Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 25, 1958, Image 6

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    0
6 MAIL TOWJNE, U4ftrJ, ron, Vcdntsday, Jun. 25, 1938
Pardon .Gladden Itaing Tragi! FdliraB-Typ(g IP
mtenfiary
at Sata
Stock Market Said Approaching
One of Pest Months for Bulls
Br ELMER C. WALZER
UPI Financial Editor
New York (UPI) The
stock market is approaching
one of its best months for the
bulls with the prices high and
talk of a possible lull in the
upturn. 0
July has always been the
S;r2"CZL best month of
V the year for
lf7jj, shares. In the
past 61 years,
? this group has
risen in 4 3
and declined
-W M in lR .TnTvc
"T Si "
Ihe industri
als have their
1 UAr- u ;M
Elmer Walzc wnnui""
December with the score 44
;to 17 on gains and losses. But
July also is excellent with 42
to 19 losses.
Then too, the market is get
ting into the period of the!
summer seasonal rise which
has proved more potent than
any other of the' Wall Street
statistical marvels.
The way Wall Street meas
ures the summer period is like
this:
It takes the difference be
tween the close of the indus
trial average in May and com-
J
pares it with the highs of
July-August. In the past 61
years, this July-August high
has been above the May close.
And most of the nine declines
recorded have been small.
The widest decline 11.4
per cent was in 1930. And the
widest gain 72.1 per cent
was in 1932 when the market
was rising sharply after touch
ing a near record low.
In the past seven years
there has been a rise on this
basis in every year with the
widest 10.3 per cent in
1955.
Last year the average was
even higher than it is now. It
closed May of 1957 at 504.93
and on July 12 set its high at
520.77. It was higher in 1956,
too May close 478.06 from
which it rose to 520.95 on
Aug. 2. The current figure
was at the third highest in
history for the day closing of
462.70.
From a purely price 'stand
point the market isn't any
worse off than it has been in
three Drevious years. But on
the basis of price-earnings ra
tio it is far higher than in
many a year and this makes
for the bearish talk at the
present time.
Also second quarter earn
ings are going to be stream
ing out in a few weeks. Wall
Street knows they will make
poor reading generally, and
since it knows this, some
think the market has ' dis
counted the worst. But some
wonder if it has some over
discounting. If the market can take the
second quarter results of cor
porations in stride, many
think it can rise to new highs
for the year in the July-August
period and maintain the
summer rally tradition.
HEED MONEY?
Do Whr Your Friends and
Neighbors Do Get a Confi
dential LOAN Through ...
m
k owismx or Memc
PACIFIC
INDUSTRIALS
16 S. Central Ph. SP 3-5308
JIAELBERT, Manager
The Hollywood Scene
By HAZEL JOHNSON
United Press Writer
Hollywood (UPI Pe
ter Potter, a Hollywood tele
vision disc jockey, whose
"Juke Box Jury" on a local
TV station airs new records
and predicts hits, has come
up with an advertising gim
mick which he says could
help put a damper on "that"
kind of music.
Just what he means by
"that kind of music" wasn't
explained. But Potter did
mention that his advertising
and merchandising tie-in with
the music operators of Ameri
ca (MOA) will "tolerate only
first class, top recordings."
"I feel certain we can
stamp out the filth, the naugh
ty lyrics, that you can find
in some of today's record
hits," the disc jockey said.
Arrangements Explained
The way Potter envisions
th arrangements, his show
will be able to make a hit
record out of any song
through MOA, which controls
more than a half-million juke
boxes throughout the nation.
The first thing Potter has
to do is find a network spon
sor "to "Jury," a task which
shouldn't be so hard if he can
do what he claims he can.
Potter says MOA has
agreed to put Potter-picked
(studio audience picked, ac
tually) records on each of its
phonographs. And the organ
ization also will agree to fix
a decal advertising the "Jury"
pick-of-the-week on each of its
500,000 machines.
Sponsor's Name Included
The decal will include the
name .of the program's spon
sor and will mark the first
time juke box operators have
allowed commercials or ad
vertising to appear on the
heavily - played machines.
The first leg of the tie-in
goes ' into effect this week.
MOA's subsidiary, the Calif
ornia Merchants Music Asso
ciation has agreed to put the
song selected as best of five
new records aired in the
course of this weeks hour-
long telecast in 10,000 juke
boxes operated in this state.
"We can make a hit out of
a record even if the public
doesn't buy one disk," Potter
remarked.
Although it lives where
winters are warm and food is
plentiful all year around, the
Florida b 1 a ck bear goes
through the same seasonal
routine as its northern breth
ren. It feeds, fattens and hibernates.
SUflMEf! VITAMIN
250 for the Prico of 200
THAT'S 50 FREE POTENCY GUARANTEED
Vitamin "Bl"
25 Mg
TOO TABLETS
$1.19
SO.,.
H2r.w
250 TABS
$2.38
50,000 Units
100 Caps $2.95
250 5.90
Vitamin
o
25000 Units
ttO
Capsules
2.50 Caps
33.38
"C"
Vitamin
O 50 Mg
100 TABLETS
59c
00 KIB
10.
O 50 Mg Tabs
100 --$1.98
250 -- $3.96
Sale Super-Special
Compare the Formula
Each Geltab Contains:
Vitamin A (Acetate)
10.000 USP Units
Btamin D-2
1 OOO USP Unit
Vitamin B-l
Vitamin B-2
Vitamin C
16 mg.
mg.
40 mg.
HIGH POTENCY
RUBICAP
Multiple Vitamins
Regular
100 caps $6.95
250 c&is $9995
Niacinamide 10 mg.
Calcium Pantotne
nate 5 mg. ;
Vitamin B-6 0.5 mg.
Vitamin E .1.25 I.U.
Desiccated Liver.
NF 100 mg."
Dried Debittered
Yeast 100 mg.
Choline Bitartrate
62 mg.
Inositol 30 mg.
dl-Methionine 30 mg.
Folic Acid 0.1 mg.
Vitamin B-l 2 Activity
Concentrate. NF
6 mcgm.
Ferrous Gluconate
30 mg. .
Calcium from Dicalci
um Phosphate 58 mg.
Phosphorous frolm Di
calcium Phosphate
45 mg.
Potassium Iodide
0.15 mg.
Magnesium Sulfate
Dried 72 mg.
Copper Sulfate
Dried 5 mg.
Manganese Sulfate
3.4 mg.
Cobal Sulfate 0.2 mg.
Potassium Chloride
1.3 mg.
250 TABS
$1.13
100 Mg Tabs
100 --- 98c
250 --$1.96
250 Mg Tabs
100 --$1.98
250 - - $3.96
Vitamin "B12"
25 Mcgm
100 --$2.49
250 - - $4.98
rfrrm
PRESCRIPTION V
SPECIAL! STSA
Mm.
' MULTI
VITAMIN Maintenance ..
Potency
Capsules
100 --$1.69
250 -- $3.38
SALE
No Confusion,
Rubble Found
In Prison Yard
Editor' note: This is a third in a
series of four articles on the. Ore
gon State penitentiary.
By DICK HUMPHREY
United Press International
Salem (UPI) Warden
Clarence T. Gladden, a vet
eran oi tne federal prison with
system, runs a tougn, ieaerai
type prison here.
That is what he was hired
to do in 1953.
The prison yard is so care
fully policed that it's almost
impossible to find a cigarette
butt anywhere and the floors
to get caught at a little week
end crime.
That's why there are 10
guard towers and a 27 to 30
foot wall around OSP. No
one's gone over the wall for
five years.
There is some flexibility to
custody. In fact, the classifi
cation committee has its
choice of five degrees of cus
tody ?nd reviews cases at
least once a year.
A man in maximum custody
is under individual super
vision all the time. In -close
custody he usually travels
an officer around the
prison rather than on a pass.
Medium inside custody
(medium-I) allows him some
freedom of movement within
the walls while on medium
custody he may work outside
under supervision.
Minimum custody is for
of the cellblocks and halls men at the farm annex and
gleam with sheer elbow Tillamook forest camp. They
are relatively tree except for
grease
The kichen and food stor
age rooms smell fresh.
There's no rubble laying
around except where inmates
are tearing down the ancient
cellblock B.
And there's no confusion.
Inmates go to and from work
in single file following a
Bad Checks Lead
Conviction List
At State Prison
Salem (UPI) The
latest statistics compiled by
Warden Gladden show, in
order, the crimes for which
men were confined to Ore
gon slate penitentiary:
Bad checks, 349; burg
lary, 218; sex crimes, 208;
robbery. 165; larceny. 159;
manslaughter, 29; murder,
8; kidnaping, 8; and arson 7.
painted red line. Every few
yards a guard is posted to
shake the men down at ran
dom to keep them just a bit
off balance.
Of course, men allowed out
side the walls on work parties
get a shakedown coming and
going and pictures in the
hands of gate officers provide
positive identification.
Pressure Is Constant
It takes a firm system and request it, his partner agree
continuing pressure to make and the request must be ap-
one-hour checks and they
sleep in dormitories.
Inside the 22-acre prison,
major areas such as the indus
trial area and the five-acre
recreation yard are fenced off
to prevent trouble.
The nerve center control
ling all movements in OSP is
the control center located at
the heart of cellblocks A. C.
D. and E.
Through it all men moving
on passes are required to
check and by it the men walk
to the mess hall, block by
block. Incidentally, - talking
is permitted in lines and in
the mess hall but the men
have to get used to eating
without a knife and eating all
they take.
An important feature of
custody is "the count." Most
prisoners get counted six or
seven times a day and counts
from which they are excused
are carefully noted
The warden is keen for ac
curacy and within 20 minutes
he can get a count of every
one inside and outside the
walls.
Most Cells Singles
All cells in OSP except in
C block, the .oldest in opera
tion, are singles. To get a
double cell in C, 'a man must
MRS. WYATT
VITMAIN
CONSULTANT
Trained by
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturer
Will be at Western
Thrift Thursday, Fri
day and Saturday to
assist you with your
nutritional problems.
CALCIUM
CAPSULES
With Vitamin
"D"
100 Capsules
DiCalcium Phosphates 5 gr.
Calcium Gluconate 2.5 gr.
Vitamin "D" - 330 Units
89c
T
JL
250 capS 51.78
uu
MSMVUDS OXI&NAl PRICE CimQ
ttiaag rasa glares) an?
LUL
j
. CENTRAL
DIAL
Sal
a prison look and work like
OSP and the pressure is evi
dently being applied.
The well - trained officer
force of 200 men has the faces
of real trouble-makers mem
orized and on them the pres
sure is unrelenting.
Custody is the most unpleas
ant function of a prison, but,
as society dictates, a vital one.
Unfortunately prisons must
be built to contain the tough
est members of society, not
just the lad v who happened
Bluebird Planter
Pretty, in pairs, or create a
birds-in-flight arrangement of
several in living-room or
patio.
Jiffy, thrifty! Less than one
ball of jiffy cotton or string
for a bluebird. Pattern 7251:
crochet directions for planter
9 inches long. Starch stiffly.
Send THIRTY-FIVE Cents
(coins) for this pattern add 5
cents for each pattern for 1st-
class mailing. Send to Med-
ford Mail Tribune, Household
Arts Dept., P.O. Box 168, Old
Chelsea Station, New York
11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME,
ADDRESS, PATTERN NUM
SCR Send TWENTY-FIVE Cents
more for a copy of our Alice
Brooks Needlecraf t 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. .: , ..;
proved by officials
a regular ceil contains a
bunk, toilet without seat, wash
basin, writing desk and chair
and a panel into which a man
can plug earphones to re
ceive any one of three radio
stations,
Lights are controlled from
outside. They go on at 6 am
and off at 10 p.m.
In all blocks except C,
doors are controlled from mas
ter electric panels by an of
ficer who is separated from
the block by steel bars. The
doors may be opened 'and
closed in banks or operated
singly.
Like a small city outside
the walls, OSP has its police
court or "adjustment commit
tee" which is composed of
guard captain Lloyd and the
two deputy wardens. '
Before it come men accused
of minor infractions and
tougher or more troubled men
from the new 90-unit segre
gation and isolation block
(S&I).
The committee can sentence
a man to segregation with no
loss of privileges except that
he is kept away from the rest
of the inmates. Into segrega
tion go escapees, agitators,
overt homosexuals, those in
protective custody and those,
like Billy Junior Nunn, under
sentence of death.
Isolation is a little tougher:
No cigarettes, no mail, no vis
its, a restricted diet and a mat
tress between 6 p.m. and 6
a.m. only.
Ordinarily a man can send
out 15 letters a month and re
ceive 30 from seven approved
individuals.
He is allowed two visitors a
month. Mail, except for let
ters from the Board of Con
trol and the Parole Board, is
censored and letters limited
to both sides of a single page.
At the end of the custody
line are five "quiet cells"
which are bare except for a
hole in one corner which
serves as a latrine. If a man
tears up his clothes they are
taken away from him. If he
tears up his mattress, that
goes too.
A man may receive an in
definite sentence to S&I, but
there are rarely more than
20 to 25 men there at any one
time.
Only about 15. per cent of
the prison population seems
to get into any trouble accord
ing to Lt. H- C. Cupp, trains
ing officer. The rest of the
men lust want to ao ineir
time and get out.
Vermont's first settlement
was a jjrencn military out
post on Isle La Motte, Fort
St. Anne, in 1666. The first
permanent settlement was
made on the - Connecticut
river at Brattleboro in 1724
at Fort Dumner where Timo
thy Dwight, the first white
child,, was born ia 1734. . .
TB Patient Caring Costs
Show Decline, VA Says
The cost of caring for tu
berculosis patients in Veter
ans Administration hospitals
dropped by $38 million dur
ing the past three fiscal years,
Charles M. Cox, local VA rep
resentative, said today.
Dr. W. B. Tucker, VA di
rector of tuberculosis service
in Washington, D.C., said the
reduction can be attributed
in large part to improvement
in treatment for the disease,
much of which resulted from
findings of VA research.
Newer drugs and other
treatment for tuberculosis
have shortened periods of hos
pital stay for TB patients, he
said. " -Joint
Research
For the past 12 years, VA
has conducted a joint re
search project with the
Armed . forces which is the
world's most extensive study
of drugs against TB. Involv
ing some 37,000 tuberculosis
patients, the study has pro
duced findings leading to
present use of TB therapies
by the entire medical profes
sion. Dr. Tucker said the average
duration of hospitalization
necessary, for successful treat
ment of TB formerly was
about two years, while TB
hospitalization today is neces
sary for less than one year.
TB patients today usually
are able to return to produc
tive employment soon after
hospital discharge, Dr. Tuck
et said, while in the past the
TB patient had to undergo
prolonged rest to gradually
build up strength.
Prior to development of
the newer drug therapies, the
relapse rate in TB ran from
35 to 50 per cent,. Dr. Tucker
said. Today, that relapse rate
has been narrowed down to
less than 5 per cent. During
the past 10 years the hospital
death rate in TB has been cut
from more than 5 per cent to
about 1 per cent, he added.
America's highest golf
course, the 9,000-foot-high
links at Cloudcroft, N.M., be-N
comes part of Cloudcroft's
skiing area during the win
ter months.
KEITH'S .
Ornamental Iron
tnTTTTTTT
Let us show yon how to give
your home a completely new
appearence, inexpensively, with
our beautiful Ornamental Iron!
Free Estimates Fh. SP 3-3588
2231 Orchard Home Drive
BUt DIRECT and SAVE!
REAL COOL
Beacon Falls, Conn. (UPI)
Mrs., Stanley England is
considered one of the coolest
customers ever to call state
police. She caught her hand
in a washing machine and
with the other reached for
the phone and called the
police.
NO TAKERS
Brookings, S. D. (UPI)
One of the books least In de
mand at the South Dakota
State College library "is en
titled "How to Study Effect
ively." A professor recently
checked out the volume and
noted the last person to use
the book borrowed it in 1916.
l
- SAVE - SAVE - SAVE - SAVE - SAVE - SAVE -
ACME CLEANERS
Has inaugurated a NEW DEAL!
YOU CAN SAVE 20
On your Cleaning Bill by bringing your clothes
into the plant.
20 DISCOUNT
(ASH & CARRY!
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 flOi
Plain Skirt, or Sweater HOG
TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU
ACME CLEANERS
1728 No. Riverside Call SP 2-4263
GOLD HILL AREA
SPIC 'N' SPAN CLEANERS
352 Second Ave. Call UL 5-1616 '
Regular Pick Up and Delivery at Regular Price
4$$$$ If 0j0ttijzz TIL 9 Pi fill
JX ""VALUES GALORE! Q
Cap Pistols
Western six shooter style with automatic ac
tion. Shoots roll caps.
EACH
Roll Caps
Repeating roll paper caps for cap pistols. Extra load.
ROLL
PACKAGE
20
SO
ROLL
PACKAGE
10
25
Machine Guns
Sturdy plastic sub machine gun with pull
back bolt action. This gun will round up
all the little outlaws.
98
EACH $S
LADIES'
Billfolds
The new secretary style billfold in
colors to match any summer ensem
ble. EACH W
Holster Sets
Real leather double holster sets
with leather belt, complete with
two western style cap guns.
SET
3-PIECE
Luggage Set
Consists of. a WW
train case, 21" Week
end case and 26" Pull
man case. Colors Sun
tan, green, blue.
Set
A BIG VALUE
1577
W5
Girls' Skorts
Combination skirt and short in
sizes 7 to 14. Assorted print de-
signs or solid colors.
PLASTIC
Dinnerware
Made of a brand new boilable plastic
material -guaranteed against breakage
in normal use for one year. Avail
able in fine pastel colors. 5 piece
place setting -...
ONLY
EACH
98
STORE HOURS: Daily - 9:30 to 5:30 p.m.
. Monday 9:30 to 9:00 p.m.
Jug&TumblerSets
Set consists of jug and four tumblers. Made of soft
plastic in gay pastel colors. Perfect for water, juices,
milk.
SET
39 NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE
MEDFORD, OREGON