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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 16, 1963)
Portland Livestock Portland (UPI) USD A Weekly livestock : Cattle 1970. Choice slaughter teeri 26 choice 25.75; mixed good - choice 24.75-25 JO; good 23 50-25 with grass offerings 22 22.75; mixed good-choice heifers 24-24.25; standard-good 17-23; can ner cows 10-13, cutler 1214.50; Utility bulls 20. Calves 470. Good-choice vealers 22-27; choice feeder steers 28. Hogs 1150. Butchers closed 75 1 00 lower; barrows and gilts mixed 1-2 grade 19-19.25. Sheep 3800. Slaughter spring lambs choice - prime wooled IB IS. 75; ewes cull-good 3-4.75; spring feeder lambs good-choice wooled 12-15. Relax and Enjoy Yourself At William's GHOST TOWH CHUCK WAGON RESTAURANT All You Can Eat $J10 CHILDREN UNDER 12 60c OPEN 12 Noon-9 P.M. WILLIAM'S! GHOST TOWN 3 Miles Up Sardine Creek Go Through Geld Hill en Hiway 234 and Follow the Signs. TONITE! THE GIANTS WHO BECAME THE FURY OF winm RQ BRAV0! m ?v"s R.. v,H ft IS A.V, ,J&?. fFZ s?VwflSsa 4 Teathers' Dn and Ricky Ung.tMl "Ro Bravo" "My Rrfl, My Pony and 4t "Cmmv" Home Is Where the Homicide Is! (SHE SAID) Local and Smoko Investigated Fire men were sent to investigate when smoke was reported about 3 a.m. at Shakey's Piz-! za parlor, 215 East Jackson st. They found that the oven had been burned out with too high a temperature and reported possible smoke damage. mi hh: Ends Saturday! ...THE BIG GUY WITH THE BATTERED HAT .. THF WOMAN -WRECKED CASTOFF CALLED DUDE- ...THE ROCKIN' BABY-FACED GUNFISTED KID- scan mmzm TECHNICOLOR ANGIE DICKINSON -WALTER BREMMAN WARD BOND MUU Bll(0EI I Gonzalez com-e: estejt oe'vj y-m- wwilH l3fl nUirvCw jw.es wik le Mcn . ajgj 2ND FEATURE! ON SCREEN 11:30 P.M. AGATHA CHRISTIE THF FIRST LADY Of MYSTERY NO MARGARET RUTHERFORD THE USTWOROIN DETECTIVES 8R1N6 YOU t KILLER OF t SUSPENSE YIRH... NO IFS.MDS OR B'HLtPS ABOUT IT! VI v r.,..s.,.mi ROBERTSON-JUSTICE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. Personal Fires Extinguishtd City firemen put out a trash fire about 10:40 o'clock last night ! in the 600 block of Crater! Lake ave. They extinguish-' ed a gress fire at 11:15 p.m. ! at the rear of the Donald ; Williams residence, 717 Laws-! dale rd. They said it had ex-1 tended from a trash fire. , 1 Rummage Sale -Alpha, Lambda chapter, Epsilon Sig-1 ma Alpha sorority, is spon soring a rummage sale Satur day, Aug. 17, in the Fehl building, 106 North Ivy st., Medford. The sale will open at 9 a.m. Can Collide - Cars oper ated by Claude Clifford Chap man, 68, of 530 Berrydale ave., and George Henry Combe, 36, Thousand Oaks, Calif., collided about 10:40 a.m. Thursday at Fourth st. and Central ave. City police reported no injuries and no citations were issued. Permit Issued - The Med ford building department is sued a permit Thursday to Frank Richey to refinish a residence at 306 North Holly st. at an estimated cost of $1,200. Gold Seal Meeting - The Rogue Valley Chapter of the Gold Seal Chinchilla associa tion will be held at Haw thorne Park in Medford at 1 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 18, Gary O'Brien, president of the chapter, reported today. Drinks for the polluck pic nic will be furnished by the chapter. Abusiness meeting will follow. Funeral Service Set For Portland Lawyer Portland - (UPIl - Graveside service will be held Monday for Lyman Ezra Latourette, 90, one time city attorney of Portland, who died in a rest home Wednesday. Latourette was born in Ore gon City on Nov. 6. 1872. He was a graduate of Linfield College and later was on the school's board of trustees. GATES OPEN 7:45 P.M. "RIO BRAVO" On At 8:40 P.M. & 12:45 A.M. ib ff r- - 1. J-MtlA ' i I from warn CR BROS. (SHE 8A10J- ii;iifi iirmt ' wim RUTHERFORD KENNEDY PAVLOW tnmm im MEDFORD. OREGON FESTIVAL PLAYS Tonight: "Henry V." Saturday: "Merry Wives of Windsor." S u n d y: "Romeo and Juliet" Monday: "Love's La bour's lost." Curtain time is 8:45 p.m. Bus leaves Medford ho tel and Jackson House in Medford at 7:30 p.m. Births SMITH - To Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lawrence, 212 Rose St., Medford, Aug. 14, 1963, a boy, 634 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. WALKER - To Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edward, 1011 West Second st., Medford, Aug. 14, 1963, a boy, pounds, at Rogue Valley hos pital. HIGINBOTHAM - To Mr. and Mrs. Loyle E., 4857 Ham rick rd.. Central Point, Aug. 14, 1963, a boy, 7V4 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. BAUMAN - To Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Dennis, Ideal court, Apt. H, Taylor St., Med ford, Aug. 15, 1963, a boy, 7 pounds, at Rogue Valley hos pital. KOVENZ - To Mr. and Mrs. John Frank, 1021 Whit man st., Medford, Aug. 15, 1963, a girl, 8 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. DAVIS - To Mr. and Mrs. James Melvin, 24 Mace rd., Medford, Aug. 15, 1963, a girl, 814 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vtcinitv: Clear through Saturday with lome high cloudiness at times. Low tonignt 50-53. High Saturday 00-95. Western Oregon. Fair tonight and Saturday, except night and morning fog or low clouds with local drizzle on coast. Low to night 48-56. High Saturday as in north to 95 in southern interior and 65-73 on coast. Small craft warnings Newport to Cape Blan co. Wind increasing to .12 miles per hour south coast in after noon. Northern California: Mnstlv fair tonight and Saturday, except scauereo auernoon ana eventn, thunderstorms aver central am southern Sierras and fog along coaai. iuoier central coast area. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 70: below normal 1. Record high this date 102 In 1950. Record low this dale 43 in 1945. PRECIPITATION : 24 hours to midnight none. Midnight to 10 a.m. none. Total this month .01 In., .05 In. below normal. Total since Sept. t 26.74 In., 7.09 in. above normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 15, highest this a.m. 77. High 4:00 24- C1TV Yester- a.m. nr. day Low Pree. Brookings Grants Pass Howard Prairie Klamath Falls .. MEDFORD Portland 60 47 SO .19 47 55 57 85 51 50 "52 67 62 52 ..91 .82 ..88 ..92 81 Seattle 76 Spokane 80 Yakima 83 Eureka 57 Red Bluff 105 Sacramento 103 San Francisco 78 Los Angeles 90 "Phoenix 99 Denver 89 Chicago -74 Miami Beach 93 New York 79 Washington, D. C. 80 64 81 59 FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Thrush Aug. 21): Western Oregon -Western Wash ington Temperatures averaging near or a liuie oeiow normal. Lows 45-55. Highs in 70s In western Washington and in 80s In western Oregon. Little or no rain. Northern California No pre cipitation. Temperatures near or above normal. Investment Funds Noon quotations on feltcttd stocks: Fund Bid Bullock 13.70 Chemical Fund 11.75 Colonial Ener 12.61 Eaton Howard Stk ....14 20 Fidelity 16.68 Fundamental Invest 10.11 Group Sec Avia-Elec 6.71 Group Sec Com Stk 13.56 Hamilton C7 5.15 Keystone B-3 16.59 Keystone B-4 10.40 Keystone K-2 5.31 Keystone S-l 22.59 Keystone S-2 13.44 Keystone S-3 ....15.24 Keystone S-4 4 24 Mass lnv Growth Stk 8 42 National Growth .... 8.10 Stocks 18 92 TV-Elec 7.53 United Accum 14.95 United Income 12 68 United Science 6 89 Value Line lne 5 36 Varlbale 691 Wellington 14.78 Asked I 14.02 I 12.78 I 13.78 I 15.34 I 18 03 I 11.08 7 .43 7 47 16.11 I DINING ROOM OPEN EVERY DAY 5 .m. to 11 p.m. 12 Midnight Friday and Saturday The Valley's Most- Danceable Music Featuring . . - THE TAYLOR TRIO Friday and Saturday FOR BANQUETS and P.RTIES Call 535-9710 Talent Southern Cities Have Limited Joint Swimming Pool Use By AL KUETTNER UPI Corrtspondtnt At 3 p.m. one day this week, the largest public pool in At lanta had just 15 swimmers. One was a Negro. No one paid the young Ne gro any attention except the white youth with whom he was swimming. They seemed to be having fun. On the surface, all was calm, but nearby a police cruiser was parked. The officer-driver relaxed on a bench, sipping a milkshake. Inside the bathhouse, another police man manned the ticket booth. This was the first summer of swimming pool integration in Atlanta. Results: No serious incidents but pool attendance had dropped at least 50 per cent. Pools, formerly open in the evenings, were closing at 5 p.m. Integration groups were urging their white mem bers to use public pools to prevent them from becoming "re-segrcgated." Htd Issue Few desegregation issues have generated more heat touncil Votes to Install Stop Sign The Medford city council last night voted 7 to 1 to in stall a stop sign at the inter section of Pennsylvania and Summit aves. The action came after David B. Shaffer, 812 Pennsylvania ave., appeared before the group to present a petition signed by 30 residents of the area requesting the sign. Shaffer said the residents were concerned that some children might be injured at the intersection unless some thing were done. He said a stop sign would "cut down the speed" of the vehicles there. A motion by Councilman William Singler to refer the matter to the Traffic Safety committee failed by a 7 to 1 vote. Body of Unknown Man Is Discovered Portland - (UPIl - The body of an unidentified elderly man was found under an ap proach to the Steel Bridge here today. Police said he had apparently been stabbed to death. Deputy Coroner Frank Blanchard said the man had apparently been stabbed in the back. His pockets had been turned out. Officers said the location of the body was a favorite summer sleeping spot for transients. mim a FOR THE FINEST IN DINING! f PATIO PACkX f 12 pc. tub ChicktnX Potato Salad I I A ill tha trimminfi 1 I 1 Gal. Root Star I V $4.95 Mul for y. than efforts by Negroes to take a cool dip in the old public swimming hole. Nashville, Tenn., is taking its first steps at getting pools back in operation after "wade- in" closings in 1961. They have been open for desegre gated learn-to-swim classes this summer. Segregated pools still oper ate at Tallahassee, Fla., and Chattanooga, Tenn., despite demonstrations. Negroes occa sionally swim at a "white" pool in Knoxville, Tenn., without incident. A number of cities have abandoned public parks to es cape pool desegregation. In Memphis, Tenn., one of the cities that closed pools, Negroes this week filed a mo tion in federal court demand ing that pools be reopened on an integrated basis. In Jackson, Miss., pools tail ed to open this summer after an integration order. Closed Two Years Pools were close two sea sons ago in Jacksonville, Fla., and Negro efforts to get them reopened have failed. In Lexington, N. C, where a service station attendant was killed and a photograph er wounded during racial troubles in June, pools were closed after less than a week of integrated operation. The closing came after two barrels of oil were dumped into the pool one night. Albany, Ga , sold its public swimming pool to newspaper publisher James H. Gray, who is operating it on a private and segregated basis. Pools at Birmingham and Montgomery in Alabama are closed, and this extends in Montgomery to all parks and recreational areas. NOW APPEARING NIGHTLY at the Colony Restaurant in the FLORENTINE LOUNGE BILL BLAKELY at the PIANO BAR 8:30 to 1:30 Nightly CUOUL THE and FLORENTINE LOUNGE FOURTH and ATTENTION EAGLES BENEFIT DANCE Saturday, August 17th HEARING AID FUND MUSIC 'BY 3 SHARPS AND A I.O.O.F. No. 129 COLD HILL BUILDING FUND BENEFIT DANCE AMERICAN LEGION HALL Central Point Music by . . . Tht Melodius Four 9 to 1 verybody Welcome Bobby Saturday 9 to 1 and THE ROGUE VALLEY BOYS II Featuring Visit Our taataaasaaaMsaaaHHaaaaasaiaBaaaaaiaaaaaaBUBi DANCE I Miles from tha Crater like Hl-way en tha Burla Falls Hi-way SATURDAY NIGHT 9-1 RAY ASHCRAFT With An All WESTERN BAND Featuring Bill lively a i. I w ni- OBITUARIES INA C. ALENDERFER Funeral services for Ina C. Alendcrfcr, 79, of 45 Rose Court, who died Tuesday, will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at Perl Funeral home. The Rev. Fred Evans, pastor of First Christian church, will offi ciate. Interment will be in Siskiyou park. Mrs. Alenderfer was born Jan. 19, 1884, in Elsberry, Mo. She moved to Medford in 1900 Over-the-Counfer Western Stocks By United Press InternaUonal Bid Asked Bsnk of American 66 69 Cal Pac Util 26U Con Freight 10 Cyprus Mines 24 k Equltahlp SfcL . 3H4 First National Bank ....68 Jantzen 22a Morrison Knudsen 30? Mult Kennels 4', N W. Natural Ga 35 Oregon Metallurgical .... 1 PGE 27', PP&t. 2a U.S. National Bank 80-, West Coast Tel 2.1 Weyerhaeuser 31. 28'i 10 201. 33 71 24 'a 32 4Ta 37 1 28 28 84 24 33 Portland Produce Portland (UPIl Dairy market: Eggs To retailers; AA extra large 45-49c: AA large 42-47c. A large 4l-45c: AA -medium 35-40c; A small 23-29c: cartons l-3c high- Butter To retailers: AA and A prints 66c; cartons 3c higher; B prints 65c. Cheese (medium cured) To retailers: 46-48C: processed Ameri can 5-10 lb. loaf, 43-48c. Portland (UPI) Dressed chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn 29 36c lb.; cut-up 35-40c lb.; hens light type, whole drawn 22-26c in.; light type hens, cut-up 24 28c lb.; heavy whole 36-39C lb. FRONT FLAT IAGLIS AND GUESTS I ,t J AUG. 17th DREAMLAND BALLROOM Burton Larry Boh I Snack Bar DERBY mu - fcvJUa UmJ m (A Jirry Lewis Production) c ) DANCE I lllfeagS ; I Rogue River ( f JEFF CHANDLER -hardwI fpXZT l0tM0tM0h)0r BROWN HUTCHINS DUGGAN H t.'l 1 'SHv ll - AT THE FRIDAY. AUGUST from Everett, Wash. She was married to O. O. Alenderfer, who preceded her in death In 1949. Survivors include one nephew, William E. Cunning ham, Baltimore, Md., and three grandnieces. Honorary bearers will be H. Sims, A. C. Leighton, E. C. Jerome, Jack Swem, ack Thompson, Larry Schade Jr., C. D. Wood, Paul Ryn ning, Raymond Reter, Albert Lenox, H. S. Deuel, M. H. Hogan. FRANK E. HUNTER Private funeral services for Frank E. Hunter, 76, of 2162 Camp Baker rd., who died Wednesday, were held at 10 o'clock this morning at Perl Funeral home. The Rev. Fred Evans, pastor of First Chris- jEiuiy LEWS., nri 'tup Me7T3H Donrr? I V 1 n UST tihes I jQTiENDISHTUrLTIruliEW HORROrTtS"? wervo-rama I L HOW MUCH SHOCK CAN YOU STAND? H III j m) illl BisBM ak. ja, immnunir 111 Safins MATINEE EVERY DAY FROM 2 P.M. OPTrffl i.!i:ilH,l;r OUY HEIDI WILLIAMS BRUHL A 9 tian church, officiated. Mr. Hunter was born July 3, 1887, in Missouri. He lived in Huntington Beach, Calif., for several years and moved to near Phoenix on Camp Baker rd. in July this year. '. He was employed as a cook most of his life. He was a veteran of World War I. , Survivors Include four sons, ? Ross Hunter, Seattle, Wash., ' Ronald Hunter, Huntington : Beach, Calif., Roy Hunter, : Cedro Wooley, Wash., Robert Hunter, Spokane, Wash.- ona daughter, Mrs. Rhoda A. Stephens, Fort Knox, Ky.; nine grandchildren, and two great grandchildren. HELEN M. HOELTING Helen M. Hoelting, 770S SE 17th ave., Portland, died yesterday in a motel near Rogue River. Funeral arrange- , ments will be announced by Perl Funeral home. W.ilHiltJiMHil'Ji PEDRO AlHAHAk ARMENDARIZ SOFAEP W-Q-M H. J 1 1 aA STEVE SJlFPfTsf ,1 i minus mnr,tisi OfW3cm.usmi.aui (J II. 1113 TONITE AND 1 ' TOMORROW I 1 I -fitiCK omr Tor tout rivur