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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1958)
TWELVE MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE LEGAL NOTICES (Continued) Assessment No. SIS H. H Coleman Lot 2. Block 4. Rogue Valley Estates in the City of Medford, Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record Total Assessment: J25.38 Assessment No. 516 Richard H. & Margaret Alley Lot 3. Block 4. Rogue Valley Estates in the City of Medford. Jackson County, Orrgon. as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record Total Assessment; S25-38 Assessment No. 517 Alley Brothers Company Lot 4. Block 4. Rogue Valley Estates in the City of Medford. Jackson County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $23.38 Assessment No. 51 Robert W. & Loleta Shepnerd Lot 5. Block 4. Rogue Valley Estates in the City of Medford. Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record Total Assessment: S23.38 Assessment No. SI9 E A. 6c Frances Littrell Lot 6. Block 4. Rogue Valley Estates In the City of Medford. Jackson County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment; $25.38 Assessment No. S20 John'. P. Sc Mary A. Moffat Lot 7. Block 4. Rogue Valley Estates in the City of Medford. Jackson County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: 25.38 Assessment No. 521 Robert Boyd Stuart Lot . Block 4, Rogue Valley Estates in the City of Medford. Jackson County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record Total Assessment: $23.38 Assessment No. 522 Raymond Miksche Lot 9. Block 4. Rogue Valley Estates in the City of Medford. Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $23.38 Assessment No. 523 Deane M 8c Margery M. Lambert Lot 10. Block 4. Rogue Vallev Estates in the City of Medford. Jackson County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25 38 AssesMment No. 524 Rogue Valley Countrv Club Lot 11, Block 4. Rogue Valley Estates In the City of Medford. Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 525 Glenn L. & Helen S. Jackson Lot 12, Block 4. Rogue Valley Estates in the City of Medford. Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $23.38 Assessment No. 526 Rogue Valley Country Club All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 322. at pages 316 to 319 inclusive, and Vol ume 327. at page 68. Deed Records of Jackson Countv, Oregon. Total Assessment: $2,219.72 Assessment No. 527 Golf Holding Company AH that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 213. at pases 18 and 19. and in Volume 2K7, at page .'5, Deed Records of Jack son County. Oregon: less those por tions thereof described in deed recorded in Volume 293. at pages 108 and 109. Deed Records of Jack son County. Oregon. Total Assessment: $8,198.63 Assessment No. 528 -Lawrence S. & Dorothy A. Ellis All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 353. at page 143. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 529 J. Edwin & Helen W. Harper AH that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 418. at page 273. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 530 Gain Sc Suzan D. Robinson All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 313. t page 380. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No, 531 Martin L . Jr., & W. Carol Vorheii All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 430. at page 118. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 532 Carroll & Dorothy R. Miller All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 333, at page 83. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 533 Eula E. Jacobs All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 396. at page 194. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Assessment No. 534 H. L. & Jewell E. Mooney All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 292. at pages 468 and 469. Deed Records of Jackson Countv, Oregon. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 535 James S. & Marjorie M. Cummins All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 283. at pages 274 and 273. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 53S Kenneth G. Pryor All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 352. at page 111. Deed Records of Jackson County. Oregon. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 537 Kenneth G. Pryor All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 424. at page 64, Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 538 Ralph & Lulu B. Pierce All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 382. at page 347. Deed Records of Jackson County. Oregon. Total Assessment: S8.390.91 Assessment No. 539 Elmer Moore All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 420. at page 168. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $784.57 Assessment No. 340 Ralph & Lulu B. Pierce All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 382. at page 347. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $341.40 Assessment No. 341 RalDh & Lulu B. Smith AH that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 53. at page 167. Miscellaneous Records of Jackson County. Oregon. Total Assessment: $518.94 Assessment No. 542 Archdiocese of Portland In Oregon The Sacred Heart Church All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 438. at page 47. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $2,785.19 Assessment No. 543 Lester C. & Alta M. Coleman All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 349. at page 494. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. ...., Total Assessment: $460.41 Assessment No. 544 Clvde & Audra E. Keeney AH that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 336. at page 199. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $483.02 Assessment No. 545 Gertrude Stark All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 286. at page 249. Deed Records of Jackson County. Oregon. Total Assessment: $383 50 ' Assessment No. 346 Clifford E. & Viva M. Lewis All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 268. at page 382. Deed Records of Jackson County. Oregon: less those portions thereof described in deed recorded in Volume 283. at page 589. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $570.80 Assessment No. 547 Medford Printing Company All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 281. at page 595. in Volume 283. at page 589 in Volume 311. at page 147. and in Volume 319. at page 424, Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon, j Total Assessment: $835 66 Assessment No. 548 I Mary V. Porter All that real property described in i deed recorded in Volume 268. at ! page 36. Deed Records of Jackson j County, Oregon. Total Assessment: 674.10 Assessment No. 549 Marv V. Porter All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 268. at page 37, Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 550 J. W. Sc Estelle V. Smith All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 289. at page 192. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $48.23 Assessment No. 551 Horace L. Root Al! that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 362. at page 202 Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $190.37 Assessment No. 552 Frank B. & Mildred E. SHva All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 329, at page 351, and in Volume 339. at page 220. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon. Total Assessment: $126.91 Assessment No. 333 Helen M. Mace All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 305. at page 492. Deed Records of Jackson County, Oregon: less those portions thereof described in deed recorded in Volume 375, at page 13 and in Volume 379. at page 353, Deed Rec ords of Jackson County. Oregon. Total Assessment: $583.80 Assessment No. 554 Helen M. Mace Lot 1. Block 1. Park Terrace Subdi vision in the City of Medford, Jack- I son County, Oregon, as shown on tne oiuciai piat mereoz, now oi record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 555 Helen M. Mace Lot 2. Block 1. Park Terrace Subdi vision in the City of Medford, Jack son County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $23.38 Assessment No. 556 Helen M. Mace Lot 3. Block 1. Park Terrace Subdi vision in the City of Medford. Jack son County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 557 Helen M. Mace Lot 4. Block 1. Park Terrace Subdi vision in the City of Medford. Jack son County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 558 Helen M. Mace Lot 5. Block 1. Park Terrace Subdi vision in the City of Medford. Jack son County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Tptal Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 559 Helen M. Mace Lot 1, Block 2. Park Terrace Subdi vision in the City of Medford. Jack son County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 560 Helen M. Mace Lot 2. Block 2. Park Terrace Subdi vision in the City of Medford, Jack son County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 561 William J. & Elizabeth C- Slaten Lot 3. Block 2. Park Terrace Subdi vision in the City of Medford. Jack son County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 562 Helen M. Mace Lot 4. Block 2. Park Terrace Subdi vision in the City of Medford. Jack son County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 563 Melvin Perry & Roberta Jean Scott Lot 5. Block 2. Park Terrace Sub division in the City of Medford. Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 564 Helen M. Mace Lot 6. Block 2. Park Terrarce Sub division in the City of Medford, Jackson County, Oregon, as shown on the offical plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: S25.38 Assessment No. 565 Helen M. Mace Lot 7. Block 2, Park Terrace Sub division in the Cty of Medford, Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 566 . Helen M. Mace Lot 8. Block 2. Park Terrace Sub division in the City of Medford, Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 567 Helen M. Mace Lot 9. Block 2, Park Terrace Sub division in the City of Medford. Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 568 Helen M. Mace ' Lot 10. Block 2. Park Terrace Sub division in the City of Medford. Jackson County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 569 Helen M. Mace Lot 1, Block 3, Park Terrace Sub division in the City of Medford. Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 570 Helen M. Mace Lot 2. Block 3. Park Terrace Sub division in the City of Medford, Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 371 Helen M. Mace Lot 3. Block 3. Park Terrace Sub division in the City of Medford, Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 572 Helen M. Mace Lot 4. Block 3. Park Terrace Sub division in the City of Medford, Jackson County. Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 373 Helen M. Mace Lot 5. Block 3. Park Terrace Sub division in the City of Medford. Jackson County, Oregon, as shown on the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: $25.38 Assessment No. 574 Archie E. & Charlotte M. Nixon All that real property described in deed recorded in Volume 348, Page 413 of Deed Records of Jack son County. Oregon. Total Assessment: $63.46 Assessment No. 575 Sisters of Charity of Providence in Oregon All of Block 8 in Medford Heights Addition to the City of Medford, Jackson County. Oregon, as of the official plat thereof, now of record. Total Assessment: S850.32 Section 6. That the City Recorder of the City of Medford is hereby directed to enter a statement of j said several assessments in the Docket of City Liens of said City ana puonsn a notice mereoi as re quired bv Charter PASSED by the Council and signed by me in open session in authentication of its passage this 2nd day of January. 1958. John W Snider, Mavor. I ATTEST: j D. F. Huson, I Recorder. ! Aporoved by me this 2nd day of January, 1958. John W. Snider, 1 Mayor. Wednesday, January 8, 1958 Portland Owned Ship in Trouble Off Aleutians Portland W The Port land owned ship Columbia Trader, bound for Japan with 9800 tons of barley, limped toward Adak in the Aleutians today after suffering a 20 foot crack in her deck during a Pacific storm. Capt. Birger Jacobsen, Van couver, Wash., master of the ship, radioed West Coast Steamship company that the vessel was "coming along nicely," and was making pro gress. It carries a crew of 38 men. Jacobsen turned the ship around and headed for Adak where it is expected to arrive Saturday afternoon after winds of 75 to 80 miles per hour buffeted it for three days and caused the crack in the deck inside the deckhouse structure. The ship reported the trouble when it was about 800 miles west-southwest of Adak. Worst Seen Past Kit Conyers, executive vice president of the steamship company, said the vessel was reporting almost every hour and indications were that the worst of the storm had pass ed by. The Columbia Trader is a Liberty ship built in Los An geles in 1943. It was purchas ed by the Portland firm three years ago. Jacobsen said he hoped to effect temporary repairs in Adak before continuing on to Kobe, Japan. Plates have been welded across the crack and heavy wire and anchor chains have been rigged from bitts on the bow to bitts near the stern to ease the strain, he reported. Reservation Bill Offered Washington (IP Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore.), Tuesday in troduced a bill calling for federal purchase of the Kla math Indian reservation in Oregon. Tribal members would be paid over a 20-year period with the price to be deter mined by an appraisal. There are some four billion board feet of timber on the reserva tion. The measure calls for a sustained-yield program, Ull man said. Ullmans aid that the bill would assure receipt by the Indians of the fair market value for timber and farm and grazing lands with in the reservation. He said tribal members would be given preference in the sale of non-timbered land through the chance to meet the highest competitive bid. The measure makes provis ion for deeding of several In dian cemeteries to a tribal or ganization for development and maintenance and for des ignation of certain areas as state parks dedicated to the memory of tribal leaders. 'Dolfo' Offers Prize To Viewer By WILLIAM EWALD United Press Correspondent New York (IP) The hors es and singers can start mov ing over. Television shows suspicious signs of embarking on a new cycle the give away for home viewers. The tip-off took place this week when CBS-TV dumped the veteran "Strike It Rich," and launched "Dotto," a day time quiz with emcee Jack Narz. "Dotto," a fairly dreary lit tle number, doles out cash to its studio contestants, but even more significant, it has an "extra" in its half-hour the big prize for the home viewer equipped with a post card and luck. This makes "Dotto" the third network prpgram in recent months to dangle loot in front of all you folks out there in television land. "Dotto" presently is offer ing a trip around the world as its bait for sit-at-homes. The idea is that if your post card is picked, you are then telephoned during the show and asked to identify a mys tery celebrity whose picture is only partly sketched. CYECH MINISTER DIES London (IP) Dr. Hubert Ripka, 62, former Czechoslo vakian minister of foreign trade, died here Tuesday. Ripka, a journalist and schol ar, served as minister of state and deputy foreign minister in the Czech government-in-exile in London during World War II. After the war he be came minister of foreign trade, resigning in 1948 after he charged that Czechoslo vakia had become a police state. Quotes From the News By UNITED PRESS , Chicago Attorney Donald B. Hatmaker after he launched a new political party the "Whig National party": "We need a third party in this country. The Republican and Democratic parties both are lacking fundamental pro grams for public welfare and for solving world problems." Houston, Tex Seaman Kenneth Packer, who survived the capsizing of a huge dredge in Galveston bay, on his belief a faulty conveyor belt contributed to the accident: "That made us top-heavy and we were already low in the water because we had taken on fuel the night before." Harrisburg, Pa. State Sen. George N. Wade, in urging Lt. Gen. James M. Gavin to seek the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate: "I am certain that Pennsylvanians would unite in nomi nating and electing you with your vast experience and in the sincere belief that this Commonwealth . . . would prob ably set aside petty politics to give our nation the voice in the Senate halls that it so desperately needs in these times of great peril." New Orleans A Coast Guard spokesman, on the SOS meisage received from a Cuban freighter 200 miles south of here: "It looks like they're being tossed around out there, and have become pretty excited about it." Washington Missile and Rockets magazine, on its report that Strategic Air Command bombers are carrying out re connaissance missions over the Russian mainland: "This indicates that in the event of an all-out situation that SAC bombers would get through in high enough propor tion to result in a major catastrophe to the Soviet Union." Is That So? There are today, roughly speaking 3,000,444 kinds of creatures in the animal king dom worms, insects, spid ers, fish, birds reptiles and mammals. Of these, only a tiny frac tion are mammalian species, less than 4,000. Yet, this tiny minority less than one-seventh of 1 per cent is the earth's predominant form of life. Many and wonderful are the differences among these 4,000. Some, like the bats, have taken to the air; others like the monkey have taken to the trees; some like the whales have left the land and gone to sea; others like the moles have burrowed under ground. Yet, despite the tremen dous diversity, because they are mammals they have many things in common. First off, as the Latin word mamma implies breast they are all milk-suckling during infancy, although two, the duck-billed platypus and spiny anteater of Australia, are without breasts, the milk simply oozing out of a gen eral area and following the hair roots where the young lap it up. Also, except for this primi tive pair which lay eggs, all mammals bear their babies alive. Some young like the agouti of South America can be weaned the first day and survive; others like the porcu pine may need only a week of the mothrer's care; others like th walrnc mav nnrsp fnr Pthree years until their tusks grow long enough for them to rake up mollusks from the sea floor. All mammals are back boned and have four legs, al though bats and seals are hardly four-footed in 'the or dinary sense of the word; in the former the limbs have developed into wings for flights, in the latter they have become flippers. And as for the hind limbs of the whales, dolphins and porpoises, they no longer emerge from their bodies. In the whale, they are only a pair of small rudemen tary rods buried deep in the body, not even hooked up to the spine. an IfflRffling and earn interest from JairVary I Ttw United Soei Bait W f Offioirf By EUGENE BURNS Ranger-Naturalist All mammals are warm blooded, with a four-chambered heart which pumps blood through a double circulatory system, consisting of arteries, veins and capillaries. Yet the blood temperature among mammals may vary and, in fact within the same individ ual during the year may un dergo a 65-degree change. In hibernation, for example, it may drop dangerously from 100 decrees to near-freezing. Below freezing, 32 degrees f., the animal dies. To help maintain its warm temperature, every mammal has hair ranging from a few stout bristles to very fine and sometimes, expensive fur Even the whale has a few scraggly whiskers. Another mechanism unique to mammals which helps to maintain their temperature is sweat glands, although in some animals like the camel they are exceedinly few to conserve bodily moisture in deserts. Add all these and you have the mammal and in nearly every type, a creature of ex quisite beauty and grandeur of form. (Copyright, 1957. By Eugene Burns) (Released by McClure Newspaper Syndicate) Free: By special arrange ment with the editors of the Encyclopedia Americana, my panel of judges will . award each week to the readers and send me the best true-life na ture adventure, the best na ture observation, or the best question on nature and wild life, a complete 30-volume set of this world-famous reference work in a handsome Seal craft binding. Each week new submissions will be consid ered. Sorry, I simply can't answer your many friendly letters. Please address your letter to: Is That So! oo Med ford Mail Tribune, Box 575, Sausalito, Calif. PLEA AMONG PINES Udine, Italy (IP) A desper ate appeal allegedly from an Italian soldier who claimed he was a prisoner of the Rus sians in Siberia was found to day carved on a tree which arrived at nearby Villasan tina. The message, discovered in a load of fir trees from Russia said: "I have been a prisoner of the Russians in Siberia for 15 years. I am an Alpine soldier. Help me." The signed name appeared to be Giuseppe Pischiasis. 4 Cooked shrimp added to cream of potato soup makes a filling one-dish meal. pen or add to your savings account oa or before January 10 MEDFORD BRANCH UnW ftdtrml tii'n Ciw COUGHING FROM TEAR GAS, Howard Scott and Evelyn Shane, 37, a hostage, come out of Inglewood, Calif., restau rant during pitched battle with police. Scott and fellow bandit suspect, R. L. Haskins, were captured. (International) Grant Woman Gets Extra Time in Gold Sale Fight Portland (IP) Mrs. Gladys! Laycock, the Grant county woman who says she could be a multi-millionaire if the gov ernment would stop interfer ing with her property rights, won additional time in Fed eral Court here Tuesday to carry on her legal battle against a government official. Mrs. Laycock says she has 243,000 tons of gold ore and that she could clean up a profit of $40 million if the government would allow her to sell it on the open market instead of at the statutory price of $35 an ounce. She fought through to the United States Supreme Court in her unsuccessful effort to over turn the Gold Reserve Act of 1934. Nothing daunted, Mrs. Lay cock then brought legal action against Treasury Department regulations which enforce the gold pricing law. It was on this action that U. S. District Judge William C. Mathes Tuesday granted an extension of time to file briefs. Defend ant in the action is Frank J. Kenney, special agent in charge of the Federal secret service in Oregon. Mrs. Laycock's complaint seeks to enjoin Kenney from enforcing the Gold Reserve Act in Oregon. If she were successful, Mrs. Laycock claims, she could market the lawful product of her prop erty in accordance with her property rights just as a farm er markets his wheat. She says she could get S70 an ounce for her gold on the open market and make a tidy prof it. Otherwise, she contends, ' 1 VSeltibei? ecu 3d vfly, These two escaped but 70 million others re main captive behind the Iron Curtain. And these are the people at whom Radio Free Europe beams its daily broadcast. Escape is not its aim. Radio Free Europe penetrates the Iron Curtain to spread 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 Support Radio she can't break even. U. S. Attorney C. E. Luckey asserts Mrs. Laycock has failed to state a cause of ac tion on which injunctive re lief could be granted. Norman Easley, attorney for Mrs. Lay cock contends the regulations of government have "no rea sonable relationship to the price fixing powers." (to Thii Olio offers you a rare combination. First, he 11 show you a Mvings plan that's pmeJ its worth. But he also will show you a record for safety that's truly unique. Since Equitable Savings and Loan was founded in 1890 it has never gone on notice, never reorganized, and never closed its doors on a business day. Savers' funds are invested in first mortgages and government bonds, the safest investments known. Equitable maintains its twn reserve fund, now approximately $5,000,000, which has nevtr been drawn upon and as added protection has the privilege of borrowing millions in time of need through its membership in the Federal Home Loan Bank. Choose the savings plan that really Ktrh with a firm that puts nt limit on the safety of your savings. Ask your Equitable man or send the coupon for all the facts. MB?) Ibwf ttEaev soloed e foefidom Free Europe Send your Truth Dollars lo: CRUSADE for FREEDOM c Local roahnaitor MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Farragut School Has Link With Civil War Chicago OF) Farragut High school here finally can boast a real connection with the Civil War admiral for which it was named. A brass deck tread plate taken from the flagship of David Farragut, the USS Hartford, was presented to school by Lt. H. D. McCahey, enlistment officer at the Chi CffibGB ( k GOING SKIING? I SPORTSWAR I 'fcjT S?f F,RST AID V$S SUPPLIES OJv YELLOW PAGES IQUITABLI BUIIDINO, PORTLAND 4, OREGON Please see that I jet savings plans. Strut AdJrtu r K.F.D. N: Cirjr They had never flown before. But early one morning Zdnek Macfcilner, 19, and Karel Kucera, 20. tied up a Czech guard and wobbled to the safety of West Germany in a stolen plane. "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! Each dollar vou contribute snonsors a Minute or Truth on nacuo Free Lurope. How many minutes will yoi giver cago Navy Recruiting station. The plate, taken from the ship when it was scrapped recently, will be imbedded in the school floor, said Prin cipal William E. McBride. Whole fruit nectars add flavor to gelatin desserts. Try apricot nectar with lemon snow pudding. Consultant JIM METZ 1310 Ridgeway Medford, Oregon Phone SP 2-4294 your Equitably representative 8 . full information about Equitable , . -Znw JW i