Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 30, 1956, Image 13

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    Court Records
POLICE COURT
John Kenneth Haggeri. violation of
baaic rule, 10.
Jamei Francii McCoy, illegal right
turn. $5.
Rodney S. Thompson, violation of
basic rule. $15.
David E. Walsh, violation of basic
rule. S10.
Robert Waldron. failure to yield to
oncoming traffic. $5.
Kenneth C. Hudson, violation of
basic rule, S10.
Norman A. Caster, violation of basic
rule. S10.
Arle Z. Scott, violation of basic rule,
110.
Patricia M. Luce, violation of basic
O rule. 10.
Donald O. Burgess, excessive noise,
10.
Barbara Ann Cameron, failure to
top at stop sign. $5.
Normans B. Blowers, violation of
basic rule, (10.
District court
Paul Force, failure tto yield right of
way. 13.
Raymond R. Note, overload. $17 50.
Leonard V. Keller, one license plate,
110.
George W. Goodman, failure to sig
aal. S.
Othaniel X. Hayes, eateeesive over
hang. .
- Wayne W. Smith, failure to atop at
red light, S10.
Homer L. Dale, failure to atop at
top sign. S10.
Kenneth L. Carothers. violaition of
basic rule, $20.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
APPLICATIONS
Frank William Cavin, St. Helens,
Ore., and Patricia Anne Rodgers, 814
West Jackson st.
David Norman Nelson. Klamath
Tails, and Dixie Joanne Moor,, 1233
Woodrow lane.
Ralph Horton Slaton, Grants Pass,
and Rosemary Nichols, 1030 Orchard
atom dr.
Ernest T. Stuckmeyer, Mill Valley.
Calif- and Margie Lois Hollings worth,
125 Lincoln way.
CIRCUIT COURT
Arthur Vernon Hall vs. Essie Hall,
divorce complaint.
Mender, January 30. 1938
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREE
Shocking, Schiaparelli Bring To Mind Beautifully Vivid Pink To Miss Swanson
By GLORIA SWANSON
Written for United Press
Rome "Shocking" and Schia
parelli are two words which
bring to mind a beautifully vivid
pink, a lovely scent and a dyna
mo of a person who lets off
sparks in the form of new ideas.
No longer is Schiaparelli a cou
turier confined to apparel, but
a company known in France as
"Signed Schiaparelli,"
The ideas are not only for mi
lady, but also now for gentlemen
as well. For them she recently
invented a drink called "shock
rocks" (pink vodka on ice). This
isn't a joke. I have seen it in her
home in Paris.
And speaking of her home,
here is a house unlike any other
on this earth! It could easily be
a museum.
Home Cluttered
To describe t in detail, I'd
need an entire newspaper. Be
sides, it must be seen to be be
lieved. If I tell you it is clutter
ed; that is putting it mildly. I
thought I saved things That
doesn't mean we are collectors
it means we never throw any
thing away. '
Well, my recollection out of
a maze of "things" was a collet
tion of horns. Not musical horns,
animal horns! All sizes and.
shapes. Oh yes, and some very
j ,
THEY CALL IT DISCIPLINE We call it sheer will power
these members of New York's 7th Regiment are displaying
m they give the cold shoulder to a warm gal, actress
: Javne Mansfield, as she arrives for movie premiere of
"Helen of Troy" at New York City theater. The men are
nattily attired in full dress uniform for their appearance
a honor guard.
WOFTMEWOOBSm
JIJH STEVENS
YiH Timber TalM
A new book of history and
telM out of the wilderness, of
the Olympic Peninsula promises
to rival "The Egg and I," a
tory-book from the same re
lion.
Betty McDonald, who wrote
the hen-fruit saga of diversified
stump-ranching more years ago
than sh would like to have
mentioned, now r.anks among
the top ten-story tellers of the
U.S.A.
Young Murray Morgan's fifth
book Is "Last Wilderness." He
spun yarns rarely well in his
"Skid Road," out of Seattle his
tory. In his Olympic Peninsula
book h strides upward and on.
Of course, he serves up the
classics about Jim Huelsdonk,
the Iron Man of the Hoh, Wild
Man Turnow of the South Olym
pics, and other figures of fact
and legend. But they have been
freshened, so thatHhey read like
new. The last -chapter, on De
struction Island, on the other
had, Is so new in material and
treatment that it was recently
published in The Saturday Eve
ning Post, as "The Loneliest
Spot in America."
..The Famous Elk Hunt
And now in a book we have
the modern story on how old
time log piracy is today up
against the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. Morgan cites the
case of an Olympic National
: Forest ranger, who located evi
dence that's couple of giant logs
. in a small boom had been pirat
ed from Uncle's timber. He
tracked truck trails to the scene
of the crime, then took an FBI
agent to the stumps. They sawed
the tops off, then hauled the
cuts to the boom an8 matched
them with the butt ends of the
logs in question. It cost the pi
rate S5.000, all told, to get out
of that on.e
Ever hear stories from the
wide-open season on the Olym
pic Elk that was declared in
1937? Murra9 Morgan tells the
best ones in "Last wilderness."
There were 5.280 hunters who
swarmed into Olympic National
forest and over industry and
state timberlands. It cost them
M estimated $250,000 (1937 dol
lars) to kill 811 elk. Murray
Morgan repeats, this story, as
told to him by one stump-rancher
about another:
"You see, he had a cow old,
sick cow . . . And when the sea
son opened he took the poor old
critter out in the woods and tied
her to a stake. . . . Pretty soon
bang! But she didn't suffer at
all. That hunter was a good
shot. Right smack between the
eyes. Fellow from Seattle, and
pretty rich. He paid S135 right
there, and he wrote out a check
for $200. . . . They propped that
poor damn co wup and got her
leaning against a tree, and that
week she earned him $1,425.37,
three rifles, a spare tire off a
pickup truck, and she had
twelve elk tags on her. After
the season he melted her down
for lead."
The Tree Farms Story
Murray Morgan reports his
tory, also, in his new book. One
chapter Is on the birth of tree
farms in Grays Harbor county,
year of 1941, and how this pro
gram looks today in neighbor
ing Mason county. The chapter
strides out with this line:
"The first lumber was cut In
Mason county in 1853 . . . the
first lumberman in Mason coun
ty was Mike Simmons, the big,
unlettered Kentucky pioneer
who has led the first American
settlers to the Puget Sound
country eight years earlier."
The toil, the struggle, the ri
valries, the ventures with risk
capital, the losses, the gains,
the investment of gains in new
plants for new products, so that
today good wood is hauled down
and utilized to the last splinter
all this is recorded in "The
Last Wilderness" as facts of his
tory simply and entertainingly
dramatized. Murray Morgan
emerges from his new book as
a well-informed and highly re
liable forestry writer.
POPULAR PHONE NUMBER
Chicago . xU.P.) Chicago's
most popular telephone number
in 1955 was not that of a blonde
or a brunette. It was weather
4-1212 to which nearly 23,000,
000 cals were made to hear a
phonograph record of the hour
ly weather report.
long elephant tusks,
I can't tell you what period
the furniture was because I don't
remember seeing it. The couch
I sat on was covered with a leop
ard skin throw. The cocktail
table was littered with bottles
and glasses. Every other table
and the piano had "objects, of
art" and bric-a-brac mementoes
without an inch to spare because
of the porcelain horns, crystal
works of art horns and paintings,
many of which rest on chairs that
need repair and more horns!
Has Passion for Unusual
This woman's passion for the
unusual in the old as well . as
the new was certainly in evi
dence. I don't imagine there is a
duplicate to be found in the
whole world of anything in her
petite salon, or was it a library?
There were books but I "seem to
recall they were on the floor.
Her clothes collections when
she had her couturier business
in Paris were always unlike the
French designers. It was she who
started the padded shoulders
that were in vogue longer than
any style I can remember.
Before we parted this week
Schiaparelli graciously invited
me to stay with her in Paris,
which I accepted promptly. All
the horns pointed directly at my
heart would not stop me from
seeing what is on the second
floor.
STIFF BOOK PENALTY
Grand Rapids, Mich. (U.PJ
Grand Rapid's new ordinance
making persons who fail to re
turn books to the public library
liable to $50 fines or 30 days in
jail is bringing results, library
officials said. Scores of "lost"
books have been returned to the
library since the ordinance was
adopted late last year.
BOOK
MATCHES
Every match is 1
guaranteed
toligbt
Limit 2 Cfn. U
LUCERNE
3.8 MILK
Bonus quality
Regular or.
Homogenized
Extra rich
Qt. Gfn.
PiPPER
Crown Colony
the finest
quality for
the money
4-oz. Can
TOMATO
CATSUP
Taste Tells brand
has the rich
flavor of red
ripe tomatoes
(4-oz. Bolile
('Jnji!jjMjiiltemc c
SCAMP
WHOL
ER
New pink detergent is the
grandest thing for. easier,
faster, thriftier dishwashing
PLUMS
LUNCH
MEATS
Highway
brand, whole
unpeeled
Kingan
Brand
FLICKETT
Ghirardelli, the little
chocolates with a ,
thousand uses
22-oz.
Can
No. 2i2
Can
12-01.
Can
6-oz.
Pkg.
59
1
33'
2Y
Mrs. Wright s Bread
Fleet Mix, biscuit mlx-
40-oz.
1-Ib
Baking Powder, Calumet-
Royal Satin
pure vegetable shortening 3-Ib.
Instant Dry Milk, Lac-Mix2-lb. 6-oz.
Harvest Blossom, family flour10-lb.
Figs, Calimyrna 1.2-oz.
Apricots, Glenview, med 12-oz.
Quaker Oats, quick or reg. 3-lb.
Marshmallows, Fluff-i-est 8-oz.
pkg. 39e
. can 25c
. can 83c
pkg. 85c
sack 89c
pkg. 33c
pkg. 49c
pkg. 43c
pkg. 23c
Fresh White or
Whole Wheat
Save 2c ea. loaf
Pineapple Juice, Lalanl 46-oz. can 27e
Lima Beans, Seaside, dry No. 303 can 15e
Shoestring Beets
Jack 'n Beqnstock No. 303 can 12e
Garden Peas, Libby brand No. 303 can 23c
Lima Beans with Ham
Dennison's : 15-oz.
Chili Spaghetti
Large
Loaf
Campbells Soup
All meat base
variety soups
flavor packed
Reg.
Can
Nob Hill Coffee-Mb. bag 90c; 2-lb. bag T.79
Airway CoffeeT-lb. bag 88c; 2-lb. bag 1.75
Edwards ,Coffeell-lb. can 95c; 2-lb. can 1.89
Folgers Coffee, MJB or
Hills Bros. 1
Cigarettes, popular brandsctn. reg. size 7.75
Parade, detergent 40-oz. pkg. 69c
can 25e Cocoa, Hershey's
.1-lb. can 97e .
.1 -lb. can 69c
.quart bottle 59
pair 59c
Libby brand, with beans 16-oz.
Red Salmon, Libby brand No. Vi 1
White Star Tuna, bite size No. '4 1
can 33e
. can 55c
can 29c
Tuna Fish, Sea Trader, ehunk..No. can 24e
Strawberries, Bel-air, frozen10-oz. pkg. 29c
Frozen Peas, Bel-air.
Mixed Vegetables
Bel-air, Frozen
-10-oz. pkg. 21c
.10-oz. pkg. 19c
Aerowax, self-polishing
Gloves, . Leather Palm ,
Facial Tissue, Chiffon : pkg. of 400 25
Wax Paper, Thrifty brand 75 ft. roll 15e
Popcorn
Jolly Time, wh. or yellow10-oz. size 21 e
Great Northern Beans or Pinto J2-Ib. pkg. 29c
Dill Pickles, Columbia Koshers quart jar 39c
Enjoy a
"U.S.D.A.
Choice"
Beef
Beautiful
HOUMD
...SAFEWAY
STEAK
Tender cuts of the finest properly
"aged" Round Steak. Trimmed
before it. was weighed to save you
money.
Full-Cut
Bone-In
ib. 57
Just Heat 'N Serve .
MANOR HOUSE
Frozen Pies
Your choice of a wonderful
chicken, beef or turkey
4
8-oz.
Pies
$100
Boiling Beef Te"tt Nathc". lb. 15
Pot Roast" "39 49
Ground Beef Ground Daily : LB. 39c
Pork Steak
Fish Sticks
Tender
Juicy Cuts
Captain's
Choice
lb. 39
39
10-oz.
Pkg.
Extra Fancy and Fancy ROME
IFF
LARGE SIZE
BEAUTIES
24-lb. Box $1.98
Oranges
Large Size
Sunkist Navels
9i2clb.
Appro. 35 lbi. 2.2
Grapefruit
Florida Reds
Indian River
5 for 49c
Cabbage
Firm Crisp Heads
Tops for salads etc.
10c lb.
Grapefruit
Beautiful
Arizonas
49c
8-lb.
Bag
Tangelos sS07Forida lb. 17c
Lettuce S&K&n' lb. 14c
Potatoes 10590
PotatoesPunVsGeLacdte I085c
Prices in this ad are in effect through "Wednesday,
February 1 at Safeway in Medford. We reserve the
right to limit quantities. No sales to dealers or to
their representatives.
CHEER
WASHDAY DETERGENT
21-oz. OO- 51-oz.
www
Pkg.
Pkg.
79c
IVORY SOAP
Personal Size
423 :
King
Size
TIDE
Washday Detergent
1.33
ST 3.89
STARCH
Niagara Brand
12-oz, Pkg. 19c
TREND
Liquid Detergent
l212-oz. Can 259c
DASH
Washday Detergent
Large 4 AO Giant
Pkg. Pkg.
.79
SHORTENING
Snowdrift Brand
3-lb. Can 89c
i n . ----- .