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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1955)
0 Doctor's Suit Says Medical Groups Fix Office Call Rates Lot Angele (U.R) A doc tor charged in 8 suit for $2,500? 000 damages today that organiz ed medical groups refused him membership and barred him from hospitals because he would not charge more than $3 an of fice call. Dr. Sylvan O. Tatkin named as defendants in his suit the Los Angeles County Medical assoc iation, the American Medical as sociation, Behrens Memorial hos pital of Glendale, Calif., and 11 Garden Notes C. B. RDY County Extension Agent for Horticulture The recent rains and frost have caused the hulls of walnuts to crack and allow the nuts to drop to the ground. In order to have nuts of high quality they should be picked up from the ground within a few days from the time they fall. Shaking the tree to jar the nuts loose, so long as they' come free from the hull, would be desirable. Drying is tiest accomplished by exposing the nuts to a temp erature between 90 and 100 de grees and blowing the air over them with a fan. If held at room temperature molds develop ra ther quickly and if heated to temperatures above 110 degrees, the meats become rancid. With circulating air it requires about two days to dry walnuts at 100 degrees. As the temperature is lowered it takes progressively longer. Spreading the walnuts in a single layer in the basement near a furnace or on the kitchen floor near the stove with a fan blow ing over them are satisfactory places to dry them. After the ex cess moisture on the outside of the shell is removed molding is less apt to occur. The degree of dryness can be determined by cracking the ' nuts and testing the meats. When the meats are brittle and the membrane sep arating the two halves will crumble the nuts are thoroughly dry. , Bleaching is not necessary ex cept to improve the appearance for sale. Where bleaching is de sired the dried walnuts should be soaked for three minutes in a solution containing one pint j of household, bleach in two gal lons of water. After bleaching the nuts should be rinsed and again quickly dried. Terrific BENEFIT Performance jh, EVENING OF SONGS Also CHOP CHOP and CHARLENE IN "ORIENTAL MAGIC1 Bedford Sr. High School Auditorium MONDAY, OCTOBER 17 - 8:00 P.M. Tickers on Sale at Barkers, The Big Y and at the Door Monday Night Sponsored by CRATER LIONS Through the Courtesy of the ROGUE VALLEY COUNTRY CLUB All Proceeds from this Show Go to the UNITED MEDFORD CRUSADE Published in Cooperation with the United Medford Crusade by the MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE physicians who are members of the LACMA council. Restraint of Trade Charged Tatkin charged the Los Ang eles County Medical association with restraint of trade for deny ing him membership. He said the association officially would give him no reason for denying him membership but it was bas ed on his refusal to charge more than $3 an office call. The med ical associations declined com ment on the suit. The superior court suit filed yesterday said the defendants "have combined fix rates which may be charged as minimum rates to the public for medical treatment." The physician said he was for ced to turn his patients over to another doctor because hospit als in this area would not make facilities available to doctors who did not belong to the county medical association, an affiliate of the AMA. His inability to gain staff membership in hospitals damaged his professional status and curtailed his income, Tatkin charged. He said he was dismiss ed from the Behrens Hospital staff after he had been "condi tionally accepted." Competition Restricted Tatkin said the associations sought to "fix the hours. and number of days a week during which doctors . . . shall work." Additionally, the suit charged the groups used "coercive and oppressive methods to limit and restrict fair competition in the medical field." Soviet Sailors Stock Up on Fancy Frills Portsmouth, Eng. (U.R) Some 3,000 Russian sailors from a Soviet goodwill fleet stocked up today on such capitalist frills as "nylon stockings and ladies' silk underwear. The Russian seamen took their cue from Valeria Mirkulov, 24, a cadet officer aboard the So viet cruiser Sverdlov, and went on a wild shopping spree for presents for their wives and girl friends back home. A special store equipped with Russian translators reported nylons were going at the rate cf five pairs a minute. The Rus sians also brought brightly colored scarves and frilly under things. Salem (U.R) Gov. Paul Patterson has designated the per iod Oct. 17-23 for observation of national Bible week in Ore gon. ARTHUR LEE Simpkins "Once in a Lifetime a Voice Like This" At the Piano ... MR. MAURY ELLENHORN Of Theyll Do It Every Time In tvje CLASSROOM WHERE MUM'S "WE RULETHE BOYS AHD 6ALS BABBLE Otf AMD ON LIKE TEWMSON'S BROOK FCT- 7 it. . WMWWWm Li HvV W .... vtA . NrV.l GOLD HILL Return From Gold Hill Mr. and Mrs. Jack White have returned from Los Angeles where they went to pick up a sports car, driving it back for delivery. White is the owner of White's Cycle shop in Med ford. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Trolard and daughter have moved into the Dale Collins place on Sardine creek. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Johnson returned from a vacation trip to Salmon where they visited with Mrs. Johnson's aunt, Mrs. J. J. Tallman, a brother, Leo Tallman, cousins,1 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Daw and William Tall, Johnson's mother, Mrs. Amy Johnson, and an aunt, Mrs. Alice Storey. They then went to Port land to visit Johnson's sister and husband, Dr. and Mrs. C. A. Hurley and nephew, Jack Hur ley. They were also a guest of their sister, Mrs. Clara Herlihey, and a niece and husband, Mr. and Mrs. . Robert Herney and their baby: Mrs. Allen Pettey and twin Glaciers on Washington State's Olympic Peninsula, like others in temperate lands throughout the world, are dwin dling, says the National Geo graphic Society. In the 15 years between 1938 and 1953, Blue Glacier just northwest of Mt. Olympus has shortened by more than 800 feet, and since 1919 by nearly -three-quarters of a mile.; Many ice fields vJTisappeared but more than 50, covering 25 to 30 square miles, persist. J,l I i,Mvsr-n IS TEkk BLE. I rTl II 1 Z?. " '" '7-y" w BUT AT THE PEP J?4U.y IKl THE GYM, WHERE VOU WAHT 70 SET A LITTLE KOISE OUT OF THEM-LOOKy wi&Wum! hereTI rffirfVSJ earn get behind the team! , TWf CILPUCS.' -TULS I L LETS SHOW WE'RE ALL HOOTING I '.'' -I . III I EnDBM IU 7UE -rf Los Angeles daughters, Debra and Janet, who have been staying at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Smith, returned to their home near Roseburg to live. Pettey drove down to take them back. Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Lee Malone and family from Gres ham, Ore., is Mrs. Malone's sis ter, Mrs. Robert L. Reed. because we're like never before Just peanuts puts you here, in this big new Buiclc Special Four-door Riviera. (Look, no center posts 1) lol7 wttii ing j r r n wor 01 nor in KUADMA5TIK. irs practically . ' Picture yourself here, yours right now-with Variable Pitch Dynaflow In this super-spacious Buick Supeu, with its to silken the miles away. thrilling new 236 hp V8 engine. -Mil HVBET, BUBBT TO OUR BUICK SALES CMOS- By Jimmy Hatlo Archbishop Freed By Vienna (U.R) Catholic Archbishop Joszef Groesz has been released from a Communist Hungarian prison and "will live in a church building appointed by the Hungarian government," according to a Radio Budapest broadcast. Groesz, 68, was sentenced to 15 years in prison after a show trial in Budapest June 28, 1951. He was accused of "conspiracy against the Hungarian state and You're the boss of the road In the Buick Century (Buck's highest power-to-weight ratio). . VT" i., .... 143 South Friday, October 14, 1955 Little Boys, Scouring Garbage 0 Cans for Food, Die of Poisoning New Orleans (U.R) Two small brothers, who spent their childhood begging and scaveng ing for food in garbage cans, ap parently died of eating contami nated food obtained in one of their alley forays, authorities said today. The boys, Lawrence Baugh man, 7, and his brother, William Jr., 6, died Thursday in Charity hospital. They were found critically ill in a shabby one-room apartment where they had lived in squalor with their five sisters and their parents. The father, tall, thin William Baughman, a 29-year-old unem ployed longshoreman from Bo galusa, La., said illness had kept him from work. He and his wife were charged with criminal ne glect of their family and contri buting to the delinquency of juveniles. . Red Hungary , black-marketeerinjj in foreicn currencies. REASON ENOUGH Fort Wayne, Ind. (U.R) Truck driver Clyde L. Robin son couldn't understand why police were stopping him. He was told two rear wheels on his heavy truck flew off and travelled 600 feet through two filling stations and a parking lot before banging into a park ed car. '2SAf Yfl Wont Believe! u , -t Mel i HI$,ory M DM,$ " GrMttst New t TE don't have to tell you that the. WbuU Sales Circus XinsSet-listeutoall SXScSourfabulou.toade-ui the tauc Dl" . record-crazy, allowances. es' T J But we're We've gone 0VX-geSing the liavine fun, and you re gexuug r5otorineufetirne. , Duy "i " allowance u" -, , . and pick out tbat aa6 . . ... Riverside Phone 2-6265 The parents could hot produce bond and were jailed on the charges. The father said from his cell at the New Orleans city jail that he hopes to be able to find a new job when he is freed. William was the first to die in the hospital. His last request before dropping into a coma was for a "ham sandwich, I'm so hungry." His brother died a few hours later. Poisoning Blamed The Orleans Parish county coroner's office said both deaths were under investigation but the boys probably died of some sort of poisoning. Neighbors said screams of the hungry children kept them awake at night. "They ate in garbage cans," said Mrs. Evenlyn Scallan. "Up and down the street. One day one of my children said one of the little Baughmans was star ing into the window. I took two sweet potatoes out to him. It was all I had. I have six chil dren myself." Mother Questioned Miss Lillie H. Nairne, director of the city Department of Pub lic Welfare, said Mrs. Baughman had been questioned but the mother said "they had food." She said Mrs. Baughman gave no indication that "her husband was too ill to work, or that their situation was an emergency." The 38-year-old mother said she believed the children had been well cared for. Hurry and get under the tent of the iggesf Profit-Cutting Sales Show on Earth t then vou crack the whipl want. ,mn ven for. .. , .Variable Ptt W Buick on orner . We're cutting our Droffts Make a " to tne bone miWsS sy " It's a 3-fting Riot of Stupendous Deals on the Greatest Performers in "Buick History 0' MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIE7NE FXV3 I gave them milk when I could afford it, and we had beans and rice and gravy and spagh etti and potatoes and ground meat and snap beans," she said. The five surviving girls, all emaciated, were placed in juve nile homes, but Mrs. Baughman said she wanted the children re turned so that she could rear them as she thought fit. The girls range in age from 1 to 9. LAUREL HEDGE Hardy, evergreen, fast grow ing ENGLISH LAUREL -Ideal for hedge or speciman plants. May be trimmed like PRIVET or BOXWOOD. In 3 Sizes 18"-20c each $ 17.50 100 24"-30c each $27.50 100 36"-Well branched - heavy, $1.00 each .$75.00l00 GARDEN CENTER NURSERY (Formerly NEWH ALL'S) 3 Mile South of Phoenix Pacific Hiway V , JT.n is the only T. ; 7M