Local arid
GOC to Metl The Ground
Observer corps will meet Satur
day, May 21, at the county court
house at 8 p.m., according to K.
J. Knutson, corps supervisor.
Hubcap Stolen Richard Lee
Farrell, 511 Dakota st., has re
ported to city police that a hub
cap was stolen from his car
about 11:30 a.m. Friday.
mm
At Community Mrs. John
Selby. 507 Haven sr., had minor
surgery Saturday at Community
hospital, and William Morgan,
7, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. L.
Morgan, 904 Wabash ave., was
admitted there Saturday morning
for emergency appendectomy.
Visitors Darrel Brown, Ore
gon State college student, is
visiting this week end with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orrin
Brown of 1203 Queen Anne ave.
Mrs. Brown's mother; Mrs. Mary
L. Parks, Oakdale, Calif., also
is visiting here. Mrs. Brown is a
medical patient at Community
hospital.
Bicycles Stolen John Hays
Rowan, 828 Minnesota st., and
Norman Gilbert Bailey, 416
Alice st., reported to city police
that their bicycles were stolen
Friday. The Rowan bicycle was
reportedly taken from Roose
velt school at 5:35 p.m. and the
Bailey bicycle from the owner's
residence at 7:21 p.m.
Potters Displayed Poppy
posters done by Medford school
students went on display Satur
day at Weeks and Orr Furni
ture store show windows. The
display is made up of 93 posters
and are the results of the annual
poppy day poster contest spon
sored by the auxiliary to the
American Legion'. Mrs. Minnie
Bryant has been auxiliary chair
man in charge of the project
since 1935.
.
Cars Collide Motorists in
volved in a two-car collision at
the intersection of Fourth st.
and Grape st. at 5:30 p.m. Fri
day were Donald Edward Bloom,
box 252, Wolf Creek, and Rob
ert Edward Lee Marshall Jr.,
1110 West Fourth st., city police
reported. No one was injured
in the accident. Marshall was
cited for having no operators'
license.
Back From Corvallis Miss
Marjorie Hattan, county 4-H
agent, and Mrs. Evelyn Sise-i
more, Ashland, Siskiyou 4-H club
leader, attended a training ses
sion for fair judges Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday morn
ing at Oregon State college in
Corvallis. On Thursday after
noon and Friday Miss Hattan
and Don Berry, county horticul
ture agent, attended a television
workshop at OSC. Conducting
the workshop was a United
States department of agriculture
official from Washington, D. C.
Driver Cited Marion Ellis
Fisher, 718 Bennett St., was cited
by city police for violation of
the basic rule Friday after his
car and two others collided on
North Riverside ave., between
Jackson blvd. and Maple st.
Drivers of the other cars were
Jerry Vernon Barrett, post of
fice box 762, Central Point, and
William George Clark, 1769 Pa
cific highway. The accident oc
curred at 9:55 p.m., police said.
No one was injured.
NOW OPEN
BEAUTIFUL
ROGUE RIVER
LODGE
On the river just north of Trail
en Criter Lak Highway. Open
daily and Sundays.
FINE FOODS
FRIENDLY SERVICE
. Under personal management
of Monty Gilhoustn
Mystery, Danger,
Desire!
if Fx
S HSR SI
1DB8B PARTNER
fc?
Personal
Meeting The Golden Link
class of the First Baptist church
will hold its monthly meeting at
1 p.m.. May 24, at the home of
Mrs. Charles Cingcade on Pio
neer road. A devotional study
will be held followed by a des
sert luncheon.
'
Mercy Flight The 4-week-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. F.
Bixler, Grants Pass, was flown to
Portland from Grants Pass Fri
day afternoon by - a Mercy
Flights, Inc., air ambulance
plane. She was to have treat
ment for a stomach ailment at a
Portland hospital.
Kaffee Klatch Phoenix resi
dents and others interested are
invited to attend a kaffee klatch
Wednesday, May 23 from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m., at the Phoenix Com
munity hall. The event is held
in behalf of the Phoenix fest
ival princesses, when those who
attend have an opportunity to
choose their candidates and vote
for them through purchase of
tickets.
Food Group Mrs. Alma
Smith will report on a National
Food association convention held
earlier this spring at Terre
Haute, Ind., during a meeting of
the Natural Foods group Tues
day, May 22, at 8 p.m., in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Vern
Shangle, 1445 Kings highway.
Mrs. Harlan P. Bosworth will
speak on calcium assimilation.
All interested persons are in
vited. 5
To Workshop D. W. Mitchell
and Darrell Davis, ' Medford,
chairmen of social studies and
science study committees, respec
tively, plan to attend a curricu
lum workshop at the University
of Oregon. Chairmen of 100 subject-area
field committees have
worked on a state-wide curricu
lum study sponsored and coor
dinated by the state department
of education. The workshop will
be held July 16 through August
3. Findings of committees will
be used to devise the framework
for public school education in
the state.
News About
Servicemen
PROMOTED
Kenneth Neil Owen, son of
Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Owen, Jack
sonville, has been promoted to
a dental technician on board the
carrier, USS Wasp, in the Far
East. He received basic training
at San Diego, Calif., after en
listing last November. He is a
graduate of Rogue River acad
emy. Owen left for the Far East
from San Diego last April 23.
PARTICIPATES
Roy D. Anderson, specialist
third class, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy D. Anderson, 115 Florence
st., recently participated with
the 1st infantry division in the
75th anniversary celebration of
the Army's command and gen
eral staff college at Ft. Leaven
worth, Kan. He is a cook in Com
pany C of the division's 16th
regiment, and entered the Army
in February, 1954. He completed
basic training at Ft. Ord, Calif.
TO REPORT
Pvt. Paul Maurice Dutton of
the Army, who has been visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gay
W. Dutton, 410 Woodstock st.,
will report next to Ft. Bliss,
near El Paso, for duty with an
artillery unit. He recently com
pleted eight weeks basic train
ing at Ft. Ord, Calif., and was
awarded a sharpshooters medal
on the rifle range. He enlisted
in the Army last February and
previously attended Medford
schools.
ATTENDS CONFERENCE
Warren M. Long, local Army
recruiting station commander, is
attending a recruiters confer
ence in Portland and will return
to his office in the Medford Post
Office' building Monday, May
1 21. Direct enlistments in the
I regular Army division are now
TONITE
ENDS TOMORROW!
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HAN CAULflELD-FKD MacMURRAY
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Obituaries
JOHN C. MARIN
Funeral services for John
Clayton Marin, 80, of 619 Al
berts st., who died Friday, will
be held in Conger-Morris chapel
at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. The Rev.
D. Kirkland West of the First
Presbyterian church will off icite.
Committal will be in Memory
Gardens Memorial park.
Mr. Marin was born Dec. 16,
1875, in Port Huron, Mich. On
Feb. 1, 1898, in Park Rapids,
Minn.,, he was married to Pearl
Geil, who survives. He has made
his home in the valley for the
past six years coming from
Klamath Falls in 1950.
Survivors besides his wife,
Mrs. Marin, are four daughters,
Mrs. George Potucek, Medford;
Mrs.. Arthur Edstrom, Two Har
borns, Minn.; Mrs. Claude Hol
teen, Roseburg, and Mrs. Albert
McCumber, Pleasanton, Calif.;
three sons, Harry Marin, Klam
ath Falls; Neil Marin, Des
Moines, la.; Donovan Marin,
Medford; a brother, Henry Mor
in, Bemidji, Minn.; a sister, Mrs.
Nellie Jordan, Eugene; 15 grand
children and four great grand
children. HARVEY A. FAUSET
Funeral services for Harvey
A. Fauset, 54, of 34 Vancouver
ave., who died Thursday, will be
held in Conger-Morris chapel
Monday at 10:30 a.m. Ritualistic
services will be performed by
Medford Elks Lodge, assisted by
Rev. Thomas McCamant of the
Community Congregational
church. Committal will be in Sis
kiyou Memorial park.
Mr.. Fauset was born on Aug.
15, 1901, in Logansport, Ind. On
Dec. 31, 1945 in Haver, Mont.,
he was married to Emma Irene
McGuire. He operated a service
station for many years at 700
East Main st. He also owned and
operated a restaurant on East
Main st. which he recently sold.
' He was a member of Ameri
can Legion Post 15 and Med
ford Elks lodge. He was a vet
eran of WorldWar II.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Harvey Fauset; one daugh
ter, Mrs. Richard Burlesfen, In
dianapolis, Ind", two sisters, Mrs.
Robert Cannady, Logansport,
Ind., and Mrs. Laura Powell.
Logansport, Ind.; and two grand
sons. LUCY WILCOX
Lucy Wilcox, 90, died in Jack
sonville Saturday, May 19, 1956.
Conger Morris Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.
JAMES WILSON
James Arthur (Jim) Wilson,
75, resident of the Bishop creek
area for the past 20 years, died
Wednesday at a local hospital.
Mr. Wilson, son of the late
Jesse W. and Rosana Wilson,
pioneer Jackson county resi
dents, was born near Medford
Jan. 24, 1881. He was married
in March, 1925, to Miss Anna
Doren.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Wilson; one daughter, Mrs.
John Jenner Jr., Etna, Calif.; two
sisters, Mrs. C. E. Lindemood,
Jacksonville, and Mrs. F. T.
Hayes, Portland; one brother,
Jesse A. Wilson, Medford; three
grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Monday at Perl Fun
eral home. The Rev. John J.
Root of the Free Methodist
church will officiate, assisted by
the Rev. Harold Bullman of the
being accepted. The 10th divi
sion designated as a gyroscope
unit, rotates for duty in Europe
in November of this year.
ON LEAVE
PFC Marvin Maxwell, who
has been stationed in Germany
for the past 14 months is home
on a 30-day leave. He is a 1954
graduate of Jacksonville High
school. During his leave he is
visiting at the Elmar Adams'
home in Jacksonville, and other
relatives in Medford, Klamath
Falls and Central Point.
Richard F. Foster, a technical
sergeant in the Air Force, left
last week for service in Japan.
He with MrsFoster and their
children, Ricky, Patty and Billy,
arrived recently from Sacra
mento, Calif., to visit his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Foster,
115 Clark st., her mother, Mrs.
Fannie Sullivan, Oak st., and
her sister, Mrs. Fred Warner,
Eleventh st. Mrs. Foster, the
former Miss Sandra Sullivan,
wil remain in Medford with the
children.
Sergeant Foster recently was
commended for service in Alas
ka at the Eielson Air Force base.
Johnnie
126 North Bartlett Next to Safeway
S HAS A TREAT FOR YOU!
Any Day, Monday, May 21st, Thru Saturday, May 26th
CLIP THIS COUPON
It Entitles You to a
. FREE Cup of Coffee and a Do-Nut
Hoover Says Reds'
'New Look' Posing
Free World Menace
Washington (U.R; FBI Di
rector J. Edgar Hoover and 39
experts on Russian affairs
warned today that the Soviet
Union's "new look" policies and
tactics present "a menace to the
free world greater than Stalin
ism itself."
Their views were expressed
in a symposium on anti-Stalinism
and the 20th Congress of the
Communist Party. The sympos
ium was published Saturday by
the House Committee on Un
American Activities under the
title, "The Great Pretense."
"The Communist leopard fre
quently changes his spots, but
the same blood bad blood con
tinuously flows through his
veins," Hoover said in the 173
page report. "Josef Stalin, who
ranked with MARX, Engels
and Lenin as an untouchable
saint in the godless Soviet tem
ple, has been exposed by his own
worshippers as a power-crazed
tyrant," a pathological fraud and
"a coldhearted executioner.".
'About Face'
This is "another spectacular
about-face" in the party line,
Hoover added, but "should have
been no surprise coming from a
movement which has no moral
principles, which lives by ex
pediency, and which will make
any move to advance the Com
munist cause."
Committee Chairman Francis
E. Walter (D-Pa.), who prepared
a summary of the various views,
said the 39 contributors stood
together on these major conclu
sions: 1. "The current policy and tac
tics of the Soviet Union present
the greatest danger ever to con
front the West."
, 2. "Current developments in
the Soviet Union are a reflection
of growing strength and confi
dence rather than weakness."
3. "The policy of anti-Stalinism
proclaimed by Nikita Khru
shchev does not denote aban
donment of the messianic Soviet
program of universal conquest."
Firemen Battle Mill
Flames in Eugene
Eugene U.R Firemen bat
tled flames at three lumber mills
in the Seneca district of Eugene
Friday for 40 minutes after fire
started in one of the mills and
spread to the adjacent ones.
The fire apparently started in
a burner of the Cuddleback lum
ber mill. The mill was inopera
tive but the fire spread quickly
down a conveyor belt and to
about 20,000 board feet of stored
lumber.
The Star Lumber Company
and the Zellner Lumber Com
pany both suffered minor dam
age when sparks from the fire
spread the blaze. "
Holiness Movement church of
Canada.
Interment will be at the Jack
sonville cemetery. Pallbearers
will include Charles LaMoine,
Roy Smith, Peter Fick, Tom
Dunnington, Ernest Mclntyre
and Oscar Lewis. -
MIRIAM BROWN
Mrs. Miriam Katherine
Brown, 42, of Fairmont st., died
in a local hospital Friday.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Monday in Chapel
Mortuary, with the Rev. D. Kirk
land West, pastor of the First
Presbyterian church, officiating.
Interment will be in Siskiyou
Memorial park.
The body will lie in state at
the mortuary this afternoon and
evening.
Casket bearers will be Wilson
H. Smith, William Koepke, Dav
id Peterson, Perry Ducan, Eu
gene Peterson, and Donald Ack
er. Mrs. Brown, daughter of Oscar
and Hilma Koski, of Finland,
was born in Renton, Wash., Jan.
"2, 1914. She was married in
Seattle on Feb. 21, 1936, to Wil
liam Brown Jr., who survives.
The family came from Everett,
Wash., seven years ago to Med
ford. Brown is an insurance in
spector. " ,
Mrs. Brown was a member of
the Methodist church, and Beth
any circle of the First Presby
terian church.
Besides her husband she is
survived by one son, Richard
W. Brown and one daughter,
Marlene M. Brown, both of the
.home; and several relatives in
Finland.
Johnson at
JOHNNIE'S
BURGER SHOP:
Pulp, Paper Industry
Reaches Agreement
Portland, Ore. (U.R) Pacific
Coast pulp and paper manufac
turers, have reached an agree
ment with employees on a one
year contract calling for 12.3
cents an hour pay increase for
some 19,000 workers.
- The new contract would add
about $6.5 million to the pay en
velopes of International Broth
erhood of Pulp, Sulphite and
Paper Mill Workers and the In
ternational Brotherhood of Pa
per Makers in Oregon. Washing
ton and California.
The new pay hike established
a base rate of $1.94 an hour for
men and $1.64Vi for women, and
provided fringe benefits. .
The contract will be submitted
to referendum of the union
membership with an effective
date of June 1.
California Postmen
Honored for Service
San Francicso (U.R) The post
office department Saturday sing
led out 32 postmasters and nine
postal employes for commenda
tion for their services "under
adverse and hazardous condi
tions during the disastrous win
ter floods in northern California.
Verne Scoggins, postal region
al director, said official letters
of commendation also have been
sent to 28 non-postal employes
and a group superior accomp
lishment award was given to
the entire staff of the Eureka,
Calif., post office.
Scoggins said most of the post
masters honored will receive
their awards in Sacramento
Tuesday during the convention
of the National Association of
Postmasters' California chapter.
India May Be
Generation of
Bombay (U.R) India may
be growing a new generation of
gangsters.
This is the fear of many per
sons in this country, which is
committed to a policy of prohibi
tion. The nation has not gone com
pletely dry yet. Prohibition is
making greater progress legal
ly in some provinces than in
others. But the number of "dry
days" is increasing and India's
leaders appear convinced they
are on the right path.
Not all of the people are equal
ly convinced. There is a lot of
complaining, and there is more
and more bootlegging.
"India's leaders always are
talking about developing 'cot
tage industry in this country,"
oneBombay resident said. "Well,
tRey have a new 'cottage indus
try' now illegal cottage distil
ling." Generation of Gangsters
Here , is what this means, and
DUUMI
I
m
mill
THE PICTURE THEY TRIED
It exposes the whole inside story of the racketeers in
the fight racket -as no other picture has done before!
I
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iS HUMPHREY I
Sunday, Mar 20, 195S
Five Tracts off O&C
Timber Sold Mere
Five tracts of O and C and
public domain timber totaling an
estimated 6,524,000 board feet
brought S268. 440.20 at an oral
auction Thursday by the Med
ford office of the bureau of land
management.
Overage price was $41.15 per
Three Americans Held
On Monaco Charges
Monte Carlo, Monaco (U.R
Three Americans held oh
charges of using "loaded" dice in
the Monte Carlo Casino have
gone on a hunger strike to force
authorities to try them, it was
reported Saturday.
The three menare: Jason Lee,
60, Los Anaeles; 39-year-old Phil
ip Aggie of Fargo, N.D., and
Labanese born Ralph Shaker, 40,
of West Covina, Calif.
Lee's son. Jason Jr., who flew
from the United States to assist
his father, said the three men
began their hunger strike Fri
day in an attempt to force au
thorities to set a trial date.
The three Americans were ar
rested Feb. 22 on charges of
switching "loaded" dice into a
Casino crap game in an attempt
to break the bank.
However, they not only failed
to win money but lost about
$8,565.
Births
HERNDON Mr. and Mrs.
John,-Talent, May 19, 1956, girl,
10 pounds, at Community hos
pital. Developing
Gangsters
wny people here believe pro
hibition may bring a generation
of gangsters to India:
1. There are many, many peo
ple in India with an extremely
low income, and a tremendous
number who are unemployed and
have no income at all.
2. By running a small whisky
making plant secretly in their
homes, they can produce illegal
beverages which their children
can peddle.
3. The children will see how
easily their parents are making
$2 to $3 per day, and they will
see how their parents disobey
the laws.
4. The children will grow up
without a desire to make an
honest living and without re
spect for law and order.
"We are going to have a gen
eration of gangsters as a result
of prohibition in India, just as
the Americans did after their
miserable experiment," one
Bombay citizen said.
Top Notch Cafe
Next to Craterian Beauty Shop
i
JAN STERLING ROD STEIGER
MEDFORD (OREGON)
thousand board feet for all spec
ies. Prices for douglas fir, which
made up approximately two
thirds of the total volume sold,
ranged from $18.25 to $55.55 per
thousand and averaged $42.45
per thousand.
High 'bidders in the Jackson
master unit were Bruce Barton,
194.000 board feet in the Butte
Falls area, $4,096.50, with bid
price of $24.50 per thousand for
Douglas fir; Olson-Ross, 391,000
board feet in the Sykes Creek
fire salvage area, $5,472.15, with
bid price of $18.25 per thousand
for Douglas fir; and, at the May
10 sale, Paul Workman Lumber
company, 67,000 board feet in
the Dead Indian rd. salvage area,
1,629, with bid price of $17 per
thousand for white fir.
Olson-Ross will be required to
plant 44 acres of the Sykes
Creek burn to ponderosa pine
seedlings as rapidly as possible
as part of the program to re
forest federal lands, the bureau
explained.
A special sale is planned by
the bureau on May 24 or an esti
mated 44,000 board feet of blow
down located on Stratton creek
near the Hellgate bridge.
Next Regular Sale
Next regular sale for the Med
HOTEL
mm
MEBLIT
5:30 to 9i00 P. M.
Roast Turkey
$150
Cranberry II (
Sauce
ASHLAND
t t
4) M
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VI. Cook.
UUKUUN MacRAc
SHIRLEY JONES
PLUS
ZOth Centwyf presents QN t
1
TODAY!
CONTINUOUS
From 1 :00 p.m.
TO STOP!
I ' BREAKFAST
AND LUNCH
7 a-m. to 2 9-m.
VX odUcd by JEFFREY HUNTER
Bt. . . ' r .... I
MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN
ford district of the bureau will
be held June 28. John Carnegie,
assistant district forester, an
nounced that present plans indi
cate this will be one of the lar
gest sales held in the Medford
district in recent years.
It will include approximately
30 million board feet of timber
in 10 to 12 sales located through
out the district. Although de
tailed information is not yet
available for these sales, Carne
gie said marking has been com
pleted and anyone wishing to
examine the sales areas may se
cure information by contacting
the office of the district forester
in the Medford city hall.
tM OP
8;30 p. TO.
Show t
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second -A hero and
a marked man!
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MIKE UNE MAX BAK JWSEYJ06 WAUWi t.
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