The11 Do It Every
M7
VZAH I
BURNED 4 HOLE
IM THE KNEE OF
MY RANfTS. THOUGHT
THE WHOLE SUIT WAS.
SHOT BUT I TOOK
IT TO ONE OF THEM
LOOK HOW THEy
FIXED ITyD
NEVER KNOW
IT
Glen Canyon Dam
Work Shuts River
To Boal Travel
Kanab, Utah. m Con
struction work on the site of
the Glen Canyon Dam, east
of Kanab near the Utah-Arizona
border, has forced the
closing of a long stretch of
the Colorado river to boat
travel.
Running the Colorado from
Hite, Utah, to Lee's Ferry,
Ariz., has long been rated as
one of the most thrilling ad
ventures in the west.
A report from Commission
er of Reclamation W. A. Dex
heimer to Interior Secretary
Fred A. Seaton explained that
work already under way on
the steep cliffs at the dam
ite makes conditions "simply
too dangerous" to permit river
travel.
As a result, signs warning
of the closure have been post
ed at Hite and Lee's Ferry.
There are no places of exit
from the river for boatmen
and their gear between these
points.
Dexheimer said that cables
now cross the river at .water
level to anchor barges being
used by drill crews at the spot
where the 700-foot dam will
begin to rise soon.
Tunnel Started
Other crews are working on
the sides of the cliffs, blasting
and scaling, and rocks falling
from these operations would
be hazardous to boatmen.
Dexheimer said engineers
had hoped to find a feasible
exit for boatmen upstream
irom the dam sije at Warm
Creek or Wahweap Canyon.
However, quicksand forma
tions, rough tertain and the
possibility of flash floods
forced abandonment of this
hope.
Boring of the first diversion
tunnel has already started.
The prime contract for the
main dam is expected to be
let this summer. Engineers
aid that in about two years,
when the diversion tunnels
and coffer dam are complet
ed, the river level may be
high enough so the Wahweap
Canyon exit may be used.
When completed, Glen Can
yon Dam, a major unit of
the Colorado River Storage
Project, will store about 28
million acre feet of water.
The river will be changed into i
a lake extending 186 miles
north-eastward up the main
Qolorado channel and 71
jiiiles up the San Juan river.
--
Ex-Senafor's Wife
Files Divorce Suit
Tacoma (tP) The wife
of former U. S. Sen. Harry
P. Cain Tuesday filed suit
here for divorce, charging
mental cruelty.
Attorneys said Cain, who
has also served as mayor of
Tacoma, accepted the divorce
papers Friday in Miami, Fla.
Cain has been appearing on
a Miami television station for
the past two years as an in
terviewer of celebrities.
Cain and his wife, Marjorie
were married in September,
1934 and have two children.
No specific amounts for sup
port of the children was spell
ed out In Mrs. Cain's com
plaint. 47 YEARS
of tiKcauful practics in the treatment
of rectal, colon and stomach disorders.
NO HOSPITAL OPERATION
fOi INFORMATION, Writ or call for our lr
rfseripriv booklet. Absolutely no obligation.
Practice limited to Proctology
Fhy$lothmrap!stl Ch iropractic Ph ysieiant
2024 N. E. Sandy loulevard
ftiene BE 2-391 3 Portland 12, Oregon
(HEMORRHOIDS)
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Grange Notes
Upper Applegate Grange
A public dinner honoring
St. Valentine's day will be
held in Upper Applegate
Grange hall on Sunday, Feb.
16. Plans for the affair were
made when members of the
Grange Home Economics club
met at the home of the chair
man, Edna Sawyer, Monday,
Jan. 13.
Featured on the menu to
be served during the hours of
1 to 3 p.m., will be roast tur
key, with traditional trim
mings, and cherry pie.
Tentative plans for other
activities for the new year
were also discussed by the
ten members of the club pres
ent. A dessert luncheon was
served by the hostess preced
ing the business session.
Japan will form the theme
for the display table at the
next regular meeting of Up
per Applegate Grange on
Jan. 24, it , was announced,
and members are invited to
bring objects of interest from
that country for exhibit.
Sister Grace Buck will be
hostess to the club at its next
meeting on -Monday, Feb. 10,
entertaining at her home.
Sextuple! Lambs
Born Near Canby
Canby, Ore. (IP) Sex
tuplet lambs were born last
Saturday to a ewe on the
Russel Rutherford farm and
a professor of animal hus
bandry said it was the first
such birth he has heard of in
Oregon.
Two of the six lambs have
died. Dr. B. W. Fox, said he
had not heard of six lambs
being born to a ewe and that
the chance of one having five
lambs was less than one per
10 million births.
Easfy To Make
Make a big hit with a little
girl by making her one of
these party aprons! Easy-to-sew,
jiffy to embroider, decor
ate.
For a little angel or for a
birthday girl! Pattern 7340:
transfer 2 aprons, 8x934
inches. Use straw yarn for
hair.
Send Thirty-five cents
(coins) for this pattern add 5
cents for each pattern for lst
class mailing. Sent to Medford
Mail Tribune, Household Arts
Dept., P. O. Box 168, Old
Chelsea Station, New York,
N. Y. Print plainly NAME,
ADDRESS, PATTERN NUM
BER. Send Twenty-five cents
more for a copy of our Alice
Brooks Needlecraft Catalogue.
Two complete patterns are
printed right in the book . . .
plus a variety of designs that
you will want to order: cro
chet, knitting, embroidery,
huck weaving,, quilts, toys,
dolls.
Jj&M 7340
By Jimmy Hatlo
AT TtYhE DOESN'T SMOKE
HE DOESN'T SMOKE-
HE JUST LIGHTS UP
THE
AH' LAYS 'EM DOWN
TO SAV NOTHING
HOW OUR HOSTESS
WILL BURN WHEN HE
SAyS,TT YJGXT SHOW
IF YOU TURN THE
iLiv-r- :
CUSHION OVER
ft?
Hi
THE FIRE
PRONE SMOKER DO IT
ALL OVER AOAhi J
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Dhawt AHO A HAT TIP
T0B1ULKRUTZ,M.D.
EL.1ZSSETH.N.J. (Cl
Hospital Staff
Donates Funds
To Keep Going
Philadelphia (IP) The na
tion's oldest nursing school
and its hospital were saved
from being closed down re
cently when doctors, nurses,
technicians, office help and
maids contributed a total of
$50,000 to keep it running.
Women's Hospital of Phil
adelphia, which will be 100
years old in four years, is al
most a half million dollars in
debt. The board of managers
was considering merger with
another hospital when the
staff made their offer. The
board was then able to turn
down the merger, which
would have meant the clos
ing of Women's Hospital as a
separate institution.
The hospital was founded
by Dr. Ann Preston in 1861,
two years after the founding
of the first hospital for wom
en, the New York Infirmary
for Women.
Women's Hospital opened
the first nursing school in the
country in 1867.
In those days the hospital
and the school were housed
in a building rented for $300
a year. Sixty-seven patients,
attracted by newspaper ad
vertisements, were treated
the first year. Two Quaker
women acted as chaperones
when surgeons worked in the
operating room.
$200 More Needed
Now the hospital occupies
a million-dollar building in
West Philadelphia. Annual
operating expenses run to
more than a million dollars,
the number of patients ex
ceeds that of the first year by
almost 100 times. A men's
section was added in 1950
to meet American Medical
Association requirements for
resident intern training.
Mark L. Dawson, who. be
came the hospital's first male
administrator i n October,
said the staff's $50,000 ges
ture of loyalty was the only
thing that kept the hospital
alive. He said another $200,
000 will get the hospital on a
stable business basis.
The hospital receives al
most $30,000 dollars annual
ly from the United Fund and
is bound by an agreement
with the fund not to make
an independent plea for-contributions.
However, friends
of the hospital in the neigh
borhood and former patients
from all over the country
have been sending in volun
tary contributions.
Perhaps the historic hos
pital will see its centennial
yet.
Institute Studies
Worker Attitude
Ann Arbor, Mich. OP)
The Institute For Social Re
search at the University of
Michigan has completed a
study in an industrial plant
on the change in attitude of
workers who become com
pany foremen and' union
stewards.
The study concluded that
new foremen became more
anti-union than stewards be
came anti-management.
"Workers who became fore
men had to relinquish their
membership in the union,
while workers who became
stewards did not. New fore-1
men are subject to one main
set of loyalties to manage
ment. When asked to carry
out a markedly new set of
functions, they tend to de
velop negative attitudes to
ward the unions as well as
positive attitudes toward
management.
"New stewards, on the oth
er hand, are subject to over
lapping group membership.
As union leaders, they are
still dependent on manage
ment for their livlihood. As
a result, they tend to become
more favorable to the union,
but they do not turn against
management."
-it mum
-.3 t
KIP
Jayne Mansfield,
Husband Receive
Reception Guests
Dallas, Tex. OP) Jayne
Mansfield and muscleman
Mickey Hargitay, married
Monday in a world-premiere
atmosphere, finally found
peace and quiet at their wed
ding reception, guarded by a
squad of 13 police.
Today they leave for Miami
Beach for a three-day honey
moon. A police sergeant stood at
the door, of the home of
Jayne's mother and step
father, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Peers Tuesday and checked
off reception guests as they
entered from a list that con
tained not only names but tel
ephone numbers.
A plainclothesman stood on
the lawn with a loudspeaker
system, warning back press
ing fans. Eleven other police
men were scattered around
the house in exclusive Uni
versity Park, keeping traffic
moving and looking out for
gangs of teen-agers who might
try to crash the reception by
the back way.
In this law-enforced quiet,
the 24-year-old bride and her
27-year-old former "Mr. Uni
verse" husband received their
guests.
Jayne greeted them with a
firm handshake. Mickey spent
a good deal of his time com
forting Mrs. Peers, who wept
freely.
Toward the end of the re
ception, the crowd outside had
grown to around 300, about
half of them teenagers. After
the reception, Jayne and her
new husband came outside
and signed autographs.
When they first reached the
Peers' home early Tuesday
morning, Hargitay lifted his
bosomy bride in his arms and
carried her across the thresh
old. Negligent Homicide
Charge Faces Man
Albany OPI A charge of
negligent homicide was filed
against Walter Burbank, 23,
Monmouth, Tuesday by Linn
county District Attorney
Courtney Johns in connection
with the death of two persons
in a head-on collision near
here last Sunday.
Killed in the crash were
Frederick Smith, 27, Albany
mechanic, and Robert Har
lan, 25, of Corvallis. The vic
tims were occupants of an
auto struck by a car driven
by Burbank.
Burbank and two passen
gers in his car were recov
ering in hospitals today from
injuries suffered in the col
lision on Highway 20, one
mile east of Albany. Darlene
McGarry, 18, Corvallis, re
ceived a fractured pelvis and
was in "fairly good" condi
tion. The second passenger,
Gerald Spinney, 20, of Kings
Valley, suffered a concussion
and a broken right arm. Bur
bank received a concussion,
fractured jaw and skull and
other injuries.
Auto Mishap Near
Lebanon Kills One
Lebanon (IP) A car
went off Highway 20 near
here late Tuesday and struck
a telephone pole. One young
man was killed and another
was injured.
Robert Scott, 20, Albany, a
passenger In the car, was
killed. Wayne Michele, 19,
Albany, was hospitalized with
internal injuries. His condi
tion was listed as "fair." Po
lice said he was the driver.
Scott is survived by his
widow and three-months-old
daughter, Debra.
It was the third fatal traf
fic accident in Linn county in
three days. Two. men were
killed in a collision Sunday
near Albany.
Metal Trades Union
Secretary Succumbs
Portland (IP) Gerry
Weaver, 52, executive secre
tary of the United- Metal
Trades Association and form
er newspaperman, died Tues
day. He was aviation and
labor editor of the Oregonian
from 1934 until August 1942
when he went with the Trades
Association.
Scappoose Man Given
10 Years in Prison
Portland (IP) Harold
A. Johnson, 39, Scappoose,
Tuesday was sentenced to 10
years in the state prison after
pleading guilty to a reduced
charge of manslaughter in
connection with' the fatal
shooting of Marion Icenogle,
29, Scappoose, last Nov. 9.
Seto, Japan (IP) A Japa
nese company today launched
its own satellite program. It
shipped 10,000 boxes of por
celain savings banks to the
United States confident they
will find a ready market as
soon as the U. S. successfully j
launches its satellite. The
banks are shaped like the
U.S. Sputnik. 1
Easy-See Diagram
R ii '
i .:. f i aica
Vlli ft 10-20
There's a feeling of Spring
in the air when you arrive in
this pretty princess with fit-ted-and-flaring
lines. A dream
to wear in one of the lively,
new silk prints, solid cottons.
Sew-easy with our Printed
Pattern.
Printed Pattern 9115:
Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16,
18, 20. Size 16 takes 4
yards 39-inch.
Printed directions on each
pattern part. Easier, accurate.
Send FIFTY CENTS (coins)
for this pattern add 5 cents
for each pattern for lst-class
mailing. Send to Marian Mar
tin, care of Medford Mail
Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232
West 18th St., New York 11,
N.Y. Print plainly NAME,
ADDRESS, with SIZE and
STYLE NUMBER.
Race Relations
Said Worsened
Tuskegee, Ala. (IP) Tuskee-
gee institute reported today
that relations between Whites
and Negroes in Southern
states worsened in 1957, a year
which saw passage of a fed
eral civil rights bill and the
use of troops to enforce inte
gration of a school.
The annual report on race
relations issued by the presi
dent of the famed Negro
school, L. H. Foster, said both
sides of the controversy be
came "more resolute" in the
eventful year and made urg
ent the need for "realistic and
constructive" efforts to avoid
more serious trouble.
"Obstruction of federal laws
which guarantee constitu
tional rights to the individual
was extremely vigorous in
numbers of states and cities,"
the report said.
"The growth in numbers
and the increased activity
o f voluntary segregationist
groups reduced the security of
person and property in many
Southern communities.
"Despite this trend toward
lawlessness, the number of in
cidents of physical violence
remained relatively low.
Those occurrances were con
demned by numerous persons,
regardless of their own views
on desegregation." .
Oregon's Share of
Debt $673 Million
Portland (IP) Oregon
Tax Research, statewide tax
payer organization, said today
Oregon' taxpayers' share of
the S74 billion national
budget would be $673 mil
lion.
This represents about $387
for each man, woman and
child in the state, OTR said.
OLD BEFORE
YOUR TIME?
New Hope for the Tind-Ovt
The REAL cause of that
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moD"1 Buppiy
WESTERN THRIFT
3() N(Jrth Centra,
Order of Arrow
Meets in Yreka
The Mazama Lodge of the
Order of The Arrow, honor
ary camping society of the
Boy Scouts of America, held
its annual meeting last Satur
day at Yreka.
Thirty five members from
Josephine, Jackson, and Sis
kiyou counties attended the
meeting at the Yreka Union
High school. The morning and
part of the afternoon were
spent in workshops led by
William Roy Clary, of Grants
Pass, John Grubb, of Ashland,
and Larry Hammond, of Med
ford. Clary is the lodge ad
visor, and Grubb is the new
ly appointed assistant lodge
advisor.
In the afternoon, the annual
business meeting was held,
and members heard a report
from Lodge Chief Dick Clark
on his attendance at a recent
meeting in Lawrence, Kan.,
where he and 25 other Order
of the Arrow leaders formed
plans for the National meet
ing in August.
Officers for 1958 were
elected. Eagle Scout Gene
Schmidt of Grants Pass was
chosen as lodge chief, Eagle
Scout Kelly Somers of Med
ford was elected lode vire
chief, and Eagle Scout Ree
Keents of Weed secretary.
At the banquet at the Yre
ka Inn, new Lodge officers
were installed by outgoing
Lodge Chief Dick Clark, and
members were entertained hv
Lauren Paine, well-known au
thor and Indian lore expert,
who told some of the exneri.
ences of his youth while liv
ing with the Navaho Indians
of Arizona.
Those who hunt with a
bow may now have "shotgun
arrows." The tip contains a
number of steel darts that out
run the arrow and form a typ
ical shotgun pattern.
Daily's U-Drive
Medford Airport
These two escaped but 70 million others re
main captive behind the Iron Curtain. And thest
are the people at whom Radio Free Europe beams
its daily broadcasts. 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 Free Europe Send your Truth
Wednesday, January IS, 1958
DOGS COSTLY
Hartford, Conn. (TP)
Dogs cost Connecticut $10,000
annually. The state pays out
that much to property owners
for damage done by dogs
whose owners can not be
found.
PRIDE
Eta
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MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREE
Multnomah Attorneys
Elect Gray President
Portland (IP) Wendell
Gray, local attorney, Tuesday
night was elected president of
the Multnomah Bar Associa
tion succeeding Donald S.
Richardson.
of the F
its1 r
They had nvr flown before. But early one morning Zdnefc
Machilner, 19, and Karel Kucera, 20. tied up a Czech guard aai
wobbled to the safety of West Germany in a stn'-n ml.
"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 I
Each dollar you contribute
of Truth on Radio Free Europe. How
many minutes will you give?
Dollars to: CRUSADE
for
FREEDOM
ce Local fomailr
ISLAND. ANYONE?
Boston (IP) The federal
government is selling three
Boston Harbor islands com
plete with forts. They are
Lovell's George's and Pad
dock islands. There are no
price tags. :
AM LY
iwJLt I
Phone SP 2-6185
sponsors a Minute
i