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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1963)
6 A SUNDAY. JULY 21. 1963 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON w -a NEW SUBDIVISION This new subdivision In Phoenix is an example of Ihe growth of the city. Sixty-four new homes will be available in Hacienda Park south of Phoenix when the subdivision is completed. Expansion Noted in Phoenix By BERTHA HANSCOM Mail Tribune Correspondeni Phoenix - Could the Red Men return once again to the Rogue valley, they would be amazed at the change that has come to their once beloved land. And so would the pioneers who first settled In the valley be amazed at the changes which have occurred, espe cially in the town oi Phoenix, once called Gassburg. One of the first settlers of Phoenix was Samuel Colver, who took a donation land claim where the town of Phoenix now stands. The old Stage House built in 1854 by Samuel Colver still stands and is owned and operated by Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Pecbler, who have an antique shop and museum. Another old store, The Mer- Many changes have taken place since those early days. The town has grown from a one store to many stores. The city now has two barber shops, two doctors, a dentist, pharmacy, television and ra dio shop, several restaurants, public library, nearly new post office, hardware store, several service stations, ma rine supplies center, bank, packing house and three beau ty shops. A new trailer park recently opened just north of the city. The Associated Packing house on C st. is the town's main industry. During the fruit season, Milton Winn, general superintendent, says it employs 130 persons and he hires all the local help he can get. The payroll each week during fruit season comes to the past five years than riur lng any of its previous life time. A new addition, Hacien da Park, to the south of the city when finished will pro vide 64 new homes, and new homes have gone up on nearly every street in Phoenix. . The pioneer women who once lived here would wel come the paved streets. They could attend the area's five churches by walking instead of driving miles by horse and buggy or wagon over dusty or muddy roads. There are still a few unim proved streets, but the city is investigating the possibility of paving them. South Rose st. will be paved this year. Phoenix, like .many other communities, has had to ra tion water on occasions in the past, but not any more, ac- I pnrrilntf In WntimrtAflttr Irv. cantlle, still stands on Main I $13,000. . :. ..... f - 1 ing Hanscom. New wells pro- st., now called Oscars. The city has grown more in 1 vide all the water the rest- THE WEEK IN CALIFORNIA Special Session Goes into Fourth Week over Finances By United Press International What had been a clash be tween Democrats and Repub licans over taxes in a drawn out,' seven month session of the Legislature switched to a fight between the Assem bly and the Senate with the three-weck-old special ses sion ncaring an end. With temperatures climb ing in Sacramento and In both chambers, a $10 million fight halted adjournment Fridav and threw the special session into its fourth week. Heated disagreement came over how much should be ada prt to the S3.1 billion "skol cton" budget passed during the regular session. The AS' scmbly said $95 million, the Senate $89 million. Assembly Sneaker Jesse M Unruh, D-lnglcwood, stuck in his pocket for several hours the Assembly passed bill in order to hold up Senate ac tion sure to trim It. But Un ruh finally relented. After the Senate cut It to match their figure a conference commit' tec began hammering out dtf ferences. In terms of billions of dol lars. the fight over $10 mil' lion indicated tempers had grown short. Most lawmakers had hoped for the end Fri' day. "We're losing money, said one, referring to his busi ness. As fur its Republicans were concerned, they had won their major bnttle.Gov. Edmund G Brown's efforts to enact with' holding of personal Income taxes was dead for 1083. Elsewhere, there were these developments: Raffariyi The running bat tle between Dr. Max Raffer ty and the state board of ed ucation flared again, mis time In the context of civil rights. The board said Raffcrty should not be chairman of a meeting Raffcrty himself had called to discuss segregation in schools. The reason: a state ment by Raffcrty that "The neighborhood, not the schools, should be the start of Inte gration." Board member NathHnicl Colley, a Negro, said he was "gravely concerned" about the meeting. Bombing: The U. S. Navy blamed the Federal Aviation Agency and an obsolete bomb rack for the "bombing" of San Francisco, in which Navy Jets dropped practice bombs on Market st. No one was In jured. The Navy questioned whether the FAA should al low the planes over the city, adding that the rebuilt bomb racks were not designed for modern Jets. Riven Interior Sccre t a ry Stewart L. Udall told Gov. Ed mund G. Brown and the gov ernors of Arizona and Ne vada that negotiations on ap portionment of water from the Colorado river during dry years would he delayed until later this year. Udall told the governors who mot with him in Washington, D. C, talks would be hold after the Su preme Court decision on the WTUE.ED FREE DEMONSTRATION o PNIUMATICSPINSION, th, ,c,t,tl,,e control for nduclfclo inguinal htrnii. NO BELTS NO STRAPS NO BUCKLIS WATIRPROO' ana RUSTPROOF, worn ant) approved by doctors. ONI DAY ONLY, MONDAY, JULY 29TH HOTEL MEDFORD, MIDFORD, ORE. Singulation Cn Occur it Any Timt With an Improperly Held Hsmii You owe it to yourself to investigate PNEUMATIC-SPENSION with torsion action the way lo a more active and uselut life with freedom from rupture miseries. Worn in the bath and swimming. You are protected under any normal condition This ad worth $1.00 off on a. pneumatle-spenslon. NO OBLIGATION TO BUY, HOTEL MEDFORD, MEDFORD, ORE. MONDAY, JULY 29th. HOURS: 10 A.M. 'TIL I P.M. Allied Surgical Appliance Co. 127 N. Dearborn, Suite (II, Chicago 2, llli noit river becomes final. The high court decision gave water claimed by California to Ari zona, but left to the Secre tary of the Interior the dis tribution of water during low flow years. Travelers: Hundreds of stalled tourists In New York and Paris brought the ire of Attorney General Stanlej Wosk down upon a San Joso travel agency. It all started when 101 Californlans en route to Europe were refused air passHge In New York by an airlines that claimed they were ineligible for a cut-rate tour under Civil Aeronautics Board regulations. Mosk blamed the travel ag ency and said he would ask Gov. Edmund G. Brown to sponsor a proposed law reg ulating such agencies. Mosk said 500 or 600 Californlans now in Europe probably would be stalled again in New York on their return trip, oth ers in Paris. Mosk said activi ties of the agency were "out rageous and shocking." Communist: The first com munist to speak at the Univer sity of California at Berkeley in 13 years drew an overflow crowd of 1,400. Albert J. (Mickey) Lima, chairman of the communist party In north ern California touched on sev eral subjects and admitted communists had a hand in or ganizing the recent "Freedom March" in San Francisco. But he said most of the marchers wore "mobilized by others." He said, "our capitalist so ciety Is wrong . . ." but added, "we also know a majority of our fellow Americans do not agree wilh us on that score." Negro; Henri O'Bryant, Jr., 52, Los Angeles, was the first Negro to be elected head of a city fire commission in the United States. O'Bryant had been vice president of the Los Angeles commission. "We feel pretty proud," a commission spokesman said. Funds- Despite the fact out go was more than income, the state's general fund had a surplus of $118.1 million at the end of the fiscal year, ac cording to preliminary fig ures. About $4 2 million more was spent from the fund than was deposited, State Controll er Alan Cranston said. The previous year. $7.R million more was collected for the fund than was spent. dents can use, he said, seeing no need for rationing for a long time to come. Supply from Wells The city water supply now comes from four wells, which feed into a reservoir. One is 86 feet deep, two of them are about 60 feet deep and the old original well is 31 feet deep. The water is put through a chlorination process. The city offices, for years in a building that was too small, now have adequate room in the community build ing. The new offices house police, city clerk, and coun cil chambers. Beginning this month a second full-time po lice patrolman was added to the staff. ' lire protection needs are served by an active volunteer fire department, for which the city recently ordered a second fire truck to provide addition al protection. Phoenix community leaders are proud of the city's growth and see no reason why it will not continue. Three Men Appear In Circuit Court Three charges of rape were reduced by the district attor ney to charges of contributing to the delinquency of a minor and the three persons charged pieaaea guilty to the lesser offenses Friday afternoon in Jackson county circuit court. Arraigned before Circuit Judge Edward C. Kelly, Charles William Eagle, 26, of 246 Wincma Way, who was arraigned in district court July 15 on a charge of rape ana nis case continued for him to consult an attorney, pleaded guilty to the lesser charge. His counsel asked that he be granted a pre-sentence report, and the request was granted. Eagle Is a former member of the Medford city police force. Also apearing before Judge Kelly were Timothy Ralph Barker,' 20, of Lcmoore, Calif., and Charles Merrll Wright, 19. Seattle. Each pleaded guilty to the charge of contributing to the delin quency of a minor and re quested a pre-sentence report which was granted by Judge Kelly. The fourth person to be ar raigned Friday afternoon was Floyd James Sattcrfield, 45, transient, who was charged with taking money by false pretenses. His araignmcnt was continued until Aug. 2 at 1:30 p.m. for entering a plea. On the Air By ELEANOR WIESE Better not analyze TV shows too often. It's too dis couraging. Just enjoy what you can without thinking about it. For instance, I watched the premiere of "The Lively Ones" Thursday night a new show, not a repeat. My first reaction was enthusias tic. And it was a swinging, entertaining show with Benny Goodman and His Quintet, Count Basle and His Orchestra, Red Nichols and His Five Pennies, and a danc ing team of Vic Damone and Bullwinkle Moose. But it wasn't a good show in the sense of using the tele vision medium in a creative way. Originality consisted of filming each musical number in an unusual location an amusement park, an aircraft carrier, a deserted cobweb shrouded night club-attempting to use unusual camera an gles at times. Each segment was then tacked on to the other with no words of intro duction. The no words part was good, but the transition from one number to the next was a jarring thing. This is not creative tele vision, Hollywood has been doing such things for years. That such a program should seem outstanding merely points up how pitifully poor the usual TV diet really is. No imagination, no creative ex- citment just what's been done before and usually done better. New Republic's television critic Paul Goodman recently wrote, "In TV there has never been a period of creative use of the medium. Television has degenerated without ever having become." Since the television broad casting channels are in the public domain, the three major networks who monopo lize these channels carry a re sponsibility to experiment, develop and utilize the scien tific techniques peculair to the medium to produce some thing better than Hollywood revisited. member: Dag Hammarsk jold": A person portrait of the late Dag Hammarskjold before he became Secretary General of the United Na tions. DISNEY'S WONDERFUL WORLD, 7:30 p.m. Sunday KMED-TV. The life of a hur ricane is pictured. ED SULLIVAN, 8 p.m. Sunday KBES-TV. One of Sulivan's best. Diahann Car roll, Steve Lawrence, Peggy Lee, Gordon MacRae, Roberta Peters, Cesare Sicpi and Peter Nero sing and play the won derful music of Richard Rod gers in a special concert hon oring the composer at Car negie Hall. Arthur Fiedler conducts. SHOW OF THE WEEK, 10 p.m. Sunday KMED-TV. Ed die Albert and Glynis Johns find $92,000 in an antique bought at a junk shop, which is only the beginning of their troubles. . MOVIE, 3:30 p.m. Sunday KBES-TV. "Three Smart Girls," an old but above aver age comedy starring Deanna Durbin and Ray Milland, con cerning three girls' attempts to keep their father out of the clutches of a scheming wom an. TWENTIETH CENTURY, 6 p.m. Sunday KBES-TV. "I Re- Dr. Holmen Will Speak af College Ashland - Dr. Milton G. Holmen, director of system applications for the System Develop ment corporation, will speak on "Computers, Automation, and Education" at 3 p.m. Monday, July 29, in the lounge of Britt Student center at Southern Oregon college. Dr. Holmen received his bachelor's degree in business administration from the Uni versity of Arizona in 1942, his master's from the University of New Mexico in 1949, and his Ph.D. from Stanford in 1952. He has done extensive re search in the field of candi date requirements for jobs. In 1955 he joined the Rand Cor poration System Development Division and has worked in many divisions of that firm since then. This year he be came director of system applications. FOCAL POINT, 9:30 a.m. Monday KMED-TV. Dick and Jim Corum, Presbyterian the ology seminary students dis cus the challenges facing the modern ministry. Rosemary Young and Eldon Mitchel de scribe the Footlighter's new production, "Goodbye Charlie." MOVIE, 3:30 p.m. Monday KMED-TV. "The Pied Piper," a recommended movie about an Englishman (Monty Wool ley) who hates kids and finds himself stuck with a pack of them and trying to escape the Nazis. YOUTH POWER, 7:30 p.m. Monday KMED radio. Med ford high students Douglas Sweet and Dave Smith talk to Arvin R e y m o n d and Phyllis Pesenti about the ef fect of world problems on their everyday lives. COMEDY HOUR, 9 p.m. Monday KBES-TV. Phil Sil vers stars as the Silver Dollar Kid, the most unlikely law man of the western frontier, and guest star Jack Benny portrays the most cowardly gunman In the Arizona Terri tory in "The Slowest Gun in the West." FOCAL POINT, 9:30 a.m. Tuesday KMED-TV. A young folk singing trio from Provo, Utah, members of the travel ing Mormon Youth Spectac ular, perform: Eunice Rob erts tells about the Medford Marksman Rifle and Pistol Club. FOCAL POINT, 9:30 a.m. Wednesday KMED-TV. The Bill Bray family demonstrate roping on horseback; the Red Cross Counselors in training program is explained. MOVIE, 3:30 p.m. Wednes day KMED-TV. "The Men," with Marlon Brando, Teresa Wright, Jack Webb. Perhaps one of Hollywood's best films. Brando is superb as a para lyzed war vet trying to ad just to society. WAGON TRAIN, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday KBES-TV. Barb ara Stanwyck guest stars as a freed Indian captive who Is mistaken for another woman taken in an Indian raid .10 years before. IVERSON'S MEDFORD PAINT & WALLPAPER STORE 1st in Quality 1st in Service S&H Groan Stamps 6th l Holly Ph. 772-9321 Local Man Wins Trip to Mid-West Jim Watkins, Medford wholesale distributor for Wat kins products, was awarded a trip as winner of the Watkins Northwest Rocky Mountain regional contest. He will be flown in a com pany plane to the company's home office in Winoma, Minn. Of the distributors who competed in the region Wat kins was judged the winner with sales that amounted to 158.67 per cent of his quota. Subscribers To report improper or non delivery ot the Mail Tribune in Medford, phone 772-6141; Ash land call at 416 Bridge it. or phone 482-3002; Yreka, phone Victory 2-2398 before 6:45 p.m. daily and 10:30 a.m. Sunday. If regular delivery arrive! shortly after you call please notify office, thus eliminating ipecial messenger service. - AaUU I yfi MM.S T 1-23-47-! W.6y-70-80-84 STAR GA2ERV Br CLAY K. POLLAiV , tauius MAY 21 36 GEMINI pO MAY 22 CANCEI JUNE 23 JULY 23 V,19-M-30-a 5y65-78-87M 41 uo JULY2i . AUG. 23 V)3-37-41-4fl a? 50-59-75 VIRGO AUG. 24 SEPT. 22 iY5-33-4B-5a M Your Daily Admly Guidt JK According Is thm Stan. To develop message for Sunday, read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodioc birth sign. 3! Alsecr 32 Until 33 Pruocv 34 Delightful 35B.ci 36 Today 37 Day 38 And 39 Relaxation 40 MesKtge SEPT. OCT 6-18-27-3? aft 63-72'86.90l 2 Count 3 You 4 Pleasure, 5 Need 6 Stand 7Gonly In 9 Entro 10 Excellent 1 1 Cupid'i 12 Plonelery 13 Darn 14P.es 15En,o 16 Art '17 Your in Bv 19Hondshol.es 49 For 20 Today 21Aocly 22 And 23T.IW 24 Blessings 25 The 26 Gills 27 Wait 28 Menial 29 Holds 30 And 41 For 42 Warm 43 In 44Giv 45 For 46 Short 47 With 45 Home 61 Qlder 62 Aimed eu You rt 64 You 65 Welcome! 66 Friendship 67 Heed 66 New 69 Fo'lts 70 Who 71 Today 72 AsWed 73 At 74 11 75Thealra 76 You 77 Short 73 Are 79 And SO Need 61 Leisurely 82 Silent 83 Thanks 84 Cheering 85 Romance scoirio NOV. 22 -f a- 7- e-43C- 153-54-71 SAGITT AllUS DEC 22 bl-25-35-5lfi W-58-68 Vli Cs;)Good 50 Trip 51 To 52 Comforts 53 Your 54 Stors riS Beino 56 Extrovogant 86 For 57 New ' 53 Urges 88 Strolls 59 Music 69 Around MOt 90 Opinion- t)Advse QKitiSl 23tetier CAMKOSN DEC. 23 JAN. 20 VlySv 3- 5- 9-141 K-28-39 AOUAUUS JAM. 21 ' 00.29-40-4541 U4.67-74 PISCES fa: Br?fe. MAR.21 tiC 11-13-16-55V K2-73-76 CHOOSY-BUY JACUZZI! When If Comes to Pumps... Get the Best! It Costs You Less! Don't be fooled by trick advertising . . . there is only one TRUE Jacuzzi Pump. Years of research and engineering have gone into the manufacturing of the best quality water pump in the world. Water is your most important commodity . . . don't settle for less than a JACUZZI, backed by over 25 years of faithful service. BE Large or small, our equipment can do it all ! mmmmimm SISKIYOU HARDWARE 225 West Main, Medford - Just Call 772-2939 Service Work on Any Make or Model Pumps ALEXANDER HARDWARE CENTRAL POINT, OREGON You may also get Jacuzzi Pumps from Goff Bros. Well Drillers, Major Drilling, Rogue Valley Drilling and J. C. Pump Service. Winema Trails Are In Good Condition Klamath Falls - AccordinR to Bud Twombly, Klamath District ranger on the Wi ncma National forest, trails on the district are free of snow and in Rood condition. Fishing is reported good in the Sky Lakes area, and fair at Lake of the Woods. All campgrounds are open in the Lake of the Woods area with the exception of Aspen, where improvement construction is progressing. The Fish Lake Lake of the Woods road is rough due to construction work. All roads on the Chiloquln district are passable. Many of the roads are dusty and carry ing logging traffic, and it is recommended that fore It visitors drive carefully. STAY AND ANOTHER PLAY DAY! The people of Oregon and the Rogue River valley have the welcome mat out for YOU and all who visit this late this summer. If YOU are an Oregonian, become a good host and sea that your own guests and tourists, too, see Crater lake, the museum and historic points in Jackson ville, lithia Park, Diamond Lake, lake of the Woods and Howard Prairie lake, the Oregon Caves and other fine attractions herel MedfordWTribune 1