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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1963)
o 10 A 1 i I WEDNESDAY, EWi Ot MM5 tttzavtcM iWL -Mtoaxs. iiimmm. A A We're I THUR5. Nighl Costumes, if You Wish A Having A 11 Ji K 5- (. C l ifnU 5 x&-ifirij- it As i ft 7 C,'2?!s! i DANCING 'Til 2 Al ALL WITCHES Pieait Park Your Broom At the Door DOUGLAS From Bourbon Street Gumbo Soup Mardi Gras Combination Salad Antoine Dressing SHRIMP CREOLE Rice-En Casserole SAFFRON CHICKEN Ala Beale Street OYSTERS, ROCKEFELLER Coquille BEEF TENDERLOIN as Made in the French Quarter Choice of Potatoes or Creole Rice rid Beverage LATE SPECIAL! Served After 10 P.M. Only Oyster Loaf Crustade Oyittn Bkcd in individual Lojvci of Bread with Special Sauce Au Champignon Harry " Douglas c o Make Up a Group and Come on Down I 1 I rfTV,. 'W-5BS0. Your Ghoult I MSSS. ' PKeed I I r'X. sT i ' You' 0w" Ri,k XKay Mack XX 11 I Bob Norton SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT -by the- rj BAT TRIO fc' Where Everrhotlv Meeisr Medford's Finest RESTAURANT & LOUNGE 1206 North Riverside Phone 773-5474 Civ i Ik) 0 Slate Advi To Reapportion ALBUQUERQUE, N M. (UPI) An Idaho legislator told the Western Conference of the Coun cil of State Governments Tues day that failure to reapportion state legislatures according to population changes is as bad as stuffing ballot boxes. Slate Rep. Herman J. McDe- vitt of Pocatello said the states shduld quit reacting to reappor tionment like "belligerent eight-year-olds" and get the job done if they want to avoid "further federal encroachment." HEALTH BILL SIGNED After signing the 1 lobbyist for the legislation. The $355 million mental health bill in Washington, President bill will combat mental retardation through Kennedy gives one of the pens used to his improved maternal and infant care. (UPI) sister, Eunice Shriver. He called her the No. BLM Foresters From 12 States to Meet In Coos Bay Nov. 5 COOS BAY Bureau of Land i search on reforestation, animal Management foresters from 12 damage, soil erosion, and the states and Washington, D. C, silviculture of several tree spe will meet in Coos Bay Nov. 5 I cies. for a 10-day conference, Russell National Director Charles H. E. Getty, BLM state director for Oregon and Washington, has announced. The conference will promote the exchange of knowledge among professional foresters and lead to adoption of new forestry techniques and further improvements in the manage ment of BLM-administercd for est lands, he said. Discussions will cover such subjects as further applications of automatic data processing, re finements in sampling methods, consideration of more precise tree and log measurement stand ards, application of the stand structure approach for predict ing future timber yields, and es tablishment of orchards to pro duce genetically superior tree seed. Administers Public Land An agency of the U. S. Depart ment of the Interior, the Bureau of Land Management adminis ters 466 million acres of public land. Of that total, 46 million acres are classed as commer cial timberland and 111 million Stoddard will participate in the conference Nov. 7, after meet ing with the multiple use Na-1 tional Advisory Board Council i earlier in the week in BLM's Vale District in Southeastern Oregon, Getty said. Both Getty and Stoddard are professional foresters and members of the Society of American Foresters. Approximately 60 BLM forest ers and several experts in re lated managerial fields will par ticipate in the conference, which also includes several tours in the Coos Bay-North Bend area. Planned are visits to the Weyer haeuser Company sawmill, Georgia - Pacific Corpora t i o n hardwood and plywood mills, and the Menasha Corporation pulpmill. Participants also will hear a representative of Pacific Power and Light Company dis cuss the utilization of water from sand dunes and observe export shipment of forest prod ucts from the port of Coos Bay. "More than a training confer ence, we expect this meeting to Concert Scheduled In Grants Pass GRANTS PASS - Dr. Charles Heiden, who was concertmaster at the Peter Britt Music Festi val in Jacksonville last summer, will be guest soloist at the Vir tuoso Strings concert at South Junior High School in G r a n t s Pass Sunday, Nov. 4. Dr. Heiden, who is professor of violin and conductor of the orchestra at Willamette Uni versity, will play the Mozart "Violin Concerto in G." ' The Junior Strings also will present a portion of the concert, according to the director, Ed Wilcox. The concert is scheduled for 4 p.m. Tickets, on sale now at the Melody House and the Mu sic Shop in Grants Pass, may also be purchased at the door on the day of the concert. Among works to be present ed in the concert will be Scar latti's "Concerto Grosso;" "Symphony in A," by Stamitz; and Leroy Anderson's "Synco pated Clock." boingI Teem! Teem! fipralrl MrRninr.Rnind's way of saying: "TryTeeml" Ponce de Lion first discovered the Gulf stream in the spring of 1513. Just on the light side of lemon and lime! PEPSI-COLA COMPANY MAKES CLEAN. TASTING TEEM THAT'S WHY IT'S SO GOOOl C 19b3, P EP5I COLA COMPANY Bottled bv Pepsi-Cola Co. ol Medford Under Appointment from Pepsi - Cola Company, New York, N.Y. acres as woodland. The Bureau ( fos(e'r cooperation wmle stimu. narvesis more man a u, u ,a(i individual initiative." Get board feet of timber annually. , t said ..Tangible results wiu ?VermA?eC'nt. 7 1 be energetic problem solving, from BLM-admin.stered lands in , a p,icatfon o( latest research western Oregon, Getty noted, j dsHcoverics to resource manage. m'ui8..:..uur Iment, and careful coordination sions will be panel discussions in securing the greatest public benefits from sustained yoeld. benefits from sustained yield, BLM-administered lands." on forest inventories, manage ment plans, location of roads, appraisals, timber sales, and re forestation. Also In he considered are the effects of land pattern and ten-1 EDUCATION I ureon forest management. Other new YORK (UPI) Cur-i topics will be manpower require-1 , f mt o njne mcnts and budgeting. . '. ' . Reports Planned ! adults in lhe Unl'ed States have Reports are to be presented completed a high school educa on cooperative research projects tion, statisticians of the Metro jointly sponsored by BLM and politan Life Insurance Co. re other agencies such as Oregon port. State University and the Forest In addition, one out of every and Range Experiment Stations. ; 11 has had four or more years Current projects include re-1 of college training. HALLOWEEN SALE HURRY T1LC OPEN 6 P.M. 19c Masks 13e 29c Masks 19c PLASTIC PUMPKINS Reg. 19c Now 12c Reg. 29c Only 19c Reg. 39e Only 24c COSTUMES Reg. $1.98 Only $1.37 TRICK or TREAT BAG Reg. 40c Now 27c 30c HATS 19c ALSO MISC. ITEMS A World of Toys, Hobbies, Games at TOY WORLD NEXT TO OREGON BANK Medford Shopping Center ft Benefit Stage Performance of the WORLD FAMOUS DON COSSACK CHORUS&DANCIRS WEDNESDAY-NOVEMBER 6-8:00 P.M. Hedrick Junior High Auditorium Thrilling Songs ! Spectacular Dancing Kostrukoff Conductor Sponsored By Jackson County Shrine Club Tickets obtained at Purucker Music House, Lusk Music Co., or Barker's Courtesy of MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE G id