SIGHT MTOF"09D (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Thuriday, June 23, 1955
Theyll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy Hatlo
I, i f -ii ' 1
TjE T16UT COUSISIS DHfT SEND
W4S NO B!5 SHINDIG
iar U AIMS 4 RECEPTION?!
WELLTHEy wowt et a
SUiSf RE E ""STCHES TO LIKE
UP FREEL040 VVWEN THE BRIDE 4ND
GROOM SET UP HOUSEKEEPING
V,ZZA il . rf50 Jf ootw to findout r
As We Live
Hro-Worship Hallhy
At Part of Growing .Up
Every child needs someone he
can look up to, admire, and im
itate. The more glamorous the
person, the more he catches the
child's imagination.
Q. "I have a son of seven
who. has gone wild over this
Davy Crockett stuff. He had to
have a coonskin cap and a
whole outfit to look like his
hero. All he wants to talk
bout is Davy Crockett, how
brave he was, etc., etc., until I
get fed up with it 1 don't re
member ever having gone wild
ever anyone like the kids of
today do. If it isn't one person
it's another they hero-worship.
Don't you think this is foolish
and carrying things too far?"
(A) No, I think it is good for
a child to have
a hero he can
admire and
and want to
imitate.
This hero
acts as a model
fnr Vi i c num Vio-
vV I havior. If he
seiecis a moaei
who has char-
Df. ffarlock acter traits that
everyone admires and he
wouldn't be a hero unless he
did then his hero-worship is a
healthy thing.
By ELIZABETH HURLOCK, PH.D.
I If a child has no hero to want
to be like, or if he switches con
jstantly from one "ideal" to an
other, he is likely to become con
fused in his own mind about
what he would like to be him
self.
The only danger in childish
hero-worshipping is that a per
son who , is unworthy of being
imitated may become a hero in
children's eyes to the point
where they want to imitate un
desirable qualities. Should a
child pick out as his hero a per
son who was not a law-abiding
citizen but who had enough dar
ing to give him glamor, that
would certainly not be a good
thing.
However, when' children try
to imitate national heroes and
want to be like the people who
have helped to make our coun
try great, the best thing a parent
can do is to encourage them
whether the hero be Davy
Crockett or someone else who
has gone down in history for
what he has done for his coun
try. (COPYRIGHT 1955,
GENERAL FEATURES CORP.)
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday; 10 a.m. Monday for
Monday; other days 5:30 previous day.
Former Resident
Killed in Accident
News of the desth June 14 at
Cincinnati, O., of Fred Frideger,
85, a former valley resident, has
been received here from his
niece, Mrs. Wilbert Pester,
Wapokoneta, O.
Frideger died as the result of
a freak accident while he was
sitting on a park bench in the
Cincinnati zoo, according to a
report of the incident. A truck
driver hauling a load of hot
blacktop material swerved his
truck into a zoo roadway to
avoid striking a car parked at a
stop light. The truck's brakes
failed, and it overturned. Fride
ger was buried under seven tons
of the 'hot material. He died
about two hours after the acci
dent. Funeral services were held
last Friday at Wapakoneta.
Frideger came to Oregon from
Ohio in 1901 and lived in this
area until April, 1935, when he
returned to his home state. He
was a plasterer by trade and op
erated a pear orchard for many
years at Eagle Point.
He stayed during winter
months in Medford at the home
of a half-brother, the late Abe
Frideger. He also was a cousin
of the late Will Frideger.
SPECIALIST FIELD
Detroit Many automotive
plants specialize in a certain
part of a motor vehicle and do
not produce completed automobiles.
Home Repair Bill
Said Getting Big.
The annual outlay for repairs
and remodeling of homes in the
United States last year reached
$12,000,000,000, according to
Clark Walker, president of the
Medford Realty Board.
Walker said home owners and
occupants are spending nearly as
much on improvements as others
are ' spending for purchase of
new homes.
. He stated, "Much of this ex
penditure for repairs and re
modeling has gone toward im
provement of neglected houses
of the cities. Individuals, com
munity organizations and local
governments are all part of this
unprecedented housing rejuve
nation." He further commented, "Ur
ban communities are awakening
to the need for firm enforce
ment of adequate housing
codes."
Mom says
to get Spreckels
Sugar for Canning
'n Freezing too
...so good!
Westerners are sweet
on Spreckels Sugar!
MM MS&X'fe. W eCL M
1V fii
TV
To Buy or Sell - Use Tribune Classified Ads
Hollywood, Fla. (U.R) Police
charged motorist John Flato
with colliding with four boats,
causing $10,000 damage. They
said he crashed through the
window of a boat showroom.
What every
good cook knows:
rvs
.... :
Just a little difference in ingredients
makes a big difference in cooking results
Snowdrift is just a little lighter than any other shorten
ing and that can make the big difference in giving
your family lighter, more digestible foods.
Snowdrift gives y ust a little more
tafety than ordinary shorten
ings, because it fries perfectly at
correct high temperatures. That
can make the big difference in
digestibility of fried foods.
Snowdrift's ingredients are just
a little costlier than any other
solid shortening (yet you pay
no more). That can make the
big difference in better tasting
foods, whether fried or baked.
No other shortening at any price is
so creamy, so digestible -and so light!
MO PURE AIL-VEGETABLE SHOtTI NINO . MADE Y THE WESSON Oft MOM
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
FOR PRESERVING OR FREEZING 3
LOCALLY GROWN "TABLE ROCK" BRAND
STRAWBERRIES
g49
GRATE Ml
f LUCIous, sweet rv lLlm U (Qjc
WMm BI11G CHERRIES -3t Thuk5,i'"' T. A
MBE ' ill CllCWMRS gilJ BEEF (N Cerwl Added) U O FANCY
P, LOCALLY CROWN Q BEEF ' E (5)c flgl
Mm fl CABBAGE - Lb-5) nOAST 55, g) V. FRYER
1 tiff IS lYoungTender V (P) W
Ite 1 1 c 1 9' U 1 0 1 c loaf 5) v . rp rn
EBBHSHBHSHHMBSMHBHBHHBSBHBaSlMBBHBBBBBBKBBKB
"CHUNG KING" FROZEN 4Ti& " FZ3 FTN fZU
chow MM, 2 S525Jv - E)
MEin chic, . 29 KZ) IFM EC
(With Noo'dles) ' 1 n
n 5k., Ivithin (hall n P ;W
uimiiint muiMr w 1 11 1 1
m m m m m m urn -
Ly a n U u LziUW U.
LAMB
PATTIES
(Spring Lamb)
OREGON TRAIL
CANNED
2
No. 303
Tins
BOYSENBERRIES 45'
WILLIAMS (39' E
POTATO
CEQHPS
)
29
Anywhere
Within the
City Limits
Always TOP QUALITY,
FRIENDLY SERVICE, and
Money-Back Guarantee
On All Purchases
SHOP WEEK
DAYS
WE ARE
CLOSED
SUNDAYS
WE INVITE CHARGE ACCOUNTS
ON APPROUED CREDIT
Bruce Floor Gleaners
Asphalt Tile Gleaner . pL 6S;
Floor Cleaner . . . . qt. $1.00
Cleaning Wax ..... qt $1.03
purex fsr - ";
na , , ! ntL ... 23
BLEACH osiioa.-.o
CUTRITE
WAX PAPER
PHONE 2-7137
222 WEST MAIN NEXT TO COPCO
Ad
Prices
for
Friday
and
Saturday
t:
i?
f:
'
&
r
S
"I
4s