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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 2, 1963)
MEDi'OHD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOHD, OREGON FRIDAY. AUGUST 2. 1963 A 9 f DANCE ( Ittrf Sari . g I The ROGUES' f VFW Hall I Rogue River m Patienii Liiitd - Surgical I patients listed at Sacred Heart I hospital today include Kelly ! Ellen Beadnell, 5 - year- old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rob ert W. BeadneU. 1117 West meill ave., Roseburg; and Ad rian D. Vetkus, Vyjar-old son of !jr. nd If rs. Jonald Vet kos, route 1. box 587, Eagle Point. Listed as a medical patient is Lynn K. Sizemore, 5-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Everett J. Sizemore, post office box 63, Butte Falls. The Finest In Dining FEATURING- PRIME RIB (Au Jus) STEAKS CHICKEN SEAFOOD LIVE MUSIC Friday & Saturday Nights DINING ROOM OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK S p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Hwy. 997 Milts South at Tilent Ph: J3S-9710 Open at S P.M. Daily 1L Z"t P-m Featuring . . . BROASTED CHICKEN ... at Cubby's modern, sparkling Drivt In Res taurant and Coffee Shop! familyX special a ml 12-pc. tub of chicken, 1 If trench frits, 1-pint col II II slaw and garlic bread! A II 1 fine feed for . . . If I smart potato salad, 1-gal- i T Cukhv's I Ion root beer, potato chips, I II buttered rolls, forks, plates, I Courteous akns CUB' paeked Catering Service l PHONE ORDERS... 773-2919 Local and Personal icnie Tonight The an nual picnic for Business Man agement associaition, former ly NOMA, will be held at 7 p.m. at the Elks picnic grounds. Families of NOMA members, friends and pros pective members interested in the organization are in vited, according to Frances Johnson, publicity chairman. Sunday Picnic All Dale Carnegie graduates and fam ilies are invited to a picnic at Lake of the Woods Sun day, Aug. 4, Mrs. J. R. (Bob) Taylor reported today. They are to meet in the picnic area for a pot luck lunch at 1 p.m. Anyone wishing more infor mation may call Mrs. Taylor at 773-5125. Council to Meet - Jackson Council of the Blind will hold a business meeting at 2 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 4, at the district office, Commission of the Blind, 248 East Stewart ave. It is noted that this is a change of date for the coun cil session and that important business is to be discussed. Those needing transportation are asked to call Dorsey Lowe 772-8958. ATTENTION EAGLES DANCE SATURDAY August 3rd Music By The THREE SHARPS and a FLAT Eailei and Guests Welcome! Relative Injured - Emmett Lanfear, Talent, this week re ceived word that his nephew, Tom Ferguson, Boise, Idaho, fell from a haystack and suf fered a broken neck, broken arms and internal injuries, re sulting in paralysis. Mrs. Lan fear, who is visiting in South Dakota, will stop in Boise on the way home to see her nephew. Parents of Girl - Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kunze, 8293 Cav alier lane, Pleasanton, Calif., are parents of a daughter, Kar rie Allison, born July 20. Mrs. Kunze is the former Alice Croxton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Croxton, 11720 Duggan rd., Central Point. Births EGGERS - To Mr. flnd Mrs. Albert, O'Brien. July 24. 1063. a boy, 8: pounds, at O'Brien. BROWN - To Mr. and Mrs. Robert D., 2732 Ruth dr., Mcd ford, July 30, 1963, a hoy, 6V2 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. FESTIVAL PLAYS Tonight: "Romeo and Ju liet" Saturday: "Love's La bour's Lost" Sunday: "Henry V" Monday: "Merry Wives of Windsor" Curtain time is 8:45 p.m. Bus leaves Medford ho tel and Jackson House in Medford at 7:30 p.m. Obituaries Seven Men Hold Answer To Yacht Abandonment GENAW - To Mr. and Mrs. Roger W., P.O. box 56. Gold Hill, July 31. 1963, a girl, 9Vs pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. DAVIS - To Mr. and Mrs. Robert L., route 2. box 189, East Vilas rd., Medford, Aug. 1, 1963, a girl. 9 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. HUSSEY - To Mr. and Mrs. Mervin L., 2830 Elliott st., Medford, Aug. 1, 1963, a girl, 8 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. The Mark Antony's Fabulous CROWN ROOM Serving the Finest Food! Open until 2:00 each evening during the 46-day Shakespear ean Festival. Call Ashland 482-1721 for reservations. Show time 8:45. tttark Antonu MAT AO HAT 1 1 Excessive Sick Pay Tax Voted Washington - (UP!) - Persons who make a profit out of be ing sick by holding more than one health insurance policy will have to pay taxes on the gain under a section of the tax bill on which the House Ways and Means Committee is working. The committee, drafting a compromise version of Presi dent Kennedy's tax program, voted Thursday to close the health insurance loophole by declaring excess payments as declarable income on federal income tax returns. Persons who have more than one policy can submit their eligible medical bills to each of the companies cover ing them and the combined payments often exceed the medical expense. At present there is no provision for tax ing this windfall. A committee spokesman indicated a sub stantial number of Americans now have multiple insurance coverage. The committee also affirm ed earlier decisions to lib' eralize the rules governing tax deductions for child care and moving expenses. The deduc tions would cover expenses of moving to a job in another city not paid by the employer and child care expenses of working parents. BOBBY CLINTON WILKES Private funeral services for Bobby C. Wilkes, 31, of 845 Bennett St., Medford, who died Sunday, were held Thursday at the graveside in Siskiyou Memorial park. Dr. D. Kirkland West of the First Presbyterian church of Medford officiated. Inter ment followed in Siskiyou Me morial park. Mr. Wilkes was born Nov. 25, 1931, in Vidalia, Ga. On June 7, 1952, in Coronado, Calif., he was married to Patsy Heston, who survives. He was a veteran of the Korean conflict, having serv ed from Dec. 6, 1950, until July 14, 1952, as a seaman in the U.S. Navy. Prior to his death, he had been em ployed as a carpenter in the home building industry in this area. He had been a resident of this community, and of Oregon, for the past seven years. Survivors, beside his wid ow include one son, Eddie Wilkes, at home; one daugh ter, Linda Wilkes, at home; one sister, Mrs. Elaine Las sitcr, Valdosta, Ga.; and his mother, Mrs. Mary Gay, Val dosta, Ga. Funeral services were en trusted to Siskiyou Funeral Service, directors of Chapel in the Trees mortuary. we imii oRiye-iN Bfe TONITE & SATURDAY! Gates Open 8 p.m. mmmmmmmi iiTr?? Show Starts 8:55 1 vv I " ritm THE MAN WITH THE BARBED WIRE SOULI j I zrw' CHUN IS I ammmmmmmm iaiii I mi "7 ..$JJ s u4 rw y'Pktl 1 ,l( j . Lie! 1 W. -vaa n . It. it L , -Cat . JmmW ' ? tn awm mm mm mm m V , m ' .. j- XT 1 m Mm MELVYN DOUGLAS $0: f J WS&K PATRICIA NEAL gMT Ifife Tt mt BRANDON deWILDE Mm J Investment Funds Noon quotation, on selected stocks: Bullock 1.1.2B Chemical Fund 11.2a Colonial Ener . 12 2fi Eaton Howard Stk.. t3.77 Fidelity 16.01 Fundamental Invest. 0.80 Group Sec Avia-Klec 6.63 Group Sec Com Stk 13.24 Hamilton C7 4.DH Kevblone B-3 16.4S Keystone B-4 10.32 Keystone K-2 5.16 Keystone S-l 21.811 Keystone S-2 13.01 Keystone S-3 14.69 Keystone 8-4 4.1.1 Mass Inv Growth Stk 8.13 National Growth .... 7.8(1 Stocks 18.53 TV-Elcc 7.33 United Accum 14.40 United Canada 17.48 United Income 12.30 United Science 6.611 Value Line Inc 9.23 Variable 6.77 Wellington 14.48 14 36 12.27 13.40 14.88 17.34 10.74 7.27 14.50 .1.46 17.95 11.27 3.63 23.84 14.19 16.03 4.33 8.89 8.32 20.03 7.99 1.1.83 19.00 13.44 7.31 .1.74 7.32 13.76 Youth Stranded High Above Surf Tillamook-IUttl-James Mc- Govern, 17, Portland, remain ed stranded on the rocky face of Mt. Ncahkahnie 100 feet above the surf near here to day while mountain climbers tried to rescue hiin. Mcuovern and a compan ion climbed onto the bluff Thursday about 4 p.m. and went beyond a rocky out cropping above Falcon Cove, according to Tillamook Coun ty Sheriff Del Walpole. The companion was able to get back to the highway, but McGovern became standed. The Sheriff's office and the Coast Guard made efforts to reach the youth before call ing in the Oregon Mountain Rescue Council. An Air Force helicopter made an unsuccessful at tempt early today to pluck the youth from his dangerous perch above the water. San Francisco-iUPI) - Seven men, with tne answer to wny they abandoned a $250,000 luxury yacht in the Pacific, were aboard a Navy subma rine today somewhere off the Southern California coast. They include a retired ad miral and six crewmen, who left the 104-foot motor yacht Freedom II on the high sea southwest of here Wednesday for the doubtful safety of a 14-foot outboard motorboat. There reasons for leaving the yacht were not expected to be revealed until late Sat urday night when they ar rive in San Diego aboard tne submarine USS . Razorback, which plucked them from the ocean shortly before midnight Wednesday. 600 Miles off Coast The vacht was abandoned about 600 miles off the Cali fornia coast while en route to San Diego from Honolulu under the command of retired Vice Adm. Gerald Bogan, one-time commander of tne U.S. First Task Force. The Navy identified otlicr members of the Freedom H's crew as William Pratt, R. W. Prouty, T. G. Reeves, W. J. Tapert, R. C. Groves and a. A. Meek. No home adaress were immediately available. The yacht, which carried such fancy stores as cham pagne, pate de foi gras and filet mignon, apparently sank after drifting for severaM hours. The Navy picket ship USS Galahad, which searched for the stricken vessel Thursday, reported by radio that "when last sighted by the USS Razor back, Freedom II was down by six feet at the bow." DANCE AT THE DERBY Mile from th Crater lake Hi-way en the Butte Falls Hi-way SATURDAY NIGHT-9-1 RAY ASHCRAFT With An Alt WESTERN BAND Snack Bar for your pleasure Electronic Lung Keeps Ward Alive London - 0IPII - Dr. Stephen Ward hovered near death to day, still in a coma 48 hours after he took an overdose of sleeping pills in an apparent suicide attempt. The 50-year-old society os teopath, convicted of vice charges by a Criminal Court jury Wednesday, was being kept alive only by an elec tronic lung in St. Stephen's hospital. A hospital spokesman said Ward, who tried to kill him self just a few hours before the jury found him guilty, is "critically ill. As Ward moved toward death, the last of his many girl friends, singer Julia Gul liver, 22, vowed to make pub lic the names of his many former friends who deserted him at his trial. I.O.O.F. No. 129 GOLD HILL BUILDING FUND BENEFIT DANCE AMERICAN LEGION HALL Central Point T wa iu ilia j AUG. 3 Music by . . . Th Mclodiut Four 9 to 1 Ivtrybody Wtlcom MtjllHassHAlB DREAMLAND BALLROOM I Saturday 9 to 1 Bcbby Burton and THE ROGUE VALLEY BOYS Featuring Frank Burdick Visit Our Snack Bar annnanz Portland Livestock Portland (UPI)-USDA Week ly Livestock: Cattle 1.700. Slaughter ulcers, choice 23.75. mixed good and choice 24.50-23.25. Slaughter hei fers, lower grades weak, good and choice 21-24. Cows steady, mostly utility and commercial 12.50-17, cutter 12-14.30. Bulls, cutter and utility 16.50-19. utility 20. Feeder steers, mixed good and choice 22 24.50. Calves 400. Slaughters, good and choice vcalers 23-27. Feeders, good and choice 25-28. Hors 1,100. Barrows and gilts, mixed 1-2. 20-20.50. Mixed 2-3, 18.50-20. Sows, little changed, 1-2. 14-16.50. Sheep 400. Spring slaughter lambs, choice and prime 18-18.25; choice and prime shorn No. 3 pelts 17-17.23. Slaughter ewes, cull to Rood 3-4.75. Spring feeder lambs, choice and fancy 14-14.50, good and choice 10-12.50. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Fair through Saturday. A little cooler Saturday. Low tonight 52. High baturday 87. Western Oregon: Fair tonight and Saturday, except foggy on coast late tonight and most of Sat urday. Low tonight 50-60. High Saturday 7585 in north and 82 94 in south Northern California: Fair to night and Saturday, except high fog on coast and morning drizzle. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mrn yester dav 66; below normal 7. Record high this date 104 in lD3!t. Record low this Oate 45 in 1036. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight, none. Midnight to 10 a.m.. none. Total this month none, normal. Total since Sept. 1, 26.73 inches, 7.13 inchrs above normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 26fi, highest this a.m. 83. High 4:00 24- CITY Yentrr- a.m. lir. day low rrec Brookings 7fJ Grants Pass .... B3 Howard Prairie .. 70 Klamath Falls .... 81 MEDFORD 86 Portland 73 Seattle 73 Spokane 76 Yakima . 80 Eureka 60 Red Bluff 99 Sacramenlo I5 San Francisco .... 60 Lou Angeles 80 Phoenix 97 Denver 96 Chicago 76 . 81 , 92 49 48 36 37 52 54 55" 53 49 Over-the-Counter Western Stocks By United Press International Bid Akked Bank of America 3 65 Cal Pac Util 253; 27 aj 1 Con Freight 9'k loi Cyprus Mines 24 26 1 '4 Equitable S At L 32 '1 34 'i 1st National Bank .... 07 Mt 70 'j Jantzcn 22,; 243i Morrison Knudscn .... 30' 32 Mult Kennels 43 5 N.W. Natural Gas 3.V 37'i Oregon Metallurgical ..1 Hi PCE 27U 20 PP&L 26 27 U.S. National Bank .... 78 l'A 82 West Coast Tel 22U 23 Weyerhaeuser 30 ts 32 Portland Produce Portland (UPIi Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: AA extra large 4S-49e; AA large 43-47c; A large 41-45c: AA medium 3540c; A small 25-2Dc; cartons l-3c higher. Butter To retailers: AA and A prints KOc; cartons 3c higher; B prints 65c. Cheese (medium cured) To re tailers: 4-48c; processed Ameri can 5-10 lb. loaf, 43-48C. Portland (UPIi Dressed chick ensNo. I grade dressed to re tailers: Fryers, wnoie drawn. .11- 38c lb.; cut-up 37-42c lb.; hens, light type, whole drawn 22-26c lb.; light type nens, cui-up tc id., heavy whole 3ti-39c lb. THE THREE TO SEE 1 CHARLTON HESTON YVETTE MIMIEUX GEORGE CHAKIRIS FRANCE NUYEN JAMES DARREN DiV!0;iD HEAD PANAVIblON - tislnxn COLOR SMtni.iv wis lowMoa. KxUHH'lMMGS hyGxisha A S0i oar Calhoun TBOHNIOOLOH WOMNI DwCAtlO 3 Features Tenite and Tomorrow unriruumi . inocuirr r&-, iimuMWtW iu. nmuuA-v- t ft JK ir, r- ft i . 'St : r at. DEBBIE REYNOLDS "MY SIX LOVES" O mvtJdJJ"-Jmwm I nwrn BONUS FEATURE "BACKLASH" xmm BOX OFFICE OPENS 1:30 MATINEE EVERY DAY A thunderbolt of entertainment explodes on the screen: Rugged and convincing! Has guts with a grin! I 4 ;X '..'v.. . The true story of Lt. John F. Kennedy's incredible adventure in the South Pacific! CLIFF ROBERTSONttdSSi iywnmsgw M'ami Bench . New York Washington. D. S3 B3 7!f no S3 7 fi.1 68 n MB G HURRY! HALEY LEAVES SOON 1 41 Ui NO MOTION PICTUKBlVait DARBP TO BfeTMIS HOHBBTI IT TRUTH YOU WILL UNDERSTAND! HiTCHC0CK!O)HITCHC0CK ?IUS 2ND CLASSIC ACTION I .aw,. MRlt C- I niEKJSNIHIla suspense s.wmmsKimmi:vcM HIT! I Alfred Hitchcock's ncHNtr on' 3RD ,;?"t I HIT! FIVF-IIAV r'tSHlKC'AST (Through Aug. 7): W eitern Oregon-U entern Wtih- . incum Mostly fair but chance of i showers western Washington and northwestern Oregon Monday and again Wednesday. Temperatures j to average near or sligh.ly below j normal, with hiehs 68-78 in Wash ington and 75-90 in Oregon. Lows mostly 50-80. Northern California No preci pitation. Near normal temperatures. "MONDO CANE" Color Also . 'Arf'J x A WHIRL OF FUN, MUSIC AND ROMANCE! Wait DiSNGY wu&f Bua Sim"! ooromy DeeoraH Mills tves MPGUiie wauev nroici ... unnccc .. . ..Dm i ADn .. QPfMM Ttvun Una IyIuixivlL- dd nuuULU Micnaei J r ULLHlu raer ui u 1 1 icvnun Open 6:45 -Screen 7:00 P.M. "LOVE IS A BALL" 5z 9 0, 19)