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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1957)
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Ib. 6 for 5-lb. bag 25' 29' 29' 19' 29' 39' GEEK fl Look at this sensational Safeway savings ... on two famous brands. Pork and beans are always a smashing hit with the whole family. They're tops when they are served either hot cr cold. Take home several tins today . . . you'll be mighty glad you did! TASTE TELLS Brand c 3 Reg. lie f fcnT 29 Taste Tells No. VA Tin 239c VAN CAMP Brand Reg. 2 for 29c No. 300 Tins 335 Tide Detergent Napkins GIANT SIZE 69 M-D Brand White 80 Count Pkg. 10 c c Kraft Orange Drink $1 Potato Chips 00 Blue Bell Tri-Pak Carton Free Blue Bell Bomber In Each Carton 59 Prices in this advertisement are effective through July 30 at Safeway m Med ford. We re serve the right to limit quantities. Airman Released By Trial Errors; Refused Haircut Fuchu, Japan HP! Airman 3c Donald Wheeler was ordered released today from, prison be cause of errors in the court martial which convicted him of disobeying orders to get a "white sidewall" haircut. Wheeler, of Cortez, Colo., was sentenced to four months im prisonment at hard labor, fined $200 and reduced in rank for disobeying the order to get a haircut he claimed would make him look like a "shaved jack ass." Col. Charles W. Johnstone, commander of the 6.000th Sup port Wing at the U.S. air sta tion here, issued a statement or dering the airman released from confinement and returned to duty. Cumulative Errors "I have reviewed the court martial case of Airman Donald Wheeler and have found cer tain cumulative errors and pro cedural irregularities in the trial. For these reasons, I have this date disapproved the find ings and sentence of the court." Johnstone said that normally under such circumstances a new trial would be ordered. But he said he had talked with the young airman and "I am con vinced that he has undergone a considerable change of atti tude." "In view of this," Johnstone said, "I do not consider that further trial would serve the cause of justice, the interest of the Air Force or the individual. I have therefore ordered Air man Wheeler released from con finement and returned to duty." Loophole Gives Grounds for Trial Thursday, July 23, 1957 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN London (IPl A loophole in U.S. status of forces agreements leave American servicemen open to trial in foreign courts even if the United States and foreign governments find no grounds for prosecution, two ex perts on international law said today. The warning was sounded at the American Bar Association's annual convention here by R. R. Baxter, assistant professor of law at Harvard University and a former Defense Department attorney, and G. I. A. D. Draper, L,onaon university law lecturer and former judge advocate in the British Army. In many countries, they said. there is nothing to prevent a private citizen from filing crim inal charges against an Ameri can even after the governments involved have agreed there is no case. Theoretically, this could sub ject military personnel on over seas duty to long pre-trial im prisonment in addition to the expense in time and effort of answering unjustified charges. Man Kills Estranged Wife; Shoots Self Denver (IP) A South Den ver man shot and killed his es tranged young wife Wednesday four hours before she was to ap pear in divorce court, and then turned the gun on himself. " Dead was Mrs. Vivian J. Duff, 18. Reported in critical condition at Denver General hospital was Gilbert Duff, 22, a Gates Rubber Co. employee, with two head wounds. Hospital officials said they did not expect him to live. Police said Duff pumped four 25-calibre bullets into his wife as she stood beside the crib of their youngest child, Jeffie, 1, in the couple's apartment at a South Denver rooming house. Two other children, William, 4, and Jackie, 3, were in a nearby bedroom. He then shot himself twice, once in the neck and once in the head. Other residents of the rooming house said the couple had an ar gument Tuesday night about Mrs. Duff's divorce proceedings. Brucker To Inspect American Army Units Washington rn?) Army Sec retary Wilber M. Brucker will fly to Europe Friday for an "ex tensive" inspection of American Army units, it was announced Wednesday. There was no official indica tion whether the Brucher trip is connected with Defense Sec retary Charles E. Wilson's order that the Army slash 50,000 men from its ranks by next January. However, the announcement did say that Brucker will be ac companied by his manpower ex pert, Assistant Army Secretary Hugh M. Milton II. They will return here on Aug. 12. PLAYING IT COOL Hollywood (IB Southern California's current warm spell it was 86 Wednesday didn't bother actress Amanda Blake, the sexy saloon hostess on CBS TV's "Gunsmoke" series. The latest story in the series features her sitting in a frontier-type bathtub filled with cool, cool water. . Back Stairs: No Social Fling For Ike By MERRIMAN SMITH United Press White House Writer Washington (IP) Back stairs at the White House: If some of the society leaders of Newport, R. I., are harboring any notions of possibly snaring the President and Mrs. 'Eisen hower as guests later this sum mer, they can stop dreaming. During the three summers Ei senhower and his wife visited Denver, they attended only one social function per season a reception given by the officers of Lowry Air Force Base where the President has his summer of fices. Furthermore, ranking mem bers of the Eisenhower staff rarely attended social affairs outside their own immediate circle of assocates. It probably will not be much different when and if the Eisen howers start their vacation at Newport. They'll stick rather close to their naval base quar ters, knowing full well that if they accept one invitation to a private affair out in town, the social flood gates will be open. So, if the tiara set of Bailey Beach wants a good look at the President, they'll have to hang around the golf course or watch him when he lands at the airport. Augusta, Ga., offers another good guide to the probable per formance of the first family when and if they take up resi dence in Newport. The Eisen howers have made more than a dozen trips to Augusta and they have yet to accept a social invi tation "out in town." They stay strictly within the confines of the Augusta National Club ex cept on Sundays when they go to church. This sort of behavior is not peculiar to Eisenhower. Most re cent presidents have taken the same attitude. When former President Truman made his many visits to Key West, Fla., he stuck to the naval base ex cept for occasional auto rides. The Lincoln Motor Co. is building a new "bubbletop" lim ousine for the President. Some members of the Gettys burg, Pa., Country Club are re portedly irate about finding some golf cart tire tracks on one of their putting greens. First inclination on the part of some of the members was to blame this severe breach of linksmanship on some of the un couth reporters or photographers following the President. But it just isn't so. There is, however, a most distinguished party who plays the course fre quently and it just could be . . . Speaking of the delightful Gettysburg Country Club, Mrs. John Eisenhower and her three older children are making good use of the club swimming pool in this hot weather. The Presi dent's son, Maj. John Eisenhow er, dutifully stays home on oc casion with the baby of the family, little Mary Jean, while mother takes the other three kids to the rjool. David, the President's grand son, has mastered a rocking chair dive into the pool. The John Eisenhowers have not yet completed getting the rugs and carpets into their house on the President's farm. But the doll and playhouse for the chil dren has wall-to-wall carpeting installed. Reporter Beaten In Mystery Attack Murphysboro, 111. HP! A young, red-haired newspaper re porter, victim of an unmerciful beating, said today he could think of no reason for the "cow ardly attack." Robert McClure, 25, a report er in the Murphysboro bureau of the Southern Illinoisian newspaper of Carbondale, 111, was kicked and beaten into un consciousness on Wednesday shortly after leaving a tavern. He lay along U.S. 51 for three and one-half hours before re covering consciousness and crawling to a farmhouse for aid. Authorities rushed him to Mur physboro hospital where he was placed in an oxygen tent, and later released after treatment. In recent months, McClure has written stories about the sale of liquor to minors, the mysterious tavern beating death of a Sparta, 111., businessman and questionable road and bridge contracts. The liquor-to-minor sale story involved the tavern McClure visited Tuesday night. Howt-ver, the newsman said he and Gene Hines, owner of the tavern, were good friends. McClure said he did not think anyone in the tavern with him that night, was involved. POPSICKLE PRICES HIKED Chicago (IPl Ice cream prices here have become unfrozen after 35 years. Manufacturers said popsicles, ice cream bars and other novelties will cost six cents next month, the first in crease since 1922. Proud Difficult, Graham Declares New York (IPl Billy Graham said Wednesday night that hs has found it "more difficult to bring a proud man to Christ than it is to win a drunkard, an adulterer or a narcotics addict." The evangelist told a Madi son Square Garden audience of 14,500 persons that "the sin of pride" afflicts thousands of Americans today and "we're proud and selfish as a people and as individualis." " T is the sin of all of us," Graham said, "the sin of ego. We have T trouble and it's not related to sight. We don't be lieve the truth, that pride is hateful to God. Yet God says no proud man shall enter the kingdom of heaven. "You don't come to God in pride, but in humility that's the reason I ask you to come forward here to make your de cision' for Christ to show humility." As of Wednesday night, 1,232,100 persons have heard Graham since he began his New York Crusade May 15. The 349 persons who recorded "deci sions for Christ" brought that total to 37,811. RESTFUL TERM AHEAD Baltimore (IP) Harry Le gourd, 57, walked into police court today and asked for a jail term because he was "just plumb beat." Legourd told the court he had looked unsuccessfully for a job for several months and wanted a place to recuperate from his efforts. Magistrate Standley Richardson obliged with a three-month sentence. distinctive flavors of real cheese in one hand new pack "......" :.... l ; 6 &W Vj?f.?SJr Tillamook FAMILY PAK Everyone to his own last Tillamook believes ... and comes up with the brand new Tillamook Family-Pak the whole family will go for... a half-pound of each distinctly flavor, individually wrapped, then packed ai convenient single unit. Remember, this is your favorite, familiar, prize-winning Tillamook . . . only the package is new. We're rushing these I li-b. Tillamook Family-Paks to your grocer as fast as we can. rfWamook mezns real cfeese aged naturally