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

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Lake o' Woods Road Proposal Refused
Klamath Falls OJ.R) Klam
ath county yesterday refused an
Oregon State Highway Commis
sion proposal for development of
a highway connecting Medford
and Klamath Falls via Lake-of-the-Woods.
But it left the door
open for possible counter pro
posal, The first proposal was that
Klamath county and Jackson
county place the highway seg
ments on their federal aid sec
0
4 lovely
Moderntone
Colors:
(Burgundy, Forest Green,
Gray ani Chartreuse
Yellow Anything liquid looks bet
ter, tastes better, in these
gay mugs. They'll add
cheer to your table . . .
brighten your cupboard.
Gefcyours today!
Gifts galore with
the "premium" milk
When you buy Sego you
let quality PLUS. Yes,
creamy smooth double -rich
whole milk plus a val
uable coupon on eery can.
Coupons good for hun
dreds of gifts in the Sego
Catalog. See instructions
on label.
6tt your mugs at these redemption stores
fomeilordm,plta
ASHLAND BAUDER'S HARDWARE I APPLIANCES
296 E. Main
MEDFORD HIBBARD'S HARDWARE
310 E. Main
0
IslWUIN
'J 1H' V'
BEATS!
BLENDS!
STRAINS! &
m w .aw w m tjt
DRAINS!
ondary system, provide FAS
funds up to 60 per cent of the
cost of construction, provide
rights of way and assume main
tenance. The proposal involved about
16 miles of Jackson county and
about five miles in Klamath
county.
The biggest single consumer of
water in the United States is irrigation.
f-i ru
"
?3(&inBtto
WHIPS!
ktXESI
Pioneer Hardware
HEATING DIVISION
128 North Bartlett St.
Phone 2-8043
Your Headquarters For Siegler Heaters
ujui nave jvycclo
Across Nation in
Wake of Rainfall
By UNITED PRESS
A brisk autumn cool wave
sliced across the nation today be
hind heavy rainstorms.
Temperatures dropped 10 to
29 degrees from the Great Lakes
southeastward through the Mid
dle Mississippi Valley and parts
of the Central and Southern
Plains.
Heavy rains ushered in the
cool wave, dumping an estimated
three to four inches on Jones
boro, Ark., and flooding some of
the .city's streets with three to
four feet of water. High winds
accompanied the rain, blowing
over some signboards.
Rains in Florida
Rains also hit Florida, damp
ening the American Legion con
vention at Miami for the second
straight day when a 2.67-inch
downpour hit the city yesterday.
Also at Miami, weathermen
kept a close eye on a wide band
of squalls in the Western Carib
bean Sea which might develop
into Hurricane Katie. The clus
ter of showers could grow into
the 11th hurricane of the year,
they said.
Elsewhere in the nation, other
heavy rains included 1.11 inches
at El Dorado, Ark., and 1.10 at
Memphis, Tenn.
Heavy coastal fog, plus anoth
er smog attack, plagued Los An
geles. The fog was so bad yester
day that it snarled traffic and
caused many minor accidents, in
cluding a 37-car bumper-to-bumper
collision on a freeway.
Jewelry Cache
Left by Peron
Buenos Aires (U.PJ A fabu
lous collection of jewelry worth
possibly as much as $7,250,000
was left behind by ousted Ar
gentine dictator Juan D. Peron,
it was estimated today.
Government officials Wednes
day night gave newsmen a
glimpse of part of the Arabian
Nights treasure trove accumu
lated by Peron during his 10
year dictatorship.
The newsmen watched govern
ment officials inventory, the con
tents of Peron's safes in the
presidential residence and two
houses he maintained in Buenos
Aires. The jewelry alone was
estimated to be worth 60,000,
000 to 100,000,000 pesos ($4,350,
000 to $7,250,000).
Earlier, it was .reported that
the government recovered more
tha'n $20,000,000 in gold and
United States and Argentine
currency.
GOOD FRIEND
Wichita, Kan. OJ.R) Mrs.
Arvilla Whitehead, a school
teacher, skipped six weeks' va
cation this summer to do a favor
for a friend. Mrs. Whitehead
took over operation of a cigar
stand at the post office so Joe
Griffith, a onetime college pro
fessor who now is blind, might
take his wife to visit her home
town, Erie, Pa.
WHILE
m74 THEY LAST
-k ,
PofintMl HEAT TUBES in every
Siegler Heater use heal that's 4
TIMES HOTTER ever your floors!
You ' get heat in every room of
your home cuts fuel bills, tool
Worm Woor MATERS
TRESTLE GIVES WAY This general view shows what Is left of 40 freight cars after
an old wooden trestle near Gowanda, N. Y., cdlapsed, dropping most of an Erie Railroad
freight train to the creek below. No one was injured in the accident.
Constitutionality Of
. Washington U.P.) The Su
preme court hears arguments to
day in the case of Robert W.
Toth, young Pittsburgh veteran
flown to Korea to face an Air
Force court martial on a mur
der charge.
. At stake in the case is the con
stitutionality of the 1950 Uni
form Code of Military Justice
which gives the military power
to arrest and try veterans ac
cused of serious crimes while in
service overseas.
Toth, 25, was arrested by mili-
Portland Mother,
Die in Fire
Portland (U.P.) Mrs. Eileen
McCormack, 39, and her daugh
ter, Sheila, 3, died in a fire
which damaged their one-story
home here last night. v
Fire Capt. Walter Stickney
said the blaze may have started
from an overheated electric
heater, matches or a cigarette.
The woman and her daughter
were the only occupants of the
house.
m mm
Carnation Instant
the Dflferent
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Better than
Ever!
MORE PROTEIN NOURISHMENT! WHEATIER FLAVOR I COOKS INSTANTLY!
Famous Idaho Bart Wheat makes the difference. Today's Carnation Instant
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Contains all the nourishment of whole kernel wheat plus all the B vitamins.
Now wonderfully improved. Especially suitable for low salt diets I
Get this fine new Carnation Instant Wheat... at a big introductory saving.
Hurry. Offer good only while special packages are available.
Special
Introductory
Offer
LOOK FOR THESE
SPECIAL PACKAGES
Military Law Will
tary police while at his job in a
Pittsburgh steel mill on May 13,
1953, five months after his hon
orable discharge. The former Air
Force sergeant was flown im-
World's Tallest Man
Dies in Portland
Portland (U.P.) Clifford
Marshall Thompson, known as
the world's tallest man, died in
a local hospital yesterday. He
would have been 51 next Tues
day. :
Thompson, a practicing attor
ney in Oregon since 1950, was
eight feet, seven inches tall.
His widow, Mary, said death
was due to gall stones and "an
ailment of the liver" and not to
any affliction connected with his
great height. She said he had
been ill for some time.
Thompson was born in Rugby,
N. C, and was a graduate of
Marquete University where he
received his law degree.
He used his unusual size many
times in helping promote civic
enterprises.
N UTRITIOUS
WHfch4 T00!
t H5?"T H tJb-k- i WITH-
Thursday. October 13, 19SS
Be Decided
mediately to Korea to stand
trial. But on orders of a federal
judge he . was returned to this
country where he has been free
on bond pending the high courfs
decision.
The Supreme court heard ar
guments on the case last term
but ordered further hearings this
fall.
Toth's i attorney, William A.
Kehoe Jr., contends that it is un
constitutional for the military to
retain indefinite control over
veterans. He argues that every
American outside of the armed
forces has a right to trial by jury
in this country.
Toth and two other soldiers
were acused of killing a Korean
civilian near an Air Force dump
in Korea. The other two soldiers
since have been freed. i
BULB BLUNDER
Cynthiana, Ky. (U.P.) Wilbur
Smith likes hamburgers, but
he'll be more careful in . the
future when he reaches for the
onions. Smith was finishing up
a midnight snack of hamburgers
when his wife informed him
the "onions" he had used were
narcissus bulbs.
Wheat
l-LB.
PACKAGE
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ELEVEN
Flagship Center Of
Tokvo 'U.R) The once croud
flagship of the imperial Japa
nese navy, now rusted and
stripped of its glory, has become
the center of a hot deoate in
Japan.
Fifty years ago the Mikasa
was the most powerful battle
ship afloat. It helped defeat the
Russian navy in the Russo
Japanese war. Only 10 years ago
its guns roared defiance at
American ships in the Battle of
the Japan sea.
Today the Mikasa sits virtual
ly unnoticed in the cement docks
at the U.S. Navy's big Yokosuka
Naval base south of Tokyo.
But white haired John S. Rub
bin, 77, remembers the ship as
Peaches
303
Save at Paulsen's Thrift Market!
33 FLATS SLICED
lip Pineapple 6 ..100
5? Tomato Juice 4 ..,1
E3r& '46-oz.
Ip Pineapple Juice 4 ..-1
iP PEAS 303 can
IP CORN G'Xu"m 7..-100
Large Heads
Lettuce
STRETCH YOUR
WITH THESE
PORK ROASTS
LOIII ROAST
mm mm m mt
Red Snapper 23'
o PAULSEN'S o e
THRIFT
CENTRAL POINT'S MOST COMPLETE
SHOPPING CENTER
W Reserve' tht Right to Limit Quantities
Lots of Free Parking Space
Japan Debate
a sleek and powerful battleship
being built in his hqgiie town of.
Barrow-in-Frness, England.
He came to Japan a few
months ago in search of the ship
and the crew members whom he
befriended 55 years ago when
they came to England to bring
the ship to Japan.
Rubbin wrote a letter to a
Japanese newspaper that has set
off a national controversy
whether to scrap the proud old
warship or enshrine it as a na
tional treasure.
The per capita consumption of
meat in the United States is ap
proximately seven ounces per
day.
can..
Cabbage
LOCAL'
GREEN
FIRM
BUDGET DOLLAR
PORK STEAKS
MARKET
I
.. 5
Flame Tokay
Grapes
2i T
RIB
PORK CHOPS
5L.
G