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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1955)
STiVR. -Br CLAY MAR. 22 1 Voor Doily Activity Guide Jrt According to fie Stars. To develop messoge for Sunday, read words corresponding to numbers 6- 7-11-131 56-57-66 of your Zodiac birth siga tAUBUf 1 The 31 Con APR. 21 2 Adjust 3 Your 4 Routine 5 Moke 6 Otheis 7 An 8 Evening 9 No 10 May 11 jit 12 You 13 The 14 E.ptct 15 Goi 16 Little 17 Much 18 Don't 19 Be 20 From 21 New 22 Bring 23 You 24 For 25 Friend 26 An 27 Move 28 Easier 29 That 30 Could 32 33 34 35 36 MAY 31 1. 8.10-72 y23-5M7-89 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 I MAY 22 ! JUNE 22 130-33-50-53 i JUNE 23 JULY 23 2- 3- 4-241 no JULY 24 A-, AUG. 23 4l-47-49-65 67-71-76 VMOO AUG 24 Vf SEPT 22 Hm54-59-68 g)Good ) HJ 69-77-79-831 Around Hollywood (Editor's note: The second of an exclusive three-part series on the life and loves of Clark Gable.) Hollywood (U.R) Clark Ga ble holds the curious position of having one of the saddest matri monial records in Hollywood yet bsing sel dom criticized for it. He also is one of the best loved movie stars around the world al though for 15 years he has appeared in a string of medi- AlineMosby ocre movies. Experts have figured that Ga ble's appeal lasts come divorce courts or bad films because of his clean, healthy, "he-manliness and his friendly, honest manner. ' Those attributes brought him a stardom which has never been equalled. They also brought him a string of unhappy loves. Gable was born in Cadiz, Ohio, Feb. 1, 1901, the son' of a farm eirl and an oil field worker. At IS he was laboring in a rubber factory when he saw his. first play. The boy with the outsized ears and wide grin became stage struck. He took odd jobs in the aters while working as a lum berjack and salesman. , " . " At one little theater he met director Josephine Dillon, sev eral years older. She taught him acting and the lessons ended' in marriage. :v- Gable was an unsuccessful ac tor in bit parts on the stage, and in movies for six years. His act ing coach divorced him in 1930. Gable soon won an MGM con tract and began to be noticed. A year later he again married an older woman, Mrs. Rhea Lang ham. 11 years his senior. "He was very insecure at that time," a close friend says. "He had a mother complex because his mother died when he was a year old. So he was attracted to TOfJITE! ? 'v yps V lbs6 : J jfeNs ""ylovt story J KIRXKHJGLASACTOFLOYT.fcaUMi ikWllM-IMtH-llMMll-l fetffttAfWOUlJTVM never mm mm hm m n ti mm mm Plus The FUNNIEST S -A Comedy Hit Tears! 1 0000y' AISO LATEST WORLD NEWS and COLOK CARTOON GAZERV R POLLAN- SEPT. 23 OCT. 21 hs.19-45-48tffi 60-636-90M 41 Oyer' ', scovjp Through Be Pace Your Disturb . 62 Money -A3 Patience 64 Gam v 65 The 66 Decide 67 First 68 Evaluation ; 69 Of 70 Others 71 Move i 72 And " T 24 N0V.22 F2-73-74 - Mot Or Partner And Let Fast Action Or Afraid Neighbors Other To Mad Some Brings Make Stormy A An Mood To Scenes New Show SMtTtAMM NOV. 21 is DEC 22 5-9-27-W4T1 73 Settlements 74 Today 75 Could bl-3rV80-84M-J 76 Now 77 Your 78 Be 79 Money 80 Your 81 Public 82 Relations 83 Tie-ups 84 Popularity 85 Somewhot 86 And DEC. 23 I JAN. 20 VSS 112-15-17-32 r-4fLfliJ5i h 4-16-20-211 125-44-46 87 Unexpected i 88 Uncooperative PISCES 89 Thrill 90 Restraint JT 717 QJ Neutral MAR. 21 O Adverse 75-78-8S-8oa By ALINE MOSBY Unite Press Co rresacn stent older women." After four years the couple separated. In 1939, Gable by then a star married Carole Lombard. At last he appeared mated with someone closer to his age, interests and personality. Gable won an Oscar for "It Happened One Night" in 1934 He scored tremendous successes in "Mutiny on The Bounty" and "Gone With The Wind." He ap peared with Jean Harlow, Greta Gar bo and other sirens of the screen. Quits Movies He was among the first ten money-makers at the box office for 10 years before the war. But he had rough sledding at home, Carole was killed in a plane crash near Las Vegas in 1942. Gable quit movies for the Army He returned to pictures in 1945 but never equalled his past glory, In 1949 he ended his solitude by marrying Lady Sylvia Ashley. One of his ex-girl friends said then, "hope he finds happiness- he s been a lost guy for a long time. - But the elegant, sophisticated Sylvia and outdoorsy Gable were no match. One day he moved her clothes out o f the . house and changed the locks on the doors. After more than a year of legal fights .over his fortune, she di vorced him. in April of 1952. Gable escorted Grace Kelly, model Suzanne Dadolle and oth er beauties. He resumed dating old-time friend Virginia Grey, who once claimed she's the only girl who jilted Gable. Finally he renewed a friendship with Kay Williams Spreckels. ": - Tomorrow: what is the wom an lika who becama Gable's fifth wit.? . Ambrose, New York harbors, main channel, is dredged to a depth, of 45 feet and a width of 2,000 feet. Off "Luxury-Liner Row" at midtown Manhattan, where the largest ships dock, a 48-foot depth is maintained. A few extra feet of water under keels allow maneuvering. ?1 AQUARIUS I JAN 21 j&l feb' 19 fileJI m ! (T1 1st Driye-ln wow ei ' STARTS Showing! S:20 p.m. r.isDMIYROBN Starriflt Dinah SherieUa Jolin Greflsen Kay Kaadall . KtMMlh Moom Tu r ntoaf's Fa (rhe r r Believes Sufficient Punishment Inflicted Hillsboro, Miss. -tU.R) Farm er Elbert Bell said Saturday ha believed his disillusioned turn coat son Otho has inflicted suf ficient punishment on himself for deserting his country for a brief fling in Red China. Bell voiced his opinion as he, his wife and their son made preparations to drive in their 1955 model car to San Francisco to meet Otho when he arrives aboard the President Cleveland July 29.-. "I just hope he can come back home with us," Bell said. "He ought not to be punished any more." Refused Repatriation ' Otho G. Bell, Lewis Griggs of Jacksonville, Tex., and William Cowart of Dalton, Ga., refused repatriation at Panmunjom with 18 other soldiers at the end of the Korean war and chose to live with the Chinese Communists. They became disillusioned with their new way of life and asked and received -permission to return to the United States and face an uncertain future. Bell's father, a 49-year-old poultry farmer, said he, his wife and son Lester would leave Hills boro July 24 for San Francisco. . Otho's stepmother, who reared him from a seven-month-old in- Health Board Votes Vaccine Advisers: Portland U.R) The State Board of Health Friday voted to establish an advisory com mittee to help "assure equitable. distribution" of Salk polio vac cine in Oregon in coming months. The committee, expected to be named in the next few days, will be made up of two repre sentatives of the Oregon State Medical society, two from the State Pharmaceutical associa tion, and one each 'from the Parent-Teacher . association, a public health agency and the press, radio and television in dustries. Dr. Harold M. Erickson, state health officer, said he hopes ad ditional supplies of the vaccine will be made available for both public and private distribution in the state "within a short time." The health officer told the board that while some . 40,000 Oregon children received, initial shots during school ; clinics earl ier this year, only about. 30 per cent of second shots had; been completed because of the na tional production slowdown. Court Records POLICE COURT Benjamin Virgil Shearer, excessive noise. $10 bail. Art Raymond Huff, excessive noise $10 bail, no operators license. $5 bail. Walter Leon Brenner, excessive noise. $10 bail. Nettie Jane . Wheeler, failure to yield right of way- to oncoming 've hicle. 10 bail. : . - Darley Pearl Craig, failure to atop at red light. $5 bail.. Roy Forrest Martin, failure to stop, (sign), $5. Dorothy Elliott, crossing over fire hose. S3. Roy Clifford Bmgren, violation of basic rule. $10. Lester W. Wilson, violation of baste rule. $10. ' - James Walter Hons, failure to stoo flight). $5. victor v joaenn David. illegal ' sen turn. $5. Burnath H. Morgan, failure to yield right of way to oncoming traffic, $9. Richard W. Kline, expired vehicle license, $5. Phillip Harold Ward, failure to stop, (sign),, $5. . ., - . DISTRICT COVRT - James Horn. S4. Grants Pass, driv ing while intoxicated. $395. AJDert r. TucKer. angling oy pro hibited methods. $30. Troy J. Diekenoa. failure to atop at stop "sign, $10. David a. Legg. overwwtn. so sus pended. $10 fine. Robert S. Six, failure to atop at atop Urn. $10,. - . Bunnell m. sail, ovenoaa, Delmer T. S teach, overload. $09. Sharold W. Chapman, overload. $44. Roland D. Miller, overload, $100. -William L. Riahtmier. failure to stoo at atop sign, $10. MarlinW. Fjarii, bo PUC permit, $19... . . ;. ... . Albert TKKera Tuexer, angling wnn prohibited methods. $30. CIRCUIT COtTRT' Donna B. Corzine vs. Syl vaster S. Conine, divorce complaint. . John O. Chancellor Jr.. vs.- carol Ann Chancellor, divorce decree. Dorria D. Holsaosle vs. Harris Hoi- sappla Jr., divorce complaint. unirena tureen -.vs. Lawrence j. Klrsch. divorce complaint. Walter H. Shumard vs. Jessie Shu mard. divorce complaint. Anita I. Lucas vs. Clarence J. Lu- cas. divorce decree. Richard Cyril Tnorpe vs. Marian Gertrude Thorpe, divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS RalBh Leon Hackner. 30. Zacle Point, and Patricia May Stock. 19. Eagle Point. - Graver Gabriel Kawis. si. Norman, Ark.. and Hazel Charlotte Van- Dermark. 60.' 349 Apple St. Robert LeRoy- Larson. 22. of 3290 Jacksonville Hwy.. and Edna Roberta Ricks. IS. of 202 Stark it. Frank Wesley Smith. 74. Ashland, and Ethel Mabel Blasch. 64. Philo math. Ore. Robert Arthur smun. a. of 45 Haven St.. Medford. and Mary Ann Mitchell, 29, route 1, box 14A, Jacksonville. O SMORGASBORD $2.25 Inclndes Barbecued Spareribs O WONDERFUL DINNERS Special Prime Bibs of Beef O ALA CARTE MENU FOR RESERVATIONS - Phone NOrrnandy 4-2513 fant, was the happiest member of the family. She had at first planned not to make the trip because she "thought we wouldn't have enough mUney, and someone's got to stay 'here to look after things." To Wateh Over Farm J Tommy Bell, Otho's half broth er, volunteered to watch over the farm, leaving Mrs. Bell free to make the trip with her year old son and a six-year-old daugh ter. : , The possibility that Otho may be prosecuted is uppermost in Elbert Bell's mind. He has the assurance of a Hillsboro grocer, Paul Chambers, that the mer chant will stand bond for Otho, should the necessity arise, "and if. it's not too much." The elder Bell is convinced that Otho. was forced to remain in Red China after the Korean truce. "What Otho says about the others wanting to come home proves it," he said. IILRB Aidelsks Vote At Ontario Set Aside Ontario1, Ore. (U.R) Thomas P. f Graham, regional director for the National Labor Relations Board, has recommended that a bargaining agent election con ducted" at the Oregon Frozen Foods Co. plant in Ontario April 28 be set aside and a new elec tion held. In a report released here to day on objections of AFL Team sters Local 900 at Pendleton, Graham said he found merit in the union's claim that employees were called into the company office individually just prior to the election and urged to reject the union. . c ' Graham called the interviews "interference with free choice." Employees rejected the union as their bargaining agent by a vote of 158 to 75 in the election. New Effort Planned In M&M Dispute Portland U.R) Federal Mediator LeRoy Smith Satur day said he planned to contact both union and management in a new effort to end a strike by some 1500 AFL plywood em ployees at five M and M plants in: Oregon and California. The federal mediator's efforts to "get the negotiations back on the road" followed union re jection 'Friday of a back-to-work proposal by the big lumber com pany. Workers at M ' and M plants in Portland, Albany, Lyons, and Idanha in Oregon and Eureka in California voted 706-493 against returning to work while the company negotiated with the union. ' The strike was called July 1 when the company refused to re new its union contract with "certain changes". The union de manded an unchanged contract. Clay , Brown, company presi dent, said the company's posi tion had not changed, and that the company was willing to re sume operations under the same terms that existed prior to the strike.; Welcome To WATCH FOR SIGNS your visitors end f VoRwffjry CsihisWilfaffS. Aa Cut and Pofshad ArtifocSa Rouoh cut one poHshel ore Pof $erfa Try Ovr Peldim aovtx HONfY Lejfeju 99sr9cKeii of oootejft re, iiichKtinf C r a ra i c Jugs. ; , or Mtofotp , - -SaftUPg' ft Mill EAST -$SvSriV9s? jTHAT 'GOOD EARTH' FEELING - Paratroopers of the j 187th regmenta i combat team hug the "good earth" at Hamilton Field, CaL, -after the plane in which they were flying from Japan survived the most perilous Pacific flight mhistory. Their crippled Globemaster limped home over 700 miles with two engines out No Freeway in Red Bluff; Klamath Man Pays Fine ' Red Bluff, Calif. (U.R) "I thought I was on a freeway," said Gary L. Kittj Klamath Falls, Ore., explaining why he flashed through this small town at bet ter than 70 miles an hour. "Un huh," said Judge Robert L. Barbour and fined him $105. Dead line Sunday Classified is at noon Saturday, 10 a.m.- Monday for Monday; other days 5:30 previous day. PUBLIC CARD PARTY Tuesday July 19 8 p.m. 50c Per Person Refreshments Served Bridge - Canasta - Pinochle Pythian Sisters PYTHIAN BUILDING Fifth and Grape J. CLARK Will Appear IN PERSON 2 Times Today 2 at 3 & 9:30 p.m. . - -CONTINUOUS Today From 12:45 p.m. . -REGULAR PRICES! .03 1 . ssea fTMSH jHPIP"PWj.-faiMli i sssi a un m-Jtvuii in i lassmii iN.tyt var. iafiiii" -- npar 3 oc the - 11 TT Warn erColor 11 II Sunday. July 17, 1955 Open - 5 a.m. to 12 Midnight For Goodness Sake . . . Eat Here THE Top Notch Craterian Theater Bldg. -1 ii ill I JACK HAWKINS DEWEYMARTIN -KER1MA LUISELLA BONI I Answering Your . . 1 AiMstions on LOVE Business, MEDFORD (OREGON) Huge Hailstones Batter West Portland Portland -(U.R) A freak July hailstorm battered Portland's West Hills Friday night with icy pellets' the size of golf balls. . The hailstorm accompanied a sudden- thundershower that drenched the city with upwards of .06 inches of rain. The weath er bureau said it was the first Jiail to be recorded in Portland in July. ' ' '- ' One , Portland man, W. K Goughnour, said the "roof of his automobile emerged from the storm looking like a "wash board" and he. said hailstone punctured the, canvas top of a neighbor's auto. City police reported no dam age from the considerable light ning. ? .-0-y---''" -. HEY KIDS! THERE IS STILL ' TIME TO JOIN THE CRATERIAN -i THEATRE'S Wednesday; Matinee Club ' ", o r v . Membership T Cards , FREE! REGISTER ANYTIME Evenings From 7 to 9 pjn. . or Sat. and Son. Matinees -Join Craterian's DAVY CROCKETT ' CLUB TODAYI I SIIVANA MANGANO MKHAil RENNIE 1 ASHLAND o ci!ia'i PLUS iTTTTTl 'i"M' STARIsTODAY- JOAN COLLINS MARRIAGE Etc. MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN Gale CI liuaat TCITE $k A SAGA OF PIONEER DAYS "Kentucky Rifle" WITH CHILL WILLS CATHY DOWNS IN . COLOR . & Att - ' l'" I- tc::ite MON. TUB. " e Piu o t!r (br fed ENOSTONiTE Aiscrcot xsa nus 'i. aW. aaaasi asWItJ. r V afar r sriv eatl 11 rsS" 0f Wl i ii i L. 5