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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1963)
10 More Forest Areas Willi Be Closed To Entry Salem-fllPD-Ten more forest areas will soon be closed to entry except by permit. Proclamation ot Gov. Mark Hatfield halting entry into the areas is a month later than usual because of cool weather conditions which held down fire danger last month. State Forester Dwight Phipps ex plained. Closures Roing into effect Thursday will effect four areas in the Eastern Lane For est Protective Association dis trict and two in the West Ore gon district. The West Oregon closures will cover the forested region of Polk county and Eastern Lincoln county forest lands. Tillamook Ara Listtd The old Tillamook burn area and lands covered by the Linn Forest Patrol asso ciation will be closed Friday. Also set for Friday closure are two areas in the Clacka mas-Marion Forest Protective association. Persons wanting to go into the closed areas must get per mission from forestry offici als. To be allowed in the areas a person will have to carry desisnated fire tools, build no fires except in designated places and smoke only in areas designated as safe. Portland Livestock Portland (UPtl USDA Cattle Ssn. slaughter heifers choice near OKI lb. 24.5(1; Rood-low choice 85 lb. 24; canner-cutter cows 11-14. Calves SO. Medium-steer feeder calves 420-460 lb. 20-21. Hoes 200. Barrows and gilts t find 2 at 200 lb. 20; 2 and 3 grade 200-250 lb. 19.50; 250-270 lb. 18 18.50. Sheep 600. Spring slaughter Iambs choice-prime 80-102 lb. 18.50-18.60; those at 18.60 high yielding. Portland Produce Portland (UPIl Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: AA extra large 44-47c; AA large 41-45c: A large 40-43c; AA medium 33-40c; A small 23-29c; cartons l-3c hisher. Butter To retailers: AA and A prints Hc; cartons 3C higher; B prints 65c. Cheese (medium cured! To re tailers: 46-4Bc; processed Ameri can 5-10 lb. loaf, 43-48C. Portland (UPIl Dressed chick ens No. 1 grade dressed to re tailers: Fryers, whole drawn. 31 38c lb.; cut-up. 37-42c lb.; hens, lifiht type, whole drawn 22-26c Jb : light type hens, cut-up, 24 2Rc lb.; heavy whole 36-39C lb. GATES OPEN 7:45 P.M. ,.mm.m 1 " 1-ltKt put a fence In front of thest m r r put a wall in front of them. ..and they'll tunnel under it... W GRI "ESCAPE put a risk in front of them. put a great adventure on the screen a -ib m a. ;a.a ana you win never rorgei m STEVE MCQUEEN JAMES GARNER RICHARD ATTENBOROUGH jlWES DONALD CHARLES BRONSOM DONALD PLEASENCE JAMES COBURN COLORSlb FANAVISION'---- 2ND WESTERN ADVENTURE! tKMllUrV.f ill II II II Ji Bti Mil I R pj Ilia Ui ifS Mil sill I J. ) Ml 11 OBITUARIES MARY E. DOOMS Funeral services for Mrs Mary E. Dooms, 87, of 1003 West Second St., who died Tuesday, will be held at 10 a.m. Friday in Conger - Morris Chapel. The Rev. Norman Northrup of the Fust Chris tian church will officiate. Committal will be in the Jacksonville cemetery. Mrs. Dooms was born Nov. 13, 1875. in Texas county Missouri, and had lived in southern Oregon since 1902 moving from Missouri. She was married Dec. 15, 1895, in Douglas county, Missouri to Pleasant A. Dooms, who preceded her in death in 1953 Survivors include three sons, Henry Dooms, Ashland and Charles Dooms and Wil lard Dooms, Medford; a daugh ter, Mrs. Orval (Sarah) Hayes, Medford; three brothers, Jesse Barnes, Medford: Otis Barnes, C a b o o 1, Mo., and Ernest Barnes, Willow Springs; three sisters, Mrs. Sarah Tobin, Bozeman, Mont.; Mrs. Stella Headley, Lawrence, Kans., and Mrs. Lilly Johnson, Medford; nine grandchil dren, 19 great grandchildren and two great great grand children. A daughter, Mrs. Ethel Bish, preceded her in death in 1957. Casket bearers will Include Frank Douglas, Andrew Ow ings, Richard Singler. Walter Wilson, P. M. Aldredge, and Norval Jones. NETTIE E. FISCHER Funeral services for Mrs. Nettie E. Fischer, 57, of route 1, box 463, Central Point, who died Monday, will be held Saturday in Cashmere, Wash. Committal will be in the Cashmere cemetery beside her husband, Arthur Fischer. who died in 1943. Conger- Morris Funeral directors were in charge of local arrange ments. Mrs. Fischer was born Jan. 24, 1906, in Wymore, Nebr., had lived in the Wenatchee valley in Washington fox 22 years before coming to south ern Oregon 10 years ago. Survivors include a son, Darrell Fischer, Sand Point Naval Base, Seattle, Wash.; a daughter, Mrs. Donald Mc Farland, Hood River, Ore.; three brothers, Frank Lisec, Wymore, Nebr.; Robert Lisec, Odell, Nebr., and Stephen Lisec, Odell, Nebr.; a sister, Mrs. E. Everett Kendall, Wenatchee, Wash.; her moth- SHOW STARTS 8:45 P.M. THMITCI a ataxia a a a? n a ua men... and they'll climb it... ON SCREEN 8:50 P.M. 1:45 A.M. ..and they'll take it. ON SCREEN 11:55 P.M. er, Mrs. Anna Lisec, Odell, Nebr., and six grandchildren MYRTLE M. GARRISON Funeral services for Mrs. Myrtle May Garrison, 71, of 252 Hoyt lane, who died Mon day, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday in Hillcrest Memo rial Chapel on the North Phoenix rd. The Rev. Bernard Andrews of the First Baptist church will officiate. Committal will be in Hillcrest Memorial park, with Conger-Morris Funeral directors in charge of arrange ments. Mrs. Garrison was born Nov. 13, 1891, in Iowa, and had lived in southern Oregon for the past 15 years. She was married in April, 1955, in Ashland, to Angus Garri son, who survives. Other survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Goldy Sadler, Medford; one grandchild and two great grandchildren. RUFUS H. FANN Rufus H. Fann, 1040 Maple Park dr., died yesterday in his Hnntors office. Funeral arrangement will be announc ed by Conger - Morris Funer al directors. R. MERLE ATTWOOLL Private funeral services for R. Merle Attwooll, 73, of 4074 South Pacific highway, Medford. who died Tuesday, will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at Perl Funeral home. The Rev. B. J. Holland, pastor of Ashland Presbyte rian church, will officiate. Entombment will be in Mountain View Mausoleum in Ashland. Mr. Attwooll was born Sept. 13. 1889, in Clear Lake, Iowa. He was graduated from Iowa State Teachers college in Cedar Falls, Iowa, in 1911 and taught school for five years in Le Mars, Iowa. In 1916 he moved to Minneapo lis, Minn., where he taught school until his retirement in 1947. He and Mrs. Attwooll moved to Ashland, Ore., in 1947 where they made their home for several years on Mary Jane ave. On June 6, 1914, in Mason City, Iowa, he was married to Gladys Foote, who survives. Other survivors include three daughters, Mrs. Jane Snodgrass, Medford, Mrs. Helen Thomas, Phoenix, Ore., Mrs. Aryls Miller, St. Louis. Mo.: three sisters, Miss Florence Attwooll, Glendale, Calif., Mrs. Nettie Palace, Las Vegas, Nev., Mrs. Lora Whitehead, Springfield, Mo., and eight grandchildren. Friends who wish may con tribute to the Ashland Pres byterian church building fund. HERMAN ST. CLAIRE Herman St. Claire, 72, of 613 North Bartlett st., Med ford, died today in a local hospital. Funeral arrange ments will be announced by Perl Funeral home. Potluck Picnic-The Grants Pass Chapter of the Fleet Re serve association will hold its annual potluck picnic at 11 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 18 at Indi an Marv nark, located on the road to Galice. Members are asked to take their own table service and to contact the branch secretary if the mem ber plans to attend. Kansas Pienie - All former Kansans are invited to attend fho annual Kansas nicnic at 5 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 18, at the Grants Pass City park, sec tion 2. Those attending are asked to take a basket dinner and table service. Coffee and ice cream will be furnished. Various awards will be given. in Hoaoital - Listed as a sureerv Da t i e n t at Sacred Heart hospital today is James A. Weaver, 2756 Robertson Bridge rd., Grants Pass. Mcdi ral nation! s there are John W. Ross, Crescent City. Calif., and Ernest R. Owen, Klamath, Calif. Ptrmits Issued - The Med ford building department is sued permits Monday to Da vid W. Chase to erect a florist and gift shop at 555 East Fourth st. at an estimated cost of $8,000, and to C. L. Milley to remodel a residence at 2200 Ruhl Way at an esti mated cost of $1,900. Motorists Injured - Wil liam Ray King, 26, of 712 Oak St., Central Point, and his wife, Shirley Betty Ann King, were treated for minor injuries at Rogue Valley hos pital Saturday after the car King was driving was involv ed in a collision with an auto driven by Alice Mae Thom as, 30. of 80 Crater lane, Ccn- tral Point. The collision oc ! curred at Fifth and Cherry sts. i ... In Hospital - Douglas H. Hinesly, 1032 Murray St., is listed a a medical patient at Rogue Valley hospital. .4 1 Locals MEDFORO Racial Barriers In Baton Rouge Eateries Lifted By United Press International Merchants lowered racial bars without incident in an other Southern city Tuesday. Lunch counters at 12 retail stores in downtown Baton Rouge. La., and in two big suburban shopping centers were desegregated with ad vance notice. Negroes were served quietly at the stores during the noon lunch period. Picketing continued, how ever, at Baton Rouge's segre gated public swimming pool and Negro leaders have ask ed a federal judge for an early hearing of a suit aimed at desegregation of the city's park and recreation facilities. Police arrested 138 Negro demonstrators at Athens, Ga., luesday for parading with out a permit. Officers said 97 of the group were juve niles who were turned over to juvenile authorities. Permit Lacking Fifty-five Negroes were ar rested at Sumter, S.C., for marching in downtown area without a parade permit. All but 16 of this group were juveniles. At New York, around 40 demonstrators left their pick et lines at a Brooklyn con struction site and filled up scats in the only restaurant in the area in a move design ed to keep workmen from getting lunch. The pickeis are protesting alleged job hir ing discrimination on city construction projects. Racial tensions appear to have eased in Chicago where white crowds have staged un ruly demonstrations in a re cently integrated neighbor hood on the city's South Side. Medford Skater Takes Third Spot Thirteen-year-old Earlene Hardy, 3404 South Pacific highway, skated through eli mination and final events to win third place In the Ameri can National Skating cham pionships held last week in Memorial collisium in Port land. Miss Hardy, who has been skating since two years old, spun and jumped through the three-minute routine without a fall. Twenty-eight skaters who had placed either first, second or third In the seven different regions of the Unit ed States competed for the national honors. The three placement win ners of the event will later be required to move up to the intermediate ladies divi sion, with an age limit of 18. Miss Hardy will be the small est girl in the 26 years of the National competitions to skate in the intermediate ladies event. Investment Funds Noon quotation! on salectad stocks; Fund Bid Askrd Bullock 13.4 14.74 Chemical Fund 11.42 12 42 Colonial Ener 11.51 12. 5B Eaton Howard Stk 13!in l.-.02 Fidelity 16 27 17.5!) Fundamental Invest. fl.f2 10R7 Group Sec Avia-Klec R.73 7.3R Group Sec Com Stk 13.43 14 .7(1 Hamilton C7 5.07 554 Keystone B-3 104R 17.JHI Keystone B-4 10 32 11.27 Keystone K-2 5 21 5 70 Keystone S-l 22.14 24. IR Keystone S-2 13.10 14.37 Keystone S-3 4.fl! 10.25 Keystone S-4 4.tn 4.5R Mass Inv Growth Slk 8 23 B 09 National Growth .. 7 01 R 64 Stocks 18 63 20.14 TV-Elcc - 7.40 8 07 United Accum 14.70 16.07 United Canada 17.59 10.12 United Income 12.48 13.64 United Science 6.79 7.42 Value Line lne 5.28 5 77 Variable 6.BO 7.35 Wellington 14.61 15 92 Over-the-Counter Western Stocks By United Press International Bid Asked Bank of America 64 67 Cal Pac Util 2fi4 28' Con Freight 10 11 Cyprus Mine 24 "j 2fi'' Equitahle S & L 32'a 34'2 1st National Bank B7' 70 Jantzen 22'4 24 ai Morrison Knudsen 30' 4 324 Mult Kennel 4 nn 5 N.W. Naiural Ons 35'g 37'it Orr-aon Metallurgical.. 1 pt POE 27'i, 2Ri4 PPL 2fi' 27 U.S. National Bank .... 7fP fl2U West Coast Tel , 7R1, 24 Weyerhaeuser 30 32 fauHo A NEW MENU Prime Rib Steaks Chicken Sea Food Dining Room OPEN 7 DAYS 5 P.M.-11 P.M. For Banquets Call 535-9710 MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, FESTIVAL PLAYS Tonight: "Love's La bour's Lost." Thursday: "Henry V." Friday: "Merry Wives of Windsor." Saturday: "Romeo and Juliet." Curtain time is 8:45 p.m. Bus leaves Medford ho tel and Jackson House in Medford at 7:30 p.m. Technological Projects Listed Salem - OJPD - Members of the legislative interim com mittee on technological em ployment have been assigned study projects by its chair men. Sen. Don S. Willner (D Portland). Members and their proj ects include: Sen. Alfred Corbett (D Porlland), manpower and de velopment with emphasis on a survey of probelm areas in Oregon. Rep. EI Elder (R-Eugene), the role of vocational educa tion. Sen. Ted Hallock (D-Port-land), survey of the Industri al potential of the state. Sen. Arthur P. Ireland (R Foresl Grove), impact of au tomation on agriculture. Rep. Richard L. Kennedy (D- Eugene), the apprentice ship training program. Rep. Fred Meek (R-Port-land), the impact of automa tion on small business. Rep. Wayne Turner (D-St. Helens), federal government programs affecting technolog ical employment in Oregon. Rep. Howard Willits (D Gresham), groups with spe cial needs in a technological economy and the impact of defense industry on employ ment. Waldport School Principal Killed Newport, Ore.-IUPII-Charles Phelps, principal of Waldport Junior High school, was kill ed in a logging accident 25 miles southeast ot here Tues day afternoon. Phelps, 44, was employed by the M and W Logging Co. ot Waldport. He was dead on arrival at a Newport hospital Dr. Karl Rottlauf, medical examiner for Lincoln county, said Phelps was crushed when he apparently fell off a truck while loading logs and a log fell onto him. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinitv; Cnn. tinued fair and hot through Thursday. Expected low tonight 53. high for Thursday 03. Western Oregon : Fair tonight and Thursday except patches of early morning fog or clouds. Con tinued warm. Low tonight 52-60, high for Thursday 80 in extreme North. 95 in south interior Rft-72 along coast. North winds 34 mph along coast. worinern California: Fair to night and Thursday except scat tered thunderxhowers in Sierras. foe along coast. Little chance In temperature. TEMPERATURE: Mean yester day 74; above normal 2. Record hieh this date 104 in 19H0. nerord low Ihin dale 4R In 104R. PRECIPITATION: 24 hour In midniRhi, none. Midnight to 10 a.m., none. Tola! thin month none: .01 inch below normal. Total since Sent. 1. 2fi 73 inches. 7.12 inches above normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest vesterdav 23, highest this a.m. 8(1. MiRn 4:on 24 CITY Yester- a.m. hr. day low I'rec. Brnokincx fl2 B3 48 52 48 Grants Pass Howard Prairie .. 80 Klamath Falls 89 , 03 77 80 55 55 5 ft 61 80 51 83 51 fi5 73 58 70 82 71 72 MEDFORD Portland Seattle 73 Spokan 85 YaKima 95 Eureka SB Sacramento ........ 99 San I-rancisco .... 72 Los Angeles 77 Phoenix 93 Denver 85 Chicago 80 Miami Beach 88 New York 84 Washington, D. C. 89 FIVK-DAY FORECAST: WESTERN OREfiON-WAHIIINK TON Little If any rain except a tune arizzie on me cnam. Tem perature averaging near normal Highs 70-80 in Western Washing ton. 80-90 in Western Oregon. Lows in the 50 i. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA No precipitation except scattered thundershowern at times in the high mountains. Temperatures averaging near normal. FOR THE FINEST IN DINING! Starting Fri. A Sat- DANCE to the Taylor Trio and Parties Talent OREGON Ranking Drama Critic Indicates Broadway Plays History's Worst Ashland-This year's season on Broadway may well have been "the worst in history," one of the nation's ranking drama critics said here last night. Addressing a small audi ence at a dinner at the Mark Antony hotel, Henry Hewcs, critic for the "Saturday Re view of Literature," said the "deterioration that was per ceptible in the l!)fil-2 BrnnH. I way season was mercilessly apparent in the 1862-63 sea son." Hewcs said investors in shows, plagued by production costs which have almost dou bled in the last 10 years, lost over $5 million in Broadway productions. The critic said one reason for the decline this season was that many of the leading play writes among them William Inge, Lillian Hellman-Irwin Shaw, Sidney Kingsley and Tennessee Williams offered plays that were "disappoint ing." Discusses Plays Hewes surveyed briefly sev eral of the major productions of the past season, making brief, pithy comments on each. He said he regarded Ed ward Albee's "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf," the "most talked about play of the sea son,'" as a "truly remarkable" production. Tennessee William's "The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore' Hewes felt was imperfect." But the critic said he included it in the an thology which he edits. "The Best Plays of 1063." because he felt it was, nonetheless, "a major member of the Wil liams menagerie." He described Hellman's "My Mother, My Father and Me" as revealing the "inner contradictions of middle class family life," in this country. ITU STARTS Roadshow a story 0f desire and dl.aw in 'act- that makes lite ... Adm. worth living VIIRISCH COMPANY.. mm LEMNON 3ILLY WILDER'S J mm DOUCE THIS ICTUH IS FOR ADULTS ONLY nODUCtO ND DIKCCTCD Y BILLY WILDER SCREENPLAY BY BILLY WILDER"0 1. A. L. DIAMOND T Ot RECTO" MUSIC SCO"E BY ALEXANDER TRAUNER ANDRE PREVIN TECHNICOLOR' PANAVISI0N' HtMNTEO IN ASSOCIATION WITH nuiAMI PRODUCTIONS. INC. HE LEASED THRU UNITED ARTIST? The critic said the "im ports" from Europe, includ ing the ones which played off Broadway, were not up to the quality of past seasons. However, he praised "Stop the World, I Want to Get Off" as a "truly imaginative and the atrical piece of work." Most Successful The "most successful" play of the season, a piece about late - in - life parents called "Never Too Late," Hewcs scorned as "appallingly bad." "I'd never include it In the book," he said, in reference to his anthology ot best plays. In "contrast" to the decline of the theater in New York, Hewes found signs of vigor ous theatrical activity else where in the country. He cited San Francisco's Actors Studio, Tyrone Guthrie's work in Minneapolis, the Lincoln Arts Center, and the establish ment of a three-year resident company In Seattle as ex amples. Search Continues For Missing Plane Seoul, Korca-ltlPII - More than 30 Americans and South Korean planes took off at dawn today in a stepped up search for a smal U.S. Army aircraft missing with six men aboard since Sunday. Poor flying weather has hampered search efforts for the past two days. Ground parties have not been able to locate the missing aircraft. The aerial search was con centrated along South Korea's eastern coast, starting from the vicinity of Dacpo-ri, a vil lage 25 miles south of the truce line. It was from Dacpo ri that the missing plane took off about 3 p.m. Sunday. T0NITE passjon bloodshed. death . . . everything, v. EDWARD L ALPERSON SHIRLEY WaeiaiWE WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 7. IMS He said the "real hero" in the new burst of theater across the country was the Ford Foundation, which has just awarded $6 million in grants 'to help professional ac tors and companies to reach new levels of achievement." Hewes pointed out that it PREMIERE PUrOV nyi: SMGOffNO-MONiriCINr-MMMrr June WilKinSoiT TkirSfi Btij BH J-Ep CUMMINS BVKIOtJ tSgSJt -ioor iuuiwi" "IZf W S ta&Tm. T irsfftiS, J: . .i CO-HIT SSM 7 A m PLUS "A SUMMER PLACE" Uouve goto Cttimuncm PMIOINT A K(MMAI-NCT PRODUCTION dick LOT V3NDYKB I r IN vm nnnr Hr rnAii f ni in n inn . r.vr im v mi l i v iiiiiwh i MATINEE EVERY DAY FROM 2 P.M. BOX OFFICE OPEN 1:30 A 13 Is "too early" to sty what the enect of the grants will be, : but at the very least he found 1 encouragement In the fact that "it will now be passible . for more people to work as full-time actors." This is the fourth season that the critic has traveled to " Ashland to see the festival -production. The dinner was held last night, prior to the -showing of "Romeo and Juliet," under the sponsorship of the Medford Broadway The ater League. TONITE! Ma 1 TONITE mm dim OF 4 PICTURE! TODAY otfce JrWtkdb AM) AS HIMSflf n m- mm raw a ilk lAimAAii tAkiu