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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1955)
o o o D o o 0 FOUJt MeDPORD (OREGON) UNI "Everybody In Southern Oregon Reads The Mail Tribune Published Daily Except Saturday by LJ MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager I. C. FERGUSON Managing Editor F.RIf? ALLEN JR Citv Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor JACK JACKSON Sunday Editor GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES II M.n Tn AHvanrp' Per CODV 10c. Daily and Sunday Cms- year S12.00 Daily add Sunday Six months 6.30 Daily and Sunday Three mos. 230 Sunday Only One vear $350 By Carrier In Advance Medford. AshlanA Central Point. Eagle Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent, and on motor routes: ,,. Daily and Sunday One year $13.00 Daily ana sunaay une uiu"" Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy. All Terms lasn in aava"" Official Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Pr FuULeaseq wire "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION "wT Hni l.mAV COMPANY TSC. Offices in New York. Chicago De troit. San Francisco Los Angeles. Seattl. Portland. St. Louia AUanta. Vancouver B.C. NATIONAL EDITORIAL Iassoc'TatiIqn riJJMTHfcmiLLLJ NIWSPAMt PUtlKMIRS associatioh Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and 10 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO August 10, 1945 (It was Friday) Japan offers surrender terms. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: Discovery of the "atomic bomb" has caused unfamiliar and horrific appear ing and sounding words and phrases to blossom rampant on newspaper pages. Many reek with villainy. Should any one of 'them show up on a valley pear, they will get arsenate of lead squirted on them. The "atomic bomb" scared the Older Girls, but not enough to cause them to hop on a chair and squeal, as if they saw a mouse. 20 YEARS AGO August 10, 1935 (It was Saturday) Experts predict very costly television available by 1938 perhaps. Medford to receive $225 share of state beer tax. as 30 YEARS AGO August 10, 1925 (It was Monday) Entire force of state and fed eral fire fighters called out to "fight 21 forest fires in county. Morgan-McNeil sawmill burns. From the Local and Personal column: The heavy pall of smoke which lies over Medford and the valley comes from many forest fires in the county and adjacent territory and will probably last until a rain or heavy wind blows it away. The smoke is so heavy that it completely hides the sun an$; conceals the foothills from view. 40 YEARS AGO August 10, 1915 (It was Tuesday) Utah beet sugar factory and Portland-Beaver Cement plants promised for valley in coming year. Fifty men battle incendiary fire in Applegate district. Fire bug said active in that area for two years, still at large. What's the Answer? Can You Get 4 of the 7? Cepr. 1955, Editorial Research Report 1. Costs as a whole for the av erage family not changing its liv ing standards have gone up or down these last three years, or stayed about the same? 2. Neiman Marcus is a famous Texas: Oil Co., political lead er, department store, university, or utilities magnate? 3. Most of the 21 U.S. (now 18) Korean war prisoners who chose to stay with the Reds came from large cities or from rural areas and small towns? 4. Milk thickened with rennet rnakes what? 5. Carryover of cotton from previous years is higher or low er than the whole crop estimated for next year, or about the same? 6. The Great Barrier Reef lies off Cape Horn, Australia, Nor way,, New Zealand, Nantucket Island, Cape of Good Hope, or Florida? i 7. Cornelius McGillicuddy is better known in baseball circles as ? The Answers: 1. Stayed about the same. 2. Department store. 3. Most from rural areas and small towns. 4. Junket. 5. About the same. 6. Australia. 7. Connie Mack. MAIL TRIBUNE Why Mexican Workers? The fruit orchards of Jackson county bring an es timated average of some $14,000,000 into the valley each year. All the valley benefits from this fruit growers, agricultural workers, merchants, white-collar workers, or what have you. The industry is most important, ranking with lum ber and tourist services as our three most vital econ omic mainstays. DUT wherever you go in the valley, it is possible to detect an undercurrent of resentment, sometimes half-humorous, against "the fruitgrowers." This is a simple fact. It applies at the time of "smudging," which orchardists prefer to call "orchard heating;" it applies throughout the growing season when chemi cal applications to the trees give rise to fears of pois oning; and it applies at harvest time now rapidly approaching when the labor problem comes to the fore. We have long felt that much of this resentment could be dispelled if the fruitgrowers, as a group, would simply take the rest of the populace into its confidence, and explain its problems, and why it has to solve them as it does. FROM time to time attempts to do this have been TMorln Vn- 1-1 att Vi o tt-v inauc, uub Liicv nave adic, and much of their lost. There has been too many of the fruit operations, from the fact that some growers last spring used rubber tires for smudging, to the negotiations for the use of Mexican Nationals in the harvest. It's easy to say, in effect, that what the public doesn't know won't hurt it. But it is also a fact that the fruit men are, to a large extent, dependent on public opinion. Many of them recognize this, and have at tempted to publicize their feel that the less said the gives rise to rumors and suspicion. TXHAT brings. this to mind is the fact that Mexican ' Nationals again this year are to be brought here to help with the harvest. No announcement of this has been made by any of the fruitgrowing organiza tions, although it is of general public importance. With "outsiders" brought in to help in the fruit, there is a quite natural tendency to ask, "Why don't you hire local people? The best answer we a letter from one Rogue sponse to just this question, posed by a teacher in a local school. We are publishing parts of his letter in the hope that the reasoning behind the decision, which seems sound to us, will clarify the situation. We could add that we would like thoughtful explanations "touchy" aspects of the industry's operation. Here are excerpts from the letter: The fruit industry requires about 2,500 people to harvest and pack our crop of fruit. The season usually starts the middle of August and extends well into October. In order to handle the crop on time and before the fruit becomes too mature, we must harvest a steady amount every day for the full two months. , It happens that the national low period of employment for farm migratory labor occurs in August. So even though we are far from large centers of population, we find a con siderable number of migrant workers passing through the valley in August. Our growers have invested considerable money in housing to encourage them to stay, because we realize they can readily move north into vegetables and apples for the longer job extending into December, rather than accept the shorter period of work here. During August, we also have the problem of employ ment of local people, including students and women. Our problem is, if we "load up" with too many local students and housewives through August and do not make room for migratory labor passing through, in early September when schools start we suddenly find ourselves with no help. The transients, not finding work here in August, have moved out of the valley. September is the month of heaviest em ployment of migratory labor along the coast. There are three things our growers might do: 1. Pay higher wages to try to induce more people to work in the orchards. Actually this valley is paying more per hour for farm work than any other district we know of in the country. We cannot economically go any higher, because we must sell our produce in competition with the same products from other districts. 2. Our growers could selfishly refuse to employ any local students, families or persons whom they were sure would not stay with them for the two full months necessary to harvest the crop. 3. Employ Nationals from Mexico. That is what the growers have been forced to do. These Nationals are expen sive because the growers must not only pay the same wages to them as they do local or transient help, but must in addi tion pay for recruitment, transportation and maintain the camp to house them. But we must have labor, especially the last month of the harvest season, and there is no other source. Our growers are trying to cooperate with the local people by attempting to analyze the local prospective labor situation well in advance of the harvest, and to bring in the , Nationals in two or three groups, timed for arrival when they feel that local people and transient labor will be quitting for school or other reasons. It takes time to recruit and bring these people in, so planning has to be done well in advance, and cannot always fit perfectly. If the local people and students are not fully employed at all times during the harvest. I believe from the above they will have a little better r ' rstanding of the growers' problems, and the efforts tht,. are making to be fair all around. "THIS sounds reasonable. We can see no reason why anyone should take exception to the solution which has more or less been forced on the growers. The people of Southern Oregon are fair-minded people and will accept reasonable solutions, when they are- explained. It is almost always when facts are not known that misunderstandings occur and un founded suspicions are aroused. E.A. Wednesday, August 10. I9S5 Vtrti - vi innnncicfanf nrirl ennr. uccn iiijuoioitiii anu owui- effect has therefore been much secrecy surrounding problems. Others, however, better an attitude which have seen is contained in Valley fruit grower in re to see equally frank and given publicly on other Halt to Bogus Declared No. Of Past Session of Congress Washington, D. C. The most important conservation achieve ment of the recent session of Congress was a law to stop bogus mining claims on the Na tional Forests and other public lands of the West, according to the National Wildlife Federa tion. The new mining claim law permits a prospector to work his diggings, but otherwise pre serves the right of the govern ment to manage the timber and other surface resources. It also sets up a procedure involving public notices and hearings for clearing up many false claims that now clutter the public lands,. Under the old law it was pos sible for a person to stake out, a summer home site, post a good trout stream for personal use, or get control of valuable tim ber all under pretense of look ing for minerals. Commended For Bill' In a summary of the session, the Federation also commended Congress for passing a bill to re lease $13V million of ear marked wildlife funds that had been tied up in the treasury for 10 years. The impounded funds, collected from a tax on sports men's guns and ammunition, ac cumulated when Congress failed to appropriate the full receipts during the World War II years. The $13Vz million will be al located to the states and terri tories during the next five years in addition to regular federal aid wildlife funds. The money can be used for acquisition and development of game lands, wildlife research and manage ment. The House Interior Commit tee killed a plan for building Echo Park dams as a result of widespread protests by support ers of the National Park system. Echo Park dam, planned to im pound water in the Green and Yampa canyons of Dinosaur Na tional monument, was one of Editorial Comment A WELL-BALANCED EDUCATOR The retirement of E. H. Hed rick, city superintendent of the Medford schools, closes a period of 30 years in that position. So far as our data goes this tops the record for Oregon city super intendents, the nearest approach being J. A. Churchill's 22 years as superintendent of the Baker schools about a half-century ago. Needless to say, Mr. Hedrick has been an unusually efficient educational leader, but not in a spectacular way. He has a com bination of administrative abil ity and well-balanced common sense, the talent of keeping things running smoothly and in the right direction. Significant in this long period of leadership has been the fact that Superintendent Hedrick has not been bowled over by educa tional fads of a national charac ter as they swept the country from time to time. Nor has he permitted extra-curricular activ ities to dominate learning, like the tail wagging the dog, al though recognizing their value and rightful place in the lives of the children. He has steadfastly kept in sight the fact that the goal of our expensive school sys tem is learning in the funda mentals, plus the development of good citizenship.. In this he has put forth a more definite and sensible goal than the vague ab stractions which the National Educational Association has from time to time tried to set up as ends of education. Naturally E. H. Hedrick's suc cess with the Medford schools has not gone unnoticed. At times he has been called to larger fields with offers of more salary; but the powers that be at Medford have made induce ments sufficient to keep him right there. We have had state superin tendents of public instruction who have not thus emphasized the fundamentals. Some have tended to relegate the three 'R's" to the days of the little red schoolhouse. This looks like educational suicide. How can a high school or college student learn anything else who has not Questioning Planned In Slaying of Woman Kansas City, Mo. (U.R) FBI agents planned to question a sex offender today in connec tion with the slaying of Mrs. Wilma Allen, whose body was found Sunday in a Kansas pas ture. Police arrested the suspect yesterday in Omaha on a charge of drunkenness and vagrancy. They said the 43-year-old man had a record of sex offenses and robbery and lived in Kansas City within 10 blocks of the murdered woman's home. When arrested the suspect had head bruises and deep scratches on his neck and left shoulder. Police here said before his arrest that Mrs. Allen's mur derer probably had been scratched when she struggled against him. Mining Claims 1 Achievement several big reservoirs proposed in a bill to authorize the so- called upper Colorado River project. The Senate passed the bill with Echo Park dam in it, but the measure never came to a vote in the House. Appropriations Up The Federation noted with satisfaction 10 per cent increases in appropriations for the Fish and Wildlife service, the Na tional Forest service and Soil Conservation service. The Na tional Park service got a 40 per cent increase, mostly earmarked for road .construction in the parks. The Federation predicted that organized sportsmen and other conservation groups would be working for the following in the second session of the 84th Con gress: I. Final passage of a water pollution control bill. 2. Amendments to plug loop holes in the Coordination Act of 1946, a law which requires study and reports on the fish and wild life effects of federal dams and drainage projects 3. Legislation to halt federal subsidies for drainage of water fowl marshes. 4. Earmarking 40 per cent of Duck Stamp (migratory bird hunting license) receipts for ac quisition of waterfowl areas. 5. Legislation spelling out mul tiple-use management of the Na tional Forests and providing ade quate funds for wildlife and pub lic recreation. The Federation, an organiza tion of State wildlife federations and sportsmen's leagues, warned conservationists to "take a good look" at H. R. 6815, a bill re ported by the House Agriculture Committee, which' would force early sale of some 7,000,000 acres of submarginal lands ac quired under the Bankhead Jones Farm Tenant Act of 1937, Some of these federal lands are in Wildlife Refuges now adminis tered by the Fish and Wildlife service, learned to read well, or who does not continually increase his ability to read? And is it enough to teach girls to cook and serve and sew and play basketball and know little if any arithmetic? "It has little value," said one educational leader. Or was he an educational leader? It is a matter of satisfaction to know that E. H. Hedrick's type of educational leadership has met with steady endorsement over a long period of years. The southern Oregon city and the man are both to be congrat ulated. WLA in Baker (Ore.) Democrat-Herald. Mystery of Bronze Casting Cleared Up Portland (U.R) A heavy bronze casting found Monday by Warren W. Hale in his driveway here created something of a mystery until D. A. Powell, sculptor and Roosevelt high school teacher, decided it was a bas-relief he made of Dr. J. W. Hill, founder of Hill Military Academy in Portland. Powell said he had made the casting about 1935. It was set in the base of a beacon light on Rocky Butte just above the academy grounds in Portland. Police said they thought the 15 by 20-inch relief had been removed and dumped by youth ful vandals. Its face had been scarred by .22-calibre bullets and BB pellets. Baruch Asks Soviets To Accept Atom Plan New York (U.R) Bernard Baruch appealed to the leaders of the Soviet Union last night to accept a "safe and foolproof" system of international nuclear control before "atomic energy becomes uncontrollable. Baruch made his appeal in a radio address on the Columbia Broadcasting System's "Age of the Atom" series. He said the present confer ence in Geneva on peaceful uses of nuclear energy is a fine start, but said without a system of control of atomic weapons the world cannot reach the heights of possible development. Klein Attends IFYE Meeting in Michigan Glenn Klein, 4-H agent for Jackson county, recently at tended the National Internation al Farm Youth Exchange confer ence at Michigan State Univer sity in East Lansing, Mich. Klein has been in Ithaca, N.Y., for summer studies at Cornell University the past several weeks. He returned there from the conference. The conference was held Aug. 4 to 7 for foreign exchanges and IFYE alumni from every state in the union. Klein was an IFYE to New Zealand in 1951. He is to return to Medford about Aug. 22. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although under certain circum stances the use ol a Den name or initial for publication is permis sible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensa tion Letters submitted for publica tion must not exceed 400 words. The Timber Problem To the Editor: Your August 5 editorial prompts me to present another sample of daily, or not infrequent news items, headings or advertisments: LOGS WANTED . . . LUMBER WANTED . . . Two Northwest Mills Tell Closure Plans third one ex pected soon. Once one of Port land's largest and most modern . . . probably never will operate again. At Longview some 300 plywood employees handed dis missal notices at Long-Bell Co. Mill at Garibaldi to be Closed Permanently. Firm employed about 300 persons Linn Coun ty Shortage of Logs Closes Mills Top O&C Prices Paid. $70 per 1,000 board feet stumpage paid for Lane county fir timber. About $500,000 paid for timber advertised at $193,720. $954,854 Did tor timber appraised at $454, 610. Record Timber Cut in NW Area. Three-Sisters Wilderness Timber Cutting Protested New Attacks on Olympic National Park. And so on. More mills closing; SP stops passenger service on 300 miles; more hundreds of men, with fam ilies, out of work; questionable deals on Indian timber sales; more beautifully timbered water sheds left forest shambles rock bound dustbowls! Will these mean anything to you, to me; to our children and their children's children? For more than 50 years many have been warning: "Conserve America's natural resources." Gifford Pinchot, originator of U. S. Forest Service, Pres. Theodore Roosevelt, and many others, warned of a timber famine. Yet, "Timber-r-r-r foreverr-r-r," "In exhaustible supply," was shouted across America and destruction went on. Now we are beginning to see and feel the results and other ills that go with the timber famine. Even while skimming off the forest cream from their private holdings, leaving watershed aft er watershed a forest shambles and scorched earth, big timber companies urged more, faster and closer cutting on National Forests. Some of those same spe cial interest groups now seek to control America's electric power producing plants and prices. May a lew tycoons ere long control America's farms, production and prices, the masses share-croppers or peons? Family-size farms are becoming few and far between. For nearly 50 years the U.S Forest Service stood as a symbol ior tne greatest good to the larg est numoer, fought for the long est time against special interests ana political pressures and threats. Infiltration of special in terest tactics have more recently Deen used, apparently, and with increasing success. John E. Gribble, 139 Kenwood ave., Medford, Ore. McKale Stations To Be Leased by Union Seattle (U.R) McKale's Inc the oil company that originated the gas-oil credit card, will be leased Sept. 1 to Union Oil Co., it was announced today. The lease "involving several million dollars" will be for 10 .years ana inciuaes 17 service stations in Seattle, 17 in San Francisco and nine in Portland. Tom Wise, McKale president. said employee' termination for about 400 McKale workers has been arranged on the 'basis of one week's salary or wages for each year of employment. The 31 - year -old chain of coast-wise service stations was founded here. Fish Problems Said Raised by Hells Dams Portland U.R) The Oregon Fish Commission said at a meet ing here yesterday it was "too early" to take a stand on Idaho Power company's plans for three low dams in the Snake river. But State Fisheries Director M. T. Hoy said after the meeting that fish problems were "very definitely" raised by the pro posed dams. Hoy said that all Northwest public fish agencies were shown the power company's plans and met with company officials to study fish migration matters. Both the fish and game com mission said they would have data to submit to a public hear ing on Idaho's application. Mrs. Vega Burns Joins Camp Staff Camp White Transfer of Mrs. Vega E. Burns as staff nurse from Roseburg VA hospital to Camp White to replace Mrs. William Auel, who resigned in June, was announced today. Prior to joining the VA nurs ing staff at Roseburg in 1949, Mrs. Burns was engaged in pri vate nursing in Tennessee. She is a graduate of the Knoxville General Hospital school of nursing. Is That So? "A swarm of honeybees scared the living daylights out of my family last week," writes J.R.P. Jr. "Won't you give us some of the more unusual facts flying speed, life span, strength, etc?" To begin, the honeybee is no native of North America. Quite likely, it was brought to New England around 1640. Of the afia 12,000 or more varieties of bees in the world, only four or five store honey. By FRANK JENKINS Weather stuff: The Atlantic coast from Nor folk, Va., to New York City has been put under a full hurri cane alert. Hurricane warnings had al ready been hoisted along sections of the North Carolina and Vir ginia coasts. "DOTH the U.S. navy and the -- Red Cross disaster specialists are deploying along the East coast against the possibility of hurricane havoc. Navy planes at Quonset Point, in Rhode Island, are FLYING INLAND (to get out of reach of the blow) and the aircraft car riers Tarawa and Antietam have been ordered out to sea (also to get out of the way of the winds.) Thousands of Red Cross vol unteers have been alerted against the hurricane all the way from Long Island to the southern bor der of North Carolina. ALL THIS, you must under stand, comes about as a result of the wicked antics of a crea ture known as Connie. Connie is a hurricane. Some time ago the weather sharps hit upon the de vice of naming hurricanes. For some' reason known to them alone, they give these ruckus raisers FEMININE names. When comes the hurricane sea son, they start off with a name beginning with the letter A, such as Annie, and go on down the alphabet. Connie begins with C, so it is immediately apparent that she is the third of the really nasty hurricanes of the 1955 season. Simple, isn't it? W JE newspaper people go all out when a hurricane heads inward from the Atlantic toward the coastal regions. Hurricanes are dramatic affairs and when they loom on the horizon we drag out of the drawer our most dramatic vocabularies our PUNCH WORD vocabularies. Here's a sample culled from the teletype's offerings. "Hurricane Connie's BREAK NECK winds are CLAWING to ward the Eastern seaboard and WATCH OUT warnings have been issued. "She is WHIRLING north northwest, which if this direc tion is . continued could be a SMASH against the seaboard in the same general path where three hurricanes caused such de struction last year." PRETTY neat, what? You can bet your bottom dol lar that the reporter who turned that one out was proud of it. It is what is called VIVID writing and in these modern days we newspaper folk set a lot of store by it. TROM the weather standpoint, the news has been getting a little monotonous lately. It has been too universally concerned with SIZZLING days and hot, MUGGY nights. This has been coming from all over the coun try including our own area. So Connie gives us a welcome change. IF you want more change, here it is: A harsh- winter is reDorted from Southeastern Australia zero temperatures and the WORST BLIZZARD OF THE SEASON. That's one nice thing about the weather news. If you don't like one kind of it, you can always search around a bit and find some other kind. TTERE'S another bit of news of a kind that is beginning to fall into a pattern: Oregon's Hillcrest school for girls had another riot the other night the second in a month. Eight inmates of the Salem insti tution who went on the rampage were finally quieted down and put in the county jail. WHAT to " It's a do? problem, of course. But I'm reasonably sure that if the inmates of our institutions of correction were kept busy at least eight hours out of the 24 .at CONSTRUCTIVE work there would be fewer of these riots. in the Day's News Sy EUGENE BURNS Ranger-Naturalist Of the million or so insects. the bees areby far the most im portant to mankind particular. ly in cross- pollinating fruit trees, berries, some vegetables and countless flowers. For every pound of honey. bees must make about 80,000 field trips a distance which takes them as far as the circum ference of the world. During an average flight, a young worker's wings beat about 250 times a second 15,000 a minute. When older, the wings are worn and require a faster higher-toned beat. A bee's lifetime varies-the queen may live four to (five years; the drone only Siting enough to mate with a qCjeen or for a few months lorjfer, until winter comes along; ijthe worker normally lives only six weeks or so, literally working herself to death. A very few workers, born late in the sea son, live through the winter with the queen. As for strength: An average man during his prime does well to raise his own weight; trans lating this into traction power, a bee could raise 22 times her own weight- Put wheels under her load, and she could pull' about 300 times her own weight. To sting, a worker bee brings about 22 muscles into play. Her stinger, two slender shafts notch ed with barbs, is carried on her abdomen. As she . drives these shafts into her victim, she in jects formic acid mixed with other poisons. Because the honeybee work er's defense is to benefit the entire colony; not only herself, a sting is generally fatal to her. (Drones have no stingers.) (Released by McClure Newspaper Syndicate) Free: By special arrangement with the editors of the Encyclo pedia Americana, my panel of judges will award each week to the reader who sends me the best true-life nature adventure, the best nature observation or the best question on nature and wild life, a complete 30-volume set of this world-famous referenqf) work in a handsome Sealcraft binding. Each week new submis sions will be considered. Sorry, I simply can't answer your many friendly letters. Please address your letter to: IS THAT SO; co Medford Mail Tribune, Box 575, Sausalilo, Calif. More Salk Vaccine Released for State Portland (U.R) Release of another 14,514 cubic centi meters of Salk polio vaccine for Oregon use was announced yes terday by the State Board of Health. The .vaccine will all be re leased commercially on recom mendation of the Oregon State Medical Society for use in the 5 to 9 age bracket. A spokesman said letters had been sent .to doctors and phar macists through the state request ing the vaccine be restricted for use only in the recom mended age groups." The board also disclosed a new polio total for the year of 110 cases, counting 10 cases re ported last week. This time last year, 91 polio cases had been reported in the state. Court Records DISTRICT COURT LeRoy Alma Starkey. overload. $S0. Raymond Leslie McVay. switched licensed plates. $15. Lonzo Leonard Lown, violation of basic rule, $12.50. Alvin Donald York, failure to stop at stop sign, $10. Richard Wayne Imhausen. following" too close. $10. Ernest E. Evemden, Jr.. overload, S41. Margaret Mae Glass, passing on a hill. $7.50. Marvin William Betts, overheight. Thomas Jefferson Short, truck speeding. $12.50. CIRCUIT COURT John A." Fryling vs. Shirley A. Fry ling, divorce complaint. Vella D. Camden vs. James E. Cam den, .divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Charles' Freeman Bonds. 21. Ash land, and Barbara Jean Wray. 18, Ashland. Gene Douglas Long, 18, of 1065 Sis kiyou blvd., Ashland, and Donna Mae Howell. 17. of. route 1. box 446. 'Ash land. POLICE COURT - Maud Kimball Chapman, failure to yield right of way (traffic). $10. John Adrian won. lauuie tu i (sign), $5. M ., . Henry onana waeiiy. muuc stop (sign), $5. Frank Leslie i"aige, iaumc "- (sign), $5. ., , Charles Thomas tioee. iauuic (light). $5. Dead line Sunday Classified is t noon Saturday: 10 a m. aionaay ior Monday: other days aau prevmm MAKE A PROFIT that's worth while. Have extra dollars in your billfold later ... by putting savings to work with us. FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASS'N of Medford 27 North Holly An Institution Dedicated To Those Who Save o 0