Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 24, 1963, Image 7

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    Locals
Erect Residences The Med
ord building department issued
permits Wednesday to Powers
and Powers Construction compa
ny to erect a $9,500 residence at
2786 Howard Ave. and a $10,500
residence at 200 Mace Rd.
Cable Shorted Medford fire
men were called about 11:20
p.m. yesterday when there was
a short in the wiring in the
cable to the circus rides in front
of the Medford Armory. A trash
fire was put out by firemen
about 5:35 p.m. at the east end
of 10th St.
Genealogists To Meet Leta
V. Burrell has issued a remind
er to local members that the
Oregon Genealogical Society
workshop meeting will be held
from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday, Oct.
26, at the Eugene Water and
Electrical Board building in Eu
gene. Charles L. Greenwood of
Salem will bring his books and
lead a discussion of New Eng
land genealogy. Persons plan
ning to attend are asked to
bring their genealogy books and
magazines.
Pancake Breakfast The Ad
arel Social Club will sponsor a
pancake breakfast from 8 a.m.
to 1 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 27 at
the Masonic hall in Jacksonville.
Pomona Meeting Jackson
County Pomona Grange will
meet at 10 a.m. Saturday, Oct.
26, in the Bellview Grange hall,
south of Ashland. Women have
been asked to take a salad or
desert. Canning contest judging
is scheduled during the meeting,
Grange representatives said.
Time Change Bliss Heine's
Moose Juniors will meet at the
Moose hall at 11 Newtown st.
Saturday at 9 a.m. instead of
10 a.m. to receive final instruc
tions for participation in the
costume parade, it was announc
ed today. The Moose Juniors
will leave the hall at 9:30 a.m.
to enter the line of march in the
parade, sponsored by Lodge 178,
Loyal Order of Moose.
Club Plans Party The Old
Timer Car Club is planning a
card party Saturday night, Oct.
26, at (he Medford club house.
Movies of the parade July 4
will be shown. Members are ask
ed to take potluck dishes for a
6:30 p.m. dinner. Card tables
and cards also are requested.
Coffee and rolls for the dinner
will be furnished by the club.
Oregon Sfofe Sons
Parade Noisemakers
CORVALLIS (UPI)-The use
of trucks and mechanical noise
makers in future Oregon State
University Homecoming parades
has been banned because of the
death of a 15-year-old girl last
Friday night.
MEDFORD
ARMORY
12-9 p.m. Friday
Oct. 25-26-27
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat.
1 p.m. -5 p.m. Sunday
1
SSI
RUMMAGE
SALE!
PANCAKE BREAKFAST
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27th
8 A.M. to 1 P.M. (Std. Time)
Masonic Hall, Jacksonville
Sponsored by Adarel Social Club
Adults $1.00 50c
SUPER SCIENCE HITS!
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Obituaries
WARKEN BL'TLER
The body of Warren Butler,
31, who died Tuesday, has been
returned to his family home in
Saratoga, Wyo., for services and
interment. Conger Morris Fu
neral Directors were in charge
of local arrangements.
Mr. Butler was born Dec. 1,
1931, in Saratoga, Wyo.
Survivors include two broth
ers, one in Portland, Ore., and
one in Saratoga. Wyo., and his
mother, Mrs. Beulali Butler,
Fort Collins, Colo.
MARGARET E. PATTON
Funeral services for Margaret
E. Patton, 88, of 1763 Boundary
Lane, Grants Pass, formerly of
Butte Falls who died Wednes
day, will be held at 10:30 a.m.
Friday at Perl Funeral home.
The Rev. James Powers, pastor
of Butte Falls Community Bible
Church, will officiate. Interment
will be in the Butte Falls Ceme
tery. Mrs. Patton, the daughter of
Benjamine F. and Kizzie Ed
mondson, was born Nov. 12,
1874, in Big Butte. Ore. She was
a member of the Episcopal
Church and one of the early pio
neers of the Rogue River Valley.
On Dec. 24, 1893, in Big Butte,
Ore., she was married to James
I. Patton, who preceded her in
death in 1934.
Survivors include two sons,
Charles Patton, Grants Pass,
Harold Patton, Grants Pass;
three daughters, Mrs. Mildred
Higinbotham, Grants Pass; Mrs.
Anne Weatherford, Grangeville,
Tenn., Mrs. Lelah Stucky, Min
neapolis, Minn.; one sister, Mrs.
Charlotte Allen, Medford; 11
grandchildren, 24 great grand
children and four great great
grandchildren.
EMMA KUBLI
APPLEGATE Mrs. Emma
Alice Cook Kubli, of O'Brien,
died Oct. 22 in a Grants Pass
nursing home. She was born
Oct. 17, 1873 in Applegate, Ore.,
where she had lived the ma
jority of her life.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 25,
at Hull and Hull Funeral Chapel,
Grants Pass. Interment will be
Missouri Flats Cemetery in the
Applegate area.
Survivors include two sons,
Evan Kubli, O'Brien, and Vance
Kubli, Redding, Calif.; six
grandchildren. 28 great grand
children: and three sisters, Mrs.
Delia Whetstone, Medford; Mrs.
Dora Bowers, San Francisco,
Calif., and Mrs. Lula Hannum,
San Francisco.
STUART HATCH
GRANTS PASS - Stuart S.
Hatch, 56, of Rogue River died
Oct. 23 in the Josephine General
Hospital, where he had been a
patient for two weeks.
Born Aug. 14, 1907, in Wood
ville, Ore.. Mr. Hatch is surviv
ed by two brothers, Arlie Hatch
and Gordon Hatch, both of
RoBue River.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 26, in
the Church of God at Rogue
River with the Rev. Harold
Laws officiating. Interment will
be in Woodville cemetery under
direction of Hull and Hull Fu
neral Parlor of Grants Pass.
R. W. I) UNMAN
Word has been received here
from Riverside. Calif., of the
recent death of R. W. Denman,
former owner and operator of a
barber shop in Medford and a
past president of the Medford
Lodge. No. 105. Degree of Honor
Protective Association.
Mr. and Mrs. Denman were
residing at 6178 Nogales St.. Riv-
nclrin r-if al iUa tima nf hie
cijiwv;, vain., ai tttiic vi mu
death.
Ginny Moves Away
From Missile Site
MIAMI (LTD -Ginny
moved away
Hurricane
from the
nation's space port at Cape Ca
naveral today and headed in a
northwesterly direction that
threatened coastal regions of
four states with its 75-mile-an-hour
winds.
The Miami Weather Bureau
warned residents along the
coast from Jacksonville, Fla.,
to Brunswick, Ga., to be ready
to take quick precautions
against the storm which crept
along the coastline at about 5
miles per hour some 100 miles
off shore.
Man Listed as Fair
After Being Shot
A 32-year-old Medford man
was shot in the back by his wife
shortly after midnight last night
as he was attempting to molest
their 11-year-old daughter, ac-
cording to city police.
:,. onn nob ct -.,... ,i
1.13, uan kit., nao icuuutu
in fair condition in Rogue Val
ley Hospital this morning.
His wife, Evelyn Marie Fran
cis, 27, is being held in Jackson
county jail on a charge of as
sault with a deadly weapon.
5cenc Highway Award
Goes To Michigan
PORTLAND (UPI)-A north
ern Michigan highway received
Parade Magazine's Scenic High
way Award for 1964 at 49th an
nual meeting of the American
Association of State Highway
Officials here Wednesday night.
Servicemen
WINS MEDAL
Capt. Howard M. Tackett of
Wenatchee, Wash., who is mar
ried to the former Janice N.
Parks, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
E. W. Parks, White City, was
recently presented the United
States Air Force Commendation
Medal for meritorious service.
The presentation was made at
Manhattan, Kan., in recognition
of his outstanding performance
of duty while serving as a KC
135 aircraft commander in the
385th Strategic Aerospace Wing
at Offutt AFB, Neb.
REASSIGNED
Airman Raymond K. Wallace,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford H.
Wallace, 508 Fourth St., Med
ford, is being reassigned to
Walker Air Force Base, N. M.,
for training and duty as a mili
tary sales store specialist. He
recently completed United
States Air Force basic training
at Lackland AFB, Tex The air
man is a 1963 graduate of Phoe
nix High School.
COMPLETES BASIC
Airman Arthur C. Roberts,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C.
Roberts, Jacksonville, is being
reassigned to Amarillo Air Force
Base, Tex., for technical train
ing as a United States Air Force
supply specialist after complet
ing his initial basic military
training at Lackland.
Airman Roberts, a graduate
of Medford High School, enlist
ed in the Air Force recently.
IN AHMED FORCES
Four Jackson County regis
trants were recently inducted
into the armed forces at the
Armed Forces Induction Station
in Portland.
They are Jeffery Wayne Ba
ker. Ashland : Lanny Jerome
Bogenoff, Central Point; Steven
Ray Charters. Eagle Point, and
Terry Darwin Moehle, Gold Hill.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Occasional
ram and strong southerly wind
tonight. Valley fog or low clouds
Friday morning. Partly cloudy Tri
riav afternoon. Low tonight 45.
High Friday near 60.
Western Oregon: Partial clear
ing and scattered showers tonight
and Fridnv. Cooler tonight. Low
J(i-46 High Friday 32-62.
Northern California : Increasing
cloudiness tonight and Friday.
Rain spreading to vicinity of Mon
terey and Stockton Friday. Cooler.
Snow in northern mountains Fri
day or Friday night
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE; Mean yeitr
dav 51: normal
Record hi;;h this date BO in 1020.
Record low this dale 26 in 1954.
PRECIPITATION. 24 hour to
midnight 02 inch. Midnight to 10
am. 01 inch.
Total this month l U7 inch. :m
inch helow normal.
Total since Scpi 1. 1 33 inch.
.60 inch below normal
HUMIDITY Lowest vcMcrday
53', . highest this a m. 10ij't ,
Hieh 4:f 21-
C1T i l rstrr- a m
Low I'rf
Brookings HO
Craler Lake .T4
Cirsnts Pass .... 37
Howard Prairie .. 47
.VI
2
Klamath Falls ..
MEDFORD
Portland
Seattle
Spokane
Yakima
Eureka ..."
Red Bluff
Sacramento .
San Francmco
Los Angeles
Phoenix
Denver
Chicago
Miami Beach ,
New York
Wanhington, D
Walt Diin.y'i
"20,000 Lt.guei Under Th Sei"
and "Th Lion"
I Mi j l'TOy' m" "r" ' 40C3MJ 60 7i JtJO V .OC7..0 i9 rltl.l Vl.,1 ....I ' ' nv,. TJr.. , I at Ch.ic. Of .r 36 million Tim.il
tfaTTin'a I
I
MEDFOIiU
Religion in America
Traditional Jewish Wish Comes
True for Service Organization
Bv ROBERT M. ANDREWS
United Press International
There's a traditional Jewish
wish, roughly translated as
"may you live to be 120,"
which has at last come true for
B'nai B'rith, the worldwide Jew
ish service organization.
Last Sunday B'nia B'rith
celebrated its 120th birthday
with the first of a year of spec
ial observances.
The age of 120 is a symbolic
milestone in the tradition of the
faith, for by Bibical account
that was the life span of the
great prophet Moses.
On Sunday morning, many of
its nearly 500,000 members
gathered at anniversary break-
fasts throughout the free world.
That night, at Chicago s Conrad
Hilton Hotel, an estimated 1,500
persons heard a speech by Atty.
Gen- Robert F. Kennedy and
honored Philip M. Klutznick,
Other anniversary dinners lat-
er in the year will honor such
notable members as Supreme
Court Justice Arthur Goldberg,
former New York Democratic
Gov. Herbert H. Lehman and
comedian Jack Benny.
Helped American Jews
Just as Moses led the Israel
ites out of their bondage in
Egypt, B'nai B'rith helped
i
j lies out of their bondage in the first disaster relief cam-1 her arrival in Dallas, where
cgypi, d uai Di iui n e i p e u paign in jooo 10 neip vicunis ui i sue was gi eeietl uy picKeis. ' r icuu iu ui . Jonas aaiK, aiscov- iir ' fr
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.MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORP.
American Jews of the mid-19th
century emerge united from the
immigrant ghettos of the new
world.
The organization began hum
bly. In 1843, there were about
20,000 Jews in America, most of
them immigrants, all of them
badly divided by ritual and eth
nic loyalties.
Concerned about this situation,
a dozen German - speaking Jews
led by a young, scholarly
mechanic named Henry Jones,
met in a lower East Side cafe in
Manhattan and formed B'nai
B'rith, meaning "Sons of the
Covenant."
Their aim was to give Ameri
ca's small Jewish community a
common meeting ground based
on Judaic teaching, despite their
differences of national origin,
economic background or re
ligious and political convictions.
The founders' first step was to
scrape together $12 for a widows
and orphans fund B'nai B'rith's
first service program. The or
ganization's annual budget to
day tops $15 million.
Many Oilier I'irsls
Since then, there have been
many other firsts.
According to organizations of
ficials, B'nai B'rith organized
the first disaster relief cam
paign in 1868 to help victims of
Open
25 South
OKECiON
a Baltimore, Md flood. That
was 13 years before the Ameri
can National Red Cross was
founded.
B'nai B'rith opened the first
Jewish communitv center and
Mme. Nhu Visits
Ranch in Texas
BEEVILLE, Tex. (UPD
Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu of South
Viet Nam roamed a real Texas
cattle ranch today but balked
on horseback riding and other
cowboy sports.
Mme. Nhu, the sister-in-law
of the South Viet Nam Presi
dent Dinh Diem and wife of
that country's military leader,
spent the night at the plush
ranch home of millionaire cattleman-oilman
Dudley Dough
erty. Dougherty was scheduled to
fly her to Austin today for a
speaking engagement at the
University ot Texas.
The rancher flew Mme. Nhu
to Bceville Wednesday after
her arrival in Dallas, where
she was greeted by pickets.
Thett pricti in good in H Western Auto Company Storei
Friday Until 11 p.m. for the Moonlight Sale!
Xivrsid Ave. - Medford Phone 772-6217
the first Jewish library, both in
1852, and the first free employ
ment oureau m Chicago.
Perphaps the biggest news-
maker in the organization is its
Anti-Defamation League, formed
50 years ago to fight discrimma-
tion and oppression. The league
grew out of the first anti-semi-tism
in 1851, when it persuaded
Congress to help pressure Swit
zerland to eliminate local anti
Jewish restrictions.
With the league in the midst of
this year's civil rights struggle,
B'nai B'rith's other activities
have tended to be overlooked.
The variety of its work has led
some to call it "the Macy's of
Jewish life." It extends from so
cial service work to overseas
aid. from youth activities to vo
cational counseling.
Encourage Jewish Students
One example is the Hillel
Foundations movement on col
lege campuses, designed to en
courage Jewish students to be
come more aware of their re
ligious heritage. B'nai B'rith
sponsored campus centers pro
vide religious services, cultural
activities and personal counsel
ing at 246 schools today.
B'nai B'rith even organized a
company of 106 Jewish volun-l
tcers in Illinois to serve with
Union forces during the Civil
War.
The organization's rolls list a
wide range of members, from !
the Los Angeles Dodgers' World
Series hero, pitcher Sandy Kou-,
lax, to a tormer Miss America,
Bess Myerson; from the late
pioneer psychoanalyst Sigmund
Freud to Dr. Jonas Salk, discov-
TIILiiSUAY. OCTOBER 21.
erer of polio vaccine.
The variety of its membership I
is us strength and the key to its
success, sav its leaders.
j Label A. Katz of New Orleans,
; current president of B'nai B'rith,
i says the underlying purpose of
all the organization's programs
is to "strengthen and stimulate
Jewish community life."
Or, in the words of its mem
bers, "wherever there are Jews
in the free world, there is B'nai
B'rith."
NOW PLAYING
MAGNIFICENT NEW TRIUMPH
FROM THE MAKER OF 'EL CID'!
SAMUEL BRONSTON xin
Heston Gardner Njven
55 DAYS
AT PEKING
G
FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
YES!
WE HAVE
FREE
IN-CAR HEATERS
Window
"Tlie HANGING
KARL
MALDEN
TECHNICOLOR
AND
BLOOD'S COFFIN"
esteim
8i
REARMS
.
IF
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