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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON THURSDAY. JUNE 6. 1963 -A 6 Edited by The Mail Tribune Advertising Department totii. RETAIL DOLLAR VOLUME REMAINED THE SAME during the 7-day period ended Wednesday, May 29. as the corresponding week last year. Dun & Bradstrect re ported today. National Percentage Changes varied from the corresponding levels of a year ana tav the following percentages: minus 1 to plus 3 per cent. Regional Percentage Changes varied from the comparable levels of a year ago by the following percentages: East South Central: minus 7 to minus 3; West South Central: minus 6 to minus 2; New England East North Central, West North Central: minus 2 to plus 2; Middle Atlantic: minus 1 to plus 3; South Atlantic 0 to plus 4; Mountain: minus 2 to plus 8; Pacific: plus 5 to plus 9. WORLD S FIRST CHLORIN- i ATED DETERGENT BOWS IN MEDFORD - The Colgate-Palmolive Company announced this week that the Medford, Oregon, area has been chosen for the , introduction of PRUF, the . world's first chlorinated deter- gent. According to a company spokesman, PRUF marks the first lime that a manufacturer has successfully combined a de ; tergent with a chlorine bleach. The formula was developed after five years of intensive research. "This represents a very real breakthrough in laundry sci ence." the spokesman said "With PRUF - the chlorinated ' detergent, we can offer the homemaker a product which combines the cleaning action of detergent with the bleaching ' action of chlorine bleach. Test after test was conducted to determine if the new deter gent formula produced compar able bleaching action without 1 U -JJltl . . - Mj3JJj , -""T.,"'''- I I ln bl"cl' "We found that separate bleaching entirely and still get end results which are comparable to separate chlorine bleaching. With one cup of Pruf -the chlorinated detergent in the washing machine, housewives get clothes both clean and bleach-white from a single product," the spokesman said. It was pointed out that PRUF is particularly effective for washing diapers because of its disinfecting, deodorising and stain removing actions. Other major uses, it was said, include the removal of tough stains and the hand laundering of bleach-safe items such as dacrons, nylons and orlons. Pruf is also designed tor general household cleaning and dis infecting, including tile and porcelain surlaces. Beginning this week, supermarkets ln the Medford area will offer ample supplies of PRUF, available in two sises. The modern blue and green package can be easily identified. Karl H. Becker, assistant production manager lor the Colgate-Palmolive Company with headquarters in New York, was in Medford the middle of May to direct the coordina tion oi the Prui nation-wide preview here. . RECORD AUTO SALES YEAR PREDICTED - This year "could be the biggest auto sales year in the history of the business,'" topping even the 7.4 million car sales in 19S3, said Byron Nichols, general manager of Chrysler's Dodge Division. This is the most op timistic public estimate yet made on 1963 car sales, reports The Wall Street Journal. Most auto men have been saying 1963 sales would match 1962 s, when 7.1 million cars, including 340,000 imported models, were sold, in me tirst lour momns of this year 2,424.000 U.S. models have been sold by dealers, up 11 per cent from z.ibo.OOO a year ago, and slightly behind 2,475,000 in 19S5. This year, however, about 25,000 to 30.000 imported models are being sold each month, while in 1955 few Imports were sold. Therefore, in cluding Imports, this year's retail car sales are up slightly from 1955. The car sales, "coupled with a new surge of strength in the rest of the economy," could "thrust us into a period of sustained economic activity on a high level in the months ahead," Mr. Nichols said. Truck sales are another indicator "pointing strongly to an advancing economy in the months ahead," he added. Truck sales in 1963 are likely to set a record topping the old high of 1,142,000 sales in 1952, Mr. Nichols commented NEW OFFICES FOR BAU MAN REALTY AND MID WEST CONSTRUCTION - A new office for Mid West Construction Com pany and Bob Bauman Realty is now open at the Grandview Market parking lot site. Crater Lake Avenue at Roberts Road. Bob Bauman, well known real tor, announced that Lucile Dan iels is now a licensed saleswo man for the agency. Bauman was publicity chairman for the re cent Realtor's Week. Wayne Crites owns and oper ates Mid West Construction Com pany. He is a general contractor and an established home and commercial builder. The new office has been open for the past two months and is located on the Grandview Market parking lot next to the site of the new post office annex station. Mewrf t-w-yww -?Feje I Religion in America ' Miller pointed out. All makes GRANTS PASS MAN JOINS ALLSTATE- Frederick C. Dymock, 542 Sunset Wjy, Grants Pass, has Joined the Allstate Insurance Company as agent for Medford and vi cinity, the company's regional headquarters ln Salem has announced. Dymork has completed an extensive training course at the Mcnlo Park, California office and has met all licensing requirements, Regional Manager Charles E. Colbert has reporlcd. He also has been appointed a Medford representative of the Allstate Safety Cru sade. Dymock was formerly employed by Laurentlde Finance at Medford, He is married and has three children. ( LELAND CLARK INSURANCE AGENCY MOVES-After 30 years In one location, the Leland Clark Insurance Agency has announced that it has moved its offices to the Oregon Bank Building at 711 E. Jackson Street. Leland Clark, owner and manager of the agency pointed out that the company s slogan has beeni "Safe Insurance at a Savings, "Primarily," Clark commented, "this move is designed to provide easier access and con venience for our customers. . The agency is a member of the Independent Agents Association, DAHRELL MILLER OPENS . , , ,. ,A.,.v, .. , ...., . BEE HIVE AUTO LEASE-Dar- rell Miller, well known car man , ... '- ' in this area, will open Bee Hive Auto Lease, Inc. this weekend at the corner of Central and 10th. Founded in Klamath Falls in 1937 by E. W. Stiles, Bee Hive Auto Lease is one of the oldest leasing firms on the Pacific Coast. The Bee Hive plan was designed as a service to firms and Individuals, providing them with current model automobiles, trucks and pickups on an annual lease basis. "Many business men have chosen this plan to eliminate Initial Investment and take advantage of the tax benefits, and models arc offered by the agency In addition to the lease business, the firm also rents cars and has a varied Inventory of high quality used cars for sale. The agency also has a complete service department and xacinues. Miller has been in the automotive business for the past 23 years with 10 years ln jucaioro. as uicisniooue dealer. uponlng activities for the new facilities will be held this Friday and Saturday, june ana . free coitee and doughnuts will be served visitors as an added feature FOOD STORE SALES CONTINUE TO SOAR . Sales of the nation's chain and inde pendent grocery stores reached a record high lor the 23rd consecutive year In 1962 reports Progressive Grocer. Total retail sales were SS6.2 billion, up $.1 per cent over J3ti. Dupermarxeis captured 68 per cent of salesi 2 per cent of U. S. food sales went io discounters. Independents (operators of 10 or lets stores) reported sales of $33.03 billion, up 5.2 per cent ever 1981. Chains (operators of 11 or more stores) achieved seles ol 123.13 billion, gain of 5.0 per cent over the previous year. Consumers spent 32.75 billion more In food stores in 1962 then in 1961. Per capita expenditure in grocery and combination stores increased from I2BJ In 1961 to 1300 last yeer. BILL FRAZIER TO REPRESENT DEL MONTE - Del Monte, one of the world's largest packers of canned goods, has named Bill Frailer to the position of sales representa tive for Southern Oregon. Frailer will be in charge of wholesale and retail sales, promotions, merchandising of the Del Monte line of canned fruits, vegetables, Juices, fish, pickles, and dried fruit. Color ads have frequently been used In this area for Del Monte promotions. Well known promotions of this company, which headquarters in San Francisco, are the Del Monte Roundup ln the fall, Garden Show in the spring and the Sun Fest In late winter. Previously, Frailer served as sales representative In Yakima, Washington for 5 years. He is married and has 3 children. His wife's name Is Patricia, and his children are Bill v. 17: Marsha 8: and J mini v .V 111 I For 8 years, Frailer served In the U.S. Navy. In 1941 if- 1 I he served aboard the U.S.S. Nevada and was with this ship it I I when it was sunk at Pearl Harbor. December 7. 1941. Later I I I the same ship was raised and refitted. Subsequently, he mi l I "ved on the US S. Nevada in the Aleutian Campaign, as t 1 I I troop convoy to France end Ireland, in the Invasion of S Mmmmmm" Cn,,,l..rn f .. . - . I f .v. T 1 . I . - , , , . . , . tji.uiiinii riaiiiT ana m mr oumii i aiiuc mnrsnaii isianct campaign and others. Frailer was born itnd spent his youth In Kansas. He likes to fish and said: "I'm really looking forward to living in this area because of the fishing potential." BOATING BOOM-Pleasure boating hes Increased some 10 per cent annually unce iea io wnere u now commands consumer spending in excess oi z.e blliio.1 a year, re ports E. I. duPont de Nemours at Co. This sum goes not only for the purchise of boets but also for accessories, care and storege for some I million crelts, including 4.1 million outboard motorboats. 142.000 Inboard and auxiliary - powered sailboats. 516.000 sailing boats and 1.6 million rowing crelts. There are 1,150 U.S. yacht and boet clubs with water front Ittillttes end more than 4,000 boat yards and sriarinas. , LA Glossolalia Continues To Be Controversial in SomeChurches By LOUIS CASSELS UPI Correspondent Last Sunday, Christians ob served a holy day called Pentecost. It is sometimes referred to as the birthday of the Church because it commemorates the occasion, seven weeks after the first Easter, when the apostles were dramatically endowed with "power from on high" to go forth and preach the good news of Christ to all the world. According to St. Luke's vivid account, the apostles were, gathered together in a house ln Jerusalem "when suddenly there came from the sky a noise like that of a strong driving wind, which filled the whole house where they were sitting , , , "And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and be gan to talk in other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utter ance. Oldest Reference The foregoing sentence, from the second chapter of the Bouk of Acts, Is the old est reference In Christian lit erature to a phenomenon known as glossolalia or "speaking in tongues." The New Testament con. tains many other references to the same phenomenon. By the time St. Paul wrote his First Letter to the Corinth! ans, ln 54 A.D., ecstatic utter ance had become the subject of sharp controversy within the church. Some Christians attached great importance to it as an external sign of being "filled with the Holy Spirit." Others looked askance at the Intense emotionalism associat ed with the experience. St. Paul apparently belonged to the latter group. He told t'.ie Corinthians he would "rather speak five intelligible words, for the benefit of others as well as myself, than thou sands of words In the lan guage of ecstasy." One thousand nine hundred and nine years later, the phe nomenon called "speaking In tongues" is still occurring among Christians. And It is still causing controversy. Until a few years ago, mod. cm manifestations of glossa- In 1 la were found almost ex- cluslvoly In the so-called Pentecostal sects, such as the Assemblies of God Churches of God, and Four Square Gospel Tabernacles, Today there is a growing Pentecostal movement within the big main-line Protestant bodies, and particularly wiuv In the Episcopal church. Al though the movement is strongest in California and around Chicago, it also has cropped up in other parts of the country, including Yale university. A careful and comprehen sive study of the new move ment was completed this month by a special commis sion of the Episcopal Diocese of California. Appointed by Bishop James A. Pike, the commission Included five priests, a theologian, a Bible scholar, two psychiatrists and a psychologist- Finds Two Types The commission found that there are two quite different types of glossolalia. One, which is called "rare, In volves "the use by a person of a human language which he has not studied and could not 'possibly' have learned. The commission members were unable to study this phenomenon at first hand, and offered no opinions about it. The "most common" type of glossolalia, and the one principally involved in the current movement. Involves the use of a special "lan guage which has no human counterpart, and which may be as unintelligible to the speaker as to his listeners. When a person begins to peak in this "language of ecstasy," as St. Paul termed it, he Is said to feel a strong sense of "surrender" to God, a release from anxiety and tension, and a conviction that the Holy Spirit will hence forth supply him with the strength to do all of the good and loving things which he has hitherto been too weak and selfish to do. Issues Pastoral Letter After receiving the com mission's report. Bishop Pike issued a pastoral letter "ad' vising" Episcopal clergymen of his diocese not to lead or take part ln public services whose purpose is to Induce or demonstrate glossolalia. He said that the holding of such Til C 11! Frailer l 1. 4, public services is "dangerous to the peace and unity of the church and a threat to sound doctrine." But the bishop said he had "neither the authority nor the desire ... to discourage the individual exercise of the gift of tongues by anyone in his private devotional life" "The very rise of this move ment within major churches in this country is a sign of a real need and hunger for a more vital, spirit-filled Chris- nan experience in life." saM Bishop Pike. "We commend those prests and laymen who have sensed this need and at the risk of scorn and mis understanding have soueht t be avenues for the filling of the church with the Holy Spirit." Theyll Dole Every Time jQHaLb Fescue brings home a joke pbdm the office and tells his fbau but he mi&mtas well have kpt mum w AUO TUB DINER VS -WHAT'S THIS IN MY SOUP? AND THE WAITER SAYS, ILL ASK THE MAWAGER-IM 'J I J V IS THAT TRUE? on-is rrA joke I DOWT ?ET IT utiK cum II n A WAITER SAY THAT? ITS NOT FUNNY' rc:-You KN5W-W HUH : THE ONE ABOUT THfc wn J, WITH THE SOUK IN ihc n PESTAUkANl y 11 1 l THE ONE AiSOLH IHCr. , tmff I WITH THE SOUP IN THE j M k I I vESTAURA. MM "fuFM TUEY GOTO A PACTV AND KaSTSTW? HE TEU AT, NOW THAT ME DOESN'T UKE IT, EITHER ? Insurance Men Plan To Attend Conference Curtis L. Hopkins, Wayne H. Safley and W. Wayne King, representatives of Aetna Life Insurance company in Medford plans to attend .the 35th annual meeting of the company's Corps of Region naires June 16-19 in Santa Barbara, Calif. The local insurance men were named to Aetna Life's national honorary organiza tion in recognition of their outstanding records in the life insurance field during the past year. Subscribers To report improper or non delivery of the Mail Tribune in Mediord. phone 772-6141; Ash land call at 416 Bridge it., or phone 482-3002: Yreka, phone Victory 2-2898 before 6:45 p.m. daily and 10 JO a.m. Sunday. If regular delivery arrives ahortly after you call please notify office, thus elimlnatiMt special messenger service. A JUNE 10, 1963 ...... nfi 1QW 1 1 ,,, hsunmiJl AGENT lltvlireuiiiii- t-Hb ' It Leland Clark Insurance 30 Years Safe Insurance at a Savings to OREGON BANK BUILDING 711 East Jackson St. COLOR GIRL - Midshipman first Class Charles S. Mintcr Ul embraces his Color Girl, Diane Lovewell, 21, of Arling ton, Va , during Color Cere monies at the Naval Academy at , Aniinpolls. M Inter, com mander of the top-judged 9th Company, selected Miss Love well to be the 1963 Color Girl. 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