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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 24, 1958)
EIGHT MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Ducks Battle Bears Tonight in PC Loop w L PA California 10 2 3 4 S 7 6 8 9 10 702 782 829 909 812 699 690 730 589 617 668 Oregon State 9 UCLA Idaho 796 830 use 833 Oregon Washington Stanford WSC 740 746 777 687 By SCOTT BAILLIE United Press Sports Writer Eugene HP) One of the most interested observers of the Oregon-California basket ball game here tonight will be Coach Slats Gill of Oregon State. Gil'i Beavers, fresh from a pair of key victories against Southern California and UCLA, still trail the Golden Bears by a full game as the PCC chase draws to a close After the Oregon game, Cali fornia has 'dates with UCLA, Idaho and Oregon, all on its home court. If somebody doesn't trip up the Bears, they are in as the PCC champ. Oregon State still must meet Southern Cal and Washington State at home and the Cougars and Idaho on the road. California, using the "stall" only to speed up its drive toward a second straight Pa cific Coast Conference basket ball crown, led the loop by a full game today while Se attle apparently had broken down in its own campaign to rate an NCAA tournament bid. The Bears, who can enter the tourney automatically taking the PCC laurels, won their third game of a road trip Saturday as they downed lowly Washington State. 59- 48. They emphasized ball con trol and froze the pumpkin during the last four minutes of play to come out ahead. Seattle, an independent which had announced it would shoot for one of the "at large" berths in the NCAA conclave rather than the Na tional Invitational tourna ment,took a 71-68 beating in overtime from Idaho State de spite 32 points by Elgin Bay lor. This loss followed a one point squeaker over Montana State two nights earlier. OSC Batters Bruins Both seceding . UCLA and Southern California were stunned by conference "puri tans" in Long Beach. Oregon State bounced the Bruins out of second place by thumping State Wrestling Crown Annexed by Sweet Home Portland Sweet Home scored 51 points and captured the team title in the 11th an nual state high school wrest ling tournament here Satur day. Redmond scored 47 points and was second. Newberg. 1957 "team champion, placed third with 46 points. CHAMPIONS: 98 Pounds Dayne Payne, Sweet Home; 106 Pounds Lyle McFarland, Klamath Falls; 115 Pounds Jerry Perez, Sutherlin; 123" Pounds Ken Stanton, Redmond; 130 Pounds Joe Markee, Tillamook: 136 Pounds Clarence Seal, Redmond; 141 Ppunds Ron Finley, New berg; 148 Pounds Ted Brewster, Milwaukie; 157 Pounds Barry Schneider, Canby; 168 Pounds Ron Medley, Hillsboro; 178 Pounds Jerry Ferkus, Bend; 194 Pounds Pat Clock, New berg; Unlimited Tim Gal- laher, Franklin. Team Scores: Sweet Home 51, Redmond 47, Newberg 46, Klamath Falls 36, Franklin 30, Mil waukie 28. Grants Pass 18, Hillsboro 18. Canby 17, Gresh am. 17, Tillamook 17, Suth erlin 17, David Douglas 15, Marshfield 15, Lebanon 15, Bend 14. West Linn 12, Springfield 11, Dallas 11, Il linois Valley 11, Park Rose 10, Roseburg 10, Scappose 10, Woodrow Wilson ,10; North Marion 8, Oregon City 7, Prineville 7, Tigard 7, Burns 6, Estacada 6, Benson 5, Bend 5 Cascade 4, Jefferson 4, Bowling JUNIOR LEAGUE MATCH GAMES Kiwanis Junior No. 1) 4 L.. Offord 440 J. Barry 442 T. Bortis 366 B. distance 383 Senior (No. 1) S D. Bauman 437 G. Williams 349 G. Schuler 479 D. Atkins 426 S. Schroeder 445 Handicap 318 D. Williams 389 Handicap 561 Total 2581 Total 2474 Kiwanis Senior No. 2) 3 (No. 2) t W. Mills 432 R. Goode 402 M. Nelson 371 B. TomDkins 350 W. Weaver 348 D. Smith 433 L. Little 363 R. Martin 364 J. Osbom 377 J. Barnes ' 438 Handicap 663 Handicap 564 Total 2554 Total 2551 Barry had high game and series with 182 and 442 for Kiwanis Junior High league team No. 1 and Mills and Nelson had 149 games and Mills a 432 series for the No. 2 club. For Senior league team No. 1 Schroeder had a 169 game and Schuler high series with 479. Smith's 188 and Barnes' 438 were tops for Senior No. i. them, 77-61, behind Dave Gambee's 30 points. And Stan ford, which holds surprise wins over University of San Francisco and Oregon State this year, did it again by dropping Southern California, 69-61. Tonight California is at Oregon in a bid to sweep all three games of its road trip while Washington plays at Washington State. The Dons of USF can win the West Coast Athletic Conference title and breeze into then latest NCAA tourney if they beat erratic St. Mary's on Tuesday. California's victory went into the books as a legitimate team win with Don Mcintosh their high man with only 10 points. The Bears were safe ly ahead most of the night. Baylor retained" his na tional scoring lead by bucket ing 32 against Idaho State but the Bengals, who are headed for the NCAA titanic them selves, never trailed. The game was pushed into over-j time, however, when Gail Sieman teamed up with Lloyd Harris to score free throws that stashed away the vic tory. Gambes Sets New Mark Gambee's splurge against the Bruins raised his three- year conference record to 858 and set a PCC career scoring mark. During the opening same. Stanford's Paul Neu mann scored five field goals in the last seven minutes of play to ignite a rally and de feat the Trojans, 69-61. Idaho belted Washington, 85-63. as Gary Simmons mesh ed 30 for the Vandals and Doug Smart vainly counter ed with 28. Frensno State bopped St Mary's 73-53. in a non-con ference title while USF was idle. Dick Sigaty of the Gaels was cut off with three points by the sharp Bulldog de fenders. PeoDerdine downed San Jose State, 68-67 and College of the Pacific beat Loyola, 57-53, in a brace of WCAC games. ' Chico State beat San Fran cisco State. 62-58, to tie Ne vada for the Far West Con ference diadem. The wolf pack lost to Sacramento State, 75-70. They will meet in a playoff Tuesday night. South Eugene 4, Grant 3, Mo lalla 3, Sandy 3, Albany 2, Lincoln 2, Central 1. Crater 1, Medford, 1, North Salem 1, South Salem 1, Reynolds 1, Roosevelt 1. Pilots Rap Zags 70-56 Spokane OP) Tall Ray Scott pumped in 31 points while Gonzaga's Jean Le febvre was held to 13 Sunday as the University of Portland put on a strong finish to de feat the Zags 70-56 in a basketball game here. The two teams meet again tonight. Scott hit 13 out'of 21 from the field and added five free throws plus, doing a good job of holding down Gonzaga's 7-4 Frenchman who got 50 points in one game last week. Portland trailed 26-25 at the half and was ahead 55-52 with four minutes to play when a late spurt gave them the win by a big margin. Dick Jolly followed Scott in scoring with 15 for Portland while Jim Altenhofen had 12. Mat Ex-Champ Found Hanging Hayward, Calif. IIP Po lice investigated today .the death of Dean Henry Detton, 49, former football star from Utah who won the profes sional world wrestling title in the late 30s. In an apparent suicide, Det ton's body was found hanging by a rope in the back room of his taVern Sunday by his wife, Maline, and his son, Dean Jr. There were no notes. Police said Detton ap parently fitted the noose around his neck and kicked a stool away. He lived with his family in Hayward and operated the Turf club. It was Detton's second at tempt at suicide. Police said that two months ago he threw himself at a moving train but was only, slightly in juried. Mrs. Detton said he talked frequently of "ending it all' because business was poor. Detton .won the wrestling title from Bronko Nagurski. WANTED: ONE MACHINE Lethford, England (IP) A salesman advertised in the local newspaper today for re turn of his washing machine. He let it out for a free trail, he said, but he could-not re member to whom. Monday. February 24, 19S8 They'll Dp It Every OH,MO,hJO,DEAH.' '"THAT WOHT DO LET'S MOVE THE PlAhlO BACK HE4H-THE D4VEMFOCT OVER 7HEAH-.4ND JUST FOE RjNlTHE eS4D- FATHAHS CLOCK WHERE THE BRE4KFEOMT. IS- 3 1M. glSG PEA TUaES syndicate. Im, MQRLD RIGHTS BASKETBALL SATURDAY COLLEGE GAMES By United Press (East) Pennsylvania 71, Harvard 67 Brown 96. Columbia 94 St. John s N.Y. 82. Fordham 74 St. Bonaventure 62. Canisius 55 Temple 73. Villanova 58 Boston Co. 73. Holy Cross 68 West Virginia 99, Pittsburgh 86 Niagara 79, Duquesne 64 (South) William & Mary 96, VMI 78 Kentucky 45, Alabama 43 Mississippi St. 95 Louisiana St. 72 Florida 73. Vanderbilt 53 Auburn 72, Tennessee 66 Mississippi 83, Tillane 68 " (Midwest) Detroit 69. Seton Hall 68 Dayton 58, Louisville 52 (Southwest) Baylor oa, iexas ot Texas Christian 90. Rice 65 Texas A&M 66, Arkansas 57 Arizona St. 70, Arizona 66 (West) Wyoming ti, utan si. t Colorado 54, Air Force 50 Denver 55, Montana 52 Utah 75. New Mexico 53 Colorado Col. 75. Colorado St. 62 Fresno St. 73. St. Mary's 53 Portland U 70. Gonzaga 56 East. Oregon 66. Portland St. 64 So. Oregon 57. NW Nazarene 45 Oregon Tech 92. OCE 51 Linfield 88. Whitman 68' Col. of Idaho 78. Willamette 59 Lewis & Clark 66. Pacific 55 Pepperdine 68. San Jose St. 67 Fresno St. 73. St. Mary's 53 Sacramento 75, Nevada 70 Pac. Lutheran 88, East Wash. 50 S. Diego St. 83. Santa Barbara 58 Cal Tech 70. Kiverside b3 Pom.-Claremont 82. Occidental 65 Pasadena 68, Cal Poly 60 Jimmy Archer Choice in Bout New York (W Jimmy Archer, New. York welter weight, is favored at 9-5 to beat Danny Russo of Brook lyn again tonight in their re turn TV fight.at St. Nicholas arena. Aggressive Archer had to be content with a split decision in their Jan. 27th clash in the same ring because of young Danny's strong finish. Neither fought since then. Portland (IPI Valley Mo tors of Salem defeated Moore's Oilers of Vancouver, Wash., 75-69 Sunday to qual ify for the state AAU basket ball tourney at Hermiston next week end, Ben Pitzer of Valley and Jack Scrivens of Moore's had 17 points each. Also qualifying for the tourney Sunday were Bend and Powers with victories over Pendleton and Malin re spectively. Hermiston will have the host team. Two Men Injured In Crash of Plane Portland (IP) One man was in critical condition to day and another in serious condition at a Portland hos pital after their light plane crashed into an alfalfa field near Troutdale airport Sun day. ' Critically hurt was Glen Yost, 27, Beaverton, pilot of the plane, Cedric Grant, 23, Portland, suffered serious in juries. -.. The aircraft, a BT-13 mono plane, cracked up just east of the airport after colliding with a cottonwood tree. Yost .said he had been bringing the plane around for a landing when his fuel pressure sud denly fell at 2000 feet. The plane was owned by Wik's air service at Hillsboro. Hikers Find Safe Stolen at Portland Portland (IP) Two hikers Sunday found a safe which was taken early Saturday by burglars from a- southeast Portland drug store. The safe had been battered open. Several cigar boxes of narcotics were recovered but the $633 in the safe was miss ing. The safe was found under a ramp to an old shed along SE Barbara Welch rd. WOMAN KILLED Castle Rock, Wash. (IPI Mrs. Agnes Ylonen, about 50, Castle Rock, was killed near here Sunday night in a three car accident. SPORTS I i Time STICK AeOUMD,VE!24MQ4.' EC-YES, YOU C4W TEUL VEB4MDA- GUYS WHERE TO VDU HAVE VEpy SCOD TASTE, BUT V . WE CAM FINISH rr TOMOIIOWI'M- CAM INTERIOR EB-WOEeiED IF SHE LIKES A3O0T HEMCyS SO MUCH SHE HEART UP HER OWM ITS CONDEMNED M RESERVED. 2-2 r SOC Clips Court Quint 57-45 Ashland Southern Ore gon college turned the tide with a 10-point spurt in the final half and went on to clip Northwest Nazarene 57 to 45 on Saturday in its final home home basketball game of the season. Victory made it a two-game sweep for the Raiders who won Friday also, 58 to 51. Bill Hollingsworth, Jim McAbee and Norm Oliva paced Southern Oregon into a 49 to 39 command after the score had been knotted at 39 all. Nazarene had its last lead at 34 to 33 but kept in the fight until the Raiders broke to the 10-point 'spread. Southern Oregon lagged most of the first half. It tied up the count at 22-all and had its only lead at 24 to' 22 be fore the Crusaders took a 29 to 26 midway advantage. Backboard domination Overall Honors Go To George Jantzer George Jantzer, Medford, was high overall in the two day registered Early Spring trapshoot of Medford Gun club. He had a 378 bird count out of a possible 400 in the Sat day and Sunday count. Jantzer and W. W. Hile man, Cottage Grove, each fired 99s yesterday in the 16 yard event and the Medford man won the . shoot-off for Class A honors. Robert R. Jones, Crescent City, Calif., took the Sunday handicap and Jim Morris memorial trophy with 95 out of 100. Red Byrd, Medford, won the shoot-off for runner up after tying with Frank Black, Crescent City, F. C. Broyels, Klamath Falls, and Sam Samson, Med ford, with 93. In Sunday doubles, Jim Horn, Grants Pass, and Frank Whitlock, North Bend, each shattered 43 birds out of 48 for Class I and ,Class II trophies, respectively. Run ners up were Martin Clog ston, Medford, with 41 in Class I and Tom Mehl Sr., Glendale, with 40 in Class H. Try and -By BENNETT CERF- A FAMOUS Hollywood producer is considered by friends to be the greatest hypochondriac in the land. He usually has two bottles of pills in every pocket Not so long ago he and Cary Grant passed a drug store. "Don't you want to step in?" suggested Grant "Not today," said the pro ducer. "I don't need a thing." "I know," persisted Grant, "but maybe the druggist does." A magnetic young lady was hired by a vacuum cleaner company to demonstrate and take orders on a new, light weight model, and justified the move by turning in a sheaf of orders that doubled those of experienced salesmen on the staff. "How do you do it?" marveled the manager. "Nothing to it," she laughed. ,"I' just address my sales talk to the husband in tones so low the wife doesn't dare miss ft single word." 7 1958. by Bennett Cert Distributed by King Features Syndicate. Do his buying at Barker's and get Green Stamps By Jimmy Hatlo iipj THE AMBJL4MCE PUT HEMRy OH,AUMTy VECAMDA-WILL VOU SHOW MOMMY DECORATOR. AND DADDY HOtV TO PLAY HOUSE THINGS SHOULD OUGHT TO FIX BE UPSTAIRS LEAM - TO BEFORE (50INI& AUDtiQ WITH THE OVERBEARING FRIEND WHO READ A CHAPTER. OR TWO IN AHOW TO BOOK -2 CONTRIBUTORS Nazarene helped SOC in the second half. The Raiders led 37 to 26 in rebounds for the game. Hollingsworth paced point getters with 20 and McAbee had 15. Sam Willard put in 14 for the Nampa, Idaho, team. NW Nazarene FG FT Gardner 1 5-7 Peppley 4 2-3 Tracy 2 2-3 Freeman 1 2-3 Stueckle 1 0-0 Willard 5 4-6 Finkbeiner 0 0-0 White 0 2-4 Martin 0 0-0 Hanson 0 0-0 ' Totals . 14 17-26 SOC FG FT Hollingsworth .. 6 8-12 Maurer 0 4-4 D'Oliva 2 0-0 Tenny 0 0-0 Crandall 1 2-2 McAbee 7 1-2 Oliva 3 4-6 Foust 0 0-0 Love 0 0-0 Sutherland 0 0-0 Totals 19 19-26 PF TP 14 45 PF TP 0 20 18 57 Dean Bubar, Roseburg, and Bill Davis, Klamath Falls, each busted 97 at 16 yards in Class B. -After each broke 25 straight in a shoot-off Bubar took top trophy on a coin flip. Bubar, who is 80, was high veteran on the Sunday 16-yard and handicap events with 188. In Class C 16 yards, Percy Beardon, Medford, won with 93 and Robert Mclntyre followed with 86. Class D was won by Jack Burns, Med ford, with 97 and Tom Mehl Jr., Glendale, had 94 for runner-up. Crystal Hileman, Cottage Grove, was high lady with 158 in the 16-yard and handi cap shoots. In shoot-offs of Saturday events Gene Hunt, Medford, wrested B Class 16-yard run ner-up honors from Charles Skeeters, Prospect, and Ray Coleman copped handicap prize from George Jantzer. There were 40 shooters on Sunday and 30 on Saturday. The largest river system in Australia is the Murray river which extends ove a 1,609- mile course. Stop Me j i 1 One of 10 Pregnant By DELOS SMITH United Press Science Editor New York OP) The newest "Kinsey Report" asserts that before American women of the upper class have lived out their "reproductive lives" one out of every 10 has been preg nant without at the same time being married. However, this dilemma was resolved for most of these women by . abortion when it was not resolved by hasty marriage. Here was added a statistic which will be no less shocking to many persons: Among women of child-bearing age now living one in seven has had or will have a premarital abortion. The report is the first com ing from the Institute of Sex Research at the University of Indiana since the death of its State Department Plans Study on New Businesses Eugene Why do new businesses come to Oregon? At the request of the state department of planning and development, the University of Oregon bureau of business research is attempting to find answers to the question. Once the answers are found the strong points of the state as a prospective home for in dustry and business can be used to better the business climate of Oregon for both existing and prospective firms according to Julius R. Jensen, director of the department of planning and development The first part of the study is being conducted through a questionnaire sent to all the firms, having 20 or more em ployees, that have opened for business in the state during the past five years. Some 300 such firms,, whose manage ment appeared to have had an alternative in locating in an other state, were included in the survey. Questions Asked Questions asked of the firms were reasons for decis ion to locate here, the persons responsible for locating the industry here, whether other states were considered as pos sibilities, and the principal market for the firm's pro ducts. Also included was a check list of the possible reasons for locating in Oregon. These were cheap electric power, low cost of labor, favorable state and local taxes, avail ability of needed labor, and favorable climate. Opportunity to list any rea sons which might have tend ed to cause the business or industry to reject Oregon as a location was also given Questions as to the local facilities considered most . im portant for employees are al so asked. These include such Western Airlines Airplanes Grounded Los Angeles (IP) Strike bound Western Air Lines made no attempt today to pro vide service to 47 cities in 13 states. Canada and Mexico on its regular runs. The airline, hit by a strike of 230 pilots last Friday at midnight, announced that the company would close down operations during the dispute. More than 2,500 employees were furloughed after mem bers of the Air Line Pilots Association e n d ed lengthy negotiations, with Western for a pay increase and fringe benefits. The pilots had not placed picket lines around company offices hours after the walk out. The strike followed accept ance of a National Mediation Board proposal by the union but rejection of the compro mise by Western. DOUBLE REPAIRS Atlanta (IP1-1- A veterin arian and a mechanic were re pairing the damages of a traf fic accident today. The vet erinarian was treating the horse that put its foot through the plastic top of Mrs. Frances Crumbley's automobile, which the mechanic is patching. Look . . . Only $14900 DOWN Full Price 1497 including d i r e e tional signals, elec tric wipers, heater, etc. mmmmm Upper Cla Without M founder, Dr. Alfred C. Kinsey indeed, the first since publi cation of Sexual Behavior in the Human Female" five years ago. The new report deals with the consequences of that behavior. It is called "Preg nancy, Birth and Abortion." It will not become avail able in full until bobk publi cation in May. But the Insti tute invited a number of mag azines to bid for the exclusive right to publish excerpts from it before then. McCall's maga zine was the successful bidder and ithe first of two install ments highlighting the report appears in the March issue, out Tuesday. 8.000 Women Interviewed The statistical basis of the new report is the same as for the last one intimate inter views with almost 8,000 worn- areas as adequate housing, hospitals, schools, and recre ational and religious facilit ies. A question concerns the means of obtaining sites, whether by purchase or by lease, as a gift from a local group, or other means. The firm is also asked for com ments concerning Oregon as a business location and satis faction with the location. Ricker Receives 40-Year Pin for Government Work E. K. Ricker, manager of Camp White domiciliary, re ceived a 40-year pin at a pre sentation of incentive awards at the government facilities, Harold Jaffrey, assistant manager announced. Those receiving , 30-y ear pins were Grace Stuhr, R. H. Ruffin, J. S. Goodwin, E. B. Sheldon, H. Moore, and John Strebinger. Jack H. Creager, manager of the Medford office of the Pacific Telephone and Tele graph company, discussed the role incentive awards play in both industry and the federal government. The Eagle Point High school band led by Di rector Charles F. Martin, played several selections. Those receiving 10-year pins were Mrs. Edna S. Cox, V. A. Frost, R. E. Kelley, W. M. Hull, L. E. Ogles, T. H. Lester, L. A. Dion, J.' W. Love, G. H. Adler and John Peterson. Certificates were given W. J. Odegard, and J. E. Allen for improving the appearance of the Camp White grounds by planting grass, a' flower bed and trees in a courtyard. Both men are physically han dicapped, Jaffrey explained. A. J. Martin was given an award for outstanding per formance on the job. W. U. Hughes was given a cash award for his suggestion of using a simple metal identifi cation tag on the many keys used at the domiciliary. A total of 26 civil service employees received certifi cates and cash awards for suggestions, improvement of government service and out standing performance, Jaffrey said. Coffee Prices Cut By General Foods Hoboken, N. J. (IPI Gen eral Foods Corp. has an nounced price reductions of from 2 to 3 cents per pound on three brands of coffee. Effective immediately, the price of grocery pack regular ground Maxwell House coffee was cut by 3 cents a pound, the lowest level of that brand in five years. The price of Yuban coffee also was re duced by 3 cents a pound. Regular ground Sanka cof fee was cut 2 cents a pound. Since last February, regu lar ground Maxwell House has declined a total of 16 cents per pound. Yuban and regular Sanka have each de clined 14 cents per pound. See and Drive the Fabulous LLOYDWAGEN Up to 55 Miles Per Gallon COURTESY CHEVROLET 9th and Bartlett Phone SP 2-6115 ss Women a rriage, Report Says en. But several categories, of women were eliminated women in prisons, pre-adoles cent girls, and inmates of homes for unwed mothers. Ne gro women were treated in a separate chapter. The result is that the statistical base was reduced to 5,293 women large ly representative of the white Protestant upper class living in large and small cities. Without having seen statis tical tables and formulas, this reporter can give no details from which statisticians could estimate validity. The Mc Calls excerpts were prepared by Ernest Havemann, a free lance writer, who was en gaged with institute approval and whose manuscript was checked by the institute. While warning on the dangers of statistical "projections," Havemann then projected freely. For instance, another pro jection was that of all Ameri can girls and women now liv ing, around 8,200,000 will be or have been pregnant with out being married. It was re called that the previous Kin sey Report found that 50 out of every 100 women question ed had had pre-marital sexual experience. "Naturally some of them were bound to get pregnant," Havemann added: Problem Widespread Havemann interpreted the statistics to mean the social problem of pregnancy with out marriage was muah more widespread than his one- out-of-every-ten projection in dicated. This was based upon all the women studied, of all ages, .tmt among the women who were born between 1910 and 1919 and reached adoles cence after World War I, the rate was closer to 20 per cent than 10 per cent. However, he pomted out that the wom en of these birth years num bered only 158.' The report found that the women who were pregnant without being married had not "suffered any social con sequences at all," contrary to general expectations. There were "relatively few excep tions," but these women "ac tually turned out to be more marriageable than the women who never had sexual rela tions at all." Of the women pregnant while unmarried only 19 per cent ended the trouble by marrying while pregnant. Of the remainder, only six per cent gave birth to Illegitimate children. Miscarriage occurred in five per cent, and the re-i maining 89 per cent had re-l course to abortion. Of these women, 86 per cent said th?y had had their abortions at the hands of doc tors 'of medicine. The practice is prohibited by the laws of all states and, very strictly, by medical ethics, unless there is an over-riding medical rea son, such as saving the pros pective mother's life. 'Mystery'. Unsolved Havemann said the report had not been able to solve the "mystery" of how many actually were performed by qualified physicians. The Phone SP 2-5271 TRIUHX CONCRETE OR CONTRACTORS Rental Equipment Delivered SP-2-5271 248 E.McANDREWS RD. Become women s own opmions were considered worthless, since most abortionists claim to be "doctors" whether they are or not However, Havemann quoted the report that "there . were many physicians in good standing in their local medical associations who performed abortions on their wives, oth er relatives, friends, or other patients because of feelings of sympathy." The report found that of the devoutly religious women" studied only five per cent were ever pregnant without marriage half as many as for the group of women as a whole. For the moderately de vout, the percentage grew higher with age, and by the time these women were 30, it was the same as for , all the women. It was granted that this was statistically valid only for Protestants because of the small numbers of Ro man Catholics and Jews in the study. Havemann. suggest ed, however, that this is the "trend" among them. 'Shocking But Inevitable' Havemann said that if all these statistics 'are shocking'" in the opinion of the insti tute's researchers, they are also inevitable." He then quoted the report on these social facts: Both women and men have strong sexual drives. These are encouraged by society. But society insists there must be no conception without marriage. Yet for. so cial and economic reasons marriages are often postponed for years. "To keep one's self and or one's suitors at a high pitch of emotional and sexual ex citement for five or ten years from the beginning of dating to marriage and meanwhile abstain from sexual relations is, biologically speaking, a most unnatural as well as dif ficult task." WHY WAIT? IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Hew English-built Fords CHOICE OF II MODELS. PRICES START AT I495 IP.O.E.) DELUXE ANGLIA Grater Lake Mrs. Main & .Fir Tt Builders Supply QUALITY BLOCKS Bricks, Flues, Drain Tile 727 W. McAndrewi Ph. SP 2-4107 z Writ 51 CONCRETE C? I -t r