Local and
Food Sal DAV auxiliary
is sponsoring a food sale and ba
zaar Tuesday, May 7, from 9:30
a.m. until 5 p.m. at City Appli
ance, North Central ave.
Car Taken Stanley Carlton
Schoen, 101 Crater Lake ave.,
.reported to city police Saturday
morning the theft of his 1948
Plymouth sedan from his resi
dence. Windows Broken Arthur
Lloyd Carroll, 1032 West 13th
St., reported to city police Sat
urday that some windows had
been broken at a building at 519
North Front st.
To Dog Pound City police
Friday took a boxer dog to the
county dog pound after receiv
ing a report from Phyllis Gayle
Graig, 1532 Bryant st., that the
dog was biting people in that
neighborhood.
Parked Car Hit A vehicle
operated by Florence Lavina Da--.
vidson, 1046 Shafer lane struck
a parked car registered to Betty
Blossom Neidermeyer, 1600
Crown ave., at Sixth and Holly
sts., Friday afternoon, according
to city police.
Birth Reported A son, weigh
ing 7 pounds, 14 ounces, was
born April 29 to Mr. and Mrs.
Carleton Werner, San Francisco.
Mr. Werner is the former Dor
othy Gaddis of Medford. Her
father lives at 815 East Jackson
t st.
Rummage Sale Reames So
cial club will hold a rummage
sale May 8 and 9 in the Fehl
building, 106 North Ivy st. Items
for sale will include furniture,
plants, dishes and a phonograph.
Doors will be open from 9 a.m.
until 5 p.m.
Cars Collide Vehicles op
erated by Joe Cox, 1822 West
Main st. and Robert Rendon
- Dyer, 124 Lincoln st., collided
Friday evening at the intersec
tion of Jackson st. and Central
ave., according to city police.
There were no. injuries and no
citations were issued.
.. .
Business Names Glenn G.
. and Murel E. Thompson have as-
- sumed the business name, Phoe-
- nix Chevron Gas station; Marvin
and Huldah Pippin, post office
box 252, Grants Pass, have as
sumed the name. Pippin Lumber
company; Robert H. Nagle, route
1, box 514-D, Central Point, has
assumed the name, Rogue Dura
clean Service; and Louis W.
Soukup, Margaret D. Soukup
and W. I. Kesterson have as
sun.ed the supplemental name,
Pacific Truck Rental company,
. according to records in the coun
ty clerk's office.
GIGANTIC
FOOD SALE
NOW ON!
All Sandwiches
Cut In Half!
Hurry down for yours
at rh
Top Notch Cafe
in the Craterian Theater Bldg.
ivovi! M1B l now
PLUS!
Personal
Rummage Sale The mothers
of the boys in Boy Scout Troop
9 and Post 9 will hold a
rummage and plant sale in the
Fehl building Monday, May 6,
from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m.
Central Council The Dem
ocratic Central council will hold
its regular meeting at 8 p.m.
Wednesday, April 8, at the Labor
Temple on South Grape st., Med
ford. The recent Roosevelt Me
morial dinner will be discussed.
Son Born Word has been re
ceived here of the birth of a
son. Gerald Len Clouse, to Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Clouse, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Clouse are former
Medford residents. The baby,
weighing 5 pounds, 14 ounces
was born April 23.
Accident Reported Vehicles
operated by Lucille Frances Mc
Neil, 525 North Riverside ave.,
and Dwayne Ernest Bachelor,
1324 Mt. Pitt St., collided Friday
morning at Sixth and Fir sts.,
according to city police. There
were no injuries or citations.
Permits Issued Building per
mits have been issued to W. G.
Mee to erect a 55,000 residence
at 411 Marie St., Medford; to A,
R. Dubs to erect a $15,000 resi
dence at 300 Modoc ave., Med
ford; and to C. H. Tjoelker to
erect a $8,000 residence at 2410
Gary st., Medford.
To Taeema Miss Doris Hick
son, personnel manager of the
F. W. Wool worth store in Medford-
left for Tacoma, Wash.,
Thursday, April 25, to assist in
the opening of a new store. She
will visit relatives and friends
in Seattle and will return in
two or three weeks.
Condition Impto Ted The
condition of James H. Pree, 425
South Oakdale ave., who suf
fered a. severe heart attack last
week, was reported improved
Saturday. He has been confined
to Rogue Valley hospital since
April 26. No visitors are being
admitted at this time, Mrs. Pree
said.
Drirer Cited Gerald Rolston
Kime, route 1, box 600, Central
Point, was cited for failure to
yield the right of way Friday
after his car collided with an
other at the intersection of
Eighth and Holly sts. Driver of
the other vehicles was Richard
DeFord, 3084 Crater Lake high
way. There were no injuries, ac
cording to city police.
.
Address Changed Campaign
headquarters for the Rogue Val
ley Memorial hospital, 28 South
Bartlett st.,- Medford, has been
closed. Donations or pledge pay
ments may be made by mail, ad
dressed to box 15, Medford, or
in person at M. N. Hogan and
Company, 38 South Central ave.,
Medford, according to hospital
committee members.
The desert west of Great Salt
Lake once supported 10,000 In
dians. The aborigines survived
chiefly on wild seeds, roots, and
nuts.
CARD OP THANKS
The thoughtfulneas and sympathy
I extended by our friends and neigh
I bore during our recent sorrow will
! always remain with ua as a precious
memory.
Our sincere thanks to all.
Mrs. William C. Karhart
and family
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Rufua C. Cearley
wish to thank those who expressed
their symapthy in so many beautiful
and practical ways during their re
cent bereavement. Our appreciation
cannot be adequately expressed.
PHONE
KE
5-1462
News About
Servicemen
AT STATION
Sgt. Warren K. Lundquist, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Al Lundquist,
220 Portland ave., Medford, is
serving at the El Toro Marine
Corps air station, Santa Ana,
Calif. He is serving with the
Third Marine Aircraft wing.
ENLIST IN NAVY
Four Jackson county men
were enlisted in the Navy last
month, according to the local
recruitme station.
The enlistees are Frank Cav-
yell, husband of Bonita Sue Cav-
yell, route 3, box 203, Medford;
Duane Alan Dolan, son of Mr.
Elsie Barbee. 3761 South Pacific
highway, Medford; Hal Burton
Pierce, son of Mrs. Vera Wanus,
911 Mary Jane ave., Ashland;
and Richard Worth Woolman,
son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wool-
man, 152 Sherman st., Ashland.
All men are undergoing re
cruit training at the Naval train
ing center at San Diego, Calif.
MEN INDUCTED
Three Medford men and two
Ashland men were inducted into
the armed forces April 24 at
the Portland induction station,
according to Helen L. McDan
nell, of . local board 17, Med
ford. ' ..' .
They are- William Harold
Rockford Jr., William Boyd Ped
ersen, and Edward Samuel Clay-
pool, all of Medford; and Francis
Dixon McCarley and Bruce La
mar Hoy, both of Ashland.
IN EXERCISE
Army Pvt. Raymond E. Reed,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Reed,
Medford, is scheduled to partici
pate in a firing exercise with
the 28th antiaircraft artillery
battalion at Red Canyon, N. M.,
April 28 through May 5.
Reed is now stationed at Ft
Lawton, . Wash. He is assigned
to the battalion's battery B. He
entered the Army in January of
1956 and completed basic train
ing at Ft. Ord, Calif.
IN TOKYO
Army Nurse Maj. Alberta H.
Knips, daughter of Alberta H.
Knips, 507 Oak Grove rd., Med
ford, recently arrived in Tokyo
and is a member of the Tokyo
Army hospital staff. She enter
ed the nurse corps in 1941 and
was last stationed at Fort Car
son,. Colo.
ON ESCORT VESSEL
Robert Sproul, radarman sea
man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester
C. Sproul, 326 North Bartlett
st., Medford, is serving aboard
the radar picket escort vessel
USS Forster at Seattle, Wash.
HOME ON LEAVE
George Raymond Pitts, sea
man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
mond J. Pitts, post office box 9,
Camp White, is home on a 30
day leave en route to an eight
weeks fleet training school at
San Diego, Calif. Upon comple
tion of the school he will report
to the pre-commissioning crew of
the USS Midway at Puget Sound
Navy yard.
Pitts attended St. Mary's high
school and was a member of the
Naval Reserve unit in Medford
before enlisting in the regular
Navy in November, 1955.
21st Annual Catfish
Derby Set June 16
The 21st annual National Cat
fish derby this year will be held
on Father's day, June 16, at Tou
Velle state park on the Rogue
river, according tto Don Wells,
chairman of the event. -
Last Tune 4,300 people attend
ed the event, which is sponsored
by the 20-30 club of Medford.
Wells said the show this year
will include a variety of pro
grams plus presentation of derby
prizes. There will be no admis
sion charge, he said.
The chairman added that the
Catfish Derby queen and her
court, selected from the Medford
High school sophomore class,
will be named in the near fu
ture. AIRLINES NEED
Men end Women
11 la 39, K. S. tTKfcjates, te pra
par for well paid positions, tschni
eal or non-technical. Public contact,'
hostesses, eommunicationists, reser
vationists.. radio operators, station
agents, electronic technicians, etc.
Good pay, travel, glamour, security.
Qualify now. APPROVED FOR KOR
EAN VETERANS. Preliminary trarawf
need not interfere with present oc
cupation. Far iaftrautie and inter
view, aail eeeet tatty!
Box No. 1831-D, eo MAIL
TRIBUNE. Medford, Ore.
Ciy
..A
Wisconsin (Political
Leaders Prepare to
Scrap Over Vacancy
By GEORGE ARMOUR
United Press Correspondent
Madison, Wis. OI.PJ Wis
consin political leaders Saturday
prepared to scrap over the late
Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's va
cant seat in the U. S. Senate.
The controversial senator's un
expected death Thursday had
brought leaders of both parties
to a point they hadn't expected
to arrive at until 1958. Candi
dates were caught with their
plans either unmade or half-
formed.
Republican Gov. Vernon
Thomson was expected to order
a special election, but not until
some time after McCarthy's bur
ial Tuesday and after a caucus
with Wisconsin GOP Chairman
Philip Kuehn on Thursday.
Fall Election Seen
An election date early next
fall has been most frequently
mentioned. Under state law, tha
governor can not order in move
than 70 days in advance.
A rumor scurried about the
legislature Friday that a special
election would not be held, but
that a measure would be intro
duced to empower Thomson to
appoint a successor to McCarthy.
Other states have statutes simi
lar to this.
There is no shortage of exper
ienced, but young, candidates in
either party.
The top Republican names are
former Gov. Walter Kohler,
former Rep. Glenn Davis and Lt.
Gov. Warren Knowles.
Kohler is considered an "Eis-
143 Motorists Have
Hubcaps Marked
About 143 . county motorists
had hubcaps marked yesterday
in a "hubcap identification pro
gram" being held by the Med
ford police department in co
operation with the Southern
Oregon Wheelers, a hot rod club.
The program will continue to
day. Four members of the Wheel
ers hotrod club will mark hub
caps for local residents between
noon and 6 p.m. today in the lot
behind the city hall, Fifth st.
and Central ave., Medford.
Purpose of the program is to
reduce the increased number of
hubcap thefts in Medford, ac
cording to city police.. Engraved
hubcaps are permanent and do
not detract from the beauty of
the hubcap, they said. No charge
is made for marking them.
Obituaries
MRS. ALICE R. WITHERILL
Funeral services for Mrs. Alice
Rebecca Witherill, of 230 North
Ivy st., Medford, who died
Thursday, were held Saturday
morning at. Conger-Morris. The
Rev. William C. Piper of the
First Christian church officiat
ed. Committal was in Sterling
cemetery.
Mrs. Witherill was born Aug.
12, 1862, in Columbus, Tenn. She
had lived in the Applegate val
ley for many years prior to
Medford in 1926. She was a
member of the First Christian
church. '
Surviviors include two sons,
Roy W. Kennedy, Cottage Grove;
and George Trask, Sutter, Calif.;
daughters, Mrs. Eva Baxter,
Brussels, Belg.; and Mrs. David
Kennedy, Banning, Calif.; eight
grandchildren and IS great
grandchildren.
BROWN'S LUNCH
101 East Main St.
BILL AND JANE
Announcing New Hours:
DINING ROOM
SERVICE-
6 A.M. to 8 P.M. LI
TlirlrV OO
" " II
Dinner U
HOUSE of
North of
Gold Hill
AT
On Display - One of the West's Finest
Collections of Gold Dust and Nuggets
Winter Hours 9 to 5
Under Founder's Management Sine 1930
ennower Republican," not as
conservative as most state party
leaders would have him,, but a
proven vote-getter in three gu
bernatorial victories.
Davis is fully in tune with
the party, but its endorsement
last year failed to carry him to
victory over veteran Sen. Alex
ander Wiley " in the GOP pri
mary. Davis served 10 years in
Congress before taking on Wiley.
Knowles also is popular with
the state organization, although
he is not as conservative as Dav
is and has kept his name before
the public with a tireless speak
ing campaign.
Thomson is Popular
Thomson has been mentioned
as a possible candidate by some
on the ground that he is disen
chanted with his administrative
position and would like to be
rid of the state's financial prob
lems. Thomson was extremely
popular as a legislator, but his
standing has dropped somewhat
with state GOP leaders since he
has become governor.
The Democrats, who have not
elected a senator in Wisconsin
since 1932, also have three top
candidates. They are oft-beaten'
Unemployment in
Stale Listed at
36,400 by Group
Salem (U.R) About 11,700
Oregon workers found jobs last
month but 36,400 members of
the labor force still were unem
ployed May 1, the State Unem
ployment Compensation commis
sion said Saturday.
More settled weather that
brought wider farm activity and
some seasonal expansion in con
struction, lumber and logging
was given as the main cause fo:
the delayed spring pickup.
Most . of the April improve
ment came in downstate timber
areas. Nearly 8,000 new jobs
were reported from the Willam
ette valley and other points west
of the cascades. In eastern Ore
gon, the best showing cams
from Bend, Baker, Ontario, Kla
math Falls and The Dalles.
A Year Ago
A year ago 28,000 persons
were - estimated to have been
seeking jobs.
While the number of weekly
claims from insured workers
dropped nearly a third during
the month, payments to eligible
workers passed $2,900,000 for
the highest April in the history
of the commission. More than
20,000 continuations were re
ceived last week at local offices
many of which reported little
demand for skilled workers in
construction and lumber oper
ations. '
A sluggish demand for wood
products and delayed logging ac
tivities in some sections because
of continuing damp weathe'
held back the usual pickup in
seasonal operations. Some 3,000
persons found work in the Port
land four-county area, but the
number of jobseekers was 3,200
higher than a year ago.
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Zotolla's Country Club
Located on Grants Pass Golf Courts
SHYING DINNERS DAILY
Featuring -FINf
ITALIAN FOOD and PIZZA
MERCHANT
LUNCHES SERVED
1 1 A.M. to 6:45 P.M.
W Invit. Yo to Try Our
GOOD FOOD!
-Chef Bill Doak
MYSTERY
Open '
Throughout
The Year
II
Sunday, May 5, 1957
Aluminum Firm Takes
Options on Land
Salem OJ.PJ The Harvey
Aluminum company filed op
tions with the Marion county re
corder this week on nearly 900
acres of land in the Rosedale
area containing bauxite and low
grade laterites used in the man
ufacture of aluminum.
The options are for two years
and if exercised call for an ex
penditure of about S400.000. Ex
ploratory drilling is scheduled 1
to open soon. i
The Harvey venture is the
second attempt in two years to :
utilize the minerals in the Rolling-Hill
property south of Salem.
The first was by the Canadian ,
Aluminum company, a research j
organization presumably acting j
for the Aluminum company .of
Candada.
The Harvey firm, with head
quarters in Torrance, Calif., now
is building a 60 million dollar
alumina processing plant at The
Dalles. -
gubernatorial . candidate . W 1 1--liam
Proxmire, the frequent
spokesman for the party, State
Sen. Gaylord Nelson and Rep
Harry Reuss.
Proxmire has been beaten
twice by Kohler in races for
the governorship and is consid
ered by some to have had his
chance at high office.
Nelson has not held a state
wide office, but has substantial
party and labor backing.
plied nearly one billion gallons j
of paint for the automobiles pro- j
duced in the U.S. since 1900.
ENJOY. GENUINE
CHARCOAL
BROILED FOODS
in the
CANDLE ROOM
at the Medford
Hotel
starrinf
Karl CaTroH Eli
MALDEN-BAKER -WALLACH
- PLUS -
SlVtftilifl
T s-Bk m. jt.IL '
Ttum
w. M ' LL i.
O O'HARA ' FORSlfTHE " HOyTT
STARTS TONITE . .
'TTiTSEir" - 'BKSBdBBSSBMa'SBSBSSSSMnBSBSr
mi " f " years
H I r md
VI 1 fek married '
' '
HILAMOUS frx -
HI.JINKSI YTVi I
( HfMlj
YStm.
STARTS TONITE
- PLUS -WrUiAMS
i
jam nigh jf-ar,
MORGAN
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN
APPOINTED TO-BOARD
Salem 0J.PJ Dr. Donald 'O.
Schuman, Bend optometrist, was
appointed by Gov. Robert D.
Holmes Friday to the State
Board of Examiners in Optom
etry. Dr. Schuman, whose three
year term will expire April 30,
1960, succeeds Dn Jesse H. Mil
ler of Springfield -on the three
man board.
KILLED BY TREE
Portland U.R) Allen
Sprague Fesler, 70, St. Helens,
The Dance
t
fi Mt wan vis TT 1 1 1 piaj iwi
your dancing pleasure:
Dreamland's regular 5-pieee orchestra. Rose Cash, leader, will plsy
at 9 p.m. The Bob Anderson Trio, led by Bob Anderson, will start
playing at 11 p.m. Men $1.00. Ladies and children Freo. Brina your
family and onjoy an evening of variety. ,
IMiliWillili
STARTS TODAY - CONTINUOUS FROM 1:00 P.M.
'2
-kind YYzJw
cfLwa- J v Iriy
Co (tarring
RICHARD
BOONE
JOAN bToNDELL
HUGO HAAS
PLUS
TENSE!
DRAMATIC!
From IfiVvLfc.f 1
VV T 1
of your V,A I
t2w
yotI yjjH
"
JOHN CASSAVETES SIDNEY POTHER
JSItWASasW.MTWUaNMAOUSM.auSTPal
HOLLY
A ROMANTIC TOOT.. .A FUN BINOBI
Designed
toncklo
your
mibilinasl
- uJJ'
PLUS "APRIL IN PORTUGAL"
was killed Friday when a tree
fell -on him as he was logging
two miles north of Skyline
drive on McNamee road. He ap
parently was killed instantly.
Ham Dinner
Griffin Creek Grange
Sunday May 5 12:30 to 5 .
Adults $1.50
Children under 12 75c
Tiny Tots Free.
of the Year
Medford Musicians'
; Annual Benefit Dance
ir Mon.r May 69 p.m.-l a.m.
at
DREAMLAND
DANCE HALL
1 DHJe will l.f tm
Torn by secret desires,
she fought a battle to
save herself from a w
fife of sin...
a female JekyiV
and-Hyde who
lived 3 lives!
ELEANOR
PARKER
YOU WILL BE SORRY
YOU MISS THIS ONE!
HELD OVER
PECK
Latin
- CINEMASCOPE - COLOR
3