Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 21, 1957, Image 9

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ARGUE AFTER RECESS Defense attorney Arthur J. Crowley (left) and Prosecutor
William Ritzi, opposing forces at the Confidential trial in Los Angeles, start arguments
all over again after court recessed upon being informed by press of the refutation of-
fered by actress Maureen O'Hara to the alleged movie theater tryst she has been ac
cused of being a party to.
Marjorie Meade Rarely Shows
Emotion During Legal Battle
By VERNON SCOTT
Unllod Pra Hollywood Writer
Hollywood (IP) What sort
of Woman is Jlarjorie Meade,
the little lady charged with
supplying spicy stories of
movieland's heroes and hero
ines to Confidential magazine?
Well-dressed and mild-man
nered shnpsits at the defendant's
table with her husband, Fred
rarely showing emotion as the
legal battle rages around her.
She stands five feet, five
Inches tall, owns a trim figure
and a pair of blue-green eyes.
-
( EATS )
ATHM!y
THIS FRIDAY IS
ffDAY
(SEE THIS NEWSPAPER)
"The initial shock of the
trial and all the people star
ing at me has worn off," she
said during a court recess. "Now
I'm just sort of numb."
Woman-like, she refused to
reveal her age.
Marjorie was born and raised
in New York City where her
father, Charles Tobias, is a
furnishing-home auctioneer. Her
mother is an executive assistant
to Robert Harrison, publisher of
Confidential, who also is Mrs.
Tobias' brother.
"I led a very normal, happy
childhood," Marjorie said. "I
went to public grammar schools
and graduated from the Leonard
School for Girls on 93 rd street.
One summer vacation I worked
as a salesgirl in a department
store."
Though she dreamed of be
coming an actress as a child,
Mrs. Meade turned to journal
ism for two years at Pennsyl
vania State college.
"It was then that I met Fred,"
she recalled fondly.
"He had just returned from
flying 52 missions with the Air
Corps in Europe. He won the
distinguished flying cross and
a lot of other medals. . You
should see them. They're beau
tiful." Mrs. Meade said her current
problems have brought the
couple closer together. "We are
more in love than ever," she
said.
Settle in Apartment
After thtir marriage In 1945
the couple settled down in a
New York apartment. Fred
worked for his father in a fami
ly Chinaware company while
Marjorie took over the role of
The Old Fashioned Girl Saved
"Pin Money" fn A Jar . . .
SAVE
MORE
end they ore particuW about where they
save. Our women patrons enjoy the security of
a strong Association where every account is in
sured up to $10,000 by the Federal Savings and
loan Insurance Corporation. And they like our
big dividends, too.
Why don't you join them seon? I
Current
Dividend
Rate
3V2
housewife.
"We have two wonderful
sons, Bruce 4', and Anthony,
7V2," she said with motherly
pride. "When we lived in Man
hattan I did the shopping and
took the youngsters to the park
to play. We had a maid who
helped out. I was president for
two years of the Child Care
League for Psychologically Dis
turbed Children and helped to
raise money for the cause."
Two years ago the Meades
moved to a Spanish-style, eight
room house in Beverly Hills.
And Marjorie shifted gears from
housewife to career woman for
Hollywood Research, Inc., Con
fidential West Coast listening
post.
Mrs. Meade refuses to discuss
her trial or why she took the
Confidential job except to say
that the trial prevents her from
spending more time with her
children.
"I took a lie-detector test this
week," she concluded. "And it
proved everything I've said is
absolutely true.
"The man who recorded the
test said my heartbeat was faint
and slow and I ought to see a
doctor."
High Pressure Center
Provides Fair Skies
By UNITED PRESS
A high pressure center extend
ing from the Gulf of Mexico
north to Hudson Bay produced
fair skies and near ideal sum
mer weather today over most of
the nation.
Only scattered showers oc
curred during the night, and
precipitation amounts were
light."
A fresh Invasion of cool air
swept the northern Great Lakes
and New England, touching off
showers along the southern shore
of Lake Ontario.
Scattered showers also were
reported over portions of the
mid-Mississippi valley, the west
ern slopes of the Central Rockies
and much of the desert Southwest
cmcrmi
SAVINGS
126 East Main
Medford
(j omtfx "fedaia
p LOAN ASSOC
Since IS01
ATION
"Where You Are
Paid To Save"
Armed Forces to
Get Shots for Flu
Washington OP) The U.S.
Armed forces will begin receiv
ing Asiatic flu vaccine in about
a month, officials said today.
A Defense spokesman said
first priority will go to men ov
erseas, their families and De
fense department civilian em
ployees overseas.
The department has for sev
eral years given a flu shot to
military men. This year, offic
ials said, a so-called monovalent
shot, to combat solely the Asia
tic flu strain, will be given first.
Later the usual polyvalent shot
will be given.
Graham Notes Other
Headlines Than Trial
New York (IP) Billy Gra
ham said Tuesday night that
while large chunks of the Free
World are about to disappear
behind the Iron Curtain, "our
headlines seem mostly taken up
with a scandal trial in Holly
wood."
"There are other headlines
more gravely serious," the ev
angelist told a Madison Square
earden audience of 17.000. "It
looks as though Syria is going
behind the Iron Curtain and In
donesia is heading the same
way."
The major powers are prepar
ing nuclear weapons with mis
sile warheads that are capable
of annihilating whole cities, he
said, and "all the world seems
to be getting ready for a conflict
that could end our western con
cept of a Free World."
This being the case, Graham
continued, Americans should
turn irom sensational frivolous
pursuits and take what oppor
tunity is left to improve their
spiritual situations.
Graham said his New York
crusade had turned out to be
"the longest religious crusade in
modern times." When it closes
Sept. 1, it will have run 16
weeks. Evangelist Billy Sunday
conducted a 10-week campaign
in New York in 1913, but Gra
ham's has already run 14 weeks.
Balloon to Carry
Bomb Leaks Helium
Las Vegas, Nev. HP) A bal
loon designed to carry a nuclear
device has sprung a leak, forc
ing the Atomic Energy commis
sion to call the third postpone
ment of its 13th shot in the
summer test series.
The device, dubbed Doppler,
was to be detonated from the
helium-filled balloon today at
1,500 feet above the Nevada
Proving grounds. Scientists dis
closed Tuesday that the leak re
sulted in the loss of nearly all
of the lighter-than-air gas pump
ed into the plastic balloon.
The AEC said a new shipment
of helium would arrive today
and the test would be held at
5:30 a.m. (PDT) Thursday
weather permitting. Adverse
weather already has caused two
24-hour delays in the detonation
of.the "half nominal" yield de
vice.
Milk Strike in NY
Averted Yesterday
New York HP) The milk
strike in the New York metro
politan area ended early today,
averting the threat of a short
age for 12 million consumers.
Milk from dairy farms began
moving into the area Immedi
ately after both sides reached a
settlement, Harry Uviller, chair
man of the State Mediation
Board, said.
Uviller said the settlement
terms "more or less meet the
union demands."
He said the Dairy Transport
association agreed to give truck
drivers a 70-cent an hour pack
age increase over a three year
period.
Officials of the association
and of Teamsters Local 770 met
Tuesday night and reached the
agreement about 3 a.m. (EDT).
American Students
Board Chinese Train
Otpor, Sino-Soviet Border
BP) Forty-one American stu
dents en route to Peiping from
the Moscow Youth Festival
boarded a Chinese train here
today for the remainder of the
trip to the Chinese Communist
capital.
All of the students were well
and in good spirits as they pre
pared to enter Chinese territory.
The train arrives in Peiping two
days later, passing the Ancient
Wall of Ghengis Khan at this
border of northern Manchuria.
En route the train bearing
the students halted briefly in
Kirov, Sverdlovsk, Novosibirsk
and other Siberian towns where
they were greeted at the plat
form by hundreds of Russian
youngsters offering flowers and
gifts.
Cooks' Conference
Slated For Friday
The annual school cooks -conference
will be held in Klamath
Falls on Friday, August 30.
Lake, Klamath, Jackson and
Josephine counties will take part
in the meeting. The Medford
schools will furnish bus trans
portation for the annual confer
ence. Mrs. Una B. Inch, assistant
school superintendent for Jack
son county, asks all cooks who
wish transportation by bus to
contact her office at SPring
2-4424 to make a reservation.
fill
mm
aMjE -1
mm I
r j mm w v wf
Quick Elastic is the pre
mium quality liquid
starch that mixes easily,
quickly and is . . .
WORTH MORE
BECAUSE IT
DOES MORE
It's concentrated, goes
further . . . penetrates
deeply,
maices
your money
;r .. . penetrates K -i-p
, starches evenly, 4jjMU
noney's worth . . . f ft (Iff)
'JW"H . i -'twill
HAPPY MEMORY
Bayonne, N.J. OP) Joseph
Godski, 38, of Jersey City, ar
rested for disorderly conduct,
was asked about the tattoo on
his arm that said, "in memory
of my wife Helen." "I had that
tattooed the day she divorced
me," he said.
Wednesday. August 21, 1357
MEDFOiD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE
Actress Gail Russell
Found Unconscious
Hollywood HPI Actress
Gail Russell, 32, was found un
conscious Tuesday night beside
a half-finished highball on the
bathroom floor of her home, the
sheriffs office reported.
The actress was taken to the
prison ward of Los Angeles Gen
eneral hospital where she was
booked on a felony warrant
charging failure to appear for
arraignment on drunk driving
charges. She had been scheduled
to appear in court Tuesday on
charges she was intoxicated
when she allegedly drove her
car through the window of a
restaurant last July 4.
Miss Russell, following the ac
cident in which a janitor was
hurt, told a judge she would
"never take another drink."
GALVANIZED
mm ROOFING
271i" WIDE - LAYS 24 INCHES
6 ft. $1.68 7 ft. $1.96
8 ft;. $2.24 lOff. $2.80
12 ft. $3.36
o
Grange Co-Op Supply
CENTRAL POINT - ASHLAND
Phones NO 4-1261, SP 3-4022 or MU 5-4021
USE TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED ADS!
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POSITIVELY 7 HOURS ONLY - FRIDAY, AUGUST 23rd - 10 to 5 P.M.C
World Famous PRECISION 1957 Model BRAND NEW AUTOMATIC
ROUND BOBBIN
SEWING MACHINE
SEWS EVERYTHING WITHOUT ATTACHMENTS
-ALSO STRAIGHT SEWING MACHINE.
Regular $225! Advertised in Leading Publications Everywhere -SAVE $156.05!
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THIS SALE
Will Not Bo Repeated!
Positively Only at Hotrs. Advertised!
EASY TERMS! 'MONEY BACK GUARANTEE! LIFETIME GUARANTEE!
(Your Credit Most Be Established)
ALL WITHOUT ANY ATTACHMENTS! PVT!t?&cSn9t
Expensive Features! Nothing Finer!
SEWS ON BUTTONS. HEMS.
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Darns, Embroiders Sews Forwards and Reverse Over Pins Automatic Bobbin Winder.
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Now $(0 95 0
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Standard Parts Available
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1 DAY ONLY
FRIDAY
AUGUST 23rd
MAC & JACK FURNITURE
2330 NORTH PACIFIC HIGHWAY - MEDFORD, OREGON
If returned darter sale
POSITIVELY 7 HOURS ONLY - FRIDAY, AUGUST 23rd - 10 to 5 P.M.I
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