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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1957)
Local and Ilemi Taken Donald E. Day, 1671 Grand ave., reported to city police Friday afternoon the toeft of several items from his vehicle. ttcai Taken Charles W. Mathey. 1401 West 10th st , re ported to city police Friday the theft of four spinner hubcaps fror his vehicle. To Camp White Johnny Forrest Stewart. 34, formerly of Newberg, was taken by ambu lance to Camp White Friday af ter becomine ill at a service station located at 8Z0 ?.orth ion the front lawn of his resi Riverside ave. Medfoid police idence sometime between 8.30 were called to the scene and contacted Camp White oficials. Treated at Hospital Morris Stringer, 1019 Clay st., Ashland, and Dean Williams, 391 Palm St., Ashland, were treated at Ashland General hospital Sat urday morning for head and face cuts. State police said they we imormea me two men were struck with a jack handle in an altercation at the Tally Ho lub. No complaints were signed or arrests made. Police and Litwiller s Ambulance serv ice were called at 3:10 a.m. V Gri Fire About 150 acres were burned Friday by a grass lire near the Medford city dump at Camp White, according to the Central Point Rural Fire Pro tection district, five pumpers were dispatched to the blaze, which was extinguished by fire men about two hours after it started. No serious damage re sulted from the fire, firemen reported. Obituaries MHS. MARINA COOK Mrs. Marina Cook, 1111 V 2 North Riverside ave., died in a local hospital Saturday morning Conger-Morris Funeral home is In charge of arrangements. FRANCIS ELLIOT NIVISON Ashland Francis Elliot (Frank) Nivison, 87, long-time resident of Ashland, died July 4 following an illness. He was born Dec. 4, 1869, in Cedar county, Iowa. He is sur vived by one daughter, Mrs. John Adams, Salem, and one granddaughter. Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at Lit willer's Mt. View chapel. In terment will be In ML View cemetery. ETHEL BISH Mrs. Ethel Bish. 945 Brook dale ave., died in a local hospital Saturday morning. Conger-Morris Funeral home is in charge of arrangements. LESLIE SCHEFFEL Leslie B. Scheffel. 60. died at the Veterans hospital in Rose burg Jule 5. Perl Funeral home is in chtrge of arrangements. flen't Say ?tidlo" o Sssy - - - "FILTER-FLO" TONITE! I mac JOHN WAYNE V mm MB PUS 1st Drive-ln Run of HOUSE of North of Gold Hill AT 0 Display - One of the West's Finest oikxtiens of Gold Dust and Nuggets Summer Hours 8 to 6 Founder's Management Since 1930 Personal I Practice The Women of the 'Moose will hold ritual practice, ; Monday. July 8, at 8 P m. at the Moose hall. Initiation will be held Wednesday. July 10. Dog Missing Mary Jane Murphy, 618 Franquette St., re ported to city police Friday morning that her one-year-old white male toy poodle had stray ed from home. Hose Cut R. R. Stevens, 335 South Orange St., Friday evening notified city police that someone had cut his garden hose p.m. Thursday and 12 a.m. Fri- day. Births WILLFORD To Mr. and Mrs Glenn, 1154 West Eighth St., Aiecuora, July 4, 1907, gin, o- pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital BEWLEY To Mr. and Mrs ford. July 6, 1957, boy, 10U Marvin, 1063 Ellendale dr., Med- pounds at Sacred Heart hospital News About Servicemen ON LEAVE Allen D. Young, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Young, 525 Fran quette st., Medford, is spending a 15-day leave with his parents. An airman second class in the Air Force, Young is stationed at Lowry Air Force Base in Den ver, Colo. FINISHED COURSE Army Second Lt. Robert L. Bosworth, 23, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harlan P. Bosworth Jr., 2435 East Main St., Medford. was graduated June 22, from the in fantry school's basic officer course at Fort Benning, Ga. Lieutenant Bosworth entered the Army last February. A 1956 graduate of the University of Oregon, he is a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. Four Rescued from Shark Infested Sea Avalon, Calif. m The British freighter SS Levenpool late Friday rescued two men and two women who were adrift in a small dinghy and capsized 25 foot catamaran for mere than fours hours in shark infested waters 25 miles south east of Catalina island. Rescued were Albert L. Saf strom and his wife, Helen, of West Los Angeles; Howard B. Eckwith of Santa Monica and Doris Prendergast of West Los Angeles. Safstrom. owner of the cata maran, said he and his friends left San Diego Friday morning on a 10-day vacation. He said a hole was ripped in the bottom of one of the catamaran's two hulls 16 miles southeast of Av alon harbor and the craft cap sized a short time later. Safstrom . insisted that his guests board a small dinghy which had a capacity of two. He and his wife climbed onto the hull of the overturned cata maran. HAS OPERATION Washington UP Sen. Thomas C. Hennings Jr. (D.-Mo.) under went surgery Friday for removal of gallstones. Phone KE 5-1462 Never A Western Rke h! iSJEARCHERS: w Tmc MM 1 color. Mfrn Vr Word HUNTER MILES- BONO WOOD the Year's Comedy Hit! MYSTERY Open Throughout The Year Scientist Says He Hopes Nuclear Arms Won't Be Used in War Br JOSEPH L. MYLER United Press Correspondent Washington W Scientist Ralph E. Lapp adds the 14 million-volt neutron to the 5,000 mile ICBM and comes up with what looks to him like a power ful military argument for the "dirty" H-bomb. Lapp, who worked with the wartime atomic project, favors rigid international limits on H bomb testing. He is all for " clean" weapons with no radio active fallout if they can be perfected. He hopes nuclear arms will never be used in war. Disarmament Fails But if disarmament fails and the Soviet-U.S. race for the in tercontinental ballistic missile continues, Lapp fears that mili tary logic is on the side of dirty warheads. The 14-million-volt neutron is part of that logic. The difficul ty, if not impossibility, of mak ing a completely accurate ICBM is another. For the ICBM to be any good as a weapon, it must pack tremendous destructive power in the most compact pos sible package. In the present state of nuclear weaponry that point, Lapp be lieves, to a dirty bomb like the 15 megaton (15 million tons of TNT) monster tested by the United States in March, 1954 Inert Natural Uranium That weapon owed close to two-thirds of its violence and the bulk of its radioactive dirt iness to a jacket of normally in ert natural uranium which was made to fission by the high-en ergy neutrons created by the Civil Rights Bill May Be Considered In Senate Monday Washington IW The Sen ate plunges Monday into a civil rights bill fight which could bring all other pending legisla tion to a dead stop. At 2 p.m. (EDT) Senate Re publican Leader William F. Knowland (Calif.), will move that the Senate take up the measure endorsed by President Eisenhower and already passed by the House. This will signal the start of a Southern Demo cratic filibuster which could last indefinitely. Knowland himself says the fight "easily could and probab ly will tie up the Senate for at least eight weeks. But he is op- timistic that the fight will bring : victny to pro-civil rights forces! and finally clear the way for 1 "quite a bit of legislation." Thinks Otherwise i Sen. Richard B. Russell (D Ga.), a leader of the Southern bloc, thinks otherwise. He and his Dixie colleagues are ready for any endurance contest re quired. In past years, such talk-a-thons have killed bills intend ed principally for protection of Negroes. If Knowland Is right the reg ular session of Congress could continue beyond Labor Day for the first time since 1951. Meantime, the president's leg islative program seems all but doomed. Even if the House acts on major bills and many are opposed by Eisenhower's own party They will have no chance as long as the Senate is deadlocked. In this category are bills for federal aid to school construc tion, immigration law revisions, "clean" elections, expanding coverage of the national mini mum wage law, postal rate in creases, and measures to over turn Supreme Court decisions on subversives and exposing FBI files to public view. 'Oklahoma' Scheduled For Showing Here "Oklahoma," the film version : of the successful Broadway musical comedy, will open at I theh Craterian theater here Thursday, according to Robert ' Corbin, Oregon-California thea- j ters manager. I He said Medford is one of the first of the nation's smaller j communities to see the film, ' which will be presented here i at popular prices, following its earlier roadshow run. Chicago Firemen Seek Cause of Explosion Chicago HP) Fire depart ment inspectors and company officials poked throuEh the char red sections of a Glidden com pany plant Saturday to estimate damace in an explosion that rip ped off the roof and hospitali zed one worker. The four-story soybean pro cessing plant exploded about midnight Friday night into what cne witness called a ''huge ball of flame." A 5-11 alarm, the ! city's largest, was turned in. ' However, firemen reported they had the blaze under control in about 80 minutes. j bomb's hydrogen fusion re action. Neutrons of much less energy are the subnuclear particles which trigger self-sustaining fis sion chain reactions which make possible both A-bombs for war and atomic power plants for peace. A pure H-bomb would be a clean weapon because its fusion reaction generates no radioac tive byproducts. AH fission wea pons, on the other hand, are dirty because of the products of fission are radioactively "hot." Bl Arrests Seaman For Ship Attack San Francisco W The Federal Bureau of Investigation Saturday arrested a merchant seaman who is accused of at tacking three of his fellow crew men with an ice pick while the ship was en route from Balti more to San Francisco. H. G. Foster, special agent in charge of the FBI here, said Valentin Alvarez, 57, Brooklyn, N.Y., was seized when his ship, the Kenmar, docked in San Francisco. The assault allegedly took place Friday. Alvarez will be charged and brought before the U. S. com missioner here Monday. He was taken to the San Francisco City prison to await that appearance. Audry Points to Need For Improvement Washington W Sen. Allen J. Ellender said last night the havoc or Hurricane Audrey clearly shows the need for "some improvements in our hurricane warning system" The Louisiana Democrat join ed to a lesser extent criticism of the U.S. weather bureau voiced by his colleague, Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La.). Ellender said in his weekly ra-; dio broadcast over a New Or- j leans station that "generally speaking, the weather bureau did a commendable job" in warning inhabitants of the low- j lying Louisiana coastal areas which took the savage brunt of j the hurricane. I However, he said, "there is some room lor improvement and "better methods of tracking j guif storms must be devised." Workers have recovered 311 I bodies in southwest Louisiana and said that 116 persons still ! are missing - CARNIVAL SHOWING Medford Sheriff'! Posse Grounds American Legion V.F.W. and D.A.V. Dare Devil Motor Drome Riders 15 Biq Rides 15 10 Big Shows 10 Circus Side Show Fun House Kiddie Land Live Ponies Giant and Midgets Dancing Girls Fabulous New 1957 Edition Presenting the Mightest Mo bilization of Super Spectacles, Dynamic Displays and Start ling Sensations Ever Brought Before the Eyes of Man! Follow the Twin Searchlights to the Showgrounds 38 Said Dead From Heat in Mexico Mexicali, Mexico (IP! Tem peratures of 128 degrees and more have caused at least 38 deaths here in the past five days, it was reported Saturday. Health authorities said at least 100 more persons are in hospitals in "critical" condition suffering from insolation. Meanwhile, the weather bureau said there are no signs of a letup in the worst heat wave in the history of this Baja California city located across the border from Calexico, Calif. Most of the deaths have oc cured in the poorer sections of the town, notorious for their lack of medical facilities. The municipal hospital, built more than 20 years ago, is in sufficient to handle "hundreds" of other insolation cases, officials said. Field laborers who, have con centrated here seeking jobs on U.S. farms have created an even more serious problem, and plans are underway to return them to their hometowns. Humphrey Says Steel Increases Are Nonsense Washington OP) Sen. Hu bert H. Humphrey (D-Minn.) said Saturday the steel indus try's argument that higher wages forced the recent $6 a ton steel price increase is "a lot of plain unadulterated nonsense." The said the increases were an invitation to federal price control. During the Olympic games as a test the United Press senat a message around the world in less than 60 seconds. PHONE 2-7710 STARTS TONITE! THE DRAMA OF A WOMAN BETRAYED! WILLIAM OE.BOBAH HOLDENKERR r I muu iimn oiwEi mm faiamouwt nenrtf - PLUS - A i s r Mmi EiTOIUIj tiiinn MISS CORNELL BORCHERS ENDS TONITE! kirk Timon DOUGLAS - PLUS - The PRIVATE WAR of MAJOR BENSON STARTS TONITE! YEAR'S SUPREME THRILL! JEFF MOftffOW FAITH DOMERGUf - PLUS - , ' Sterling HAIDER TKhSirToiwI .Ween BRAY r r: I I, -T Sunday. July 7, 1957 Three Arrested for Aiding in Escape Culver City, Calif. OPl FBI agents Saturday arrested a Cul ver City man and his wife and a 21-year-old woman on suspicion of aiding two 'prisoners to escape from a work party at Ft. Mac Arthur on June 5. Agents identified the suspects as Mr. and Mrs. John Mulvey of Culver City and Mary Ann Wil lis, 21. They were booked in Los Angeles county jail and or dered held for arraignment be fore U.S. Commissioner Theo dore Hocke on Monday. John F. Malone, special agent in charge of the Los Angeles FBI office, said a truck used by Patrick Lindsey Muldrew Jr. and Donald Wayne Gates to es cape from Ft. MacArthur, was found abandoned in Wilmington and the men took a cab to the Mulvey's home. He said the escapees received clothing from the Mulvey's and the prison garb was burned in the backyard. According to Malone, the Mul veys drove Muldrew to the home of Miss Willis where he obtained money and additional clothing. Muldrew was arrested the same day by FBI agents in Culver City and Gates was seized in El Cen tro three days later. Both had been, serving terms for illegally transporting stolen cars across state lines. PRESIDENT RELAXES Gettysburg, Pa. OPi Presi dent Eisenhower relaxed at his farm here Saturday with week end guests who are experts in two of his favorite pastimes golf and bridge. ENJOY GENUINE CHARCOAL BROILED FOODS In the CANDLE ROOM at the Medford Hotel STARTS TODAY! HIS no C KIN' AND XOLUN' THE WOULD WITH LAUGHS! Thm fonniast dfinqun? who vr mod Hm rogue's gallery I Sir jT"tl MARTHA HYER T,W I (PiV'l DARREN McGAVIN S V I V ''lJi MARY WEBSTER CJf Xjj RICHARD BAKALYAN ' Jf mJLOi Cii - PIUS - LOUELLA fTMW Ul 1?,', tffiM f Tl ! () ? if 'J i'XM i H HEDDA PARSONS HOPPER says: MiL r trf; SAYSs "Anthony VO fvT j "An,nonY Perkin iVXfhj Perkins occupy f 1 Vl one reserved U ZKlilffid-NjCV ,f. "' ltar for &Wxf !ftIW Prospect, Dean" uS58 mm -mm'- years" MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN WHY THE FUSS? Milwaukee IW John Schu bert, 48, still can't figure out what everybody's so mad about. Schubert confessed Friday that he robbed the same tavern twice during the past two months. But he said he spent every cent of his loot at the tavern's bar. STARTS FIRST STARRING euMaciuE cJll' GLORIA GRAHAME- SHIRLEY JONES rMT"' - GENE NELSON -CHARL0IIE GREENWOOD W rfvV CP loo 'MS Wm RICHARD RODGERS W-fhA OSCAR HAWMERSTEIN OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Zotolla's Country Club located en Granti Pan Golf Course SERVINO DINNERS DAILY Featuring FINE ITALIAN FOOD and PIZZA Use M-T Classified Ads THURSDAY !- ty TECHNICOLOR QnemaScoPE ARTHUR HORNBLOW, )R, ,-FRED ZINNEMANH r: h SONY IEVIEH M WIUIM IUDWIG . t, VM HGNES Ot MILLC mum noeuctiOM . fen. it fo cwum rtt Continuous From 1:00 p.m. ROLE!