MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
OBITUARIES
MONDAY. JANUARY 7, 1963
T'r.vaie ..uuirtl rarvne jw.-ou ij.ld llows cemetery.
h!d ' lor Jun J. '.--1 Motfttt was born June
zc, u .lunyoii W"ino:) I In Swan, Iowa, and
WAatir.r. C'M.imiUil will be in East-
us iv -oil fj.M Uows cem
i,'mrv ,M, srur gud
Ssv rJy at She Rogue Valley
Manor.
Mr. Vnnier ws Ijorn June
21, 1378 in Santa Cruz. C!if.
On Dec. 13, 1913 in Sa.-ra-mntu,
Calif., ne aiarried
to Majaalene Frrle : who sur
vives. Mr. 'A'amer was vet
eran oj Uie Spanish American
war and served as a captain
in the Transportation corps I
during World War I. He
served in France from July
14, 1S18 to Aug. 23, 1919. He
was discharged Sept. 13, 1919
at Presidio of San Francisco,
Calif.
Mr. Wanzcr had been em
ployed by various organiza
tions as a civil engineer in
China, Alaska, South Amer
ica, Africa and in Sacramento,
Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Wanzer
came to the Rogue Valley in
May 1961. Mr. Wanzcr was a
member of the Christian
Science church of Sacra
mento, Calif., and Yerba
Buena lodge AF & AM of
Oakland, Calif.
Besides his wife he is sur
vived by one brother, Horace
B. Wanzer, Jackson, Calif.
Funeral arrangements were
entrusted to Siskiyou Funeral
Services directors of the
Chapel in the Trees Mortuary.
WILLIAM A. CHILDERS
Ashland - William Albert
Childers, 83, of route 1, Tal
ent, died in a rest home Jan.
6. He was born Jan. 28, 1879,
in Winnigan, Mo.
He moved to Talent In 1905
where he married Ethel Robi
son, in 1906. Mrs. Childers
died in Mcdford last month.
Mr. Childers operated a
meat- market in Talent for a
number of years. Survivors
include two sons, Buford
Childers,, Talent; and John
Childers, Portland, and one
grandson, Karl Childers, Port
land. Funeral services will be
held Tuesday, Jan. 8, at 10
a.m. at Litwiller's Mountain
View chapel with James
Morse of the Jehovah's Wit
nesses officiating. Interment
will be in the family plot in
Stearns cemetery.
AGNES MOFFITT
Funeral services for Mrs.
Agnes M. Moffitt, 91, former
ly of Medford and Phoenix,
who died Thursday, will oe
held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Conger - Morris downtown
chapel. The Rev. W. R. Riohcy
will officiate, assisted by the
Rev. Jack Quails, of the Phoe
nix Church of the Nazarene.
Over-lhe-Counter
Western Slocks
By United Press International
Bid Asked
Bank of America 33ss
Cal Pac UU1 21 a
Con Freight .... 133,
Cyprus Mines 2i
Equitable S & L 31
First National Bank .... 60',
Jantzcn 2234
Morrison -Knudscn 29 's
Mull Kennels 4
N W Natural Gas 31
Oregon Metallurgical .. 1
PP&L. 24',
PGE
U.S. National Bank fiR
United Utll 33.
West Coast Tel in'.
Weyerhaeuser 23 s
SO',
2ti'i
14',
24 ,
33i
62,
24',
30',
4a
33',
1 ',
26',
2Ti
71',
34 ,
21
27
Investment funds
Noon quouuons on selected
stocks;
Fund Bid Asked
Bullock 12.29 13.4S
Chemical Fund 10.38 11.28
Colonial Energy 11.66 12.74
Eaton Howard Stk 12 87 13.00
Fidelity 14.10 15.68
Fundamental 9.07 9.94
Group Soc-Avia-Elec .. 6.87 7.54
Group Sec-Corn Slk .... 12 28 13.45
Group Sec-Pctr 11.68 12.79
Hamilton C7 4.86 5.31
Keystone B-3 13.43 16 84
Keystone R-4 9.52 10.39
Kcyslonc K-2 4.87 5 32
Keystone S-l 20.61 22.49
Keystone S-2 11.94 13.03
Keystone S-3 13 20 14.41
Keystone S-4 3.96 4.33
Mass Inv Growth 7.48 8 17
National Growth 7.76 8.48
Slocks 1733 18 76
TV - Elcc 7.11 7 73
United Accum 13.21 14 44
United Canada .... . 17.48 1900
United Continental .... 6.45 7.05
United Income .. 11 45 12.49
United Science 6.28 6.86
Value Line - 5.08 .155
Variable ..... 6 20 8 70
Wellington 13.92 13.19
OLD FORTS FOR SALE
London -il'Pli- The War Te-
partmcnt today put up for
sale four old sea forts. "Some
people might find some use
for them," it said.
nad lived in southern Oregon
tor the vast 32 years. For the
itt several years of her life
ahe had lived with Mr. and
Airs. Charles Cummons, at
Phoenix, until ill health made
hospitalization necessary.
Survivors include a grand
son, Charles L. Cummons Jr.,
Lewiston. N.Y.; a granddaugh
ter, Mrs. Miriam E. York, San
Francisco, Calif.; great grand
children, Mrs. Beverly Thom
as, Loren Cummons, Jjncan
Cummons, and Wanda Cum
mons, all of Medford; Jerry
York, David York, Danny
York, of San Francisco, Calif.;
and Paul Wesley Cummons,
Lewiston, N.Y.; and great
grandson Steven Thomas, of
Medford. Her only daughter,
Mrs. Georgia Cummons, of
Eagle Point, preceded her in
death July 30, 1941; and a
great granddaughter, Stacy
Thomas, died Dec. 30, 1962.
Casket bearers will include
Dorman York, Bernard York,
Mike Knapp, and Glen Yor-ton.
MARY GRUBB
A requiem mass for Mrs.
Mary Grubb, of Gold Hill,
who died Saturday, will be
said at 10 a.m. Tuesday by the
Rev. Gilbert Lulay of the Sa
cred Heart Catholic church.
Recitation of the Holy Rosary
will be at 8 o'clock tonight at
Conger - Morris , downtown
chapel. Committal will be in
Hillcrest Memorial park.
Mrs. Grubb was born Feb.
7, 1896, in Oregon, Mo., and
had lived in southern Oregon
for many years.
Survivors include two sis
ters. Miss Dorothy Bridge and
Mrs. Larry Gidncy, both of
Gold Hill. Her brother, Harry
Bridge, died Dec. 27.
ROBERT KAHLER
Robert Kahler, 84, former
ly of 312 Portland ave., Med
ford, died in a local hospital
Saturday evening. Funeral ar
rangements will be announced
by Perl Funeral home.
Committees Are
Named To Search
For Sulphide Ore
Cave Junction - Special
committees to search for sul
phide ore deposits in southern
Oregon and northern Cali
fornia, which would be suit
able for making sulphuric
acid, were formed yesterday
afternoon at a meeting of the
California Oregon Chrome
Producers association in Cave
Junction. The meeting was at
tended by more than 100 of
the area's business and min
ing interests.
Mrs. Lendolyn Davenport
and John C. Welden volun
teered to lead the committee
in Grants Pass area; Collins
McClendon will head a com
mittee in Crescent City area.
Others will be announced for
Happy Camp, Yreka, Rose
burg and Brookings.
Those who wish to assist
with this program may do so
by getting in touch with any
of the above named or other
members of the association.
That such a plan would be
feasible for the area provided
suitable deposits, could be
found was determined in a
study by the Oregon Planning
and Development committee.
Such a deposit it was brought
out at the meeting should con
tain about 14 million tons of
sulphide ores averaging 40
per cent sulphur. Copper,
nickel and other by products
would be highly desirable.
In discussing the project,
Bruce J. Manley, Medford, the
association's president, repeat
edly emphasized that the pur
pose was to aid all mining of
the area so far as possible
and that if a cheap source of
sulphuric acid could be made
available it would lay the
basis for leaching the copper
and nickel ores, for making
chromium products, and for
the development of consider
able industry.
A meeting of the commit
tees will be held in Cave
Junction at 2 p.m. Jan. 20.
WEATHER
FORECASTS
Medford and viciniiy: Cold,
dense fog and mokc in lower val
ley through Tuesday. Some partial
clearing Tuesday afternoon. Fair
and mild above fog. High both days
30-37 in fog areas and 30-60 above
fog. Low tonight 24-30.
Western Oregon: Generally fair
along coast and northern interior
with patchy night and morning fog
but continued foggy in south half.
Low tonight 23-33 in interior and
35-40 on coast. High Tuesday 48-58.
except 34-42 in interior of south
half.
Northern California: Fair tonight
and Tuesday, except local fog
mainly in Central valley. Little
temperature change.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
30; below normal 7.
Record high this date 64 in 1061.
Record low this date 6 in 1037.
PRECIPITATION: None.
Total this month .06 in., .53 in.
below normal.
, 7.03
City Police Check
Four Accidents
Medford city police inves
tigated three hit and run ve
hicle accidents Sunday. No in
juries were reported, officers
said.
Larry Richard LaFcver,
3143 Delia Waters rd., told
police his car was struck by
an unidentified vehicle about
6 p.m. while it was parked
near Riverside ave. and Ken
net st.
A car registered to Floyd
Kenneth Lawson, 1418 Reddy
St., was struck and damaged
about 6:15 p.m. while it was
parked on Hawthorne st. be
tween Main and Jackson sis.,
police reported.
A city-owned traffic sign at
Main and Elm sts. was dam
aged by an unidentified ve
hicle about 9:18 p.m., officers
said.
In a fourth accident Sun
day, Donald Milton Straus. 30,
Gold Hill, was cited for hav
ing an expired operator's li
cense after the vehicle which
he was driving struck a traf
fic island marker at Highways
99 and 62 about 12 a.m. Sunday.
Tola! since Sept. 1 16.16 in.
in. aDove normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest vcslerday
100rr. highest this a.m. IOIKp.
J:nn 'M-
CITY Tester- a.m. tir.
Low Prpc.
40
High
65
BrooklnCK
Crater Lake r,j
Grants Pass 36 29
Howard Prairie .... 52 22
Klamath Kalis 47 10
MEDFORD 34 23
Portland 37 39
Seattle ' 37 33
Spokane 29 ?7
Yakima 38 33
Eureka 61 38-
nea aiutt 72 37
aacramcnio 58
San Francisco 61
Los Angeles 73
... 67
Phoenix ...
Denver ...
Chicago 32
Miami Beach 74
New York 41
Washington. D.C. .. 40
31
4!)
57
44
61
31
FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through
Jan. 121:
Western Oregon - Western Wash
ington Temperatures will range
from near or ahove normal at be
ginning of period with highs most
ly 40-0O and lows 30-40 to much
below normal by Friday or Satur
day with highs dropping to 32-42
and lows 22-32. Precipitation less
than normal, occurring mostly after
Wednesday.
Northern California No pre
cipitation likely. Temperatures
near normal.
Local and Personal
Flue Fir Firemen were
summoned about 9:50 p.m.
Sunday when a flue fire oc
curred at the Darral L. Payant
home, 2400 Edgemont dr.
Meeting Tonighl The
Medford Toastmasters will
meet tonight at 6:30 o'clock
in the Grotto. Speakers will
be John Austbo and Walt Nun
Icy. To Meeting R. E. Dndey,
district salesman in the Med
ford area for the Shell Oil
company, will attend the an
nual Northwest area sales
meeting in Portland Jan. 10
and 11.
Meeting Friday Ameri
can Legion Centennial post,
Jacksonville, will meet Fri
day, Jan. 11, at the Commu
nity hall at 8 p.m.
Flue Fire - Ashland fire
men reported a flue fire Sun
day at 9:14 a.m. at the resi
dence of C. N. Gillmorc. 357
Walker ave., Ashland. There
was no damage.
Permits Issued The Med
ford building department has
issued permits to F. Brewer to
erect a residence at 301 Ard
more dr. at an estimated cost
of $3,500; to R. II. Gandee to
construct a print shop at 6251
Market st. at an anticipated
cost of $19,000: to Die Walsh
to erect signs valued at $1,600
each at 1028 Court St. and 835
South Riverside ave.; to D. L.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPI I Dairy market:
Eggs To retailers: AA extra
large 49-53c; AA large 46.31c; A
large 43-49C: AA medium 44-48c:
A medium 31-34c: AA small 30.37c:
Pickcll to erect $9,000 resi- ca"" '."if" nl. ..... a
deuces at 2881 and 2849 How-1 prints sue; cartons Ic higher; B
ara ave. and a $10,000 resi
dence at 191 Mace rd.; to John
Humphrey to erect a $1,000
sign at 340 Lindero rd.; and
to Alexander and Brown In
surance company to erect a
$1,500 sign at 128 East Main
st.
prints 65c.
Cheese (medium cored! To
retailers: 46'a-47Ue; processed
American 5-10 lb. loaL 43-43c.
Portland-! UPI i-Dresaed crlckens
No 1 grade dressed to retailers:
Fryers, whole drawn. 33-39C lb.;
cut. up, 38-43C lb.: hens light type,
whole drawn 2I-26C lb.: light type
hens, cut up 24-30c lb.; heavy
whole 3K-3DC lb.
Prominent Portland
Restaurant Man Dies
Portland - OIPII - Ernest H.
Aebi, a prominent Portland
area restaurant operator, has
died at the age of 73.
Aebi operated L'Abbe Res
taurant in Lake Oswego and
Chalet L'Abbe and the Oregon
Liquor Control Commission
cafeteria at Milwaukie. He
recently resigned as a mem
ber of the Milwaukie City
Council because of poor
health.
Two Arrested for
Several Burglaries
Two Central Point youths,
both 18, are being held in the
Jackson county jail on charges
of burglary, according to stale
police.
Ralph Emmet Glass, and
Gary Gene Asher were arrest
ed Friday following a joint in
vestigation by state, Medford
and Central Point police.
The two young men admit
ted to burglarizing the Tom
Thumb market Thursday
night, and Gold Eagle Service
station on Table Rock rd. and
Larry's Drive In, Central
Point, on two occasions. Of
ficers also recovered much of
the loot stolen.
At Tom Thumb market
taken were tires, oil, green
stamps, numerous lubricant
additives.
'Religious Fanatics'
Blamed by Israel
Jerusalem, Israel -(UPD- The
Israeli cabinet said Sunday
night that "religious fanatics"
were responsible for the ston
ing of a Finnish government
mission school here last
Thursday.
It apologized to Finland for
the stoning, which was done
by a mob of 70 persons. Nine
of their leaders have been
charged with participating in
the incident, which resulted
in 30 broken windows. All 40
students at the school were
on Christmas vacation.
'Meet life Jt The Colony"
Luncheons served daily from II j.m. to 5 p.m.
Dinner service always from 5 p.m. to 'Midnight
Monday thru Saturday Closed Sundays
THE
t
and
FLORENTINE LOUNGE
FOURTH I FRONT For Reservations 779-1616
Births
DURB1N To Mr. and
Mrs. Dale C, 1161 Sage rd.,
Medford. Dec. 31, 1962, boy,
at Rogue Valley hospital.
TUESDAY WIDNESDAY
DOORS OPEN AT 7:30
"CURTAIN AT tIGHT"
m Minify
ASHLAND 482-1321
A Most Unusual Motion Picture!
fr ffk a flash of intensely
nniranla personal drama
1 wLfwSLA briiant bot
WOfElGir of bold motion
picture entertainment... beyond the
usual! starring ANNE BANCROFT intro
ducing PATTY DUKE with VICTOR J0RY
COMING JAN.
IS-lbTHE RED SHOES"
ROAD SHOW ENGAGEMENT
TONITE
Doors Open 7:30
Only Ona Show 8:00 P.M.
How did
they ever
make
movie of
"LOUTA"?
a vs:jusj - e -, I
LGBUTA
1 w
9
ADULTS
ONLY
No 0 U"o' II AdHVMtd
ROAD SHOW PRICES
Gcnoral SI. 00
Ut SI. 25
IWU I SMS -t SlUKrv SUSbCSl
LOLIJA
ftltRMRS SI m
lWMKKHX tvii.ixatp'H
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPli USDA
Cattle TMlt. Utility cows 13-10:
canner-eutttr 10-13; bulls utility
10-21.
Calves 400. Good-choice veslcrs
30-31: cull-utility 14-22: feeders
good-choice 160-430 lb. steers 28
28: medium 440 lb. dairy bred
steers 22.
Hogs 700. U.S. 1 and 2 butctmrs
17 75-18; 2 and 3 grade 17-17.73:
sows 1 grade 323 lb. 13.30; 1. 2 and
3 grade 373-330 lb. 12.50-14.
Sheep 1000. High choice long
haul wooled lambs near 100 lb.
20.30; choice 80-100 lb. wooled 10
20: high choice fall shorn 10.30:
feeder lambs choice-fancy 90 lb. 18.
A 7
C Phon. 772-4534 J
Time
For
Fresh Boneless
Corned
B
Beef
Fresh
ft Ground
f Beef
Oregon Grown
GABBA6
Solid Heads
Crisp and Tender
for the tastiest Corned
Beef & Cabbage ever
Firm, Rip No. 1 Top Quality
Keep 'em on ft If1
Bananas z,b.Zr
California Choice Seedlou Naval
Oranges 52.59
Z- BETTY CROCKER
s, PieCrusf Mix ,J i39
Atr Mission w staleys
if Oat sop 1 TL - --U9
111 14 oz. Bottle jj TUNA 3 ...89
1 ZyJ CLAM CHOWDER .J J9
100 COUNT TREE J&AV v
Tea Bags 99r !J
VforW be v U S lUJrJJ
-
3-lb,., 4-oi.7
SKIPPY
Dog Food
RIVIERA
40 oz. Tin .
Lasagne
ALLEN 1
Whole Chicken
MARK'S
We Give
THRIFTY GREEN
STAMPS
Sixth
and Grape
Limit Rights Reserved
I
LOTS
OF
FREE PARKING
Prictt
Good
Thru
Wid.
Jan. 9th