On the Side-8' f v
(Distributed Kiai Natvrea Syndic, IneJ
u wiuuMiinniniiiiiiiiiiiii
But I lovt you. dr.
And when a woman
aayt she lovei a man.
The man mutt hear her
Though he love her not.
ELIZABETH BARRETT
BROWNING
(Th rtiion many young
women do not make the progress
with the male sex they would
like to is that they hesitate to
DRIVE IN
theatre
TONIGHT
Mon. and Tues.
First Run Here
TO
MCKCmiWflflD
BE SURE TO SEE THIS PICTURE!
Th Greatest of All Harness Races
PLUS
"ROSE OF
SANTA ROSA"
NEWS CARTOON
Gates Open at 7:30, Show at Dusk
"Your Office Boy"
Since 1927
Ideal Graduation
Gifts
ROYAL PORTABLES
SHEAFFER PENS
LEATHER GOODS
Across from the Rialto
Theatre
YOU LL NEVER
WAX OR SCRUB
FLOORS AGAIN
lttit Wif Oh with Glotk
Ask For The Black a Whits Can
AT BETTEW 1TDOCS NCAW YfJU
acme
HARDWARE CO.
"Specialists in Home Wares"
3 West Sixth Phone 2-5201
talc th initiative. If girl Is
attracted to a young gentleman,
ah should lot him know about
it. Not wait tor him to male
his feelings known. She doesn't
her to come right out and say,
"I lov you," immediately, but
shs can convey th thought by
words and action in other ways.
On this most experts on male
psychology are agreed. So are
this department's Mules & Men
experts.)
One of my boyhood ambitions
not yet realized is to ride from
Euston Station, London, to Glas
gow on the Royal Scot. There
fore, I was much interested in
an article in the May issue of
Cosmopolitan Magazine dealing
with this world famous train.
The Royal Scot has the world's
longest scheduled non-stop run,
the 401 miles between London
and Glasgow. It has been leaving
Euston Station, London, every
morning at 10 for over a cen
tury. Marriage Bureaus
There are quite a few mar
riage bureaus and "introduction
clubs" in New York. Business is
not so good for them right now.
Some have employed high-powered
outside representatives
who call on single girls at their
offices or homes with offers to
find them high-grade husbands
for a small registration fee plus
a larger payment after the wed
ding has taken place.
Touring
Returned traveler says while
In England he hired for touring
purposes a six passenger lim
ousine with a chauffeur to drive
it for a flat rate of the equiva
lent of 21 cents a mile. No other
charges. Seems quite a reason
able rate to travel in such style.
Don't know of any automobile
renting outfit here offering a
flat mileage rate for that type of
touring. They usually charge by
day, week, or month with a mile
age limit.
Asking
Queries from clients. Q
Could a real jackrabbit beat a
greyhound in a race? A The
majority of jackrabbits could,
but between some greyhounds
and some jackrabbits a dead
heat might develop. The speed
of a jackrabbit varies from forty
to forty-five miles an hour. That
of greyhounds from thirty-five
to fortymiles an hour. Speaking
of animal speed, did you know a
lion can run as fast as a thor
oughbred racehorse? Q In 1923
at a Toledo, Ohio, dance hall
Howard W. Roth played the pi
ano for twenty-nine hours con
tinuously. Is that a world's rec
ord for non-stop piano playing?
A Couldn't say. I regret we
have no non-stop piano playing
records in our files. However, it
seems to me I heard of a man
in England who played the
piano for a longer time than you
mention. Perhaps some of our
London clients will recall this
man's feat. .
Horses at Women
The young women who have
been so blessed by nature that
they have no need for that ar
ticle of attire known as "gay
deceivers" or "falsies" are re
ported somewhat bitter about
the situation that has developed
since these artificial aids to the
feminine figure have become so
generally adopted. A New York
"Oomph Girl" informs me she is
starting a campaign for the
wearing of low cut gowns and
bathing suits by girls naturally
blessed with figure rotundity.
"This at least," says she, "will
do away with young women of
this type being continually sus
pected of wearing falsies."
Suggestion
There snould be invented a
gadget that will shut off a tele
phone after three rings, fol
lowed by a recorded voice which
says: "Nobody home. Do you
care to leave a message." If the
caller desires to leave a message
a recording device on the phone
should be there to take care of
it. This gadget would not only
be a nice thing to have in the
absence of the person called. It
would be a great assistance in
dodging calls not wanted. I mean
calls from solicitors, bores, per
sons extending invitations dif
ficult to find an excuse to re
fuse on the spur of the moment.
And so on. A billion dollar idea,
what? Think it over. How many
times today has somebody
reached you on the phone with
inconsequential messages?
.... AROUND HOLLYWOOD
Sunday, May 14. 1950
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREE
'Acme Telephatoi
RAPS BUDENZ Owen Lattimore
(above), testifying in Washington
before the Senate foreign relations
subcommittee Investigating com
muntsm in the State Department,
charged that ex-Co mmunist Louis
P. Budenz Is a "paid informer and
unscrupulous finger man" who
brought charges of communism
against him for personal gain.
Object Lesson For
Juveniles Teaches
Them About Danger
Elyria, O. (U.R)-Gasps and
white faces marked the newest
approach to safety education for
some 80 students of Oberlin high
school near here.
Trying a "shock" treatment
where lectures had failed, the
students were shown the shat
tered wreckage of a 1941 sedan,
on the iaeeed metal of which
! twn nprsnns riiprl. Six others
went to the hospital.
The crash on a dry road in
good weather which caused the
deaths apparently resulted from
one of the newer juvenile death
thrill road games. The young
sters call it playing "chicken."
Sheriff Carl Finegan and an
Oberlin patrolman, Ray Warren,
did not disclose all their investi
gation had shown. It is known,
however, that one of the injured
girls in the car said the pupils
were playing "chicken" just be
fore the crash.
Tragedy at End
Whatever it was they were
playing, it ended in a terrific
crash and spilt blood, broken
glass and death for 17-year-old
Marvin Bittner and Jean Marie
Presnell, three-month-old daugh
ter of Donald and Viola Presnell.
The pupils from Oberlin view
ed the heap of metal and glass
and winced when they learned
their schoolmates had been play
ing "chicken." They knew the
rules of the game.
The rules? A nervy driver
turns out his lights and speeds
down the highway toward an
approaching car. The first per
son in the car who loses his
nerve and demands that the car
be pulled over and the lights put
on is called "chicken."
It's an easy game to play. It is
a hard but almost certain way
to die.
I VIRGINIA
Unit1 Pre!
Hollywood, May 13 (U.P.)
Every time Bing Crosby makes
headlines, his brother Bob said
today, he gets
a new title
himself.
"For years,"
the younger
' C r o 5 by grin
ned, "I was
'B i n g's kid
brother.' Now,
with his kids
turning croon
er, too, 'I'm
Gary's uncle.' "
And if Bing
and Dixie are
having family squabbles which
they say they aren't his next
Vtrftai
amacrhi
Rogue River
2 Rogue Men Aboard
Same Navy Submarine
Two southern Oregon men are
serving aboard the same navy
suDmanne a Saturday navy
press release said. They are on
the USS Baya, one of several
undersea craft used in daily
operations in southern Califor
nia waters for training the
navy's anti-submarine units.
The men are Clifford M.
Graves, fireman, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford M. Graves. Cen
tral Point, and Paul K. Schaefer.
navy seaman, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Schaefer, Grants Pass.
Air and surface elements of
the Pacific fleet track down the
submarine during these exerci
ses to improve their defense
techniques against modern
undersea vessels.
Rogue River The meeting of
the Rogue River Hobby club at
the country home of Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Kasworm Tuesday
afternoon was an unusual affair.
Members, modeling rich cos
tumes of the "gay nineties" and
of the later 1920 s, gathered in
the living room where they
posed for photographs among the
many rare antiques of the Kas
worm home.
Mrs. Ralph Tison, in a Paris
creation of lavender panne vel
vet, was voted "the best dressed
woman in America." The dress
she wore was one of her mothers
wardrobe. It was trimmed with
bands of mink and a lavender
chiffon yoke with a high lace
collar, fashionably boned, en
riched the costume.
Mrs. W. A. White wore a
sweeping skirt of soft grey
broadcloth, with a waist of black
lace and beaded marquisette.
Her parasol was adorned with
row upon row of embroidery,
the whole mounted on a gold
headed staff. It was a costume
which had graced the streets of
Chicago before the fire.
The costume worn by Mrs.
Carl Christenson came from
Norway. It was of black and
white embossed silk, with a
matching cape and bag of rich
black velvet which had belonged
to her mother. Over all was
worn a soft black silk apron with
exquisite lace insertion, hand
made 'by Christina Noss, sister
of Carl Christenson. A hat of the
Gibson girl era added to the
grace and dignity of the costume.
Another street costume was
worn by Mrs. Jim Whipple, It
was an ensemble of heavy black
silk worn with white accessories
and the straight line coat was of
finger tip length.. White silk
hose and high top laced shoes
and a white parasol completed
the costume.
A touch of humor was fur
nished by the costume of Mrs.
Phil Strahan who wore her wed
ding dress as an apron with a
Dlacard reading, "The March of
Time." Her dress was made of
French voile, ruffled with bands
of self material. It is a size 12,
though she maintained she was
18 years of age when she mar
ried. Mrs. Will Trotter's dress pro
vided an interesting contrast to
the elaborate costumes displayed.
She wore a silk pongee dress of
severe straight lines of a style
worn In 1920.
Mrs. Grant Powell, dressed in
finery borrowed from grand
mother, Mrs. Joe Perry of Sams
Valley, typified the well dressed
pioneer mother of America. She
wore a tailored black and white
print dress with a white apron
of cross barred mull trimmed
with wide handknit lace. The
apron was made in 1850. High
topped lace shoes were worn
with the costume.
Mrs. Lang, a special guest of
the afternnon. wore a linen dress
of the modern casual style, while
Mrs. Kasworm. hostess, wore a
black and white costume of
hand tucked, lace trimmed bat
iste which had been given her
by Una Mcllvane. '
The club, organized many
years ago, is composed of twelve
members who each have a dif
ferent hobby. A new member is
chosen only when a vacancy oc
curs. The club meets once a
month.
MacPHIRSON
Correteoaeeat
title might be: "Dixie Crosby's
ex-brother-in-law."
"People are always trying to
scrape up a feud between Bing
and me," Bub said. "I can't even
wear a loud Hawaiian sports
shirt without somebody giving
me the 'trying to - copy - Bing
huh?' routine.
"They did it when I cracked
the entertainment business.
Heck, I turned singer because it
paid more'n picking cucumbers.
which I had been doing.
Even With Golf
"Then when I went on the
radio, I got it again. Same with
movies and records. At' least
Bing hasn't recorded 'The Stars
and Stripes Forever,' yet.
"I couldn't even take up golf
without somebody accusing me
of latching on to that because
Bing plays it."
Now he's getting ready to
make a series of comedy pictures
with Crooner Frankie Laine.
And he's bracing himself for the
inevitable: "Huh. making like
Bing and Bob Hope, hmm?"
They had the road pictures.
Bob shrugged. "Ours'll be 'the
path' movies . . . we have a very
limited budget."
Goes On and On
This feudin' business goes on
and on, he says, and has been
so long nobody can even re
member now where or when it
started.
"Actually, we're very good
friends." Bob explained. "My
position with Bing is that of a
small boy who walks up to his
big brother and says: 'Blow my
nose for me.
"The big brother hands him
a handkerchief and says: 'Blow it
yourself.'
lhats Bing and me. But we
can't ever seem to get the idea
through anybody s head.
3:30 p.m. for following day: 10 era
Monday tor Monday: noon Saturday
or Sunday a.m.
Dead line on Classined Adsi S3j
p.m. for following day; 10 a.m. Mon
day, noon Saturday for Sunday a.m
Dad . . . This Is
A
jr
Take
Mother Our
To Dine at
Mary's Case
12 to 9 P. M.
For Reservations Phone 2-5349
537 Mary Street
Give her
WONDERFUL DAY
" Away from household
chores and the kitchen
, . Bring her here for a
' taste-tempting dinner
Special for Mother s Day
BAKED HAM
' BAKED CHICKEN
ROAST TURKEY
Many Other Entrees
. . . The RIGHT Atmosphere . , . Excellent
Food. .. Reasonable Prices... .
Dining Time Restaurant
2323 Pacific Highway, South
WIVES GET "PHT" DEGREES
Burlington, Vt May 13 "
vU.PJ Some 300 wives of Uni
versity of Vermont students
graduating May 27 will receive
"degrees" with their husbands
of the "P. H. T." variety.
10
esrwai
They'll be awarded to wives i by keeping house and "keeping
who pushed hubby through" I up with the diapers."
TODAY!
FIRST MEDFORD
SHOWING!
fi'
I
Open 7 p.m. Show jr Dusk
KIDS
ALL
ABOARD
Get Your Ticket at
Our Box Office
for a
FREE RIDE
on the
Shasta Daylite
Miniature
Train!
I Ufft
I
1 ENen Drew Rhys Williams ( I
.f5gitt CONTINUOUS TODAY
WgfZy FROM 12:45 P. M.
1
2 TOP
FIRST RUN
FEATURES
' 1
ARLENE DAHL
intiii unnui
lunn nuuinn rr-'Jzs
Rory Calhoun -Walter Brennan
Mothers Day
Treat Today!
For Mothers Over 60
A FREE SHOW
And . . .
A Free Corsage
Courtesty of . . .
MEDFORD
GREENHOUSE
Continuous Shows
From 12:45 P. M.
EVEN PRISON BARS
COULDNT STOP THE V
REVENGE THAT- T rT "3 f
STALKED 1
HER!
WMKd ju.ne fivoc
1..ar'&tfj-'.JS' I mioTT "WIS
fTpWj&jfpiT'j CATHY IIWIS
theft"
I lUIII KNIGHT
D I RAYMOND HATT0M
FIRST MEDFORD SHOWING
YOUNG HAN
WITH A HORN
AND
nr
REFORHER
AID THE
REDHEAD
". . . A grand shew, enjoyed It
thoroughly."
Mrs. N. K. Porter
730 Whitman Ave.
Mtdrord
". . . A wonderful comedy pic
ture, with a touch at morals in
it, which is food.
Mrs. W. S. Town
940 Kenyon Ave.
Medford
". . . Wonderful. Perfect in every
way.
Mr. I Mrs. R. J. M.tliek
Matlack's Super Market
Jacksonville Highway
MflUr Through
llVff
Wednesday
J2- - -
POWELL ALLYSOH
IUNC
DOES THE
REFORMER
REFORM THE
REDHEAD
OR DOES SHE
REFORM THE REFORMER?
o
Not Just
Pxix mm Comedy
FROM 12-.4S P. M. nia jvl