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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1958)
k.1 Dl f. n Korean Gang Zteah IU IVUUII I IUI VIUUIII In Christianity, Evangelist Declares San Francisco W Billy 3raham believes there's no room for a gloomy gus in Christianity. The hard-hitting evangelist told a rapt audience of 12,500 Tuesday night that their re ligion should be one of re joicing, not of sadness. "Where in the Bible do we see that Christianity is a sad religion?" he asked. . "Even when the earliest Christians were being perse cuted for their beliefs, they filled the jails with praises of the Lord. "Let us rejoice, rejoice, re joice!" Graham told once of visit ing in a small town and get ting off the train. There he saw a friend who was dressed in a black suit, black shoes, black hat and a black necktie. "I've been converted," the friend explained. "And do you know what I did?" Graham asked. "I took him right down and bought him a red necktie!" Some Vacancies Tuesday night was the third meeting of Graham's six weeks crusade in San Fran cisco's Cow Palace. There were 4.000 vacant seats, twice the number as on Monday night. For much of the 45 minutes he spoke, Graham discussed sin and the need for repen tence. He noted that most of those who "give their lives to Christ" are under 25. "Why: Because those who are older find their hearts are cold and hard and dead when it comes to hearing the word of God." As the group sang a sub dued hymn, a few people started down the aisle in re sponse to Graham's plea to be reborn. Soon a few more joined them. In a few minutes, the whole area in front of the podium was filled. Later it was announced that 386 per sons had come forward. The Young Among them were two girls of about -15. They wore tight black dresses and black shoes with high, spiked heels. One had a close-cropped haircut. Her hair was bleached. She dabbed at her eyes with her fingers. Her girl friend had an arm about her waist. Counsel lors took them in tow. Three boys of about 13 or Communication Wire Seol W A gang of six Koreans stole almost two miles of communication wire Tuesday after knocking down the poles, the U. S. Army dis closed today. The wire, valued at $4,200 was recovered the same day. Communications were inter rupted for about 12 hours in the First Cavalry Division area. 14 wearing tight jeans and with duck-tailed haircuts slouched forward, chewing gum with their mouths open. But from the expressions on their faces, it was apparent that Graham's words had reached them. By and large, those who came forward were ordinary looking people, much as a crowd that might be shopping on Market st. on Saturday af ternoon. But every one of them, it was plain to see, was moved and inspired by the service. As the "sinners" moved to a side room for interviews with counsellors, Graham told the audience quietly: "The sight you have seen is one of the great hopes of this country men and women making their way to God. This is the only way our world will emerge from the dilemma it is in." ILLINOIS VALLEY Rescue Class Discussed MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Wednesday, April 30, 1958 5 I I Music by DCI AMTQVA HIGH FIDELITY at its (utfCHjatk best limited time only per 12" LP reg. $3.98 ONDON RECORDS 1 S A 1 ... ' - '' 'ir " p o fi- f I R h All The Things You Are; True Love; I Could Have Danced All Night; You Keep Coming Back Like A Song; A Vypman In Love; This Nearly Was Mine; Summertime; Some thing To Remember You By; Love Letters; The Nearness Of You; Our Love Affair; Hey There 11 3032 I I I OTHER MANTOVANI HITS CONCERT ENCORES Clair De Lune; Spanish Dance; la Boutique Fantasoue Can Can; Chanson de Matin; Gypsy Airs; Autumn; Song of nou; itnoq Kosmarin; Meditation (Thais); Perpetuus Mobile. n 3004 WORLD'S FAVORITE LOVE SONGS, And This Is Mr Beloved; At Dawning; Drink To Me Only With Thine Eyes: I Give My Heart; Night and Dav; Parlez-Moi D'Amour; My Old Dutch; The Story Of Tina; For You Aione; Yours Is My Heart Alone, 4 others. u 1743 FILM ENCORIS My Foolish Heart; love Is A Many Splendored Thing; laura; High Noon; September Song; Three Coins in the Fountain, 6 others. It. 1700 BAllET MEIOOIES Valse des fleurs-"Nutcraclier Suile" (Tchaikovsky); Waltz "The Sleeping Beauty" (Tchaikovsky); Dance of the Hours-finale-"La Gioconda" (Ponchielli); Waltz-"Swan lake" (Tchai kovsky); Dance of the Comedians-"The Bartered Bride" (Smetana), 5 others. n S25 MUSIC FROM THE FIIMS Warsaw Concerto: Serenata O'Amore; Dream of Oiwen; Tbe legend of The Glass Mountain; Story of Three Loves; Cornish Rhapsody. lL 1513 CANDLELIGHT Candlelight; Blue Fantasy: Gold and Silver Waltz; Heart of Paris; Spring in Montmartre; Song of Sorrento, 6 others. II 1602 WALTZES OF IRVING BERLIN Aii Alone; Because I Love You; Russian lullaby; Always; Mane; me bin mar 1 Marry, t otners. LL 152 OPERATIC ARIAS Celeste Aida (Aidah One Fine Day (Madama Butterfly); Cam nome (Rigoletto): M'Appari (Martha); Musetta's Waltz Song (la Boheme); Habanera (Carmen); Intermezzo iCavalleria Rusticana); Brindisi (La Traviata), 4 others. LL 1331 GERSHWIN; RHAPSODY IN BLUE, CONCERTO IN F JULIUS HATCH EN, Piano. LI 1262 LONELY BALLERINA (Musical Modes) Lonely Ballerina: Deserted Ballroom; Lazy Gondolier; Begin the Beguine; June Night; Edelma, 6 others. U 1259 SONG HITS FROM THEATR ELAND If I Loved You (Carousel): Hello Young Lovers (King and 1 Stranger in Paradise (Kismet); C'est Magnifique (Can-Can); Bewitched (P Joey); Some Enchanted Evening (South Pacific), others. - ll!2i THt MUSIC OF RUDOLF FRIMl Rose Mane; Dear Love, My Love biannina Mia; Indian Love Call Sympathy, 6 others. CHARMAINC (Woltx Tinw) Oiane; Queen Elizabeth Waltz; Our Dream Waltz; Under the Roofs of Paris; The Melba Walttj Wyoming; Charmaine, 6 others. . u 1094 THE MUSK OF StGMUNB ROMKRft Wanting You; Stouthearted Men; Desert Song; On Alone; Just We Two; Drinking Song; When I Grow too Old to Dream; Lover, Come Back to Me, 6 others. a iojj ROMANTIC MELODIES Swedish Rhapsody; Music Box Tango; Moonlight Serenade; Beautiful Dreamer; Moulin Rouge Theme; Jamaican Rumba. Gypsy Legend; Suddenly, 6 others. u 979 MANTOVANI FLAYS THE IMMORTAL CLASSICS Prelude in Cf Minor (Rachmaninoff): Minuet in G (Mozart); Largo (Handel): Barcarolle (Offenbach); Ave Maria (Schubert) Cradle Song (Brahms); Air on a G String (Bach); 5 others. LI 877 AN ALBUM OF FAVORITE TANGOS Jealousy: A Media Luz; Besame Mucho: Tango de la Luna; Red Petticoats; Adios Muchachos; La Cumparsitaj Chiquita Mia, 4 others. jc SOMC ENCHANTED EVENING (An Enchanted Evaning with Mantavani) Some Enchanted Evening; Speakeasy: Symphony; The Agnes Waltz; Faith; Schonbrunner Waltz; Czardas, 6 others. U 766 THE MUSIC OF VICTOR HERBERT Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life; March of the To; I'm Falling in love With Someone; Kiss Me Again; Indian Summer; Italian Street Song; Habanera; Sweethearts, 6 others. LL 746 STRAUSS WALTZES Blue Danube; Wine, Women and Song; Tales from the Vienna Woods; Emperor Waltz; Voices of Spring, 7 others. Li 605 GREENSLEEVES (A ScUcrioa of Favorite Weftse) It Happened in Monterey; Mezicali Rose; Love, Here Is My Heart; I Love You Truly; Dancing With Tears la My Eyes; Greensleeves. 6 others. n jg py M (sK MUSIC HOUSE 11 "Your High Fidelity Center' 111 North Central Phone SP 2-5702 I (Ml fl1 J 4 I I I I I I I I I I I I I 0 I love fs like a Firefly? Donkey Serenade; Someuay, Ll-lloO By HELEN BOTTEL Cave Junction Only 12 persons attended the organi zational meeting for a civil defense rescue class recently. If a class is'lo be formed in the Illinois Valley, Rose Turpin, local chairman said, a membership of at least 35 must be assured. Men and women who wish to take the rescue course may sign' up with Turpin within the next few weeks. Karl Reherd, county direc tor of civil defense, and For est Gardner, deputy in charge of rescue work brought out the rescue truck from Grants Pass, and demonstrat ed its many uses. The Soil Conservation week tour committee met Wednes day morning at the home of Les Archer in Draper Creek valley to make plans for the Illinois Valley tour which will be held May 13, in connec tion with the county-wide Conservation week. day at the Illinois Valley I Grange meeting. Lecturer Mrs. Gilbert Clay-, ton read a history of the Na- tional Grange, while Mrs. Is- abel Mellow and Elwood : Hussey gave brief vignettes j of local Grange events over j past years. A rehearsal was held Sun day afternoon for the first and second degree drill team, members of which are prepar ing themselves to give first degree work in the long form. Instructions were given by Mr. and Mrs. McClintock of Grants Pass. Melvin Gray is supervisor of the drill teams. Future Farmers of America heard Andy Lanforce, wild life extension agent from Ore gon State college, at a meet ing Tuesday night. Plans for the annual ban quet May 3, were discussed there. Members of the Illinois Valley Federated Women's club who attended the district conclave at Ashland were Mesdames R. J. Heidenreich, Frank Rauber, Earl Boyd, E. J. Wilber, Frank Knight, Jack Spitz, Sam Bunch and Gene Denning. Recent guests at the home of Mrs. Esther Quinn in O'Brien were former O'Brien residents, Mrs. R. D. Swank, her son, Pete Swank, and a friend from Lakewood vil lage, Long .Beach, Calif. Valeria Rauber of Cave Junction, represented the Il linois Valley Chamber of Commerce at the "Winnemuc ca to the Sea" highway plan ning session Friday night at Klamath Falls. Chamber representatives from eastern and western Oregon and California pushed the proposed east-west high way which would connect with Highway 40 at Winne- mucca. Librarian Ann Messenger conducted her first tour of the new Cave Junction Branch library last Friday when the fourth graders from Ever green school visited the chil dren's room and other parts of the building. They were accompanied by their teach er, Mrs: Dave Wilson. A number of local and Grants Pass Masons attended dedication ceremonies of the new Sidney Croft Masonic lodge at Brookings recently. Present from the valley were Arthur Kellert, Henry Lloyd, Homer Snider, J. J. Haines, Doyl Hamilton, Ralph Kaiser, Carrol Banks, Jiggs Morris, Bud Hoskins and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Musil. Claude Masters of Grants Pass, a member of the Kerby lodge, went over with , the Illinois Valley group. A work party composed of Grants Pass and Illinois Val ley scouters and others inter ested in youth activities re timbered and straightened the old CCC building at Camp Chinquapin last week end, preparatory to. transforming it into a shelter for the new youth camp. Material for the work were donated by mills and other local business houses. Accord ing to Marshall Burrows, a member of the youth camp committee, the building is now ready for installation of window glass and re-siding. Another work party is plan ned later this spring. Arlene Banks, daughter of Cave Junction .Mayor and Mrs. Carrol Banks, has passed her Army tests, with grades of "excellent" in all divisions and will enter the Women's Army Corps in June, shortly after she graduates from Il linois Valley High school. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh White of Cave Junction celebrated their 39th wedding anniver sary last Saturday night with a quiet evening at home be fore the television set. Mr. and Mrs. Blake Miller of Cave Junction are home from spending the winter in Indio, Calif. ' Twenty-nine students of the senior American Problems classes at Illinois Valley high school returned Saturday eve ning from a two day tour of the Willamette valley, where they visited the Oregon state capitol and other state insti tutions, and several college and university campuses. Mr. and Mrs. Ed George of O'Brien of will go to San Francisco April 25 for the graduation ceremonies of their daughter, Beverly, who is finishing her course at the Dental nursing school this month. Mrs. Palmer Lovejoy of Cave Junction, the only wom an member of the Veterans of World War I, Barracks in Cave Junction, received her obligation at the regular meeting Tuesday night at the VFW hall. Mrs. Lovejoy was a nurse in the armed services during World War I. Also obligated was Leo Fes sler of the Illinois Valley. Members made final plans for their picnic and day of gold panning at Browntown, May 4. The 90th birthday of the Grange was celebrated Thurs- Harvey Peery, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Peery of O'Brien, underwent 3 Vi hours of surgery in Sacred Heart hospital, Medford, last week. When Harvey cut his wrist on a broken bottle, the wound healed in such a way that his hand was drawn and his arm shortened. Grafting was nec essary to eliminate the trou ble. Another operation may be required later, his mother said. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Nune maker of Dorris, Calif., Sun day visted their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Al bert Eggerd. Plans for the Queen's visita tion in May were made at the Zuleima Illinons Valley Nile club meeting Tuesday at ihe home of Mrs. Joe Ollis in Cave Junction. Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Petsch at Cave Junc tion Manday were Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell of Aberdeen, Wash. McCurley to Move To Klamath Basin The transfer of Gene T. Mc Curley, First National bank of Portland agricultural rep resentative in the Medford area, to a similar post in the Klamath basin, has been an nounced by Elwood Hedberg, vice president and manager of the bank's Medford branch. McCurley, an Oregon State ; college graduate, has been representing First National in Jackson county and surround ing area with headquarters in Medford for the past three years. In the new postiion his headquarters will be in Klam ath Falls. Before joining the bank, McCurley was associated with Southern Oregon Production Credit corporation. He has been active in the Elks, Jack son County Young Farmers, Central Point Grange and Jackson County Agricultural I committee. . Georgia-Pacific Petition Continued Portland (IP) The Oregon State Sanitary authority con tinued until May 12 today a petition by Georgia - Pacific Paper company in Toledo seeking permission to dis charge rain water mixed with mill wastes into the Yaquina river. The Authority, which heard the request Tuesday, contin ued the meeting to give in terested parties time to inter vene. The Authority last month ordered the company to halt emptying wastes into the river from the firm's emer gency storage lagoon. The company said that only one- tenth of one per cent of the storage in the lagoon was ! mill waste and that the bulk i was rain water. Fur Storage Special C for V April 450 V each fur includes $100 Insurance FREE PICKUP We Also Clean and Glaze Furs Medford Cleaners Hale & Kathryn Wheeler 34 N. Holly - SP 2-6500 Free Pickup and Delivery The Manager Is On Vacation aid the Assistant Manager Has Gone Wild! Get These Buys While They Last! You Always Save More at Newberry's! YARDAGE SPECIAL Gingham Embossed Cotton Sailcloth 0 Poplin Polished Cotton Drip Dry, Etc. Values to 79c yd. Florals, solids, plaids, checks, stripes and prints. For anything you want to make in sport or casual wear,' dusters, curtains, etc. STRETCH YOUR BUDGET Ladies Knee Length Stretch Hose First quality. Can't run, stretchy. Small and tall. Beigetone. -Regular $1.15. NEED A COMB? SPECIAL FAMILY OFFER Famous fiesta combs for the whole family. All popular styles. Clear, Blue, Pink, Shell. Packaged in sanitary nolvetholina baa. iz uomos tor umy IDEAL GIFT FOR MOTHER Ladies Cotton Dusters Beautiful and colorful embossed cotton for cool. comfortable wear. 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Reg. $10.95 WITH ELECTRIC OUTLET $ Regular $11.95 Now.... 9.97 WOMEN'S MOCCASIN Soft glove leather with thick, white vinyl soleg. Gold or white. Sizes 4 to 9. 267 Reg. 2.98 Romper Room TV Pillows M 98 U each Increase your TV pleasure with a soft 18x18 100 cotton filled box pillow with button center. Reg. $2.98. Circus print in gold, tan and blue. Rodeo print in tan and grey. Now only KNIFE EDGE PILLOW Reg. 1.69. Button center, same as above, Now only 99' ea HOT POPCORN Reg. 10c Bags 3 25 Newberry's has a real bargain for you! Famous Manley Popcorn. Sale ends this Saturday. Buy enough for the whole family. SPECIAL! TWIN BED SHEETS Reg. $2.69 ea. value $498 $388 ea. pr. 72 x 108. Three famous brands Cannon, Pepperell and J. P. Stevens. Percale and muslin. Some fitted bottoms. Pinch Pleated DRAPERIES Reg. $7.98 42 x 84. Cotton rayon blend famous "tumble weed" pattern. Brighten up your home. 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