o
)
o
Local and
At Market Mrs. George Cod
ding left Saturday for Los An
geles for about a week to attend
millinery market shows and pur
chase hats for Hadleys hat shop
Holv Communion Holv com-
i munion will be celebrated
S Thursday, Jan. 6 at 11 a. m.,
w at St. Mark's Episcopal church
in honor of the Feast of the
C Epiphany.
H In Hospital George McDon
aid, 14-year-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. Delbert McDonald, route 2
o box 203A, Central Point, under
went surgery in Osteopathic hos
pital this morning, the hospital
reported.
o
From Nampa Mr. and Mrs.
u Marion Sutton, Nampa, Ida., left
Monday after visiting since
Christmas with "Mr. and Mrs.
John O'Dell. 1445 Lawnridge
st., their son-in-law and daugh
ter; and Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy
Sutton, Gold Hill, their son and
ms family.
To North Dakota Glenn Mc-
Cullough, Medford agency man
ager for Provident Life Insur
ance company, will leave Friday
to aend a housewarming and
business meeting in the newly
completed home office of the
firm at Bismarck, N. D.
.
Moving Back Mr. and Mrs
William Leever and family are
returning from Klamath Falls
. to live in Medford. They will
."" stay for the present at 17 Haw
thorne st., and young Leever
again will be associated with his
father and brother at Leever
Motor company.
Family Moves Mrs. Ann
Brown and daughters, Nancy
and Catherine, her mother, Mrs
' Etta Healey, and aunt, Mrs.
Maud Patton, have moved from
' 28 Myrtle st., to 114 Genessee
t. .Mrs. Brown is employed as
a secretary at the Elks club.
Mrs. Patton recently arrived
here from Rifle, Colo., to make
." her home with the family.
In England - Navy Chief
; Radio Electrician Cyril "H. Al
'bert, son of Mrs. M. E. Albert,
775 South Holly st., was in Lon
don, England, during the Christ-
f mas season, according to a Navy
release. He is stationed at head-
, quarters of Adm. John H. Cas-
sady, Navy commander in chief
of Naval forces in the Eastern
. Atlantic and Mediterranean.
Teacher in Hospital Mrs.
Kenneth Hulburt, a teacher at
Roosevelt school, underwent ma
jor surgery at Community hos
pital this morning, the hospital
reported. The Hulburts live at
542 Haven st. Other surgery pa
tients reported were Clyde B.
Bunker, Eagle Point; Mrs. Har
old Ricks, 721 South Stage rd.,
and Mrs. Guy Garletz, 14 South
Bartlett st. In Community hos
pital for medical care are Ray
Clark, Sunnyvale, Ore., and Orin
Train, Trail.
Amazing New Safe
SCIENCE NOW HELPS YOU TAKE
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THE FOODS YOU CHOOSE
FRIENDS! Let Me Ask Yon a Simple Question
Are you too fat because you eat too much?
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control your appetite and like to eat too much
of the wrong kind of food? Do you like sweets,
candy, cake and are you a real glutton when it
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tried one thing after another to reduce, spent
dollar after dollar for pills and tablets and in
spite of everything you've tried you're still
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os For Easy Reducing
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Personal
In Bay Area Mr. and Mrs.
Zerald Laurine, Loring court,
has returned after being in San
Francisco and San Jose for sev
eral days. They attended the
East-West game while south.
At Roseville Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Gist, 558 Haven st., re
turned home the end of the week
after being for a week at Rose
ville, Calif., to visit their daugh
ter and her family, the William
L. Hulls.
Home Among the servicemen
home for the holidays was Terry
Grant, airman third class, who
visited his mother, Mrs. Evelyn
Grant, 517 Spencer ave. A 1954
Graduate of Medford high school,
he is now training in helicopter
mechanics at Gary Air Force
base in Texas.
Family Returns Mr. and Mrs.
Ken Murray and daughters, Mar
jo and Nyla. Crater Lake hieh-
way, and Lottie-Mae Combs, re
turned Sunday from San Fran
cisco, where they visited Jheir
nephew, Walter Linnell, former
resident, and his family.
From Idaho Mr. and Mrs.
Hiram V. Martin and children,
Alice, Susan, Sarah, Hiram and
Jimmy, 1386 Hilton rd., have re
turned after visiting at Elk River,
Ida., near Moscow, with friends,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Blackwell
and family.
Visit Parents Mr. and Mrs.
Addison Robinson, 2375 O'Gara
St., had as their visitors during
the holidays their son and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Lvle
Younger, and family, and Mr.
ana Mrs. Clinton Hunter of
Grants Pass. Hunter is Mrs. Rob
inson's brother.
Wins Contest Mrs. Arthur
Levin, 303 North Berkeley Way,
recently received word that she
is a second prize winner in the
Kraft Oil-Gorham sterling silver
contest. This was a national
jingle contest, and as her prize
Mrs. Levine will receive a three-
piece sterling silver hostess cof
fee set.
Graduated Maurise Paul
son, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
M. Paulson, route 1, box 528,
Gold Hill, has been graduated
from pre-flight school at the
Navy air station at Pensacola,
Fla., according to a letter to the
Paulsons from B. M. Strean,
commanding officer. Paulson is
a Central Point high school grad
uate and' he entered the service
in August, 1954.
Jailed Briefly Richard Dean
Ragan, 23, of 1336 Morrow rd.,
was jailed for several hours
yesterday before payment of the
balance of an overload fine, ac
cording to the sheriff's office.
Ragan was released after pay
ment of $66, the balance unpaid
of an $81 fine set for payment
in November. He was ordered
committed on Dec. 8, but was
not jailed until yesterday, court
officials said.
Discovery Makes
Just recently a well known scientist perfected a "hew tiny capsule
that combines not one but ALL THE RECOGNIZED proven
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Mail Orders Filled
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Obituaries
JOHN PARTON
Funeral services for John
Terry Parton, 56, of Trail, who
died Monday, will be held in
Conger-Morris t chapel Thursday
at 2:30 p.m. with the Rev. R. H.
Mathewson of the Four Square
Gospel church officiating. Inter
ment will be in Trail cemetery.
The deceased was born Feb.
15, 1898, in North Carolina, and
had lived in southern Oregon
since 1933.
Survivors include five sons,
Ralph E., Prospect; Howard R.,
Stockton, Calif.; James Donald,
Medford; Staff Sergeant Paul D.,
USAF, Larson Air Force base,
Wash.; and Weston E., Medford;
four daughters, Mrs. John H.
Robbins, Medford; Mrs. Byron
Jones, Grants Pass; Mrs. James
H. Stackhouse, McChord Field,
Wash.; and Miss Phyllis Parton,
Grants Pass; a half brother,
James Estes, Moscow, Ida., and
13 grandchildren.
RACHEL COBB
Funeral services for Mrs. Ra
chel B. Cobb, 77, who died Mon
day, will be held in Conger
Morris chapel Thursday at 1
p.m. with the Rev. J. Thomas
Dixon of the First Methodist
church officiating. Entombment
will be in Siskiyou mausoleum.
Pall bearers will be Dr. Frank
Roberts, Clyde Webb, Ira Jones,
R. J. Bills, Ed Fetzler and Vern
Gleason.
The deceased was born June
18, 1878, in Abingdon, Va., and
had lived in Medford since 1929.
She was a member of the South
ern Methodist church.- On Jan.
10, 1904, in Roseburg, she was
married to Merrit S. Cobb, who
died in 1950.
Survivors include three sons,
Owen W., Everett, Wash,; Clin
ton A., Medf6rd; and Ivan B.,
Sacramento, Calif.; a daughter,
Mrs. W. W. Hahner, Medford;
two brothers, Robert A. Branch,
Grants Pass; and Walter B.
Branch, Eugene, Ore.; four
grandchildren, and one great
grandchild. Theft Reported Dorothy
Helen Hogan, 232 King st., re
ported to city police yesterday
that a child's blue pedal car. had
been stolen from their residence.
The car has been missing for
three weeks, she said.
Purse Found A red plastic
purse without identification was
found at the J. J. Newberry
store yesterday, according to city
police. The purse is being kept
till claimed in the police prop
erty room.
Patients Reported Patients
reported by Sacred Heart hos
pital this morning included Ed
win Collom and Mrs. Pearl Folks,
both Ashland and both in the
hospital for surgery, and Joseph
C. Barnes, 20 North Peach st.,
in the hospital for medical care.
Building Medford building
permits have been issued to War
ren Arnold, 1101 Murray st., for
$10,000, to erect a residence;
Bill Ruck, 1201 Winchester ave.,
$1,000, to add bedroom and
bath; Sandy Clace, 1109 and 11
17 Murray sW $8,000 each for
two new residences, and L. C.
House, 229 North Ivy st., $1,500,
remodel an apartment house.
a
Sons Leave Harmon Green
Jr., and his brother, Charles
Henry Green, have returned to
Berkeley, Calif., where they are
students at the University of
California. They visited during
the' holidays with their mother,
Mrs. Marjorie Green, North
Bartlett st. Also visiting with
Mrs. Green during the holidays
was Miss Sandra Nash of Salem,
a student at Los Angeles.
Daily Weather Report
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Partly cloudy
tonight and Thursday except for val
ley fog in morning. Low tonight 25.
High Thursday 40.
Western Oregon: Partly cloudy with
Scattered showers tonight mixed with
wet snow in places. Thursday fair.
Little temperature change. Cloudy on
north coast late Thursday. Low to
night 25-35. Low Thursday 35-48.
LOCAL DATA
Temperature a year ago today:
Highest 46; Lowest 35.
Total monthly precipitation .26 inch.
Deficiency for the month .06 inch.
Total precipitation since September
1. 1954. 4.94 inches.
Deficiency for the season 3.74
inches.
Relative humidity 4:30 p.m. yester
dav 93: 4:30 a.m. today 100.
Observations Taken At 4:30 A.M.,
120 Meridian Time
Hieh Low Free
Boise
27
20
T
Boston
Chicago
Denver
Eureka ...
Grants Pass
30
48
44
48
36
16
42
21.
39
32
-5
14
42
31 .
25
30
36
34
21
35
17
42
33
22
32
28
.01
.11
.19
JO
.08
.08
.04
Havre
26
Klamath Falls
Los Angeles
Medford
New York
Omaha
Phoenix
Portland
26
56
33
48
46
55
40
28
42
.27
Reno
.01
Eugene
Salt Lake
.57
34
47
37
30
59
.08
.07
San Francisco
Seattle
.31
.05
Spokane
Washington, D.C. -Yakima
30
Tomorrow
Sunrise 7:30 a.m. Sunset 4:54 p.m.
and Sunday Afternoon 2 to 4:30
o DOUBLE SESSION FRIDAY NIGHT
Clamp On Skates 25c to Children Under 12. Parents
Invited FREE To Watch ... Hat Check FREE for Skaters
ROGUE UALLEY BALLROOM
Tighter Restrictions
On Speculation in
Stock Market Ordered
Washington (U.R) Tight
er restrictions on speculation in
the booming stock market be
came effective today with the
opening of exchanges:
The restrictions, announced
on Tuesday night, require stock
buyers to put up sit least 60 per
cent of the purchase price of
stocks rather than the 50 per
cent previously permitted.
Action Not Explained
The Federal Reserve board an
nounced the higher margin rates
Tuesday after stock exchanges
had closed. The board, as usual,
made no explanation of its ac
tion. The feeling in Washington was
that excessive stock market cre
dit might lead to a wave of spec
ulation which could upet the
current recovery of business.
But Stock Exchange officials
in New York called the Federal
Reserve board action necessary
and surprising.
Wall Street
New York U.R) Profit tak
ing hit the stock market a smash
ing blow in the last hour of trad
ing today just about the time
every one had decided a 20 per
cent margin hike had been taken
in stride.
Prices crumpled in their wid
est decline and tickers ran far
ther behind than in any session
since the ones immediately fol
lowing the outbreak of the Kor
ean War in mid-1950.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T 174
Anaconda 48Vfc
Chrysler . .... unquoted
Curtiss Wright 16
General Electric f - 48
General Motors . 97 Va
Montgomery Ward .... 78
Penn. R. R 22
Penney, J. C. .. 87
Radio 39
Southern Co 18Vi
Southern Pacific .:. 53
S. Oil of Calif 7634
Texas Gulf Sulphur 124
Transamerica .' 39
Tri-Continental 26
United Aircraft 75
U. S. Rubber 42
U. S. Steel .'. 70
Youngstown 69 V4
Portland Livestock
Portland ttJJM Cattle 500. High
good 971 and 1056 lb. fed steers S23-
Z3.ZD; cuuer-utniiy steers jh-io ju,
good around 825 lb. fed heifers $20,
lightly sorted at $1825; cutter-utility
heifers $10-15.50: canner-cutter cows
mostly $8-9.50; utility cows SI 1-12.50;
commercial grades around $14 with
young cows to $16; cutter-utility bulls
$11-13.
Calves 50.' Good-choice vealers $13-
S22.
: . . . n . . . ion
HOgS 150. tnoice i-z ouiciiers iou
235 lb. mostly $20-20.50; 250-335 lb.
$17.50-19; choice 400-620 lb. sows $lo-
Sheep 500. Choice with some prime
wooled lambs $19.50 with utility
grades at $16.50; good-choice wooled
feeders lambs $'.5.50; good-choice
ewes $5-6 or above.
Portland Produce
Portland (U-PA Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large. 41-45c doz.; A
large. 39-42c doz.; AA medium, 38
41c: A medium, 38-40c: A small, 32-
33c doz.;-cartons, l-3c additional.
Butter To retailers: aa. grauc
prints, 66c lb.: cartons, 67c; A prints,
66c; cartons. 67c; B prints, 64c.
Cheese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar Oregon singles, 42,,2-45,,2c; 5-lb.
loaves, 4612-491ic. Processed Ameri
can cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 39,a-41c lb.
Farm Market . ..
Trading was slow at tue East Side
Farmers" market today with supplies
limited to scattered lots loose packed
apples, cabbage, cauliflower, dry
onions, potatoes and sundry root crops.
Poultry, Rabbits
Live Chickens To growers (No.l
quality, f.o.b. Portland): Fryers, 2Va
to 4Va lbs.. 21c lb.; at farm. 20c;
lb. roasters, 4,a lbs. and up. 21c. lb.
f.o.b. Portland. 20c at ranch; light
hens, 11c; heavy hens, alLwts.. 13c lb.;
old roosters, 10c lb. . .
Dressed Chickens No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers. 34-35c lb.: roasters.
36-37c; light hens, 21-22c; heavy hens,
25-26c; cut up fryers, all wts.. 45-46c;
whole drawn, 39-40C
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, 24c;
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.
dressed, to 43c lb. A grade toms, oven
ready, 40c; Beltsville A grade hens,
oven-ready, to 52c; Beltsville toms,
49c lb. . ,
Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b.
killing pjants) Live white. 3V-'z
lbs., 18-20c up; 5-6 lbs., 14-16c: color
ed 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
USD A 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,
S58 ton: Portland delivery $56 ton;
No. 2 Western barley $54.50 f.o.b.
Portland: Coast delivery: Soybean
meal. $96 ton, cars, prompt delivery
Portland: standard millrun. prompt
shinmpnt f.o.b Portlandf $44.50 ton:
No. 2 yellow corn $69 ton f.o.b. Port
land. Wholesale Hay Prices: No. 2 green
alfalfa, baltf. f.o.b. Portland. $34-35
trucks: $36-37 rail.
Portland Grain Exchange: Tuesday'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
2.45
Wednesday
Night,
Friday Night,
Keith Funston, president of
the New York Stock exchange,
said the amount of -money bor
rowed to purchase securities on
margin at the end of November
represented less than 1.4 per
cent of the market values of all
listed stocks at that time.
ASE President Surprised
"It's hard to understand," he
said, "how they possibly could
have concluded credit being
used in the market today is ex
cessive." Edward T. McCormick, presi
dent of the American Stock ex
change, said he was ."indeed
surprised" to learn of the higher
margin requirements.
"The amount of credit now
used in the market "is a matter
of public record and cannot by
any stretch of the imagination
be considered high
healthy," he said.
or un-
Mass Flight of Birds
Sighted Over Medford
A mass movement of birds
over Medford about 5 p.m. yes
terday was witnessed by at least
two residents of the Laurel st.
area. ,
The birds, reportedly number
ing in the thousands, were head
ed east in a flock about two
blocks wide, and took five min
utes to pass overhead. Their al
titude listed as "not too high."
The observers did not identify
the species. There was specula
tion that they were robins re
turning to a roost along Bear
creek. Berry vines in that vicin
ity were found late last month
to be the roosting place of
thousands of robins.
Births
"HUNTER To Mr. and Mrs.
Billie Joe, route 1, box 22D,
Jacksonville, Jan. 3, 1955, boy,
6V2 pounds, at Community hos
pital. HUNTLEY To Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh A., 2179 Crater Lake ave.,
Jan. 4, 1955, boy, IVz pounds,
at Community hospital.
DAWSON To Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis, 828 Broad st., Jan. 2,
1955, girl, 6 pounds, at Sacred
Heart hospital.
BLACK To Mr. and Mrs.
Ray, 2475 Finley lane, Jan. 3,
1955, girl, 8 pounds, at Sacred
Heart hospital.
FRANKS To Mr, and Mrs.
Onie, 1008 Oak st., Jan. 3, 1955,
boy, 654 "pounds, at Sacred
Heart hospital.
DAVID To Mr. and Mrs. Vic
tor, 2948 North Pacific highway,
Jan. 4, 1955, boy, 8 pounds, at
f-. J tt 1. l '
CARTER To Dr. and Mrs.
Earl, 823 E. Main st., Jan. 4,
1955, a boy, weight 9Vz pounds,
at Sacred Heart hospital.
KEESEE To Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald, 3216 Madrona In., Jan.
5, 1955, a girl, weight 6 pounds,
at Sacred Heart hospital.
SILVER GRILL CAFE
403. East Main Street
INFRA-RED BARBECUE
AND COMPLETE MENU
Breakfast-Lunch and Dinner
MEDFORD'S QUALITY CAFE
Hours: 7 A.M. to 8 P.M. Daily Except Sunday
ill , 1- m in ' O ENDS TONIGHT O
0
n
STARTS TOMORROW
GET SET FOR ACTION! THESE TWO HAVE IT
The Story they
THE " fc'is!i
vs. - SB-4A &
" THE " '
SCOTT BRADY EETTA ST. JOHN SlaKX
0 STARTS
Wednesday, January 3, 1955
Chinese Critical
Of Adm. Radford's
Tour of Free Asia
Tokyo (U.R) Adm: Arthur
Radford, chairman of the U.S.
Joint Chiefs of Staff, ended his
tour of Free Asia today with a
40:minute conference with Jap
anese Foreign Minister Mamoru
Shigemitsu.
As Radford planned to leave
from Tokyo's International air
port on his return flight to
Washington, Red China charged
he was attempting to stir up a
"hotbed of war" against the
Communist regime.
Said Hostile io Chinese
"Radford's tour shows that the
U.S. aggressive group is stepping
up the organization of a system
of armed aggression in the
East," Radio Peiping said in a
broadcast heard in Tokyo.
Peiping said Radford's Asian
tour included visits to Pakistan,
Thailand, the Philippines, Indo
china, Formosa, Korea and Jap
an. "It is well known that Radford
is invariably hostile to " t h e
Chinese people," Peiping said.
"The areas covered by his cur
rent Asian tour constitute ex
actly a ring of encirclement
around China. 1
To Create Hotbed -
"His obsession is to create an
explosive situation and a hotbed
of war against China."
Radford, who arrived in Tok
yo late Monday, was accompan
ied to the Foreign Ministry by
U.S. Ambassador John Allison
and UN Commander Gen. John
E. Hull.
Shigemitsu told Japanese re
porters after the conference
that "no concrete matters" were
discussed and said Radford's vis
it was only a courtesy call.
Anti-Polio Shots
May Be Available
Chicago (U.R) If studies
prove that the Salk anti-polio
vaccine is successful, enough of
the shots will be made available
to inoculate 20,000,000 children
this spring.
Dr. Hart E. Van Riper, the
National Infantile Paralysis
Foundation's ' medical director,
said yesterday plans are to give
Salk vaccine shots to 9,000,000
children on a volunteer basis.
He said this would be done if
last year's field tests given 6
1,830,000 children show-it to be
successful. He said the results
should be known by April 1.
In addition tp the foundation's
program for inoculating 9,000,
000 volunteers, there will be
enough vaccine available for an
other 10,000,000 to 11,000,000
children who could get their
shots from health agencies and
doctors if their parents approve,
he said. "
The foundation will make vac
cine available to all first and
second grade school children
who have not as yet had Salk
shots, as well as those who in
1954 received "blank" shots for
control purposes, Van Riper
said.
0
n
Never Told Before
h. m m m m
IL. JL - a I I 1 1
SUNDAY
THAT HAPPY MM
MUSICAL!
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ELEVEN
Lipsticft Irks
London Dentist
London (U.R) An East End
dentist posted tnii notice out
side his office Tuesday:
, "Lipstick. I will not attend
to any woman with this filth
on her lips. I .am tired of get
ting it on my fingers and in
struments. Before I attend to
you, go home and scrub it off."
Two Alternatives
Seen as Result of
Peiping Meetings
Tokyo (U.R) The talks be
tween United Nations Secretary
General Dag Hammarskjold and
Chinese Communist Premier
Chou Bn-lai may, result in either
a Far Eastern crisis or extended
diplomatic negotiations, well in
formed sources predicted "today.
They said that if the talks fail
outright, .obviously a crisis will
have developed -a that neither
the UN nor the United States
can accept flat refusal to free 11
American airmen imprisoned as
spies. .
May Be Delay
But even if the talks in Peip
ing go well, they said, their
fruits may not be borne until
some time after Hammarskjold
returns to New York and re
ports to the 60 members of the
UN.
Hammarskjold's mission is
simply to seek the release of
the 11 airmen and of all other
UN military personnel still held
prisoner of the Chinese Reds.
Two Messages Sent
Chou, in response to Ham
marskjold's bid to go to Peip
ing for personal talks about the
prisoners, sent two messages.
The first, a propaganda blast,
said that the imprisonment of
the 11 fliers was no business of
the UN. But the second said:
"In the interest of peace and
relaxation of international ten
sion, I am prepared to discuss
with you pertinent questions."
On the basis of Hammar
skjolds's mandate and Chou's
messages, diplomatic observers
suggest that the two men will
have to "play it by ear" in their
talks.
Tighter Money Credited
For Divorce Rate Drop
Memphis, Tenn. (U.R) Poston
Cox, divorce proctor, believes
"tighter money" is responsible
for a decline in the Memphis
divorce rate.
"Times may not be bad," he
said, "But families don't have as
much money to spend. Couples
just naturally stick together bet
ter in lean years."
NO TRAFFIC DEATHS
Richland U.R) Washing
ton's atomic city did not have a
traffic death within its city lim
its last year although there were
247 more accidents and seven
per cent increase in traffic flow.
UtAN ANU JcnKT IAIC OVER THE CIRCUS... A
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If mart .
Survey of Dental
Needs Scheduled
Portland (U.R) The Oregon
State Board of Health today an
nounced plans for surveys of
dental needs of children in five
Oregon cities during the next
few weeks.
Studies will be held In Bend,
Astoria, Gearhart, Warrenton
and Seaside.
Dr. David M. Witter, head of
the board's dental health sec
tion, said the Gearhart survey
will be designed to show the ef
fect of fluoridation on all grade
school children, and the -Astoria
study will reveal the effect of
fluoridation on six-year-olds. At
Warrenton, where voters recent
ly approved fluoridation of the
water supply, the teeth of high
school children will be studied
td provide a "base-line" for fu
ture measurements of the effec
tiveness of the process.
The first survey will start in
Bend, during the next few days
with some 500 Bend school chil
dren from the first, second and
seventh grades scheduled for
examination. -
London U.R) The threat of
a nationwide rail strike next
week brought a boom to the
shoe repair business today. A
spokesman tOt the footwear in
dustry said "Everybody is rush
ing to get their shoes in march-,
ing order."
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TONIGHT
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