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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1962)
t 1 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOHD. OREGON Clinie-The chest x-ray clin ic at Sacred Heart hospital will be open Thursday, Aug. 9, from 2 to 5 p.m., according to the Jackson County Tuber culosis and Health associa tion, which sponsors the clinic. Kansas Picnic - The annual picnic of the Southern Ore gon Kansas association will be held Sunday, Aug. 26, at the Grants Pass city park. Those attending should take food and table service. Cof fee and dessert will be fur nished by the Kansas associ ation, and dinner will be served about 1 p.m. WEDntaDAY. AUGUST 8. 1962 Local and Personal SHAKEY'S mm 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 At Gift Show - Mrs. Arncl i Butler, manager of Law rence s jewelers, and Mrs. Ann Wirkkula of the store staff, are in San Francisco this week to attend market gift shows and purchase fall and Christmas merchandise for the shop. Mrs. Wirkkula's sons, Charles and Jerry, ac companied the women on the trip. Car Stolen - Vivian Edna Rose, 414 Kenwood ave., re ported to Medford city police the theft of her auto Tues day from her residence. Building Permit - A build ing permit was issued by the , city building department to i Economy Housing to con struct a $6,000 residence at i 2596 Corona ave. A permit . to erect a sign, valued at ' 52,500, was issued to Drews Manstore, Medford Shop ping center, this morning. I Damages C a r A vehicle, i operated by Cherokee Rose t McSwan, 20, of Grants Pass, failed to make a curve on South Stage rd. Monday aft : ernoon and skidded into a i ditch, according to state po i lice. The car was damaged, but no injuries to the passen- gers were reported. The ac cident occurred about 3:30 ' p.m. one mile west of Voor ; hies crossing on South Stage rd. Births LOPER To Mr. and Mrs. Jerry, route 1, box 441, Tal ent, Aug. 6, 1962, a boy, 6?4 pounds, at Crater Osteopathic hospital. OSBORNE To Mr. and Mrs. Richard R., 516 Pennsyl vania ave., Medford, Aug. 7, 1962, a girl, 6 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. BACKEN To Mr. and Mrs. James J., route 1, box 588C, Central Point, Aug. 8, 1962, a girl, 7 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. P R I N G L E To Mr. and Allen Emmett, box 7, Butte Falls, Aug. 8, 1962. a boy. 7'2 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. YOU CAN Trial SEE IT IUI1 .ROSS HUNTER KS2"-JOSEPH FIELDS RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN'S rrMWMNG. r e ' JONTOVJSt lye. Flut Fira - Central Point rural firemen were called to a flue fire about 8:40 a.m. to day at the home of Harry Krebs, Seven Oaks rd. Guns Taktn Three hand guns and about S59 in ammu nition were reported taken from Rogue Valley Sporting Goods, 4768 Crater Lake highway, Medford. sometime Monday night or early Tues day morning, according to Jackson county sheriff's deputies. Baby Injured A 19-month-old baby, Michael Edward Brooks, was injured slightly in an auto accident Monday at 4:43 p.m. in Ashland. The baby did not require hospital treatment, however. The acci dent occurred at Highway 99 and Harmony lane and in volved autos driven by the baby's mother, Judith Ellen Brooks, 23, of 2092 Ridge Way, Medford, and Angelo John Bortolazzo, 34, of Gre nada, Calif. News About Servicemen ENLIST FOR EUROPE Enlisting for service in Europe under the Army's "Choose-it-Yourself program, are five valley men. They now are receiving eight weeks of basic training at Ft. Ord, Calif. The men are Raymond R. Grisham, son of Mrs. Grace B. Grisham, Jacksonville; Ter rance L. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lee Smith, 415 Clark St.; Douglas Wayne Guches, son of Mrs. Mabel A. Guches. 819 Marshall ave., and Klaus Dieter Schulzki and Fritz Peter Schulzki, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Friedrich Karl Schulzki, 3748 South Pacific highway, all Medford. DISCHARGED David Havlick, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Tousignant, 137 Willamette ave., arrived Saturday from Berlin, Ger many where he has served with the Army for the past two years as a private first class. He was with an infan try division and was a drafts man. Havlick entered the service in 1959 after graduation from Medford High school and re ceived his basic training at Ft. Ord, Calif. He has received his discharge after serving inrce years and now is em ployed at the Rogue River Packing corporation. INDUCTED Terry A. Krinnck. Med ford, and James L. Nelson. Eagle Point, were Inducted into the Armed Forces in late July at the examining and in duction station in Portland, according to the local Selec tive Service board. Rhode Islanders Aid Integration By JOHN F. McDONOUGH United Press International Providence, R.I.-l!PH-A New England supermarket chain and 62 Rhode Island citizens and organizations are betting $7.5 million that integrated housing can be successful. Even as Negroes shuttle through the city on their "Re verse Freedom Rides" to the north, plans are moving ahead to build an integrated apart ment house complex in Provi dence. The project will be located in what is known as the Lip pitt hill redevelopment area, abutting the fashionable and historic East Side . . . the home of Brown university. And it is not far from the city'a Fox point section where police dogs were used last fall to quell a disturbance in non-white neighborhood. The $7.5 million venture is being undertaken by the de velopment firm of University Heights, Inc. which is made up of the chain store and the other parties. The store is a 50 per cent stockholder. The corporation is affiliated with Modern Community De velopers, Inc., of Princeton, N.J., which is guiding it on housing problems. The New Jersey firm was organized specifically to assist in de velopment of integrated hous ing throughout the country. Irving Jay Fain, a director of Modern Community devel opers and head of the Rhode Island corporation, said: "We propose to show that mixed housing is associated with the best housing, the most imag inative. It is important to raise the public image of what racially integrated hous ing is. The quest for an economic cross-section of tenants isobvi ous. The monthly rents for the garden apartments will run from $60 a month for ef ficiency units to $175 for three bedrooms. Included in the project' is a shopping center, a neighbor hood public park, a school, a playground and about 480 apartments in two and three story structures arranged in clusters. Counter Tells Level Of Home Radiation New York -(UNI- Something new in do-it-yourself gadgcl ry: a plug-in Geigcr counter for the home. It keeps a round-the-clock guard against a sudden in crease in radiation levels and if this should occur, warns the household with an au dible signal. For $30 or a little less, the radio hobbyist can build a transistor circuit which gives a loud click every time a ra dioactive particle strikes it. A sudden increase in Hie radiation lount is the signal to turn on your regular radio and check the news, accord ing to Popular Electronics, which blue-prints such a counter in its July issue. Sale And Money Box Differences Shown New York -lUPli- Americans lose millions of dollars to burglars each year because they don't know the differ ence between a "safe" and a "money chest." When you order a safe, you get a container designed to resist fire, not criminals. A money chest is designed to foil burglars. i This information comes from Arthur F. Anderson, chairman of the planning and technical advisory committee of the Safe Manufacturers National association. "Public misunderstanding of what a safe is designed to do is one factor behind the loss of many millions of dol lars each year to burglars," Anderson said. OBITUARIES JOHN ELIJAH PETERS John Elijah Peters, 73, former Medford resident, died July 31 in a Salem hospital. Funeral services were held Auk. 2 at Bolman chapel in Dallas, with the Rev. Lowell Montgomery officiating. Inter- ment was in the Dallas ceme tery. Mr. Peters was born in Can ada and came to this country in 1913, settling in Dallas He moved to Medford in 1926 California six years ago. Her ien, Dayton Verner. Portland Livestock Port Ian d (UPIi USDA Cattle 300. Individual steers stand ard 1045 lb. at 20; rows runner cutter 10-14; bulls utility around 900-1200 lb. 17-19. Calves 7.V Good-choice vea ers 24-27, Rood-choice feeder calves 23-27; good 470 lb. heiters 21. Hogs 200. U.S. 1 to 3 grade 200 223 lb. butchers 20.50-21.25; 1 and sown 2110-340 lb. 16-17. Sheep 600. Choice-prime BO-120 . spring slaughter lambs 20-21: good-mostly choice f)0 lb. thorn No. 2 pelt If) 50; feeder lambs choice-fancy 70-100 lb. 14-15.50. Portland Produce Portland (UPIi Dairy market : Ecus To retailers: AA extra large, 43-40c; AA large 40-4. U. A large 3f)-42c: AA medium 34-3Rc; aa small 24-juc; cartons l3c higher Huucr 10 retailers: aa and A prints (17c; cartons 1c higher; B prims hlc. cneese (medium cured) To re tailers: 47-48l3C: processed Ameri can 5-10 lb. loaf. 45-46,c. Portland iUPIi Dressed chick ens No. 1 grade dressed to re tailers: Fryers, whole drawn. 32- 39c lb.; cut-up. 38-42c lb.; hens. light type, whole drawn, 10-2f)c lb lisht tvne hens, cut-tin 21-34c lb.; heavy whole 36-3l)c lb. Over-fhe-Counfer Western Slocks By I'nited frr;. International Hid Asked Bank ol America 50 ' S3 Cal Pac Utll 23'! Con Kreiehl HI1. Cyprua Mines 21 U Equitable SAL 37 First National Bank .... .Ifl'i Jantzen 2ft3, Morrison Knudsen 31 'a Mult Kennels 3Ta N.W. Natural Gas 28 Oregon Metallurgical .. 1 ' PP i L 24', PGE .. 23',, 11. S National Bank .... Rti United Utll 2H'i West Coast Tel 171, Weyerhaeuser 233 2.Vi til, 23 3! K0;l. 2!)'. 33', 1, 29, 1 'a 25 s, Gresham Lectures Listed For Week Ashland - The third and fourth in a scries of Gresham lectures sponsored by the Ore gon Shakespearean Festival Institute of Renaissance stud ies will be held Aug. 9 and 10 at 3:30 p.m. in the Gresh am room o the Ashland Pub lic library. The two lecture periods will feature Dr. Everett Am derson of the University of Oregon music department in a discussion of "The Begin nings of Opera." Trained at husband, Vincent J. Gossman preceded her in death April 13, 1956. Survivors include five daughters. Edith Shepherd, Medford; Lorene Kadin, Ket chikan, Alaska; Mattie Mc Coy, Los Angeles; Vena Stan- li Johr. Blair, and James Pleyer. Funeral arrangements wen entrusted to Siskiyou Funeral service directors of Chapel in the Trees Mortuary. ana operated me meai tucycic ; age. Van Nuvs, Calif.; and ' shop here until 1937. when i Ruth Hodge, Altadena, Calif.; he moved to Klamath Falls, one son. John Goad, Pasa Later he moved to Salem. He dena, Calif.; two brothers, , was a member of the Apos- ' Frank Tompkins, Corcoran, tolic Faith church and was a Calif., and Claude Tompkins, retired carpenter. j Sacramento, Calif ; one sister, ', Survivors include his wld-!Rhoda Gibson. Btiena Park. ow, Mrs. Katherine Peters. Sa lem; six daughters, Mrs. Ruth Schleigh, Medford; Mrs. Beth Bern heisel, Coquillc; Mrs. Mildred Vincent, Salem; Mrs. Jean Mumaugh, Chico, Calif ; Mrs. Alice Dickey, Kerby, and Mrs. Evelyn Wright, Portland; one son, John D. Peters, Wil mington, Del.; four sisters, Mrs. Mary Janes, Medford; Mrs. Susie Pcnne'r. Mrs. Kith-1 erine Ricketts and Mrs. Ann ! Moore, all of Portland; 17 grandchildren and 16 great, grandchildren. Calif.; 17 grandchildren and 10 great grandchildren. Honorary pallbearers will be Raymond Gossman, Nor man McMahan, Hayden Al- ENJOY A BETTER BREAKFAST HEREI WHITE HOUSE Cornar 6th and Ivy Alio - Delicioul v - ': Lunches ''.u.". OPEN (i,cr3 7 a.m. Vgysrg CLOSED (V-) Sat. & Sun. ' - the Julliard School of Music ,.ril.a.C;l'lly -,mCnibCr.0f I WILLIAM H. POMEROY V.U.MIIIU1M uin vt-i any, lii. An derson is a mut'ic historian, voice teacher and opera di rector. A total of seven Gresham lectures are scheduled for this summer as part of the regu lar programming of the In stitute Renaissance Studies. The small admission fee per lecture is utilized to benefit the Festival collection of rare books and prints. Weather FORECASTS Med lord and vicinity? Showers tonight and clearing trend Thurs day niornme;. Fair Thursday after noon IhrouRh Friday morning. Low tonieht near 33. High Thursday 73. Western Oregon ; Scattered showers inniRht. Partly sunny Thursday. Patches of earlv morn iiiR Tor. Low tonight 46-53. High Thursday 66-7fi. Northern California: Rain from Uklah and Ml. ShHsta northward tonight and showers as far south as San Francisco and Chico. Cloudy north portion Thursday with a few showers In mountains. Fair eentral California tonight and Thursday. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yester day 63; below normal 10. Record high this date 104 in 1DHQ. Record low this date 43 In 191B. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, .41 inch. Midnight lo 10 a.m., ..11 inch. Total this month .SB inch, .36 Inch above normal. Total since Sept. 1. 13.98 inches. 2.03 inches below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 68'.c. highest this am. 96'. CITY Investment Funds Noon quotation. HOCKS' Funil Bid Bullock 11.39 Chemical Fund n.l.'l Colonial Ener ... 10.71 Ealon Howard Stk .. 11.73 Fidelity 13.7.1 Fundamental Invest. 8.30 Group Sec Avla-Elcc 6.30 Group Sec-Corn Sik 11.40 Group Sec Petr ... Keystone B-3 Keystone B-4 Keystone K-2 Keystone S.-I Keystone S-2 Keystone S-3 Keystone S-4 on a 1 a o t d 10.32 14.74 fl 02 4.4R 10.10 10.R0 12.02 3.113 Mass Inv Growth Stk fi.78 Nafl Growth Slocks TV.Elec United Accum United Canada . United Continental . United Income United Science Value Line lnc Variable fin:! 1.1.00 6 73 12.3.1 1.1.00 6 0ft 10.7.1 . .1.67 4.7!) .170 Wellington .. 13.40 Asked 12.40 9.03 1 1.70 12 SB 14 66 9.10 6.01 12.4S 1 1 .30 16.09 9.8.1 4.00 20.84 II. no I. 1 1 1 3.07 7 41 7.46 17 18 7 34 13.10 17 3.1 6 04 I I . 7.1 6.20 .1.23 6.16 14 61 lllch Yester day Brooklncs .18 Crater Lake 44 Grants Pass 83 Howard Prairie .. .12 Klamath Fall, .... SB MEDFORD 67 Portland 70 Seattle 60 Spokane 67 Ya k i ma . 60 Eureka 63 Red Bluff 76 Sacramento 8.1 San Francisco .... 67 Los Angeles . .. 89 Phoenix 110 Denver 96 Chicago 84 Miami Beach 00 New York . 84 Washington, D. C. 4:011 34 a.m. nr. Low Prrr .14 .80 40 ,70 Funeral services for Wil liam H. Pomeroy, 75, of Eagle Point, who died Monday, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thurs day in Conger-Morris down town chapel. The Rev. War ren L. Christcnsen of the Eagle Point Community Bible church will officiate. Committal will be in Memory Gardens Memorial park. Mr. Pomeroy was born Nov. 24, 1RR6, at Foots Creek, and had lived all his life in south ern Oregon. He was married May 23. 1D29, in Medford, to Viola Talent, who survives. Other survivors include a son, Charles Pomeroy, Eagle Point; a brother. Thomas Pomeroy. Yacolt, Wash.; and three sisters, Mrs. Angilina Plowman, Yacolt, Wash.; Mrs. Henrietta Logue, Yacolt, Wash.; and Mrs. La Vena Force, Central Point, Ore. Pall bearers will include John Barton, Clvde Bunker, Donald Ullom, Dobc Grebb, Horace Webster, and Thomas Freeman. .17 70 78 EDWARD M. GYGER Ashland - Edward Mason Gygcr, 61, died this morning at his home, 5310 Highway 86. Ashland. - j Mr. Gyger was born Jan. 24, 1901, in Chappcll, Neb. He moved to Ashland from Klamath Falls about three years ago. He is survived by a sister, Mrs. Wilma Brophy, and a nephew, Jack Wilcox, bolh of Ashland. Services will be held Fri day, Aug. 10, at 10:30 a.m. in Lltwiller's Mountain View chapel. The Rev. B. J. Hol land will officiate. Inter ment will follow in Mountain View cemetery. vvis towaaos ENDS TONIGHT lalatHnii - 5.TN7-: I sWrji--- 'PETER USTJNQV SANDRA DEE JOHN GAVIN , Starts Tomorrow Thursday Th3 Year's Big Hit! i,. Someone's got lo give... v - r-wien thi, IRRESISTIBLE FORCE LI meets this IMMOVABLE OBJECT I I TouclLof If Jk A HlyaZ"""" Q0L ht j!? j GIG YOUNG 'AUDWMEADOWS- EL CD IS COMING SOONI KlVE-OiV I'OKKCAST (Through Aug. 131: Western Oregon - Western Wash ington Precipitation heavier than normal with showers Saturday or Sundav. Temperatures below nor mal with highs In western Wash ington from 6.1 lo 7.1. In western Oregon from 70 to 80 and along coast In 60s. Lows from 45 to 55. Northern California Possibility of a rain or two in extreme north; otherwise, no precipitation. Tem peratures below normal. MRS. ADDIE GOSSMAN Graveside services for Mrs. Addic Gossman, former ly of Medford, who died Sun day in Altadena, Calif., will be conducted Friday at 10:30 a.m. in Siskiyou Memorial park, with the Rev. Sherman Moore of the Pilgrim Holiness church of Klamath Falls of ficiating. Mrs. Grossman was born Oct. 15. 1888 in Tennessee. She had been a resident of Medford prior to moving to Km notn fwrit hiwww w Am a carloadI" m ! f miry ROBERT ELEANOR MITCHUM PARKER i Fbt" People a iSnmr-riirit &JirtirwfsFi n sr FiirrnTa musriiT I FHmed in Tanganyika. Africa in B P) vCJfinn fTECHMiCOLORITECHNIRAMflL Mm TONIGHT TWO ALl-TlrAE GREAT HITS1 Alan (.ADD Sidn.y POUIER Jam.. DARREN Mori SAHL AlMHE I YOUNG 1 MEN Ufwuitow . Mi iMJUnuli j WOtMAl JOHAMtOM WW i 23BEH3!SfiiC DRIVE-IN 0UTH PACIFIC HIGHWAY, STARTING TONIGHT DRIVE-IN ROAD SHOW ENGAGEMENT BUT AT REGULAR PRICES KIRK DOUGLAS LAURENCE OLIVIER JEAN SIMMONS CHARLES LAUGHTON PETER USTINOV JOHN GAVIN TONY S8 P.M. & 12:15 AM B dfe. Bl .Julv nt Ihe pvammintf anr in. Irancidnr nii-piili urhifh niopc Keystone s- i'u,D,pMtlGi I duction station in Portland, a loud click every time a ra- Keystone 1-4 ! 'xrs iun western ore'son - western wash- a.m. in Siskiyou Memorial JrMtJffB ffA ;;voG's.RtTT0WJC I tuiZeJC!,i SCleC' dioactive particle strikes it. i-. h s,K s.,a ,,, . with .he Rcy. Sherman fl f7lifljKtj0A '" A- 0"u ' rtl Su:....S8w:?l I live Service board. A sadden increase in the stocks l.i nn n ib Sunday. Temperatures below nor- Moore of the Pilgrim Holiness jt WW&frt JMw JT M WO51 tuUCM V ijsti$ia I radiation lount is the signal T.v-F'5. .l3.i El'.-T"': '.I SFSrJSSS: church of Klamath Falls of- M MW 1 'KWV.V 1 1 Detroit Is outranked nnlv to turn on vour regular radio united Canada 7 1S.M HJS Oregon from 7n to so and along ficiating. f mjrrn b Jr' OKi.V-jrI IS Vv-Syi.Bvj.-io 1 1 by New York and Chicago in oBfc'wi',TTii"T2 advertising billings and six ' ' of flBcfpT f llWiljg rjjf I ' the P 10 American ad ol fe4l Ivil Afl-! S3 B agencies havc Detroit offices. rv! . j v. fcpit'r sr i ! mmwwrmi CURTIS , NANCY KWAN 1 1 1 XW ' ' V ! ! MFH g M i AMco cmr.cTA III f fi5 s X'Jj I um l iki im J fej'ffV JUANITA HALL JACK S00 BENSON FOMG L - ff, , , r ' ' r ' ,' i " 'iW. ' ' - III aMIYOSH! UMEKI MmBri &,HGiit 1 hawks mm i mi ! m . $MW WOMtn; if!& . 1 WF I4T TlRnilWlV ffTT iTTbP m -- BSa-a ' f ech nico?or VITALITY AND FORCE!" tell 'niln Ll -imLMS- til ; AN0 THE IDEAL CO.FEATURE mllJUaAlOikJ STARTING etnrMEnftfth TONIGHT V ' SISTHRI n today wi msmjJiu ,wo i?? as ,0:M SaisssmsiasiasM V..U lUUUWK"" I , ,.... 1 t T - , - - 1 11 " 1 I I 111 y bW. OOS.OK f Mi . .i iii -iimi mi - rr - - r r win r -- . .i , ... ... ..nr.w. 1 " T .