.HIGH TONE BURGERS Albert White (left) "fiddles"
around as his partner, Lennard Petersen, broils a burger
for a customer in their hamburger stand in San Francisco.
White is conductor of Masters of Melody Orchestra over
KNBC and also plays the viola in the San Francisco Sym
phony Orchestra. Before that he spent 17 years with the
San Francisco Opera Co. Petersen is a KNBC musical
contractor and still holds the record of being the youngest
violinist to play with the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra.
They put parts of their first names together and call their
eatery, Allen's.
BOY SCOUTS
District Court of Honor
' A district court of honor was
Tield at the Methodist church
Thursday, April 21, for Sea
Scout Ship 7. Their advisor is
Jim McGoodwin. Boy Scout
Troop 7 under Scoutmaster Bob
Hawkins were hosts.
The court was made up of
Dr. Paul Bray, judge; R. J. Bills,
clerk; Don Wilcox, Troop 6;
Bob Hawkins and Harvey Beat-
ty, Troop 7; Ted Garhart, Troop
13; Robert Balch, Troop 43; and
Ji mMcGoodwin, Scout Ship 7,
making up the rest of the court.
The Rev. Dr. J. Thomas Dixon of
SUCCESSFUL
LIVING
starts with saving. Hav ths things
you want through systematic sav
ing. Don't just dream ... or wish,
but have the things you want in
life by saving for them. Start with
any amount.
O
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS &LOAN ASS'N
of Medford
' 27 North Holly
An Institution Dedicated
To Those Who Save
the Methodist church gave the
invocation and benediction.
Awards were made to boys
of Troops 6, 7, 13, and 43, and
Scout Ship 7. The high awards
of the evening were nine star
scout awards given to Kenneth
Nelson, Richard Champion,
Craig Wright, and Bud Quuv
ney of Troop 6, and Charles Bell'
Leo Gilman, James Eldrid,
Charles Johnson and Howard
Misner of Troop 43.
Those receiving first class
awards were Russell Walker,
Gilbert Quitt and Tom Manley,
Troop 6, and Charles Kujaski,
Troop 7; second class awards
were given to Jerry McLeod and
Tommy Tompkins, Troop 7; Jack
Jones, Richard Jones, Tommy
Richardson and Calvin Smith,
Troop 43, and Warren Skoog,
Troop 13.
Sea scout apprentice awards
were given to John Chishplm,
Gerald Mallam, Allen Taylor,
Jack Larson,. Ron McKemie and
Don Greaves.
A one-year perfect attendance
pin was awarded to Lynn
Knight, Troop 7. In addition to
these awards there were 38
merit badges awarded 22 scouts
and service stars given to 9
scouts, 74 awards in all being
give.
A total of approximately 100
people attended the court with
Mrs. Harvey Beatty and boys of
Troop 7 serving refreshments.
Dead line for Sunday Classified tr
at noon Saturdays
Yv OS
Off Again, On Again Sailing of Lehi II
Rescheduled for Today With Three Aboard
Oakland (U.R) The raft
Lehi II will make an attempt to
conquer the Pacific Ocean today
when skipper De Vere Baker
and his crew catch the west
bound current for a 2300 mile
drift to Hawaii.
Baker said the box-like craft
would leave Oakland's Jack
London's Square at 6 a.m. The
craft, sister ship to the ill-fated
Lehi I, will carry only Baker
and a crew of two, Larry Hall,
the first mate and Bill Souza,
a radio operator.
Second Attempt
For Baker it will be the sec
ond attempt to catch a . west
bound current that will guide
his craft to Hawaii as a shake
down cruise for a drift from the
Persian Gulf. His first attempt
in the Lehi I ended in near dis
aster when the craft became be
calmed and the crew had to be
rescued by a banana freighter.
Baker and his crew will at
tempt to make the crossing using
only the currents to move them
and hopes to live by taking food
Third Soldier Dies
Off Meningitis at
New Jersey Post
Fort Dix, N. J. U.R) -Spinal
meningitis claimed its third sol
dier victim in two months Fri
day when a 22-year-old Weilsvil
le, N.Y., soldier died in the Fort
Dix, hospital.
Capt. Tom Hamrick, the post
public information officer, said
Pvt. John Kelsey answered sick
call on Wednesday and was hos
pitalized for an upper respiratory
infection. Shortly afterward the
case was diagnosed as the dread
spinal meningitis. .
The youth's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Kelsey, Jr., hurried to
their son's bedside Thursday and
were with him when he died.
In Army Five Weeks
Kelsey had been in the Army
five weeks and was undergoing
training with M Company of the
364th Regiment.
The death of Pvt. Irwin Wein
rib, 18, of Far Rockaway, N.Y.,
on Feb. 22 touched off a series
of congressional inspections into
medical and housing facilities
at Fort Dix.. A House armed serv
ices subcommittee concluded
that Weinrib and several other
soldiers stricken with the disease
received the best possible treat
ment and that there was no evi
dence of medical neglect.
Richard A. Robinson, 21,' of
Norwell, Mass., died of spinal
meningitis March 6. Another GI
was stricken at the camp but is
recovering at the base hospital.
from the sea. The craft, how
ever, will carry an auxiliary mo
tor and provisions to be used
in an emergency.
The Lehi II will make the
crossing with a history of al
most as much trouble as her
luckless sister. The most recent
setback, an attachment by the
Coast Guard for back fines, was
cleared up when an Oakland
man, Al Martin, paid off the as
sessments, only to have the ship
ground itself on a'mudflat, caus
As We Live
The Average Griper
Is Usually Frustrated
There are some people who
seem to get real pleasure from
gripinff. If others enjoy what
what they are
doing or say
they like
somethi ng,
the griper at
once finds
fault with it.
He seems to
like things
better if he
can find fault
Dr. Hurloek . with them.
Naturally, when you can find
fault with others or with what
they are doing, it makes you
feel superior. The more faults
you can find, the more superior
you can feel. Likewise, griping
has great attention value, espec
ially when others agree that
the thing the griper complains
about it fine. Being different
always puts the person in the
limelight. 2
But, are the advantages the
person gets from griping enough
to make, him happy and do they
outweight the bad effects? The
answer to both these questions
is an emphatic "No". Griping
may give the person temporary
satisfaction, but like all tempor
ary things, it must constantly
be reinforced.
No On Likes Griper
Although people may pay at
tention to him for a time, no
one likes a griper. It certainly
is unpleasant to be with a per
son who never has anything
to say. The perennial complainer
soon discovers that people ig
nore him and this makes him
want to regain their attention,
so he gripes even more than
before.
No one can be truly happy if
he sees only the black side of
everything. Nothing has any
real value if all that is seen are
the faults, never the good fea
tures. The realization that peo
ple do not like him can only
add to the griper's, unhappiness.
So, while the griper may seem
to be having fun, he is, in re
ality, an unhappy, frustrated
person.
LETTERS FROM READERS
"What pleasure do some peo-
IPEP
WITH
r,
Uo
ing minor damage to the hull.
Martin said a fourth member
might be added to the expedi
tion. He was 19-year-old Craw
ford Hartley, an amateur frog
man, who told Martin his diving
and fishing equipment might
help supply the Lehi crew with
food for the long trip.
Baker said the youth had been
accepted as a member of the
crew, but that he Baker was
awaiting the consent of the
youth's parents.
By ELIZABETH HURLOCK. PH.D.
pie get from gossiping? I should
think they would realize that it
makes people dislike them.'!
(A) As a matter of fact, people
who gossip have little reason to
know that people dislike them.
Most people like to hear gossip,
even though they may disap
prove of the person who does
the gossiping. As a result, they
are only too eager to hear what
the gossiper has to say. This as
sures the gossiper of a certain
degree of popularity, even
though it is only superficial and
temporary. .
Letters: "Should 'parents
read their children's letters? My
parents claim that this is a par
ent's right. I am 16 years old
and resent this very much.'
(A) You have every right to
be annoyed when your parents
read your mail without your
permission. Parents of past gen
erations used to feel that it was
their privilege to open and read
letters their children received.
Today, most parents are willing
to respect their children's pri
vacy, especially when they
reach the teen years. If you
volunteer to read aloud the let
ters you , receive from relatives
or friends of the family, won't
this satisfy your parents?
Family boss: "Because my
wife inherited some money from
her father, she feels that she
can be the boss of the family.
I resent her bossy attitude very
much."
(A) There should be no "boss"
in today's family. Instead, the
family should be a' partnership
arrangement. Are you sure that
you have not tried to boss your
wife in the past so that now that
she has inherited some money,
she feels independent enough to
turn th tables on you? It would
make a happier relationship in
your family if neither you nor
your wife tried to dominate the
other. Try this and see if I am
not right. - '
(Copyright 1955,
General Features Corp.)
The American Cancer Society
is the only volunteer agency sup
porting a comprehensive pro
gram Of education, service to
cancer patients, and research
for the control of cancer.
n
Sunday, April 14, 195S
Graham Declares
Glasgow, Scotland (U.R)
Billy Graham said Friday night
his sermons piped over a, tele
phone network to churches
throughout Britain are winning
four times as many converts as
his "Tell Scotland" crusade meet
ings themselves.
"It is nothing short of fantas
tic," the American evangelist
told a capacity crowd at Kelvin
Hall last night. "God is doing
it." -
Relayed to Churches
Graham's revival meetings are
relayed to some 500 churches in
Scotland and England. And, for
the first time Friday night, di
rect telephone hookups linked
Kelvin Hall with churches . in
Northern and Southern-Ireland.
Graham said that as far as he
was able to determine, 1682 of
those listening in long distance
on his Thursday night meeting
made "decisions for Christ." 'Ajlj
uie nice Ling liseu, some uu step
ped forward. t " .
More People Listening
"And in London tonight," Gra
ham said, "more people are lis-;
tening to our meeting here in
Glasgow than attended any
FALLS FROM SCOOTER
Wayne James Pockett, 13,
Ashland, was hispitalized briefly
Friday afternoon for ogserva
tion, after falling from a motor
scooter he was operating, ac
cording to state police. Reports j
indicated' the scooter went out
of control and in to a ditch neai
the rcdeo grounds north of .Ash
land. Neil P. Pickett, Wayne's
brother, also was on the scooter,
but vas unhurt, it was reported.
From the big-screen movies comes this entirely new Magnavox concept of
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Y
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE FIVE
Broadcasts Winning
single meeting in London last
year." ...
Some 17,300 jammed Kelvin
Hall for Friday's night's meeting.
Converts numbered 487, bring
ing the-total during the five
weeks of the crusade to 12,880.
The crusade has another week to
run.
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