Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 20, 1963, Image 11

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    FESTIVAL
PLAYS
Tonight: "Henry V."
Wednesday: "Merry
Wives of Windsor."
Thuriday: "Romeo and
Juliet."
Friday: "Love's Labour's
Lost."
Curtain time is 8:45 p.m.
Bus leaves Medford ho
tel and Jackson House in
Medford at 7:30 p.m.
Locals
Sale Planned - The Shady
Cove Lady Lions will sponsor
a rummage sale at the T ?ady
Cove fire hall between 10 a.m.
and 4 pjn. Friday, Aug. 23.
Proceeds will be used to help
support the organization's
sponsorship of a blind girl.
Thursday Meeting -The
Rogue Valley Rabbit Breeders
association will meet at 8 p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 22, in the
Foots Creek Community hall.
All persons interested in rab
bit raising are invited to at
tend. Advertising Club- The
Southern Oregon Advertising
club will meet at 12:30 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 23, at the Brave
Bull restaurant, 1206 North
Riverside ave. Chuck McCor
kle, public relations man, will
speak.
Returns Home - Mrs. James
Lindsay, Wilderville, has re
turned to her home after sur
gery at Josephine General
hospital.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair
through Wednesday with some
afternoon cloudiness over the
mountains. Low tonight 45. high
Wednesday 85.
Western Oregon: Fair South in
terior, otherwise partly cloudy
tonight and Wednesday with early
morning overcast and patchy fog
in North part early Wednesday. A
little warmer Wednesday. Low to
night 45-53, high Wednesday 75
85 with 70 on the coast.
Northern California: Fair to
night and Wednesday except
patches of fog locally on the coast
Wednesday, Little change in tem
perature. LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day 66: .below normal 5.
Record high this date 103 in
1961.
Record low this date 40 in 1918.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, none. Midnight to 10
a.m.. none.
Total this month .01 Inch. .08
inch below normal.
Total since Sept. 1. 26.74 inches,
7.05 Inches above normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
22, highest this a.m. 80.
High 4:00 24-
C1TY Yester- a.m. nr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 76 50
Grants Pass 80 46
Howard Prairie .. 70 36
Klamath Falls .... 68 40
MEDFORD 79 49
Portland .. 74 59 .02
Seattle 70 55
Spokane 74 53
Yakima 76 47
Eureka 62
Red Bluff 94
Sacramento 97 .
San Francisco .... 77
Los Angeles 79
70
59
56
JG6
78
T9
58
72
63
67
Phnenix 103
Denver 84
Chicago 75
Miami Beach 8f)
New York 77
Washington, D. C. 79
.94
.84
2.38
Portland Livestock
Portland! UPI) USD A Live
stock: Cattle 200. Heifers, mixed high
Rood and choice 24.50. Cows, cut
ter and utility dairy bred 12.50
14 30, small lot 15.50. Bulls, com
mercial 19. Feeders, few medium
18 .23-20.
Calves 50. Few good vealers 26.
Hogs 200. No early sales.
Sheep 600. Choice and prime
slaughter lambs 18-18.50.
ALL
EQUIPMENT
To Be Sold at
RAINBOW CAFE
109 West Main
Phone 772-7068
SPECIAL SHOWING
Tume
535-H62
ON SCREEN 8:30
mm bo
The Family Council
Editor's note: The Famllr Council cunslsli of a Judce, a
ptiyOslatrlst, three clergymen, three edllurs ami a women's editor.
Kch article Is a summary of a family dlsnisreement presented to the
Council Ihe Cuuncl! drals with problems, major and minor,
n:ounteid by guidance counselors and social workers. Edited by
Mrs. Alma Denny. (Cupyrljh: by General Matures Corp.)
Brian S.-I want the house
to myself for the party.
Mrs. G. S.-Nothing doing.
It's our home, too.
Brian S.-My 15th birthday
is coming up in two weeks
and I want to have a campfire
and barbecue party for my
friends in our back yard. My
parents have agreed, but they
want to stick around though
they won't fit in at all. They'll
just spoil things. It will look
as though they don't trust me
any more than when I was
five.
Mrs. G. S.-Brian can't get
it through his head that we
do trust him in general, but
we have a big investment to
protect. I'm not sure we can
trust his guests. Some are real
show-offs. Besides, a few kids
are bringing their sisters or
girls they know. And what
would Brian do if uninvited
boys tried to crash the party?
The Council - Despite his
protestations, Brian will be
grateful that his parents were
The Medical
Froien Stomach For
Ulcer Treatment
A number of people have
been writing to ask me if
they should go ahead and have
their stom
achs frozen in
order to cure
their ulcers.
In this proce
dure a rubber
b a 1 1 o on
pushed down
the gullet into
the stomach
and then some
very cold al
cohol is run through the bal
loon for perhaps an hour. In
some cases the idea is to just
cool the stomach, while in
others the idea is to freeze it.
The process is supposed to
cut down on the acidity of the
gastric juice (some physicians
say now that this object, at
least in their experiences,
was seldom attained.) In many
cases the technic has stopped
gastric bleeding, but in some
reported cases, it has caused
bleeding.
Naturally, the best results
have been obtained by the ex
perts in Minneapolis who
have "frozen" hundreds of
stomachs. A man who treats
in this way only a half dozen
men may not do so well.
A number of physicians
around the country who are
now reporting results not as
good as those obtained in
Minneapolis are suggesting
that men with mild ulcers
and bearable symptoms wait
a while until the technic is
perfected; and doctors all over
warn the medical profession
of the possible dangers and
how they can be avoided.
One Bad Result
There is a letter in the New
England Journal of Medicine
in which a physician reported
one very bad result. Appar
ently he froze the stomach of
his patient until it was in
clined to fall apart. Now Dr.
Morton I. Grossman, editor
of the journal, Gastroenter
ology, asks, "Is gastric freez
ing safe?" He says that al
ready some men have report
ed that freezing caused ulcers
in the stomach, or death of
part of the wall of the stom
ach, with the punching
through of a hole, or severe
bleeding. Grossman says that,
- NO PASSES!
GATES
OPEN
7:45 P.M.
P.M. & 12:45 A.M.
On at 1 1
pm
limnrw
HEPBURN A
jn A ,nv'oS 0U
To Share Tha V
1 Happy Romantic f
.J Adventure Iff
I That Won Her
- Tn Academy Award!
on the premises. For that's
where they ought to be, as re
sponsible guardians of a
mixed-up teener. The prob
lem of party-crashing, espe
cially in the suburbs, is a real
one requiring a firm adult
"screening" all arrivals. In
fact, a 15-year-old's party is
tair game for marauding 17
and 18's who like to wave liq
uor bottles at "the kids. .
Intelligent and loving parents
like Mrs. S. know how to be
unobtrusive but useful. They
investigate too much noise,
or too little. They change
fuses. They apply Bandaids to
burned fingers. And their
very presence, even though
they huddle upstairs strain
ing to keep out of the way,
reduces the breakage of glass
ware, records, lamps, and fur
niture. A top-ranking song
among teen-agers today is,
"It's My Party and I'll Cry If
I Want To." Brian can sing it
around his campfire, but
thanks to his parents he won't
have much to cry over.
Roundup
Emeruiii Consultant In Medicine
Mayo rilnie
Emeritus Professor of Medietas
Mayo Clinic
(Be sister and Trlbuna Syndicate,
1963)
"Some of these complications
have been fatal."
All of this causes him to
feel that it would be fairer
to Dr. Wangensteen if physi
cians would study the technic
a little longer before they
rush to use it on their pa
tients. Doubtless the main
thing physicians must learn
is not to destroy a part of the
wall of the stomach by too
much freezing.
After S3 years of treating
ulcers, I would like to em
phacize here that in all but
a few of the cases I see, all
the man needs to get excellent
relief and an apparent healing
of his ulcer, is to find mental
peace. For years I have rare
ly put a man with an ulcer
into a hospital, and I almost
never permit one to be oper
ated on.
Many a man with a very
painful ulcer I have cured
over night simply by induc
ing him to get out of a very
distressing job. If any pain
stays for a while to bother
the man, I teach him to con
trol it by munching half a
dozen tablets of malted milk
every 2 hours. If he has se
vere night pain I have him
set his alarm clock so that he
can wake for a minute at
midnight and take a small
glass of milk - before his
pian is due then his ulcer
soon heals.
How do you know whether
you have an ulcer? Dr. Al
varez has help for you with
that question in his booklet
about ulcers. You may get
your copy by sending 25 cents
and a self-addressed, stamped
envelope with your request
for it to Dr. Walter C. Alvar
ez, Dept. MMT., Box 957, Des
Moines 4, Iowa.
Over-lhe-Counter
Western Stocks
Bid Asked
Bank of America
69
Boise Cascade 26 u
28' 2
2R'i
10'',
2V,
33,
72
24 i
33
4T's
37
l3a
2854
23',
83'j
24'.
33',
Cal Pac Util 26',
Con FrelRht 07
Cyprus Mines 24 '.a
Equitable S & L 31 "4
1st National Bank 68 U
Jantzen 22 lb
Morrison Knudsen 31
Mult Kennels 4'4
N.W. Natural Gas 35
Oregon Metallurgical.... 1
PGE 27 Vt
PP&L 27
U.S. National Bank .... Hl'i
West Coast Tel 23'4
Weyerhaeuser 3n
Investment Funds
' stocks:
I Fund Bid Asked
I Bullock 13.68 15 (12
Chemical Fund .... 11.92 12.86
Colonial Ener 12 67 13 85
Eaton Howard Stk .. 13.21 15.39
Fidelity 16.70 18.05
Fundamental Invest. 10.13 11.10
Group Sec Avia-Elec 6.72 7.37
Group Sec Com Stk 13.55 14.84
, Hamilton CZ 5.18 5.64
j Keystone B-3 16 61 18.12
Keystone B-4 10.43 11.39
! Keystone K-2 5.32 5.81
Keystone S-l 22.61 24.67
Keystone S-2 13.47 14.70
Keystone S-3 15 20 16 59
' Keystone S-4 4.25 4.65
1 Mass Inv Growth Stk 8.45 9 23
I National Growth .... 8.08 8.83
! Stocks 19.11 20 63
i TV-Elec 7.50 8 17
Value Line Inc 5.39 5.89
j Variable . 6.98 7.54
! Wellington 14.78 16.12
' United Accum 15.00 16.39
United Canada 17.55
United Income 12.73 13 91
United Science 6.92 7 56
DINING ROOM OPEN EVERY DAY
5 P.M. to 11 P.M. - 12 P.M. Friday
FOR BANQUETS and PARTIES
Call 535-9710 Talent
MEDFORD
iff?
in to
py
' 1 fM.i b.m mm
NEW BANK This architect's sketch is of
the new Rogue Valley branch. The Oregon
bank, under construction at Court st. and
Central ave. The bank, expected to open in
New Bank
The Rogue Valley branch
of the Oregon bank, under
construction at the junction
of Court st. and Central ave..
will open in October, accord
ing to Clarence Young, vice
president and director of The
Oregon Bank, and Robert
Baxter, branch manager.
OBITUARIES
MARTIN WITTE
Funeral services for Martin
Witte, 71, formerly of 521
Marvie St., who died Satur
day, will be held at 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the graveside in
Central Point cemetery.
The Rev. D. E. Millard, pas
tor of the New Age church,
Eagle Point, will officiate.
Perl Funeral home is in
charge of arrangements.
Mr. Witte was born Jan. 3,
1892, at Imperial, Neb. He
has lived in Medford since
1903. He has been employed
as an orchardist. He was a
member of the Zion Lutheran
church.
Survivors include two sis
ters, Mrs. Ella Prouty, Med
ford, Mrs. Anna Bishop, Med
ford, and several nieces and
nephews.
MARGARET PITKIN
Margaret Whiteford Pitkin
died at the home of her broth
er, T. P. Whiteford, Talent,
early this morning. Funeral
arrangements will be an
nounced by Perl Funeral
home.
EARL SHORTHILL
Funeral services for Earl V.
Shorthill, 67, who died at
at Veterans Administration
domiciliary, White City, Aug.
16, were held in the White
City chapel at 1:30 p.m. to
day. Litwillers Funeral home
in Ashland was in charge of
arrangements. Interment fol
lowed in t h e Veterans Ad
ministration cemetery, Eagle
Point.
OLIVIA KIRK
Ashland Mrs. Olivia Rob
inson Kirk, 50, of Beauy,
Ore., died Sunday in a Med
ford hospital. Mrs. Kirk was
born Dec. 24, 1912 in tua
math county.
Survivors include her hus
band. Jesse Kirk, Beatty.
The body was sent to Kla
math Falls for funeral serv
ice and interment in Chilo-
quin. Local arrangements
are by Litwiller's Funeral
home, Ashland.
CLARENCE J. HOQUEN
Funeral services for Clar
ence J. Hoquen, 67, of 336
Crater Lake ave., who died
Saturday, will be held at 10
a.m. Wednesday at ren fu
neral home.
Chaplain John Frazec, of
the Veterans Domiciliary at
White City, will officiate. In
terment will be in the Wil
lamette National cemetery in
Portland.
Mr. Hoquen was born Nov.
14, 1895, at San Luis Obispo,
Calif. He lived in San Fran
cisco for many years where
he was employed as a sheet-
metal worker. He was a vet
eran of World War I, serving
with the United States Army
overseas in France.
He entered service on Nov.
27, 1917, at Ft. McDowell,
Calif., and was discharged
April 1, 1919, in San Fran
cisco, Calif.
He was a member of sheet
metal union 104 in San Fran
cisco and World War I Vet
erans organization of Med
ford. On Nov. 3, 1950, in Palo
Alto, Calif., he was married
to Lola Haley, who survives.
Other survivors include
three stepchildren, George
Haley, Central Point, Mrs.
Marie Sleath, Bermuda, Mrs.
Dorothy Ingham, Hollywood,
Calif.; his mother, Mrs. Clista
Richmond, San Francisco,
five grandchildren and five
great grandchildren.
MATT LE FLORE
Funeral services for Matt
Harris Le Flore, infant son
FOR THE FINEST
IN DINING!
MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD.
4 ' fH
Branch Being Built
The present branch bank at
1109 Court st., will move to
the new location.
The new building will have
6,315 square feet on the
ground floor and an addition
al 1,400 square feet in the
basement. The main floor will
include space for nine offic-
of Mr. and Mrs. Herman K.
Le Flore, route 2, box 214B,
Central Point, who died Sun
day, will be held at 11 a.m.
Thursday in the Chapel in
the Trees mortuary, within
Siskiyou Memorial Park.
Bishop Gerald Huffman of
the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints of Med
ford will officiate. Private in
terment will follow in Siski
you Memorial park.
The infant was born Aug.
12, 1963, in Medford.
He is survived by his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman
K. Le Flore, Central Point;
his maternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver W. Han
sen, Central Point; and his
paternal grandmother, Mrs.
Desies Spencer, Central Point.
Funeral arrangements are
entrusted to Siskiyou Funeral
Service, directors of Chapel in
the Trees mortuary.
JOHANNA W. WIESE
Mrs. Johanna W. Wiese, 83,
of Phoenix, died yesterday in
a local hospital. The body has
been returned by Conger
Morris Funeral directors to
Snohomish, Wash., for serv
ices and interment in the Lu
theran cemetery there.
Mrs. Wiese was born May
21, 1880, in Germany. She
moved from Snohomish to
southern Oregon about a year
and a half ago to live with
her daughter at Phoenix.
Survivors include a daugh
ter, Mrs. Margaret Tronsdal,
Phoenix; three sons, John
Wiese, Anchorage, Alaska;
Henry Wiese, Cordova, Alas
ka; and Alex Wiese, Monroe,
Wash.; and eight grandchil
dren. 1
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
' I iWO. JUDGES who had been at swords points for years
were nailed with summonses for speeding and showed
up in court simultaneously. To save time they agreed to
appear before each other.
The first judge mount
ed the bench, glared at
his fellow: judge and
rasped, "You are charged
with grossly exceeding
the speed limit. How do
you plead?" "Guilty,"
said the other, as prear
ranged. "You are hereby
fined ten dollars," was
the verdict. "Step down.
Next case."
The two judges swap
ped places, and the same
routine was repeated.
Only this time, when the second judge pleaded "Guilty,"
the first one pointed out sharply, "This is the second case
of this kind we've had here this morning. Reckless speeding
is becoming far too prevalent in these parts. We've got to
stop it. You are fined $25 or ten days in jail."
The producer of one of those foreign film epics, employing a
cast of hundreds, plus the entire Yugoslavian infantry corps,
persuaded Sam Goldwyn to attend a prevue, then, asked him
eagerly, "Do you think it will be a commercial success?" "Joe,"
replied Goldwyn heartily, "if you can only persuade every mem
ber of the cast to pay to see your picture, you've got a smash!"
V
An overeager salesman got his
er in Maine. "You must remember
try, young feller," said the storekeeper, "every want ain't a need."
The Wooden Shoe
Invites You To
DINE and
... and lake your place in the fun!
SATCH, DROOPS and BOB
Dlavina inif linaina vour favorite tun-frnm k "nu
te lh new hits in a leitive
Dance the iamba. Twist,
You couldn't spend a better evening anywhere. Enjoy Irv'i fine cuisine, your favorite beverig. and
the friendly, courteous atmosphere that all your friends are now enjoying.
At The Popular Holland Hotel
OREGON
early October, has been designed to blend
into the wooded park at the intersection.
The branch bank is now located at 1109
Court st.
ers, two stenographers, con
ference room and related of
fices. There will be six tell
ers stations, note department
and stenographic space, plus
safe deposit boxes and cash
vault.
The accounting and book
keeping departments also will
be on the main floor. A
drive-up banking window
with a night depository box
beside it also are included
in the new building.
Architect for the structure
is Robert J. Keeney. Graff
and James is general con
tractor. Briefs Awaited in
Loyalty Oath Trial
Boise-flJPD- The controversy
over Idaho's new loyalty oath
rested today while a three
member federal judge panel
awaited trial briefs from the
oath's opponents and defend
ants. The federal judges, at Mon
day's day-long hearing on the
oath, ardered Pocatello attor
ney Louis Racine to file a
trial brief within 30 days on
behalf of the public employ
ees he represents.
The judges gave Ally. Gen.
Allan G. Shepard 15 days af
ter receiving a copy of Ra
cine's document to file a brief
supporting the law.
A parade of Idaho profes
sors Monday described the
1963 statute as a threat to
academic freedom.
"The mind should be free
to explore all areas of knowl
edge," said Dr. Albert E. Tay
lor, head of the Idaho State
University graduate division.
"My concern is to leave the
professors free of harrass-
ment, free of suspicion.'
He said many professors are
reluctant to come to a school
that has a loyalty oath pro
vision. He said this makes it
especially difficult for a
school as small as ISU to al-
tract qualified instructors
and would harm the Pocatello
school system's recruitment of
profesors
comeuppance from a storekeep
that in this part of the coun
fashion (fist enly they can cteata.
Bop or Walts they play them all.
Auxiliary Activities
Continue at Festival
Ashland - The Oregon
Shakespearean Festival's an
nual series of auxiliary ac
tivities continues Wednesday
with two attractions, both
slated for afternoon presenta
tion. The Festival Musicians and
Dancers will perform another
in their 1963 series of special
concerts at 3 p.m. in the Cae
sar room of the Mark Antony
hotel.
As a featured part of
Wednesday's program, Miss
Gayle Sandine, Coos Bay, will
Births
HINTON - To Mr. and Mrs.
Erskine J. Harold, route 2,
box 200A, Central Point, Aug.
17, 1963. a girl. 7 pounds at
Rogue Valley hospital.
BANTA - To Mr. and Mrs.
Jesse Glen, 16 Jeannctte St.,
Medford, Aug. 17, 1963, a girl,
5 pounds, at Roc Valley
hospital.
MILLARD-To Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Arlin, route 1, box
729, Eagle Point, Aug. 18,
1963, a girl, 73,4 pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
KENT - To Mr. and Mrs.
Gary D., 754 Oak St., Ashland,
Aug. 18, 1963, a boy, 6
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital. CARBIENER - To Mr. and
Mrs. James N., 514 Beatty
street, Medford, Aug. 20,
1963, a girl, 10'2 pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
LOVE - To Mr. and Mrs.
Norman C, 807 Pennsylvania
ave., Medford, Aug. 20, 1963,
girl, 7V2 pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
CORDELL - To Mr. and
Mrs. Billy L., route 1, box 496,
Gold Hill, Aug. 19, 1963, a
boy, 7V4 pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
WEBSTER - To Mr. and
Mrs. Kerry Guy, 755 Stevens
St., Medford, Aug. 19, 1963, a
boy, 8Vi pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
1 CARAT
Total Weight
Man's Diamond Ring
SH Green Stamps, Too
231 East Main
Open Friday Nites
Prime Ribs
e Steaks
Chicken
1 CARAT
Total Weight
Ladies Diamond Set
$(jGj)50
TERMS, TOO
TUESDAY. AUGUST
present unusual sung and
spoken settings for several of
the Psalms. Miss Sandine,
who accompanies herself on
the autoharp, has evolved her
own method of highlighting
the rich biblical poetry with
original music backgrounds
and a full range of vocal ex
pression. A Willamette university
graduate, Miss Sandine has
only recently given public
performances of her self
taught techniques.
Own Translation
Continuing in performance
at the Ashland YMCA will be
Peter Arnott's Classic Marion
ette Theatre. At 2:30 p.m.
Arnott, internationally-famed
marionettist, will present his
own translation of "Les Four
beries de Scapin."
One of the most brilliant
short comedies of Moliere, the
work is a comedy of simple
humours and well - defined
stock characters. It is a com
edy of love and intrigue,
dominated by the rascally ser
vant Scapin, a master of
trickery and deception.
t PLUS "SWINGIN- ALONG"
"The sexual side of
marriage chills me!
Box Office ffijjjjfo All Tickets
Open 7:45 vjj&rjf 90c ea.
rsistxrj
All Pastes Suspended
S IM
n
I!
LAST CRITIC'S CHOICE
DAY "YELLOW CANARY"
'
HiTflMM
STARTS TOMORROW AT 2
THE AMAZINO STORY OF A LITTLE BOY AND
HIS FABULOUS UNDERWATER FRIENDI
YOU'LL HAVE
TO SEE IT TO
BELIEUEJT!
COULDN'T
BE BETTER IF IT
WERE A WALT DISNEY
PRODUCTION
MATINEES EVERY
DAY FROM 2 P.M.
l FRANKIE AVALON MARIETTE HARTLEY LLOYD BOCfiNER lllN THATCHER J
A 11
Portland Produce
Portland (UPD Dairy market!
, Efgi To retallera: AA extra
large 43-49c; AA large 42-47c; A
large 41-45c; AA medium 39-40c;
A small 23-a9c; cartons 1-3U
higher.
Butter To retallera: AA and A
prints 66; cartons 3c higher; B
prints 63c.
Cheese (medium cured) To re
tallers: 46-48c; processed Ameri
can 3-10 lb. loaf. 43-48c.
Portland (UPI) Dressed chick
ens No. 1 grade dressed to re
tailers: Fryers, whole drawn 30
37c lb.: cut-up 36-41c lb.: hens,
light type, whole drawn 22-28c lb.;
light type hens, cut-up 24-28c lb.!
heavy whole 36-39C.
CONTACT
LENSES
ON
CREDIT!
Wt giv. HrT
Grttn Stamp
ux SK(A yet
.COLUMBIAN
OPTICAL CO.
Medford Shopping Center
772-9990
Drs. Omar J. Nolei
and William Hodson
LAST NITE
"NUTTY PROFESSOR"
"MERRILL'S MAURADERS
TOMORROW
EXCLUSIVE
1st Run Showing
fl m-m
LOOK
20. 1963
n mil m
JV I -BR W Vt.
1
A