Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 07, 1957, Image 17

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    e
52nd Year
nT-A IT
Price 10c
Tribune
United Press full Leased Wire
United Pn
Full Leased Win
2nd SECTION.
MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1957
Pages 1-8
Holmes Slates Trip
Throughout Oregon
Salem Gov. Robert Holmes
will make a flying tour of Ore
gon starting Sept. 3 to help sti
mulate area interests and efforts
for industrial and business ex
pansion, his office announced
Tuesday.
Included on the tour is Med
ford. Klamath Falls, and other
iouthern Oregon cities. The
barnstorming tour has been
planned as an idea-trading pro
gram between local groups and
the new department of planning
and development.
Julius Jensen, development di
rector; Harry Schenk, deputy di
rector of development; Ivan
Bloch, Portland industrial con
sultant for the department, and
Tom Wright, the governor's ad
ministrative assistant for press
relations, will accompany Gov
ernor Holmes on the tour.
Industrial, business, labor and
civic leaders are being invited
to participate in the develop
ment meetings to find out the
best way areas can accelerate
their industrial and business
growth, and how the new de
partment can best assist them.
Wilson Seen Forced
To Back Budget Plan
Washington KPl President
Eisenhower appeared Tuesday to
have forced Defense Secretary
Charles E. Wilson to line up,
publicly at least, behind a con
troversial budget reform plan
that Wilson opposes:
That was the interpretation
put by usually well infoVmed
qusrters on Wilson's carefully
worded statement Monday night
that he had "no difference" with
Eisenhower on the plan. 1
T"hese quarters said (he De
fense Department has an "over
whelming lack of enthusiasm"
for the plan, under which Con
gress would appropriate money
for federal agencies strictly on a
year to year basis. Congress now
provides sums for some depart
ments, like Defense, for years in
advance toiay for items such as
ships and planes that take seve
ral years to build.
z'cTt-'":-" ' ' I
RESTIX8 ON BEACH south of San Francisco, this 26-foot
motorboat carried two couples whose bodies are being
sought by Coast Guard. Between them they leave seven
children. Cabin of boat was smashed. (International)
Three Persons Injured in
Traffic Accidents Monday
W. Herb Gregory, 43, Rogue
River,' was reported in fair con
dition Tuesday at Josephine Gen
eral hospital in Grants Pass
where he was taken late Monday
morning for treatment of in
juries suffered in a log truck ac
cident. Sheriff's deputies who investi
gated said Gregory received
broken bones and a possible back
injury when a loaded log truck
operated by William David
Shaw, Rogue River, in which he
was a passenger, rolled over a
shoulder near McKee bridge.
Shaw told deputies the truck
rolled over atfer the steering
gear failed' to function properly.
It is owned by . Ben W o m p,
Grants Pass.
Three-Car Accident
Mrs. Dorothy Sinclair, 44,
2902 North Pacific highway, was
treated at Sacred Heart hospital
Monday following a three - car
accident on Highway 99 at How
ard ave., according to city police.
She suffered abrasions and
bruises when a parked car in
which she was a passenger was
struck following an accident in
volving sedans' driven by Ada
Ely Casteillo, 133 North Ivy st.,
and Bobby Jean Williamson,
transient, Officers reported. Ada
Casteillo was cited for improper
lane usage and Williamson for
improper passing.
Also treated for injuries Mon
day afternoon was Carlotta
Esther Smith, 69, of 10 Newtown
st., who was injured in a collision
between a sedan operated by
Patsy Elinor Marble, 215 Laurel
St., and a station wagon driven
by Wallace Ardell West, Phoe
nix, city police said.
Mrs. Smith, a passenger in
Patsy Marble's car, was treated
by a local physician. Patsy
Marble was cited for failure to
yield right of way, according to
police.
Inquest in Death of
City Clerk Resumes
Homedale, Ida. HP! A cor
oner's inquest in the death of
Homedale City Clerk, Bertha
Ehrhart has resumed here
with Owyhee and Canyon coun
ty Sheriffs Jim Tucker and Dale
Haile expected to be the lead
off witnesses.
Owyhee County Prosecutor
Slyvan Jeppesen said he was
hopeful the inquest would end
today and said only one other
witness besides the two sheriffs
was scheduled to testify.
Mrs. Ehrhart's body was found
floating in the Snake river near
Adrian, Ore., July 29, just three
weeks after she disappeared
from Homedale under myster
ious circumstances.
Dairy Farmer Runs TV
Winnings To $63,500
New York (IP) Dairy farmer
Harold Craig, 26, knocked off
two opponents and ran his win
nings up to $63,500 on the
"Twenty-One" television quiz
Monday night.
The bachelor from Grainville,
N. Y., bested Brian Hamilton, a
New York translator, and H.
Richard McGrath, a Lafayette,
Ind., advertising man to add
$19,500 to-the $44,000 he had
won previously. ;
You'll Soon Be Able To Smell Various
Ads, Sections in Daily Newspapers
By DOC QUIGG
United Press Correspondent
New York (W The gladsome
word wafts eastward from Cali
fornia that before long you'll be
able to smell your newspaper as
well as see and feel it. Fragrant
reading may soon brighten our
lives. That phrase " a nose for
news" may come suddenly alive.
The report from the Printing
Industries Association, Inc., in
Los Angeles alleges that new dis
coveries in the use of fragrance
in printing will make it possible
to put more than 120 aromas
on paper.
The report mentions such deli
cate fragrances as fried chicken
and pizza as possible appetite
stimulants in your family news
paper. Among other nose-prick-lers
available (and fit to print)
are country smoke, fresh-cut
grass, blackstrap molasses, but
terscotch, pickles, apple pie," cof
fee, tea, and chocolate.
Skelfons Arrive
From European Trip
Hollywood (IP) Red Skelton,
tired, and grateful to be home,
arrived Tuesday with his ailing
son Richard, and wife and
daughter after a controversial
five-week tour of Europe.
The -weary comedian said,
"I'm. not bitter about English
press criticism. I wouldn't judge
a nation by one idiot member of
the press who writes under the
name of Simgn Ward. But it was
the most unfriendly country we
visited."
The Skelton family posed for
photographers for 15 minutes
before disembarking from the
plane.
A spokesman said
any newspaper, trade publica
tion, or consumer magazine
could have its own identifiable
odor and he obligingly suggest
ed pine or woodsmoke for men's
magazines, perfume for fashion
publications, and new-mown hay
for farm journals.
Well, now, wait a minute. Let's
be careful. Who wants to open a
paper at the breakfast table and
suddenly be struck full in the
nostrils by the combined whif
fery of toothpaste, paint, corned
beef and cabbage, and possibly
the odor of stale cigar smoke
from a column devoted to poli
tics and a sweaty smell from the
sports sections?
That's what could happen if
the family newspaper showed a
bit of imagination in livening
up the smell of its advertise
ments and news.
We could be in danger of be
coming sort of a captive audi
ence when we take up the paper.
You can always avert your eyes
from any news column or ad
vertisement if you want to. But
you can hardly avert your nose
from an odor. The solution might
be to have the smells section
alized and localized.
Thus, the travel section could
be redolent of the sea, of soft
flowers of the tropics, of leather
valises. The food pages could
reek groceries, the perfume ads
their own sharp stinks, and the
cigarette ads an odor so mild
and filtered you couldn't smell
anything at all.
This whole thing Is something
that television just can't match,
although in all candor it must
be conceded that some areas of
TV have had a scent all their
own for some time.
There could be some complica
tions. For instance, in wrapping
that soon a bit of newspaper about your
lunch to take to work, it would
be wise not to get a garlic or
limburger ad next to your angel
food cake. And there is no telling
how irate -countless canary birds
might get to find their cage
bottoms carpeting with, say, per
fume ads exuding powerful es
sence of "Whoops!" or "Mid
summer Madness No. 5."
There will be, I submit, possi
bilities for public service la
smells. The stock market pages,
for instance. They could have
a smelling salts section for any
one who may feel suddenly faint.
H ONLY lOi A ROLL I
Is
FORGETFUL
HARRY
FORGOT!
He Could Have
Borrowed for His
VACATION LOAN
Repay In Convenient Monthly Payments
LOANS FROM
525.00 to 52,500.00
AUTOMOBILE FURNITURE SALARY
COMMERCIAL
INDUSTRIAL
FINANCE CORP.
Phone SP 3-4564 Sparta Bldg. Medford
Civil Rights Bill Held
'Unacceptable' To fee
Washington (W Repub
l'.Tan congressional leaders Tues
day pronounced the Senate's
civil rights bill "unacceptable"
to President Eisenhower. They
said they will press for its am
endment in a House-Senate conference.
(look)-
J
struggling with a refrigerator
you have to defrost!
at the all-new II cu. ft.
urn
WITH AUTOMATIC DEFROSTING
Food stays firmly frozen.
Full-width 75-lb. freezer
. . . keeps ice cream hardl
Color styled interior.
4 deep door shelves and
1-lb. Butter Bin)
2 Vegetable Crispers hi
humidity for fresh flavor!
Tall Bbttle Zone room for
pitchers, large fowl,
melon!
Lifetime porcelain finish
interior cleans easily.
Only $333 a Week
This figure includes finance charges and
insurance. No hidden charges.
Liberal Trade-In on Your Old
Refrigerator.
ASK ABOUT THE HOUSE WITH A HUNDRED ROOMS
"it Costs No More To Buy The Best"
ppliance, Inc.
"Jackson County's Exclusive Hotpoint Dealer"
127 North Central Across from Penney's Medford PJione SP 3-5306
137 E. Main Ashland -Phone MU 9-5831
City A
SALE
STS
FOR 1MB
Sale at Andy's - Phone SP 2-2970 Today
rJl7 7777 J
Convenient
Terms
' ' Si'SS' aB"Si sss
ii fllC" f A complete dennerware service for 8 people in Nationony Adverid''j li f fl Ji
iJ ' ' P Melamine and genuine COPOLYMER as life-like as china as easy &: ' fl If . fj'i'l h
to clean os glassware chip-proof and scratch proof and guaranteed fi52l ' If ':-'S( '"' ' sHiffli'V'fl
r ' i - tjf for 5 years. You get two place-settings of each color Gold, Turquoise, r II f if j iff jml I
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ra v"" JL"U STAINLESS Tableware. Youll love the spartan beauty of this modern Princess i9f ifF'-S!"" iivViJ I
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mWr2zk ' SafcK Fork. - u-
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3 Ways to Buy..
Your Friendly
Credit Jeweler
15 NORTH CENTRAL SP 2-2970
V'WJk Green Stamps
COME irj-TELEPiionn
l
ANDY'S, IS N. Central, Medford, Ore. ,
rtos send yoar comptfft 95 Pise ssrvfe tor 9 psople
MELAMINE ond COPOLYMER unbreakable dinnerware end
stainleu tableware at tfa sale price of 129.95. 1 will pay 11.00
a week entil paid fee.
PRINT NAME-
PMNT ADDRESS-
Oty
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-State-
Employed
How
-Long