Brown, and the state; appeal
irom Umatilla county; opin
ion by Justice Georee Ross
man; Judge William W. Wells
affirmed; decree partitioning
a wheal ranch near Pendle
ton affirmed.
State vs. David A. Brown,
appellant; appeal from Mult
nomah county; opinion by
Justice William Perry; Judge
Alfred T. Sulmonctti affirm
ed; Brown's conviction for
assault and robbery with a
dangerous weapon affirmed.
Hallinan Mackin Lumber
Co., Inc., vs. Esquire Lumber
Co., appellant; appeal from
Multnomah county; opinion
by Justice Gordon Sloan;
Judge Alfred T. Sulmonctti
affirmed; $2,223 judgment re
covered by Macklin Lumber
for breach of warranty affirm
ed.
Phyllis Moore vs. Trddy
Moore, appellant; appeal from
Union county; opinion by Jus
tlcejO'Connel Jidge W. T.
judgment recovered by Mrs
Raz for injuries in a car
crash affirmed.
Slate vs. Frank S. Russell,
appellant; appeal from Mal
heur county; opinion by Jus
tice Goodwin: Judge Jeff D.
Dorroh Jr. reversed; convic
tion of Russell on a charge
of stealing livestock reversed
due lo failure of the state to
prove the crime stated In the
indictment.
Joe D. Parks vs. Edward
Mines Lumber Co. and South
ern Pacific Co., appellants;
appeal from Lane county;
opinion by Justice Goodwin;
Judge Pro Tern Victor Oliver
reversed; employers' liability
action with $5,225 recovered
by Parks, an employee of
Hines Lumber; case sent back
for new trial.
State vs. Edwin Ralph
Shaw, appellant; appeal from
Multnomah county; opinion
by Justice Goodwin; Judge
J. J. Murchison affirmed;
Shaw's conviction for assault
and robbery with a danger
ous weapon affirmed.
Hearing on Rail
Merger Continues
Minneapolis, Minn. - (UPD
The final phase of the Inter
state Commerce Commission's
hearings on the proposed mer
ger of four western railroads
returned here Wednesday aft
er a series ot hearings in
states affected by the merger.
The applicants, Great
Northern, Northern Pacific,
Burlington and Seattle, Port
land and Spokane railways,
submitted rebuttal testimony,
answering the claims made by
intervenors in the past two
months.
Representatives of those op
posing the merger then were
permitted to cross-examine
witnesses for the applicants.
ICC Examiner Robert Mur
phy said the hearing would
move to SI. Paul today it
more lime were needed.
Six-Orbit Space
Trip Will Seek
'To Plug Holes'
Langley AFB, Va. - il'PU -Astronaut
Waller Schirra will
set out on a possible six-orbit
space flight in late summer
"to plug some holes" before
the united States tries to sur
pass the Russian feat of 17
orbits.
"I'm looking toward it very
much. It's what I've been
working toward for three
years," Schirra told a news
conference here following the
announcement Wednesday by
the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration in
Washington.
Longest Venture
A six-orbit flighl would be
America's longest space ven
ture, doubling the flights of
astronauts John II. Glenn, Jr.
and Scott Carpenter. Schirra
said longer flights were neces
sary to "give us more time to
study the systems" of exist
ing spacecrafts.
"We can't leap from three
orbits lo 24 hours (18 orbits)
without trying to plug some
holes," said the 30-year-old
Navy lieutenant commander
from Hackensack, N. J. NASA
docs not plan an 18-orbilal
mission until next year.
NASA officials said the
number of orbits would de
pend on several factors, in
cluding the condition of the
astronaut during earlier
bits. "Anything more than
three orbits should be con
sidercd a bonus," said D.
Brainerd Holmes, chief of
NASA's manned space flight
programs.
Probably in September
NASA said Schirra would
be rocketed from Cape Ca
naveral "late this summer."
Informed sources placed the
probable time in September.
Air Force Maj. L. Gordon
Cooper, 36, youngest of the
seven astronauts, was picked
as Schirra's backup pilot and
would assume control of the
capsule if something happen
ed to Schirra before blast-olf.
Franklin Credited
With First Bathtub
New York - (UPD - The Tile
Council of America credits
Benjamin Franklin with intro
ducing the first formal bath
tub to America.
The Council said Ben's tun
"was shoe-shaped and made of
copper" - a far cry from the
ceramic tile step-down tubs
j the industry is turning out
! this year.
Springfield Man
Killed in Crash
Eugene - (UPD - An accident
involving a car and two
trucks killed a Springfield
man near here Wednesday
afternoon. A Eugene man was
critically hurt.
Sheridan M. Hills, 34. a
partner in a Eugene television
specialty shop, died in a hos
pital shortly after the acci
dent. Kenneth Gibson, 41, was
in critical condition at Sacred
Heart Hospital. He suffered
multiple fractures.
State police said the two
men were riding in a panel
truck. Officers said another
car apparently sideswiped the
small truck, forcing it into
the path of a tanker-truck.
DIVIDEND NOTICE
The Board of Directors has
declared a dividend of 6 cents
per share from net investment
income, payable June 29, 1962,
to ihtreh older of record June
15, 196:.
Pacific Northwest Company
Investment Adviser and Underwnttr
TCdmiind K. Hut, Vira Prm. t- Mirr.
ai Kluhrer Rid., fi S. CimlrnI Av.
Mlford, Ore., SPnng 3-7319
Jackson To Present
Pins for Service
Salem - (UPD - Nine slate
highway depart ment em
ployees will be given 40 year
service pins here Friday by
Glenn L. Jackson, Medford,
chairman of the highway com
mission. The nine are among 436 em
ployees wno will receive
awards for 10 or more years of
service.
The nine are Walter Krue
ger. Myrtle Point; William L.
Lock year, Eugene; Earl
Stream, Portland, and six Sa
lem residents - Ed Chidsey,
E. G. Ricketts, Carl Schnie
der, Gertrude Chamberlain,
Rockwell Simpson, and A. E.
Arrhibald.
Forty-three per cent of all
department employees have
worked for the agency 10 or
more years.
NO CHEST PROBLEMS
Portland, Ore. - (UPD - Dag-
mar, a comedienne noted for
her ample proportions,
Wednesday offered one wom
an's view on smoking and
cancer. "I smoke heavily," she
told a reporter, "but frankly
I have never had any trouble
with my chest."
Shop Tonite
' 6:30 lo 9 it
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DON'T BE SHY
London - (UPD - The British
National Bedding Foundation
today advised women shop
pers they shouldn't be reluc
tant to lie down on a store bed
they Intend lo purchase. "Ask
the salesman If you ein't bor
row a pillow," Ihe federation
added.
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