Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 23, 1963, Image 11

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
TUESDAY, JULY 23. 1983
A 11
OBITUARIES
LAURA L. MASON
Funeral services for Mrs.
Laura Louilla Mason, of
Shady Cove Star Route, who
died Saturday, will be held
at 7 o'clock tonight at Conger-Morris
downtown chapel.
Bishop Dwaine E. Nelson of
the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints will offici
ate. Committal will be in
Elackfoot, Idaho.
Mrs. Mason was born Sept.
22, 1881, in Brushy Mount,
N.C., and had lived in south
ern Oregon since 1947. Six
of her sons and one son-in-law
served with the U.S. Armed
Forces during World War II.
She was a member of the
L.D.S. Church. She was mar
ried Jan 22, 1901, in Brigham
City, Utah, to Jesse G. Mason,
who survives.
Other survivors include
eight sons, Devier R. Mason,
Shady Cove; Oscar A. Mason,
Jerome, Ida.; Curtis M. Ma
son, Shady Cove; Lavoir S.
Mason, Los Angeles, Calif;
Fendon W. Mason, Lewis E.
Mason, Dennis E. Mason, and
George T. Mason, all of Shady
Cove; three daughters, Mrs.
Emma M i n d y Farnworth,
Richfield, Ida.; Mrs. Olive
Louilla Scovel, Gooding, Ida.;
and Mrs. Vera Mellisa Otis,
Pittsburg, Calif.; two broth
ers, Fenton Estep, Burley,
Ida.; and Fred Lawrence
Estep, Babbitt, Nev.; a sister,
Mrs. Anna Theresa Marshall,
Salt Lake City, Utah; a half
brother, Carl Estep, Hazelton,
Ida.; a half sister, Mrs. Min
nie Mitchel, Twin Falls, Ida.;
27 grandchildren and 13
great grandchildren.
quin, Ore., Leslie Wittrock,
Chiloquin, Ore.; one brother.
William Washington, North
Bend, Wash.; two sisters.
Mrs. Mildred Griffin, Mt. Ver
non, Wash.; Mrs. Rosemary
Unive, Chiloquin, Ore.; her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Martin, Sedro Wool
ley, Wash.; several nieces and
nephews.
WALTER H. SCOTT
Funeral services for Walter
H. Scott, 78, of 217 South
Riverside ave., Medford, who
died Friday, will be held at
9:30 a.m. Wednesday in Hill
crest Memorial chapel on the
North Phoenix rd.
The Rev. Gilbert O. Skaar
of the First Southern Baptist
church will officiate. Commit
tal will be in Hillcrest Memo
rial park, with Conger -Morris
Funeral directors in charge
of arrangements.
Mr. Scott was born July 8,
1885, and had lived in south
ern Oregon for more than 20
years.
Pallbearers will include
Ivan Hall, John Pearson, Dan
iel Senn, Ron Simpson, Cal
vin Walker and C. M. Jolliffe.
RUDOLPH A. HOLTZINGER
Rudolph A. Holtzinger, 55,
LaCanada, Calif., died Mon
day while visiting his brother,
George J. Holtzinger, 616
South Oakdale ave., Medford.
Funeral arrangements are en
trusted to Siskiyou Funeral
Service directors of the
Chapel in the Trees Mortuary.
PEGGY JEAN WITTROCK
The body of Peggy Jean
Wittrock, 25, of Chiloquin,
Ore., who died Monday, was
sent today to Mt. Vernon,
Wash., for funeral services
and interment.
Perl Funeral home was in
charge of local arrangements
Mrs. Wittrock was born
Nov. 17, 1937, at Marble Mt.,
Wash., the daughter of Oscar
and Gertrude Washington,
She was married in Mt. Ver
non, Wash., to LeRoy Witt
rock.
Survivors include two sons,
Raymond Copeland, Chilo-
Gates 8 P.M
Show at Duskl
comes
MUSie
WILLIAM SPENCE
Ashland - William McKin-
ley Spence, 67, 265 Mistletoe
rd., Ashland, died Saturday,
July 20, at the Veterans hos
pital, Portland.
He had resided in Ashland
since 1924, moving here from
Oklahoma. A veteran of
World War I, he was born
March 28, 1896, in Carroll
county, Virginia. He was re
tired, having worked as a saw
mill pond man for many
years.
He is survived by a son.
William Spence, Grand Island,
Nebr. Another son, John, was
killed in action at Okinawa
in World War II. Other sur
vivors include a brother,
Charles Spence, Ashland; two
sisters, Mrs. Sarah Tabor,
Stockton, Calif., and Mrs.
Elizabeth Spencer, Prospect;
and four grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held at Litwiller's Mountain
View chapel at 10 a.m.
Wednesday. Interment will be
at the Memory Gardens Me
morial park.
JOYCE ANN McCOLLUM
Funeral services for Joyce
Ann McCollum, 14, of route
1, box 141, Rogue River, who
died Sunday, will be held at
1:30 p.m. Thursday at Perl
Funeral home,
The Rev. D. E. Millard, pas
tor of the New Age church at
Eagle Point, will officiate. In
terment will be in Siskiyou
Memorial park.
Miss McCollum was born
April 23, 1949, in Garwood,
Texas. She has lived in the
Rogue River area for the past
five years and was a student
in the Gold Hill Junior High
-school.
Survivors include her fa
ther and step-mother, L. D.
and Irene C. McCollum,
Rogue River; her mother, Mrs.
Beatrice Morgan, San Jose,
Calif.; five brothers, Clifford
McCollum, Rogue River, Don
ald McCollum, Oakdale,
Calif., Robert McCollum, Sa
lem, Ore., Calvin McCollum,
Salem Ore., Michael McCol
lum, Rogue River; two sisters,
Mrs. Marie Eakin, Austin,
Texas, Mrs. Judy Puryear,
Oakdale, Calif.; her grand
mother, Mrs. Leacy Seamora,
Eagle Lake, Tex.; one step
brother, Norman Mallon, Med
ford and one step-sister, Mrs.
Nancy Stuckey, Portland, Ore.
Casket bearers will be For
est Carpenter, Curt McCrae,
Fred Keierleber, Arthur
Rupp, Deane Roberts and
Robert Perry.
Funnel Clouds
Seen in Midwest;
Rains Lash South
By United Press International
Funnel clouds threatened
parts of the Midwest Monday
night and early today and
heavy rains and winds lashed
the South.
The U.S. Weather Bureau
said funnels were spotted
dancing around Chicago sub
urbs, over northwest Indiana
and in eastern Iowa. Appar
ently none touched down.
Gusts of 68 miles an hour
pounded the Pensacola, Fla.,
Naval Air Station. The storm
knocked down power lines
near Farmersville, La., and
forced postponement of a
search for a private plane
missing with five persons
aboard in the St. Petersburg,
Fla., area.
Winds with guests of up to
53 miles an hour tore a roof
off the projection building at
a Harrison, Ark., drive-in the
ater and pushed a twin-engine
plane 50 yards down the run
way. Warehouse Toppled
In Little Rock, Ark., 42
mile an hour winds toppled
a warehouse and blew boats
around a storage lot. Light
ning knocked a Pine Bluff,
Ark., radio station off the air
and disrupted electrical serv
ice to 1,200 customers in
Little Rock.
A prison trusty, Wallace
Ellis Richardson, 25. was kill
ed by lightning while guard
ing a detail of prisoners at a
prison farm near Pine Bluff,
Ark.
Heavy rains with loud over
head noises struck the Chica,
go suburb of Oaklawn. Hail
measured at three-quarters of
an inch in diameter covered
the ground in nearby Oak
Forest, III.
Springfield, Mo., got more
than half an inch of rain in
an hour. Detroit, Mich., had
1.17 inches of rain in a 24
hour period.
Injured Climbers Said Recovering
TO SUMMER TRAINING More than 50 members of the
Roseburg and Medford units of the Army Reserve left
Saturday for two weeks summer training at Camp Roberts,
Calif. The men left at 1:50 p.m. from the Medford airport
in a chartered DC7. Advanced parties left Friday to set
up quarters at Camp Roberts for the group.
Locals
Newest Knit
7393
THt MOST MimiOUS MOVIE EVEI MIOE!
f 0M THt PUT THAT KEPT PUNM fMHUI
ROBERTPRESTOri-SHIRLEYJONES
Dimnupicn.uDiiinnfiran
muu i
Li l Ml,
LlVtlUULUIHU1
2ND FUN PICTUREI
James Foster Dies
At Home Early Today
James Foster, 38, of 734
Garfield St., Medford, opera
tor of Foster's Medical Cen
ter Pharmacy on North Cen
tral ave., died shortly after
12:15 o'clock this morning of
an apparent heart attack, the
Jackson county sheriff's of
fice reported.
Sheriff s officers were
called to the Foster residence
by Merlyn Harvey, 613
Newtown St., who was talk
ing on the telephone to Fos
ter when he collapsed. Fos
ter's 16-year-old daughter,
who is visiting here from Il
linois, came on the line and
asked Harvey to come at once
that something had happened
to her father. Not knowing
the circumstances, Harvey
called the sheriff's office be
fore going to the Foster home.
Mr. Foster was dead when
sheriff's officers and Harvey
and his son, Gene Harvey, ar
rived, according to the depu
ty's report.
A physician was summoned
and pronounced the pharma
cist dead.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced by Conger Mor
ris Funeral home.
Knit this jacket to make a
fall outfit with the shift
shown recently; smart com
bination. I Wear this cable-trim knit
j with shift (7032) or any out
fit. Easy to knit. Pattern 7393:
directions for Jacket sizes 32
34; 36-38 included.
! THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (in
coins) for this pattern - add
15 cents for each pattern for
first-class mailing and special
handling. Send to Alice
Brooks. Medford Mail Trib
une, Needlecraft Dept.. P. O.
Box 163. Old Chelsea Station,
New York 11. N. Y. Print
plainly NAME. ADDRESS,
Zip code, PATTERN NUM
BER. 1963' j Biggest Needlecraft
Show stars smocked accesso
ries - it's our new Needle
craft Catalog! Plus over 200
fresh-to-you designs to knit,
crochet, sew, weave, embroi
der, quilt. Plus free pattern,
i Send 25 cents now!
Court Records
DISTRICT COURT
Terry Ernest Cooper, violation
of basic rule. $25.
Daniel T. St. Helens, no opera
tor's license, $5.
Donald Lewis Sharp, no tail
Hunt, $10.
Allen Jackson Myrick, failure to
transfer title. S.V
Lawrence William Kcrwin, fail
ure to dim lights. $1.5.
Robert William Trotter, failure
to transfer title. $5.
Varian Earl Hutchinson, no ve
hicle license, $30.
Joe L. Foss, truck speeding, $23.
William Robert McNeill, angling
In prohibited area. $15.
Albert Cecil Roberta, over
width. $15.
Albert William McConnell, no
operator's license. $5.
Robert Plnkly Norman, failure
to observe stop sign. $7 50.
Virgil Douglas Baldwin, over
load. $14.
Arthur Fredrick Hotho, over
load. $10.
James Edwin Gunter, overload,
$7(1.
Paul H. Anderson, no vehicle
license. $3.
William Robert Bean, violation
of basic rule. $10.
Arvid Francis Forsyth, over
hanging load. $5.
Paul Sherman Metzger, violation
of basic rule. $10.
Raymond Lewis Thompson, vio
lation of basic rule. $10.
Bruce Arnold Llndgrcn, expired
operator's license. S5.
Arthur Mopp Duer, no safety
chain. $10.
Jerry Dean smith, no vehicle
license. $a.
William Gerry Godden. driving
while drivers license suspended.
$100.
MF.IirORD Ml'MllPAI. COIRT
Mary Lee Grove, violatlton of
basic rule. $io
Jerry Lee Shulta. violation of
basic rule. $10
Michael Steven Broomfteld. vio
lation of basic rule. $10.
Alice Hnnk Smock, disobeyed
stop sign. S7 50.
Arthur William Glockcr Jr.. vlo
latlon of basic rule. $20.
Lawrence Walter Mason, viola
tion of basic ruie. Slo
Douglass Allen Witte. failure to
yield the right of way, $20.
Robert Edward Cull, violation of
basic rule. $25.
Carl Wallace McMlllen, dis
obeyed traffic signal, $10.
Assume Names - Lyle J.
Latendresse, 320 South Holly
St., Medford, has assumed the
business name Glu-Lam Sales
Co., according to county
clerk's record. Also assuming
a new business name is Pa
tricia Aldrich, 4425 Jackson
ville Highway, Medford. It is
Whichcraft Manufacturing.
Car Wash - The Salvation
Army Youth club will have a
car wash between 9 a.m. and
5 p.m. Saturday, July 27, at
Earl's East Side Union station,
618 East Main St., Medford.
Reports Thefts - L e n o r a
Faye Lawler, Rogue River,
reported to the Jackson coun
ty sheriff s office the then ot
a fire extinguisher and boxes
of miscellaneous truck acces
sories from the Table Top
Hereford ranch at Table Rock
Sunday, according to the Jack
son county sheriff's office.
Chain Saw Taken - Theft of
a chain saw from a vehicle
was reported to the Jackson
county sheriff's office Sunday
bv William B. Maunders, 1650
Orchard Home dr. The saw
was 3V4 horse power. It was
taken from the trunk of the
car, Maunders said.
Items Missing - William
S e y mour Curren, transient,
reported to Medford police
about 6 p.m. Sunday that a
variety of items valued at
$453 had been taken from his
car while it was parked on
Riverside ave. between Main
and Eighth sts. .
Assume Name - Cecil and
Bernice M. Halstead have re
tired the name of Denny's
Coffee Shop, and Richard and
Wanda D. Zaback, 54 North
Riverside dr., have assumed it,
according to records in the
Jackson county recorder's of
fice. Hay Ttaken Donald
Geren, route 1, box 338 Eagle
Point, notified Oregon state
police Monday that 200 bales
of hay had been stolen from
his farm sometime this month.
Fires Reported - A short in
an automatic dryer ignited lint
and caused minor smoke dam
age at the home of Mrs. Irene
Stepp, 118 North Peach St.,
Medford, shortly after 6:30
p.m. Monday, according to
Medford firemen. A short in
an electric light fixture was
cited as the cause of a small
fire at Barnard Floor Cover
shop, 711 East Jackson St.,
Medford, at 4:37 p.m. There
was no damage other than to
the fixture.
Gra$$ Flrei - Ashland fire
men were called out to con
trol three small grass fires
Monday. There was no dam
age of consequence as a result
of any of them. The fires were
at 1388 Madrone St. at 11:45 i
a.m., Highway 66 and the 1
Southern Pacific rail road
tracks at 4 p.m. and 1958 '
Highway 66 at 9 p.m.
Auto Collision - Vehicles j
operated by Charles Lawrence ;
Dauster, 2034 East McAn- j
drews rd., and Sharon Bruce j
McDowell, route 1, box 63C, !
Eagle Point, were Involved in
an accident at 3:45 p.m. Mon
day at the intersection of
Stevens st. and Crater Lake
ave., according to Medford po
lice. McDowell was cited for
failing to yield the right of
way.
Seattle Women Are
Arrested in Area
Two Seattle women, Nancy
Jean Schmahl, 37, and Jean
Elizabeth Poe, 29, are held
in Jackson county jail for
Washington authorltes.
The women were arrested
by state police Monday near
Rogue River on information
of a felony warrant, charging
them with grand larceny by
check.
The two were scheduled for
arraignment in Jackson coun
ty circuit court Tuesday morn
ing but signed waivers and
are being held for the Wash
ington officers, the district at
torney's office reported.
Births
CHANDLER - To Mr. and
Mrs. Donald William, P. O.
Box 412, Jacksonville, July
10, -1963, a girl, 34 pounds,
at Rogue Valley hospital.
HENNEY - To Mr. and Mrs.
James Michael, 586 Bcall lane,
Medford, July 22, 1963, a boy,
7?4 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
Servicemen
ON LEAVE
Gary Keith Boyd is on
leave from Moffitt Air Field,
Calif., and is visiting his
mother, Mrs. Ruth Boyd, 723
West Second St., Medford. At
the termination of his leave,
Boyd will report to Port Hue-
neme, Calif., for 12 weeks
of Navy school In heavy
equipment. Boyd is a con
struction man in the Seabees.
BILLARD - To Mr. and
Mrs. Tommy Leon, box 751,
Central Point, July 23, 1963,
a girl, 6 '4 pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
Weather
Investment funds
Noon quotaUoni on selected
biocks:
Fund
Colonial Ener
Eaton Howard Stk..
Fundamental Invest.
National Growth
Stocks
United Canada
United Continental
Bid Asked
13.10 H.36
11.18 12.13
12.12 13.25
13.60 14.70
13.79 17.07
. 0 63 . 10.3S
C 8.63 7.27
13.07 14.31
4.04 3.40
10.49 17.00
10.30 11.23
3.09 3.56
21.33 23.49
12.84 14.01
14.53 15.01
4.11 4.49
; 8 02 8.77
7.71 8.43
18.43 19.94
7.20 7.95
14 24 13 36
17.54 19.06
B.73 7.36
12.12 13.23
6 38 7.17
8 28 3.77
6.71 7.23
14.32 13.61
Permits Issued for
Buildings in City
Permits to erect four resi
dences and remodel several
others have been issued by
the Medford building depart
ment. Permits for the residences
and their valuation include:
Robert Reynolds, 532, 536 and
540 Effie st., $7,000 each, and
to Tom Whittle, 2801 Duell
ave., $9,000.
Other permits were issued
to Arthur Bevcrton, $1,000
addition to residence at 327
North Berkeley Way; Roy
Price Jr., to erect temporary
office at 2790 Crater Lake
highway at a cost of $5,000:
to Howard Mason, to remodel
the residence at 1528 Terrace
dr. at a cost of $2,000; and to
Tom Whittle to remodel i
residence at 2802 Spring
brook rd. at a cost of $2,000.
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Partly
cloudy tonight and Wednesday,
with a few scattered showers In
the mountains. Low tonight 50-33.
tiign tomorrow th-hj.
western oreeon: Clouriv with
periods of rain tonight, becoming
snowei-y wltn partial clearing
Wednesday. Not so cool tonight.
Low 52-60. High tomorrow li8-78.
Northern California: Mostly fair
tonight and Wednesday, with
chance of showers In extreme
north late tonight or Wednesday
Low overcast on coast night and
morning. Little change in tem
perature.
I.OCAI. DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day 67: below normal 6.
Record high this date 105 in
11I2H.
Record low this dale 44 In 11122
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, none. Midnight to 10
a.m.. none.
Total this month .15 inch, .03
inch helow normal.
Total since Sept. 1. 26.73 Inches,
7.16 Inches above normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
27. higheat this a.m. 83''r.
High 4:00 it-
CITY Yi'slcr, a.m. hr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 73 30 .01
Grants Pass BO 44
Howard Prairie .. 73 38
Klamath Falls .... 72 44
MEDFORD 81 47
Portland 70 46 T.
Hood River - IUPD - Three
climbers who fell about 1,500
feet onto Eliot Glacier on Mt.
Hood Sunday were recovering
today in Memorial hospital
here.
Hospital attendants listed
Dr. Mark Hanschka, Dr. Eber
hard H. Gloekler and Robert
C. Shoemaker Jr., all of Port
land, in satisfactory condition.
They suffered multiple in
juries, but none considered
critical, the hospital said.
The climbers fell while
descending the noun tain's
northeast slope. Winds esti
mated at from 40 to 60 miles
an hour sent boulders crash
ing past the fallen men.
Rescue efforts of the Crag
Rats and Alpinees from Hood
River and Mazamas from Port
land, along with forestry em
ployees and other mountai
neers, were begun about noon,
but blowing sand, hail and
finally fog delayed the work.
It was about 9:20 p.m. before
a sled carrying Dr. Hanschka
began inching down the moun
tain. Dr. Gloekler was able to
walk part of the way and
overtook the other party.
Shoemaker was brought off
the glacier about two hours
later.
LAST TIMES TONITE
n
FIRST SPACESHIP
ON VENUS"
and
"THE CENTURIAN"
TOMORROW
Si
his but maruss, ySL'S
. IINOTH TtUt-UFf A
AOVINTUIil JfjL
Over-the-Counter
Western Stocks
By United Press International
Hid AsKea
Bank of America
Cal Pac Utll
Con Freight
Cyprus Mines
Equitable S Ac L
1st National Bank
Jantzen
Morrison Knudsen ...
Mult Kennels
N.W. Natural Gas
Oregon Metallurgical
POE
PP&L
U. s. National Bank .
West Coast Tel
Weyernaeuser
.. 62 a.
.. 23 'i
.. 'i
.. 241,
.. 32',
.. 67'i
... 23 ,;
... 31
. 4!,
... 34 1 j
.. 1 Is
... 2'.'
... 26
... 77 n
... 22 ' j
.... 32'.,
Seattle 68
Spokane 73
Yakima 73
Eureka 63
Red Bluff 05
Sacramento 00
San Franclaco .... 06
Los Angeles H2
Phoenix 108
Denver 116
Chicago 78
Miami Beach tin
New York 76
Washington. D. C. 82
48
44
40
30
55
l)5
80
30
Portland Negro
Objects To Rules
Portland - IUPD - Samuel
Macon, a Negro student at
Lewis and Clark college here
who was offered a job with
the Portland Park Bureau aft
er claiming discrimina t i o n,
may not report to work.
Howard Lonergan, his at
torney, made the disclosure
Monday night after Macon
failed to appear for work at
the bureau's recreation di
vision office in the morning.
Lonergan said the City
Council had set employment
restrictions in the hiring of
Macon, including one that he
be strictly watched. ' The at
torney said he had sent a let
ter of protest to the council.
"Not until these restrictions
arc removed will Macon re
port to his Job," Lonergan
said.
Macon was offered the Job
as a recreation leader after
claiming discrimination when
his application was rejected.
A spokesman for the park
bureau said the question of
whether the Job still is open
to Macon if he reports later
is a recreation division de
cision.
Mttm
Gtldwyn
Mayer
presents
Samuel
Bnnsttn's
Production
iKtstau
iKSMSkf
STARTS
TODAY
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPHUSDA Cattle
150. Slaughter steer , standm-d
and good 10-23; slaughter heifers,
low sood 21. Sows, cutter and util
ity dairy bred 12-14.25. Feeders,
high medium and good steers 20
2t. mixed common and medium
Holstein heifers 17-18.
Calves 9U. ivo eany sates.
Hokk 250. No 1-2 barrow and
gilts 20-20.50.
Sheep S00. Choice and prime
spring slaughter lambs 10, utility
slaughter ewes 4.50, mostly choice
feeder lambs 14.
9 Short on Time? K
I LUNCH I
B I WOODEN I
l'k I SHOE I
33 Enjoy an escellent lunch m
36 m ""'h f1 rvic . . . a M
l's B bonania tor busy pso-
"J" pic. Coma in, matt
81 1 lr our chf.
23 s, TsswssBaaajW.S
34 ,k UW
- IAST NITE -"GYPSY"
&
"I Could Co On Singing"
LOOK!
Matinees
EVERY DAY
From 2 P.M.
GREATEST
QMSSEY
OF THE AGES'
STARTS
TOMORROW
ROAD SHOW PRICES
Adults $1.00
Srurftnra 75c, Child SOc
jMasT
mm
NATALIE WOOD
RICHARD BEYMER- RUSS TAMBLYN
RITA MORENO GEORGE CHAKIRIS
PLUS
Hi Mite
II Jl
fSSH I COLUMBIA PICTURES swan.
3ff W'JL I A CHARLES H. SCHNEER 9dvetn
Elk
I JAN READ trid BEVERLEY CROSS
AhmIiIi PfflKr
I RAY HARRYHAUSEN
I ilsltlln'IT-lil j DON CHAFPEY
"'"" .-..,.-..- (AMMAN
I 1 1 WoRLOWIOEmiii SOiSB. I
HISTORY-MAKING
SCREEN
ENTERTAINMENT!
UMiltD AfillStS
tmciiT roi RT
Ocllia S Fichtner vs. Earl E
Ftrhtner. divorce decree
Kenneth Howard Luney vs Ge
neva Juanita Luney, divorce
complBint
Loren Glt-nn vs Patsy L.
r.lpnn. divorce cnmolaint
Julia M Bunch vi Elijah G.
Bunch, divorce complaint.
MRRtr.r urfcNSE
API-I ll Al IONS
Robert Romeo Rojas. VSS Ru-
nertut. Sao Francisco. Calif . I.' 5
Navy, and Karen Lynn Kristin
Riihl, 1316 East Main st , Mediora
Portland Produce
Portland (UPlt Dairy market:
EggB To retailers: AA extra
lame 43-4c; AA larfe 42-46C; A
large 41-43c; A A medium 35-38c;
A small 25 -29c; cartons 1-3C
higher
Butter To retailers AA and A
prints ft He, cartons 3c higher; B
print Vr.
Cheese (medium curedt To re
tailers: 4B-48c: procemed Ameri
can 5-10 lb. loaf, 43-4ftc.
Portland UPl Dressed chick
ens No 1 grade dressed to re
tailers; Fryers, whole drawn. 31
38c lb : cut-up. 3?-42c lb.; hens.
ItKht tvpe. whole drawn, 22-26c
lb ; light type hens, cut-up. 24-28c
lb ; heavy whole 36-3&C lb.
STAY AND
ANOTHER
PLAY
DAY!
Th people of Oregon end the Rogue River valley heve Ida welcome
met out for YOU end ell who vitit (hit stele thie summer. If YOU ere
en Oregonien, become e good host end see that your own guests-end
tourists, too, see Crater lake, the museum end historic points in Jackson
ville, lithie Park, Diamond lake, lake of the Woods end Howerd Prairie
lake, the Oregon Ceves end other fine ettrections here!
Medford
Tribune
if.
if