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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1957)
OCKK MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Monday, April 22, 1957 .JACKSONVILLE Rebekahs Elect Deleqates By MRS. C. S. HOSKINS Jacksonville Jacksonville . gtoth Rebekah lodge, at their fijlar meeting last Monday ning, elected two delegates f attend the Rebekah conven isn to be held at Bend, Ore., Si May. The two delegates elect (BJ were Mrs. Kindred Thomas, (api Mrs. Albert Hackert. Irs. P. E. Matheny will also (ajtend the May convention and deceive the decoration of the (Rivalry pin. Mrs. Hackert was (8jteo elected as district deputy rpident. Or. and Mrs. Warren Hazen (turned the first part of the sek from a visit with friends (8n the coast at Smith river and (jsseidad. Phe last Junior Red Cross meeting was held at the court house Tuesday, April 9, in the inference room. The members brought their sack lunches ad the Red Cross furnished pop or milk. At 1 p.m. they started to work on 100 Easter centerpieces for the dinner tables at Camp White. The centerpieces were made with miniature chickens, rab bits, and ducks. In May there will be a picnic at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Day where some films on Alaska, taken while Mr. Day was hunting big game, will be shown. In the March Gregg' shorthand award tests at Jacksonville High school, Miss Zita Maddox and Carlene Wall each rated a certi ficate on the five-minute 100 word per minute dictation and LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE TO CREDITORS Probate No. IM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR JACKSON COUNTY. IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE of WILLIAM L. HOLMES. Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that by an Order of the above entitled Court dated April 8th. 1957. the un dersigned was appointed administra tor of the above entitled estate and all persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same to said administrator at the offices of Farrell & Blackhurst. 230 Franklin Building. Medford. Oregon, properly verified as provided by law and within six months from the date of first publication hereof. Dated and first published this 15th day of April. 1957. , T. E. Holmes, Administrator. Farrell & Blackhurst Attorneys for Administrator. NOTICE IS HEREBY GTVEN that S. H. FRALEY and .PEARL E. FRALEY. husband and wife, have filed with the Board of Directors of MEDFORD IRRIGATION DISTRICT their petition to have excluded from the boundaries of said district the following described tract of land, to wit: Beginning at a point 20 chains . west and 13 chains south of the northeast comer of Donation Land Claim No. 84, township 37- south . of range 2 west of the Willam ette Meridian, and running thence south 231 feet; thence west 787.66 feet; thence north 231 feet; thence east 787.66 feet to the place of beginning, containing 4.18 acres. All persons interested in or who may be affected by such change of the boundaries of said district are hereby required to appear at the office of said Board of Directors. No. 205 Holly Building, in the city of Medford, Jackson County. Oregon, on the 7th day of May. 1957. at the hour of 1:15 o'clock p.m., and show cause, if any you have, why said change m the boundaries of said dis trict should not be made. MEDFORD IRRIGATION DISTRICT By J. A. Hoffbuhr. Secretary. transcription. Different office machines have been on rent or on loan in the typing room recently and the typing students have been us typing students have been using them. 4 CLUB NEWS Paul Winningham broke his leg in an logging accident this week and is in the Sacred Heart hospital. Out of town guests at the Carl Hoskins over Wednesday were Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hamaker and two children John and Grace of Horse Creek, Calif. They also visited other rela tives in Jacksonville and Mrs. Hamaker's sister and family Mr. and Mrs. Marion Smith in Medford. Mrs. Edna Arrington is home after a stay in the hospital last week. Her grandson, Keith Nel son of Medford, has parked his trailer house near her home so he can be with her. Mrs. Marie Osborn and son Bruce of Berkeley, Calif., were recent visitors in Jacksonville at the W. A. Clemmer home. Mrs. Osborn,, the former Marie Mills, was en route to Blue River, Ore., to join her father, D. C. Mills. While here Mrs. Osborn visited many old friends and relatives in Grants Pass. Visitors this week at the C. E. Lindemood home were Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Genner of Etna, Calif., here for a two-day visit, and Mrs. Lindemood's sister-in-law Mrs. Anna Wilson of Med ford, who visited them a week. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Babb and son Ronald are away this week on a combined business and pleasure trip to Dallas, Ore. 'Grandma' Mclntire moved from her sons home recently to stay for a time at the home of Minnie Sawyer. Don Swanson recently spent a short leave with his family in Jacksonville. He is stationed with the Navy in Vallejo, Calif. Mrs. Verna Culy is spending a week's visit in Morro Bay, Calif., at the home of her daugh ter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Pease. Mrs. Curtis Fitch, her daugh ter Hawley, and a girl friend, Carin O'Brien, all of Scotia, Calif., were visitors of Jackson ville on Thursday. Mrs. Fitch is the former Elizabeth White of Jacksonville. She called on many old friends here as well as the Harry Daltons in Butte Falls, and the Warren Fitches in Ash land. Hawley and Carin flew down by Southwest Airways a week ago Saturday to spend the Easter vacation week with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rosebaum in Ashland. Mrs. Fitch and her son Loyal drove from Scotia to bring them home. They left on Good Friday. Mrs. Ray Coleman drove Mrs. Leonard McKee, Mrs. Verna Gold Hill Livestock' Club The Gold Hill 4-H Livestock club met at the home of Roy Eskew on April 10, with 19 members present. After project reports were given, enrollment cards were filled out. 'Group singing was enjoyed. Next meet ing will be at the Biles home on April 24. Reporter, Larry Eskew Byrd Determined To Slash Budget Washington (U.R) Sen. Har ry F. Byrd today stood by his determination to try to slash President Eisenhower's budget by $6,500,000,000. He said Ei senhower's recently proposed budget reductions were "totally inadequate." The Virginia Democrat is a leader of the Senate economy bloc hoping to whittle down Ei senhower's $71,800,000,000 budg et for the 12 months starting July 1. Byrd said his figures show the government already has $70 bil lion available for the new fiscal year from money appropriated by Congress in recent years. Added to this year's request, he said, the amount available would total about $140 billion. The President, sensitive to the high economy fever Congress is running this year, suggested in a letter to Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex.) last week that $1,342, 000,000 be shaved from his re quests for new "spending au thority." Eisenhower said, however, that less than half his proposed cuts in "spending authority" actually would show up in re duced federal spending next fis cal year. Hells Canyon Group To Continue Efforts Lewiston, Idaho (U.R) The Tri-State Hells Canyon associa tion met here during the week end and voted to ' continue its efforts for federal development of Hells Canyon on the Snake river until all possible hope for such development is gone. Association President Lynn Tuttle, Clarkston, told delegates from Washington, Oregon and Idaho that there still was a chance for construction of a fed eral dam in the canyon despite recent setbacks in the Federal Power Commission and Supreme Court. Wright and Mrs. James Noble to attend a recent Rogue River Garden club flower sale. They reported that films were shown of private garden scenes. Attend ing the show was a large repre sentation from the men's Gar den club at Camp White. Millions Gather for Easter Services as Weather Mostly Good By UNITED PRESS Millions of Americans led by President and Mrs. Eisenhower, attended Easter church services Sunday, and thousands, of other persons worshipped out-of-doors at sunrise services. Except for the Southwest, gen erally fair skies encouraged church attendance and added sparkle to the spring, finery dis played in the traditional Easter parades. Accompanied By Humphrey Mr. and Mrs. Eisenhower at tended Reid Memorial Presby terian Church in Augusta, Ga., where the nation's first family is vacationing. They were accom panied by Treasury Secretary and Mrs. George M. Humphrey, week end guests of the Presi dent. About 1.200,000 persons jam med New York's Fifth ave. from 49th to 59th sts. in the nation's biggest Easter parade. Sunny skies and temperatures in the 80s attracted the huge throngs. About 350 policemen were on hand to keep order. Chilly readings in Chicago thinned the ranks of paraders on Michigan ave. and in some other cities, notably in the Southwest, an umbrella was a necessary ac cessory to Easter outfits. First Easier Service The first sunrise service was atop Cadillac Mountain near Bar Some Optimism in Disarmament Talks Moscow (U.R) Diplomatic circles expressed cautious opti mism today that some measure of agreement could be reached between the Soviet Union and the West in the London disarma ment talks. The prediction came as Russia made . public its latest notes to the Western Big Three propos ing a four-power declaration re nouncing the use of force in settling disputes in the Middle East. The return to Moscow from the London talks of Deputy For eign Minister Valerian A. Zorin was regarded as an indication the Russians may be ready to accept certain Western disarma ment proposals. The Soviet press has not yet indicated Soviet reaction to these proposals, but observers believed there was more than a 50-50 chance that Zorin was returning to the London talks with instruc tions to accept or at least sug gest constructive modifications to the plans. In the case they feel that the Soviet Union will agree to some sort of reduction in conventional arms and armed forces. The founder of osteopathy was Dr. Andrew Taylor Sill of Ma con, Mo. TOE IMOGMWCMiaWILEia Most glamorous car In a generation No other car even challenges its performance ! Here are some figures for comparison. We believe they talk louder . than words, and that you will find this message worth reading. So much has been said abont the good looks of the 1957 Chrysler that yon may have the impression its reputation rests on styling alone. The truth is it's even more impressive in action. Three performance figures prove this. Here is the first: Chrysler's Fire power V-8 engine packs 325 hp (and up to 375 hp in the Chrysler 300-C), tops in '.he industry. Is horsepower the only way you judge performance? Certainly not. There's engine displacement and torque. Chrysler's displacement is 392 cu. in. What about torque, the real pay-dirt power that turns the wheels? Chrysler's torque is 430 lb.-fu at 2800 rpm, again tops in the industry. More power than you need? Maybe. But it means unquestioned command of the highway when you want it. It means your Chrysler will stay like new much longer because it can loaf where other can strain. So you see, when we call this car the Mighty Chrysler we mean just that . . . the mightiest on the highway! Come in and drive it soon. mMim MOTOR CO. Eighth & Front Harbor, Maine, where the sun's rays first' touch the nation. Sev eral hundred persons attended the service, sponsored by the Pil grim Fellowship of the Bar Har bor Congregational Church. A downpour near Lawton, Okla., cut attendance at the Wichita Mountains Easter pag eant. Creeks and streams over flowed their banks and flooded parking areas for the program. Pope Sees Science As Offer of Hope Vatican City (U.R) Pope Pius XII said in his Easter mes sage Sunday that science offers 20th Century man the hope of a golden age if he can curb his "evil habits" of internation al hate and destructipn.. The address was' heard by more people than ever before a record crowd of 400,000 in St. Peter's square, televiewers in 11 European nations, and radio list eners around the world. Devout listeners received a plenary indulgence with the Pope's concluding blessing "to the city and to " the world," whether they heard it directly or by electronic means. For the first time since 1954, the pontiff made no direct ref erence to the "horrors of atpmic war. He mentioned atomic en ergy and guided missiles only as samples of the wonders of modern science. The one remark which could be interpreted as even ' an oblique reference to nuclear con flict was his comment about the threat of "storm and the crack of thunder" in the night which he said engulfs the human spirit. He said Christ will have to be reborn in the hearts of men be fore the world can be "bathed in the rays of a new sun." "It is necessary to remove the stone from the tomb in which men desired to bury truth and goodness," ', he said. "A new resurrection of Jesus, is neces sary . . . which admits no more the lordship of death." EAST EVANS CREEK-MEADOWS 4-14 Meeting Scheduled By Nellie Bergman East Evans Creek-Meadows The Meadows Busy Beavers 4-H Livestock club will meet April 26 at the home of Mrs. Ellis on Antiock foad. v Miss Gloria Jean Holmes, of Los Angeles, is a visitor at the home of her aunt, Mrs. Paul Mat-tison. Mr. and Mrs. Neal Dutton and Connie moved to Jacksonville last week. Dutton is employed in Jacksonville. Mrs. Hazel . Mattison, Mrs. Vera Stingley and Mrs. Nellie Bergmatn atended the extension unit meeting at the home of Mrs. Rosellen Duggan of Sams Valley recently. Mutt Holtzclaw left last week to spend some time with his fam ily in Portland, Ore. ' Herman Gerhardus left for Portland to spend Easter with his mother. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bergman spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Elk and family of Little Applegate. Work has again been started on the church. With good weath er and a lot of help, the job should go faster. . - Wing Chopped Off; Plane Makes Landing Phoenix, Ariz. U.R) : A Frontier Airlines twin-engine DC3 with 26 persons aboard made an. emergency landing here Sunday after ten feet of its left wing was chopped off "by some object" in turbulent weather. Carlton Foster,' the airlines' operation chief, said about a quarter of the plane's wing was clipped" off as the airliner hit a downdraft, he said. "The plane was hit by an object, but we don't know what." The airliner was en route to Phoenix from Prescott, Ariz., carrying 23 passengers and a crew of three. Capt. Dale R. Welling made a perfect landing nearly an hour after the plane lost part of its wing. The passengers reportedly remained calm and there was' no panic on the crippled airliner. Six People Hurt In Vehicle Collision Six people received minor in juries Sunday in a two-car col lision on Highway 99 near Beall lane, according to state police. Officers said the accident oc1 curred at 5:36 p.m., when a car operated by Charlie Kelly, 45, of 118 East McAndrews rd., en tered the highway from Smitty's tavern, near Beall lane. His car collided with a vehicle traveling north on Highway 99, operated by George Chester Loveland Mc- Bride, 17, Coos Bay. Kelly and an unidentified passenger in his car were thrown from the vehicle onto the high way, police said. Also injured were McBride and his four pass engers, Virginia Loveland Mc Bride, 42, David Loveland Mc Bride, 11, and Kotherine Love land McBride, 9, all of Coos Bay, and Mrs. Mary Miller Loveland, 72, Palo Alto. Calif. The accident victims were taken by Medford Ambulance servfce to Rogue Valley hospital for treatment of cuts, bruises and other minor injuries. They were released from the hospital that night. No citations were issued, police said. Beekeeping Class Set For Tuesday Evening The second in a series, of class es for beginners in beekeeping will be held Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Bigham hall at the county fairgrounds. Dr. W. P. Stevenson, entomol ogist at Oregon State college, will be chief instructor. He will be assisted by officers of the Rogue Valley Beekeepers asso ciation. Xdar Widmer is presi dent of the group. A REAL GUY' Des Moines, Iowa U.R) Iowa's "shirt sleeve" state sena tor, Guy Butler, 69, this week completes 10 years of legislative service without ever having worn a . jacket in the Senate chamber. Butler says he doesn't see why he should wear a jacket when women clerks enter the chamber' in short - sleeved dresses. L Pine Wood SPECIAL! 3 r'27 McGinty Fuel Co PHONE 2-8277 Mi: GOING FISHING? 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