0
o o
o
Local and Personal
3
Medical Care Mrs. William
Johnson, Rogue River, is receiv
ing medical care at Osteopathic
hospital, attendants said today.
o
Roxy Ann HEC A meeting
of the RjDxy Ann Grange Home
Economics club is planned for
Wednesday, Jan. 5, at 1 p.m.
Visit Daughter Mr. and Mrs.
a W. H. Arnold, Arnold rd. and
Bellinger lane, have arrived
home after visiting in San Ma
o teo, Calif., with their sonn-law
o and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. C.
W. Carlon and family.
Lady Lions Medford Lady
Lions will meet Tuesday, Jan. 4,
at the Rogue Villey Country club
for a dinner meeting and reports
will be given concerning the
group's recent toy project.
Visits Parents Jerry O. Holl
8 oway, a student at Eugene high
school, visited his parents, Mr.
arid Mrs. Roy V. Holloway, dur
ing the holidays. Also visiting at
the Holloways was Miss Barbara
Barker, a University of Oregon
student. Q .
Tamily Home Mr. and Mrs.
L. W. Schaecher and sons, Lar
rygand Ronnie, 1129 Dakota
ave., arrived Home New Year's
eve from a week's trip to Idaho.
"They visited sisters of Schaech
er at Jerome and Pocatello.
Student Leaves Darrel
3 Brown, a freshman at Oregon
L State college, returned this
morning to Corvallis after being
here for the holidays. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Orrin L.
Brown, 1203 Queen Anne ave.
The Brown's son, Kenneth L.
Brown, has returned to Pt. Mu-
gu, Calif., where he is stationed
with the Navy. He visited here
through Christmas.
From Canada Henry New
comb, Vancouver, B. C, is vis
iting Mr. and Mrs. Quintin Jor
dan, Jacksonville. He arrived
here with thern the end of the
week after the Jordans with
their sons, David and Harold,
had visited at Vancouver and
Westminster, B.C., for the holi
days. Newcomb is a cousin of
Mrs. Jordan and he' plans to be
here for about a month or long-
er.
o
" Farm Bureau Members of the
Central Point center of the Farm
Bureau will have as their guest
o speaker, Robert Fowler, Jack-
son county assessor, at a meeting
Tuesday, Jan. 4, at 8 p.m., in the
West Side school. He will discuss
-a county taxation. Reports will be
. given concerning proposed legis-
1 lation sponsored by the bureau
atthe Oregon state 1955 legisla
ture. The status of the dairy and
beef industries and an outlook
report on 1955 for turkey pro
ducers will be given. Anyone in
q terested is invited.
0
Alr Sacred Heart Medical pa-
00 tients listed today at Sacred
Hearty hospital include Eugene
0 Geary, two months, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Mickey Geary, Trail;
Waltec0Quisenberry, 800 South
Oakdale ave.,; Mrs. Leo Ray
o Bornamann, Gold Hill; Patricia
Stockman, 9, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John Stockman, 928 Board
man st.; Mrs. William Ryan, 103
Mistletoe st., and Joy Ann Guid
ry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
o Francis Guidry, Jacksonville.
Those having surgery there to
day include Mr. Ildefonso Gon
zalez, 128 Chestnut st.: Mrs. John
Grantham, 35219Table Rock rd.,
and Mrs. Bernie Moore, Central
Point.
Similar Doors Prove
q Celebranf's Undoing
Long Beach, Calif. U.PJ
Similar apartment doors moved
0 to be Carl R. Carlson's undoing
0 after a night of celebrating the
New Year.
Carlson, 50, staggered weari
ly into Mrs. Jane Berry's apart-
ment, "Hi, Honey . . . guess I'll
0 go to bed."
"I don't know who you are,"
-, Bfrs. Berry snapped.
0 "Aw, quit your kidding," Carl
son replied as he pulled the
m covers over himself.
w Mrs. Berry wasn't. She called
S police who hit Carlson with a
drunk charge.
SPORT
0 Bostonians Gain
Second Place Tie
By UNITED PRESS
A Si 13-96 victory over the
New York Knickerbockers mov-
ed'lBoston up today into a tie
0 for second-place in the Eastern
(p division of the National Basket
ball association and also even
with the .500 mark.
The triumph at Boston, paced
by rookie Frank Ramsey's 27
points, left the Celtics and the
Knicks each with 15-15 records,
0 two games behind the pace-setting
Syracuse Nationals.
The Milwaukee Hawks pre
vented Syracuse from extending
its division lead by upsetting
the Nationals, 91-79, while in
othes league games Sunday
nighf, Fort Wayne trounced
Philadelphia, 89-66, and Roches
ter won a 102-100 thriller from
Minneapolis. -
I At Community Peter ' Math-
eny, 601 Fifth st., Jacksonville,
and Roy H. Hageman, 1615
Grand ave., are medical patients
at Community hospital, attend
ants said today.
From Roseburg Mrs. Nina
Coon, 1217 Dakota ave., return
ed Sunday from Roseburg where
she visited with relatives
through the holidays.
Return Mr. and Mrs. Ed
mund E. Haas, 810 East Jack
son st., arrived home over the
week end after visiting in south
ern California.
Chimney Fire Firemen re
ported that no damage resulted
from a flue fire Saturday night
at. the home of Charles Ward,"
405 Oak Grove rd.
In Bay Area The Rev. and
Mrs. W. J. Loar, and son, David
and daughter, Margaret, Haw
thorne apartments, visited in
Berkeley and Alameda, Calif.,
during the holidays with Mrs.
Loar's parents, and the Rev. Mr.
Loar's mother The family re
turned home Sunday.
Al Game Among those who
returned Sunday from San Fran
cisco where they attended the
East-West football game were
E. B. DeVoe, Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert Lockwood and Gary Wine
trout. DeVoe went down by
plane and the group returned
together by car.
Graduated Roy B. Conner, a
Navy boatswain's mate second
class, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clar
ence Conner, 1060 Barnett rd.,
was graduated from the service
force petroleum school at Pearl
Harbor, T. H., according to a
Navy release.
At Pittsburg Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Lovejoy, Central Point,
are home after visiting in Pitts
burg, Calif., through the holi
days with Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Schroeder, former Medford resi
dents. They also visited in the
Bay area with Mr. and Mrs.
Emil Sandell, , former Jackson
ville residents.
.
From Klamath Mrs. Frank
Worrell, 214 Girard dr., arrived
home5 Sunday after being in
Klamath Falls since before
Christmas when she was called
there by the critical illnes of
her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Bill
Stafford. Mrs. Stafford was con
fined to the hospital there and
now is convalescing at her
home at 1529 Wiard st., Klam
ath Falls.
Promoted Harold L. Setzer,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester C.
Setzer, Prospect, has been pro
moted to the rank of corporal
in the Marine corps, according
to a release from the corps. He
is stationed . at Cherry Point,
N.C. Before entering the corps
in August, 1953, he was gradu-(
ated from the Prospect high
school. He is . serving with the
Marine photographic Squadron
2 of the 2nd, Marine aircraft
wing. ,
Graduated Pfc. Steve E.
Swedberg, son of Mrs. Cecile L.
Bulebar, 1123 Court st., recent
ly was graduated from the
Army's Far East antiaircraft
artillery specialist's school in
Japan, according to an Army re
lease. He completed the school's
artillery meteorological course.
He is regularly assigned to Bat
tery C of the 138th AAA group,
part of the 30th AAA battalion.
Before entering the Army in
November, 1953, he attended
Oregon State college and South
ern Oregon college.
Newcomers Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Geunther and son, Jimmy,
arrived today from Portland
and will live at 1141 Dakota
ave., where they hav8 purchased
the home. Geunther has been
transferred here by Tracy and
Co., an electrical automotive
firm. He replaces Ronald L.
Shellhart who was promoted
transferred by the company to
Eugene. The Sheflharts left this
morning with their daughter,
Carolyn, ' a first grade student,
and Roger, preschool age. The
Geunthers have a young son,
Jimmy.
At Air Station Richard Mile
stone Jr., a Navy chief hospital
corpsman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Milestone, route 1, box
149, Central Point, and husband
of the former Miss Mary L.
Preston of Medford, has report
ed for duty at the Navy Air
station at Norfolk," Va., accord
ing to a release from the navy.
A veteran of -13 years Navj
service, Milestone reported from
the Navy at Oakland, Calif. He
attended Medford high school.
Florence Corbin Funeral
At Rogue River Tuesday
Grants Pass Funeral serv
ices for Florence Agnes Corbin,
54, of route 4, box 130, Grants
Pass, who died at her home Sat
urday, will be held at Hope
Presbyterian church at Rogue
River Tuesday at 2 p.m. with
the Rev. D. F. Barnett officiat
ing. Interment will be in Wood
ville cemetery at Rogue River.
The L. B. Hall funeral home at
Grants Pass has charge of ar
rangements. The deceased was born at
Minneapolis, Minn., on Sept. 20,
1900. Survivors include her hus
band, Henry.
Obituaries
FRANCIS CRAIG
Funeral services for Francis
Marion Craig, 67, of Beall lane,
who died at his home Saturday,
will be held at Perf funeral
home Tuesday at 2 p.m. with the
Rev. Joseph Bowdoin, Shady
Cove, officiating. Interment will
be in Medford IOOF cemetery.
The deceased, a Medford resi
dent for the past 32 years, was
born in Chase county, Kansas,
on July 16, 1887, and was a
farmer.
Survivors include his wife,
Ethel, Medford; a son Frank D.,
Medford; two daughters, Mrs.
Fern Schmidt, San Francisco,
and Mrs. Edythe Herroitt, Med
ford; two sisters, Mrs. Alice
Kindred, Long Beach, Calif., and
Mrs. Rose Sims, Seattle; a broth
er, Charles, Pocatello, Ida.; six
grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren.
Boise
Boston
Chicago
Denver .
Eureka
Grants Pass
t Havre
Klamath Falls
Los Angeles
EMIL LARSON
Funeral services for Emil
Fritz Larson, 59, who died Sat
urday at his home, 701 South
Keeneway drive, will be held at
2 p.m. Wednesday in Chapel
Mortuary, with the Rev. G. H.
Hillerman of the Zion Lutheran
church officiating. Interment
will be in Siskiyou Memorial
park. ,
Pall bearers will be Milton
Winn, Gene Champagne, Albert
Nelson, Rudolph Kadin, Edwin
Kadin and Robert Trautman.
The body will lie in state at
the mortuary this evening and
Tuesday until 10:30 p.m. for
those wishing to pay their, re
spects. The deceased was born in
Chicago, 111., on April 4, 1895.
He was married in Chicago on
Sept. 12, 1917, to Edna M.
Stringham, who survives. The
family came to Medford seven
years ago, where he has been
employed by Kogap lumber in
dustries. HS was a member of
the Lutheran church.
Other survivors include a
daughter, Mrs. Edna - Kadin,
Medford; a sister, Mrs. Frank
Young, Chicago; a brother, Art
hur, Cedar Lake, Ind., and two
grandchildren.
DON PARTON
Don Perry Parton, 57, of
Jacksonville, died todav in a
local hospital. Conger-Morris
funeral home is in charge of
funeral arrangements.
Wall Street
EATON'S 1
DINNER HOUSE
113 Crater Lake Ave.
ITALIAN AND
AMERICAN DINNERS
SPECIAL All the Spahettl and
Homemade Ravioli you can eat.
Includes Home Made Bread,
Butter and Coffee. j QQ
5 course 1tXluan'dinner
$1.50
Open 5:30 POM. Till 9 P.M.
Fri, Sat, Sun., and Mon. Only.
New York (U.R) General
Motors common stock soared
nearly a billion dollars to carry
industrial shares to an all time
record high today.
The industrial average regis
tered a rise of more than 5
points, best since the spurt the
day after election. Rails rose to a
new average high since April
26, 1930. Utilities lost a few
cents.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T .....175V4
Anaconda 52
Chrysler . 73
Curtiss Wright ...... 17V2
General Electric . 48 V4
General Motors 105
Montgomery Ward 81Vfc
Penn. R. R
Penney, J. C. ..
Radio
Southern Co IZVa
S. Oil of Calif 78 Va
Texas Gulf Sulphur . 124
Transamerica . . 41
Tri-Continental 273,4
United Aircraft 781's
U. S. Rubber 4434
U. S. Steel . 75
Youngstown 73 $4
23 34
... 86V4
39
VAN DYKE, WIFE WINNERS
Government Camp, Ore. (U.R)
Kenny VanDyke, of the Schnee
Vogeli Ski Club, posted the best
time for Class A division men
Sunday "in the 17t1i renewal of
the Portland Day trail ski races
at Government Camp on Mt.
Hood. His wife, Betty Van Dyke,
of AWS, was winner of the Class
B women competition, despite a
painful spill near the finish line
that cut her victory margin.
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday : 10 a jn. Monday for
Monday: other days 5:30 orevioiw day
Daily Weaier Report
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Increasing
cloudiness tonight. Chances of a few
light showers Tuesday. Low tonight
2U-30. High Tuesday 45-48.
Oregon (Western): Partly cloudy
over southern portion tonight and
Tuesday. Increasing, cloudiness in
north half tonight, becoming cloudy
with occasional showers by Tuesday
afternoon. Little temperature change.
Low tonight 32-42 except 25 southern
interior. High Tuesday 42-50.
LOCAL DATA
Temperature a year ago today:
Highest 41; Lowest 32.
Total monthly precipitation 2.A in.
Excess for the month .08 inches.
Total precipitation since September
1. 1955. 4.92 inches. Deficiency for the
season 3.60 inches.
Selative humidity 4:30 p.m. yester
day 68; 4:30 ajn. today 91.
TOMORROW
Sunrise 7:40 a.m. Sunset 4:52 p.m.
OBSERVATIONS TAKEN AT
4:30 AJtt., 120 MERIDIAN TIME
nign low prec.
35
44
33
51
18
33
29
48 34
42 30
Medford
New York ..
Omaha
Phoenix
Portland
Reno
Eugene
Salt Lake
San Francisco
Seattle
18
30
60
Spokane
Washington, D. C.
Yakima ,
11
12
45
45 25
52 36
54 42
61 50
.... 45 35
30 18
43 27
41 94
52 36
39 32
30 21
63 41
38 28
.46
.03
.13
.02
Portland Livestock
Portland (U.P.) Cattle 2400. High
good and choice around 1050-1100 lb.
fed steers $24. Commercial and good
fd heifers 17.50-S19.50; some higher.
Canner and cutter cows mostly 8
$$50; shells down to $6:50 and below;
utility cows 11-512.50; young commer
cial cows up to $15; utility and com
mercial bulls 12.50-S15.
Calves 100. Good and choice veal
ers 18-S22; choice around 330-350
lb. calves 17-$19.
Hogs 1500. Choice 180-235 lbs.,
largely 20-S20.50; choice three lots
$19.50; choice 350-450 lb. sows 16-$17.
Portland Produce
Portland (U.P.) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large 41-45c doz; A
large 39-42c; AA medium 39-41c; A
medium, 38-40c; A small, 32-33c doz.;
cartons. l-3c additional.
Butter To retailers: AA grade
prints, 66c lb; cartons. 67c: A prints,
66c; cartons. 67c; B prints, 64c.
Cheese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar Oregon singles. 42',i-451,jc; 5-lb.
loaves. 46i-491jc Processed Ameri
can cheese. 5-lb. loaf, 39 ii-41c lb.
Farm Market
Willamette valley cauliflower cab
bage and broccolli were short supply
today on the Portland East Side Farm
ers' market. Prices held fully steady
to firm.
Vegetable market, trading1 was fea
tured by steady to firm listings with
higher prices for California lettuce,
yams, sweet potatoes and Florida to
matoes. Cellar stocks of yams and sweet
potatoes brought sharply'higher prices
at most houses with name brand yarns
going at 5.50-S5.75 a -50-pound basket,
with best sweet potatoes changing
hands at 6.50-$6.75.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers (No. 1
quality, f.o.b. Portland): Frayers, 2,i
to 4 J2 lbs. 2ic lb; at farm. 2pc lb:
roasters. 4V2 lbs and up. 21c lb. f.o.b.
Portland. 20-21c at ranch; light hens,
11c; heavy hens, all wts. 13c lb; old
roosters, 10c lb.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers, 34-35c lb; roasters,
36-37c; light hens, 21-2Bc: heavy hens,
26-27c; cut up fryers, all wts, 45-46c;
whole drawn. 40-41c.
Turkeys Paying prices to produc
ers for 1954 turkeys: Heavy type hens.
29c lb. f.o.b. farm on N. Y. dressed
basis; toms same basis. 25 lbs. up, 21c;
under 25 lbs. 21c lb. Beltsville hens,
31c; light type toms. 25c; fryer-roaster,
27c lb. liveweight. To retailers, A
grade hens, ready to cook, 48c; N. Y.
dressedT to 43c lb. A. grade toms, oven
ready, 40c. BeltsVllIe A. grade hens,
oven-ready, to 52c; Beltsville toms, 49c
lb.
Rabbits (average to growers, f.o.b.
killing plants) Live white. 3i-4'2
lbs. 18-20c up; 5-6-lb. 14-16c: colored
pelts, 4c under; old does, 8-10c lb; a
few higher. Fresh dressed fryers to
retailers, 54-57c, cut up, 60-63c
Portland Cash Grain
Portland Prices as reported in the
USDA market news service: Wheat,
No. 2 soft white. $78.50 a ton bulk,
prompt delivery f.o.b. Portland. No. 2
white oats, 38-lb test. Coast delivery,
S7.50 ton; Portland delivery, $56
ton. No. 2 Western barley. $54 f.o.b.
Portland. Coast delivery. Soybean
meal, $95.50 a ton, cars, prompt de
livery Portland, Std. millrun, prompt
shipment, f.o.b. Portland. $44.50 ton;
No. 2 yellow corn, $67.50 ton, f.o.b.
Portland.
Wholesale Hay Prices: No. 2 green
alfalfa, baled f.o.b. Portland. 34-$35
trucks, 36-S37 rail.
Portland 'Grain Exchange:
Friday's close: .
Soft white ! $2.34
do no rex 2.34
White club 2.34
H. R. winter, 11 per cent . 2.36
do 12 per cent
Monday, January 3, 195S
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN
.... 2.45
Births
GREGORY To Mr. and Mrs.
William, 25 Myers courts, Dec.
30, 1954, a girl, 63a pounds, at
Osteopathic hospital.
GALBRAITH To Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond, route 3, box
169A. Medford. Jan. 2. 1955. a
boy, 6V4 pounds, at Community
hospital.
The .
CQTTAGI
KITCHIN
On Crater Lake Hijfcway
WILL OPEN
for lusi.ess
As Usual
TUESDAY,
JANUARY 4th
Wo Will Bo Closed
MONDAY G TUESDAY
JANUARY S & 4fh
Fop Inventory
CYCLE & HOBBY SHOP
23 North Fir Phone 2-2472
Man
s Explorations During 1954
Probe Skies, Oceans, Mountains
Washington In the endless
guest to broaden knowledge of
the earth, sea and sky, explorers
made far-reaching discoveries
and attained new records in
1954.
Indications that Mars is a liv
ing planet with simple vegeta
tion marked the end of a six
month astronomical expedition
sponsored by the Nationtl Geo
graphic Society and Lowell Ob
servatory of Flagstaff, Arizona,
the Society noted today in its
annual year-end summary of
major geographic achievements.
New Mars Photos
Dr. E. C. Slipher returned
from Bloemfontein, South Af
rica, with 20,000 new photo
graphs of Mars that clearly
showed its great blue - green
markings, gleaming polar caps,
frost areas, swirling clouds and
dust storms.
Mars in 1954 made its closest
approach to .the earth in 13
years. Scientists in 18 observa
tories around the "world gauged
temperatures on Mars, meas
ured its diameter more accurate
ly and made other observations
for the International Mars Com
mittee. Progress on Palomar
On Palomar Mountain, Cal
ifornia, astronomers completed
their best season's work on the
monumental Sky Survey spon
sored by the Societyand the Cal
ifornia Institute of Technology.
It was disclosed that cthe first
section of the Survey's atlas of
the universe, now six years in
the making, will be published in
1956.
Observers discovered a new
minor planet on Dec. 5. This was
the latest addition to the Sur
vey's mounting list of new as
teroids, comets, nebulosities and
star clusters.
As the 48-inch "Big Schmidt"
phototelescope and 200-inch Hale
telescope unfolded secrets of
the universe, man probed deep
er into the sea.
On Feb. 15, two French naval
officers made a record descent
of 13,287 feet in a bathyscaphel
off the coast of Dakar, French
West Africa. They beat by 2,948
feet the previous record set by
Swiss Professor :Auguste Pic
card in .1953,.
In September, .two French
cave explorers descended 2,485
foet in the Berger Cave near
Grenoble, France, setting a new
world's record for exploration
in a natural underground cavern.
Top of the World
Spurred by the 1953 conquest
of Mt. Everest, at 29,028 feet
the world's 'tallest summit,
climbers from 11 countries chal
lenged other peaks in the Hima
layas. A team of Italian mountain
eers battled to the top of 28,-
250- foot Godwin Austen (K2),
second highest mountain, on
July 31. A British group recon
noitered "Kanchenjuna (28,166
feet), the world's third tallest
peak and the loftiest unsealed
mountain.
An Austrian expedition con
quered Cho Oyu (26,867 feet),
seventh highest peak. A French
woman who tried Cho Oyu with
a Swiss team reportedly reached
25,496 feet, a record for a wom
an climber.
In the Arctic, two United
States icebreakers made a his
toric journey in August. They
pierced, for the first time, the
formidable M'Clure Strait that
connects the Arctic Ocean with
Viscount Melville Sound.
M'Clure Strait is a western en
trance, of the famous Northwest
Passage that has been navigated
through other routes.
Underwater Divide
Russian scientists reported
finding a vast underwater divide
between the New Siberian
Islands and Greenland. The
scientists said their research pro
gram, started in 1948, had es
tablished , there never was a
north polar land mass.
Members of a United States
Canadian survey expedition
found and used food and equip
ment left behind more than 45
years ago by Rear Admiral Rob
ert E. Peary, who discovered
the North Pole.
Another expedition led by a
Jesuit priest of Boston College
reported that it localized the
North Magnetic Pole in a trian
gle on the northwest end of
Prince of Wales Island. The
Magnetic Pole has shifted about
150 miles west and slightly
south of the position established
in 1946.
A British expedition com
pleted a two-year study in north
Greenland. The explorers said
seismic soundings established
that ice in north Greenland ex
tends at places to a depth of 10,
000 ieet, although the ice cap is
becoming smaller.
Mystery of the Dorsets
Remains of the largest settle
ment yet found of the ancient
and little known Dorset people
of the Canadian Arctic were un
covered on the southeast coast
of Southampton Island in Hud
son Bay. The expedition was
sponsored by the National Geo
graphic Society, National Muse
um of Canada and Smithsonian
Institution.
Another expedition, sponsored
by the University of Pennsyl
vania Museum and National Mu
seum of Denmark, found re
mains of a Dorset village eight
miles north of the 'Arctic Circle
on Melville Peninsula. .
Still unanswered, however, is
the mystery of what hjippened
to the Dorset people whr lived
more than 1,000 years ago- No
human bones came to light.
At the bottom of the world,
the Antarctic lured flew explora
tion parties.
On Dec. 1, the U.S.S. Atka left
Boston for a five-month recon
naissance " trip to prepare for a
major United States expedition
in 1957. The crew of the ice
breaker will investigate Little
America, near the outer edge of
Whales. The first Little America
the Ross Shelf Ice on the Bay of
settlement was established in
1929 by Rear Admiral Richard
E. Byrd, who led the Navy's big
expedition to the Antarctic in
1946-47.
Like other countries, the Uni
ted States is making studies pre-
ASHLAND
Marlon BRANDO
Jean SIMMONS
Tbchn i cetson. '
ftteri MkhtMl ?g
OKRON UNNIESal
Box Office Opens 6:30
NOW SHOWINGI
MUSICAL OF MUSICALS!
21
ROMBERG
SONGS
3
VI
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Is-TBctfHtCOtt.!,,
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sfc HELEN TRAVBtSLi
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jHOTARD KEEL. TONY MARTIN
PLUS CARTOON - NEWS
Iraq, Russia Break
Diplomatic Relations
Bagdad, Iraq. U.R) Iraq has
broken off diplomatic relations
with Russia, it was announced
today.
The Iraqi government formal
ly notified the Soviet Union of
its decision to suspend relations
in a note to the Soviet charge
d'affairs in Baghdad, Ivan Ya
koushin. .
The reasons for the break
were not disclosed.
liminary to the International
Geophysical Year. 1957-58. when
38 nations will carry out world
wide research in such fields as
meteorology, cosmic rays, solar
activity. oceanoEraDhv and ela-
ciology.
On Mac - Robertson Coast,
about 1500 miles from the South
Pole, Australia set up what is
intended to be Its first perman
hent station on toe Antarctic
continent. The British sent out
a two-year expedition to moun
tainous Palmer Peninsula.
Highway users paid $6,000,
000,000 in taxes in 1953.
VI
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Here comes Mom's own special delivery
man, heavy of cargo and light of heart.
Home's mighty pleasant, and he's headed
there with some of the things that help
make it so. -
Manufacturers bring his family better and
bettes products all the time result of
constant competition against each other to
keep their brands in demand.
That's where Mom's smart. She knows
this. So she reads this newspaper to keep
up on latest product improvements . . . to
learn about entirely new items ... to find
out where she can get them. And when she
learns which brands serve her best, she buys
by the trademarks that identify them.
that's how Mom keeps home twed
BRAND NAMES FOUNDATION
INeOKPOItATIB
A HpK-PROFIT tOUCATtOHAL FOUNDATION
7 WUT IT STNCCr. NEW YORK 1. M. T.
WANT VAIUET PATRONIZE THf DfAlfR WHO PROVIDES YOUR FAVORITE IRAN DS