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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1957)
. L J. t.J if! ' Traffic, Wafer Cbim reaon Lives Over MAKING slow progress, Pierre VP-Mint, SO, former finance minister. 13 trying to form new I renoh govern ment. (International) Electronics Center Destroyed by Fire , SetUe m Fire destroyed the e-ectron:s coo'xo) center of 1aiir.gtrm National Guard a n t i a i r craft installation just south of here tixjay. Officials estimated the dam age at clp.ie to one million dol lars. Mo Injuires were reported. Col. Wiliiam B. Baic, com mander of the ins'allation, said the blaze destryed a one-story wooden building which housed the electronic equipment and two mobile units equipped with radar facilities. A night security crew and the Des Moines and Burien fire de partments battled the bla.ie for a half hour before it was brought under control. Jackson Named OSC Foundation Officer Corvallis API Marion T. Weatherford, Arlington, baa been chosen president of the Oregon Stale College founda tion, succeeding Claude F. Pal mer, Portland. Glenn L. Jackson, Medford. was elected vice president. Rob ert M. Kerr, Portland, continues as treasurer, ai.d OSC President A. L. Strand as secretary. The foundation was formed io 1947 to accept and administer gifts and grants and to aid in development of the college. Memorial Day Holiday By UNITED PRESS Two boys drc wned and a man was killed in an auto crash in Oregon Sunday. This brought the total number of highway and water deaths in the state since the Memorial Day holiday start ed last Wednesday evening to 14. nine in traffic and five by drowning. Latest drowning victims were Louis Looney, 15, Eugene, and Wayne Clark. 13, Port Orford. Young Looney drowned Sun day afternoon to Big Fall creek about 23 miles southeast of Springfield. He was walking along the water s edge with two other boys when he slipped and fell into the crek. A companion, Delmar Patrick, attempted to rescue him but was unable to do so before the boy went under. Woodburn Man Killed The Clark boy drowned Sun day while swimming in Garri son lake near Port Orford. A companion said the boy coughed, went down and did not come up. . A Sunday night traffic smash near Monitor took the life of Olaf Bennett Moen, 51, Wood bum. His wife was hospitalized at Silverton for shock. The driv er of the other car, Leon J. Schiedier, ML Angel, was not hurt. A rash of traffic accidents took several lives Saturday. ' One crash, about 40 miles east 0 Klamath Falls, resulted in the deaths of Jack Duane Westling, 26, Klamath Falls, and Dorothy May Wood, 22, Lakeview. Four others were hurt critically. Robert Lee Simshauser, 24, Se attle, was killed when his car went out of control on an unpav ed road about 25 miles f ' ' nl Roseburg and struck a bank, in a second Douglas county fatal, Harold O. Burgin Jr., 28, Riddle, died when his car ran off a high way near Days Creek. Coast Guard Man Killed Jack S. Green, a Coast Guard enlisted man from Astoria, was injured fatally Saturday night near Carlton when a car went into a ditch and overturned. James Roark, 15, Klamath Falls, died from injuries suffer ed Friday when a motorcycle crashed through a guard rail on a road about six miles southeast of Klamath Falls. The driver. Bert McCuIlough, 15, Klamath Falls, was hospitalized. Earlier traffic victims were Frankie Lee Clubb, 17, Boring, and Harold Elhckson, 54, Eu gene. Others drowned included Monte Gene Begley, IB, Albany; Cindy Meyers, 2, Eugene, and Max H. Zehrung, 24, Portland. . 5 People Charged Vifh Burglary Five people were lodged in the county jail on charges of burglary Saturday night as a re sult of "routine checking" of automobiles by state police. Samuel Ivan Thompson, 21, Klamath Falls, student at South ern Oregon college, was arrest ed in connection with a burglary Saturday at Ernie's Cycle shop. Phoenix. The vehicle Thompson was driving was stopped by po lice on Highway 93 at Talent. Officers said the car contained several items believed taken from the cycle shop. Four Washington residents are being held for Siskiyou county auvhorities in connection with the theft Saturday cf an out board motor from Montague, Calif. They are Lawrence Earl Jessen, 19, Clyde Jessen, 30, and Barbara Jane Ann Jessen, 18, all of Arlington, Wash., and a 16-year-old Everett, Wash., boy. Police said the car in which they were riding was stopped and checked on Highway 99 at Ashland. Officers said their car contained an outboard motor be lieved taken from Montague that evening. 13-Year-Oid Girl Killed by Lightning Bolt Plainfield, N. J. (IB A 13-year-old girl was killed Sunday when she was struck by a light ning bolt while sitting on a wooden bandstand railing in the Greenbrook park here. The victim, Patricia O'Neill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O'Neill, had taken shelter under anielm tree during a thunder storm. She was dead on arrival at Muhlenberge hospital. Father at the end off his rope? GIVE HIM A GENUINE ' 32 1 Ms iff ' ' r .1 1-'. 1 t The Brtalvffer b fcfh lor nils, t04uv horn. B turn you act o corrocc fic ing to excelUat selection ol BarcaLouager models covered in the richest fabrics. Lounger will kelp amke kim feel like leathers tnd plastics. Come in tad see csw ann. Too secret 13 ths Sarcz- ;irm aorr. t Laurcr's Lxprovc, exjmive Comfort." The BarcaLouagar actaally invites relaxation. And k naakes the per fett Father's Day gift! We are aow show- Yvt, after Dad's rough Mt working X davs, a short rest ia the genuine Barca in Kttn nd fhJ'te Cdvar 'V . f ! -.-.'-aw v " . r?f ff r , :1 514 ; Monday. June 9, 1957 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIB rKE THREE PROTESTING ACQUITTAL of her husband's killer, widow of Liu Chi-Jan sits under a sign at the American Embassy, Taipei, "The Killer Reynolds Is Innocent? Protest Against (J. S. Court Martial's Unfair, Unjust Decision." Scores were injured in riots, and embassy was wrecked. (International) French Take-Off on Striptease Said Gaining Paris (IB The French take off on the American striptease is bumping along the road to success in Gay Paree. The secret of burlesque with the French touch, according to the French, is more strip and less tease. The experts also claim that the accent here is as much on pretty faces as on dangerous curves. The French say their strippers are younger, prettier, and more petite than the Ameri can brand. Les artistes as they are known here, don't dawdle through a poky version of "Tea for two," undressing ruffle by ruffle and snap by snap, and finally emer ging in a g-string and flimsy bra, as American strippers do. The French girls go into their acts with more rest. They unzip already brief costumes to swing rhythms. Then they pose or dance wearing only a single tri angular patch a g-string with no strings attached for five or 10 minutes. Scores of girls are employed in Paris night clubs ranging from the swank to the existenti alist. The "cave" in which exis tentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sarte used to mope, has been taken over by girls who get paid to undress in public. Shows featuring strippers in clude high-priced theatrical pro ductions as well as weeklv ama teur disrobing night at the Mou lin Rouge club. At the Moulin Rouge, girls selected from the audience peel off their date dresses and underthings to roars of laughter from the audience. For girls who want to learn more, there is a striptease school which teaches them the bare facts of the profession. A pretty blonde stripped with what once were known as goo goo eyes takes a sudsy bath right on the stage at the crazy Horse saloon every night. A Left bank bistro beauty strips to funeral music, weeping the while. The girls who get paid for this activity come from almost every country. One, a Scottish lass, had the thrill of her life when her parents came to Paris to watch her strip. They in turn also were thrilled, when they found out how much money she makes more than 100 dollars a week Le striptease, as it is called here, became a two-million-dollar industry last year, drawing more Europeans than Americans and more Frenchmen than for eign visitors. This year it is ex pected to bring further prosper ity to the French night club cir cuit. An Academy Some girls work in more than AD FREE Customer Parking 341 N. Central WE CARRY OUR OWN CONTRACTS nu n tan ire MEDFORD GRANTS PASS ASHLAND For Her Graduation (l-ostoria CRYSTAL She will appreciate your gift of sparkling, lasting crystal. A lifetime gift. Check Ths GRADUATES CRYSTAL REGISTRY for her patterns in Fostoria or Imperial Candlewick. The GRADUATES of NINE HIGH SCHOOLS throughout Medford and Jackson County have registered their pattern preference. f2 Glassware Dept. 2nd Floor 1 t ! 1 , - rnEDFDROrOREGOnJ Two Upholstery Clesses Scheduled Two upholstery classes will be held this summer at the Mc Loughlin Junior High school gymnasium. The classes will be one week In length and meet daily from 8:30 a.m. to 12 noon and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. The first class will be held from Monda; , Junt 10, through Friday, :4. The second class wi'. ne held from June 17 through June 20- The courses will consist of the uphoW-rrr.; ; -mall projects and the fabrication of slip cov ers for tapirs and davenports. Mrs- May Trye of .he Eugene Vocational be the in structor. Tuition for ft., .-us Is $8 and because of ' hrr T" enrollment there will be no rf-funds. Tuition must be paid upon registration at Medford High school. Regis tration dates are Monday, June S, through Friday, June 7. Safe Stolen From Tavern at Ontario Ontario OR Thieves broke into the Plaza Tavern here some time overnight and carted off a heavy safe, police reported to day. Charles Retzell, tavern owner, said the safe contained between $3,500 and $4,000, of which $1,000 was in cash and the bal ance in paychecks. The thieves bored through the back door to gain entrance, and used a small beer truck to cart the safe to their escape vehicle. Police said from the nature of the job, it was probably executed by the same thieves who broke into the Payette Food Center in Payette, Idaho, Saturday night. The Payette job netted $1,618 in cash and a valuable coin collec Sheree North Confined To Hollywood Hospital Hollywood ffl Actr&ra Sheree North was .reported "resting comfortably" at-Cedara of Lebanon hospital today fol lowing minor surgery. -. The actress' physician sa.id the surgery Miss North underwent wa , not of a serious nature, but that she would be hospitalized for several days. Dead Hnt Sunday ClnmflftA ja at neon Saturday. one club. They appear for ab,! $7.50 a strip in each of the s?v-( eral places on their nightly cx cuits. Some make as much a. 600 dollars a month. Alain Bernardin, operator of the Crazy Horse, downstairs from Balenclaga's ritzy dress making parlor and across the street from the expensive Hotel George V, claims he introduced le striptease to Paris in 1951, to perk up the night club business. New Italian Premier's Cabinet Appears Doomed Home ItPi A "revolt" with in his own Christian Democrat party appears to have doomed .Premier Adone Zoli'a cabinet, svi. 'f it survives its first parli amentary test. Zeli is expected to win the vote with the support of the right wing Monarchists and Fas cists. But leading members of the Christian Democrats urged him to resign and force new elections rather than depend on the right wits s.ipport. I iris . 129 S. Central Medford, Oregon Expansion Watchbanda WWm 1 as low as White or Yellov Gold (Including fittir.j to your Measurement) Um May Trlbai Want Ads ' ' It' - V'V Mm K ? 4 4 when you refresh with Milk! Milk k the pickup that keeps you picked up your energy refreshed by milk's nat ural sugar, minerals and proteins. Have a glass of milk at mealtime, in-between-time, at bedtime. Doesn't it taste good? Doesn't it make you feel great? Drink S Glasses Every Day! tein, needed daily at every age. TOU NEVER OUTGROW TOUR NBBD FOR MILK June Is Dairy-Month REMEMBER ... all Oregon Dairy Foods are your best buy! This advertisement sponsored by your Oregon Dairy Products Commission. rmnn L3 ) f o