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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1958)
o 14 MAIL TOeUtft fc,W, Pkldfl Poor A litti ?lmony was con- vuisJ j& front of the dminis- trCeeMl4inf Saturday ev - xiinj .Mi rt jresnted Xrib- utOcBrw tmployees to the HPaj fsjt their .bees" t'Jt ars. It a ?S4 dedication of -"icfc Xloa," the stret "Mftnajf PactP crossed and reKMe4 il9 in goinj to swum xrom ni resi- n ActlfiJt Uanaftcr .Banks mote f ctremon- 0 3 tM more n isif of tft .ftfa sia epiojeet were M&t lot uAilins. Dr. r9tlit Titftka, lormer chief anroccaX officer, delayed his 4$artat fa? ?rg, MD., in 3t?ot f ere K Bicker, re- vffittvfc tcxniAiSced somewhat $Mt Xia rea$cft$ for retrre- mfrJ ici was planned tmfott f;e was called upo fb titumg tfie feufdn of rcnjt gt Camp White. ?4SZ- Paul, the new man g?r unfii one if nmed as FitcTwchefs lo s 9i area teachers will sar (fksjafa' Jft foirf-weea work- (iVt, 74ft 23- July 18, on I?arsertty of Oregon and State College eam- Jtrjiioveinents in the pne- (edtOfegoft dacationai frame- afc I? Children's eiperi- ta lofeigft languages, . art ng, Jttfts, business edu tid, 3rdtirial arts, and elt$ will fee discussed, ac- oCorirgf I. Joseph I. Hall, 3fti3ctofc t curriculum with tftitfaf. 4f tftneni of educa- 3io. - Wrfc Vaging Smith and T89dt?L9 9S. Wilson, fih of 3eWfcd Bift icftool, will f , !f sxtieipata in fce foreign lan worgsftop. Lee Rgs 4?etf7 e ti Bedford public &w2s iiXUen tfie health !ftttietina in the work (shc$ en 'business education mm Sffrf Hooper of Qf9 Tif Wigft gcfiool & Hatter, acksonvillei &fJodl, gjill fee a fnem $t e ifcguStriat arts iQfami are copon cjonf he State department o f Ofefoo nJ Oregoa Uajtl Canadian Mount 0( police wgS organised is St it f civil force for 9Xa?emtgt of law and it 3ktMliA If tha Dominion IFIRST . . . Famish Your Home! W CARRY OUB WN CONTRACTS FDE Custontf Parking 41 North Central am 'FURNITURE ASrStAND MEDFOtD 9 GRANTS PASS Wednesday, June 18, 19S8 News and Notes From Camp White permanent -manager, repre sents the new school of admin istration, with a background o" WWII service and college training, as well as field ex perience. Paul was with the Marines in the Pacific theater of the last war. He took post gradu ate work in hospital adminis tration at Columbia univer sity, New York City, and served as special assistant at the GM&S hospital of the Veterans administration in Pittsburgh before coming here is March as assistant man ager. Ricker indicated that it may be eight months before the VA makes the new appoint merit.. Thia column will be han dled henceforth by the news editor of Dominews, William Black ir. He has sparked the camp paper with terse and readable news and recently hit the 'jackpot", in the quar terly contest of the hospital ised veterans writers project He has been asked to write the column and with his close contact with available news Sources,' can present to read ers of Pickin Pears a full re port of what is happening at Camp White. Frank Houlahan, golf pro and expert at the game, is now a veteran member and is teaching the increasing num ber of golfers on the pitch and putt course at the domi ciliary aome of the tricks. Be fore being hospitalized, Houla han was instructor at the Aberdeen, Wash., course. Andy Miller came first in last week's tournament and made a hole in one on the No. 2 green. Other prize winners were George Heinold, second; Irving Gray, third; Jim Hood, fourth and George Eichnor, fifth. Dan Yarno won a standing priie for coming within five feet of the flag. Past Commander H a z e n and Commander Williams, of Barracks 14, Veterans of WW I, have returned from the de partment convention at North Bend. Williams stopped over for several days at Grants Pass for a brief rest before resum ing his task of reorganizing the barracks. George Parker has made plans to return to his native Brooklyn where he hopes to remain with is family and possibly' find something to do m Manhattan. George has been an institu tion at Camp White during these years of activity. He ad the concession of the Ore gonian for a period and has been an occasional contribu tor to Dominews. G4I Carratf Borfur aids your bealS) and appearance. So doas a Sealy Posturepadic Mottrast. It sleeps you keeps yen at yeur eve best. So firm, s eemforiable! A Sealy "osturepedic won't sag, won't aggra vate weary bade muscles. So replace jat worn-out mattress now. Switch to a posture-perfect Poirurepedic with famous "spine on a line" con struction. Full or Twin Size ... $79.50 Always-Mafching rouneaKon$79.50. Foam Rubber 2-Piece Sat $179 JO tOfTURE IS A PLUS yaw caw e frmm sleeping OITUBIP-tlC MATTRESS Outer Mongolia's Turn to Communism Found Simple Editor's note: Following is the third and final dispatch on little known Outer Mongolia. Material for this dispatch is from Chinese Communist sources. By PETER SUM United Press International Hong Kong (UPI) The People's Republic of (Outer) Mongolia had a far easier time becoming a Communist state than did either Russia or China. The small population and the backwardness of the peo ple perhaps were the two ma jor reasons why the Mongo lian People's Revolutionary (Communist) party found its task simpler than did their Russian and Chinese counter parts. The Mongolian Cpmmunist party has 42,500 card-carrying members, plus candidate members. The figure is rough ly one-tenth the country's to tal 500,000 population. Chinese Communists claim Mongolia never experienced the "development stage of capitalism." They say that Mongolia, "under superb guid ance of the Mongolian Peo ple's Revolutionary Party," jumped over that stage and entered directly into social ism which neither Commu nist China" nor the Soviet Union did. The Mongolian People's Revolutionary party was formed March 1, 1922, 16 months after the nucleus of the Chinese Communist party Pellet Mill To Go In Operation Soon Scott Valley,' Calif. The pellet mili and storage barn on the Star ranch, three miles west of Fort Jones, soon will be in operation. Pellets of mixed alfalfa hay and grain hays will be manu factured and sold for feeding livestock, turkeys and other domestic animals. With the pellets, the animals will be fed in troughs rather than the common loose hay feeding racks, according to Orrin Heinke, operator of the ranch. Three thousand islands, cays and rocks comprise the Bahamas, the British colony southeast of Florida. The Bahamian Constitution, dat ing from 1729, provides a form of government similar to that in the North American colonies before the Revolu tion. Court Records MUNICIPAL COURT Ronald Brood Gillaspey, violation of basic rule, Siu. Jack Edward Williams, disobeyed traffic signal. S5. Irene Lonette Shirley, disregard ed ' no rient turn sign, 3. Louise William Powell, disobeyed traffic signal. S5. Larr Kenneth Metcalf, no tail liehts. $5. Harold Richard Hiatt, violation of basic rule. $10. Ethel Rose Osborn, disobeyed stop sign. So. Harry Conrad Phillips, disobeyed stop sign. $5.' Joseph Edward Hasler, excessive noise, exhaust, siu. Lloyd L. Tyson Jr., disobeyed stop sign, So. Laura June Riley Goutermont, disobeyed stop sign, $5. Brooke Wendel Adkinson. ex pired operator's license, $2.50. Horace Edward Bittle, disobeyed stop sign, $5. Dorothy Mary Wilson, disobeyed stop sign. So. Alveretta Marie Bobbett, dis obeyed traffic signal. $5. Donald Lee Addington, disre gaded "no right turn" sign, $5. Jimmy Ed Crumm, no operator's license, $10. Lester Hollis Trask, improper passing, $10. Robert Porter Hart, violation of basic rule, $10. Ralph Fredrick Kime, disregarded- "no'"right turn" sign, $5. Clarence Leroy Smith, disobeyed stop sign, $5. Edmund Ray Birge Jr., disobeyed stop sign, $5. Margery Jean Robertson, no operator's license, $2.50. ' Eugene Earl Gemaehlich, no tail lights. $2.50. , Dorothy IrCne Bean, disobeyed traffic signal. $5. Johnnie Hubert Bobbins, dis obeyed yellow light, $5. . . Forest Earnest Lawler, disobeyed red light, $5. Guy Wayne Gillaspey, violation basic rule, $10. Charles Frank Clark, disregard ed "no right turn" sign, $5. Rolland Ray Todd, disobeyed red light, $5. Donald Eugene Hills, four adults in front seat, $2.50. DISTRICT COURT , Donald R. Nelson, failure to stop at traffic signal, $10. Ruth E. Dunn, failure to yield right of way. $15. Lois M. Smith, failure to yield right of way, $15. , Charles Rickets, driving while in the embrace of another, $6. ' George F. Reigel. failure to st'oo at a traffic signal, $10. wuiiam btanton, failure to have operator's license on person, $10. Paul A. White, failure to stoD for traffic signal, $10. .Eugene U. Hunt, overheight, $15. Anton Gerswick. failure to storj for traffic signal, $10. Wayne England, failure to stop for traffic signal. $10. Aioert j. bacchi, failure to stop for traffic signal, $10. Merritt L. Hittle. failure to stop for traffic signal, $10. i Loren M. Glenn, failure to dim lights, $7.50. Joy W. Eatherstone, overlength, $10. - CIRCUIT COURT Gwendolyn Seymour vs. William Charles Seymour, divorce decree. Christina Marshall vs. Lee H. Marshall, divorce decree Daisy Caroline Tureman vs. Nor man Tureman. divorce decree. Dorothv D. BiIIuds vs. Homer E. Billups, divorce decree. MARRIAGE LICENSE , APPLICATIONS Max Eugene Hite. Med ford.- and Norene Davis. Central Point. John Pamplin. Talent, and Bar bara Jean Crosslin, Ashland. Frank Root. Medford. and Eldean Jane Burgess; Ashland. PLANER BLOX Clean Quick Delivery Medford Fuel Go. i i was born in a western-style house in Shanghai's French concession. Communist historians said that before 1924, the party was merely known . as the Mongolian People's party. The First 16 Years "Under the leadership of the Revolutionary party," a Red source said, "in July, 1921, and with the direct help of the Soviet Red army, the Mongolian people overthrew the rule of oppressors at home and abroad, set up the Peo ple's Revolutionary regime." In November, 1924, Mongo lia saw its first Hural na tional people's congress or parliament. The Hural pro r , i- ... - , CLINGING TO BOAT'S TAIL, Bill Cantrell (arrow) suffers fractured jaw when thrown, from cockpit of Gale V before start of Detroit Memorial Regatta. ( UPI Telephoto) st a mm NEW "DEBONAIR" PATTERN i Dinner Plates J t Saucers 1 Meat 49 V " tttoBi isn I sugar ana cover 1 mmmm SJ r The most practical dlnnerware you've tl llfPri SI J d aver had, yet attractive enough for .Ull W fcfcK 4 i. i Jf M t company. Will not warp under heat. 1 ww ww YOUR CHOICE OF 2 DANISH MODERN STYLES "GUILDER" AND "CONQUEST" COMPLETE 72-PIECE SET INCLUDES: 1i Teaspoons I Iced Tspns. 1 Knives 2 Tablespoons S Salad Forks ' 1 Gravy Ladle S Cocktail Forks 1 Pastry Server S Dessert Forks 1 Butter Knife . t Dinner Forks 1 Sugar Shell 1 Large Salad Spoon I j 1 mulgated the country's first "people's constitution." It for mally proclaimed the inaugu ration of the People's Repub lic of Mongolia which embod ied that part of the area be tween the Soviet Union and China that National Chinese call Outer Mongolia. Since establishment of the republic, Communist histori ans say, the Mongolian repub lic has been "advancing to wards more prosperous stages of socialism." It took the Mongolian Communists about 16 years before they "basical ly fulfilled the difficult and enormous task of uprooting feudalism." During this period the Mon VI A J& J M mi . a. .BBS Si i n 45-PIECE SET - SERVICE FOR 8 QUALITY MELAMINE Z m m. bbv sv sv si mm wmm m m m smsm MANUFACTURED BY KENRO COMPLETE 6 PIECE SERVING SET INCLUDED Sugar Spoon Pastry Server Butter Knife Cold Meat Fork - Serving Spoon Gravy Ladle PIECE SET SERVICE for 8 STAINLESS TABLEWARE Complete with all the extras n PAY 1.00 A 1 Large Salad Fork Large Salad Fork golian Communists also de veloped the country's industry and set up the "working class," thus bringing about some basic changes to Mon golia's economic and "class status." The years after 1940 are considered b y Mongolian Communists as a period when the people entered a . new stage of socialist revolution and socialist construction aimed at bettering the living standard of the population. Eight years were required to lay down the ground work of this "new stage of social ism." Industrial Goal Beginning with 1948, Mon- 88 ONLY WEEK 122 East Main St. Phone SP 3-5348 Store Hours: 9:30 to 5:30 No Money Down! I f I I I X y PIECES 1 TO mm Ufa golia plunged into two suc cessive five-year plans aimed at developing the nation's economy and culture. The two periods ended Dec. 31, 1947. Mongolian Commu nists found it necessary to in augurate three more years of economic planning, this time aimed at putting muscles into the country's industries. Mongolia basically is a live stock raising country. But as in other Communist countries, Mongolian Communists feel their country will not be "strong" unless it possesses a sizeable and independent in dustry. Thus, appeals were made to the Soviet Union, Communist China and other eastern Eu ropean . countries for their support in materializing Mon golian aspirations of indus trialization. Special friendship, cultural and technical delegations ar rived in Mongolia from throughout the Communist world, and already a small but efficient industry has been established in Mongolia with foreign assistance. Regardless of the Mongo lian Communists' ambition, however, Mongolia perhaps will always remain a country dependent on the: Soviet Union and Communist China. Firstly, because of Mongolia's r a1 mT'm9mmmmmmmmWmmr if u i n wm n wi u a VjfA w ti a m k -JVlMs- hmrt V r a AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC DEEP FRYER and COOKER 988 NO MONEY DOWN ONLY 25c A WEEK . ' Gives complete thermostatic controlled cooking. Includes a long-handled wire insert JJiAa AiJk PORT-A-TABLE Q88 NO MONEY DOWN ONLY 25e A WEEK SLar Made of sturdy metal, this is .... . 1 -gT the table ot IUI uses, a wei yr, come gift for every home. fhs,j Task geographical position, sand- wiched between the tWo ma-, - SAVE - SAVE - SAVE - SAVE - SAVE -SAV ACME CLEANERS AVESAAVEAVEAVE - SAVE- Has inaugurated a NEW DEAL! YOU CAN SAVE 20 On your Cleaning Bill by bringing your clothes into the plant. 20 D CASH & o WATCH THIS SPACE o for ACME CLEANERS EXTRA SPECIAL Good for Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. (for plant & route) This Week's Special Will Be Any JJft. Pants or Slacks Cleaned and Finished 3C ea TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU ACME CLEANERS 1728 No. Riverside Call SP 2-42G3 GOLD HILL AREA SPIC 'N' SPAN CLEANERS 352 Second Ave. Call UL 5-1616 ' Regular Pick Up and Delivery at Regular Prices m- m m mm mm mwm mm mm t m mwrnmpr n m cm i mm rm s. SUNBEAM Steam & Dry Iron REG. 17.95 VALUE .... SUNBEAM ELECTRIC Automatic Fry Pans REG. 16.95 STANDARD REG. 19.95 MEDIUM .. REG. 23.95 LARGE. REG. 26.95 SUPER ....... . . : LIDS ALSO REDUCED Deluxe Mixmastar REG. 49.95 Ift, JQ8S 7th juicer ...KOm t i ... Portable Hand Kixer iXr How I688. NO MONEY TERMS AS LOW AS dtwc ri.iv I 25c PER WEEK basket. . A vV 11. , tr-"tf(r I jor powers. Secondly, because of the country's majority of herdsmen population. Third ly, the country's lack of in- dustrial raw materials. CAR XT-?:?.-!? flow II88 Kara II 88 Kovy I488 Mm IS88 Kcw 2088 5 .3 DOVN H ml ' " - ? m$ 3 I I