Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 26, 1955, Image 13

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    Medford Physician
Named on Arthritis
Chapter Committee
Appointment of Dr. Martin L
Vorheis, Medford physician, as
a member of the medical and
scientific committee of the Ore
gon chapter. Arthritis and Rheu
matism Foundation, has been
announced by Gordon E. Wilson,
Portland chapter president.
With Dr. R. E. Rinehart,
Wheeler, Ore., as chairman, the
committee is primarily con
cerned with the Foundation's
program for research, clinical
services and professional educa
tion against arthritis and rheu
matic diseases.
Plant Told
With supervision by physician
members of the committee, the
chapter plans to conduct arthritis
clinics under the auspices of
local medical societies, including
one in Medford; establish phy
sical therapy centers in hospitals
throughout the state; establish
mobile home care facilities
where local need is determined
by medical consultants, and con
tinue research projects at the
University of Oregon medical
school, Portland, and at the
University of Oregon medical
school, Portland, and at the
chemistry department of the
University of Oregon, Eugene.
Foundation reports point out
that in addition to the allevia
tion of human suffering, the
chapter's activities prove a defi
nite contribution to the econom
ic welfare of the state in that
many persons, previously handi
capped by arthritic diseases,
have been enabled to return to
work because of the professional
and lay education, resulting in
improved patient care in exist
ing treatment facilities fostered
by the chapter.
The Oregon chapter is an ag
ency of . the United Medford
Crusade.
Son of Gold Hill
Couple Earns Degree
Gold Hill Leroy Carter, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Carter,
Gold Hill, received his Master's
degree in science at the Univer
sity of Pittsburgh on June 15.
He received his .bachelor of
science degree at Iowa State col
lege in 1946 while In the Navy
VI 2 program. He is now a West
lnghouse aviation design engi
neer at Lima, O., and is the first
mechanical engineer there to re
ceive his master's degree under
the Westinghouse and Univer
sity of Pittsburgh extension plan
of night classes over the last five
years.
With his wife, daughter and
son he plans to spend a vacation
beginning July 18 with his par
ents at their home on the Rogue
river.
A FREE
MEAL
to the first person hi the
deer anytime this restau
rant Is without a customer,
after our first guest each
morning.
Open 5 a.m. to
12 Midnight
THE
Top Notch
Craterian Theater Bldg.
lUlvvinWp'tsFBS)
l "?-Mrsi 1
l i f
mi . -!
i m m I
n v
-PLUS-ANOTHER
BIG
FIRST
RUN HIT!
MILITARY RULE SEEN FOR ARGENTINA President
Juan Peron (tight) chats with Gen. Franklin Lucero as they
tour bomb-damaged areas in Buenos Aires hit by naval
planes in Argentina's short-lived revolt The Argentine
cabinet resigned soon after Peron conferred with Lucero
and Vice President Alberto Teisaire, a retired rear admiral.
Diplomatic reports in Monteviedo, Uruguay, predicted a
three-man military junta will rule Argentina, with Lucero
as strong man, Peron No. 2 and Teisaire No. 3 as part
of a move to ease Peron out of power.
Shady Cove -
Shady' CoverTrail The week
end of June 18 and 19, Boy Scout
Troop 46, Shady Cove, was fish
ing, boating and camping at
Four Mile lake. Scouts attend
ing were Assistant Scoutmaster
Vernon Baldwin, Benny Nork,
Rodney Collins, . Stanley John
son, Gary Williams, Jake Stock
well, Bill Harmon, Bill Pfeifer,
Bob Osborne, Bud Hawks, Ken
neth Paulson, Ralph Goode, Mar
tial Andre and Gary Stelle. Ac
companying the troop were Mr.
and Mrs. Ivan Hale and family,
Al Andre, Harry Goode and
Don Harmon. On Wednesday,
the troop spent an evening at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Pfeifer and son, Bill. The troop
enjoyed swimming in the Pfei
fer's pool and the refreshments
served by Mrs. Pfeifer, Mrs.
Wayne Miller and Mrs. Dave
Rastall.
Mrs. John Mallon, Shady
Cove, is employed at California-on-the
Rogue motel for the sum
mer.
Mr. and Mrs. George Duffey,
Hayward, Calif., are house
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Cook. Shady Cove.
Mrs. Alma Mallery of Mallery
Maples has several friends visit
ing her this week, Mrs. Lyle
Tucker and Mrs. Elizabeth Tuck
er, . Ashland, and Mrs. Jennie
Hutchinson, Medford. Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Merriman and family
are in Ashland working on a
house they are building there.
Miss Estelle Schwalm, Glen
dale, Calif., is spending several
days visiting with. Dr. and Mrs.
Verne Wilson, Shady Cove.
Elected to serve as members
of the Shady Cove School board
at the election last week were
Ivan Hale, Edgar Vanderlip and
Cecil Kee.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Stafford,
Trail, had as guests over the
Father's Day week end Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Burdell, Forest Grove.
Mrs. Burdell is a daughter of
Mrs. Stafford.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Rags
dale, Trail, left by plane "for
Reed City, Mich.; on the 6th
where they plan to visit rela
tive and friends returning home
around the 28th. Their daughter
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Merle
Harper, Shady Cove, are staying
in their home in their absence.
The show attraction at the
VFW Hall for Monday, June 27,
will be . "Sahara" starring
Humphrey Bogart. Also shown
will be the weekly serial "The
IT
JL
1st Drive-In Shewing
T0II1TE!
SHOW STARTS
8:25 P.M.
ROBERT FREWS. DOttLD C-WOTBONO-BEWnUflER-rlllCAJW
w
Trail News
Green Archer" and short sub
jects.
Bill Massey, Trail, is now at
the Trail guard station for the
summer season.
Olma Jean Copley, Napa,
Calif., is visiting her friend,
Loretta Rone, Shady Cove. Mr.
and Mrs. Swede Allen and fam
ily made a trip to Napa, Calif.,
where they visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Don Copley and Olma Jean
accompanied them back to
Shady Cove for a visit.
Mrs. Caroline Long of Sacra
mento, Calif., has been visiting
her granddaughter and family,
Mr. and Mrs. David Wilkinson,
Shady Cove.
Everard Brown, Shady Cove,
was called to Los Angeles due
to the illness of his father, E. T.
Brown. His father is much im
proved and Brown expects to re
turn home soon.
Mrs. H. B. Greer and son,
Robert Greer, Shady Cove, have
moved to Medford. Bob Greer is
working at Ginger Rogers ranch
for the summer.
House guests of the Ernest
Segessenman family, Shady
Cove, are Miss Betsy Jefferis,
Seaside, who will be one of the
bridesmaids of Miss Mary Segess
enman and Mary's cbusin, Miss
Dolores Roach. Saskatchewan,
Canada.
Navy Divers Find
Automobile Parts
Detroit, Ore. U.R) Navy
divers searching for the bodies
of John Wallace, 17, and Richard
Jennings, 14, in Detroit Lake
found only a few spare parts of
the car in which they were
hurtled to death.
The Detroit Youths have been
missing since a week ago Sat
urday night when their car
failed to make a curve and
plunged 185 feet off the North
Santiam highway into the lake
behind Detroit Dam.
Diving operations were re
sumed yesterday.
, Final rites were held Saturday
at Weddle Mortuary in Stayton
for James A. Jennings, 41, and
his son, Leo, 16, of Detroit, who
lost their lives in the car plunge.
Their bodies were recovered
Tuesday. The four were return
ing from Mill City and a movie
when their car missed a curve
and plunged Into the lake. ,
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Caryl Chessman's Best
Seller Written in
San Quentin's
Death House!
NEWS CARTOON
Around Hollywood
Hollywood ttJ.R) A shape
ly blonde housewife from Flor
ida returned to Hollywood for
I . TE?MW her first visit
in 16 years and
declared to
day: "The
actresses here
who hang on
and keep try
ing I don't
envy them a
bit."
' Back in the
30's that
Aline Mot by
blonde was Toby Wing, the
Marilyn Monroe of the gridiron.'
In countless Paramount football
pictures, pug-nosed cute Toby
rah-rahed while Jack Oakie or
Richard Arlen charged down the
field for a touchdown.
To fans who have wondered
what happened to Mae Bush,
Toby Wing and Hadacol, I can
report that Toby, at least, quit
As We Live .
By UIZABITH HUUOCK. PH.D.
PRIZE COOK LETS
OTHER WORK GO
Most men who complain about
their wives' cooking say that the
wife does not know how to cook
anything fit to eat and woh't
even try to learn. Here is a man
who has a different story.
(Q) "My wife is one of those
creatures known as a 'born
cook.' She spends most of her
time in the kitchen frying out
any and every new recipe she
can get her hands on. She
doesn't like other housework
so the house rarely gets a de
cent cleaning. My shirts are
never washed or ironed "until
I haven't a clean one left to
wear lo the office. She spends
so much of her time in the
kitchen that our children are
running wild with no super
vision. All this experimenting
with food is expensive too. The
family lives on a whipped
cream diet instead of good,
plain, wholesome food. I have
made no headway when I have
tried to talk to her about this.
She claims that I show no ap
preciation for all she does lo
try to please us. What would
you suggest?"
(A) Since your wife is inflating
her ego by her culinary art, you
must find a substitute form of
ego-inflation for her if you want
to get away
from the
whipped
cream diet,
Why not en
courage her to
take up dress
making for
herself and the
children to get
her out of the
Dr. He-lock
kitchen some
of the time?
You could get a good argu
ment against the food she gives
you by having your doctor pre
scribe a suitable diet for grow
ing children and for yourself. I
am sure no doctor would approve
of children living on the type of
food you have at home. Then,
when your wife prepares food
the doctor prescribes, compli
ment her and tell her how much
better you like such food than
the fancy food you have been
having.
Another suggestion is to bud
get the food allowance carefully
enough that your wife will not
be able to afford rich desserts
and food that requires expensive
ingredients. You could see that
she kept within this budget by
offering to help; her with the
weekly shopping. In that way,
you could guarantee that you
had wholesome food and that
there would not be enough
money left for food to experi
ment with,
To give your wife a chance to
do the fancy cooking she enjoys,
suggest that you want to enter
tain more and let her serve fancy
refreshments to your guests.
Then, too, there are always
church bazaars for which she
can cook to her heart's content.
(Copyright 1935. General
Features Corp.)
Coos 6a Editor
Takes New Post
Coos Bay, Ore. (U.f9 Ulla E.
Bauers, executive editor of the
Coos Bay Times, said today he
had submitted his resignation to
accept a position as managing
editor of another daily news
paper in the Pacific Northwest.
Successor to Bauers had not
been announced. He will leave
Coos Bay about July 9, he said.
He came to Coos Bay from Santa
Rosa, Calif., and served first as
assistant managing editor. He
later became managing editor
and then executive editor.
POPULATION GAIN
New Delhi India's popula
tion is gaining at a rate of about
five million per year.
V A
WflYCH
HON PUSHES
. . July 1st
- ty ALINE MOSBY
United Press Correspondent
movies 16 years ago to marry a
famed airline pilot 'and execu
tive, Dick Merrill.
Church Play
Many of ,her co-workers still
are tangled in Hollywood ca
reers and unhappy divorces. But
Toby has been living happy in
Miami Beach with her husband
and son, Ricky, 14.
The closest she ever will get
to acting again will 'be in al
church play in Florida this fall.
I was in a show in New
York in 1939 with Clifton Webb,
'You Never Know, when I met
Dick," she said.
"I loved him. To me that was
the most important thing- in the
world, to be happily married and
to have my baby. I never re
turned to Hollywood.
"When you marry somebody
important, like my husband, you
take the back seat. He's a most
outstanding aviator, you know,"
she smiled in wifely pride. '
Cheesecake Queen
Toby stilT has the blonde hair
and pretty smile that made her
a Goldwyn Girl in Eddie Cantor's
"Kid From Spain." At Para
mount, she recalled, "I received
more mail than any other star,
and we had Marlene Dietrich,
Carol Lombard and Claudette
Colbert."
She also was a cheesecake
queen. Cheesecake photography,
she added, hasn't changed a bit.
"Being an actress was a lovely
dream, fascinating and wonder
ful," she said.
"And then to turn around to
marry a man like Dick!
"I teach Sunday school in Flor
ida. Your best Hollywood mar
riages, I notice, are the ones that
have religion.
"I don't care how much fame
and money you have, if you don't
have a happy marriage.
"Some of these actresses do
marry and then don't appreciate
what they have. If they'd only
take a backseat, and not push
their husbands ...
"Now I think the story of my
husband's career would make a
good movie," said the former
actress.
"Jimmy Dean would be line in
the part."
Funeral Services
Set for Youthful
Hemophilia Victim
Corvallis U.R) Funeral
arrangements were being made
here today for Raymond Coopey,
18-year-old victim of hemophil
ia who died Thursday.
Young Coopey fought all his
life against the rare blood dis
ease which produces uncontrol
lable bleeding and makes even
minor' injuries near tragedies.
He was the second son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Coopey of Cor
vallis to die of the condition. A
younger brother died several
years ago.
Had Broken Leg
Coopey, who had been hospit
alized repeatedly because of mi
nor injuries, died Thursday aft
er being hospitalized for four
months with a broken leg.
While still in the hospital he
was graduated from . Corvallis
high school. He had been named
by his classmates as "the most
inspirational student." Many of
his studies had been conducted
by a telephone intercommunica
tion system between the class
room and his hospital bed.
During his lifetime, young
Coopey received an estimated
2000 pints of blood from pri
vate donors and the Red Cross.
His fellow students at Corvallis
high school had raised $1200 to
help pay hospital expenses. They
also arranged for installation of
a small television set in his
room.
Oregon Guardsmen
Parade for Governor
Astoria U.R) One thousand
Oregon National Guardsmen,
members of an anti - aircraft
artillery team, were scheduled to
parade before Gov. Paul Fatter-
son Saturday at the annual en
campment at Camp Clatson.
Maj. Gen. Thomas E. Rilea,
adjutant general of Oregon, was
to be on the reviewing stand
with Gov. Patterson. Main body
of troops were the 237th AAA
group. They were reviewed Fri
day by Maj. Gen. William F.
Dean, deputy commander of the
Sixth Army.
" There are about 80.0Q0 private
airplanes In the U. S. '
'THE OLD OREGON"
CATERING
To Banquets and
Private Parties
Phoenix Ph. 2-7I1S
Sunday, June 28. I95S
Vines Lost All of
Mail Fraud Loot HH"1
Portland U.R) Morton L.
Vines, who has pleaded guilty
to four counts of mail fraud
here, said Friday he didn't save
a nickel from the more than
$100,000 he netted over a five
year period by selling fictional
sales contracts to a bank and
three loan companies. '
"It was all lost," the 37-year-old
Vines said, "and I didn't
have a good time."
! He had no alibi, but his attor
ney Alan Davis, said Vines had
been treated off and on by n
psychiatrist ever since the end of
World War II.
Davis said Vines had a nervous
breakdown when he was shipped
home from Germany to find his
wife dying of leukemia. He
spent eight months in Barnes
hospital at Vancouver, Wash.,
and was discharged with a 50
per cent disability.
Third Auto Salesman
Convicted in Portland
Portland U.R) A municinal
court jury here Friday found
anotner automobile . salesman
guilty of violating the Portland
ordinance against selling used
cars on Sunday. .
Charles Frost, salesman at a
Union avenue car lot, was the
third salesman found euiltv in
recent weeks in a series of cases
that eventuallv will test th mn-
stitutionality of the no-Sunday-sales
rule.
A case against a fourth used
car salesman, G. C. Elie, was
taken under advisement by
Municipal Judge J. J. Quillin.
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday: 10 a.m. Monday for
Monday: other days 5:30 orevious day
ANNOUNCING
BOB'S
BAR-B-QUE
HOME DELIVERY
SERVICE
Specializing In:
Chicken $1.50
Spareribs ........ $1.35
French Dip Sandwiches
Beef ...:.................50c
Ham . ....60c
Pork ...60c
Milkshake also Coffee
Hamburgers 40c
Chillidogs 40c
Hot French Fries With
Every Order
If dinner isn't read . . .
don't scold your wifel CALL
BOB'S
Prompt delivery 12 to 12.
Closed Mondays
PHONE 3-9010
!!!
in
Continuous
00
JET
POWERED STORY
OF THE
NAVY!
AND
V
ICS A WWO-AOlVf
MUTAIY SECKET M
A BANG-UP COMEDY
HIT
I'ICKEY ROOMY H:
ROBERT STRAUSS
Odd MtfOdtKHvp
ELAINE DAVIS
f t
HI
vtfd
and Mfsducmt t. tL
MEDFORD (OREGON)
Cordon Considering
Portland (U.R) Former Sen.
Guy Cordon said last night he is
"seriously considering" becoming
a candidate to the Republican
national convention in San
Francisco next year.
Cordon, who arrived here for
what he called a "combination
business and pleasure trip," has
been engaged in the practice of
law in Washington, D. C, since
his defeat by Richard Neuberger
last fall.
The former senator said he
also was confident that Presi
dent Eisenhower would run for
reelection, and would win by an
overwhelming vote. He pre
dicted that Sen. Wayne Morse
(D-Ore.) would be defeated in his
bid for reelection.
COMING
Wednesday
TO THE
CRATERIAN
BUDWEBSOI
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SPECIAL
MATINEE
WEDNESDAY
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TWO BIG HITS!
WackkrThtitm
MARJORIE MAIM
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