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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. NEDFORD. OREGON WEDNESDAY. JUNE II. 1U3 a a Highway Inn Is Booming Occupation By WILLIAM D. LAFFLER United Prtu Inlernationtl New York-dTU - Innkeeping along the mtion's highways rapidly U becoming a most fascinating occupation be cause operators never know what nightfall may bring. There was a time when the motel owner was little more than a roadside room clerk but now he has become a com bination of zoo keeper, mar riage counselor and trouble shooter. In one instance a couple drove into a motel entrance way and asked the operator if he accepted pets. When he said yes, the couple ushered a goat into their room. The operator did not like it and said so. "Well, we have our own straw," the couple said de finatly. This and other unexpected incidents were recalled by - John Lacock, President of Quality Courts United, Inc., a non-profit association. Complain of Machina The operator of the South ernaire at Ft. Pierce, Fla., re ported a woman complained because the stamp machine gave her only two-four cent stamps for a dime. "It wasn't until the oper ator gave her two cents in change that she calmed down," Lacock said. "At the same motel, one woman in sisted on a baby crib .or her dog. By diplomacy, though, this problem was solved." Lacock mentioned an in stance wherein a woman and her three children arrived late one night with their dog, a boxer. "They had no money but were willing to swap the dog for a room for the night," Lacock said. "The motel oper ator didn't take ihe dog, but did give them complimentary accommodations for the night. Breakup Spat "Another operator had the strange experience of having a lady rent connecting rooms, one for herself and the other for her pet puma." An innkeeper's wife helped break up a honeymooners' OBITUARIES spat at the Bradenton Cabana in Bradenton. Fla. Lacock said a bride came crying to the front desk of this motel and told of . an argument with her husband. The innkeeper's wife offered her solace and haven, but a few minutes later the bride groom showed up. The inn keeper's wife eventually talk ed the couple into patching up the quarrel. There is a bit of whimsy in an incident reported by Bill Guilford of the Colonial Motor Court in Burlington. Vt. He watched a deer jump through a double-glassed win dow, fall on a bed and jump back out the window. The deer vanished into the forest after looking into each window of the motel, Guiford said. HELD OVER! TONITE & THURSDAY states 8:15 Show at Dusk 4QWUWP I kK ' -"'Ma iF' 'ff 111) l?m i 1 f iliv H Tony Curtis r fO Pounds ofTKouaig' Local and Personal" UIIHENCE FRANCE MARTHA HARYEY-NUYEN- M YKK HAL . .IS k GIRL i I NAMED I PA.MMOUN TECHMCOLOR Building Permits Build ing permits have been issued by the Medford building de partment to Mrs. Caroline Hooker for a new foundation under the house at 302 Wil lamette ave., valued at $1, 000; to Don Furtick Apart ments, 755 Stevens St., to construct a $4,000 swimming pool; to Ed Gaines for a $1, 000 remodeling and addition to the house at 728 King st.; to Roy Henry to erect a $14, 000 residence at 1748 Hybis cus st.; and to Frank Thrash er to erect two $12,000 resi dences at 1215 and 1213 Co vina st. Clinic Open -The chest x- ray clinic at Sacred Heart hospital will be open Thurs day, June 20, between 2 and 5 p.m., according to the chest x-ray committee of the Jack son County Tuberculosis and Health association. The asso ciation operates the clinic in order to detect early and un known chest conditions such as tuberculosis, emphysema, lung tumors, heart conditions and other chest diseases. . . ,. Plan Inlerviews-Sfc Annie B. Hawkins, career counse lor for the Women's Army Corps, will be in Medford, June 20 and 21 to interview applicants for the Women's Army Corps. She may be con tacted at the Army Recruit ing station at the post pffice building, Medford. Leaye-Mrs. Virginia Mcr- vin and daughter Kathy, and Mr. and Mrs. Arlan Tackett and children Dale and Vir ginia, Nampa, Ida., have left for their home after visiting the Rev. and Mrs. ' K. L. Malhewson, 302 South Grape St., Medford. While here they spent a day at Harris beach and en route home went by way of Crater lake accom panied by the Mathewsons. Mrs. Mathewson recently re turned from Nampa where she visited relatives. LESLIE G. MYRICK JR. Funeral services for Les lie Gale Myrick Jr.. 16. of 362 Orr dr., who died Mon day, will be held at 3 p.m. Thursday in Hillcrest Memo rial chapel on the North Phoenix rd. The Rev. Kenton Adams of the Forest Acres Community church will offi ciate. Committal will be in Hillcrest Memorial park, with Conger-Morris funeral direc tors in charge of arrange ments. Mr. Myrick was born April 13. 1947. in Torrance, Calif., and had lived in southern Oregon for the past eight years, where he was a stu dent at Crater High school in Central Point. Survivors include his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie G. Myrick; three brothers, Rob ert Myrick, Richard Myrick, and Steven Myrick; two sis ters. Sue Ann Myrick and Lin- da Myrick, all at home; his grandparents. Earl Myrick, Central Point; Mrs. M. B. Mc Cauley, Salida, Colo.; and Mr. and Mrs. Faustino Lopez, Eaton, Colo.; . and several aunts, uncles and cousins. Thursday In the Smith Cal loway Funeral home at The Dalles. Interment will be In the IOOF cemetery at The Dalles with the Litwiller Funeral home, Ashland, in charge of arrangements. Mr, Ball was a retired rail road conductor. He was mar. ied at Heppner, Ore., in 1905 to Anna M. Gosson, who survives. Portland Produce' Portland (UPll Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: AA extra large 38-42c; AA large 37-40c; A large 36-39c: AA medium 30-34c: AA small 23 39c; cartona l-3c hither. Butter To retailera: AA and A prints 6c; cartona 3c higher; n nnnt. fi.Sc. Cheese medium cured To retailera: 46-48c: proccued Amer ican S-IO loat. 43-4SC. Portland lUPb Dressed chick ens Kn 1 trade dressed to retail' era: Frvers, whole drawn. 31-3BC lb : cut-up. 37-42C lb.: hens light tvpe. whole drawn 23-26C lh.: light type hens, cut-up. 24-28C lb.; heavy whole 36-39c lb. Portland Livestock Portland (UPI l USDA Live stork: Cattle ISO; high good-low choice steers ...u-4; neuers laie i ue day one load good-choice 865 lb. 23. Calves 23; few choice vcnlcrs 23-26: one lot choice 307 lb. steer calves 27.30. Hogs 130: harrows and gilts 1 and 2 at 200-240 lh. 19; 2 and 3 grade 260 lh. 17.30-18. Sheep 400; no early trade test. THORNTON ROMINE Funeral services for Thorn ton Romine, 75, of 1202 Ma pie Park dr., who died Tues day, will be held at 9:30 a.m Thursday at Conger Morris downtown chapel. The Rev. James O. Gordon of the Mt Pitt Church of the Nazarene will officiate. Committal will be in Memory Gardens Me morial park. Mr. Romine was born Feb 12, 1888. in Cozad, Neb., and had lived in southern Oregon for 21 years. He was married May 12, 1919. in Lexington, Neb., to Stella N. Sandine who died in April. 1862. He was a veteran of World War I. Survivors include two sons, Charles Romine, Medford; and Lloyd Romine, Sacramen to, Calif.; a daughter, Mrs, Arvilla Howsley, Medford; two brothers, Floyd Romine, Gold Hill, and Harrison Ro mine, Portland; three sisters, Miss Faye Romine, Salem Mrs. Iva Abbott, Turlock Calif.; 8nd Mrs. Gladys Nich ols, Medford, and nine grand' children. STEVEN H. HUNSLEY Funeral services for Steven Harry Hunsley, 18-months. of route 3, Trail, who died Mon day, will be held at 1 p.m. Thursday in Hillcrest Memo rial chapel on the North Phoe nix rd. The Rev. Lester Wil cox Jr., of Me Meanows church, Sams Valley, will of ficiate. Committal will be in Hillcrest Memorial park, with Conger-Morris funeral direc tors in charge of arrangements. Steven was born Nov. 22, 1961. in Medford. Survivors include his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry N, Hunsley: two brothers, wii. liam George Hunsley and Lawrence Carl Hunsley; and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs Alex Legler, Central Point; and Mrs. Esther Hunsley Medford. . . Trpfe freer from Ihe ireplctf uaini Queen The treat supreme: three mounds of country-fresh Dairy Queen heaped Ki;h Ofl choice ripe bananas, and combined with your favorite toppings. Come la for treat TODAY! 450 South Central JAMES S. BELL Ashland - Funeral services for James Scott Bell, 83, who died in Ashland Monday will be held at 2 p.m. Weather Medford an4 vicinity; IncrMi ins cloudlnckt tonight. Po4hlt .vhowers today. Low tonight Huh Thursday Id. Western Oregon : Cloudy with oral dmsie tonight. Cooler and partly sunny Thursday. Low to night 4l&a. High Thursday in the southern half 78-gg 6S-7B in the northern half. 63 on coast. Northern California: Fair to- night and Thursday except fog no low clouds on coast. Chance afternoon thunderstorms in high mountains. Little change In temperatures. LOCAL DATA . TEMPERATURE: Mean vaster. lay 74; above normal 9, Record high this date 101 in 194V Record low this date 38 tn IB 29. PRECIPITATION: St hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 jn., none. Toul this month .14 Inch. .ST men dciow normal. Total since &aoi. 1. IS 80 inchas. 73 Inches above normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest vesterdav ', nignest wis am. n. Htth 4 -IB 4, Yetfr a.m. hr, day Low Free. 61) 43 .. 91 49 Howard Prairie .. M 44 Klamath Falls .... 87 48 .18 MtncuRU 93 49 Portland 18 AT Space Age Method Being Pioneered For Industry CITY Brookings Grants Pass Seattle .. Spokane Eskimo . SUSAN W. SCHMIDT Funeral services for Susan W. Schmidt, 325 West Fourth st., who died Tuesday, will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at Perl Funeral home. Dr. D. K. West, castor of First Presby terian church, will officiate. Interment will be private. RUTH M. WILSON Ruth M. Wilson, 54, of 3329 North Freeland rd., Central Point, died today in a local hosnital. Funeral arrange' ments will be announced Dy Perl Funeral home. MRS. VIOLA OLSON Mrs. Viola Olson, Eugene a lormer long time resident oi Jacksonville, died June 17 in Eugene. Born in Davis county, Ncbr in 1885, Mrs. Olson moved to Oregon at the age of six with her parents, who settled at Jacksonville. She was a 50' year member of the Eastern Star lodge at Jacksonville. Surviving are her three daughters, Mrs. Sadie Cog' hill, Medford: Mrs. Emma Coghill, Springfield, and Mrs. Thelma Owens, Eugene; brother, C. F. Dunford, Apple' how do you answer the hunger in a child's eyes, if he lives thousands of miles away? By joining CARE'S Food Crusade, you span the world to help feed hungry school children, orphans, refugees, the aged and sick, desperately poor families. what you do is share our farm abund ance staples donated by the U.S. Food for Peace program. CARE adds other foods, packs various units to match coun try needs. Every $1 you give sends one package with your name and address, to bring a personal message of friendship from the American people. where need is urgent, CARE delivers your gifts. You cannot specify persons, but you may choose any of these places: Colombia, Cyprus, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Greece, Haiti, Hong Kong, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Korea. Macau, Mexico, Pakistan, Poland, Sierra Leone, Turkey, West Berlin, Vietnam, Yugoslavia. CARE New York 16. N.Y. or your loral CARE office ; Here a $. 1.. for the Food Crusade. (Make check payable to CARE, Inc.) -.. (Tour nam) - (Address) Courtesy of Mail Tribuna sa S M 61 Eureka SS Red Bluft ., 100 Sacramento ft. San Francisco .... 00 Los Angelas 73 SI M S M "J Phoenix Denver io 7 7.1 IB New York S3 Washington. D. C. S8 Chicaco Miami Beach .. 71 41 ftS l 4 ss riVE-DAY FORECAST Western WasMniton and Oreeon Recurring snowery pertooi. ro' tal precipitation more than sea' sonal. Temperaturea below normal. (sign OU1U. LOW 40. Northern California No precipl tarion except scattered thunder' showers at timea in hleh moiin tains. Temperatures near normal Investment Funds Noon auotaUons on selected eiocaa; Bid Fund Bullock 13.51 Chemical rund . . 11 30 Colonial Ener 13 3d Eaton Howard Stk.. 13.01 Fidelity 16 34 Fundamental Invest. 0.8R Group Sec Avia-Elec 7. IS Group Sec Com Stk 13 3D 3 14 Hamlllon C7 Mass Inv Grlh Stk National Growth .... Slocks TV-Elcc United Accum united Canada . .. United Continental.. united income United Science Value Line Ino Variable Wellington 2S 7B7 1BA7 7 60 14 39 1(37 6 07 1233 70 9 30 esn 14.41 Asked III 1130 13.11 1.1 10 17.30 10 S3 7.S4 14.60 9.6 0 03 a 7 3047 3S 1.1 OS 10 07 7.62 Br LAWRENCE It. WERNER United Press International Pittsburgh -dlft- While sci ence is reaching for the moon. Pittsburgh management ad- visor Is pioneering a pro grammed instruction method he believes will be the founda tion for industrial efficiency in the space age. Dr. H. B. Maynard says his programmed instruction i n Method Time Measurement (MTM), initiated two months ago at the Maynard Research council in suburban Wilkins- burg, already ia justify ing the costly changeover from the conventional methods previ ously used in the MTM course. MTM, explains Maynard, applies predetermined time standards to all the basic mo tions Involved in physical work." When Maynard act up his first course in MTM in 1048, he utilized ordinary educa. t i o n a 1 techniques, lectures. auizzcs. visual aids and tne like. But, the programmed In struction system Is a radical departure in that the student "learns by doing. Teaching Machines "Teacnlng machines are the bcackbone ot the course," said Maynard. Each student or trainee oc cupies a partitioned, air con ditioned cubicle where he works on the programmed in struction material. The teach ing macninea present new ma terial to the student who re sponds by writing answers corrected by Uie machine, en abling tne trainee to learn at his own pace. Besides the teaching ma chines, Maynar d's pro grammed instruction method includes movies and kine scopes, lab work and expert-, at any time on regular or IP mentation. Also, trained regular schedules. There is a counsellor is available for con. sulfation at any time. . J Maynard, who also heads H. B. Maynard and company, a management consulting firm, says MTM procedures have re sulted in savings of fillions of dollars to some firms and rea died smaller organisations from the brink of bankruptcy. Large firms such aa West inghouse Electric corporation, General Motors and U.S. Steel corporation as well as smaller companies send personnel to the Maynard Research council to learn the system for Im proving methods and measur ing work. . Comparing programmed in struction with conventinal methods, Maynard said: Irregular Schedules "Now time study men, in- dustral and methods engineers and others can take the course constant high level of Instruc tion independent of the ability of any classroom instructor." Length of the course is ap proximately 100 hours and the school can accomodate from SO to 75 students at any given time. The fee is $443 per stu dent. Graduates of the Maynard Research council return to their firms armed with practi cal tools tor "measuring and simplifying work, setting time standards and establishing pay rates for work," says May nard. "We recommend that two union men from any firm take the course at the same time as management personnel." he explained. "We feel that MTM provides the basis for a fair day'i work for a fair day's pay. It has held up time and again in arbitration." Over-the-counter Western Stocks Bank ot America Cal Pac Ulll Bid Ask'4 64-u i"s H 30 con Frelsht Cyprus Mines 742 S SO 7 42 19 63 gate, and a sister, Mrs. F, D. Monroe, Medford. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday in Eugene. Equitable S St L, 1st National Bank .. Jantzen . Morrison Knuosen Mull Kennels N.W. Natural Gas . . Oregon Metallurgical PC.E PP&L U.S. National Bank west coast lei 36 , 13, , 341. . 34', . 6A'i . 2.Va . 31's . 4, . 341. .. He .. 36 .. 26, .. 17'. 23' Weyerhaeuser 31 '.a 3'. 14 20. 3H. 70 27 "i 33'a 4. 36', l' 27 2',4 01 33'! 33 THEY'RE BACK! ; . "SATCH" & "DROOPS" ; , . at the : COLONY FLORENTINE LOUNGE JOIN THE FUN This well-known pair offers Ihe best in comedy, banjo, piano and the melodic vocals of "Satch". -limited engagement ends Tuesday, June 25. THE and FLORENTINE LOUNGE FOURTH AND FRONT WHAT A DOUBLE BILL! ONE OF THE YEAR'S GREAT ROAD SHOW ATTRACTIONS FOR THE FIRST TIME AT REGULAR PRICES 7: THEATRE INFORMATION - PHONE 773-7323 A MAN OF VIOLENCE... ... IN A CRUEL AND' f VIOLENT WORLD ' 1 & sh I RULED BY THE 1 Wltf mn stmum arQnilA.iinmilm.,mm; stawmfii I msmw ANTHONT JINN . , SILVANA NANGANO AKTHfR hEVtlJiy TkatY' JlRAItO HARRY A.M)KWS VITIORJO GASMAN' JACK PAJANft . ERNEtf BORCMNE TECHNICOLOR TtCHNIRAMA ACOtUVI"PCTiJIUSfltlt3t PLUS A TERRIFIC CO-FEATURE i WHAT CAN NgV. A GIRL i 'iN, I EXPECT OF A y" - WAR LOVER Mliffl WAGNER t llll tlYVAV . SHIRLEY ANNE i V. : FIELD LAST TIMES TONIGHT mnMruMSMWrMMff-TsHi SEAN C0NNERY Han fleminosi fat. r I URSULA ANDRE5S JOSEPH WISEMAN jack LORD ' BERNARD LEE CO-FEATURE A SWELL ACTION WESTERN Starting Tomorrow, Thursday wwm newts jEflRU LEWISas TIIE rlnffitf!! PR0FEG80R! UVIlaasI LW (A Jerry Lews Production) Plesse do not reml the middle of this picture! What does he become? Whit kind of monster? UJ I LLLl I V I la I bl 1U UIUUIIL I IlLLItinil I T I mm i I Mft s AaVassHMLsSasBBSslSSsa llMtit 0 m liwiS IU KW0-vm i i-itCH))mjjjp i .'k u.l.-tm. ni (BE STARTING TONIGHT THE FIRST DRIVE-IN RUN OF THE GREAT HIT EVERYONE HAS BEEN WAITING FOR Bette Davis and Joan Crawford H6 I'M EVER lUPPEKEDTo BdBYJMIEf rt JULIE ALLRED DAVE WlLLOCK , KJSlWJi HURRYI HURRYI LAST TWO NITESI Two Complete Shows 7:00 and 9:30 I7 SPECIAL l"" Vv" WONDERFUL, eaal "m. sjh t JK. V)X tmKMM TUP I1W WondermWorld ormiBROTHHBWM IN W0NCtnjL COLOR! CO-FEATURE Oni f thti Year's Greitatt Myittrit IT SHOCKS THE UNSHOCKABLES! GLYNIS JOHNS DAN O'HERLIHY ' . , DICK DIVHIOS KWBENCI 006HIN CONSTANCE FORO - J. PAT 0 MltEY VICKI TRICKETT- ESTEUE WINWOOO ciNeMscoce 2p. Wife fe GATES OPEN . 1:00 P.M. SHOW STARTS " AT DUSK