Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 30, 1957, Image 25

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    HILTS
Home Destroyed by Fire
Br MRS. M. F. CAVIN land Mrs. Everett
U..IJ A fire of under'ermin- of Hornbrooic
ri origin C'jrrplee'y des'royed;
the home if Sir. and Mrs C'iar-i
ence W.iue. l xa'ed on the south
.Mm. W.'ii was oi.t "f town Sunday.
and White was a', work ven tri
Elmore of
Mr and Mrs. Jake Lindner.
M. Shas'a. visiled Mrs Lind
ners mother, Mrs. M. M. Seif,
On The Side By E. v. Duriing
(D.stributed by King Failures Syndicate, Inc.)
Betty Smith s novel titled "A j dressmaker to Queen Elizabeth
Tree Grows in Brooklyn." the of England, the ideal measur
group of hoodlums referred to ments for a dress model are
as ' Murder, Inc.," and calling haight. five feet eight: bust 35;
tne Dodgers 'Dem Bums" have j waist 23, and hips, 36.
most crtainlv given the nation i
at aree a distorted d dure of
Sunday, June 30. 19S7
MEBFOBB (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ELEVEN
Albany Plant To Tell Odor Control Plans
Mr and Mn Stpvp -Osiprlr anH
f.re va distovered by re.gr.bori dauRhter returned to their home
and was out of control in a .n?', I . Pasedena last week, aexom
tor of minutes. I panied by Mrs. Osier ks sister
The HiltjVi.lur leer fie Depart-1 Mrs. Don powers. and son Dav.
Bifnt concent rat"d on saving , 1(j
the (wo adorning nmiM-s as a
brisk north w:i!d was blowing.
Mr-lgbhors were at;ie to save
n.U portion ill clothing be
fore t.ie hi"', ai d smnke drove
thm ba:k. Everything e;e was
a total loss.
Mr. ard Mrs. White and fam
ily are at home in the house
. formerly occupied by the T. l
Killirigsworth family.
the beautiful borough across the '
bridge. Brooklyn has a popula
tion of three million. It is on?
of the world s greatest manu
facluring and maritime centers. '
It has an area of 90 square miles, j
Naturally there are some sec !
tions which are slightly drab in
Why does the interest in wom
en on part of some men de
crease? Why is it sonfe husbands
don't kiss their wives with th
intensity they one did? Age
could have something to do with
decreased interest in females. As
for husbands, their indifferent
osculation may be inspired by
boredom. But it isn't necessarily
so. Diet can have something to do
with it. A scarcity of protein in
a man's diet can cause hirn to
lose interest in women. Plenty
of protein can aid in turning
his thoughts to that thing called
ed his folks, Mr. and Mrs R. H ' Bav Ririse where T nt an i 'ove- On this dietitians are
Miss Gwen Robinson, who is appearance and whose residents:
training for a nurse at St Mer- afe a little bit rough as to con- j
ritt i hospital in Oakland spent duct. That is true of all great j
several das at the home of her 'cities Subscribers frequently re-
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm : fer in sarcastic fashion to my
Robinson. Referring to Brooklyn as "thai
.beautiful borough across thi:
Airman 1C James Smith ca:l- bridee " Well, it was heautiful in
Portland U- The State Air
Pollution Authority Thursday
ordered officials of the Western
Kraft Mill plant at Albany to
appear at a public hearing to re
port on progress in controlling
odors from the operation.
No date was set for the hear
ing which could be held under
a state law relating to persons
or businesses which have failed
to comply with an order of the
authority.
I Also heard at the Thursday
meeting were reports that odor
control at another Kraft plant
would not be feasible. Th pJant
i was the Georgia Pacific mill at
. Toledo, Ore.
Harvey Machine Co. told the
authority K planned to iastall
equipment at its nv aluminum
plant at The Dalles that ould
remove OS per cent of fluoride
fallout once, produttio has
started.
Rosehurm Woman Killed
A Avto Leaves Highway
Roseburg 'W Mrs. Evelyn
' Joyce Kachel. 23, Roseburg, was
killed south of here Friday, the
I second fatality reported on the
i recently opened stretch of
Highway 99 freeway to the
' south.
I County Coroner L. L. Pcwers
said Mrs. Kachel was alone in
her car about 2 a.m. when it
crashed through a guardrail ,
near Roberts mountain and
plunged 59 feet into a canyon.
Red Fir Slabwood
SUMMER SPECIAL
J Leads
1 LOAD $12.00
Immediate Delivery
Ph. SP 3-5878 or SP 2-5053
PHELPS FUEL CO.
1337 So. Peach St.
Save this ad for reference
and Mrs. Orvil Green Thursday.
The Girl Scout Troops Talent
show, under tie direction of
Mrs. Charles Codifard held at
the Club f'oute recently was we e Ki:es'J at the home of Mr
well attenled. I
The program tonsisted nfi
ballet and tap dances, novel'y
dances, piano, accordion and :
guitar solos and voca) numbers j
Duri$aj intermission numbers
were drawn for surprise pack-
gr. -,
Guests fleforming were Pen-i
ny Barn'um ajid Danny Mc-tzer I
Smith from the Omisawa Air ! extremely happy childhood. And i agreed. So. if a wife fee is her
Base in Tokyo, Japan, on Tues- sliH is. From our windows we ; husband is loving interest in her,
day. had a marvelous view of New ! she al'ould check on his diet.
a T, . .. x- - 1 York Harbor. We could see theiPcrhaPs 811 he needs to get back
A!r. and Mrs. B'ister Fai.s . ... T :u . ., into the honevmorm snirit ia a
OidlUC u; U 1C '
. -. J ......... - x . . i.
ocean liners arnvina or starting '"'"""I "
on trips from all over the world
Also many other Impressive
Mrs Roy Rushtnn of Medford 'sights. Perhaps the Greenpoint
section is somewhat drab. Ill
grant you that Williamsburg j
the background of the novel "A j
Tree Grow in Brooklyn," is not
beautiful. But Bay Ridge is.
visited at the horr.e of Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Williams Wednesday
Robert Nunes. s'ationed at
Fort Ord, and Miss Barbara
Nunes of Salinas, Calif., were
week end guests at the home
of their parents, Mr. and Mr?.
John Nunes.
or nornDrooK. I
Others taking; part were Kar-:
en Bryari. .Marcia Gavin. Cathy; jfr. anj Mrl. gam
Whittikmr. Yvonne Van de and sons of Medford
Wege, .Jan Smi'Ji. Jeri Lynn the hotr.es of the J.
i.reen, i.i rVana I rinca. Uary ; family and the R. H. Smith fam
Tallis. B.irbar ar.d Car)en De ' j;y on Sunday.
,Clerk. Mnrs)! a; d David Sim-
moat," Sohert and Tommy Lans- Mr. and Ms
Horses and Women
A highly indignant feminine
subscriber registers a strong ob-
ipftinn in arlirlf titled '"Wnnlrf
Evensizer ; Vm;r Husban(j Marrv You
visi'ed at : Aga,n,., ..How To Hold a Hlls.
rt. omiin
talof, Louise and Eliaoelh John- dng were business visitors here
band," "How To Get A Man"
and so on. She a.-ks why oot
j some articles titled "Would Your
Abbott of Red I W1! Marry You Again? , iJr.w
ions, parnips, celery, sparagu,
etc. And something containing
much Vitamin C.
Is That So?
Br CUGCMI BURNS
Ranger-Naturalist
La?t Fourth of July, I wrote
a piece on George Washington,
one of the finest outdoor eportr
men of his day. Several requests
shortly thereafter asked me:
"What about our other Found
ing Fathers?"
Washington, as we know, ,s
a good hunter, angler, borse
son. Alarily Thompson, Tony
Mcl)rI, 'Pai(a Eiistman. Janet
Cavtgi Dorothy and Pat Fcix.
Monday.
Mr. 'and Mr. B II Smih at
tended "weddinjr of Mi Maxinei' connected with the lLllcres
at the Friends church in Med-
ford Saturday evening, Hopkins
Is Mrs. Smith; uncje.
Missea Cathy O'Brien, Ann
Sanells. irjri MarietiS Smith of
Long "Beach "were overnight
guests. Friday -Bight, at the home
nf Miss Smith's parerit, Mr. axil
Mrs. H. G. Thmnpsin anf daugh
ter, Marilyn. Tliey )eft Saturday
for home, accompanied by Mrs,
Thompson 'air Marilyn, "who
went.ai far 'in Sacraniehto, Calif.,
Slith them.
To Hold a Wife" and "How To
Get a Woman." She adds, "Anrf
as for you, why don't you akt
J'idsen Parsons of Seattle the husbands among your read-
Wash , was a Sunday visitors jt ers how they are going to loni
the R. H. Smith home. Parsons in bathing t.iits?" She also com
ments. "Wby doesn't some smart
Orchards in Medford.
A guest last week at the Vic
Van de Weghe home wa Mrs.
Michael CerJconey of Eugene
.Mrs. Cerkoney is the former
Donna Lar.ge, oldest daughter of ! cigarette and then blow out
person write an article on how
to get rid of a man? I couid use
some advice like that
Briefly
If in Sweden you light a girl's
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lange who
were resident here at one time.
She is enroute to Japan to join
her husband who is serving in
the Armed1 Forces.
th-:
Kr. and! Mrs Walt LausJa'.ot
and sorim are spending a week
at their caoin on Beaver creek
iBsifbSrg fee Cierek; underwent j Mrs. Rodney Eastmem is taking
tonmilfctomv at the' Siskivou La--'sUIot's place as, clerk;
General ai County hcispival IVi
djr morni: g
Mrt. Vtvit Smirb and ten
c Ashiani vS-Jg-i here tuosday.
ifrs. tflt$ EaFtrr.a-i ant
(MOB. Bger, of Olympta, ffa?h.,
tre weeg - 3 E"e-' at tiie
homo r Mr. Sin4 Mrf, Rodoey
I aauraa no) Fy.a.
Miss JeVI Lynn GreeS af )
wwk end iuest of Mi Terry
Oakley of A-hland. On Monday
Mr. and Mrs. Orval Green
brought their daughter homec
companied by Terry, who spent
a few days with Jeri.
match, custom calls that she kill
you. Remember that when your
are in Stockholm . . . There are
over 4,000 different brands, of
Scotch whisky registered. A
liquor store on Madison ave.,
Manhattan, once had 200 dif
ferent brands of Scotch in stock.
That's the most I ever heard of
being offered in one shop in
this "country.
Prisoners"'
What became of Rudolf Hess?
So queries a Bostonian. Rudolph
and two other Nazi war crim
inals, Baldu von Schirach and
ilri William Tallis w called ! Albert Spee are still in the Span-
in the Hilts store.
Mr. fnd Mrs. Gilbert Luper
and family returned home Tue;
day after spending; severa,! days
over on the; California, coast.
to Medford Tuesday due to the
strious illness of her mother.
Mr, florencte Ciark. who lives
fthe.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Wasson
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
JerrCGould and family attended
the? Montague Junior Rodeo held
unday.
Torn, Mills Jr. who is statlon
pi a,t Warren Air Force base in
Cheyenne. Wyo., arrived Satur
day night for several days visit
"with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
To Mills.
Mrs. fiobert Trinci drov her
daughter Li Wana Trinoa, to
Medford Wednesday evening, so
that she might appear on the
television program. Miss Pat and
her Starlets, Miss Trinca, did? a
toe-tap number.
&r. and Mrs. Lester Chase
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Schuck and family enjoy
ed a picnic and some swimming
on the Klamath river on Sunday.
Dinner guests Wednesday
evening at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Donlvan Ward and family
were Mrs. Ward's uncle and aunt
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Mapel of San
Francisco, and her parents, Mr.
Dawkins Resigns From
Pierce-Dawkifts Psst
Pierce-Dawkins, Inc., Medford
advertising and public relations
acencv. has been reorganized
with the resignation of William tlle aIias "Miss Susan Day"
riau prison in Berlin. They a.
the only prisoners there although
the Jil is designed to take care
of about 400 criminals. The op
erating costs of Spandau ire
about S24.000 a year. To take
care of the trio of war criminals
aforementioned calls for a staff
of 11 cooks, 14 kitchen maids,
10 waiters, three housekeepers
and two washerwomen.
Sidelight
(l)w many miles are you get
ting out of the tires on your
elegant motor car? Before long
there is to be offered a tire that
will be good for 100,000 miles of
service . . . Greta Garbo still
lias a strong desire to travel
incognito. In England she uses
Dawkins.
Jennings Pierce, the senior
member of the firm, bought out
the Dawkins' interests and will
maintain and operate the firm
under the new name of Pierce
& Associates.
Dawkins has opened his own
public relations and advertising
office in Medford under th
name of William Dawkins &
Associates.
According to Norman Hartnell.
Stale GOP Chairman
Warns of Tsctici
Salem If1 Oregon Republi
can Chairman James F. Short
Thursday night warned the
GOP organization he ro'uld put
it on a warlike basis to regain
Dawkins reports that his pres-: its state leadership. And he sug
ent plans include the servicing ! gested that if his belligerent tac
of one major southern Oregon j tics were not popular he should
advertising account and the op-jbe replaced.
eration of the Capitol News Short told about 150 Republi
Service at Salem, which he ! cans gathered at a dinner meet
established last January. In ad- j ing here. "I expect to issue or-
dition, he plans to expand his
public relations service in the
northern part of the state.
Pierce reported the addition
of a new staff member, Mrs.
ders and make decisions and I
expect them to be complied
with." O
He referred to the adminis
tration of Gov. Robert Holmes
"hethtr your hom needs
repairs or your plan U
expansion, it's easily done with
an FHA Home Improvement
Loan through U. S. National.
NOTHING bOftlf
36 MOUTHS TO PAY
Ajk Your Contractor or Dealer
...or See U. &
Vivian Adams, long recognised : as a "serious, actually present
threat to the future of our
homes and our employment be
cause as industry lags, taxas
rntast mount."
"It is my strong conviction,"
he declared, "that continuation
of the presenj) incapable, self
interested and partisan-slanted
as a writer in the journalistic
and allied creative fields.
Pierce & Associates will re
main in the present office head
quarters at 34 No. Central in
Medford.
MEDFORD BRANCH
t. Main at Central fk. SP 2-0 1 o
ASHLAND BRANCH
30 N. Second
Phone MU 9- 11
mm
3
Congress Urgei To
Act on FBI Ruling
Washington Attorney
General Herbert Brownell Jr.
urged Congress Friday to pre
vent a "jerious miscarriage of
justice" by limiting effect of the
Supreme Court's decision open
ing certain FBI files in criminal
cases.
He 6Id a Senate .furiiciary
Subcommittee there lis", "imme
diate lietd" for legislation to
clarify procedures the prosecu- I
lion must follow in making the i
FBI information available to de
fendants.
He backed an administration
bill which he said would "cor
rect a grave emergency in law
enforcement which has resulted
from the decision."
rider, fox hunter, billiard play
er, duc hunter end card play
er. Thomas Jefferson: In oil
younger days fine horseman.
He preferred walking in his
later years. He played chess,
backgammon, and a game known
as "cros pile," a coin-tossing
game. He also swam once a
distance of 3' 4 miles.
James Madison: He 9s a bird
watcher and pursuit of this
subject charted quite carefully
the northed migration of ths
cardinal.
Patrick Henry: &emtrgibly
fond of gjiooting, fishing and
playing on the violin.
Benjamin Frgnglin: ft freat
swimmer. Onoe hile in Lon
don, he went for dip in the
Thames and wrote: "I stripped
and leaped into th river and
swam from near Chelsea to
Blackfriar's, performing on the;
way many feats of activity, both
upon and underwater, that sur
pris'd and pleas'd those to whom
they were novelties."
General Mad Anthony: Excel
lent billiard player while still
in grammar school.
Alexander Hamilton: Hunting
and fishing
Gouverneur Morris: Although
he lost his left leg, he fished
hunted and loved to sail.
John Adams: Long before the
game of baseball was reduced to
a measured diamond, Adams
frolicked with "bat and ball."
Nathanael Green: Extremely
fond of riding. He also swam,
ice-skated, sailed and wrestled.
Ethan Allan: Raised in th
frontier of Vermont mountains,
he was a magnificent shot.
(Released by $$cClura
Sewspfoer Syndicate)
Free: By special arrangement
with the editors of the Encyclo
pedia Americana, my panel of
judges will award each week to
the reader who sends me the
best true-life nature adventure,
the best nature observation, or
the best question on nature gnd
wildlife, a complete 30-volume
set of this world-famous refer
ence work in handsorr Saijl
craft binding. Each week nejv
submissions will be considered
Sorry, I simply can't gnswer
your many friendly letteis.
Please (jridress your letfer to:
That So! co Medford Mjil
Tribune, Box 575, Sjiusalito.
Calif.
jSa'.id
Plump jvveet raisins in boilirig
ater. drain and moid in coot
administration will discredit the lime-flavored gelatin (Siontf, with
state before the natijM, repel in- melon balls and tinv cubes of
dustry and frighten away need- cream cheese for (a; delicious hot
ed capital." 1 weather salad.
Tit United S.'c:s N:!ionai tvi.it t ortitnj
, Maia Hari's real name was ;
; Gertrud Margarete Zelle. She!
' was a native of the Netherlands. (
At OK MABKIT.
i fofJ
1 -
r,i m v fncnnn i .
MUFfliS CO.
DOODYS WXfcfl&D
jHIVICf TTIC
DOLLAR fft
STAMPS! jflj
:f',Y-vF.e
A:
JOHNSOQS OC tyKjsQ,? CrCgtY LUNCH
n(K SMLM
EZ 3
mm tdr
uaranteed for LIFE
Against Stone Bruises, Cuts
And All Road Hazards.
X 15 ArostrcEg Nylon Tube Type $17.95
.... $18.95
Plut Tax and a
Recappable
Carcasi
710 15 Arrciitroosg fiybn Tube Type
7E0 15 Amstrw IMm Tubs Type $19.95
BIG SAVINGS on TRUCK TIRES, TOO
Only a Mil From fho Y on Crater Lake Highway. It Will
Pay You to Drive the Mil and SAVE.
Tilt Home of Medford's Finest Recaps
Lb,
2850 Crater lake Highway
A ill
o
Thy had nvr flown btfor. But early on morning Zdnek
Xfachilner, 19, and Karel Kucera, 20, tied up a Czech guard and
wobbled to the safety of West Germany in a stolen piano.
mf $h$ soloed fo freedom
o
TTl rW j81-biit 70 ajpilline ot&ers re
aain captiv btind the Irot) Curtain. And these
a-e the people at whom Radio Free Europe beams O
if daily broadcasts. Escape is its aim. Radio
IVee Europe penetrates the Iron Curtain to spread
utRi. . . to strengthen hope and resistance.
Said the youths above, "It (Radio Free Europe)
Cadded couragsrand strength to strained nerves."
o?ri us . . . a hope for a better future
-!d a young nurse w ho t6$I to the West
flufporl di ff$ Sh( your Truth
"Everybody is listening even the Communists,"
said an escaped Czech skating champion.
From 29 powerful transmitters, Radio Free
Europe broadcasts up to 20 hours of truth a day
to five key satellite countries Poland, Czecho
slovakia, Romania, Hungary and Bulgaria. And
how the Communist bosses fear it!
Each dollar vou contribute sponsors a Minute
of Truth on Radio Free Europe. How v f1.
many minutes will you give?
Dollars fo: CRUSADE
for
FREEDOM
EDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
f
O