Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 21, 1955, Image 2

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TWO MEDrORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Sunday, August 21, 19SS
FFA, 4-H Members deceive Top
Awards as Annual Fair Closes
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O The annual Jackson county
(4.H and FFA fair ended last
O Ijight at the county fairgrounds
with the presentation of special
Q (iwards and the annual style re-f,-)
view.
u Top award winners in the Fu
q lure Farmers of America divi
O (fion were Kenneth Bigham .18,
q son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Big
lham, Sams Valley, and Ralph
Simon. 18, son of Mr. and Mrs.
0 Jtay Simon, Central Point.
0 " Kenneth Eigham was named
2 winner of an award presented
to a FFA Hereford owner by
j John and Edith Bohnert. The
O award is based on record book,
G ((exhibit, showmanship, and herd
(Quality.
Ralph Simon was winner of
O the Central Point Grange Coop
O erative Herdsmanship.
Winners of 4-H awards includ
eV oeorge Nichols trophy, to out
standing exhibitor of fat lambs,
--j nun KJ J iuiiMi i uau, mil.
O Rogue River Jersey Cattle
club award, won by Lucille Low
ry. Valley View.
Q George F. Lillis trophy, to the
exhibitor of the best Brown
O Swiss cow won by Donna Brown
of Applegate.
o Gitzen and Gitzen Soecial
award, for sheep, won by Faye
Chapman, Valley View, and for
swine, won by LeRoy Priest,
Gold Hill.
Don Nichols showmanship tro
phy, won by David Wolfolk, Antelope.
O Aliens c Owens showmanship
trophy, won by Linda Malloroy.
Antelope.
u Jackson County Guernsey cat
qO tie club award, won by DeeAnn
O Clark, Griffin Creek.
Calf Manna Special award, for
the outstanding livestock club,
qO won by Valley View rabbit
club.
Far Hills Farms Holstein tro
phy, won by Laurel Higinboth
am. Central Point.
p Ed Pierce Hereford trophy,
0 won by David Wolfolk, Antel-
O (OpP;
Q Harold Frye Jr., Swine tro
i rphy, won by Lois Biles, Gold
o (Hilt
LaPine Livestock Herdsman
O (ship trophy, to the livestock club
O (Scoring highest in herdmanship,
O (nrofi by Reese Creek Renegades.
O Farm Bureau trophies, for
CP Sabbits, won by Nyla Cooper,
3 Valley View; for poultry, won
O 0y Carolyn Tiegs, Valley View;
0 q ,'fpr forestry won by James Scott,
(Valley View; for garden, won by
(Karen Nelson, Oak Grove.
(Curtiss Candy Company
(itwards, presented to the exhibi
(jpr of the grand champion in
q Sach division of the dairy show
oandbeef shorthorns, won by
Dorma Brown, Applegate; David
3 Christiansen, Apllegate; Robert
Rosenbaum, Valley View; Dee
Ann Clark, Griffin Creek, Caro
le Brantley, Griffin Creek; Ken
Bitterling, Antelope; Louis Nick
(ffson, Central Point; Melvin
Smith, Sams Valley, and Jerry
McDonald, Eagle Point.
Shirley .Nelson Memorial tro
phy, to outsanding dairy mem
ber, won Joy Laurel Higenboth
am, Central Point.
A. T. Lathrop Berkshire aw
ard, won by James Frink, Cen
tral Point.
Big Y Feed and Seed award,
won by Starlene Wilkins, Valley
View.
Marilyn Bohnert Livestock
Judging trophy, to top individu
al, won by Donna Brown, Apple
gate. Doreen Bohnert Home Econ
omics Judging trophy, to high
est coring individual, won by
Linda Malloroy, Antelope.
Herdsmanship awards, pres
ented by Jackson county . fa?r
board, for rabbits, to Valley
View club, and for poultry, to
Central Point club.
Breeders association award, a
calf, to Willy Debrick, Central
Point.
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Sale - Rentals
Folding
VHIEL
CHAIRS
Open Sundays and Holidays
10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Weekdays 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.
HUDSON'S PHARMACY
613 E. MAIN PHONf 3-5345
I Block East of Hawthorne Park
Magsaysay Seeking
Showdown in Feud
With Sen. Recto
Manila, P4- (U.R) The po
litical feud between President
Remon Magsaysay and Sen
Clari M. Recto, reaches a show
down here today when the Na-
tionalists party convention op
ens. C
Magsaysfy, fed up with habit
ual opposition on foreign policy
matters by old guard Nacional
ista Recto, has rallied almost in
vincible support in a drive to
oust the senator from the party
ticket during this off-year election.
Takes Parry Runs
During several weeks of pre-
convention jockeying for posi
tion, Magsaysay, in his first real
political fight since his landslide
election, firmly took the reins of
his party and rejected attempts
by friends of Recto to bring
about a reconciliation. .
Recto's sharp criticism of the
administration for recognizing
South Viet Nam precipitated the
fight. But it was not the main
reason for the split. Magsaysay
said Recto had consistently op
posed administration foreign
policy.
On some earlier issues, the
President had turned the matter
over to the Senate for a vote of
confidence and in at least one
case, Recto was the only dissen
ter.
Chief Joseph Dam
Generators Started
Washington (U.R) Three
generators at the Chief Joseph
dam began feeding power into
the Bonneville system on a firm
basis Friday.
Each of the hree generators,
which have been undergoing
more than a week of tests and
preliminary operations, was ra
ted at 64,000 kilowatts. A fourth
generator was due to go into
service later this year. Sixteen
generators were scheduled for
service by 1957.
With all sixteen generators in
operation, the power plant will
represent an expenditure of
$69,000,000.
O
o Would You Like to Form a
ROSICRUCIAlM
A.M.O.R.C. CHAPTER?
All Rosicrucians interested please wrte Mail Tribune
Box 4488 or phone the District Commissioner at
Shady Cove 2171.
Birdseye Dairy Showmanship
trophy, won by DeeAnn Clark,
Griffin Creek.
Judged as champions in their
respective divisions of the style
review, were Carolyn Bernardi,
skirt and apron; Patti Straus,
simple cotton dress; Mavis
Strom, play and work clothes;
Joan Dobrot, cotton school dress;
Lucy Gardener, formal dress;
Gwen Moore, best dress; Linda
Malloroy, wool dress, and Lois
Farlow. winter suit.
The U. S. National Bank tro
phy for the outsanding girl of
the style review was presented
to Lois Farlow, Eagle Point.
Other awards in the home ec
onomics division were presented
to:
J. C. Penney's Summer School
scholarships to clothing club
members, Donna Brown. Apple
gate; Joanna Malloroy, Antelope
and Virginia Martin, Valley
View.
Safeway Stores scholarships
for outstanding food prepara
tion demonstration, Patsy Char
lie and Mildred Darras, Central
Point.
Oregon Beekeepers associa
tion award, Sharon Coffman,
Central Point.
Larry Schade trophy, to the
most outstanding cooking club
member of the year, won by Lin
da Malloroy, Antelope.
Fair board scholarships for
outstanding project work, in
clothing, Jean Dobrot, Central
Point; in cooking, Mildred Dar
ras, Central Point; in food pres
ervation, Patty Cranston, Med
ford, and in homemaking, to
Reta Milner, Evans Valley.
UN Believes Two
US Airmen Alive
In North Korea
Panmunjom, Korea (U.R)
A United Nations spokesman
said today the Allies have "rea
son to believe" that two Am
erican airmen shot down by the
Communists over the demilitar
ized zone of Korea are alive.
The spokesman refused to ela
borate on his statement that the
UN believes the men are alive
in North Korea.
Names Announced
The Air Force in Washington
announced yesterday that the
men were Lt. Guy H. Humpass
Jr., the pilot, of Jackson, Miss.,
and Capt. Charles W. Brown,
observer, of West Louisville, Ky.
The UN Military Command to
day, will demand at a meeting
at 10 a.m. with the Communists
here that the Reds return the
two men whose light trainer
plane was hit by Red guns Wed
nesday.
"We have reason to believe,"
the spokesman said, "that they
survived the crash, but beyond
that we have only hope."
Government in Red
$2,6)7,000,000 in July
Washington (U.R) The gov
ernment went into the red $2,
617,000.000 during July, the
Treasuray has reported.
But the deficit for the entire
1956 fiscal year, which began
last month, is expected to be
considerably below this figure.
The government last January
estimated the dificit would be
$2,408,000,000 at the end of fis
cal 1956. But a new Treasury
forecast, to be issued in about
a week, is expected to give a
lower estimate.
ROCKETS NICK FLORISTS
Fresno, Calif. (U.R) The
Fresno-Hacienda Rockets, de
fending world champion worn
en? softball club, defeated the
Lind Florists of Portland 1-0
here Friday night. The Rockets
scored in the sixth inning on a
single, a sacrifice and a Florist
error. Betty Evans Grayson
yielded but four hits to the
Rockets.
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WHO CAN HELP
YOUR HEARING?
C I. ADAMSON
ton!
I am a trained
Sonotone Hearing
Aid Consultant
SONOTONE
C. R. Adamson, Disr. Mgr.
S3? East Jackson Blvd.
By training and experience
with many different kinds of
hearing loss, I have been able
to bring better hearing to hun
dreds. Now I have another
wonderful new hearing aid to
help break through that iron
curtain of deafness.
This is the micro-midget
Sonotone "100."
It is as small as a matchbook
and weighs about one ounce.
It's not a gadget designed to
attract by just being small. This
is a real aid to HEARING, with
traditional built-in Sonotone
quality.
When you do business with
Sonotone, you invest in a com
plete hearing service and join
thousands of happy users in a
proven better hearing program.
i3Qo.il
Young Polio Patient Flown
From Korea to Japan; Will
Make Trip to Home in U.S
PEACE RESTORED A lone guardtands watch over
courtyard surrounding flood-lighted d&lblock where 174
rioting inmates returned to their cellsflfter they battled
guards and state troopers at Great Mqgdows State Prison
at Comstock, N. Y.
Massachusetts Polio Cases Show Decline
Boston U.R) Polio cases
in epidemic-stricken Massachu
setts dropped Saturday with 62
new cases being reported.
Massachusetts' total cases this
year stood at 1,606, compared
with 193 for the same period last
year. But Satuurday was the
third successive day that new
cases being reported dropped
over preceding daily reports.
Of the Massachusetts' total,
504 cases were reported from
Boston.
The New England figure to
date is 2,073.
Dr. Roy F. Feemster, director
of the state Division of Com
municable Diseases, said hope
fully that he was "looking for
ward" to a sharp drop in new
cases "after next week."
Tokyo (U.R) A young
American woman encased in a
portable iron lung was flown
from Seoul to Tokyo Saturday
by a U. S. Air Force C-54 trans
port plane on her way home to
the United States.
Mary Chisholf, 24, the daugh
ter of American missionaries
Dr. and Mrs. William Chisholm,
Pilot Killed in
New Mexico Crash
Lordsburg, N. M. (U.R) An
amphibious airplane enroute to
California crashed on takeoff
from the Lordsburg airport late
Friday, killing the pilot and ser
iously injuring a passenger who
owned the plane.
The victim was identified as
Milton Waggoner of Burbank,
Calif.
The passenger, who is report
ed seriously but not critically
hurt, was Dr. D. B. Adams of
Los Angeles.
Paul Malott, head of the local
Civil Air Patrol, said the plane
climbed to abjwt 75 or 100 feet
in the air arj that Waggoner
was making Jr right turn when
the plane crashed, apparently
because of insufficient power to
make the turn at that altitude.
Malott said the plane was
purchased just recently by Ad
ams, probably at Wichita Falls,
Tex., and that the two men were
taking it to the West Coast.
The plane was a single en
gined "Seabee" Navy trainer.
It did not burn.
Berkeley, Calif., was stricken
June 4 in Korea with polio.
Twice Believed Dead
She was treated by Army doc
tors who twice believed that
the young woman, also a mission
ary and fluent in Korean lang
uage, had died.
The Air Force Saturday be
gan a 7,000-mile mercy flight to
the University of Buffalo's Polio
Respiratory center, Buffalo, N.
Y
Immediately after arriving at
Tokyo's Haneda Airport, the
young woman was driven by
ambulance to a Tokyo hospital
for a 36 hours rest before she
leaves for Hawaii where another
36 hour stopover is scheduled.
Trip Successful
Maj. Harold T. Wilson, the
Army officer in charge of the
mercy flight, said that the trip
from Korea was "very success
ful." He will accompany the
woman on the entire trip.
Miss Chisholm's father has
been a missionary in Korea since
1923 as a member of the Ameri
can Civilian Independent Pres
byterian Missionaries.
Employment Gains
Recorded in July
Salem (U.R) Employment
gains were recorded throughout
Oregon in July, bringing tbe
number of non-farm workers to
485,700, nearly 10,000 higher
than in the previous month, the
State Unemployment Compen
sation commission said Satur
day. The total was 46.000 above
that of a year ago when labor
dispute in the lumber industry
affected some 26,000 workers.
With employment still climb
ing, officials were optimistic
that later reports may exceed
the all-time high of 495,700 in
August, 1952.
Some 820,000 Spaniards live
in the Canary Islands off the
northwest coast of Africa. The
archipelago forms two provinces
of Spain.
Dead line Sunday Classified Is at
noon Saturday: 10 a.m. Monday for
Monday; other days 5:30 orevious day.
TYPEWRITERS &
ADDING MACHINES
Repaired
MEDFORD OFFICE
EQUIPMENT COMPANY
41 S. Grape Phone 2-4100
The 500-mile-long Kagera Riv
er system, rising in hills south
west of Lake Victoria about
four degrees south of the Equa
tor, is today recognized as the
Nile River's true headstream;
says the National Geographic
Society.
WANTED
Experienced Watchmaker and
Diamond and Watch Salesman
For Weisfield's Credit Jewelers. Opening in near
future. Apply by letter only. Appointments will be
made. All applications will be confidential.
Write Box 4403, Mail Tribune
1
Gasoline Doing its
Best.
We doubt whether gasone was ever put to
better use than when i,t burns in the combus
tion chambers of the 1955 Cadillac' engine.
It provides power and eagerness and
responsiveness that have no counterpart
on the world's highways.
And how quietly it goeabout its work!
Even at the mil legal limit of the road, the
car is so silent in its operation that you can
actually hear the gentle ticking of the
electric clock.
And how efficient gasoline is in a new
Cadillac. In fact, owners report that a single
tankful is usually sufficient to carry this
big, luxurious car "through a full day of
normal driving, r
If you haven't fit learned for yourself
what gasoline can do in the "car of cars",
we suggest that tou come in soon for
the most thfillingdemonstration in your
motoring experience.
And after you have returned from your
demonstration drive, we hope that you will
remain for some very special news about
cost and delivery.
You will find, for instance, that you can
now become the owner of a new Cadillac
car after the. shortest waiting period in
many, many years.
And because of our extremely low used
car inventory, you will discover that we
are in a position to give you a surprisingly
liberal allowance on your present car. .
You will find, in short, that Cadillac
ownership has never before been as wonder
ful. . . or as practical. . . or as imminent . . .
as it is today!
Why not stop in soon and see for your
self? We think you'll find a combination of
favorable circumstances that will be diffi
cult to resist!
143 SOUTH RIVERSIDE - MEDFORD
PHONE 2-6264
G
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