Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 01, 1957, Image 10

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    TEH MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
1 Theyll Do It Every Time
Wednesday, Mar 1' 1 957
- By Jimmy Hatlo
cJ:S8ERitf3.
CAttT UMDEt?-
T-IE SPLINES
WOMT W4IT
FOR HIM WMEM
HE'S L4TE FOR
4 CONNECTION-
HOLD IT
WAIT (70S SJfC
KNEW I WAS 4T THE
DESK CHECKING N.'.'
WHY COULDMT THEY
warr? a sup
xr.y way to rum
AIRLINE
1
However :
aho may -tu&t
AS IT BE
when he's
ERLY.HE .
W4NTS 'EM
TO ZOOM
RIGHT OFF
NOW WHAT'S
HOLDING US UP?
LOOK I GOTT4
GET TO LOCCVILLE
ON TIME.' VERy
IMPORTS BUSINESS
DEAL C'MONTELL
THE PILOT TO
GET 60117
OHO
HORNBROOK
Scout Troop Takes Second
By MRS. H. H. CHAPMAN
Hornbrook Hornbrook Boy
Scout Troop took second place
in camping at the annual district
Camporee last week end. Site of
the camporee was the Fred Bur
ton ranch on the Ft. Jones road
Scouts from the local troop
who attended were Mike Barn-
urn, Conrad Overstrom, Loren
Howard Cummins, Lauran Paine
Jr., Mike Turnbow, Billy Mura,
Earl Henley, Benny Crawford
and Scoutmaster Al Gregory.
Rations for the camporee con
sisted of food taken in as the
price of admission to a movie
presented by the Scouts recent
ly. Judging in the competition
among the troops represented
was on selection and preparation
of camp sites, which was done
without the assistance of the
Scoutmasters, preparation of
food, and cleaning up afterwards.
The date for the visit of the
Rev. Ben Gould of Chico, dis
trict s uperintendent of the
Northern Conference of the Me
thodist church, has been set up
from Monday,' May 6 to Satur
day evening, May 4, at the
church. The chicken pie dinner
originally planned for Monday,
will be held Saturday.
Graveside funeral services for
Mrs. Susie Eleanor Hansen were
held April 29 in the family plot
at the Henley-Hornbrook cem
etery. . Mrs. Hansen ' was born in
Hornbrook June 1, 1893, and
died at the family home in
Brownsboro, April 25 after a
long illness. She had been a resi
dent of southern Oregon for 39
years.
She is survived by her hus
band William, a son, Gerald, and
a granddaughtter, Jerilyn, all of
Astoria Canners
Get Wage Increase
Astoria U.R The United
Packing House Workers, Local
554, representing 1,000 cannery
workers in the Astoria area, set
tled for a wage increase of 12V
cents an hour here Tuesday.
The UPHW, negotiating with
the Salmon and Tuna Packer's
Association, received a five cent
across-the-board pay raise. A
seven and one-half cent health
and welfare plan agreed to last
year is in effect this year also,
officials said.
The cannery workers had
planned to strike if an agree
ment had not been reached .
Brownsboro: a brother Elmer
Williams, Oakland, Calif., and
four sisters, Mrs. Ruth Vettel,
Washington, D.G., Mrs. Laura
Trautman, Sacramento, Calif.,
Mrs. Blanche Warren, Portland,
Ore., and Mrs. Grace Tyrer,
Hornbrook.
A sister-in-law, Mrs. Minnie
Bloomingcamp, also lives in
Hornbrook. Several other broth
ers and sisters preceded Mrs,
Hansen in death.
Oil Firms Asked
To Retain Records
Washingto n (U.R) The
Justice Department has asked a
federal court to forbid all ma
jor United States oil companies
from destroying records needed
in its current anti-trust' investi
gation of the industry.
- A department spokesman dis
closed Tuesday night the mo
tion, filed in Federal District
Court in nearby Alexandria, Va.,
was based on information that
one of the major companies was
destroying its records.
It is a regular practice for the
major oil companies to destroy
some of their records, the
spokesman said. But, he said,
when they are under anti-trust
investigation it is the practice
to refrain from destroying the
records.
A hearing on the motion is
scheduled Thursday before
Judge Albert V. Bryan. The mo
tion did not say what company
was destroying its records.
Court Rules Man
Must Leave 'Home'
Uanellv. Wales (U.R) Tom
Wescott was homeless today be
cause a court ruled he coma
not sleep under the furnaces of
a steel mill.
Fnr 31 vears Wescott had
dodged nightwatchmen and re
turned each mgnt to me ctar
hot tunnels beneath the furnaces
here. The steel plant obtained a
rourt order sayine he no longer
could sleep there because of the
danger to him of molten steel.
Trim sairl he had not worked
since Britain's disastrous gener
al strike of 1926. The strike up
set him, he said, and "now it's
cold outside, even in summer."
During the past three years,
64 per. cent of North Dakota's
orn acreage has been used lor
silage or fodder.
NATO Will Reply
In War of Nerves
Bonn, Germany (U.R) The
NATO countries probably will
hit back with a joint counter
blast at Moscow's atomic war
of nerves, Bonn government
sources said today.
The subject was expected to
come up today when U.S. Secre
tary of State John Foster Dulles
meets West German Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer. Adenauer al
ready has sent his individual
answer to the Kremlin threats.
Dulles flies in from Washing
ton between this afternoon for a
meeting of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization Council
which opens here Thursday.
Government sources said the
joint reply most likely will be
contained in the council's closing
communique and that it will tell
the .Russians:
The 15 free nations of
NATO reject the Soviet threats
and will not let themselves be
intimidated.
. NATO is and always has
been a purely defensive alliance
and will not use its atomic
"sword" except in self-defense.
NATO will not allow itself
to be diverted by Soviet threats
from its present defense plan
ning.
"NOW IS THE TIME"
ADD THAT PATIO, SIDEWALK, CARPORT OR
ANY TYPE OF CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION
CALL FOR
LININGER'S
"READY-MK
CONCRETE
ALWAYS UNIFORM IN QUALITY
To Insure Our Customers Prompt Service, All
Mixer Trucks Are Equipped With Two-Way Radio
ASK US FOR ESTIMATES
'ii.DID6EB'S
READY-MIX CONCRETE
Ph. Med. SP 2-5336 or SP 2-5897 Ph. Ash. MU 5-8121
Ailing McCarthy
Gets Blood Offers
Washineton KU.R) Ailine
Sen. Joseph McCarthv has re
ceived a "wonderful thing" an
offer of blood from Defense de
partment employees.
McCarthy, who has taken on
the Pentagon in some of his
greatest fights, received the of
fer while battling a serious at
tack of acute hepatitis.
"It's a wonderful eesture." the
senator's attractive wife Jean
said. "It's one of the most won
derful things that ever hap
pened to us." .
Mrs. McCarthy told the Unit
ed Press Tuesday night that the
offer of blood came from a De
fense department office Tuesday.-
She said she did not know
which office.
"But of course he doesn't need
blood transfusions," she added.
She said her husband was un
der an oxygen tent for a short
period Monday. He was stricken
Sunday and has been in the
Bethesda, Md., Naval hospital
since then. .
A' hospital spokesman report
ed Tuesday that his condition
remained serious. But Mrs. Mc-J
Carthy said that her husband
"has improved quite a bit."
19 More Whooping
Cranes Reported
Washington (U.R) A wild
life bureaucrat shivered with
joy today over word that 19
more rare whooping cranes may
exist.
The 19 were reported to be
whooping it up in Nebraska .and
South Dakota. Previously only
24 of the big birds were known
to exist.
Frederick C, Lincoln, assistant
director of the Interior Depart
ment's division of sports fisher
ies and wildlife, said the reports
are "perfectly credible."
"But," he added, "we've had
such reports before. If they can
be checked it usually turns out
that the "whooping cranes' are
white pelicans."
"We've got spotters looking
for the birds. I certainly hope
they turn up." '
The big birds have a wingspan
of about sixfeet. They get their
name from the whooping call
they give. - .
The United States' official
standards of . length are com
puted on two platinum-iridium
bars in the National Bureau of
Standards, Washington, D.C. The
bars are exact duplicates of a
prototype preserved sincec 1888
in the International Bureau of
Weights and Measures in Paris.
Pakistan Officer
Speaks at Medford
Rotary Meeting
Pakistan, one of the world's
youngest nations, has emerged
as a bulwark for the free world
in Asia and is determined to
fight aggression when or where
it may rise.
This message was voiced by
Capt. M. Yasin Raja of the Pak
istan Army in a luncheon ad
dress Tuesday before the Med
ford Rotary club. The young
Army officer, who worked with
the Pakistan Olympic team prior
to the last international games,
is currently assisting Coach Bill
Bowerman at the University of
Oregon. He spoke briefly at the
Jackson hotel.
Much of Capt. Raja's address
dealt with the similarity of Pak
istanian and American govern
ments and religion. The nation
of 80 million people,' established
in 1947, has a democratic gov
ernment patterned along the
line of the U.S., and the coun
try's" constitution closely fol
lows the famous American docu
ment. Predominantly Moslem
Pakistan is predominately
Moslem and there is also a
marked similarity between the
Koran and the Bible. Unlike the
Hindu religion of India, in which
the cow is considered sacred,
the Moslem followers of Moham
med in Pakistan have a faith
quite similar to Christians in the
West. Reverence for parents is
emphasized by Mohammedans.
Great strides have been made
in education, Capt. Raja told Ro
tarians, and widespread illiter
acy is on the way out in Pakis
tan. Women have been given the
traditional democratic freedoms,
and the ratio of men and wom
en in institutions of higher
learning is rapidly narrowing.
Coach Bowerman, formerly of
Medford, was in Pakistan a few
months ago on an international
scholarship to assist the sports
loving people of that nation in
their track program. Capt. Raja
is returning the gesture of inter
national friendship by a three
months stay at the University
of Oregon.
School Superintendent Leon
ard Mayfield introduced the
speaker. v"
Navy Commander
At $80,000 Level
New York (U.R) N a.vy
Cmdr. Edward Peary Stafford
reached the $80,000 level on the
"$64,000 Question" television
quiz Tuesday night by exhibit
ing an intimate knowledge of
American literature.
Stafford, a grandson of the
discoverer of the North Pole, is
a Navy pilot stationed in Green
land. He correctly gave the authors
of two volumes published an
onymously, the real names of
four authors who wrote under
pen names, and the pen names
of four other authors, given
their real names.
Sean McGonical, a Scottish
born sign painter from Kearny,
N.J., correctly answered four
questions in the program's "Am
erican Indians" category. Mc
Gonical's question was worth
$8,000.
On the CBS "Name That
Tune" show, Miss Suzanne Saal
saa, Argyle, Wis., and barber
Joe Lombardo, Brooklyn, won
$5,000 in their first round.
N. Y. Congressman's
Daughter Shoots Self
Washington (U.R) The newly-wed
daughter of a New York
congressman was reported in
critical condition after shooting
herself in the stomach in a down
town hotel washroom.
Police said 27-year-old Jane
Williams Hum daughter of
Rep. William R. Williams (R
N.Y.) shot herself Tuesday in the
ladies' rest room of the Raleigh
Hotel.
Mrs. Hum was married only
April 2 to Malcolm Hum, a
Utica, N.Y., businessman.
Police said they understand
Mrs. Hum has been under a doc
tor's care in New York because
of a nervous condition.
Greenland, . like North Caro
lina, has a "Lost Colony" mys
tery, the National Geographic
Society says. A Norse settlement
established in the late 10th cen
tury, vanished 500 years later
when supply ships from - home
failed to call. Legend says Eski
mo invaders killed the starving
colonists.
Daily's U-Drive
Medford Airport
Nasser Not Bitter"
Senator Humphrey
Feels After Talks
Cairo OJ.R) Sen. Hubert H.
Humphrey (D.-Minn.) said early
today after a three-hour talk
with President Gamal Abdel
Nasser he felt Nasser was "not
happy but not bitter" about re
lations with the United States.
Humphrey was sharply criti
cal of U.S. policy in failing to
send food and medicine to Egypt
and said food should not be
used as a political weapon when
a nation is suffering. ,
Humphrey visited Nasser at
his home Tuesday night and dis
cussed Egyptian domestic prob
lems, Jordan, the United States,
the Suez canal, the Gulf of Aqa
ba, the Sinai peninsula, Egyptian-Israeli
relations and the
plight of Palestinian refugees.
'Very Constructive'
"The conversations were very
constructive and I did not detect
any. note of belligerency or ar
rogance in the conversation"
even when. Nasser discussed Is
real, the Minnesota Democrat
said.
Humphrey said he felt that
Egypt wants to be free of for
eign pacts, alliances and , doc
trines an obvious reference to
the Eisenhower Doctrine.
He said his two days of talks
indicated the major causes of
Egyptian "unhappiness" with
the United States was withdraw
al of aid for the Aswan dam,
not sending i'ood to Egypt when
it asked for it and blocking
Egyptian funds in the United
States.
, Humphrey said he and Nasser
discussed the Egyptian food sit
uation at length and that Nasser
remarked that when Egypt had
needed wheat desperately Rus
sia sent it.
TBa j J. Xtr- -
... i .
Vis f&xtMi&
: O.T , ii
-3f
GOING, GOING, GON El Rampaging floods in Texas carried seven persons to their.
deaths enriincr an airrhfvrA4i ArMrtl V. nt i ai . . . .
& wguv-jsm tuuugui mau gnpyeu me state, in aoove pnoios, a iarm
house 12 miles east of Georgetown disappears before the camera's "eye" as the San
Gabriel River swallows it Normally the river is only 25 feet wide at this point As
these pictures were made, the river stretched a mile and a half across.
Two Hospitalized
After Accidents
Two men were hospitalized
yesterday with injuries received
in accidents at White City.
Floyd B. Lay,. 32, of 99 Elk
St., Medford, was injured at
12:30 p.m. when he caught his
arm in a roller at the W. H.
Daugherty mill. His condition
was reported ' "good" today by
attendants at Sacred Heart hos
pital. Fred MacEacheron, 39, Port
land, also suffered arm injuries
when he fell from a truck at
.Mitchell Brothers Truck line at
9:10 a.m. He was to be released
this morning from Sacred Heart
hospital. Both men were taken
to the hospital by Medford Am
bulance service.
I STARCH I N 6 " p-
77r
Vl; III JUUI
LESS THAN 1c PER QUART
12 or. package nukes 20 quarts
of smooth mediumliquidKUCb
about A( a quart.
AUTOMATIC WASHER beautiful easy irominb
Wiley Post, in completing the
first round-the-world solo flight
in 1933, flew 15,596 miles in 7
days, 18 hours, 45 minutes.
Just add water as directed oo the
package and swisb, it's ready for hot
or cold hand starching or effortless
starching in your automatic washer.
m Penecrates deeply, evenly. Gives
cloches lonr.-Ustint, dtrt'resiK-
ing freshness ; crisny dein f ra
grance. Sutches mil your wash
I ables txactly as you like them
mm every time!
lor better starching
and smoother Ironing
...
Rose Bushes
Growers Close-out of No. 1 varieties.
Regular 98e E(5)c
SALE PRICE S) V
Waste (Baskets
Made of heavy gauge metal in pink and blue
designs. Oval shape.
TOPS
Records
12" long, play 33ft R.P.M. fea
turing famous artists. Up to one
hour playing time.
REGULAR $3.89 VALUE
SALE $5149
PRICE Each II
EACH
49c
LADIES FANCY
Panties
Made of nylon with fancy nyon trim.
Pink end white. Sizes 6 to 9.
Regular 1 .00 Value
SALE kfO)C
PRICE Each
Orange Slices
True orange flavor. Fresh and delicious.
FULL POUND
U j
MALTED MILK
Nuggets
A delicious chocolate covered cookie with a
. . real malted milk flavor.
FULL POUND
3e
LADIES NYLON
Gtlose
First quality, full fashioned 51 gauge.
denier with dark seams. Sizes 8ft
11.
PRICE
2 9T
STRAW
Sun (Bonnets
Packs flat snaps into shape. A large assortment
of colors and designs.
EACH
49c
USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN
Buy now at these low prices and pay later! A small
deposit will hold your purchase until you're ready to
pick it up. Ask any of our clerks about itl -
Plastic Garden
HOSE
Made of durable Vinyl Plastic.
Guaranteed for 8 CatfiQ
years. 50-ft. lenejthT
LISTEN TO
STORE HOURS: Daily -9:30 to 5:30 p.m.
THE WOOLWORTH HOUR
Every Sunday 12 to 1 P.M. - STATION KYJC
0 m mntt &tu)in u oo a (( ))
39 NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE
MEDFORD, OREGON
3F
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