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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1962)
JORDON-To Mr. and Mrs. Harold, route 1, box 2934, Central Point, July 21, 1962, n girl, 7'4 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. CLIFFORD To Mr. and Mrs. Galen W., route 1, box 185, Eagle Point, July 21, 1962, a boy, 74 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. KEZER - To Mr. and Mrs. .Johnny Lee, 531 South Ivy si., Medford, July 22, 1962, a boy, 7 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. PADGHAM - To Mr. and Mrs. Robert E,( 522 J St., Med ford, July 22. 1962, a boy, 6 pounds, at Rogue Valley hos pital. CHAPMAN - To Mr. and Mrs. James C. 205 Girard dr., Medford, July 23, 1962. a girl, 8 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. TYSON - To Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J., 641 Faith st., Ash land, July 23. 1962, a girl, 6;;4 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. H1NKS - To Mr. and Mrs. James L., post office box 346, Eagle Point, July 18, 1962, a boy, 8 pounds, at Crater Os teopathic hospital. WITT - To Mr. and Mrs. James W.. Post office box 291, Talent, July 23, 1962, a girl. 5 pounds, at Crater Osteopathic hospital. HAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR TRY OUR FAMOUS PIZZA SUPREME MADE WITH 7 KINDS OF CHEESE, BAKED IN 750 OVENS FRIENDLY FAMILY ATMOSPHERE large or Small Parties ALWAYS WELCOME OPEN NOON DAILY ORDERS TO GO 773-7721 BETWEEN RIVERSIDE AND CENTRAL ON EAST JACKSON 215 E. JACKSON MEDFORD LADIES PASSES NOT ?(&( mm ON SCREEN ONCE ONLY EACH NITE AT 8:55 P.M. "THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF THE YEAR ...RIPS THE HEART!" B0SLEY CR0WTHER. NEW YORK TIMES 5 . r, n ? 0TT0 PAUL NEWMAN EVA MARIE SAINT RALPH RICHARDSON PETER LAWF0RD LEE J.COBB SAL MINE0 JOHN DEREK JILL t.EJT CCL0 Pm0T0CMED IN SUPC U"HD ARTISTS DELtASt ADDED ATTRACTION! On Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity Hot with rnntinued threat ol evening thun derstorms over the mountains TuobddV. Low tonight 55-60. high ' Tuesday 93 ; Western Orejion: Fair mnisht and Tuesday except lor coastal morning cloudiness. Chance of t hundershowers over the moun tains in all seel inns Tuesday after noon. Low tonight 48-"i8 and hich Tuesday 84-90. except 95-100 in the southern Interiors. Northern California: Fair tonight and Tuesday except a few thunder storms in the high mi untains. Fog on the coast. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 78: above normal 5. Record hiph this date 105 in 1928. Record low this date 44 in 1922. PRECIPITATION: None. Total this month T., .14 in below normal. Total since Sept. 1 15 38 in ', 2 53 in. below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 17',.. highest this a m. 7'V. It i th 4:0O24-" CITY Yeter- a.m. nr. dav Low Prer. Brookings Grants Pass . . Howard Prairie Klamath Falls . MEDFORD Portland Seattle Spokane Yakima . ' Eureka Red Bluff Sacramento San Francisco . T. -.102 .. 87 SH 4! S3 58 57 . inn 91 57 103 Las Angeles Phoenix .. 105 88 Denver Chicago Miami Beach New York Washington. D.C. . R3 83 fi7 73 FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through July jit : Western Washington - Western Oregon Temperatures much above normal. High in western Washing ton. 78-88; in western Oregon 88 98. except 62-72 on the coast. Lows 48-58 and little or no precipitation. Northern California No rain likclv. except a few thunderstorms in the high mountains. Temper atures averaging above to much above normal. Portland Livestock Portland (UPIl USD A Cattle 1.700. Choice slaughter steers 1000 1078 Ihs. 27; mixed good and choice 900-1 1U0 lbs. 2U-26.30; good 24-26; heifers mixed and good and choice 7SO-875 lbs. 25-25.25; utility 15-17; canner and cutter 10-14; high yield ing cutter 14.50; utility and com mercial bulls 19-20. Calves 200. Good and choice vealers and slaughter calves 24-27. Hogs BOO. No. 1 and 2. 190-240 lbs. 20.50-20.75; no. 2 and 3. 180 240 lbs. 19-20; sown no. 1 and 2. 300-370 lbs. 16-16.50; no. 2 and 3 sows 10.50-13. Sheep 3.000. Choice and prime slaughter spring lambs 10.50; most choice 1 8.50-1 fli Rood and low choice 70-85 lbs. 16-17.50; cull to good slaughter ewes 2-4. Portland Produce Portland i UPIi Dairy market; Eggs To retailers: AA extra large, 42c-46c; AA large 39-44c; A large 38-40c; AA medium 32-37c; AA small 24-30c; cartons l-3c high- Cr Butter To retailers: A A and A prints B7c; cartons 1c higher; B prints 66c. Cheese (medium cured t To retailers: 47 - 48 '3c; processed American 5-10 lb. loaf, 45-46'2c. Portland tUPIi Dressed chickens No. l grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn. 31 38c lb.; cut-up. 37-42C lb.; hens light type, whole drawn 23-29c In.; lighlv tvpe hens, cut-up 26-34c lb.; heavy whole 36-3!c lb. Investment Funds Noon quotations on stocks; l-'tind Bullock .... Chemical Fund Colonial Ener Eaton Howard Stk .... Fidelity Fundamental Investors Group Scc-Avia-Elec Group Sec-Corn Stk .... Group Sec-Petr Kcvstone B-3 . Keystone B-4 Keystone K-2 Keystone S-l Keystone S-2 Keystone S-3 Kcvstone S-4 Mass Inv Grth Stk .... Nat l Growth . Stocks TV - Elcc 1 United Accum ...... United Canada .. . United Continental .. United Income . United Science . Value Line Inc Variable I Wellington Rid AvkPd 11.48 12.59 U.21 10.02 10.44 1 1 lift 13 fi7 B.25 6.33 1 1 .53 10.35 14.69 8.99 4.43 19.02 10.83 1 1 .911 3.57 6.74 6 R2 15.50 6 75 12 19 15 26 6.02 10.63 5.64 4. HO 5.51 13 35 11.41 12.62 14 78 9.04 ti.94 12 .63 1 1 .34 16.03 9.81 4.84 20.75 11.82 12.98 3.91 7.37 7 45 16 86 7.36 13 32 16 59 ft 58 1 1 .62 6 12 5 36 5.96 14.55 GOOD THIS SHOW t, PREMINGER PRESENTS HAW0RTH 1CCDI3LJ3 U0 ON THt MOvFL KV LION UiS MUS'C tY PkHtvWQH JO. TtCHNtCOLO"! BY UM LtAVirTl MOOUCtD AND OIRCCUO IV OTTO PRCUiNGt Screen 8 P.M. & 12:45 A.M IWALT DISNEY -l jC.I. WW" LAUNCH PAD This is an artist's concept of one of the four launch pads in the Ad vanced Saturn C-5 Launch Complex 39 to be built in the new NASA area northwest of Cape Canaveral, Fla. A launch rack, carrying the 350-foot C-5 and its 400-foot 1 Locals i i Groups Cancelled-The Uni ty study groups, which gen erally meet in Grants Pass, Ashland and Medford, will not meet this week and have been recessed until after La bor day. Unity church of Med ford officials have announced. Paiieni-Dcborah Kay Rob erts, 9-ycar-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Rob erts, 1006 South Oakdalc ave., is a surgery patient at Rogue Valley hospital. Obituaries LENOHA A. NORMAN I Funeral services for Mqs. Lcnora Ann Norma. 89, who died Friday, will be held at 1 9 a.m. Tuesday in Conner j Morris downtown chapel. The Rev. Robert Bridge of the First United Presbyterian church will officiate. Commit Ital will be in Jacksonville cemetery. Mrs. Norman was born, Dec. 25. 1872, in Anderson, Calif., and moved to southern Ore gon in 1886. She was a hotel manager for many years, and also was a practical nurse. Survivors include a sister, Mrs. Clara Shafer, Medford; a niece, Mrs. Lcnora Marrs, Al bany, Ore ; and a nephew, George Shafer. Santa Cruz, Calif. FLORA ELLEN WILLIAMS Mrs. Flora Ellen Williams, 848 Dakota ave.. Medford, died Sunday in a local hospi tal Funeral arrangements are entrusted to Siskiyou Funeral Service directors. In colonial days, sheriffs supervised the population cen sus of the American colonies. TUESDAY WEDNESDAY ONLY! A new genre ot motion picture . to make you think and feci. flflffl MfflH V MtDKORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON Impulse To Fly Instinct To Stay Battled Within Her It was her first ncsl; the initial "setting of eggs." She hadn't given any of the events leading up to the construction of the nest the slightest thought: she was im pelled by inherited patterns. She had to be taught to fly, but the nest-building had come naturally. Now there were eggs, four of them, pressed solidly against her underside. She knew she should turn them each day; knew there were times when she should return to the nest with her feathers wet to impart a certain mois ture to them. She was con scious, too, of her mate; knew he was perched somewhere near, ready to give what as sistance he could. . . even ready to pit his feeble strength against any enemy which might violate the sanc tity of the nursery. Perfect Fit I sue was comioi iauie. sides and bottom of the nest fitted perfectly. She felt the reassuring pressure of it with her entire body. She slept. Then the dark clouds built un in the blackening sky. Came vivid flashes of light ' ning, followed almost instant ' ly by heavy crashes of thun ; der. It jarred the ground, j shook the nest and frightened : the mother bird into instant j wakefulness. The storm gath I cred momentum, and she was I terrified. Two powerful ; forces within her battled for supremacy: one, the impulse to Imp olf into the darkness, to fly anywhere at all; the ! other, the instinct to remain I with her eggs. Doors Open at 8:00 "CURTAIN AT 8:30" , -..: Akt-; R I I umbilical tower, has been mounted 'on sup port blocks by a 2500-ton crawler vehicle shown behind the pad. The C-5 has been previously erected in a vertical assembly building in the rear of the Complex 39 area. (UPI) Small Worlds Around Us By LYNN M. WATKINS (Register and Tribunt SyndiciO 19621 Mother-love, even that which precedes by a little time actual motherhood, won. She stayed on the nest and braced hersalf against the wind and the swaying tree. She could feel the eggs move as the thunder shook the ground. Then the flashes became in frequent. The thunder died away in the distance, and (hen began the rain. It came in unbroken, pounding sheets. The water cascaded off the mother bird's oiled back. In stinct had forced her to oil her feathers long before the storm which now lashed the earth and all those creatures that lived there. Flood in Nest Fitted as she was in the snug nest, the water ran off her back and into the nest cavity. The way the lain was coming the nest would be flooded in no lime. Once again, without previous ex perience, she knew what to do. She raised her wings, ex tended them out and over the sides of the nest; the wa ter rushed off her back, out onto the wings and fell to the sodden earth. She ducked her head and closed her eyes. By some wild reasoning she knew the storm would end, and again the sun would shine. And it came to pass. The day dawned bright and clear the morning of the second day. Over-the-Counter Western Stocks liy L'nltfd Prem International Hid Askfd 4ft Sl34 Bank of America. .... Cn) Pac Util Ton FreiRht Cvpnn Mines Equitable S A I- . Klnt National Bank JanUrn Morrmnn Knudsen ... Mult KrnneU N W. Natural Cut Orecon Metallurgica 2.1 40 29'4 3.1'i 1 ' PPM p;e i: S. National Bank United Util . . WM Cnant Tl IrVryerhacuaer 24 ...... 24 ...... fifi'i 2 1BJ 2.V 7Pi 2R' ENDS TONITE Show Starts at 7:00 fcw.v ir ""Sir N 't&mi ""I Holding Juveniles Responsible Said Part of Solution Seattle, Wash. - H'PH - The proper way to handle a juve nile delinquent is not to probe into his subconscious to find out why he broke the law but to tell him that he did wrong and warn him not to do it again, a psychiatrist said to day. Dr. William Glasser. a psy ciatric consultant at Cali fornia's Ventura School for Girls, said too often delin quents think because they are "emotionally disturbed" they arc not responsible for their acts. Beit Allitude "This is not something they would be aware of on their own." he said. "They have Smelter Union, Kennecott Agree Salt Lake City - (UPIl - Ken necott Copper Corp. and the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers have reached agreement on a new contract, federal medi ators announced today. The agreement came less than IS minutes before a scheduled strike by the large union at Kcnnecott's opera tions In Utah. Arizona, Ne vada and New Mexico. Details and duration of the new work pact were not im mediately announced. Agreement came after an all-night bargaining session held under the auspices of federal mediators. The strike would have in volved 4,400 mine - mill mem bers employed at Kcnnecott's Western Division. Mine-mill's contract with (he giant coppei - producing firm expired June 30 and work had been continuing on a day to day basis up until last Wednesday when Mine mill set its strike deadline. Two weeks ago the United Steelworkers Union threat ened a strike but a similar all night negotiating session produced a contract agree ment. Mine-mill's settlement was expected to closely pattern the contract signed by the steelworkers and Kennecott. Salem Area Loses Electricity Briefly Salem - lUni - Customers north and west of here were without electricity for 26 min utes this morning when a coupling capacitator at Bon neville Power administrations West Salem substation burn ed. The outage started at 4:08 a.m. It affected service to rural customers of the Salem Electric cooperative. The Salem fire department put out the fire. Service was restored on an alternate line. ENDS jeR&Yiewrs m EOT it ip m mrm lJJJ 772-6424 Fit i 1 1 li'AW 1 1 8 KRUGLH - rARf 1NELU BUIW BuTl DNS HAWKS - 8Rat n-KuiVwsciN!- ::"r.r PP "yX1 IW BCKWSW I learned that to get along well in a modern treatment insti J tution this is the most com fortable attitude to take." Dr. Glasser read a paper on ! Iiis approach to delinquency .to the National Institute on I Crime and Delinquency which I opened here today. He said when dealing with inmates at the reform school, "I explained that it was true that they miht be emotional, ly disturbed but it was be- I cause they had broken the law that they were locked up. A person can be emotionally disturbed and have a stomach ache or be afraid of high places but to gel into the school, she had to break the law." Most psychiatrists. Dr. Glas ser said, try to "help the pa tient understand that conflicts buried in his unconscious are the cause of his aberrant be havior. "The traditional therapist does not question the assump tion that once the child un derstands these previously un- j known forces he will be able to think and act rationally." However, Dr. Glasser con tended, "the more delinquents arc convinced that they are disturbed and have good rea son to be so, the worse they will- act." On the other hand, he said. Education Board Meets in Ashland Ashland - IUPH - The Ore gon Board of Higher Educa tion met here today for a two day session that includes an other look at a proposed $45' million construction program for 1963-65. The building committee, which already has given ten tative approval to the pro gram, continued to review it today. The committee's agenda also called for an architect's re port on campus plans for the University of Oregon, and con sideration of a site for a physi cal education building at Portland State college. The finance committee was slated to meet later. A report from Chancellor R. E. Licuallcn was expected at a full board meeting Tues day. Fisher Plans Swing Into Southern Oregon Eugene -Itiril- The Repub lican nominee for Congress in the fourth district, Carl Fish er, said he will make a cam paign swing through Linn, Jackson and Josephine coun ties this week. Fisher will be in the Al bany area today, in Leban on Tuesday, in the Grants Pass area Thursday, and in Medford Friday. LAST 2 NITES TWO SHOWS 7:00 and 10:00 P.M. TONIGHT! WHERE SHOULD AGIFILSTOP IN ROME? MONDAY. JULY 23. "if everyone working with a delinquent child holds him I responsible to himself for ! what he does, the child soon learns the pleasure of doing well and getting credit for it as well as taking a mature re sponsibility for what he does." Sobbing Sims Is On Vacation So We Are Going Of His Prize Stock That He Hasn t Been Able To Sell! save;; FLOOR SAMPLES AND DEMONSTRATORS SllPiiilfP l!fi! LARGER MODEL - REG. $49.88 Now 3688 OTHER COOLERS Now 1288-1688-1988 I MILLION-AIR j F L AY P O O L RIGHT IN YOUR OWN BACKYARD THE FACTORY SAYS $55.00 THE BOSS SAYS $29.88 We Say 2488 HERE IS A GOOD DEAL ON BARBECUES WITH ELECTRIC SPIT: Tht Factory Sayt $19.95 Th Boss Says $14.88 We BiKE TIRE SPECIAL!!! PAIR Of BICYCLE with purchit ol ny yV. GENERAL BIKE TIRE md TUBE COMBINATION Stop in and vitiip vntir bike with sri 5 "V ;' top-quality General i hika tire and luta U r ...we have tire and luliea to lit 'JS tvery sue 0 J .v.rv bika CONTINENTAL BIKE 26x1.75 26x14 26 x IV. 1962 He gummed up his view, "We assume that if they (de linquents) can stop breaking the law, they will be less dis turbed; not that once they be come less disturbed they will then have less need to break the law." To Get Rid Of Some REGULAR 39.88 26 88 I Say 9 88 GENERAL TIRES from 2' TUBES 149 TIRES 1 88 YOUR CHOICE ONLY EACH i1 Tror Donahue - Angie Dickinson Rossano Brazil-Suzanae Pieshsne v (7iVtUW,f fWl - l H'OT m VAX ',1 H . MH) CYCLE & HOBBY SHOP Phona 772-2472 ADULTS ONLY THAT THO'JOMT H S WAS H RACCOON TtcHNrcoiw. REX ALLEN a mm h 10 V M7?i? FT1 CAROUSEL ptfS Dt'.'.MHlO.n K'ti ccww 23 North Fir sum