Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 03, 1958, Image 9

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    Local and
Meeting Jackson county
4-H Leader! association will
meet Tuesday, Feb. 4, at 8
p.m. in the county courthouse
No Fire Found Firemen,
ummoned to investigate an
odor of smoke in the alley
at the rear of 142 North Front
St., said they found no fire in
checkine all occuDancies at
the address.
Special Meeting The Ba
kers Local 404 will hold
special meeting tomorrow
starting at 6:30 p.m. in the
Labor Temple, 24 Vi Grape
iki according to Secretary
JeSs Wagner.
Pear Blossom Meeting The
Pear Blossom Festival com
mittee will meet at 7 am
Tuesday at Henry's Drive-In
It was announced today. Un
der discussion will be the
method for selecting the king
and queen of the festival
which this year will be held
on April 12.
News About
Servicemen
ATTENDS SCHOOL
Memphis. Tenn. Alfred
T. Bailey, airman apprentice
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Al
fred E. Bailey of route 1, box
22, Gold Hill, is attending the
aviation machinist's mate
school at the Naval air tech
nical training center, Mem
phis, Tenn.
During the 14-week course.
students are instructed in the
repair and maintenance of
both recriprocating id jet
engines, and trained in the
basic electric and fuel sys
tems of aircraft.
ON TRANSPORT
Long Beach, Calif. Eugene
D. Henshaw, seaman, USN,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lauren
L. Henshaw of B.F. Star
route, box 192, Eagle Point,
left Long Beach, Calif., Jan
21, aboard the amphibious at
tack transport USS Cavalier
en route to the Far East for
' duty.
During the cruise the Cava
lier will visit Yokosuka, Ja
pan, wher she will take on
fresh provisions and then
steam to Okinawa to on-load
1,500 troops to participate in
a full scale amphibious train
ing exercise on the Philippine
Islands. Following the maneu
vers, she will visit Philippine
ports and take part in other
amphibious training.
KODGEN GRADUATES
San Diego, Calif. Winfred
E. Hodgen, son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. J. Hodgen, of 1150
S. Tolman creek rd., Ashland,
graduated from recruit train
ing Jan. 24 at Naval Training
center, San Diego, Calif.
LAMB GRADUATES
San Diego, Calif. William
C. Lamb Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. F. L. Spencer of route
' 2, box 103B, Jacksonville,
graduated from recruit train
ing Jan. 24 at the Naval train
ing center, San Diego, Calif.
The graduation exercises,
marking the end of nine
weeks of "boot camp." in
cluded a full dres parade and
review before military oih-
t j -. it- j- : . y :
ci a is ana civilian cugnuaries
ATTENDS SCHOOL
Memphis, Tenn. Richard
K. Rainey, airman apprentice,
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs
George E. Rainey of Central
Point, is attending the avia
tion machinist's mate school
at the Naval air technical
training center, Memphis,
Tenn.
During the 14-week course,
students are instructed in the
repair and maintenance of
both recriprocating and jet
engines, and trained in the
basic electric and fuel sys
tems of aircraft.
Korean
Orphans
Reach Portland
Portland IW Eleven
more Korean orphans arrived
here by plane Sunday and
were greeted by happy par
ents who are adopting them.
The new arrivals were part
of a group of 110 who left
Seoul for the United States
last week. Ninty-nine of them
were accompanied by Cres
well farmer Harry Holt who
landed in San Francisco with
97 last Friday. One died and
another was left in Honolulu
because of illness.
Sunday's arrivals were in
excellent health.
Special
Evangelistic Services
February 1st thru 7th-7:45 p.m.
Brigadier W. Dewsbury
of New York City. New York
THE SALVATION ARMY
4th & Bartlett Streets-
Personal
Hazards Found Five or
ders for correction of hazard
ous conditions were issued
Saturday by City Fire Mar
shal Truman Nelson. He in
spected six business occupan
cies and one office building.
Veterans lo Meet The
Veterans Allied council will
hold a meeting at 8 p.m. to
day in the VFW hall at 42
North Front St., according to
Secretary Pat Graham. Items
of importance to all veterans
will be discussed, Graham
said. Election of officers for
the ensuing year will be held,
also.
Dance Planned A dinner
dance is planned for the
Southern Oregon- Salesman's
club for the installation of
new officers at the February
meeting a spokesman said to
day. During the Jan. 28 meet
ing at the Medford hotel Milt
Evans was elected president.
Bill Sweet, vice president, Art
Wood, secretary, and Bob
Gustafson, treasurer. Th or
ganization was organized in
the spring of 1955 to promote
closer relations between mer
chants and salesmen.
Obituaries
MRS. IONE NICKERSON
Mrs. lone Cassey Nicker-
son, 60, died suddenly in her
rural residence near Ashland
early this morning. She was
born Oct. 21, 1887 in Lewis
ton, Ida. Services are pend
ing at Litwiller Montainview
chapel in Ashland.
WILLIAM LINDSAY
' Funeral services for Wil
liam Crawford Lindsay, 88,
of 43 Church st., Ashland,
who died of gunshot wounds
in his home Saturday, will
be held at 3 pjn. Thursday in
the Litwiller Mountainview
chapel. Burial will be in the
Ashland cemetery. The Rev.
B. J. Holland will officiate.
Lindsay came to Ashland
in 1887 after living in Cali
fornia for awhile. He lived in
the Ashland area for approx
imately 75 years raising stock
and conducting mining opera
tions. He was a member of
the Bellview Grange in Ash
land, the Ashland Odd Fel
lows lodge, and the Presby
terian church of Ashland. His
second wife, Ada, died about
four years ago. His first wile
Joan died in 1941.
HAROLD E. NEWTON
Harold Ernest Newton, 55,
Redwood City, Calif., died in
San Mateo, Calif., recently.
Mr. Newton was born Aug.
13, 1902, in Chico, Calif. He
was a member oi xne Asn-
land Masonic and Ashland
Elks lodges.
He is survived by a son,
Duane Newton, North High
land, Calif., a sister Gwendo
lyn Rulon, Los Angeles,
Calif., and his father. M. E.
Newton, Medford.
Funeral services will be
held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday
in the Litwiller Mountain-
view chapel. Burial will be
in the Rest Haven mausoleum
in Ashland.
Count And Star
To Marry Soon
Los Angeles (IP! Actress
Linda Christian and Brazilian
Count Francesco Pignatri
have confirmed that they
would marry as soon as his
divorce becomes final at the
end of February.
The couple made the an
nouncement Friday night
when they arrived here on a
United Airlines' flight from
Honolulu. Their whirlwind
world tour resumes Tuesday
when they fly to Mexico City.
Miss Christian, who was
divorced from actor Tyrone
Power in 1956, said she and
her fiance could not set a def
inite date for their marriage
until the divorce becomes fi
nal. Sun Valley Fails
To Impress Star
Sun Valley, Ida. HP)
When movie star Fernando
Lamas arrived here recently
for the filming of a TV pro
duction, Actress Lucille Ball
took him to a window, point
ed to the panorama of snow
covered slopes and said:
"Isn't it magnificent?"
Replied Lamas: "Yes, if
you like white."
-Medford
Mrs. MarySlagle
Longtime Citizen,
Dies In Hospital
Mrs. Mary Deborah Slagle
81, 103 South Holly st., Med
ford, and a resident of this
area for many years, died in
a local hospital Sunday.
Mrs. Slagle was born in
Lynnville, Iowa on June 26
1876. She came to the Med
ford area with her family, the
Charles Nicholsons, in 1891
Graduating from high school
about 1893, she taught one
year at Butte Falls, then
clerked at the Kampner and
Buel drygoods store.
Following her marriage to
Mr. Slagle, she moved to Coos
Bay where the couple lived
for several years. Later they
moved to North Hollywood
Calif., where her husband
died about five years ago
Upon his death Mrs. Slagle
returned to Medford.
Survivors include one
sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Leever.
Medford, Mrs. Angus L. Bow-
mer, Ashland; and Mrs
Frances Houston, Applegate
nieces, a nephew, Russell
Leever, Casper, Wyo. and sev
eral other nieces and nephews
Services will be held in
Southern California at a later
date. Perl Funeral home is in
charge of local arrangements
Burial will be in Forest Lawn
cemetery, Glendale, Calif.
Jossy Resigns
As Fair Official
Earle Jossy, county exten
sion agent, has submitted to
the county court his resigna
tion as secretary of the Jack
son county fair board, it was
reported today.
Jossy stated in his letter the
resignation was "due to in
creased pressure from my
work ... I feel I can no
longer devote the time neces
sary to the best interest of
the fair work." His resigna
tion will become effective
March 1.
The county court accepted
his resignation with regret
and reported that Jossy has
consented to continue keeping
the records of the fair associa
tion until June 30, the end of
the fiscal year.
City Jail Filled
Over Week End
Medford city jail space was
at a premium during the past
week end, according to police,
who said 24 men were lodged
in jail between Friday eve
ning and Sunday evening.
The largest number in jail
at any one time was 23, police
said. Twenty were still in jail
on Monday morning when
municipal court was held,
they added.
Officers said they thought
the number was a record for
recent years, passing the 14
lodged over a week end in
March, 1957. One arrest was
made on a citizen's complaint
for a traffic violation, one ar
rest was for drinking in pub
lic, two for minors in posses
sion of intoxicating liquors,
and 19 arrests for drunk in
public. Police said the jail had
one prisoner when the rush
started Friday evening.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UP) Cattle 1500. Ca
nadian fed steers 26.25; choice
steers 25.25;-25.50; good 24-24.75;
standard 22-23.50; utility 17.50-21;
Eood-mostly choice fed heifers
23.50; utility-commercial cows 16
19.50; canners-cutters mostly 12.50
14.50; utility bulls 19.50-21.
Calves 150 Choice vealers 28-30;
good 25-28; cull-utility 12.50-17.
Hogs 1200. Sorted U.S. 1 and 2
butchers 22; mixed grades 21-21.50;
sows 18-19.50.
Sheep 1500. Choice 85-107 lb.
shorn 'ambs No. 2 to fall shorn
pelt 22.75-23; mostly good shorn
lambs 22.25; cull-good ewes 4-9.50.
Portland Produce ,
Portland (UP) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large 42-44c doz.;
A large 38-40c: AA medium 39-41c;
A medium 37-40c; carton, l-3c addi
tional.
Butter To retailers: AA and A
grade prints, 68-69c lb.; carton,
lc a pound nigner, a prints, bo-bbc.
Cheese Medium cured To re
tailers: A grade Cheddar, single
daisies. 45 "i -52c; 5-lb. loaves. 51 1i
57c; processed American cheese, 5-
lb. loaf, 411.2-420.
Farm Market
Some wholesalers today quoted
No. 1A Deschutes Russet potatoes
lor as low as 2.o a hundredweight
while others quoted them within
a 3.50-3.75 range; best three-layer
lugs of Mexican tomatoes sold at
mostly 8.00; extra fancy Sumner
hothouse rhubarb was mostly 3.00
lor lo pounds.
Poultry, Rabbits
JLave Chickens Quoted to erow-
ers as ranch No. 1 qualitv frvers,
234-4 lbs., 22c lb.; light hens. 10-llc
lb., ranch; heavy hens, 5 lbs. up,
nominally 18-19c lb.; old roosters.
7-8c lb.
Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade
dressed to retailers. Fryers, whole
drawn, 41-44c lb., cut up, 46-49c;
hens, light type, cut up, 34-36c;
heavy type, whole drawn. 40-45c lb.
Rabbits (Averaee to growers.
fo b. killing plants! live white. 3'i-
43; lbs., f.o.b Portland. 22-25C lb.;
colored pelts. 4c under. Fresh killed
fryers to retailers, 59-61c lb., cut
up, 62-65c lb.
Portland Hay, Grain
Portland Wholesale Hay Prices
New crop. No. 2 green alfalfa baled
f.o.b. Portland. S24-25 a ton.
Wholesale Prices as reported by
the USDA market news service:
Wheat. No. 2 soft white. S76 ton;
No. 2 white oats, 38-lb. West Coast
delivery, S49.50 ton; No. 2 Valley
v.hite oats, S48 ton; soybean meal,
S74 ton, f.o.b. Portland; barlev No.
2 West Coast delivery, S47.50" ton;
standard mill run. prompt delivery,
nominally S39-40 ton f ob. Port
land: No. 2 yellow com. Eastern
shipment f .o.b. Portland,. $53-53.50.
Grauman's Theater Closes
Ending Glamourous Chapter
By VERNON SCOTT
United Press Hollywood Writ
Hollywood (IP) Grau-
man's Chinese theater, a film
town landmark for the past
36 years, shuttered its doors
this week, bringing to an end
a zany, glamour-packed chap
ter of Hollywood history
The rococo movie palace
will undergo a 'face lif and
renovation in the nex; two
months to become the first
theater in the world to ex
hibit a new film technique
modestly tabbed Cinemiracle
thus heralding still another
era.
A brace of ornate pagodas
will be toppled from either
side of the stage, down will
come the fancy columns
even the seats will be yanked
But' out in the forecourt
the footprints in cement will
remain, indelibly recalling
Hollywood's roaring '20s.
Some 130 stars have Im
printed their profiles, hands.
feet and even six-guns in the
cement. The tradition goes
back to 1927 when the late
Sid Grauman escorted Mary
Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks
and Norma Talmadge to see
construction of his theater,
When they stepped from a
block long limousine Miss
Talmadge accidentally walk
ed through the wet cement
on the curb. Gruman had her
sign her name, then insisted
that Miss Pickford and Fair
banks follow suit.
Down through the years
the Chinese has klieg-lighted
hundreds of glittering pre
mieres. It popped into the
news last year during the
Confidential trial when it was
alleged Maureen O'Hara was
found necking in the last
row.
Grand Opening Recalled
At its grand opening, May
18, 1927, Cecil B. DeMille's
King of Kings" was pre-
miered on a 16xl9-foot
screen.
When the Chinese reopens
m April a monstrous 100x40
foot wall-to-wall, ceiling-to-
floor screen will give audi
ences a new dimension in
motion pictures.
Making its world premiere
will be "Windjammer," an
adventure epic in the new
three-camera, three-projector
Cinemiracle process. It's a
combination of 3-D and wide
screen that gives viewers the
feeling they are a part of the
action taking place on the
screen.
The man behind the new
development is Elmer C. Rho
den, president of National
Theaters.
Rhoden Directs Remodeling
Under his direction the old
Chinese is being remodeled
Explorer Signals
Heard in Oregon
Portland (IB Three moni
toring stations in northwest
Oregou Sunday night picked
up signals from Explorer,
America s earth satellite.
The faint steady whistle
was heard about 7:30 p.m.
and again about 9:35 p.m.
The sounds were heard by
Jim Strickland in Portland
for the Oregon Museum of
Science and Industry, by Bob
Gibson in Salem who also is
on the science center hook up,
and by staff members of the
Linfield Research Institute in
McMinnville.
Gibson said the sound came
in weak and sounded much
like the Russian sputnik after
it had stopped beeping.
Ham operators here said
they were unable to pick up
the sound because the orbit
is so far. south. .
Willows Boy Seoul
Found Dead in Snow
Willows, Calif. OP) The
nine-day search for 12-year-old
Boy Scout Dennis Wor
schmidt ended tragically Sun
day when his frozen body was
found in a clump of firs in
Mill Creek canyon.
The boy had been sought
by more than 1,000 men aided
by bloodhounds, horses,
planes and helicopters.
Glenn County Coroner
Howard Street said the boy
apparently died of exposure
and exhaustion in a blizzard
which swept the area on the
night of Jan. 25 just a few
hours after young Wurschmidt
disappeared while playing
with 11 other scouts.
The boy, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gervin Wurschmidt, of i
Willows, was ' on his first j
camping trip with his troop. J
Boston OP) Two major j
radio-television networks have ;
offered technicians a six per
cent pay boost to avert a na- j
tionwide strike,, it was an-
nounced Saturday.
PLAZA HOTEL
PORTLAND, OREGON
Single with Bath 54.00
New Low Family Rate Plan
Shoppingly Located
Broadway at Washington
C. V. Cooley, Mgr.
into an ultramodern theater.
"We will lose about 450
seats," he said, "but the new
chairs will be six inches deep
er and much more comforta
ble. The theater will have a
special 50-seat area in the
balcony for special parties.
Under the new plan the
Chinese will show only Cine
miracle pictures, killing off
the old glamour days of pre
U.P. Writers
View Future
By UNITED PRESS
United Press correspond
ents around the world look
ahead at the news that will
make the headlines.
Pan-Arab Pressure
Mideast observers think
one of the first results of the
Egyptian-Syrian merger will
be demands from other Mid
east countries for greatly in
creased aid from the United
States. Such demands may
come from King Saud of
Saudi Arabia, King Feisal of
Iraq, King Hussein of Jordan
and President Camille Cha
moun of Lebanon. Each could
lose his job if pan-Arabism
spreads. Pan-Arabism has
powerful appeal to a new
class of educated Arabs
throughout the Middle East
It Floats On Oil
Speaking of the Middle
East, look for the new chief
of Army research and de
velopment. Gen. Arthur G.
Trudeau, to push for stronger
and stronger U.S. measures
to combat Soviet penetration
in that strategic area. As long
ago as 1952, he is known to
have warned that the biggest
single danger to the free
world would be the loss of
Middle East oil. He feels the
U.S. must take the. offensive,
even if it means austerity
never known on the home
front.
The Russian Tentacle
Free Asian diplomats fear
Russia soon will have Ceylon
right in the Soviet's hip
pocket. Russia has granted
Ceylon $16 million for indus
trial and agricultural proj
ects and is moving in on the
propaganda front. Latest
move is an agreement to make
Russian theatrical talent
available to establish a na
tional, theater in Colombo,
Russian books are being trans
lated into Sinhalese, a five
man team of Ceylonese doc
tors will visit Russia and a
Russian football team will
visit Ceylon this year.
Uneasy Rests The Crown
It was discreetly nandiea,
but an extra heavy detach
ment of security agents in
addition to his own staff of
bodyguards watched Indo
nesia's President Sukarno
like a hawk during his visit
to Japan. The reason: There
Daily Weather Report
FORECASTS
periods of rain in valleys and snow
in mountains through Tuesday.
Gustv southerly winds. Low tonight
I. liign luesaay to.
Woctarn nroffnn' SrattPrprt flhOW-
tonight and Tuesday. Low tonight
1-48. rugn luesaay 10-30.
T-T-tV. rlifnrnia- Intermittent
rain lnniiht and Tuesday. Locally
heavy ram and a few scattered
thunderstorms, snow level J.suu
feet. Little change in temperature.
Temperature: Mean yesterday 52:
above normal 11.
Record high this oate oi m izu.
Record low this date 9 in 1950.
DvamniMinn- 94 hnilfC tn TTllH
night Trace. Midnight to 10 a.m.
Trace.
Total this month Trace in.; .16 in.
!low normal.
Total since Sept. 1 14.27 in., 3.24
. above normal.
Hnmiriitv: Lowest yesterday 36.
belc
in
highest tnis a.m. vi-o.
High
4:00
24
hr. City
Yester
day .m.
Low Prec.
Brookings 59 48 .18
Crater Lake 30 26 .27
Grants Pass 58 35
Klamath Falls 45 33
MEDFORD S8 35 T
Portland? 55 42 .01
Seattle 54 41 t
Spokane . 41 31
Yakima 49 30 T
Eureka 55 47 .73
Red Bluff 53 47 .71
Sacramento 58 50 1.26
San Francisco 63 52 .80
Los Angeles 65 56 1.08
Phoenix 76 54 T
Denver 49 28
Chicago 23 17 .07
Miami .. 63 52
New York 38 25
Washington, D.C. .. 36 25
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
(Through Feb. 8):
Western Oregon-Western Wash
ington Temperatures and precipi
tation averaging above normal.
Highs generally 45-55. Lows 35-45.
Recurring rains with totals 1-2
inches inland, 2-4 inches on coast.
Northern California Rain at in
tervals through most of period with
total amounts heavy. Temperatures
near normal.
Holland Hotel
r
3
JpL r SP 2-6203
b i n & rin
rt m pin
.
5SS S
DINING - MUSIC - DANCING
Lunches - 1 1 -a.m. to 2 p.m.
Dinners - 5 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
miers for star-studded epics
from the studios.
"We expect our pictures to
run a year or more at the
Chinese," Rhoden concluded.
"By the end of that time an
other Cinemiracle film will
be ready to be exhibited. We
believe it is a new kind of
entertainment with a grand
old theater leading the way
to better pictures."
ews
were persistent reports that
his political enemies were
plotting an attempt on his
life. One unconfirmed report
said this also was the reason
he flew by charter plane
rather than by regular com
mercial aircraft.
Swim For Health
Reports reaching Western
capitals indicate Marshal
Tito's health is none too good
these ;days. The Yugoslav
leader is said to be suffering
from rheumatism and a slip
ped disc. Reports say he is
spending more and more time
at this Brioni retreat with its
heated swimming pool. Al
though his health is not se
riously impaired, it has start
ed speculation on a possible
successor.
Does Not Choose To Run
Political insiders say Under
secretary of State Christian
A. Herter Jr.,' former GOP
governor of Massachusetts,
was approached "informally"
recently on the possibility of
opposing Democratic Sen.
John F. Kennedy in the No
vember elections. Herter's
answer generally was (1) he's
happy in his present job and
(2) enjoys a non-political
status.
Award Scheduled For
Rural Correspondent
Cave Junction Mrs. Helen
Bottel, Mail Tribune Illinois
Valley correspondent, was
winner of a $50 third prize
and plaque and an honorable
mention in the Sierra Cascade
News awards for 1958. The
awards, to be presented at the
Sierra Cascade logging con
ference Feb. 13, Redding,
Calif., won third place on a
feature on Southern Oregon
Archery, an arrow shaft fac
tory at Kerby, which appear
ed in the Grants Pass Courier
and The Oregonian. The hon
oraoie mention award was
given for a story on Christmas
tree farming.
Detroit (IP) The Chair
man of the Board of U. S.
Steel Corp. said "profit
squeezing" heads three great
forces converging on the Am
erican system and spelling
disaster.
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
FOR RENT Furn. 1-bdrm. Court,
Laundry faciliUes. 208 Hawthorne.
SP 2-2384.
HOUSE FOR RENT S20 mo. In
quire 240 CharlotteAnnRd;
FOR RENT 3 rm. furn. apt. 1
block from Safeway, $40. 16
Mistletoe.
FOR RENT Clean 1 or 2 bdrm.
ground floor apt. Elec. range.
Spark heater. Fenced yard. Shade.
SP 2-8193.
WANTED COUPLE for river prop
erty. Must have experience with
general maintenance work, gar
den & livestock. Ages. 40-50. Lady
required to do family cooking.
Everything furnished including
home all expenses plus salary.
Sober & willingness to cooperate
required. State qualifications, ex
perience and telephone contact.
Write Tribune Box 3617.
FOR RENT 2 bdrm. close in. Part
ly furn. Elec. heat. SP 2-9607.
YOUNG single man wants work of
any kind, flease pnone sjt z-vu
FOR RENT 1 bdrm. unfurn. house.
Fireplace. S40. SP 2-2224.
FOR RENT Small furn. apt.
$30.
SP 2-8036.
FOR RENT 3 rm. furn. home,
small, $50. Adults, SP 2-6497 De
tween 5 & 7.
FOR rent 4-bdrm. house, oil heater.
fireplace. SP 2-4138.
FOR RENT nice downstairs apt.
Close in. SP 2-9172.
WANTED placer claim. Full par
ticulars in iirst letter, wrue
Tribune box 3379.
SAVE
CASH & CARRY
PABCO 3-tab roofing $8.90 square.
4x8. 4x10 & 4x12 "i" sheetrock
at 6'ic ft. 30,000 beautiful old
used brick (all cleaned) at 8c ea.
1x12 S4S pencil cedar fencing
$30 per M.
NORTON LUMBER CO.
Phoenix, Ore. KE 5-2037
WANT to rent 4 bdrm. home by
March 1st. References. SP 2-706a.
FOR SALE Shavings. Prompt De
livery. SP 3-6297. Mcuinty uei
Co.
BUNDLES OF OLD NEWSPAPERS
for sale, 20c each. Mail iriDune
office. 33 North Fir.
"OIL TO BURN"
MOBILHEAT
We give S&H Green Stamps
MEDFORD FUEL SP 2-2111
VACANCY at Lydia Apt. 806 W
Main. The place of few vacancies.
-
.
The Wooden Shoe
The RUSSELL
JONES DUO
Monday, February 3, 1958
Stock Price
Today's prices on selected
stocks;
Allied Chemical 78
American Can 423A
AT&T 172 '
Anaconda Copper 444
Bethlehem Steel 40 H
Caterpillar Corp 6634
Chrysler Corp 56 Is
Continental Can 44?s
Crown Zellerbach 47 H
Curtiss Wright 24 ?4
Du Pont I861.2
Eastman Kodak 103Vi
General Electric 63 ?s
General Foods 54
General Motors 35Vs
Georgia Pacific 3(H4
Graham Paige Unquoted
Homestake Mining 3634
Kaiser Fraser 9V4
Kennecott Copper . 81
Lockheed Aircraft 41?4
Katy Pfd 38
Montgomery Ward 33?s
New York Central .... 151s
Penney, J. C. .: 89
Penn R R 13
Radio Corporation 34U
Richfield Oil 62 Vfc
Bread Prices Drop
In Texas Market
Athens, Tex. OP! A 25
cent loaf of bread has drop
ped to 3 cents in a price war
here.
The bread price war fol
lowed a milk price war, in
which the price of half gallons
of milk, normally 50 cents,
dropped to 19 cents.
A grocery chain (Tom
Thumb) started the bread
price war against another
chain (Piggy Wiggly) on
Thursday by cutting prices to
10 cents for a pound-and-a-half
loaf.
Prices dropped to 9 cents,
then to two loaves for 15
cents, a nickel a loaf and fin
ally to 3 cents.
One chain managed to
corner the local bread supply
Friday when the price was
two loaves for 15 cents.
Housewives promptly
bought all the bread out, but
both chains brought in fresh
supplies Saturday.
The Family Council
Editor's note: The Family Council consists of a Judge, a psychiatrist,
three clergymen, a newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writers.
Each article is a summary of an actual report. The Family Council does
not give advice: It merely reports on problems that have been dealt
with by responsible agencies and counselors.
Jacqueline S. Dora thinks
her reputation was ruined
when she was born.
Dora M. My parents are
hypocrites.
Jacqueline S. I am a girl
of 17 and have a best friend
of my own age who has a ter
rible problem.
Dora is really a nice girl,
but she goes too far in pet
ting and kissing with her
dates. When I told her this
was. wrong, she said it can't
make any difference because
her reputation was ruined
when she was born. She said
she has learned that she was
born only seven months after
her parents were married.
I told her that nobody will
ever find out about this, but
she could get into trouble
because of what she is doing.
She is sure, however, that
everyone in ' our community
knows about it and that no
nice boy will marry her.
Dora M. My parents al
ways said they were married
a year before I was born and
celebrate their anniversary
on a date which corresponds
to this story. But one day a
few years ago I was looking
for something among my
mother's papers and found
this marriage license with a
different date on it.
Ever since that time I have
had no respect for my par
ents. They are hypocrites be
cause they are always preach
ing about doing right, but
they don't do right them
selves. They always talk
about other people drinking
too , much, but they have
often come home tight after
a party.
If I ever get into serious
trouble, it will really be be
cause of my parents. They are
worse than anyone else in
spite of all they preach.
The Council Dora has a
o-erious problem indeed, but
it is not the one she thinks.
Announcement
Eugene V. Meyerding, M.D.
Announces the Removal of His Offices
FROM
the Medical Center Building
TO
the MEDICAL DENTAL BUILDING
832 E. Main (Suite 6) MEDFORD
For the Practice of General Surgery; Effective Jan. 30, 1 958
PHONE SP 3-3248
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINH
Sears 27
Bocony v acuum i
r- tr A
a
Southern Co Zb'8
Southern Pacific 39
Standard California 463A
Standard Indiana 37
Standard N. J 51! 4
Sun Mines 83,4
Texas Gulf 16
Transamerica 363p
Trans West Air 12!
Tri - Continental 29
Texas Pac Land Trust .. Tss
Union Carbide 2734
United Aircraft 55
UAL :; 26i,4
U S Rubber 34 14
U S Steel :. 5634
Youngstown S & T 81
Queen Mother Now
In New Zealand
Auckland, N.Z. (IP) Brit
ish Queen Mother Elizabeth
flew in from the Fiji islands
during the week end to be
gin her first visit to the lands
"down under" in more than
30 years.
Gov. Gen. Lord Cobham,
Prime Minister Walter Nash
and a crowd of about 3,000
New Zealanders greeted the
Dowager Queen at the air
port. Other thousands lined
the street to cheer her as she
rode to government house.
The Dowager Queen paid
her last visit lo New Zealand
in 1927, when she was the
Duchess of York.
LAW PROFESSOR DIES
Freeport, N.Y. -(IPl Brook
lyn Law School Professor
Martin H. Weyrauch, 72, died
Saturday in Mercy hospital,
Rockville Centre, N.Y. A for
mer editor and publisher of
the old "New York Evening
Graphic" and managing edi
tor of the now defunct Brook
lyn "Eagle," Weyrauch taught
at Brooklyn Law school from
1936 until his death. He was
a member of the New York
State Crime commission from
1929 to 1931 and in 1944 and
1945 was chief assistant to
Hiram C. Todd, special assist
ant attorney general of New
York.
Dora's real problem is her
estrangement from her par
ents, her suspicion of them
and the fantasy she is build
ine ud about herself and
them, '
Dora should not have been
poking around among her
mother's personal papers, but
since she committed this
breach of ethics and found
something that concerned her
and upset her, she should
have spoken to her mother
about it. We suspect there is
a possibility that Dora was
mistaken about the date she
saw on the marriage license.
Young adolescents sometimes
build up a grandiose fantasy
based on an error or a small
incident.
It is also possible that Dora
was a premature child and,
to spare her and themselves
any embarrassment, the par
ents decided to celebrate
their wedding anniversary on
a different date. In any case,
Dora should try to under
stand the facts before con
demning her parents. Even if
these parents were married
after their child was on the
way, Dora should give them
credit for rectifying their
error, maintaining their mar
riage and preaching righteous
conduct to her.
Dora's general attitude,
however, suggests that she
feels she is bad and unworthy
of nice friends and decent re
lationships. She tries to put
the blame on her parents and
this means that she is free
of responsibility for creating
her own good life. We agree
with Jacqueline that she is
headed for serious trouble.
She needs lots of help from
her parents and should tell
them everything on her mind.
Girls like Jacqueline, who
receive family confidences
from their friends, should re
fuse to become embroiled in
the problem. They should tell
their friends to talk it over
with their own parents.
(Copyright 1958,
General Features Corp.)
Potato Uproar
Dies In Maine
Presque Isle, Me. (IP) The
uproar about serving Idaho
potatoes to servicemen in the
heart of Maine's potato land
was "an unfortunate misun
derstanding," according to
Frank W. Hussey, executive
vice president of the Maine
Potato council.
"There were Idaho pota
toes there, but only a small
amount and those a gift," he
said.
Republican Senator Marga
ret Chase Smith of Maine hai
demanded the Air Force ex
plain why it was serving
Idaho spuds at Loring Air
Force base at Limestone, in
Maine's potato-growing Aroo
stook county.
The Air Force and Army
procurement officials investi
gated and said it just wasn't
so.
Resources Talk Set
For Farmer Meeting
Mrs. Katherine Heffernan,
Medford, and member of the
Jackson county water re
sources committee, will speak
on water resources in the
Rogue river basin during a
meeting of the Jackson Coun
ty Young Farmers at 8 p.m.
today in Kim's restaurant on
the South Pacific highway.
New officers assume their
official duties tonight. They
include Don Straus, Central
Point, president; Don Brad
shaw, Central Point, 'Vice pres
ident; and Bob Damon, Lake
Creek, secretary and John
Yungan, Medford, treasurer.
LIFE
COMrV
MAGAZINE
COMMENDED
MOfl DESIR
In A Recent Article
For Our
PRIME RIBS
OPEN EVERY
EVENING
Except Monday
Ph. NO 4-2513
ENJOY GENUINE
CHARCOAL
BROILED FOODS
In the
CANDLE ROOM
at the Medford
Hotel
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NOW SHOWING
THE BOOK THEY SAID
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HUDSON-STACK
DOROTHY JACK
MALONE-CARSON
Tarnished
Angels
A UMVCISU.MTEINAT10HM
nctuac
CO-FEATURE
Biting Bull-Whip
Fury and Romance!
JAMES CRAIG
LITA MILAN
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M1TWOCOLOW