Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1963)
A. A 1 ; i ;8 , D SUNDAY, AUGUST II. 19S3 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON - : ; : rr. - ptheyll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hado M - LOOKIS IT ASKING TOO 1 6UESS I'M JUST NOT 1 AXILLA'S I MUCMTOEXPECTQUTO.LA&OO0HOUGEk'EEPER--iV? APACTMEWT 1 ' V. OUST OR CLEAN. THESE. T AND ANVWAV WE vfPprA inn&n I llfF 1 TWO ROOMS .ONCE I NEVgR HAVE COMPAW-J P$VC UNTIL HJEy rSTSJUwN A Snfi,l A MOVE IN "ERE f OVEO.THAT vWiC' rooPoc l 'Mr. Ashland' To Observe His 93rd Birthday Monday ; ; Br FAITH MeCULLOUGH Mail Tiibunt Correipondent Ashland - Clarence Lane - will mark another milestone - Monday when he celebrates his 93rd birthday. Helping in the observance will be his ' .wife, Minnie, who has been Mrs. Lane for almost 63 years. -.-.! The cheerful native son has ; earned the title o "Mr. Ash land" for his community con- cern and his life-long partici pation in civic affairs. He holds another unique title, that o being the only male t. member of the Federated Women's club. ' Without "Clarence's coffee" on Elks dinner or picnic is ' complete and every Fourth of July he rides the city's first fire truck wearing his No. 1 - badge or, as this year, rides beside his wife in the oldest Old Timer car in the parade. Clarence Lane was born in a log cabin near Talent Aug. 19, 1870, and before his first birthday had been orphaned by the deaths of his parents, George and Eliza Lane. Livod With Grandparents During his boyhood he lived with his grandparents, David and Jane Walrad, attending the one-room schoolhouse at , the present location of tha White House Market on Main si., later going to the old Ash land Academy, now the site of the Briscoe; elementary school. ' , Before he was in his terms, young Clarence was: working at a variety of odd jobs, and In 1R08 he began business for himself when he opened a con fectionary store on the Plaza V"? ( FT- Hi 11 CLARENCE LANE ! Will Obierr. S3rd Yar which he operated for 18 years. In 1026, the Lanes bought a soda fountain and candy store on Siskiyou blvd. next to the junior high school and adjacent to their home. Although Mr. Ashland has been officially retired for al most 25 years there is no one more closely, connected nor more vitally interested in the town's ' welfare. His daily rounds in the downtown dis trict are heralded by a' char acteristic whistle as he stops to chat or bends to pick up unsightly litter along the streets. Many miles have been trudged to and from the hos pital to carry flowers and few persons in Ashland have not experienced his friendly con cern in times of trouble or shared ; with . him nostalgic memories of Ashland as he knew It "way back when." Crater Exhibits Outstanding Farm Mechanics Event Crater FFA chapter exhibit ed the most outstanding chap ter exhibit In the farm me chanics section of the Jackson County 4-H and FFA fair and will be presented the annual Moore Steel company arm mechanics banner. , " ; American Steel and Supply company will award a gift certificate to Butch Bowman; Phoenix FFA chapter, who built and exhibited the out standing shop exhibit. Other awards are: Stock trailers,.' Butch Bow man, Phoenix, $20-gift cer tificate from Moore Steel. Utility trailers, Steve Dubc, Phoenix, $10 gift certificate from Alexander hardware. Large metal construction, Don Hanscom, Eagle Point, $20 gift certificate from Moore Steel for hay elevator. Large wood construction, Dick Unruh, Phoenix, $10 gift certificate from Norton's Lum ber company, for stock rack.- Medium metal ronstruclion, Hick Anderson, Eagle Point, $15 gift certificate from In dustrial Air Products, for portable hoist. Wood reconstruction, Walt Meyer, Crater, $5 gift certifi cate from Hubbard Brothers, for reconstruction of , cider press. '. Medium wood construction, Dan Loper, Eagle Point, $5 gift certificate from Midway Lumber company for pick-up rack. Winners by classes are: THE WEEK IN CALIFORNIA Welfare Commission To Meet Aug. 30 Sfllem - flirn - The 'next meeting of the Slate Public Welfare Commission has been scheduled for Aug. 30, jt has been announced. The meeting wilt be held In room 101 of thft Public Serv ice :Building- here,' beginning at 9 a.m. v ' xtork tralten: grand rhamnlon. rhnmplnn, nnd blue, Rntrh Bow man, .rnoemx: wn.te, Barry uioom burg, Eagle Potnt. ' . , Utility trailers: blue, Steve Dube, Fhonnlx. arce mrtal rnnniriiriinn: rhnm plnn and blue, Don Harwrnm, Ea gle Point; blue, Bob .Ryan, Cra ter. . Large wood ronstrtirtlnn: cham pion and blue. Dirk Unruh. Phoe nix; red, Don Klrkhnm, Craler; red, Joe Reeder. Crater. . Medium metal ronitnirtlon: champion and blue. Rick Ander ann. Eagle Point; blue, Jim Cald well. Crater. . i Medium , w o d ronitnirtlon: j rhamplnn nnd blue, Dan I-oprr. i Eagle Point; blue. Boh Bray, Lloyd Toner and Roger Kirkham, all of Crater; red, Gordon DeHaaa, Ea gle Point. Wood rernnstructlon: blue Wait Mecr. Crater. Small wood construction: blue Clint Gibson. Crater.- . Obstetricians Say They Have Technique of Stopping Disease Umfkg $RL (Starts 7:30 Monday A.M. Until SOLD OUT) Manufacturers have discontinued this popular 210 lb. 3-tab. (New 235 lb. Colors are identical in case of future replace ment at a higher cost) ........ s74? Reg. 9.49 sq. ALUMUmMDOn SALE rri" i rr j An ri mure S(0199 iu xd Window 4'x3' . Reg. $15.00 Sliders s45 With Screens Reg. $59.95 C. D. Int. Sheathing Plywood Sale 4x8x38" 2J5 4x8x7, S2.98 "Ceiling Tile" SALE Plain While, 11 1 Conlor Scored 2, ! Pin Punched, m mm 1 r Center Scored g 2 q. ft. "Reject Door" SALE (Mahogany Birch) 2x1 ..; 3.98 24x1 ; 4.49 24x1 4.98 3xH; 6.89 A Grade Mahogany Paneling : 4.99 Prefinithed Birch Paneling 5.49 4x8x'4" Mahogany Reject 2.29 8-ft. Patio Roof Covering 4.98 8-ft. Sheets Corr. Gal. Iron 2.24 No. 2 Oak Shorts Flooring per M 145.00 . t , , BOYSEN U "FLAT WALL" PAINT SALE .1 Buy 1 qf. $1.98 - 2nd qt. 1c. (Free Paint Brush Per Customer) J. W. COPELAND YARD - 1765 No. Riverside BRING YOUR TRUCK OR TRAILER United Presi International - Two obstetricians at San Diego's Mercy hospital an. nounccd they had developed a technique aimed at prevent ing the disease which took the life of the new born son of President Kennedy. The technique, designed to prevent hyaline membrane disease in new born infants, is called extra-ovular or ex tra-amnintic, based on find ings made by Dr. Franklin S. Snyder of Harvard univer sity, according to Dr. Albert Kimball of San Diego, He said Snyder' wrote that hyaline membrane disease is caused by new babies breath ing in amniotic fluid that has been contaminated by their mother's blood. . Kimball said the contami nation could be caused by the rupturing during Caesarian section of the amniotic mem brane which surrounds the baby before birth. He said it the membrane were partially removed so the baby's head was free of blood before the membrane was broken, there would be no contamination. He said 25 doctors had de livered 66 babies using the technique, only one of which developed the disease. He said other complications in the lat ter could have been the cause. . "Our results are strongly suggestive," he said, "but our series of cases is too short to be conclusive." Elsewhere, there were these developments: Hoax: An elaborate hoax "to stir up a racial incident" was uncovered by Los An geles police after a woman was seriously injured wnen she was tarred and leathered and left in a burning house. Police said the hoax apparent ly was aimed at getting Negro support behind efforts to have a condemnation lifted from a home so it could be rented to a Negro. Police said the owner earli er had sought backing from the NAACP but the NAACP declined because there was no racial incident involved. The owners, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewis of suburban Walnut, and the woman who was tarred and feathered, Mrs. Kalherine Harwell, 26, were arrested on charges of arson and conspiracy. Mrs. Harwell, who claimed she was attacked by three while men who called her "nigger lover," but later said it was a hoax, told police she went along "out of sheer loyalty" to her friends the Lewis's. Twinn Siamese twin boys were born to a 16-year-old Glendale mother in Los An- geles, but one of the boys died from an infection in the bloodstream flfi hours later. Daniel Hartley had been joined with brother . David from the breastbone to the naval when they were deliv ered by Rebecca Bartley. Their combined weight was 14 pounds, 4 ounces. David, who had not shown symptoms of the infection that took his brother's life, was reported critical but "holding his own." Birchi Atty. Gen. Stanley Mosk accused Robert Welch, founder of the John Birch So ciety, of aligning his cause with a racist movement for the purposes of impeaching Chief Justice Earl Warren. Mosk said in Los Angeles, Welch mRiled a new bulletin to his followers recently that 'recks of racism and scare- mongcring. Mosk said, "in this commu nication Welch contends that the civil rights mnvpment is Bids Called for Leasing Land Bids will be opened at 2 p.m. Sept. 16 on 421 acres of government - owned grazing land located within the Camp White Rifle Range, eight miles north of Mcdford. It is being offered for lease by the district engineer, U. S. Army Engineer District, Se attle. The lease will be awarded to the highest acceptable bid der for a term nt five years. Invitations for bids may be obtained and arrangements made for inspection of the land by contacting Warrant Officer Severs at the National Guard Armory. Mcdford, tel ephone 772-4323, or the dis trict engineer, U. S. Army En gineer District, Seattle. Circuit Rider Statue To Return on Aug. 27 Salem - (WD - The Circuit Rider, battered, cracked and toppled by the Columbus Day storm, will return to the Capi tol grounds Aug. 27, it has been announced. The bronr.e statue of a man atop a horse was sent to Washington earlier this year to undergo repairs. The statue normally stands atop a pedestal in the u.irk adjoining the east side of the Capitol Building. a coverup for a Communist plot-to break the southeast ern states from the United States had to form a Negro soviet republic." Mosk said there; was "not a vestige of doubt" that Welch hoped to channel southern segregation ists into his impeachment movement. Rafferiy: Dr. Max Rafferty state superintendent of public instruction, told a group of businessmen and lawmakers at an industry-education meet ing that the state Legislature had used education as "a po litical f o o t b a 1 1." He chal lenged the four-day Southern California Industry-Education Council meeting at the UCLA conference grounds at Lake Arrowhead to "do something with these extremely serious educational problems which are getting worse." "It's about time," he said, "that businessmen know that educators are not lovable and woolly-minded boobs standing strings untied; and our heads in the clouds-hopelessly im practical and mot to be trusted with much! more than lunch money." He 'said the stale's record in financing public ed ucation was "a pretty spooky one." i J Nudist: Aj borate-dropping aircraft scored a direct hit on the president of a national nudist group who was helping to fight a. fire near a nudist colony at Escondido. T. H. Latimer, president of the Na tional Sunbathing Association and manager of the Sun Is land club, was hit directly on the head) with purple-colored borate (solution. He and the foreman, of the ranch-colony had .donned clothes to help fight a small fire near the ranch. "He is bald head ed," said his wife, "and his head is pink from trying to scrub off the purple." Lati mer was not Injured in the in ivory towers with our shoe freak accident. STAR GA-ZOElC f) 4-16-27-3 y45-56-80-83l yf TAU.US - APR. 21 I "sj MAY 21 5? 5-14-29-351 y 5342-83-871 GfMINI J JEJUNE 22 W S-22-44-63 74-76-7, VT 7-19-24. Hy48-59-71 CANCIt JUNC23 JULY 23 24-37 uo JULY 1A U AUG. 23 VT 2-12-23-35 147-584! VIRGO AUG. 24 SEPT. 22 55-784-891 -Br CLAY R. POIXAN' M Your Daily Activity Guit. : According to Jh. Slan. ;. . To develop message for" Sunday, read words corresponding to numbers ot your Zodiac birth sign. 1 Today's 31 To l Andrf 2 Teleqrom 3?. Irntobl. A2 To IS You r. ?J Good 4 Romano 34 Lov. 5 Your 35 Door r) Trur 36 Family 7 Short 37 Cor fl Rest 38 Road. 9 Plan 39 Ar. 10 A .10 You 1 1 Tbfft'i 4 1 Radiant 12 Knock 42 Count 13 Excellent 43 Bellioerent 14 Personal 4 Relax !5Thos .i5To loAffecrion 4A Person l7Nothinfl 47 May 18 Da 48 Trips 19 Walks .10 And 20 Charming SO Discussions 21 An SI Your 22And WNeed 23 At S3 Close 24 Or S4 Music 2.5 You- 55 Today 26 For 56 Happiness 27 Ne - 57 Fjrtra 28 Special 5B Surprise 29 Desires 59 Are .30 And 60 Discount . 33-5445-66.fi 173-75.78 )Good (jg) Advene 63DonJ 64 Spirkajal 65 BooiU 66Culurol 67RMti 63 In i 69 You. 70 BfeiBings 71 Stimulohng 72 Circulate 73 Pur-gjiM 74 Fren 75 Are, 760r 1 77 Wory 78Hel!ul 70 Sl1 80 OpiHh 81 Your 82 Dining 83 Somijone's 84 Airsong 85 Up. 86 Gossip 87 Heort SSOiir 89 Fr.hnds 90 Crowd . , Komo OCT 3A NOV. 22 6-15-25-34 all U9-60-79-86'J SAGITTARIUS NOV. DEC h0.18-3!-42O pl-64-70 CAMrCOIN OEC23 JAN. 20 V. 9-17-28-4011 152-57-67 AQUARIUS JAN. 21 FEB. 19 1-13-26-36V 150-61-82-88 risen FEB. 20 MAR. 21 11-21-32-43 4c-68-81-90V Fuel Cost Sayings Predicted by PUC Annual savings of $653,000 in fuel costs axe predicted for industries located in southern Oregon as a result of the new natural gas rates approved for the California-Pacific Util ities company by the Oregon Public Utility commissioner. Twenty-four plywood mills, cement plants, smelting oper ations and other industrial accounts, now using other fuels, will benefit from the reduction in the fuel costs un der the new rate schedule. Residential and commercial gas customers of CPU in southern Oregon also will benefit by a 20 per cent rate reduction when the conver sion is made this fall, accord ing to Public Utility Commis sioner Jonel C. HilU V. V. Lyman, CPU division manager of Mcdford, stated that the contractors are on schedule in laying the pipe lines from Grants Pass to Ashland and White City and the branch line to Roscburg. The actual delivery date of the first natural gas into the area is dependent upon the speed with which El Paso Natural Gas company com pletes 127 miles of main transmission line from Eu gene to tie in with the system at Roscburg and Grants Pass, The schedule calls for serv ing Roseburg with natural gas by the middle of Septem ber, to be followed by Grants Pass, Mcdford, Phoenix, Tal ent and Ashland by mid-October,. Lyman said. for Healthy SEPTIC TANKS CESSPOOLS AND DRAIN! CHEMICAL T0IUII IN FALLOUT SHELTEtJ Use SEPT0NIC Regularly! Ketpi lank working, odor mam m A irte. Easy to ult. Fail, af. A U 47 harmieit to plumbing. Coil only 36c mo-. 500-ool. took. Montty bock guofontt)! ' 4 TfeolmtnH At Your Grocar r Hardwar LOANS UP TO $1500 i Here it is a HANDY HUNDRED or More! Call Crater Finance iwBi J FfA "Money From Crater Financt ' 'te Money From Home" CRATER FINANCE K S 135 PINE c 664-1273 (5 fx NEW OFFICE CASCADE SHOPPING CENTER Q. iiV.- PRESCRIPTIONS ARE OUR MOST IMPORTANT BUSINESS! ' Hern mr:rj':?,iroL.MjH . orrnTB, ph. M II Limit Right, fm 1 " fc ' ' : f WATER Electric ' Bt-. lal H --y4j5Sla&W - SKIS HafXcr E aKNITTING . ' i r?jj T.i9 Ss;.---. pay iess Ny , 4.99 k5 HA 07c Wi MM5 CLOTHES POLE RACK . . . . 2.99 pi 1 H ft f -fef A DIAMOND CIRCLE lUfca, - t 1 f4 SI ffltmmA A" Puppse whi,e tj? (fsd- . ROAD ' rlu 0 'ly PAINT ROCKET S g jmAr jSTTrVv 1 99 t RA RACER H I TOASTER , ,CAMP Ol1 v.-59 M 17.95 val. 4 jSj STOOL XysJA?55 FOAM BACK Kl Ll .'.vita. V Hjra 9xir M M.rcL. 00c A R00M M 8mm ROLL ' VTk. V Rllfi KS color AUTOMAT.cm . J&M$0md RUh- H FILM SLIDE : jfs0- i4"Va,u, S 24.99 projector :yw-tfrAiWg- 19.87 H Includin, 4988 j fj n CisiV Pr"""" ' EVEREWAREOv R ELECTRONIC TJI L 11 Quart A gl RUG KILLER DR ROSS & VsiA MS D0UBLE BOILER Jv H Takes the living QOfi 'iiltr' W 1150vlu E?l 77 7i' Wmim Asia j&fikl?Z& SILK CIHILDREN'S ACETATE KliLHGXST C, Or iN AJ ltVA r,. 39c r 1 if n T Pi m "f'r""" L"I REG. 1.49 IOC MAALOX LIQUID ,i 1.29 REG. 1.37 BUFFERIN J25 Tab.. 1.59 REG. 98c VITAMIN C 250'. 73c REG. 79c BISODOL TABS. ItKr. 57c ll: COLGATE TOOTH PASTE 21.00 REG. 1 89 JERGENS LOTION 77c REG. 1.89 ADORN HAIR SPRAY 1.19 LILT HOME PERM. 1.89