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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1963)
.MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18. 193 k 3 j. r- j it. .-rs I .4 fc.T A I REQUESTING FUNDS-Shocked by Ihe headlines telling of chil dren killed in the bombing of a church in Alabama, actresses Carolyn Jones, left, June Allyson, center, and Judy Garland, right, announce they are requesting funds for the families of the victims. Standing behind their mothers, Pam Powell, 17, left, and Lisa Minnelli, 17, right, announced they plan to attend the funeral of the victims, t UPI ) Hemming Sees Tax Measure Approval EUGENE (UPI) - Dr. Ar thur S. Flemming, president of the University of Oregon, said Monday he believed a "sub stantial majority" of voters would approve the legislature's tax program at the Oct. 15 spe cial election. PAY FOR CLEANUP LOUGHBOROUGH, England (UPI) Father Oliver Wilson of the Roman Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart asked engaged couples Monday to pay a cash deposit as a guarantee their friends will not throw confetti at the wedding. He said the money will be used for cleaning up the confetti, which is normal ly used to loss at a wedded cou ple in Britain instead of rice. "Your Insurance Man!" He is one of the first persons you call on in an emergency for financial assurance or special advice or fnend'v encourane you can contact h'm on a mo ment. He should live nearby so merit's notice. May I apply tor the important position of "In surance Man" in your life? 664-1433 5145 Dobrot Way Central Point Representing WOODMEN ACCIDENT AND LIFE COMPANY Ellsworth J. Robison Plans Completed For Stamp Show at Community Club Final plans have been for mulated for the philatelic ex hibition and stamp show, SOPEX '63, Saturday and Sun day, Sept. 21 and 22, at Girls Community club, Dr. W. B. Giles, show chairman, report ed today. There will be 145 frames en tered in competition for prize ribbons and special awards. The 26 exhibitors have entered col lections in 15 categories. Three out of state exhibitors and seven out of town exhibitors will participate in the show, Elmer Binker, Jr., president of the Southern Oregon Philatelic Society announced. They include William Winter er, Detroit, Mich.; Donald Cobb, Springfield, 111., and Lt. Col. C. Langley, Tacoma, Wash. Out of town exhibits are be ing entered by Thomas Riley, Eagle Point: Leonard O'Neill and Daniel Keizer of the White City Stamp club. Bourse tables will be maintained by Clyde Smith and Floyd Crosslin, Ash land; Mrs. Ann Carlcy, Med ford, and J.E.F. Robertson, Eugene. Non-competitive exhibits will include the story of the Suez Canal from the Stamp News Bureau, directed by Ernest Kehr of New York City, and a philatelic exhibit furnished by the United Nations Postal Bu reau. The exhibit room will be open from noon until 9 p.m. Satur day. The Sunday hours will be 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Burglary Reported at Bristol Silica Plant Thieves broke into the Bristol Silica plant between Gold Hill and Rogue River last week end for about the fourth time this year, Jackson sheriff's deputies reported yesterday. Investigation of the incident revealed thieves pried open the front door and took a record player turntable, a small table radio and a few records, dep uties said. ':ywTi 5f ur It 77 ilv.. , u 77r, The Juniper Bush Dick West Routed Early in Morning For Expedition With Bird Watchers HOT WEATHER ANSWER Not everyone has 100 degree heat. He's trying to say "A Pool, a the answer to the hot weather but "Peanuts" cool drink and some cards are the only way to nf Anaheim, Calif., found a way to beat the while away the time." (UPI) Travel-Talk Series at Domiciliary Under Way BODY FOUND SISTERS (UPI) - The body of Mrs. James Winter, 25, uf Mitchell, was found in a wreck ed car near the Santiam Pass highway about 40 miles north west of here Tuesday by a High i way Department crew. The 1P63-61 series of travel-1 talks sponsored by the Ameri can Red Cross as part of the library program at the Veterans Administration Domici I i a r y , White City, opened this week in the Domiciliary theater with a talk by Fred Pramann of Ash land. Pramann. retired former chief of Ihe corrective therapy de partment at the domiciliary, chose as his subject his recent trip to New Orleans. The first color slides, of Salt Lake City, showed various mon uments, buildings and parks commemorating events in the historv of Ihe Mormons. Also shown were pictures of Ihe Bingham Copper Mine, the world's largest open-pit copper mine, the natural arches near Moan, Drad Horse Point and the cliff dwellings dating from the 10th Century A.D., all in Utan. i For the remainder of his talk, i Pramann concentrated on Loui-; siana, showing slides of the i bayou country with its ante bellum mansions, Evangeline's Park, a memorial lo Longfel low's heroine, the Jungle Gar dens and places of interest in New Orleans. The latter includ ed scenes in the French Quar ter, Ihe Cathedral of St. Louis, General Beauregard's home and Ihe Court of the Two Sisters. The program ended with scenes taken in Florida during a sub sequent part of the Pramanns' trip. After the talk, refreshments were served. Assisting in the serving were Mrs. Lcatha Jones, chairman of the American Red Cross travel-talks, Mrs. Eliza beth Shea of Mcdford and Miss Enid A. Holmes, chief librarian of the Domiciliary. Annual YMCA Sale Scheduled Sunday The annual YMCA auction will be held Sunday, Sept. 22, at B and B auction on West Main St., Mcdford, according to Dick Hawkins, auction chairman. O. J. Brenner, owner of B and B auction, will auction off a va riety of donated items to the highest bidder as the auction gets under way at 1 p.m. All proceeds from Ihe auction will be used by the YMCA to reno vate the facilities at 522 West Sixth st. Most businesses in the Mcd ford area have been contacted by auction workers for items to donate to the event. Those who have not been contacted are in vited to call the YMCA (772 6205) and their donation will be picked up. Rv DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - The alarm clock begins clanging precisely at 6:30 a.m. For a moment, grop ing my way through Ihe fog of slumber, I am under the impression that there has been a prison break somewhere. Then I re member. I have set the alarm because I have to get up early. I have committed myself to go to Boonsboro, Md., with a party of bird watchers lo see the hawks fly over Monument Knob. The invitation to witness this ; ornithological spectacle was ex- i tended by a friend of mine who is a member of the Audubon society. At the time, over a second round of squcezings from the fruit of the juniper bush, it seemed like a swell idea. But at 6:30 a.m., Ihe envi ronment has undergone an abrupt transformation. I re solve never lo touch the fruit of (lie juniper bush again. I make my way into the kitch en, pack a lunch consisting of a cold meat sandwich and head (or the rendezvous point a Howard Johnson's restaurant. We meet in the parkine lot, check directions with our leader, make certain our bird watchers' manuals are at the ready, and the safari's under way. It is cold up there on Monu ment Knob. Along with about a dozen Aububon members, I am perched on top of the Wash ington Monument. Not the Wash ington Washington Monument. The Boonsboro Washington Mon ument. The Boonsboro Washington Monument was erected in 1827, before the Washington Washing ton Monument was even started. It took almost an entire day to build it. Moreover, it is 1.IW0 feet higher than Ihe Washington Washington Monument. That is because I h c lioonslioi o Washington Monument was built on top of a l.fiOO-fnol mountain. The hawks are supposed to fly over the monument on their southward migration and we are scanning the sky with our bin oculars. "There's one!" I shout as a large winged creature flashes across my line of vision. "That's a gnat, you idiot," my friend exclaims. It is difficult to adjust your vision to binoculars, but final ly I score. While the others are diverted by a rufous-sided tow hce, I sight nine hawks winging down the valley. It takes stamina to win your spurs as a bird watcher, but once you make it you are on top of the world. Or at least on top of the Boonsboro Washington Monument. 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