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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1957)
SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Wednesday. July 3. 1S57 TheyH Do It Every Time . -By Jimmy Hatlo S:SCE E4!y M4V, STEWBERIT M4S fcEE.Nl SOUNDING OFF R CONDITIONS SJT FdHRErMEITrVISE.- UOOK! rr MUST BE MlN'STY IN MERE.' WE GOT OME JESK C4J IM THE JOINT THiS CHE4PSK4TE cxrrprr wowt put in a"-ujNDrnONIN&-. BUT I OUT IT IN My HOUSE .' VVM4T co z ftdvE to do? w4rr TILL I &ET HOME TO COOL OFF ?! 1 Well, here's our hero to home temr i304md how is he cooling off? heh-heh-give a g4mder T-l DISH UP THE BE4SS. tSZaji jj K NUTRid SOUPS 6tf, Err?VT'3 folks come 4No yCr'St' ' l Cave Junction Plans Fourth Celebration Cave Junction The VFW grounds near Cave Junction have been transformed into a concession area for the July Fourth celebration which starts this afternoon in tha Illinois val ley. Members of the three veter ans groups in the valley are in charge of the event which will include entertainment for the children, several food and amuse ment booths, two big open air dances July 3 and 4, and the main attraction, a parade at noon on Independence Day. The Queen will be crowned at 9 p.m. at the Queen's ball, July 3, on the dance floor at the VFW grounds. She will also reign at the July 4 dance. Princesses who are competing for the title are Ronine Rausch, Helen Symens, Barbara Prf witt, Sharon Earl, Barbara Hawkins, Janice Stephens and Virginia LaBorde. SURPRISE! Crandola, Portugal W Bachelor Angelo Rodrigues .was mystified surprised to learn he was already married when he applied for a marriage license Tuesday. Investigation disclosed one of his brothers borrowed his nam to get married a second time after he failed to get along with his first wife. P3rfy-Perfecf! Quotes From the News By UNITED PRESS Crestview, Fla. Uncle Billy Lundy, 109-year-old Confederate veteran, on joining the Ground Observer Corps "to protect the Yankees from the Russians": "If I can't whip 'em, I'll protect them." Washington Treasury Secretary George M. Humphrey, on the effect of the "tight money" policy on inflation: "Tha whole thing is slowing somewhat and that's all we want to do." Evanston, 111. Mrs. Glenn G. Hays, president of the National Women's Christian Temperance Union, on major league baseball telecasts and broadcasts being sponsored by breweries: "Beercasts of the game try to convince anyone who hears or sees them it's the right thing to do to sit in front of the set and get drunk." Dos Moines, Iowa Gov. Herschel C. LoTeless, on proclaiming July 9 "Women Drivers Day" in Iowa: "One group of drivers must not be held inferior io another simply because of sex." Montmollin, Switzerland Claude Reymond, an attorney, on the death of former New York debutante Joanne Connelley Patino: "Her death is such a pity. She was so relieved to see the end of her marital difficulties approaching." Washington Former civil defense chief Val Peterson, on home warning device that might help prevent needless deaths from hurricanes and other natural disasters: "Nature can and will hit any place and every place. We simply must get better organized." The Family Council Editor'! notai Tha ramllT Council coniliti of a Jadgt, a piycnUtrtit, uiraa clertymen, a nawspaper editor, a women's editor and two wnteri. Eacn artlci Is a luminary of an actual report. The family Council doei not awa advice; It merely report! an problems Uaat hava keen dealt wltn by reiponslbla agenciei and counselor!. Catch this big butterfly with your needle and put it to use as a gay party apron! It's perfect for summer entertaining stun ning done in bold contrasting colors! Pattern 7139: Transfer of but terfly apron 15'fex20 inches; color suggestions; directions. Send THIP.TY-FIVE CENTS in coins for this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for 1st class mailing. Send to Medford Mail Tribune. Household' Arts Dept., P. O. Box 168, Old Chel sea Station, New York 11. N.Y. Print plainlv NAME. ADDRESS, AND PATTERN NUMBER. ' A bonus for our readers two FREE patterns, printed in our new Alice Brooks Needlecrafti Book for 1957! Plus a wonder-1 f ul variety of designs to order crochet, knitting, embroidery, huck weaving, toys, dolls, oth-; ers. Send 5 cents for your copy of this exciting NEW . needle . book now! ; Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With Little Worry Eat talk, lauph or sneeze without i fear of insecure raise teeth dropping. I slipping or wobbling. FASTEETH holds plates firmer and more com fortably. T&ls pleasant powder has no Itummy. gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Doesn't cause nausea. It's alkaline ( non-acid 1. Checks "Pl" ST. i (denture breathl . Get TASTkETH al j any drug counter. i Ina T. He has.5hurt me too much. Larry D. It was the fault of our parents. Ina T. Four years ago, when I was 18, I fell in love with a young man 01 my own age. We wanted to marry, but our parents managed to convince us that we were much too young. Larry and I went together for three whole years, seldom see ing anyone else. We planned to marry at 21. but just before that time Larry met another girl and married her before I even had an inkling of what was go ing on. I was so heartbroken I could hardly stand to look at anyone else for a long time. During the past eight months, however, I have been going out a lot. I can't help comparing everyone to Larry and nobody seems any where near him. Recently Larry called me and said he had made a terrible mis take in his marriage. He wants to get a divorce and marry me. He has hurt me so much I don't know whether I can give him a second chance. Larry D. Ina is now afraid that I am the fickle type, but nothing could be more untrue. I never went out with any other girl in all "the time we went steady until I met the girl I met the girl I married. It just happened I met Dora, the girl I married, quite by ac cident. She was the very ag gressive type and things went so fast, I was getting married be fore I knew what I was doing. The whole thing was really the fault of our parents. Ina and I were very much in love and quite mature for our age. We really suffered those three years, being so involved with each other and being together so much, but unable to get married. I have had the same experi ence with Dora that Ina has had going out with other men. I can't help comparing Dora to Ina and thinking how much nicer Ina is and how much happier I would be with her. The Council: Larry's statement that he and Ina were "quite ma ture for our age'' four years ago may be taken with many grains of salt in view of the fact that they are not as mature as they should be now. By his own admission Larry barely knew Dora before he leaped to marry her and now he is leaping to dissolve this union before getting to know her. He has been so busy comparing Dora to Ina al the time and blaming both her and his parents for the marriage, he has hardly had a chance to take a good look at his wife. Ina is going exactly the same thing. She cannot get to know other men while she is busily comparing them with Larry. It appears that Ina and Larry cling to one another in an in fantile manner, perhaps as a pro tection against getting to know others. They gave in to their parents' wishes only partially when they put off their mar riage. The parents probably wanted them to put their rela tionship to a real test. This would mean going through the maturing process by getting to know others. They avoided this to such a degree that Larry, inexperienced in social relationships with other girls, was completely bowled over by an accidental meeting with a new girl. Ina and Larry are now exactly where they were four years ago too young for marriage. Nevertheless, Larry must make more of an attempt to make a go of his marriage. He owes an hon est effort to his wife and him self. . (Copyright 1957,. General Features Corp.) Oregonians Figure in Centennial Meeting Of NEA; Jackson County Delegates Listed By OLIVE STARCHER Mail Tribune Staff Writer Philadelphia. July 1 An Ore gonian, Ewald Turner of Pendle ton, was nominated for vice president of the Department of Classroom Teachers, National Education association, at the first business session of the depart ment Monday on the opening day of the centennial conven tion of NEA. Another Oregonian, Miss Mar tha Shull of Portland, retiring NEA president, is conducting the general centennial sessions. Two Top Jobs Filled In Motor Vehicle Office Salem HP Director James Johnson Monday filled two top jobs in the State Motor Vehicle Department. Edward Kaneski, teller in the state treasurer's office, was named to manage the adminis tration services division. Howell E. Yarbrough, until recently chief clerk in the driver's license division, was picked to do pro cedures analysis work for the entire department. So Flattering! 1 m$m fes mm 9225 1 4V&-2614 -i"1T - With our new P inted Pattern, sewing becomes a pleasure for shorter, fuller figures! This dress assures a perfect fit won derful flattery! See its graceful skirt; easy tucks that slim the bodice. Printed Pattern 9225: Half Sizes 14'i, 16V4, 18V4, 20V4 2212, 24Vi, 2614. Size I6V2 re quires 4s yards 35-inch fabric. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, faster, ac curate. Send Thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for lst-class mail ing. Send to Marian Martin, care of Medford Mail Tribune Pat tern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plain ly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. MONEY At Crater Finance you may borrow for any worthwhile purpose on your . FURNITURE - AUTO SALARY and repay in monthly Install ments. You may choose the terms most suitable to you up to 24 months. Loans may ba paid tn ad vance or in full at any time. 1 Crater Finance CORPORATION 135 Pine St. Central Point Phone NO 4-1273 Frank Wilkinson, Mgr. Convenient Parking A Medford delegate, Mrs. Maxine Smith, Medford, nominated Tur ner. Turner, a manual arts techer, was named Man of the Year by Pendleton Junior Chamber of Commerce last year. Local Delegates Jackson county, delegates at the centennial meeting include Mrs. Elsie Turner, Medford resi dent who teaches in Eagle Point; Mrs. Viola Pomeroy, Eagle Point; Miss Anna Laura Honts, Lincoln school teacher who is represent ing Medford Grade School Teachers, and Jim McDonald, Medford, junior at Southern Ore gon college and newly elected president of Student National Ed ucation association. Mrs. Smith, former president of the Department of Classroom Teachers, Oregon Education as sociation, is a member of the ad visory council of the National Department, and Sunday after noon was one of the hostesses for a formal reception given by the department at the Benjamin Franklin hotel. 15.000 Delegates Delegates and visitors, esti mated at 15,000, crowded into Philadelphia Saturday and Sun- Teacher-Legislator Seeks Court Decision Oregon City HP) State Rep Thomas Monaghan, Milwaukee Democrat, said today he was seeking a court decision on whether he would have to give up his legislative seat if he wants to continue teaching school. Monaghan is a sixth-grade tea cher at Ardenwald school here. He was elected to the House last November. A statement filed Monday in Circuit Court recalled that the attorney general ruled last De cember that no one can teach in public schools in Oregon while holding a seat in the Leg islature. The case is expected to wind up in the State Supreme Court. day. They are from every state in the Union and Manila and Guam, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and Alaska. The Puerto Ricans, who always, turn out in full force, boast that 125 delegates plus more than 300 visitors are here for the convention. The mam moth convention hall and adjoin ing exhibition building are swarming. In her opening address to the convention Monday evening Miss Shull said "It is clear that if the basic values of democracy are to survive, education must meet new needs in every area of liv ing." She stressed four areas, those of science and technology, greater understanding of other parts of the world, more under standing jf a feeling of respon sibility for our kind of govern ment and the need to enable peo ple to be happy in a profound sense "to see that material pos sessions and financial success are not the source of happiness." Other Activities Miss Shuli also presided at a vesper service Sunday night and later delegates and visitors at tended a concert by the Phila delphia Symphony at Robin . Hood Dell with Alexander Hils berg conducting. The NEA board of directors met Sunday and drafted a wire to President Eisenhower urging him to support HR I, the pending j school construction bill. The 1 board, representing 700,000 teachers, said "On the occasion of our Centennial we share your concern for the crisis in our schools. We are confident that America's political leaders will enact emergency legislation to provide federal funds without federal control." Don't Say "Hello" Say "FILTER-FLO" OPENING of Offices in the Medical Dental Building 832 East- Main St., Medford for the Practice of General Surgery THOMAS RUTTER Hours by Appointment M.D. Physician & Surgeon Phone SP 2-7730 NOW! SIDEWALK TV New York (IB New York's sidewalk superintendent have gone modern.' They now view construction of a new building at Lexington ave., and 51st St., on the screens of thre 21-inch television sets while a camera pans around the building site. July 8 ENROLL NOW July 8 Summer Term Robertson School of Business ROSEBURG KLAMATH FALLS IN: ACCOUNTING BUSINESS ENGLISH MEDFORD SPECIALIZED TRAINING SHORTHAND BUSINESS MACHINES DICTAPHONE TYPEWRITING (The Modern Penmanship) SPEEDWRITING SUMMER SPECIALS: . 8 Weeks Typing July 8 to August 30 8:00 to 11:00 Every Day Speedwriting July 8 to August 30 9:00 to 4:00 Every Day (This is a life-time course and guaranteed by Good Housekeeping) Robertson School of Business 40 NORTH RIVERSIDE MEDFORD SP 3-4264 They had never flown before. But early one morning ZAwk Machilner, 19, and Karel Kucera, 20, tied up a Czech guard and wobbled to the safety of West Germany in a stolen plane. McHhor could fly, . bcrt flhey soloed f o freedom LK-CITY'tSflARKET NORTH HIGHWAY 99 Half Way Between Medford and Central Point OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY JULY 4 These fwo icaped-but 70 million others re main captive behind the Iron Curtain. And these are the people at whom Radio Free Europe beams its daily broadcasts. Escape is not its aim. Radio Free Europe penetrates the Iron Curtain to Jpread truth ... to strengthen hope and resistance. Said the youths above, "It ( Radio Free Europe) added courage and strength to strained nerves." It offered us ... a hope for a better future," said a young nurse who fled to. the West "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 I Each dollar you contribute sponsors a Minute ot Iruth on tladio tree Europe. How many minutes will you give? Support Radio Fro Europe Send your Truth Collars to: CRUSADE for FREEDOM MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE