( 50 Representatives to 4 H
Summer School Announced
The 50 representatives from
Jackson county's 4-H clubs who
will attend the Annual 4-H Sum
mer school June 17 to 2? on the
Oregon State college campus
were announced yesterday by
R. H. Cate Jr., county agent in
4-H work.
The list includes 27 girls and
23 boys. The girls and their spon
sors are:
Dona Lee Brown. Applegate, Apple
gate Parent - Teachers association
. scholarship; Rose Marie Jantzer, Pros
pect. Red Blanket Lumber company:
Gwen Krouse, Applegate, Antelope
4-H home economics club; Catherine
Carroll, Eagle Point, county fair board.
Donna Eskew, Gold Hill, Oregon
Poultry producers; Lucy Gardener,
Eagle Point home extension unit; Cyn
thia Rukovina, Medford. J. C. Penney
company, Medford; Mitzy Baysinger,
Applegate, county fair board: Erma
Childress, Central Point, J. C. Penney,
Ashland; Verity Day, Gold Hill, coun
ty fair board.
Feme Kellow, West Side. West Side
parents ciub; Anita Kubll, Apple
gate, Medford Groceteria; Linda Mai-
loroy. Antelope, county fair board:
Vanetta Moeller. Roxy Ann. Roxy Ann
4-H club; Darlene Nye. Prospect
Lewis Clevenburg. Prospect Shopping
center: Jean Bitterllng, Antelope,
county fair board.
Beth Buck, Evans Valley. J. C. Pen
ney. Medford; Mildred Gail. Gold
Hill, U. S. National bank: Joann Rus
sell. Central Point, Rebecca lodge,
Medford: Gail Skyrrnan, Central
Point, state forestry board; Doreen
Bohnert, Antelope. Sears Roebuck
foundation: Beverly Nelson, Griffin
Creek, Griffin Creek Grange; Char
mayne Charley, Antelope, Eagle Point
Grange. .
Bemice Bigham, Antelope, Sears
Roebuck foundation; Marilyn Bohn
ert, Antelope, Camp Plummer award:
Shirley Nelson, Griffin Creek, county
fair board; and Dixie Moore, Eagle
Point, Eagle Point Grange.
The boys and their sponsors
are:
Charles Elmore. ADolegate. county
fair board; Hugh Millard. Upper
KOgue. UDDPr Hoeue 4-h ciud; jonn-
nie Rains, West Side, West Side home
economics unit; Monte Axtell, Upper
Rogue, Upper Rogue 4-H club: Francis
Krouse, Applegate, Central Point 4-H
club: Truman Price, Sams Valley,
central point uaraen ciud.
Plywood Workers
To those who are interested in buying a work
ing share in a going plant at Roseburg. For fur
ther information see Mr. Fah in the lobby of the
MEDFORD HOTEL, FRIDAY. JUNE 13, After
noon and evening.
WESTERN PLYWOOD ASSOCIATION
Norman Barnes. Howard. Centra!
Point Grange; Kenneth Bitterling, An
telope. Antelope 4-H club: Carl Do.
brot. Central Point, county fair board:
Marvin Hamilton, Bellview. Ashland
Elks: Gary Krouse. Applegate. Apple
gate PTA; Leland Nelson. Roxy Ann,
county fair board: Ray Shafer. Pros
pect, Eugene Burrill: Dale Smith, Cen
tral Point, county fair board.
Carl Ellis. Roxy Ann 4-H: Don
Smith. Medford. county fair board:
Don Parker. Gold Hill, Medford Gro
ceteria. Gold Hill Grange: Allen
Swearingen, Howard. Central Point
Grange: Joe Dale, Bellview, Ashland
Elks: Eddie Peile, Upper Rogue, Sears
Roebuck foundation: Dick Biles, Gold
Hill, U. S. National bank; Larry Shep
herd. Roxy Ann. Medford Groceteria;
and Michael Clark. Griffin Creek,
Central Point 4-H club.
Accompanying chaperones for
the group will be Mrs. Ferd
Jones, Gold Hill; Mrs. Barbara
Rukovina, Medford; Mrs. John
Bohnert, Central Point, and
Cate. '
The Jackson county health de
partment will offer exams for
communicable diseases from 9
a.m. to 12 noon, Monday, June
16, at the courthouse, for those
attending the school.
Also, Cate added, all girls at
tending are requested to bring
sewing boxes and supplies.
The delegation will leave at 8
a.m., June 17, from the court
house steps by chartered bus.
Radio programs will be regu
larly broadcast from station
KOAC, Cate added, with Satur
day, June 21, from 6:0 to 7 p.m.,
set aside for a feature on Jack
son and Morrow county delega
tions as the summer school. As
sembly programs will be broad
casted from June 18 to 26, 1 to 2
p.m., over the statiorl, with a
daily feature or county program
each day, June 17 to 27, 6:30 to
7 p.m.
It takes the government ex
actly one second, according to
Sen. Byrd of Virginia to spend
all the federal taxes paid by a
man with a' wife and two chil
dren, earning' $12,000 a year.
Thursday. Jun. 12, 1952
. J". J. .J
j I
jg.
...
i- - , - aar
BOATS IDLE This cluster of idle ore boats waited lazily In Cleve
land harbor June 9 for end of the steel strike. Crews remain
aboard ready to dash for the head of the lakes when activity is
resumed. Empty boats are idle because iron ore miners quit work
in sympathy with steel strikers, and the lake front docks are filled
with ore which cannot be moved to steel mills.
Juvenile Advisory Group Will Meet
Look for this money Ml 5T "' &fdfjiid? f
y taking label while ffif
supplies lattl
A special meeting of the ju
venile court advisory committee
has been called for next Monday
evening, June 16, at 8 o'clock in
the courthouse, it was announced
today.
John Schapps, western direc
tor of the National Probation
and Parole association, will at
tend the meeting and report on
the survey of detention home
needs which has been made in
the county by the national as
sociation.
Other matters of importance
to the juvenile court program
will also be discussed, according
to Mrs. Victor Birdseye, hair
regular
size jar
of this
hew coffee I
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE FIVE
Agriculture Planners Eye
Wheat Crop for Next Year
Washington U.R) Agri
culture Department planners
got out their long-range slide
rules Thursday for a study of
next year's wheat crop,. .
prospects oi near - record
production this year 1,326,-
000,000 bushels led to the
prompt review" of the nation's
wheat needs into motion.
Mutt Decide on Limits
Secretary of Agriculture
Charles F. Brannan must de
cide by July 1 if limits on the
1953 crops are needed to make
room for other crops on the
In some villages of Cavite in
the Philippines when someone
is robbed and the suspects arc
living in the same house with
him, he usually forces the sus
pects to chew raw rice. The one
who spits the most sticky sal
iva is considered the thief on
the assumption that because he
Is guilty he is excited and
chews faster.
man of the advisory committee
and it is hoped every organiza
tion will have a representative
present. Anyone interested is
welcome to attend, she added.
farms or to stave off a wheat
surplus.
"We are certainly put in the
position of having to look a sec
ond time at the wtieat situa
tion," a department spokesman
said.
The department forecast Tues
day for this year the second
largest wheat output on record.
If achieved, the crop would
bring the total supply up to
the technical "normal supply"
level required for the setting
of acreage allotments or mar
keting quotas on the following
year's crop.
' Most department spokesmen
Bliss Heine's Juniors
Leave for Rose Festival
A Pacific Greyhound bus and
a caravan of 10 cars left here
this morning to taKe members of
Bliss Heine's Junior's and chap
erones to the Portland Rose fes
tival. The group plans to stay
at West Linn on the Willamette
river, and will travel by bus to
and from Portland during the
festival.
- They plan to return home Sun
day afternoon.
feel that chances for restric
tions on plantings next year
are slim. They think Brannan
will choose to reduce the de
partment's 1953 wheat goal and
hope farmers will follow it bet
ter than they did this year's
goal.
One expert said imposition
of controls on wheat produc
tion next year "would not be
realistic" in the light of the in
ternational situation.
Use Mall Tribune Want Ada
0OUIII IW STMNGTH
Of MGUlAt Sal SODA
This Improved Wash
ing soda gives you
water soft as rain.
Washes your clothes
with less soaking and
less rubbing. . -
Not a powder! Nof a grind! But millions of tiny
FLAVOR BUDS" of real coffee ... ready to burst instantly
into that famous MAXWELL HOUSE FLAVOR!
How thU ipeclal offer can
ortually av. you thlrty-i cntil
Thta regular jar of Instant Maxwell Hra
ef aW as many cups a. one pound ol
oWnd coffee-yet it ccU you about
25 leaa, even at P'. price
STbout thirty-fU cenu-ar more than one
tW the cost of regular ground coffee!
Utterly unlike old-style "instants"
just as quick-to-fix, but
tastes so deliriously different! . . j
100 pure coffee no fillers
added! Don't delay get your jar
at your grocer's today I
The only instant coffee with that
PRICES FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY
Stuffed or Green PLYMOUTH
OLIVES COFFEE
VA OZ. 2 OZ. lb
Maraschino 4 A our own iffx
CHERRIES I UC BLEND M VC
24 OZ. U-6RIND UG
Sunshine Krispy
Crackers 1 lb. pkg. 26c
Sunshine Hydrox
Cookies 12 oz. pkg. 39c
Sunshine Mint Pillow
Candy 12 oz. pkg. 33c
WESSON OIL
Quarts 61c
Snowdrift Shortening
3 lbs. 86c
REMEMBER DAD ON FATHER'S DAY CARTON
Popular Brand Cigarettes I-59
Better Produce
at Lower Prices
TASTY
CANTALOUPES
2 for 35c
SOLID
CABBAGE
Lb. 5c
GOLDEN
BANANAS
2 lbs. 29c
.HUNT'S
Garden Swt. Peas
14 oz. can 15c
BLUE PLATE
Broken Shrimp
WET PACK
5 oz. can 36c
DEL ROGUE
Tomato Juice
No. 2 can 13c
SLICING
tbh TOMATOES 27
MEDFORDS FINEST MEATS
MORRELL OR OREGON CHIEF TENDERIZED
PICNIC HAMS 49c
FRESH
LING COD
HALF WHOLE
Lb. 25c
Cascade Brand
BACON
ENDS PIECES
Lb. 19c
Open 8 a .m.-9 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m. -8 p.m.
COOP-TO-THE-LAST-PROP flavor!
StH STAMPS
S26 SOUTH RIVERSIDE
S&H STAMPS