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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1956)
LOBSTEI?? HOW 'ABOUT FILET MIGNOMPV WHATS THE SPEQ4LTy OP THE HOUSE ? THE SXVS THE LIMIT TOCtfy- WE H40 SIX WINNERS AHO THE DAILY DOUBLE-NOT E40. Hgy? NOT ZAO AT ALL- They'll Do It Every Time " . By Jimmy Hatlo W THEy DOING IN VT NO SHOULD SET S?J 7 THIS JOINT IP THEy E-dTING HOBIT- Kj. H4OTH4TI0NOOP H SHOULD S4VE MWAM yJCKPOe T4LK- THB RTOMfKINSBElS J WINDS UP WITH 4 oiil-l- iKY.Nti I V V 4 DIME TIP S lUUTCHUk' Ci 4 S4N0ERIMS THE SP0f?TlES T4KIMG it BIG IN THE THIRD CL4SS CHILI -TC4P- TU4MK 4MB 4 H4TLO IUTaXCP tip ibMssixL Wieaey, 734ya.,, , AU4MI 44, Ut. If 4 Research Observatory on Slopes Of Hawaii Volcano Studies Mars H 1 1 o , Hawaii (U.R) The United States has dedicated a re search observatory 11,134 feet up the slopes of Hawaii's famed volcano mountain Mauna Loa where scientists already are working on a project to deter mine whether the atmosphere of Mars is capable of sustaining life. Within the next year, other scientists working in the $50,000 laboratory also will be making studies which will eventually give the United States armed forces new knowledge in conneo tion with high altitude flight equipment, space flights and sat ellites. The opening of the observa tory was timed to participate in the international geophysical year world-wide studies. Howev er, it represents efforts by the U. S. Weather Bureau and the National Bureau of Standards dating back to 1920, when the Pan Pacific Science Congress meeting in Honolulu adopted a resolution calling for establish ment of a weather station near the summit of the 13,000-foot mountain. Ideal Location The high level location is ideal for delving into the mysteries of the upper atmosphere because its atmosphere is free of most of the earth's moisture content, which remains trapped below the 8.000 foot level by a peculiar trade wind inversion layer. Also there is little or no pol lution on the island of Hawaii, located 2.000 miles from main land industrialized areas that -:' 63 ? m i.n u t e s J NORTH BEND COOS BAY $6.60 plus tax jUSTC0fiST j is, if the island's famed "drive- in" volcano remains dormant. Scientists say it is about due to erupt again, but the observa tory is located away from known flow patterns. One important by-product ex pected from the planned research will be improved techniques for long-range weather forecasting. Important Studies Roy L. Gox, Honolulu Weath er Bureau chief meteorologist, said Mauna Loa studies could be extremely important to any one on the mainland whose work is affected by the climate, because the tropics is where to morrow's weather for the main land originates. The study of Mars now under way is spectrograph readings of the rays of the sun as deflected by Mars as it moves toward the Earth at this time of the year at a greater speed than any oth er time. Much as the sound of a train's whistle is accelerated when the train moves toward you, so is reflected light from Mars under present conditions, and they are concentrated and easy to read. By analyzing these rays sci entists working above the Earth's moisture level will be able to tell by color and other means just how much moisture is in the Mars atmosphere. The Family Council Editor's Not: The Family Council consists of a lodge, a psychiatrist, a newspaper editor, a women's pace editor and two -newspaper writers. These consult with clergymen of all faiths and denominations. All letters are held In completo confidence. Mrs. D. M. Susan should either marry Jim or break it off. Susan M. My mother ean't understand a platonic relation ship. Mrs. D. M. Our 22-year-old daughter has been going with the same young man for three years, yet they have shown no interest in getting married or even en gaged. This boy is the same age as she is. They met at college and have exactly the same interests. My husband and I think he is too young for her, but since they like one another so much, we see no serious objection to their get ting married. They both have jobs and the young man has a hopeful future. In any case, they ought to eith er get married or break it off be cause Susan is not meeting other young men because of Jim. She goes on occasional dates with others, but later tells Jim all about it as though he were a girl friend. Then they laugh the whole thing off. It's a very odd relationship for two young people. All Susan's friends are getting married and she is doing nothing about her own future. e Susan M. My mother can't see such a thing as a platonic re lationship between persons of the opposite sex. Jim and I just aren't in love, but we do have marvelous times together. Why should I break up friendship that has given me so much pleasure? My parents have a desperate fear of my being an old maid, but I think there is plenty of time to worry about that. The Couneili These parents are putting a little too much pressure on a relationship which may still be in the process of unfolding, but Susan is being unwise permitting herself to be come almost exclusively preoc cupied with a young man she doesn't believe she will marry. ' Parents naturally get anxious about a 22-year-old girl who shows so little interest in getting married, but they should try to contain that anxiety in order to be better able to take an ob jective viewpoint when their help is seriously needed. They may have put their finger on the problem when they say they feel Jim is too young. It is possible that these young people are con sciously or unconsciously wait ing for Jim to mature a little more before committing them selves. Many parents would be happy if their children showed that much wisdom. Feels At Ease , On the other hand, Susan should realize that one reason she enjoys Jim's company so much is that she has spent so much time with him and feels completely at her ease. Because this couple has ruled out the possibility of marriage, on the surface at least, they can use one another as shields against the challenge of forming a romantic relationship. Susan should real ize-that, whatever interpretation she puts on her conduct, other young men will increasingly take her relationship with Jim as a more or less settled affair and few may care to compete for her interest. This is what her parents fear. Susan is wise not to let the example of her friends or the anxiety of her parents push her into a marriage she is not ready for, but she should not use Jim as a shield to shut her off from other relationships. The answer lies not in breaking off her en joyable relationship with Jim, but in seriously and actively try ing to interest herself in other young men. (Copyright 1958, General Features Corp.) TRIANGLE X-TRA Egg Producer Keeps Your Layers On the Job ....all Summer Long You CAN prevent that Summer hill in your egg pro duction ... Triangle X-Tra Egg Producer will help, your hens keep their Summer lay up to par by supple menting their natural feeds with the egg producing and body building concentrates they need. Successful poul trymen have proved that this famous formula egg mash cuts summer feed costs per dozen eggs. In Mash or Pellet Form M sssr MORTON MILLING CO. 10 W. Jackson Blvd. Phone 3-1031 1 603-MS M. TIUAMOOK PORTLAND 12, OliGON Lack of Compromise At Bottom of Trouble Philadelphia (U.PJ "The inability to compromise in fam ily squabbles is at the bottom of most domestic trouble," says Ralph Ormsby, executive direc tor of the Family Service of Philadelphia. For his verification, Ormsby looks to a survey of 4,551 cases handled last year by the Family Service, a Red Feather agency. He says a good rule to observe when family differences come up is to "think more in terms of 'we' and less often of T." "Quite often," says he, "dif ficulties also come up when a family moves to a new neigh borhood, or is beset with sudden illness, financial loss or housing troubles. Even the strongest may feel frightened and abandoned without friends or relatives to turn to." Nominating Petitions Must Be Re-Circulated MarshaU, Mich. (U.R) A candidate for the Republican nomination for Calhoun county sheriff must circulate his nom inating petitions all over again. Chief Deputy Wiliard Jess Purcell had been known as "Jess" since his high school days so he usee the name "W. Jess Purcell" on the petitions. But the state elections director ruled the designation should have read "W. Jess Purcell, for merly Wiliard J. Purcel." The easternmost town in the United States is Lubec, Me., at 66 degrees, 59 minutes west longitude. frlday, Jmsj M, 1MI MEDPOKD (OREOOir) MAIL TRrBTlTB TKREB Around Hollywood ly ALINI MOSBY United Press Correspondent Hollywood (U.R) Has that Oscar changed Ernest Borg nine's life? His phone rings more, he's in vited to fancy Hoi 1 y w o o d parties and he gets to sing and dance in musicals now. Borgni n e's sche d u 1 e. he jRV'- ' V I decided today, 11 jtj, - 1 has taken a Aline Mosrii' different turn since he collected that famed gold statuette for playing a homely butcher in "Marty". For one thing, the affable Er nie now is rubbing elbows with the glamour stars and wealthy executives at lavish dinner par ties, where before he couldn't have sneaked in with the milk man. And the line "The Ernest Borgnines," is .beginning to pop up in the gossip column reports of these doings. "I'd rather stay home and read a good book," the new socialite confided. "But we have gone to some nice parties. Four years ago I never dreamed I'd be in that diamond circle standing around at parties looking at Darryll Zanuck, Gincet Rogers and John Wayne people you heard about but who didn't know you existed. ' "I don't know whether the other people had fun at the par ties, but my wife and I did," he added with boyish eagerness. 1 Borgnine's humble statements would raise eyebrows coming from another actor, but his sin cerity you may believe. He tells with frankness how one of the first duties he performed with his new wealth was to buy bis wife a mink coat to replace an 'old red one she had worn through their years of poverty. They also had to invest in a cleaning woman because Mrs. Borgnine is too busy on the tele phone now to keep house. It would never occur to him to hire a secretary. "We can't eat dinner for the phone calls," he said anxiously. "One day my wife clocked 36 calls in one hour." There are other disadvantages. His pastime is watering his front yard. But now the neighborhood small fry dance by and yell, "Your're not supposed to be do ing that you won an Oscar." And, unfortunately, he can't accept the flood of roles offered him. "I almost resent the fact I've had to give up my nonentity be cause now I can't go jfrom one picture to another," he said. "I would love to have been just a featured actor and remained that way so I could work all the time. "Hecht-Lancanster (where he's under contract) think I should only do three pictures a year or people will get tired of me." Most of the scripts showered upon him were " 'Marty type rolls, all the way down the line." So he accepted the offbeat part of portraying composer Lew Brown in a 20th Century - Fox musical, "The Best Things in Life Are Free." Borgnine is happy that the Oscar enabled him to croon and even hoof with Gordon MacRae and Dan Dailey. "I'm just a bathroom singer," he insisted. "I just yell. But I get to wear a tux and that's very different from 'Marty'." I Summer of Work Penalty for Youths San Rafael, Calif. IUM Two Sen Rafael teen - agers, sentenced in Marin county juv enile court for shooting five rare egrets, were sentenced to a sum mer of work on a fish and tree planting project. Superior Judge Jordan Mar tinelli, knowing the law forbade egrets in private possession, couldn't sentence the boys to raise five baby birds, so he di rected them to help plant trees in the county and rescue fing erling trout from the evaporat ing waters of Paper Mill creek during the dry season. Radioactive Food May Solve Iron Deficiency Berkeley, Calif. (U.R) Ra dioactive food may help solve problems of iron deficiency, which is prevalent among in fants and causes anemia. Dr. Jeanette Schulz, who is conducting the study, ' injects hens and cows with harmless amounts of radioiron. It shows up in trace amounts in eggs and milk. Radioiron is also added to baby cereals. After the food is eaten the iron absorption can be traced. Dr. Schulz hopes to learn from the study if infant diets should be supplemented with iron. Buying a car? MY BANK PLAN MAY SAVE YOU MOO ON FINANCING AND AUTO INSURANCE Virgil R. Wilkes ' .jrfTTlv jlggO Before yon buy that car, just tell me on the phone the total costs of the car, the financing and the insurance. Within five minutes I'll call you back and tell you what it will cost you to buy, finance, and insure the same car through my Bank Plan. Chances are, for exactly the same deal, it'll be $100 less! I know it's hard to believe l but k'l worth a phone call, isn't it? Tktrs it no obligation. H part H hnw jrow STATE FARM Agent JOHN A. CARTER - VIRGIL R. WILKES LYNN COLBY 133 South Central Phone 2-9322 Try a 56 Buick and See ! 3 You've probably heard us say a lot, recently, about the 1956 Buick's new Variable Pitch Dynaflow. And maybe you've wondered just what that. "neu" means. ' Well, it means a brand-new principle in transmission design that the engineers call "double regeneration.'' A new way to make whirling oil add to its own velocity. A new way to produce fast torque build-up at only part throttle. ' i What does it iL for your - (- It gives you a quick new getaway response right in the first inch of pedal travel tight where you do most of your normal driving and right where you get better gas mileage every inch of the way. It gives you more safety-surge breakaway when you floor the pedal and switch the pitch more electrifying full-power acceleration to pull out of a tight spot And it gives you all this with absolute smoothness whether you're in stop-and-go traffic, or in a highway emergency because no gears ever shift in Dynaflow. But if you think this great new getaway is the only reason for Buick's strong position in the Top 3 of America's best sellers listen: Buick Supw fS-Possenger 4-Door Riviera In every 1956 Buick there's newness from end to end. New 322-cubic-inch V8 engines. New brakes, new frame, new rear end. A new deep-oil cushioned ride. New "sense of direction" tracking steadiness. New steering linkage and front-end geometry. New han dling ease, new quiet, new comfort, new safety. New carburetor "deicing." New exhaust manifolding. New . interlocking safety door latches. New Safety-Aim head lamps. New features everywhere you look including new styling and beauty inside and out t What it all adds up to is the Best Buick Yet by far. And we cordially invite you to come see and sample all the new thrills a 56 Buick has in store for you. You'll find them packaged in a price that makes any model you choose your smartest buy yet Can you make it this week? 'Sew Adoanced VariahU fitch Dynaflow h th only Dynaflow Buick builds today. It is standard on Roadmaxttr, Super and Century optional at modest extra cost on the Special.. A1RCONDITIONINO at COOL N W LOW PRICE k cools, fittest, dahumidlfiea. Oet ' Isnsna Comfort In yoar mw rWtek wMi oenutn PRIOIDAIRB CONDITIONING MOtM GUASOM OH IV WHM SfTTH AtnOSsOSftfS AM tWlT aUICst WU Vn0 143 SOUTH RIVERSIDE PHONE 2-6265