Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 15, 1963, Image 7

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    142 Major Crimes
investigated By
Police En August
A total of 142 major criminal
offenses, including 30 burglaries, :
were investigated by Medford
city police during August, ac-!
cording to the monthly report 1
released by Chief of Police !
Charles P. Champlin.
Of the 30 burglaries reported,
five of the cases were closed. ,
During August last year. 20 bur-1
glaries occurred in Medford, and
in August 1961 some 21 were I
investigated. j
Some 79 cases of theft of $50 !
or less were investigated last
7,500 Visit Home
In Jacksonville
5 Almost 7,500 persons visited
, the Beekman Home in Jackson
ville during the first year of
its establishment as a Siskiyou
Pioneer Sites Foundation his
torical site, according to a re
port from the University of
Oregon.
,. The Beekman Home, one of
the finer buildings of the Jack
son county pioneer period, is
owned by the University of Ore
gon, which has arranged with
the Foundation for its use as
an historical site. It was given
,lo the university through the
will of the late Carrie C. Beek
man. is The home, with the original
Beekman furniture, is open to
the public at a nominal fee.
During the period since the
Beekman Home was opened to
the public in May, 1962, the
admissions have included 1,308
children, 839 students, and
8.343 adults. Summer visitors,
since June, are not included in
the figures, the university said.
??? MORTGAGES ???
Wanted: mortgages, contracts
and trust deeds at discount
(balances over $10,000 wel
comed). For information, con
tact: Mr. Mars.
NED MARS AGENCY
342 Lithia Way (A) 482-2821
COMEDY PLUS! TONITE!
ON SCREEN AT 7:45
&$& put your arms . ayXM
C around me, Bob", 3&Jm
mr 2$ "' can t' rve got ' vMM
VSfcrJ my fingers caught , jjJr
BROADWAY'S "CHOICE" 1 If: l!
': COMEDY IS : .Wf jil
111 ON THE SCREEN I s 1 tsVjj 76 I
rfe HOPE lnT
f LUCILLE j
;k I BALL 4
Put your arms
around me, Bob",
CO-STARRING
MARILYN MAXWELL
RIP TORN
I r- r- r r ( 11.1p.tr.
JOHN DEHNER JIM BACKUS
PLUS ON SCREEN AT 10:15 P.M.
"One of the sweetest, most pleasurable
movie comedies in a long time!
You have to look sharp to take in all the fun.
It wheezes and clanks its merry way through
roadside adventure and amorous dalliance,
getting funnier and funnier with every mile!"
Cvcrnif, Hit old Inbvti
.".u.w'RJSi
lb
I SJsf ....... 4
CClO by TICHNICOIOR
KAY KENDALL KENNETH MORE
DINAH SHERIDAN. JOHN GRfcGSON
month, as compared with 93 for
the same month last year. Of
the thefts reported, some 19
were closed for a percentage
of 24.1.
Under miscellaneous offenses,
44 cases o( embezzlement and
fraud, four of forgery and coun
terfeiting, and six of minor as
sault were reported in the city
last month.
Fifty persons were arrested
for drunkenness, and 13 were ar
rested for disorderly conduct.
Officers investigated three re
ports of sex offenses and closed
one of them.
Seventy-one motor vehicle ac
cidents occurred in Medford last
month, as compared with 77
during August 1962. Twenty-one
injuries were reported, but there
were no fatalities.
Some 123 drivers were cited
for violation of basic rule, and
five were cited for driving while
under the influence of intoxicat
ing beverages.
Twenty drivers were cited for
causing excessive noise, and
three received citations for fail
ure to leave information at the
scene of an accident.
Medford Firemen
Report Three Fires
Medford firemen answered
three alarms Saturday. One call
was a false alarm, and damage
was not serious at cither of the
other two, firemen said.
About 12:34 p.m., a trash
fire was extinguished at the res
idence of Paul Kenncy, 1028
West 13th st. A grass fire at
467 DeBarr ave. was put out
about 3:04 p.m.
Firemen said a house fire at
625 Park Place Five was re
ported about 3:38 p.m. A truck
drove to the street but discov
ered no such address exists.
New York is visited daily by
about 150,000 persons, including
workers and tourists.
P.M. and At
55 P.M.
11
3
Insurance Agents
From Area Plan to
Attend Meeting
Medford and Ashland will be
represented by a delegation of
at least nine insurance agents
when the convention of Insur
ance Agents opens at the Gear
hart hotel on the Oregon coast
Sept. 16.
Advance registrations indicate
that the convention may be the
largest in the 35-year history
of Oregon's property and casu
alty insurance agents organiza
tion, Lou Cranston of the Goldy
Cranston - Henselman agency
here, has reported.
About 500 insurance men and
their wives have registered for
the three-day conclave.
A tour of historic landmarks
has been arranged for the wives
of insurance men attending the
convention and advance regis
trations indicate that more
wives are planning to attend
than ever before, Crantson said.
Welcome Address
Oregon Insurance Commiss
ioner Walter G. Korlann will
welcome the convention guests
and Hayne P. Glover, president
of the Agents National associa
tion from Greenville, S. C, will
be the keynote speaker.
Workshops are scheduled for
Tuesday and Wednesday. Of
ficers will be elected for the
1963-1964 term and 12 panelists
will be heard on otficc proce
dures, public relations and per
sonal lines.
A clam bake will be held
Wednesday night as a conven
tion finale.
Attending from Medford will
be Cranston and Ralph Swalling
of the the same agency: Har
vey Martin of the H. O. Martin
Agency, Gilbert Tumy of the
Tumy Insurance agency, Duane
Baker of the Busch - Baker In
surance, Ashland; Ren Taylor,
Ren Taylor Insurance; Floyd
Hart, Jr., William Salade and
A. N. Potter of the Security In
surance Agency.
Mr. and Mrs. Cranston and
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Swalling
plan to leave Monday morning
for the convention. Some dele
gates may go earlier and some
later.
Obituaries
EDITH HOLDRIDGE
ASHLAND - Mrs. Edith Julia
Holdridge, 84, Wagner Creek rd.,
Talent, died Friday night at her
home.
She was born Jan. 6, 1879, at
Sac City, Iowa. While a young
woman she taught in Iowa rural
schools. On Sept. 14, 1908, she
married Frank Holdridge, after
which they moved to the Talent
area.
Mrs. Holdridge has been a
member of the Talent Metho
dist church for 50 years.
She is survived by her hus
band, Frank Holdridge, Talent;
one daughter, Mrs. A. G .Jef
fries. Salem; a son, Clarence
Holdridge, Talent; a brother,
George Campbell, Humboldt
Iowa; five grandchildren and
one great grandchild.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Monday at Talent
Methodist church. The Rev. Vio
let Bolligcr will officiate. Burial
will be in Steam's cemetery in
Talent. Litwiller Funeral home
is in charge.
Contributions may be made
to the Talent Methodist church
memorial fund, the family said.
i
DAVID E. WHITE
Funeral services for David E.
White, 15, of Central Point, who
died Thursday, will he held at
2 p.m. Tuesday at Perl Funeral
home. The Rev. Raymond Nor
ken, of National City, Calif., and
missionary in Mexico, will offi
ciate. Interment will be in Sis
kiyou Memorial Park.
David was born on April 25,
1948 in Astoria, Ore. He and
his parents, the Rev. and Mrs.
Thomas White, moved to their
present home north of Central
Point in 1949. He graduated
from grade school in Gold Hill,
and was enrolled this year as
a sophomore at Crater High
school in Central Point. He was
vice president of the sophomore
class and active in all sports.
He was a member of the Phila
delphia church, of which his
father is pastor.
In addition to his parents, the
Rev. and Mrs. Thomas White,
he is survived by two brothers,
Thomas A. White, Raymond L.
White; one sister, Mrs. Ruth E.
Bard, all of Central Point; his
grandmother, Mrs. Ruth E. Stef
fen, Medford; several aunts and
uncles.
Honorary casket bearers will
be Tommy Campbell, Darrel
Keiger, Dennis McGralh. Dave
Vilarino, Dave Trautman and
Steve Mapcl.
Active bearers will be Greg
Beaman, Bill Buckholtz, Mike
Turner, Dewane Blake, Gary
Schwab and Gary Bailey.
PALL C. THOMPSON
Funeral services for Paul
Charles Thompson, 16, of Gold
Hill, who died Thursday, will
be held at 1 p.m. Mondav in
Conger-Morris downtown Chap
el. Committal will be in Rock
Point cemetery at Cold Hill.
He was born Oct. 24. 1946, in
Bend. Ore., and had lived in
Gold Hill for 11 years.
Survivors include his father,
Taul C. Thompson. Ciudad Oh
i regon, Mexico; his mother, Mrs.
MEDFORD
Medford Police Report Series
Of Non-Injury Auto
Medford police reported a
scries of non-injury accidents
Friday and Saturday.
Friday morning a non-injury
accident occurred at Jackson
St. and Hawthorne ave., Med
ford, when cars driven by
James Adrian Albright, 1678
Orchard Home drive, and by
Lawrence Eugene McEachron,
517 Barncburg rd., collided.
A second accident occured
Friday when a car driven by
Dorothy Agnes Miller, 434 Oak
St., Central Point, and a car
driven by Gwendolyn Pearl
Gromyko Coming
For UN Assembly
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.
(UPD Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko will fly to New
York today to resume East-West
talks and attend the UN Gen
eral Assembly which opens
Tuesday, it was disclosed in
Moscow Saturday.
Disarmament is expected to
dominate the agenda of the 18th
General Assembly, with hopes
high that the partial nuclear
test ban agreement reached by
Russia, the United States, and
Britain last summer will lead
to further steps.
Gromyko will meet with Sec
retary of State Dean Rusk and
British Foreign Secretary Lord
Holme and may go to Washing
ton (or talks with President Ken
nedy. He told Western ambassa
dors in Moscow this week he
will stay in New York "as long
as necessary" for the talks.
Thant also said Soviet Pre
mier Nikita S. Khrushchev
would not repeal his 1961 visit
to the assembly this year.
WALL 'FLIMSY'
BERLIN (UPI) - Frank L.
Howley, U. S. commandant in
Berlin during the blockade, Sat
urday called the Berlin Wall
"flimsy and unimpressive."
4-H NEWS
Trail Blazers
The Central Point Trail Blaz
ers 4-H Horse club recently met
at the home of Pam Peterson,
who presided as president.
The flag salute was led by
Julie Thopson and the 4-H
pledge by Tana LcRoy.
Janet Olufsen, secretary, call
ed the role and read the min
utes of the previous meeting.
The 4-H county fair was dis
cussed. Planning for the play
day, the members held a play
day in the club arena.
Refreshments were provided
by Cindy Kellogg. Next month's
refreshments will be furnished
by Phillip Corcoran and Pam
Peterson.
Sharon Sutton,
Reporter
Births
BACKES - To Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn A., 6544 Drowning rd.,
Central Point, Sept. 12, 1963, a
I boy, 8'j pounds at Rogue Valley
j hospital.
NOTTINGHAM - To Mr. and
j Mrs. Kenneth Waldorf, 3686 Cra
j tcr Lake highway, Medford,
icpt. 13, 1963, a girl, 5i pounds,
at Rogue Valley hospital.
SPENCE - To Mr. and Mrs.
Charles D., Jr.. post box 25, 203
Gibson rd., Talent, Sept. 13,
1963, a girl 7 pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospilal.
McINTYliE - To Mr. and
Mrs. Maurice E., post oflice 84,
Jacksonville, Sept. 14, 1963, a
girl, 6".. pounds, at Rogue Val
ley hospital.
BRADLEY - To Mr. and Mrs.
Richard A., 423 Laurel St., Med
ford, Sept. 14, 1963, a boy, 6'
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital. WINCHESTER - To Mr. and
Mrs. Jack L 147 Highland dr.,
Medford. Sept. 14. 1963, a boy,
8'i pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
Myrtle Lcdbcttcr, Firebough, j
Calif.; a sister, Miss Jenny Lou 1
Thompson, Gold Hill, and I
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul C. Thompson, Gold Hill;
and Dave Will, Branson, Colo.
Casket bearers will be Joe
Thomas, Greg Beaman, Bill .
Buckholtz, Dwainc Blake, Dar-j
rell Kiger, Gary Schwab, Mike!
Turner, Bob Applan and Rick
Tavlor.
Jfic-
Starting Tonight
Dance to Live
'WELDON DUO"
DINING ROOM OPEN EVERY DAY
S p.m. to 1 1 p.m.
FOR BANQUETS and PARTIES
Call 535-9710
MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD,
Stockdale. 261 North Fourth St.
Central Point, collided.
Medford police are seeking
the driver of a car which hit
one driven by Frederick Eugene
Gascon, route 1, box 12-E, Gold
H at Fourth St., and Central
ave. Friday evening.
A car driven by James Joseph
Edward, 904 Elm., San Carlos,
Calif., hit a parked car regis
tered to William ana tue f re
denburg, 319 South Grape St.,
Medford, at Columbus and Jack
son sts.
Mae Gertrude Knox, 3IM1 Ta
ble Rock rd., was cited by Mod
fnrH nnlice for failure to yield
the right of way after her car
and one driven cy i.craia
George Mattcy, 903'ii West U
ct rnlliHeri at McAndrews rd.
and Riverside ave., Medford,
Friday afternoon.
A pickup truck driven by
Michael Hatalyk, 668 Ross lane,
Medford, Friday night hit a toy
poodle owned by Max Paul Wes
ton, 1102 North Riverside ave.
at North Riverside ave. and
Liberty St., Friday.
A non-injury motorcycle-auto
collision occurred at Laurel and
Locals
Jackson Toaslmasters Dale
Hearrell will be toastmastcr for
the Monday, Sept. 16 meeting of
the Jackson Toastmasters at
Sambo's Restaurant at 6:30 a.m.
Topic will be "Topicmaster's
Choice." Speakers will be Ray
Johnson. Don Heady and Bud
Hinkle.
Roundtablc Program Don
Cooper, coordinator of industrial
programs for the Oregon system
of higher education, and Don
l.nw ripnartment head of the
office of business administration.
general extension division, will
address the Monday noon lunch
eon of the Medford Chamber of
Commerce Roundtable at North's
Chuck Wagon.
Rummage Sale The Mis
sionary Ladies of the First
Church of God are sponsoring
a rummage and baked food sale
Tuesday, Sept. 17, from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. at the Fchl building,
108 North Ivy St., Medford.
Surgery raticnt Convales
cing at Rogue Valley hospital
following surgery is William
Dale Friend, 4,15 West Gregory
rd., Central Point.
Rummage Sale The Med
ford Garden club will sponsor
a plant and rummage sale Wed'
nesday, Sept. 18, at 225 West
Sixth St., Mcdtord. Persons wisn
ing information regarding the
sale are asked to call Mrs. Har
ry Buckmaster, 773-3231.
Convalescing at Home Ken
dall Jones, 5'j-year-old son of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Jones,
204 Valley View dr., is con
valescing at home following sur
gery at Sacred Heart hospital.
w
Wood Stolen Jack Batzcr
Construction company, Medford,
reported 5,000 feet of plywood
and 5,000 feet of 2x4's were
stolen from the Ml. Ashland ski
lodge site at the Siskiyou sum
mit this past week, deputies
said today.
Man Wounded Frank Myers,
route 2, box 250, Ccnlral Point,
was shot accidentally in the
right hand while hunting goph
ers in his yard Saturday, Sacred
Heart hospilal reported.
Service Men
IN PACIFIC
Airman First Class Raymond
E. Guise Jr., whose wife is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
E. Edwards, 323 King St., Med
ford, recently arrived at Tainan
air station in Formosa for as
signment with a unit of the
Pacific Air Forces.
REASSIGNED
Airman Stanley Lathrom, son
of Luie E.Lathrum, 45G5 High
way 66, Ashland, is being re
assigned to Shcppard Air Force
base, Tex., tor technical train
ing as a U. S. Air rorce re
frigeration specialist.
ON CRUISE
Navy Lt. (j.g.) Albert E.
Boardman, son of Mrs. Alberta
L. Boardman, 726 West Fourth
St., Medford, is on a six-week
cruise aboard the general store
issue ship USS Castor. The ship
Ml Yokosuka. Janan. Aug. 10
for five Western Pacific ports.
FOR THE FINEST
IN DINING!
and Every Night
Music by the
Sundeyt till 10 p.m.
Talent
OREGON
Accidents
Main sts. in Medford when a
Honda operated by Stephan
Booth, 2133 Siskiyou st., and a
car driven by Ario Bianchi, I
route 3. box 1149, Klamath'
Falls, collided. i
Cars driven by Virginia Max-
inc Russell, 2886 Beall lane, and
by Miles Stuart, 1029 Queen
Anne ave., collided at Eighth
and B a r 1 1 e 1 1 sts. Saturday
morning, state police reported.
Wilson Hurls New
Charges At Tories
LONDON (UPI) - Labor Par
ty Leader Harold Wilson said
Saturday Prime Minister Har
old Macmillan's government had
brought a "progressive corrup
tion of standards of public life
in recent years."
Wilson, in a speech at Lydney,
did not mention the Profumo
scandal directly but he said
there was grave danger that
preoccupation with recent much
publicized court hearings and
speculation about individual
ministers would divert attention
from more serious corruption.
"Ministers have shown a blithe
disregard for our constitutional
distinction between the execu
tive and the judiciary by their
Diurring oi tneir quasi - judi
cial duties with their party po
litical preoccupations, he said.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: A few
showers this morninc Partly
louriy ttm afternoon. toniBhl ann
Monday. Afternoon winds north
west IS miles per hour High tndHy
75; tow tonight 48. High Monday
78
Western Orccon : A few show
ers and brief sunny periods to
day. Partly cloudy loniRht and
Monday. A little cooler in south
portion today and most sections
tonight. HiRh both days 65 to 75.
Low tonight 45 to 55.
Northern California: Variable
cloudiness fn north portion, with
some rain in extreme north to
day. Mostly fair Monday with some
coastel cloudiness. Cooler today.
LulAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yuter.
dav 71; above normal 5.
Record high this date 100 In
19.12.
Rcord low this date 32 In 1021.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight, none.
Total this month .lfi in . .04 In.
above normal.
Total sinre Sept. 1 .If) in.. 04 In.
above normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
23 rr.
iiith 47no riTT
CITY Ypstrr- a.m. hr.
day Low Prec.
Brookings 77 .1.1
Klamath Falls 72 37
MEDFORD R3 5R
Portland KB 5 7
Seattle 71 f2
Spokane ...R7 45
Yakima 73 4fi
Eureka fi4 57
Red Bluff 94 2
Sacramento 00 SB
San Francisco 7fi fill
Los A ngclea B7 fl4
Phoenix flfl fifl.
Denver Bl 51
Chicago R3 50
Miami Beach 88 R2
New York 4R
Washington. D. C. R4 53
Sunset today 7 22 p.m.
Sunrise tomorrow 6:52 a.m.
Moonrte tomorrow 5:23 a.m.
New Moon Sept. 17
Jupiter, the largest planet,
rises tonicht at . ....8:43 p m.,
will he high in south 2:30 a.m.
and in the west at sunrise.
CONTINUOUS SHOW
FROM 2:00 P.M.
THESE ARE S
g4 "BORDERLINES'
V7 I ...IT WILL . MM
Qjf SHOCK YOU I
si Juh
ROBERT r
STACK BERGEN
JOAN JAMS
CRAWFORD PAIGE
CO STARRING
ROBERT VAUGHN MV
SUSAN OLIVER
UNlltM NNbI5 RtLLASt
Three Killed
In. Auto Crashes
By I'nited Press International
At least three persons died in
car crashes in Oregon Friday.
Kenneth Eugene Fryc, 22,
Crawfordsville, was killed in a
one car accident on a Linn
County road seven miles west
of Sweet Home Friday night.
Edward Arthur Russell, 63,
Coos Bay, was killed when his
pickup collided with a car head-
on a few miles cast ol bcous-
burg on highway 38.
Driver of t h e car, Hicnard
Hellickson, 42, Eugene, was ap
parently not injured.
A Mountain Home, Ida., man,
Solon Withers, 74, died Friday
morning while driving on U. t.
305 near Riley, Ore.
State police said his vehicle
left the road and traveled down
the barrow pit for several hun
dred yards without overturning.
Officers said they were con
sidering an autopsy. He was en
route to Idaho when the acci
dent occurred.
'Dead' La Grande
Resident Is Revived
LA GRANDE (UPI) - A 58-
year-old La Grande man who
was pronounced clinically dead
after collapsing from an appar
ent heart attack here was re
vived with the aid of a cardiac
dcfibulator Friday.
Rice McHaley had his heart
started with the dcfibulator in a
La Grande hospital after having
collapsed about 45 minutes ear
lier, lie was listed in critical
condition Friday night.
Both his physician, Dr. Wil
liam Kublcr, and Union County
Coroner Dr. Jay Sloop had pro
nounced the victim clinically
dead upon arrival at the hospi
tal. Dr. Kublcr said his examina
tion disclosed the patient had no
blood pressure, was not breath
ing and that his heart had stop
ped. However, artificial resusci
tation had been kept up on Mc
Haley. The defibulator, used to break
heart flutter, sent 440 volt pulses
into McHalcy's heart via elec
trodes attached to his chest.
The victim's heart was started
three times before It began to
pump by itself.
Racial Dispute Ties
Up Ocean Liner Trip
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
liner America with 960 passen
gers aboard was tied up Satur
day night in a racial dispute
involving members of the crew.
The America Was due to sail
for Europe at noon EDT.
But hours later there was no
sign of progress toward a set
tlement and the vessel was still
at its pier in the Hudson River.
The amount of energy fixed
annually in the sugar manufac
tured by plants in the U.S. is
the equivalent of about 300 bil
lion tons of coal.
TODAY
POLLY H,
-
ft
thirst
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15. 1963
County Court Asks
Speed Up Of Gas
Company's Project
The county court told repre'
sentatives of California-Pacific
Utilities company and Roy
Price Construction company,
California, Friday afternoon
that the cleanup work following
laying of gas pipelines through
the county must be speeded up.
Prompted by County Commis
sioner Don Fabcr, the county
court made out an order to halt
laying of a spur gas line along
Kirtland rd. near Tolo but is
holding it for 10 days to give
the construction company time
to bring its cleanup work to
where it is laying pipeline. The
order was on the county court
desk unsigned this week end.
Wimberly Leaves on
World Study Trip
Carl E. Wimberly Jr., Med
ford, was the only lumberman
among 22 wholesale industry
representatives from throughout
the United States who left San
Francisco Friday on a 30-day
wholesaler world study mission.
President of Western Lumber,
Inc., and a member of National
American Wholesale Lumber as
sociation, Wimberly will exam
ine lumber export market polen;
tial in 11 countries in Europe
and Asia.
The mission includes repre
sentatives of a wide range of
products and services at the
wholesale level of U. S. business.
It is sponsored by the National
Association of Whole salcrs,
Washington, D. C.
Cold War Said Getting ,
Hotter In Mid-East
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Isra-j
cl is faced with the urgent need
to strengthen her defense be-'
cause its Arab neighbors have
recently intensified their threats
of aggression, Israel's Minister
of Development and Housing
Josef Almogi said Saturday. !
Addressing the National Plan-,
ning Conference of Israel State
Bonds here, he said while the
cold war was cooling off in
other parts of the world, it was
growing hotter in the Middle
East. i
FISHING RIGHTS ARGUED j
TOKYO (UPI) - Japan meets
Canada and the United States
Monday for the right to fish in ;
the waters of the North Pacific
Ocean. The long dispute will
take up where negotiations in
Washington broke off in disa
greement last spring. 1
mm.
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3 DAYS
0
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saem with
j imiimHV. 2H
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k yfTffi THMETWICE )
J ANO fCC YOUR HEART 'T k J
1 1 1 J JT IIOHT UP WITH A OLOWINO . fr-
t ITKI f ENCHANTMENT THAT WILL 3k- Ijl 1
L5t IT UrtTIMEl P-!
Mwm
Mf DONALD
!, Ill Tllllinil
ia a rt t
NOW
County Commissioner Don Fa
ber and County Judge Earl M.
Miller said the county court had
received numerous complaints
about the delay in cleanup work.
The main gas line is now with
in 3,000 feet of the substation
at Ashland. However, the clean
up work is only as far as Seven
Oaks junction.
Cleanup work would include
righting mailboxes along the
pipeline right-of-way, filling in
road shoulders with gravel,
clearing culverts, drain struc
tures and driveways.
"Actually, I feel these people
have done a pretty darn good
job with their cleanup work,"
County Engineer Robert Cars
tensen said Saturday. "You can
not run pipelines along 38 miles
of roads without running into
some problems."
Representatives of California
Pacific Utilities, the construc
tion company and the gas com
pany attorney, Frank VanDykc,
Medford, met with the county
court, county engineer, and
Vern Smith, inspector for the
county roads department in a
three-hour session Friday after
noon. WELCOME TO
Southern Oregon
Philatelic Society
Saturday,
Sept. 21st
12 to 9 p.m.
Sunday,
Sept. 22nd
10 to 8 p.m.
Over 100 interesting
exhibit!.
229 No. Bartlett
ADMISSION FREEI
PLANT &
RUMMAGE
SALE!
Wednesday, Sept. II
Gibson Saddlery Bldg.
22S W. 6th St.
Across from Holly ThcJIrt
Sponsored by
Medford Garden Club
3Y G
Era
ONLY
f EVED
oJACEIS
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JOEL McCREA
VERA MILES
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