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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1957)
Dairy Industries Conference to Open Court Records O Corvallis U.Rj The 46th annual Oregon Dairy Industries Conference opens here Monday with advance registrations indi cating more than 200 Oregon riairv nlntc uill ho runrncpntAr at red liht. $5 . . , , r I Truman Lee Milton, O Conference chairman G. H. Wilster, Oregon State College dairy manufacturing professor, taid today judging of some 200 entries of ice cream, cheese, milk U nd other dairy products had -been completed. The winners will be announced during the conference. O' o Petition Circulates in CJ Against Poisons Cave Junction A petition ad dressed to the Isaak Walton League asking that poisons for rayotes and rodents be banned in the Illinois valley is in circu lation here. Several valley residents have lost dogs recently. Petitioners believe the animals were killed eiOler by strychnine or 1080 poi- on which they got in coyote bait or by eating carion killed with 1080 set out in posted areas by the forest service. fEARING AID 0 tZ NO RECOVER "KUTTON" OK COftD Plt4DS CtOTMINO STATIC POftEVIR USI Ttlf PHONf NATURALLY No wr tbnut mtmit; your ippearxnce wtb th ntv Tonemnref Cordln ' Birrntt . . . h wnrld only hunnf aid developed crdt jt-. iely for 'onwn. Jy clip m the hair and comb a kVw fcnndi T it . . Jw all you do to completely coo t the nnemuter Barrrtte in the hair. Veijhi fraction of an ounce. Complete free- mom oi activity. 1 J Aim. stk n m tkt fsmi Tinimiu nsmd- JlAIL COUPON TODAY I I I O I o I I CIOIGE E. WHITE HEARING AIDS 131 Weil Main . BEDFORD, OREGON tse tend free btentum on Tonemasttr Cord I O Alio, tend literature on jandard models. Ufi- MUNICIPAL COURT Cfton G. Jones, violation of basic rule. SlO. Joseph E. Oweru, violation of basic rule. sio. Margery Vesta Jactcman, failure to tod ai ren nsnt, .-. Marcel Kiimek Jr., failure to stop violation of basic rule. S10. Daniel Thomas basic rule. 10. Robert Lee White, at stop sijrn. th. Glenn El van Cava, violation of basic rule 510. Donald Lester Slater, violation of basic rule. $10. Joseph Edward Rinard, failure to stoD at red lisrht. S3 Charles Kenneth Oswald, defective eauinment. $10 Thomas Charles Hall, defective equipment, S3. Cobb, violation of failure to stop Darrel Wayne Lowe, failure to stop at mod turn, sa. Robert Earl Martin, violation of basic rule. SlO. Margaret G. Wilcox, no driver's license. S2.30. Winford Cloid Saylors. violation of basic rule. no. Sulo Andrew Coleman, failure to i ton at stop sign. $5. Ralph Edward Hargen. failure to yield right of way. $10. Loretta Ann Morton, violation of basic rule, $10. Lucille Mae Ober, allowing un licensed driver to ooerate vehicle. $10 Marion Joanne Swatzlander. viola tion of basic rule. $10. William Edmund McCtacken, im proper left turn. $3. Lee Roy Wallace, no drivers license. Victor William Goddard, improper left turn. $5. Eugene Roger Richmond, failure to stoo at rea ngni. ss. Frank LeNeal Tripp, violation of basic rule. $10. Elzada Luce Dahmer, failure to stop at red light. $5 Claude Peace Speegle, expired op erator's license, $3. failure to of DISTRICT COURT William Albert Gossman, stop at stop sign. $10. Clifford Dale Smith, violation basic rule, $10, bail forfeited. Leland Leroy Dysinger, no motor vehicle license. $10. Alvin Glen Edwards, failure to stop at stop sign, $10. Gilbert Wallace Buck, failure to atop at stop sign, $10. William Junior Worthington, viola tion of baste rule, $15. Glen Lee Rlgga, failure to stop at stop sign, $10. Eloy Eldon Sutton, failure to stop at stop sign, $10. Howard Donald Newby, failure to display PUC permit, $15. Delbert Johnson, violation of basic rule. $12 50. Sammie Lee Hopkins, no operators license. $5. Charles Thomas Rose, defective headlights. $10. bail forfeited. Raymond Eewell Vinson, improper trailer sway, $3. Luther Thomas Poole, defective brakes, $13. bail forfeited. CIRCUIT COURT Kenneth Myers vs. Dorothy Myers, divorce complaint. Erline Hatfield vs. Kenneth P. Hat field, divorce complaint. Peggy J. Schoen vs. Maynard L. Schoen. divorce complaint. Joyce Lavonne Prettyman vs.. John Lester Prettyman. divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Roger Lawrence Caldwell. 715 Lo zier lane. Medford. and Faith Orpha Diederich. 436 North Bartlett St.. Medford. Rudolph Petaia. Fairfield. Calif.. and Doris Mary Soares Petaja, Fair field, Calif. Most tobacco contains from two to .seven per cent nicotine. It is practically absent in Turk ish tobacco. Constellations Encircling Earth Are Zodiac . Pictures By FAY BENTLEY "What Is the zodiac? Can you help me" find four consella tions In the zodiac?" This request has come from a number of Boy Scouts within the last few days Far out in space is a ring of 12 constellations which appear to encircle the earth. They oc cupy a belt of the heavens ap proximately 18 degrees wide. which astromers have arbitrarily considered as 12 divisions of 30 degrees each in length. In each division is located a constella tion. These 12 star pictures are known as the constellations of the zodiac. The 12 different signs used to represent the zodiacal constella- tions are called the signs of the zodiac. These signs and constel lations which correspond approx imately to the months of the year hold great significance for people who believe that the po sitions of the stars and planets influence earthly events, and are "stock in trade" of astrolog ers and horoscope writers. False Science Although astrologers must be of necessity well versed in facts concerning celestial bodies, as tronomers consider astrology to be a false science. Some out standing astronomers of the past began their study of the heavens in preparation for the field of astrology, but an increased knowledge of the universe caus ed them to change their plans. Closely associated with the zodiac is an imaginary path through the sky called the eclip tic, in which the sun, moons, and- principal planets appear to move. Due to the earth's rota tion eastward, the sun seems to travel from east to west across the sky. This apparent move ment of the sun points out the locaton of the ecliptic. The moon and principal planets, when vis ible, are always somewhere along this line across the celes tial dome. Let us think of the zodiac and ecliptic as two concentric paths encirling our planet. The eclip tic, about 93 million miles dis tant from the earth is com paratively near, astronomically speaking. Behind Ecliptic The zodiac, marked by its 12 constellations, is trillions of miles away and directly behind the ecliptic. When the sun is said to be "in" one of these zodical consellations it mans that the sun is in line with that star picture as viewed by earth dwellers. In other words the earth, sun, 8f2MONDAY c VoU' FIRST QUALITY b; DAN RIVER m XduTjO Wrinkle-Shed Finish X- - TRYOLEAII PRINTS Values to SI .39 yd. 1 Wfli II W&xx ' yd. in length. This is a spe- II I V O - ifFH b V y ?. cial purchase from New II 'M Ww'XmS. York- Madt of th finest Ifji'MMwM&J&X quality fabric in light - I f II iHffN New Spring Colon. Door. I I I I II fffwS op,n"t 9:30, U II iMfflliMiia Monday Special S, lJ Yd. and that particular constellation are in a straight line with the sun in the middle. During the earth's yearly journey the sun will be "in" each one of the 12 zodical constellations. These star groups are: Leo the Lion, Virgo the Virgin, Libra the Scales, Scorpio the Scorpion, Sagittarius the Archer, Capri cornus the Goat, Aquarius the Water-bearer, Pisces the Fishes, Aries the Ram, Taurus the Bull, Gemini the Twins, and Cancer the Crab. Visible Now Now visible about 8 p.m. are Pisces the Fishes, Aries the Ram, Taurus the Bull, Gemini the Twins, Cancer the Crab, and Leo the Lion. Scorpio the Scorpion and Sagittarius the Archer may be seen in the morning sky. Taurus the Bull high in the southwest, may be easily located by finding the tiny, dipper-shaped star cluster called the Pleia des. To the right of the Pleiades, and somewhat lower in the sky, the V-shaped Hyades, with the bright star, Aldebaran, marks the face of the Bull. A line extended from the Pleiades to a point due west on the western horizon will cross the large V-shaped constellation of comparatively dim stars, Pis ces the Fishes, which lies on its side south of The Great Square of Pegasus, with the point of the V reaching south ward. Upright Piano Returning to Taurus imagine a line from the Pleiades to a point due east on the eastern horizon. About half way between the dipper-shaped Pleiades and the horizon, the line will cross Gemini the Twins, two "stick figure" boys, who lie with their heads, bright Castor and Pollux, slightly lower than their feet. The whole figure resembles the top of an upright piano. Low in the heavens, just to the left or north of due east, The Sickle or "question mark back wards" with the first magnitude star Regulus, at the bottom, points out the head of Leo the Lion. A triangle of three stars, nearer the horizon and farther north than The Sickle completes the body. These four constellations of the zodiac may be easily found on any clear evening during Feb ruary, outlining approximately the same path across the night sky that the sun followed dur ing the day. As the month pro gresses, they will rise more and more to the west each evening. Clearance Ladies' Nylon Tricot Fancy Trim Night Gowns Regular $2.98 V II Must U Ea. Go! Trimmed in a fancy laca and made of nylon for no ironing, fast drying and long wear. Soft colors of blue and pink. Siies 32 to 38. Handy Man's Tool Sale Values to $1.98 i-Pc. Screw Driver Sets Planes Braces Wire Cutters Crescent Wrenche and mere it pays to shop at Newberrys. Jewelry Clearance Sale Values to $1.00 Ea. I H c A!l sVv II plus Must iLiUii. tax Gol An assortmtnf of scatter pins, firings, bracelets and pins. A large assortment to choose from. J. J. NEWBERRY Co Medford's Bargain Corner Sixth and Central MHS Included In Interview Plan Corvallis Medford High school will be represented Feb. 16 at Oregon State college in a program of high school princi pal interviews with local stu dents now attending the college. Under the program, principals have individual, voluntary inter views with their former students on the strong and weak points in both high school offerings and the college orientation and coun seling work for new students. Review Comments Following the interviews, principals and college leaders meet to review comments and recommendations of the stu dents. Picked to help schedule the interviews of students from Med ford was LeRoy Wallard, route 2, freshman in science. OSC started the interviews on an eight-school basis five years ago, but favorable comments on the program have brought con tinued expansion of the program, according to Dallas Norton, col lege personnel coordinator. Schools Invited Thirty-nine schools have been invited to take part in the Feb. 16 interviews and another inter view day is planned by the col lege during spring term at the request of the Portland high schools. Along with discussions of In terview findings, the principals and college leaders will hold special discussions this year on the new selective admission pro gram approved for Oregon col leges recently by the state board of higher education. Murder Charge Filed Against Indian Prince George, B.C. U.P A charge of murder was filed against a 22-year-old member of the Lesser Slave Lake Indian band Saturday for the fatal stab bing Thursday night of Charles Elkington, 23, of The Dalles, Charged in the death was Freddie Chalifoux of High Prairie, Alta. Police said Elkington and two companions were driving down the street when they encounter ed a fight in which Chalifoux was involved. They said Elking ton attempted to intervene in the fracas and was stabbed in the heart, arm and back. ie was rushed to hospital but died shortly after being admitted. Suaday, February 10. 1957 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE JTIXE one Man Killed in Crash Near Hermiston Pendleton (U.PJ Twenty-three-year old Charles Orrville Aldrich, of lone, Ore., was pro nounced dead at a Pendleton hospital Friday night following a one-car crash three miles south of Hermiston on Highway 207. Police said Aldrich's car hit a guard rail, flipped over and landed in an irrigation ditch. Fifteen feet of the guard rail pierced the front of the car and struck the victim, pinning him into the back seat. Two lone teenagers, Ralph Pi per and Robert D. Stewart, were passengers in the car and suffer ed minor injuries. They were released from the hospital today. Philadelphia U.R) Allen Cameron, 50, of San Francisco, a West Coast Teamster's Union business agent, collapsed in a mid city hotel coffee shop Fri day and died shortly after at the Jefferson hospital. Cameron was in Philadelphia for a union conference. He was dining with Patrick Hollan, 60, a union official from Cleveland when he collapsed. Holland told police Cameron had been under treatment for a heart ailment. House of Health and Beauty 1100 EAST MAIN ST. e MEDFORD, OREGON MEN Open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. WOMEN NERVE RELAXING REFLEXOLOGY PHYSIOTHERAPY MASSAGE ELECTRIC STEAM BATHS REDUCING, SLENDERIZING AND MUSCLE TONING LEW G. GILMAN Licensed Masseur For Appointment PHONE 3-1272 Evening Appointments Welcomed In two of Arizona's 14 coun ties, Apache and Navajo, the In dian populations are equal to or exceed the total of the white population. flj I VJ I Happy wi ) '0mm . i J nil Lasting Gifts! 30-INCH ELECTRIC RANGE Under Counter Dishwasher Reg. $299.95 Now S -J 95 Model RF3 9 a. Pair f 1 Y .'199" Now - 1 ' And Tour Old Range Automatic Washer and Dryer j uniy 34995 !iH REFRIGERATOR Model EH-12 12 Cubic Foot And Your Old Washer Model EB 11 11 CUBIC FOOT Refrigerator Only A Regular 0 $48995 Now Special 95 399 Happy Hotpoinr Says . . . Don't Forget to Register for the WASHERS DRYER To Be Given Away in Our WASHER-DRYER CONTEST Ask at . . . MATLACK'S SUPER MARKET or (Ask for I Details CITY APPLIANCE, INC. IK. 'Jackson County's Exclusive Hotpoint Dealer" 127 North Central Avenue, Medford, Oregon Phone 3-5306 137 East Main Street, Ashland, Oregon Phone 9-3831