I
SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Sunday, April 3, 195S i
Pasco Teenager Kills fleer
After Wounding Two Relatives
Pasco, Wash. (U.R) A
policeman known as a "great
guy with the kids" was slain
here Friday by an enraged teen-
Shady Cove and Trai
Shady Cove-Trail Larry Kee,
son oi.Alr. and Mrs. Cecil K.ee
of Shadv Cove has gone to Seat
tle where he has taken back the
job he had before entering the
Amy.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Hale of
Shady Cove are expecting Ivan
sister and husband. Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Atkinson of San Fran
cisco for a visit over the week
end.
Mrs. Robert Sanderson was
hostess at her home on March
22 at a pink and blue shower
honor in e Mrs. Larrv Wilson of
Trail. The euesls of honor re
ceived many lovely gifts. Games
were played and refreshments
served. Co-hostess for the shower
was Mrs. Lewis Collins. Guests
were Mrs. Anton Anderson, Mrs
Wilson's grandmother, Mrs
Wayne Ash, Mrs. Charles Cush-
man. Mrs. U. R. Vvagler, Mrs
Lewis Collins and daughter Es
ther, Mrs. Henry Schuder ann
ri.'mshter Shirlev. Mrs. Lewis
Dusenberry, Mrs. Cheryl Cuddy
and Kickv and the honored
guest, Mrs. Larry Wilson, all of
Trail: and Mrs Steve Wilson
Mrs. Wilson's mother-in-law and
Mrs. Jack Grow of Eagle Point
Mrs. Llovd Beers of Sams Val
ley, and Mrs. John Stelle of
Shadv Cove.
Mrs. Llovd Davis of Medford
mother of Mrs. Joe Waltz and
Mrs. Gene Weitman of Shady
rnve has shown a slight im
provement in her condition the
Tast few davs.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Warner
nf Travis Air Force Base, Napa
Calif., are parents of a girl born
March 22 and weighing 7 pounds
12 ounces, according to .an an
nnuncement received here. Mrs
Warner is the former Lucile
Doak who lived in Shady Cove
and attended Shady Cove gram
mar school here for several
vears.
Diana Sallee, niece of Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Sheppard of ' the
Roguedale Cash Market, Shady
Cove, is visiting the Sheppards
while her mother is in Califor
nia. .
Steelhead Post No. 6881 and
Ladies Auxiliary are serving an
Easter Sunday breakfast at tne
Post hall on Sunday. April 10,
from 8 to 1 o'clock. A nominal
charse will be made, v
The ladies volleyball team of
the YWCA in Medford played
. the Shady Cove mothers at the
school gym March 29. Medford
wnn a nut of 5 eames. Another
game has been tentatively' sche
duled between the two teams to
be Dlaved in Medford.
A group of ladies 'from Shady
Cove Home Extension unit met
March 30 at the home of Mrs
Travis Littlefield in Shady Cove
for a day of instruction in the
art of textile rjainting in which
Mrs. Littlefield is very profi
cient. Present were Mesdames
Howard McGill, Richard Pfeif er,
Max Hawks, Dolf Larson, Ted
Daw and Carroll Watson. Mrs
Daw will conduct a series of
workshops on refinishing furni
ture. the first one to be held
Monday, April 4, starting at 10
a.m. at the home of Mrs. Max
Hawks in Shady Cove.
Teddy Daw, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Daw of Shady uove is
one of a group who will go from
Kaale Point high school to attend
the track meet in Salem over the
coming week-end.
Mrs. Rico Bertoglio of Shady
Cove has returned from Sacra
mento, Calif., where she was
called due to illness of her
mother, who was somewhat im
proved when she returned
home.
Another in a series of benefit
card parties for the Shady Cove
Home Extension unit was given
by Mrs. Jerry Hicks at the home
of Mrs. Max Hawks in Shady
Cove on March 28, starting with
a salad luncheon. Two tables of
bridge were in play, Mrs. Floyd
Kelly winning prize for high
score, and Mrs. Ernest Golberg
consolation prize. Present were
Mesdames Floyd Kelley, Earl
Sheppard, Ray Chubb, Ernest
Golberg. Dolf Larson, O. L. Wil
liams, Max Hawks and Jerry
Hicks.
., Ml ,
BEWARE
OF
IMITATIONS
LOOK
FOR THE
HAPPY -UTTLE
DOG
Si
ager and a reporter who wit
nessed the shooting said the
officer apparently ran into the
the path of murderous pistol
fire in an effort to help the boy.
Alva M. Jackson, 38, Pasco1.
policeman and father of two
children, was fatally shot as he
ran toward Richard Peterson,
16, Pasco High scnool sopho
more, without drawing his own
gun in defense.
Young Peterson earlier had
critically wounded his father,
P. T. Peterson, 52, Pasco, and
his maternal grandfather, Chet
Young, 63, Pasco.
Ron Taylor, police reporter
TOPS IN QUALITY!
LOW IN PRICE
Judge Overrules
Autopsy Request
Portland (U.R) Circuit Judge
James W. Crawford Friday de
nied a defense motion to require
the state to provide an autopsy
report on Diane Hank, 16-year-old
Portland girl who died mys
teriously last year.
After the ruling, Wey Him
Fong and his wife, Sherry, en
tered innocent pleas to first de
gree murder charges brought in
connection with the girl's death.
The Fongs had pleaded inno
cent earlier, but had withdrawn
the pleas in order that Defense
Attorney Irving Goodman could
enter his demurrer to the indict
ment. The demurrer was recent
ly overruled.
Judge Crawford ruled that the
district attorney's office had con
trol of the autopsy report and
that the document also was not
of such a nature it could be de
manded by the defendants.
Trial of the Fongs is sched
uled for April 11.
for the Columbia Basin News,
said Jackson evidently thought
he could reach young Peterson
without firing on him.
Jackson cornered the youth
in an alley between two cabins
in the east stide of town Friday
evening shortly after the youth
had wounded his father vid
grandfather after being denied
use of the family car.
Jackson died on the operating
table at Our Lady of Lourdes
hospital less than an hour after
the shooting. .
Police said the boy had been
drinking vodka and became en
raged when his father told him
he could not use the family car.
Officers said Peterson first shot
his grandfather at the trailer
camp he operated, then fired at
his father who was about a half
block from the camp.
At the hospital, Peterson's
father, shot three times with a
.30-.30 caliber deer rifle, asked
"Did you get the boy? Did you
get the boy?"
Told his son had been cap
tured, Peterson said "good."
Police said the husky youth
fired 50 or 60 shots from three
weapons during the half-hour
shooting spree.
Grand Coulee Lake
Far Below Normal
Portland (U.R) The Bonne
ville Power Administration said
Saturday that lake Franklin D.
Roosevelt behind Grand Coulee
dam has reached the lowest
level in its history .-
The BPA said the present
level of the lake was 1,223 feet
above sea level, a draw-down of
65 feet since last fall. Grand
Coulee power plants never have
operated with levels of less than
1,225 feet in a previous year.
The reservoir's level is 1,288 feet
when it is full.
LJ ASL A
EACH STEP MEANS PROGRESS Randy, a Glendale, Ore.,
youngster, learns proper foot placement in walking as he walks
in a foot placement ladder at the Easter Seal agency's Children's
Hospital School in Eugene. Marcelle Montgomery, physical thera
pist, supervises this part of his daily program. The school, financed
by the sale of Easter Seals, is open to children from all parts of
Oregon. . .
County Advertising Fund Increase OK
Salem (U.R) The Senate
Local Government Committee
Saturday recommended passage
of a bill which would double the
amount of money a county may
spend for advertising its re
sources. Multnomah county would be
allowed to spend $20,000 a year
and other counties $10,000 in
stead of $5000.
Francis Harrington represent
ing the Oregon Motor Court As
sociation, said the'proposed 1959
centennial was in part respon
sible for the increase.
Sen. Phil Brady of Portland
recommended that "welcome
stations" be. established at bor
der points where tourists could
get information about Oregon's
scenic attractions and roads.
Dead line Sunday Classified Is at
noon Saturday : 10 a.m. Monday for
Monday: other days 5:30 Drevious dav
Sen. Gore Renews
Request That Ike
Cancel Dixon-Yates
Washington (U.R) Sen.
Albert Gore (D-Tenn) Saturday
renewed his suggestion that
President Eisenhower cancel the
Dixon-Yates contract.
Gore acted in the light of a
comptroller general's report
criticizing Ebasco Services Ire,
the company which is to design
the controversial. Dixon-Yates
power plant at West Memphis,
Ark., and supervise its construc
tion. The report was prepared by
Joseph Campbell, . newly-appointed
head of the General Ac
counting office who voted for
the Dixon-Yates contract while
a member of the Atomic Energy
commission.
Rep. Chet Holifield (D-Calif)
a member of the Joint Congres
sional Atomic Energy r commit
tee, said the GAO report shows
that Ebasco "should be disquali
fied from further work on con
tracts involving federal govern
ment funds."
The report dealt primarily
with the work of Ebasco ser
vices in building a steam plant
for the government at Joppa,
111. Gore commented that the
project has become known as
the "Ebasco fiasco."
The GAO report said actual
costs overran estimates by
about $51,000,000 dollars on the
Joppa plant. It said the govern
ment also will have to pay about
$62,500,000 over a 25-year per
iod in added power costs.
Among other additional costs
and delays highlighted in the
report, the GAO singled out a
one-story administration . build
ing which cost $82 a square foot
to build as compared with a $20
to S24 "reasonable" cost.
The report said 29 doo's in
stalled in the building cost al
most $400 each to buy and in
stall.
11 ' . ' '
- - - VW? v fr p
,,,, Alwfl - f
" ,
finest Hour of the Twenty-Four !
He's traveling his favorite highway behind
the wheel of his favorite car and he's
about an hour out from his destination
What a happy prospect for a happy hour!
Imagine, for instance, the marvelous rest
and relaxation it will bring him.
He'll just sit there with his hands resting
gently on the wheel . . . cradled by those
deep, soft cushions . . . and with the soft
sound of the wind for a lullaby.
And insofar as his driving is concerned
well, what could be more restful! The car's
every movement will be regulated by the
merest touch of toe and hand. Steering will
be little more than a gesture ... and
braking will require only the gentlest
pressure on the pedal. . .
And what a wonderful time it will be to
think and plan ! For his mind will clear and
his spirits will rise with each passing mile.
Yes, he's about to enjoy one of the finest
hours of the whole twenty-four and it may
even be the most profitable!
In fact, many of America's foremost
executives will tell you that some of their
wisest business decisions have been made
at the wheel of a Cadillac.
As you might have gathered, you've been
missing out on something wonderful if you
haven't treated yourself to an hour in a
new 1955 Cadillac.
Come in soon and take a "sixty
minute vacation" in the "car of cars."
' The keys are waiting for you and you'll
be welcome at any time.
SIMMMIEffi?S (GAUI&AWIE
143 SOUTH RIVERSIDE - MEDFORD
PHONE 2-6264
is The (EISAMIE
DESSERTf . OF ALL!
Q Jorgensen's FIESTA ICE CREAM comes in handy-sized
frtlnrf 111 rartnnc inct r-inht . fit int VftllD rtm'.tmm.tm.m
Be sure to keep plenty on hand for easy-to-servo
desserts between-meal snacks for parties and "drop
ins" At Your Favorite Fountain or Grocer!
Your Favorite Fountain
and Grocer Has It!
The Bloodmobile
WILL BE HERE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6
W ' 1 to 6 p.m. t the YMCA
PLEASE CALL 3-3813 For Your Date!
1