Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 24, 1963, Image 21

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    MLDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
THURSDAY, JANUARY 24. 1SE3
No Recommendation
C '
LEGAL NOTICES
'George Washington Slept Here'
Doesn't Indicate First Rate Stop
By DICK WEST
Washington -IUPD- Innkeep
ers who put up signs boasting
n a i "Lieorge Washington
slept here"
may be guilty
of false ad-
i
Sver t i s t n g.
Washing t o n
may have
spent the
night there
all right, but
there's a good
possi b 1 1 i t y
that he failed
to get any sleep
If the bedbugs didn't keep
Jim awake, then the chances
are that his slumber was dis
turbed by some other anti
iomnolent activity, such as
bis mattress catching on fire.
1
fax Exemption on
Homesteads Sought
j A resolution calling for
passage of a homestead tax ex
emption up to $7,500 true cash
alue, without the stipulation
Of disability certification, was
passed recently by Veterans
Of World War I at a meeting
Of District 7 barracks.
District 7 includes the bar
racks of Medford, Ashland,
Grants Pass. White City, Cave
junction, Roseburg, Rogue
Biver and Tri City.
f Members present, number
ing about 120, agreed they
wanted the same provision en
Joyed by veterans of the Span
ish American and other earlier
wars.
i( Officers recently installed
by the Medford Barracks for
1863 are commander, Freder
ick D. Adams; senior vice com
mander, Herman St. Clair;
Junior vice commander, Thom
as O. Foose; chaplain, Francis
B. Otis; quartermaster, Albert
F. Johnsen; judge advocate,
Alvin C. Lucas; sergeant at
rms, Frank Hoffman; and
three year trustee, Thomas B.
Lunch. Pat Graham has been
retained as adjutant.
i Beech wood decays rapidly
when exposed to air but lasts
well under water. It is used
extensively for piling and in
the construction of dams.
The mere fact that Wash
ington made an overnight
stop at a certain tavern or Inn
is simply no recommendation
at all. The truth Is that he
stopped at some pretty crum
my joints.
The problems that the
father of our country had
in finding a decent place to
lay his head are related in
Washington's own diaries,
some excerpts from which
have just been distributed
by the National Geographic
Society.
Washington was the Dun
can Hines of his day. When
he traveled, he made notes on
the accommodations that he
found. Reading them has
given me a new appreciation
of Conrad Hilton.
At one place, Washington
wrote, the bed "as they called
it" was nothing but a little
straw "matted together with
out sheets or any thing else
but only one thread bear
blanket with double its
weight of vermin such as lice,
fleas, etc."
Anyone who has ever bed
ded down on a "threat bear"
blanket can tell you that it is
even more uncomfortable
than a polar bear blanket.
During one "blowing and
rainy night," Washington re
ported, "our straw catch'd a
fire while we were laying
upon and was luckily pre
serv'd by one of our mens
awaking."
Old George's syntax was
not all that it might be, but
I gather from this passage
that he could have been
smoking in bed.
At another place the beds
consisted of "a little hay
straw fodder of bairskin
which ever is to be had." He
did not indicate, however,
whether the bairskin was
thread bear. .
Everyone stretched out on
the floor "like a parcel of
dogs or cats," he said, and
"happy he that gets the berth
nearest the fire."
The diary is replete with
reference to the lack of sani
tation, tidiness and charm in
the roadside places where he
stayed. He also observed that
some of the prices were "ex
travagantly dear."
Washington may not have
been much at spelling, but lie
sure knew a flea bag or a
tourist trap when he saw one.
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE OK FILING FINAL
ACCOUNT NO. 11433
In the Matter of the Estate of
Amalla Welch. Deceased
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the underfcirned haa tiled her
final account and report In the
above entitled estate and that by
order of the Circuit Court of the
State of Oregon lor Jackson
County. Probate Department, i
hearing upon the same haa been
set for February 21. 1!)63. In the
Circuit Courtroom in the Jackson
County Courthouse in Medford.
Oreaon at the hour of 10:00 A.M.
All persona having objections
thereto are hereby notified to
present the same on or before such
time.
Date of first publication of this
notice is January 24. 1RH3.
Jennie May Hostetter
Executrix
NOTICK OF HKAItlNG
UPON FINAL ACCOUNT
Vi, msa
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OK THE
el A 1 E or UKLliOH run
JACKSON COUNTY
Prnhale Department
In the Matter ol the Estate
of i
HARVEY K. WHALEY. SR.,
Deceased.
Notice Is hereby aiven that Jene-
veve Taylor Bray, administratrix
wiin ine will annexed ot tno r.g
mte ol Harvey K. Whaley. Sr.,
Deceased, has filed in the Cir
cuit Court of the State of Ore
gon for Jackson County, her First
and Final Account and Report as
such administratrix with the will
annexed of said estate, and tne
4th day of February, 1903. at the
hour of 9:00 o'clock A.M- In the
Courtroom of the said Court as
the Courthouse. Medford. Jackson
County Oregon, has been fixed as
the time ana place Tor hearing of
objections to said First and Final
Account and Report, and all per
sons having objections thereto are
ncreoy required to make or me
the same on or before said time.
UAlt.1) January 3. tuea.
Jeneveve Taylor Bray,
. Administratrix
with the will annexed
Robert D. Dames. Attorney
Medford, Oregon.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR
JACKSON COUNTY
IN PROBATE
In the Matter of the Estate of
HENRY P. DEVEREUX. Deceased
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that I have been appointed bv
the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for Jackson County at Ad
ministrator with the will annexed
of the estate of Henry P. Dever.
eux deceased, and have duly qual
ified. All persons having claims
against said estate are herehv no
tified to present them, with proper
vouchers and duly verified, to me
at the office of Kelly & Grant At
torneys. 1005 East Main Street.
Medford, Oregon, within six
months from the date of this
notice.
DATED at Medford, Oregon, this
24lh day of January. 1063.
JAMES DEVEREUX
Administralor with the
will annexed
KELLY & GRANT
Attorneys for Estate
1005 East Main Street
Medford, Oregon
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
In the Circuit Court of the
State of Oregon for the County
of Jackson
In the Matter of the Estate of
winnlfred C. Horner, deceased,
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN.
that the undersigned has been ap
pointed and qualified as Executor
ot tne estate of vvinnllred t;.
Horner, deceased, and all persons
havinc claims against said estate
are hereby notified to present the
same, with proper vouchers, at the
ottice ot Donald K. Dennian, lu
Brnphy Building. Medford, Oregon,
within six months from the date
hereof.
Dated this 17th dav of January.
1963.
John W. Horner, Executor
Donald K. Denman
Attorney for Executor
-a i i
Your Money's
Worth
By SYLVIA PORTER
Copyright, Hall Syndicate, Inc.
ESTATE OF JOHN J. KENNEDY
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT
No. 11-412
In the Circuit Court of the State
of Oregon Fore the County ol
Jackson. Probate Department
In the Matter of the Estate
of
John J. Kennedy, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned, as Executor of the
Estate of John J. Kennedy, de
ceased, has filed his final account
in the Circuit Court of the Stale
of Oregon for Jackson County and
that Monday the 4th day of Febru
ary, 1903. at the hour of 9:30
o clock in the forenoon of said riav
and the court room of said court
has been appointed by said court
hi me time ana place ror the hear
ing of objections thereto and the
settlement thereof.
Dated and first published Janu
ary 3, 1963.
Date of last publication January
J. W. COWLING
Executor.
Buhlinscr & Dressier
Attorneys at Law
2321 S. E. 122nd Avenue
Portland, Oregon
SUMMONS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
si ATE Or OREGON. FOR
JAtKSON COUNTY
DAVIS-MAR-
COMING 'ERA OF THE FORLORN MAIDENS
In 1B65, we'll enter the "Era of Marriage" in our land.
This is the year the "war babies" finally will be coming
Of age, marrying, setting up new homes, buying every thing
and non-thing in sight. The boom to be kicked off by the
marriage era is a fundamental force on which President
Kennedy is counting to produce enough taxes to balance our
massive federal budgets in 1966-67.
But in 1965, we'll also be entering the "Era of the Forlorn
Maidens" and of "The Great Manhunt." For this is the year
when the total of girls reaching average marriage age will
r. start to outnumber by hundreds of thousands the total of
i boys at typical marrying age. And this aspect which Ken-
is nedy hasn't noted but which some of his astute economic
f advisers have could conceivably postpone or at least temper
the boom.
I i It's a fascinating angle of the approaching boom years
Which you can have fun with or lake seriously. So here goes,
v i Half of all the girls in our country who get married do
so before they are 20 years old; the medium age at which
girls marry is 19.9. The men American girls typically marry
are two and one-half to three years older; the average is
22 to 23. .
j This means that Hie girls born in the great baby boom
7 years of 1946-49 will be reaching the peak ago for marriage
in 1965-68 and they normally would marry the boys born
, $ in 1943-46 .
' But matching up the millions of boys and girls born in
i these years reveals what a Washington officials calls "a
lather peculiar imbalance between the sexes and raises
I the provocative question, "Where are hundreds of thou-
. j sands of these maidens going to find husbands?" Consider
the warm statistics:
3 Girls reaching typical marriage ago in 1965 will oulnum-
'., ber boys they would typically marry by 90.493. The com
f' parison is: 1,597.452 girls born in 1946 against 1,506.959
' boys born in 1943. That's not so bad, but look at the plight
1 of the maidens in 1966.
? , : t :.. io ;it
t UiriS rescuing typical iiianwiic agi: in 7uu win ""i-
j number boys they would typically marry by 364,763. The
comparison is 1.800,064 girls born in 1947 against l,4JD,dui
boys born in 1944.
It's almost as bad in 1967, for girls reaching typical age
In that year will outnumber boys they would typically marry
by 316,629. The comparison is 1,721,216 girls born in 1948
against 1,404,587 boys in into.
It'll begin to even out again in 1968 when girls reaching
typical marriage age will outnumber boys they typically
would marry bv "only" 41,957. The comparison is 1,733,177
girls born in 1949 against 1.691,220 boys born in 1946.
Of course, one way out for the forlorn maidens would be
through marriage to "older men" except that there were
even fewer boy babies born in 1940 through 1942. Those
were really low baby years. .
The extent to which the marriage era Is being relied
upon to send us Into a major boom must not be shrugged
off. Tho estimate is marriages will climb 37 per cent by
1970 from around 1,575,000 in 1962 to 1,705,000 in 1965
to 2.155.000 by 1970. The estimate is new households
will soom 51 per cent in this period from around 830,000
In 1962 to 913.000 In 1965 to 1.253,000 by 1970.
u. i the heart of the prosperity predicilions, for young
marrieds need eveylhing and will borrow to the limit to
buy Here is the heart ot Kennedy s ganiDic mat suosiduu..
lax ' reductions in 1963-64 will keep the economy going
... t., .t,.i until mfi5 and then we'll have it made.
urh.i .hnnoh. haDDens if the Great Manhunt falls? What
happens ' I suspect, is that the forlorn maidens will simply
change the habits of their males and they'll marry boys of
their own age-though pernaps a year or so .. .. .
or predicted. A searching look at those baby totals discloses
that in every year except 1940, the number of boys born
u. . j .i. r,,.mh.r nf oirls born in the same year. And
with over 11 per cent of today's 14-year-old girls actually
going steady, the teen-agers apparently already arc figuring
it out-even without one warm statistic on their future for
lorn plight to guide them.
MARGARET LOU
L-xiLL,, riaintiir.
VICTOR CULLEN DAVIS-MAR'
CELL Defendant
TO VICTOR CULLEN DAVIS
MARCELL. THE ABOVE NAMED
DEFENDANT:
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE
OF OREGON, you are hereby re
quired to appear and answer the
complaint filed against you in the
above entitled suit within four
weeks from the date of the first
publlcaton of this summons, and
it vou fail to so aooear and an
swer said complaint, for want
thereof the plaintiff will apply to
me court tor tne rcnet acmanaea
in her complaint, to-wil: For a
decree ot this court forever d s-
solving the bonds of matrimony
now cxistinc between Dlaintitf and
defendant and granting plaintiff
a aivorcc troin aetcnaant; sucn de
gree awarding plaintiff sole End
permanent core, control and cus
tody ot tne minor cniiarcn ot una
marriage, KicKy uavis-niarccu,
aged 13, and Terry Davis-Marcell,
agea l.
The data of the order for pub.
lication of summons is January 2,
1963. The time prescribed for pub
lication of this summons is once
each week for four consecutive
weeks. The date of the first pub
lication of this summons is Janu
ary 3, 1963.
JOHN PATRICK COONF.Y
Of Attorneys for Plaintiff
100.1 E. Main
Medford, Oregon
TIMBER FOR SALE. UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE
INTERIOR. BUREAU OF LAND
MANAGEMENT. OKAI. AlitlHIN
B1US as hereinafter designated will
be received by the District Man.
aaer. Bureau of Land Management,
BLM Warehouse Area, Armory
Drive, Medford. Oregon (Mailing
address 1133 S. Riverside!, at l:10
A.M.. PACIFIC STANI1ARII TI.MK,
on Thursday. February 14. 1963,
for all timber marked or designated
for cutting. Before bids are sub-
nutted, full information concerning
the timber, the conditions of sale
and submission of bids should be
obtained from the above District
Manager. The right is hereby re
served to waive technical defects in
this advertisement and to reject
any ot all bids. The United States
reserves the right Id waive any In
fnrmalllv In bids received when
ever such waiver Is In the Inlcrest
ot the Untied States. IN .lAtKSON
COUNTY: ORKGON: I'UIU.It: IHI
MAIN. All limber designated lor
cull no on Lot a. sec. IB, i. M n
n. 1 t . Will. Mer.. estimated for
the purpose of this sale to be 1,374
M hri ft. Douclas-fir. 102 M bd.
ft. suaar pine, 338 M bd, ft. white
lir, zu ftl Da. li. western ncmiocK,
74 M bd. ft. Incense-cedar. No bid
for ess than 523. 0 ncr M bd. tt
for the Douglas-fir, $36.70 per M
bd ft. tor the sugar nine. S9.40 per
M bd. ft. for the white fir, Sli.50
per M bd. ft. ror the western hem.
lock. $1263 per M bd. fl. lor the
tnccnsc-crda'-. or a total purchase
price ol $39,918 10, will be consid
ered. Minimum deposit with bid
S4.uuu.iiu.
C-Card of Thinks
OUR HEARTFELT THANKS TO
all who extended comforting
sympathy and help in our recent
sorrow. For the beautiful serv
ice, flora, offerings, and other
kindnesses, we are deeply grate
ful. Mrs. William Turnbow,
family and friends
LODGE NOTICES
Medford Lodge 103,
AF & AM. MM degree on
Friday. Jan. 25th at 7:30
P.M. accompanied by
Chanters ot HiUah Tem
ple Shrine.
Irvin Patten. WM
Reames Chapter No. 66,
O. E. S. Stated Meeting.
Thursday, Jan. 24, 8:00
P. M. Initiation.
Nellie Dyke, W. M.
3-PERSONAL
TO GIVE AWAY two 12" Pine
trees. Come 5i dig In em out. 104
a. Kocncway . 773.1017 .
WANTED To contact someone
who has a hand loom tor rug
weaving. 773-4426.
INCOME tax service. Cecelia Ray-
purn, w. ivy. vM-aJno.
VACANCY for Lady or Man need
ing nursing care. Mountain view
Nursing Home, 306 Park St.,
A smarm.
SHIRLEY Carmiehael is now at
The Charm Cottage ready to
welcome all her old friends and
new customers. 772-2186.
MWH'ii ' W
STORE
HOURS:
GOOD BUY!
Armours
24 oz. Can BEEF STEW
12 oz. Can TREET
l5'2 oz Can Corned Beef Hash
YOUR
CHOICE
ALWAYS LOTS OF
FREE
PARKING
SPACE !
CROWN
mm
A BIG VALUE
Super Marker. FroTn
Slravberry Halves
10 Oz. Package
lAJSSSl Chill with Beans JiiE
gATO " I Worrell's Pride-Mb. RoH
S 40-M.
llgjlgi "amsc a,qB
"Tlr I Zee. J Armours Banner-Regular Sliced I
Pick ud entry blank at our 111 Ft ( CII.J n
TryJI. HEINZ KETCHUP DISPLAY YvdX rapCl .lJ"lCB DaM" lb. 49
A it 12-ox. Hot-1 4-oi. Regular " I I .
f Unnamon 7 I fl Fresh Young
on Hot Oreal VI F 0(fiC 100 ft. fl' ISC Wl tim ,b 39e
r i " R Ro,,, (J ty.ea J Fh Exfra Lean " . ..
1 "7 I ' ,, ; If Ground Beef ' lb 390
l BPjjP I WEEKEND BUY. I " Our Fresh Meats An t.
Add a teaspoon or so to tcreal as j V iV ir" I
j it cooks, or sprinkle over sweet- I? ! ' Hs& V I l M I '
L ened cereal. Be sure it's Crescent jV 1 A CX C 1 ,t.R.I 1
because we pack only choice cin- 1 A " : ,1 AT'Ilm i 1 TmWITn
V namon from the Far East, selected V j - 1 I UulaT ' " 1 r Vl A' X.wt-j
k for extra aroma, flavor and color. ' s) M ataassw ". t "
CRESCENT )f LBS. J f Fresh Local CS irTtrilW S
ggrggjl I F0RZb i j SALAD MIX Zp2!ar
30 i POP CORN MMim 59. P
"7 J White or Yellow v 1
Cwl : . Ripe Thin Skin . , ' . (1 JRfctf
JANUARY 27TH ' Local Newtown E?l
Weekend Issue 1 j.....!.-. II fl mmJ APPLES 5 lb. I
a J II r II h I B ft If . a l f A V i H
PAULSEN y&GATES- PniS
III II y I a or a ru. I
Tappen I
Hoover I
DIET BUT ENJOY EATING AGAINI
NEW IDEAS FOR
WEIGHT WATCHER
MEALS!
I Jfr- sAiai CUilton
LFS?.i5 CARNATION
rKSffl INSTANT
j WHtU I PtUI
m hiu I
LSW 14-QT-
lll SIZE
9c
nsw liver
Tall 15-oz. can
The latest Medical Fad:
"The Sleep Cure: Quackery or
Therapy?"
Turning Point for A Man and
A Nation: "Appointment with
Destiny" by J. Edgar Hoover
When the Reel World Be
comes Real: "Whatever Hap
pened to Elizabeth Taylor?"
PLUS EXCITING STORIES
AND FEATURES FOR AIL i
Family
Weekly
with your copy ol the
Medford., .wTribune
Prices Effective Thursday thru Saturday
LOTS OF FREE PARKING LIMIT RIGHTS RESERVED