Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 18, 1955, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    N - l f ; ft
i V ' 'JL&jk iYT
t:;y m
DRUM BEATING for her own charms as well as the charms
of French champagne, Claudie Petit, Miss France, opens
French vs. California champagne dispute as she presents
Long Beach, CaL, mayor with magnum of French champagne
which she claims is "much, much better." (International)
On Tho Side by e. v. Duriihg
(Pirtiifcf 4 by Kfcf Syndic. lacJ
Tit la yoar eyts, my swsstsst tor.
My only worlds I ae;
Let hot their orb in sunshlna moo
And earth oclow, and sales abors
- May frowm or smUs Xor . -
MOOEC
How many drinks are extract
ed from a fifth of whisky in
the average cocktail bar or res
taurant? Several years ago bar
tenders were expected to get
25 drinks from a fifth. Now the
size of the drink has been de
creased to less than an ounce.
Not only that, the practice of
watering whiskies has greatly
increased. Watering whisky serv
ed by a bar or restaurant is, of
course, a criminal offense. It is
obtaining money under false pre
tenses and also a form of tax
evasion.
Passing By
Charlie Berns. Elegantly at
tired and studiously debonair
millionaire restaurateur. Co
founder and currently guiding
genius of that place on West
Fifty-third st, Manhattan, which
and Charlie's." Incidentally, isn't
it surprising nobody has ever
thought of calling a cafe, "Tom
and Jerry's"?
Asides .
How sharp are you on the
details of United States history?
Can you give , the location of
Bull Run where the celebrated
battle of the War Between the
States was fought? . . . Am asked
H Gypsy Rose Lee, the highly
educated stripteuse, has retired
from the entertainment field.
Gypsy, who is happily married
and very domesticated, is only
partially retired. She plays a
few night club engagements an
nually to get herself a little
extra pocket housekeeping
money.
Asking
Queries from clients. Q. What
is New -York's best restaurant?
A. Le Pavilion. ... Q. At what
age does a filly become a mare?
A. Five. . . . Q. What is the
origin of the "finnan" in that
xype. oi coaxisn Known as nn-
nan haddie"? A. The "finnan1
.was inspired by the name of
Findon, a town in Scotland, near
Aberdeen. Residents of this town
have long been celebrated for
their skill in preparing finnan
haddie for the market.
Horses and Women
The highest paid people on
the sales staff of a department
store are the salesmen in the
women's shoe department. It
takes a highly intelligent man
of strong character and great
patience to successfully sell
shoes to females. He must also
be of very good appearance and
possessed of a bit of charm.
Women have 86 -different types
of feet so fitting them is quite
a task. They all want to make
their feet look smaller. In this
connection it is interesting to
note that some of the most suc
cessful women in the history
ox the world had large feet.
Ignorance
I heard one Manhattan taxi
driver ask another where the
"Little Church Around the Cor
ner" was. An astonishing display
oi ignorance by a cab driver.
In London a man can't get a
license to drive a cab until he
passes an examination which
proves he knows the location of
every important - hotel,- club,
church and place of interest in
the entire area of greater Lon
don.
Pleas Not
Bricklayers are the highest
paid hourly craft in the world.
There are about 130,000 brick
layers in the United States.
While admitting their hourlv nav
is unusually high, the bricklayers
say a high yearly wage is im
possible because the work in
most sections is seasonal. Whv
doesn't a bricklayer master an
additional trade that would keep
him busy in the winter? Surely
a man with intellieence enough
to become a bricklayer should
have no difficulty in becoming a
carpenter, electrician or plumb
er.
Helpful Books
A pair of books many people
might find helpful are those
titled "How to Protect Your Pat
ent" and "How to Secure Copy
right." Both are published by a
New York outfit that specializes
in law books. If interested in
quire at nearest bookshop han
dling legal material.
Give Them Credit
- Give credit by name to the
models who pose for advertise-
Th Good Neighbor ...
Frank Curry, who lives two
doors down the street from me
in town, is a kind husband and
indulgent father. He is a neigh
bor who visits the sick, hauls
old ladies to church, keeps his
dog at home and never forces
the people in his block to be a
captive audience to baseball
broadcasts. His wife and their
two teen-agers are as good as
Frank to live nigh. We love them
all.
Then comes the deer season.
Frank misses no minute of it.
His pet hunting grounds are a
14,000-acre tree farm that neigh
bors on the boom-pond shack
where I hole up at odd times to
pound out tall tales on my 1909
Model Oliver Visible typewrit
er. I've seen Frank working as
a good neighbor here.
Frank started coming up the
Polewater as a boy 'with his fa
ther, around 40 years ago. Vir
gin timber stood tall and thick
on the land. The only deer to be
hunted were up along the
streams, or on the burns of 1902
or later in high open country.
Gat and Lock ...
The hunters then, as now,
started many forest fires. This
made trouble smoke up between
hunters and timberland owners.
Most of the owners were farm
ers. Some hunters claimed a
sort of roving squatter's right
if there could be such a thing
to camp out and hunt deer
any old place. 1
Then the loggers surged in
with saw and ax. The giants
fell. The best timber was yarded
out and rafted to the mills, thou
sands of feet of cheaper logs
were left to be burned as slash
or to rot. Browse grew on the
cutovers. Then for years the
hunting up the Polewater was
better than it had ever been be
fore the haryest.
Meanwhile the Douglas fir
seedlings came up above the
stumps, slash, browse and weeds.
Fires left black holes in the
green crop, and some of them
were hunters' fires. But the
owners kept the property,- pay
ing taxes, also paying protection
fees to state forestry and the
forest fire association.
By 1940 the older burns and
cutovers had stands of pole and
piling trees on the lower sites.
War demand brought the log
gers in again. Old grades were
made into new roads. In due
course the Polewater Tree Farm
was certified. The roads were
gated as part of the protection
program. Frank Curry and other
hunters who came back every
deer season found locks on gates
and closure notices posted on
favorite hunting grounds. This
they did not like. Natch.
But in the main the deer hun
ters were Frank Currys. Good
neighbors in their home towns,
good sportsmen in the field, re
specters of property rights and
the laws of property. The gate
breakers were a minority.
Red Hat Day ...
The Frank Currys have work
ed for the right of sportsmen, as
they see them, through their or
ganizations and according to law.
The vandals, drunks, poachers,
thieves, juvenile and parental de
linquents, arsonists and litter
ments. Many people would like
to know the names of these beau
tiful creatures. That's what I
suggested several years ago. I
now note the giving of . such
credit is being seriously consid
ered. This brings to mind my
other suggestion as to chorus
girls. I suggest the ladies of the
ensemble be given numbers as
football and baseball players are
so their identity can be learned
by consulting the program.
1 . v
i iiuiren
0-10 Lb. Hudson Day Stylo
BLANKETS 7284
10 Year Guarantee
quantity Genuine Cloomf icld Top Quality
CHECK O COMPARE O Bo Delighted
l::rcil!3 Cfciel Csj ... D:ri:j Car ALL-OUT
BLANKET SALE!
10 COLORS
You'll Want 3 or 4
O
Exebsivo
At
o
OPEN SUNDAYS .
OPEN WEEK DAYS
10 AJA. to 4 P.M.
. 9 AM. to t PJA.
Excbtira
bugs among the hunting hosts
are a black blight to the Frank
Currys the true sportsmen, as
they are menaces to tree farm
owners and to the managers
of public forests.
Now all hands are moving for
ward together in joint programs
that hold great promise for the
use of tree farms for hunting
and other recreation, and for in
creasing control of the rifle-packing
revolutionists and outlaws
who go to the woods in that deer
season. The cooperative groups
in Oregon are sponsoring a Gov
ernor's Red Hat Day, on which
an effort will be made to get
the signature of every Oregon
hunter to a pledge "to be law
abiding, to respect the rights and
property of others, to be careful
with fire and firearms."
Another program of the kind
is in the works for Washington.
I have faith in them because I
have faith in men like Frank
Curry, my good neighbor.
LACK OF SLEEP BLAMED
New York U.R) Dr. Sam
uel Henry Prince, of King's col
lege, Halifax, N.S., came up with
a new reason Sunday for New
York's high juvenile delinquency
rate. Dr. Prince told. the con
gregation at St. Stephen's Prot
estant Episcopal church that one
cause for the crime rate may be
that heat and noise keeps New
Yorkers from getting enough
sleep.
Argentina Church
Hours Pass Quietly
Buenos Aires (U.R) Church
going hours passed quietly Sun
day in comparison with a week
ago when demonstrations result
ed in injuries to six policemen
and arrest for more than 100
Catholics.
The only reminder of church
state friction was an unsigned
editorial in the Peronist organ
Democracia. It said Argentina's
only troubles in the ' past two
weeks have been "street disord
ers and provocative pastoral
acts" which it blamed on "those
who have the deaths and the
sorrows of the wounded of June
16 on their consciences." June
16 was the date of the navy-led
revolt.
Britons Opposed To
Capital Punishment
By UNITED PRESS
London (U.R) The mass
circulation Daily Mirror report
ed today that Britons are two-to-one
against capital punish
ment. The newspaper with 4,500,000
circulation said more than 30,000
readers answered an opinion poll
following the controversial hang
ing last week of blonde killer
Ruth Ellis. The paper said 20,
509 voted against the death pen
alty and 11,057 in favor.
The case of the 28-year-old
model who shot one of her two
lovers stirred a storm of pro
test against capital punishment.
Monday. July It. 19SS
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL THUMB WT
As We Live
By ELIZABETH HURLOCK, PH.D.
13-Year-Old Boy Almost
A Juvenile Delinquent
Children who are easily influ
enced by others are always po
tential juvenile delinquents: That
is the danger facing the situation
the troubled father describes
thus: ..
(Q) "My son, who is 13
years old. has never bn a
healthy boy and. as a result.
m am nas nTr
been abl 1
play 9 a mas
and do many
of th things
boys of his.
ag did. Con
sequently, h
has had few
friends. In
tmmasamS past two
Dr. Hexlock months a has
gotten into a crowd of boys
who might b called "bad act
on.' They don't actually do
Suian Ball Remains
In Critical Condition
Hollywood U.R) Actress
Suzan Ball, fighting for ; her
life against cancer, remained in
"serious condition", last night,
physicians at City of Hope sani
tarium reported.
A report said: "diagnostic pro
cedures will be completed by
Tuesday and evaluation will fol
low in accordance with . (her)
admission to City of Hope for
consultative purposes."
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday; 10 a.m. Monday for
Monday; other days 8:30 previous day.
anything seriously wrong, but
they have a bad reputation in
school and in -th neighbor
hood. "I have tried to point out
to my son that this is not th
typ of boy he should b asso
ciating with, but he sticks up
for them and claims I try to
keep him from having friends.
I have noticed a marked
change in him sine h started
to go with these boys, spec
ially in that he is sometimes
not too truthful; he comes
home with things in his pock
ets that I suspect he has taken
from some of th children in
school, and he is beginning to
talk against school and th
teachers. I am worried about
him."
(A) You should be worried
about your son, as he is headed
for trouble unless something is
done and done soon to stop it.
The fact that a change has come
over your son in so $hort a time
shows what is likely to happen
in the future if he continues to
pal around with these boys.
Because your son was not abl
to play with other boys when h
was younger and was deprived of
the friendships every child nor
mally craves, he is anxious to
keep the friends he now has. This
will make him an easy target
for any activities when th
group he goes with will need a
scapegoat.
Easily Influenced
A . child who has had few
friends almost always is very
easily influenced, once he ac
quires some . friends. He is so
afraid that he will lose his new
friends that he allows himself to
be led around by the nose..
If your son's friends were boys
you approved of, there would
be little cause for concern. How
ever, as they have bad reputa
tions, the chances are that they
will soon be doing things that
go beyond the limits of mischief.
Your son will be dragged down
if you do not put a stop to bis
association with them. . 1
(Copyright HIS.
General Feature Corp.)
ML
ooo
Rough with Green Pin Slabs
Select Quality -1 2" or 1 6"
Heaping Double Load .$7.50
MEDFORD FUEL CO.
Court and McAndraws
TrphfM 2-2111
w
mm 1
'ii ri
Mil"
II "
Tii
en
Sift
El
Dr. Mox ZuvMieniiuiin, Blitz bfewmQtter, chocks the
crystal-dear, golden wort as H travels on its way fro
tauter tub to brw khi.
FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW
ABOUT BLITZ WEINHARD
Throughout the entire brewing process in
the making of fine beer at Blitz Wemhard
from the initial Mmshing-ina process
down through crowning bottles and seal
ing cans the only materials with which
Blitz beer comes into direct contact at
copper, stainless steel and glass.
Blitz Weinhard is proud of its brewery,
as modern and spotless as any food plant
in the world. And Blitz welcomes every
opportunity to take visitors through die
brewery. There are conducted tours each
Monday through Friday 10 and 11 a.m.
and I, 2 and 3 p.m. as well as group
tours by appointment. You're cordially
invited!
to make Oregon's own beer your belter buy!
To visualize the straining process in brewing, think of
making coffee in a dripolator.
Our "dripolator" at Blitz Weinhard is a 13330-gallon
lauter tub of the latest stainless steel design. ("Lauter
comes from a German word meaning "to clarify). Com
parable to the fresh coffee is the brewer's mash a niixtnf
of finest grains and male And the finished "coffee cor
responds to the golden clear "wort" that, under the dose
watch of Blitz Weinhards brewmaster, flows on to the
15,500-gallon brew kettle for the cooking process.
The grain taken from the lauter tub after each "brew
is not useless, like spent coffee grounds. Because of its
protein content, this grain is transported to nearby dairy
farms where it serves as valuable animal food. Thus, what
originally came from Oregon farms returns, in part, to
other Oregon farms for important use in another bask
industry.
This careful straining process in the making of fine beer
is simply one of many steps necessary to turn outasmoodv
mellow, flavorful product. To an international brewing
authority like Dr. "Max Zimmermann, Blitz brewmaster,
there's only one way to do it and thafs the right umy.
Here's just one more reason why die best beer-buying
advice in Oregon is
w
Oregon's Own Pint Beer
Blitz Weinhard Co Portland
1951 N. PACIFIC HIGHWAY At Tho Y
J O '