Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 21, 1958, Image 19

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    'Kraft' Theater Has
Good Performances,
William Ewald Says
BY WILLIAM EWALD
United Press International
New York (ITD Views
nd reviews:
NBC-TV's "Kraft Mystery
Theatre," a terribly underrat
ed show, pulled some super
ior performances Wednesday
night out of a medium-cold
chiller, "We Haven't Seen Her
Lately." The piece was one of
those things that combined
foggy atmosphere with foggy
plot, but it was serviceable
enough as a vehicle for George
Scott to wheel around in.
Scott, one of the most tal
ented young actors in our the
ater, played a weird-o garden
er one of those standard
mystery- story types who al
ways seems to t be burying
bodies, but is really just a
good guy muddying the plot
and he played it with churlish
authority. He's a comer one
of those craggy-featured gents
who oozes presence. Scott got
some fine support from An
gela Thornton, Mary Finney,
Louis Edmonds and Myra Car
ter: Now I have seen every
thing: on NBC-TV's " I Could
Be You" Wednesday night, a
girl won a night on the town
in Hollywood with a man
dressed in a gorilla suit. And
he seemed satisfied with her
prize. Even the- repeats of
of CBS-TV's "Leave It To
Beaver" look good I had
seen Wednesday night's epi
sode about Beaver breaking a
window, but I still found it
mildly captivating.
Diana Lynn is an attractive,
capable gal and it's a shame
to watch her frittering away
her talents on gummy gudgeon
like Wednesday night's repeat,
"The House That Jack Built,"
on CBS-TV's "Johnson's Wax
Theater." The camera -work
on the .NBC-TV "Jack Paar
Show" while the Marine Corps
drill team was marching
around was pretty shoddy, but
that's all right with me as
entertainment, i rate drill
teams one level below Lib-
erace
' The Channel Swim: Elsa
Maxwell will check into the
NBC-TV "Jack Paar Show" on
Glass Containers
Big Business Now
Chicago (UPD Glass con
tainers and closures became
a billion-dollar business for
the first time in 1957, accord
ing to Richard L. Cheney, ex
. ecutive . director of the Glass
Container Manufacturers In
stitute. Cheney also told the In
vestment Analysts Society of
Chicago that approximately
one-third of the dollar value
of all glass containers pro
duced in the United States
come from those manufac
tured in 19 plants in Illinois
and Indiana.
' The dollar volume of new
class containers made by the
United States totaled $784,-
000, Cheney added; the value
of closures to $284,000.
Shipments of new glass con
tainers by GCMI member
companies, which produce
over 90 per cent of all glass
"containers, he said, reached
n all-time record high in the
first three months of 1958.
The 3.6 per cent increase
brought the total shipments
to 4.3 billions units for the
first auarter.
"Most of the increase In
the first quarter was in soft
drink bottles, returnable
bottles increased 81 per cent
and non returnable bottles
14.3 per cent," Cheney said.
Section of Turnpike
Reserved for Dogs
Cleveland, Ohio (CPD A
small section of the Ohio
Turnpike has gone to the
dogs.
The Ohio Turnpike Com
mission has set up dog exer
cise areas at each of the 16
plazas. The runs are about
150 feet long, 15 feet wide,
covered with four inches of
fine gravel and enclosed with
four-foot-high snow fences.
Assistant maintenance en
gineer Wesley Hottenstein
said:
"Dogs sometimes get messy,
and we thought that giving
them an enclosure of their
own would make things bet
ter for everyone, including
the dogs."
MEN!
In A Rut? Earnings Low?'
No Place To Advance?
r Maybe VWHave The Answer!
Sc Our A4 Under Mala Help Wanted
SINGER SEWING MACHINE CO.
Sept. 17, scotching rumors
that she wouldn't return. Ben
nett Cerf of CBS-TVs "What's
My Line" and Kitty Carlisle
of CBS-TV s "To Tell The
Truth" will be judges of the
Miss America Contest which
CBS-TV will carry on Sept. 6.
Cerf s wife, Phyllis, and Miss
Carlisle's husband, Moss Hart,
also are on the judging team.
Move over, Rip, Race, Rock
and Tat) the name of the
actor who'll play a lead role
in the upcoming CBS-TV
Western, "Yancy Derringer,"
is: X. Brands. Me, I'll iake
name brands everytime. NBC
TV will uncork its Thursday
night version of "The 564,000
Challenge" on Sept. 18 in the
slot currently held by "Music
Bingo."
Marie Wilson, who hasn't
been seen much on TV lately,
will drop into CBS-TVs "I've
Got A Secret" on Aug. 27.
The Lawrence Welk "Top
Tunes" Monday night show
will be shifted by ABC-TV to
the Wednesday night "Disney
land" spot this fall. "Disney
land" which'U .be retitled
"Walt Disney Presents" will
move to Friday night.
Medicine Chests
Cause Headache
Hong Kong (LTD Medicine
chests 98,000 of them and all
empty have igiven Shanghai
pharmacies quite a headache
The wooden cabinets were
ordered by the Chinese Com
munist government early in
1956 as its contribution to the
health of the peasants
Each cabinet was to contain
an assortment of medicines
and first-aid supplies for every
conceivable emergency.
The cabinets, according to
an official report, were to sell
for seven dollars apiece. -
But in Red China, peasants
cannot afford to spend that
much money, even to guard
against sunstroke and bee
stings. So nobody bought.
The pharmacies quickly cut
the price by two-thirds and
offered the cabinets without
any medical supplies in them.
Vegetable venders found
them useful as coin boxes; ac
tors purchased them for stor
ing cosmetics; factory workers
for tools; housewives for sew
ing implements.
But fewer than 20,000 of
the chests were thus disposed
of. And the pharmacies were
stuck with the rest at a po
tentional loss of $88,000.
However, they can be thank
ful of one thing, Peiping orig
inally wanted to sell one mil
lion of the medicine chests.
The order was cancelled be
fore 100 thousand were built.
Enterprise Starts
On Final Journey
New York (UPD The USS
Enterprise, one of the most il
lustrious warships in U. S.
Naval history, began its final
voyage today when it was
eased out of its berth at the
Brooklyn Navy Yard and
moved by tug to Kearny, N.J.,
for dismantling.
The 834-foot aircraft car
rier gained eminence early in
World War II as the flagship
of Adm. William F. Halsey
and went on to earn 20 of a
possible 22 Pacific battle stars.
Rapid advance in naval avi
ation technology made the En
terprise obsolete and the Navy
sold her for $561,333. A cam
paign led by Halsey to make
the "Big E" a national shrine
collapsed when the million
dollars needed for the project
could not be raised.
The carrier's record of de
struction to the enemy in
World War II included 911
planes, 71 ships sunk and an
other 192 damaged or proba
bly sunk.
PLANE LANDS SAFELY
London (UPD A disabled
twin-engined Lufthansa Con
vair airliner with 36 passen
bers aboard returned here
safely after takeoff Wednes
day night when a cowl flap
on one of the engines became
stuck.
WILL SIGN TREATY
Zurich, Switzerland UPD
France and the United Arab
Republic will sign a treaty
Friday calling for resumption
of normal economic and cul
tural . relations, the French
consulate general announced
Wednesday.
Navy Papers Too
Much for Young
Wife of Sailor
Erie, Pa. (UPD Stranded
here when her sailor husband
was transferred overseas, a
young Japanese wife found
there is truth in the old say
ing, "the Navy takes care of
its own."
Mrs. Kuniko Kuhn, 25, was
close to tears when she en
tered the office of Chief Yeo
man Al Lambert at the Naval
Reserve Training Center here.
Dumping a pile of govern
ment papers on his desk, she
pleaded for help. She hardly
knew what her problefc was,
much less how to solve it.
Lambert sorted through the
papers and found out that
Kuniko, the wife of a 2nd
class lithographer, Harold
Kuhn, had not been permitted
out of the country to follow
her husband to Morocco be
cause she was not a citizen.
"It's hard ehohgh for some
Americans to understand all
the red tape that goes into
things like this," Lambert
said. "Here was a Japanese
girl, new in the states, and
she didn't know where to
turn." . '
Red Tap Cut
Chief Lambert got the
Navy into action "and enlisted
the aid of the Immigration
and Naturalization Service in
getting citizenship papers for
Kuniko.
A few well-worded tele
grams, a test in American his
tory which Kuniko, aided by
two years of college in Japan,
passed easily, and the red tape
was cut.
A special section of the
citizenship law covering wives
of servicemen permitted the
waiver of the usual three-year
waiting period, and within a
few weeks Kuniko now le
gally dubbed Kay, in .keeping
with her -new nationality
took the solemn oath of loy
alty to the United . States of
America.
When it was all over, Kay
Kuhn, American 1st- class,
bowed politely again and
again toward the judge who
had administered the oath and
toward chief Lambert.
"The Navy is so fine," she
said. "Please say thank you
for Kuniko."
48 Swine, 440 Cattle
Imported Into State
Salem During July 440
cattle and 48 swine were im
ported ' into Oregon for im
mediate slaughter. This report
came to the state department
of agriculturte's division of
market development from Dr.
A. G. Beagle, in charge of
federal veterinarians in Ore
gon. ...
Dr. Beagle said these live
stock came from Canada
through Spokane. -
ICE BREAK
Innsbruck, Austria (DPD
A glacier research group re
ported recently that of the
50 glaciers in Austria, 49 are
melting away.
MAYTAG The Proudest Name In irllome lauiideriing!
JlrTINI
Medford 4
Honors in
Carolyn Tiegs of Talent
and Craig Wright of Medford
walked off with the top hon
ors in the poultry demonstra
tion at the 4-H and F.F.A. fair
this week, held in Medford at
the Jackson county fair
grounds. Miss Tiegs had the Grand
Champion Poultry exhibit
and also was the champion
showman, according to Glenn
Klein, county 4-H agent.
Craig Wright has the cham
pion heavy pen of birds and
the champion market exhibit
at the fair.
Complete results are as fol
lows: Reds (Rhode Island, Parmenter.
Single Pullet): 1 Joan Dobrot.
Central Point, and 2 Lynne Eil
ers. Talent.
Reds, one cockerel: 1 Joan Do
brot, Central Point; 2 Lynne Eil
ers. Talent.
Reds, pair 2) pulleta: 1 Joan
Dobrot, Central Point, and 2
Lynne Xilers, Talent.
Reds, two hens and one rooster
(or 3 hens I: 1 Lynne Eilers, Tal
ent: 2 Joan Dobrot, Central Point.
New Hampshires, single pullet:
1 Joyce Klutsenbeker. -Central
Point; 2 Donna Debrick, Central
BEATING SIX OTHER REGIONAL TEAMS, Los Angeles
trio become new national AAU skin-diving champions.
From left. Frank. Hope, Mel Wren and Dick Japne. Event
was held in Bahama Islands before large gallery of fans.
EAST EVANS CREEK )
Many Visitprs Listed
BY NELLIE BERGMANN
East Evans Creek Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Bishop visited at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Mattisons in Grants
Pass Wednesday last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Whip
ple of Sacramento, Calif., who
recently purchased the Tru
man Bishop ranch, made a
recent trip there for furni
ture. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Stanton
of Butte Falls visited Sunday
at the Carl Bergman home.
The Stanton boys are visiting
the Bergmans this week.
Mrs.
Friday
friends,
Carl Bergman spent
at Drew visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Emery Sting
ley and Charles Nelson spent
Sunday in Grants Pass at
tending a picnic.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Caid of
Tucson,. Ariz., visited Venson
Hunt and family recently.
Our customers come back to us, because
times, told us, so. Even Cadillacs require
competent and prompt service for all of .
- H Members Take
Poultry Exhibit
Point; 3 Mary Howell, Talent, and
4 Betty Jo HoweU, Talent.
New Hampshires. one cockerel:
1 Joyce Klutsenbeker, Central
Point, and 2 Donna Debrick, Cen
tral Point.
New Hampshires. pair (2) pul
lets: 1 Joyce Klutsenbeker. Cen
tral Point; 2 Betty Jo Howell,
Talent; 3 Donna Debrick. Central
Point: 4 Mary Howell, Talent: S
Linda Ray. Phoenix, and 6 Ro
berta Irene Calkins, Pfyoenix.
Rocks, single pullet: 1 Robert
Luest, Central Point: 2 Craig
Whight, Southwest Medford, and
3 Doris Inman. Central Point.
Rocks, one cockrel): 1 Craig
Wright, Oak Grove; 2 Robert
Kuest, Central Point, and 3 Doris
Inman. Central Point.
, Rocks, pr. (2) pullets: 1 Robert
Kuest. Central Point; 2 Craig
Wright. Oak Grove; - 3 Doris In
man. Central Point, and 4 Vernon
Calkins. Phoenix.
Rocks, two hens and one rooster
or three hens: 1 Doris Inman,
Central Point, and 2 Jonathan
Johnson, Phoenix.
Other heavy breeds, single pul
let: 1 Pauline Creel. Talent: 2
Joyce Klutsenbeker. Central Point,
and 3 Gerald Balderston, South
west Medford.
Other heavy breeds, one cock
erel: 1 Paulette Creel, Talent: 2
Alan Nielsen, Central Point: 3
Larry Sorum. Southwest Medford,
and 4 Gerald Balderston, South
west Medford.
Other heavy breeds, pair (2)
pullets: 1 Paulette Creel, Talent,
and 2 Gerald Balderston. South-
Mrs. Caid is Venson Hunt s
aunt. Other recent visitors
with the Hunts were Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Koehrn and son,
Friday, of Downey, Calif.
The dedication of the Mead
ows church will be held Sun
day, Aug. 24, at 2:30 p.m
Visitors are welcome.
Weiss Elected Head
Of Portland Rose Group
Portland - (UPD Harold
Weiss was elected president
of the Portland Rose Festival
association Wednesday.
Weiss, senior vice president
of the U.S. National Bank,
has been a long time member
of the association.
TO LUNCH WITH IKE
Athens, Greece (UPD
Queen Frederika of Greece
will lunch with President Ei
senhower at the White House
next October during, aprivate
visit to the United States, it
was officiall y' announced
Wednesday.
STOH
weak itieuiura.
Leghorns, single pullet: 1 Caro
lyn Tiegs. Talent; 2 Raymond
Nouguier. Southwest Medford; 3
Jeanette Nouguier, Southwest
Medford; 4 Kathv Zaoell. Talent:
5 Robert Gonzales. Southwest
Medford, and 6 Marlene Nou
guier. Southwest Medford.
Leghorns, one cockerel: 1 Jean
eft Vnucriiii Cnuthiroct UAWfnrff
2 Kathy Zapell. Talent, and 3
mariene xvouguier, soutnwest xviea-
f m 1
Carolyn Tiegs, Talent; 2 Kathy
"tycui i flicm, j naymoaa .nou
guier. Southwest Mediord; 4 Rob-
cr nnniala. Cn..,V...-.
. . wwi.cuo, uuuuincai iucuiulu.
and 3 Jeanette Nouguier, South
west Aieatora.
Leghorns, two hens and one
rooster: 1 Larry Sorum. South-
Talent; 3 Robert Gonzales. South
west meaiora, ana -4 Helen Mor
rison, Southwest Medford.
Dthpr liaht hraarlc .nal.
"O--- auifiiC MUiicb.
1 Marlene Nouguier. Southwest
mcuiuia, naymona JNOUguier,
Southwest Medford, and 3 Jean
ette Nouguier, Southwest Medford.
Other light breeds, one cockerel:
1 Ravmond Knuonior Smith,.,..,
Medford.
Other light breeds, pair (2) pul
lets: 1 T PinPtta Mniimiia. C...1.
v " ,J "ili , UUlllll-
west Medford; 2 Raymond Nou-
Kuier. ouumwest Medford, and 3
Marlene Nouguier, Southwest Med-
Other Iiirht hrrU ,,,, v.-. i
one rooster or 3 hens: 1 Larry
Sorum. Southwest Medford; 2
Marlene Nouguier. Southwest Med
ford: 3 John SW,.. C...i a
Medford.
Market birds, all breeds, six
broilers, 2-3 Vi lbs.: 1 Linda Ray
Phopni v - 2 nnk,. T i-u.;
. . - i .
Phoenix: 3 Craig Wright, Oak
riuvc, i unaa uitsworth. Phoe
nix, and S Wayne Ditsworth
Phoenix.
Market birds, all breeds, 6 frv
ers, 3'2-5 lbs.: 1 Craig Wright,
Oak Grove; 2 Donna Debrick,
Central Point, and 3 Vernon Cal
kins, Phoenix.
Market birds, all breeds, six
roasters. 5-7 lbs.: 1 Donna Deb
rick. Central Point, and 2 Gerald
Balderston. Southwest Medford.
Ducks, all breeds.' one young fe
male: 1 Norman Ditsworth, Phoe
nix. Geese, all breeds, one young
male and one young female: 1
Kathleen Badcock, East Valley.
Eggs, one dozen white eggs : 1
Carolyn Tiegs, Phoenix; 2 Mar
lene Nouguier. Southwest Medford:
3 Jeanette Nouguier, Southwest
Medford. and 4 Ravmond Nou
guier, Southwest Medford.
Eggs, one dozen brown eggs: 1
Joan Dobrot, Central Point; 2
Paulette Creel, Talent; 3 Craig
Wright. Southwest Medford; A
Gerald Balderston, Southwest Med
ford: 5 Doris Inman, Central
Point.
POULTRY SHOWMANSHIP,
All Breeds
Beginning: 1 Kathy Zapell, Tal
ent: 2 Larry Sorum, Phoenix; 3
Mary Howell, Talent; 4 Jona
than Johnson, Phoenix; 5 Paul
ette Creel, Talent; 6 Vernon Calk
ins, Phoenix: 7 Marlene Nouguier.
Southwest Medford; 8 Lynne Eil
ers, Talent, and 9 Uienda Dits
worth. Phoenix.
Intermediate: 1 Robert Gon
zales. Southwest Medford; 2 Lin
da Ray, Phoenix; 3 Betty Jo How
ell, Talent; 4 uonna uebncK,
Central Point, and 5 Gerald Bal
derston, Southwest Medford.
Advanced: 1 Carolyn Tiegs,
Talent: 2 Joan Dobrot. Central
Point: 3 Craig Wright. Oak Grove;
4 Robert Kiiest, Central Point;
5 Roberta Calkins, Phoenix: 6
Joyce Klutsenbeker, Central Point;
7 Doris Inman, Central Point: 8
John Stewart, Southwest Medford.
and 9 Helen Morrison, Southwest
Medford.
Applegate 4-H'ers Truman
and Russell Elmore and Phil
lip Krouse were named win
ners of county medals in a
crops judging contest at the
4-H and F.F.A. fair held at
the fairgrounds this week. As
the top three, representing
any 4-H club, they are enti
tled to medals given by the
county fair board. Russell and
Truman plus Fred Jossy of
Antelope are the top 4-H club
judging'members in the coun
ty and will represent the
county at the state fair in
Salem.
First night airmail flight
was made in 1921.
DOUBLE Trade In ALLOWANCE
for your old washer
If Traded in this Week on a New Maytag
W hive en display a "frtsh from the factory" carload of new Maytag washers
and dryers. Special prices are in effect, in Sellabration of the ''Harvest of
Values" days now going on at Medford stores.
they like the kind of service that they get. They have, many
regular service. That's why we are always careful to provide
the quality products that we sell.
Bicycle Repair
Business Grows
Rochester, N.Y. (UPD Two
Rochester youths who started
on a shoestring have built up
a prosperous bicycle repair
business in less than four
years.
Back in 1954, George Ren
nie found that getting his bike
repaired took many days be
cause there were only a few
repair shops available. A
newspaper delivery boy then,
he decided to try his own
hand at repairs.
George found he had a
knack for repair work, and
soon he had his best friend,
John Kemp, as a partner in
business. The workshop, with
his parent's permission, was
set up in George's home.
"I bought our first bike for
$5," the Rennie youth recall
ed recently. "We repaired it
and sold it for $15. Then we
bought three bikes for S5 each
and repaired and sold
them ..."
Business continued to pick
up, and the 19 -year -old
youths reported their most re
cent inventory "showed more
than $7,000 in tools, parts and
accessories."
The youths are using money
earned in their bike repair
business to finance their edu
cation. George is studying ac
counting at Rochester Busi
ness Institute, while John is
majoring in chemistry at
John Fisher College.
The youths have three rules
they go by: (1) Always put
business before pleasure; (2)
always have 100 per cent co
operation between partners;
(2) always have a wholeheart
ed desire to please your cus
tomers. Union Misdeeds
Said Spotlighted
San Francisco (UPD Cali
fornia Attorney General Ed
mund G. Brown told the In
ternational Typographical Un
ion national convention today
that "too much of the public
view of unions is confined to
the spotlighted misdeeds of
the Becks, the Hoffas, and
the Hutchesons."
Brown, Democratic 'candi
date for governor, said: "Too
seldom does the public even
glimpse the overwhelming
majority of democratic unions
honestly led unions the
unions in which every mem
ber can take pride."
He noted that former Team
sters President Dave Beck,
current Teamster' President
James Hoffa, and Maurice A
Hutcheson, President of the
Carpenters Union are mem
bers of the Republican Party.
COAL RESERVES
Chicago (UPD Bituminous
Coal Facts, annual publica
tion of the National Coal As
sociation, reports that recent
ly revised estimates indicate
34 per cent of all the world's
coal lies within the U.S. The
estimated ' reserves total 1.9
trillion tons enough to last
the nation for hundreds of
years at the present projected
rate of consumption.
MAIU TRIBUNE, Medford, Orefon,
Radar May Hold Key
New York (UPD Huge
radars with 40-foot-wide an
tennas, mounted on 75-foot-high
steel towers, may hold
the key to safer and more
efficient flights in the impend
ing jet age of civil aviation.
Steelways, official publica
tion of American Iron and
Steel Institute, said big ra
dars, 73 of them, would scan
the skies in circles of 300
mile diameter and give con
trollers a picture of en route
air traffic in almost every
part of the country: Other
types of radar would help
break the costly present-day
bottlenecks at airports.
A WORD TO THE WIVES
Madison, Wis. (UPD Back
seat drivers can be helpful,
says B. A. Precourt, safety
director of the American Au
tomobile Association's Wis
consin division. But he empha
sized that the voice from the
rear must supply useful infor
mation "without irritating the
driver' and .distracting
him . . ."
Federal prisons in the U.S.
are under the control of the
attorney general.
SERVE
IT WITH
Ilr-A l ' meals. I iTTHiLf 1
5. I Si f " ""V '' ""r ewtut
Another Favorite From . .
outh Eliversode
Thursday, August 21, 1958 7A
To Safer Flying
The publication said that
whether these and other im
provements in our obsolete
air traffic . control system
come into being depends on
putting into action a proposed
billion - dollar government
program to adapt the system
to present and future needs.
The government moderni
zation calls for expenditures
by 1962 of $810,000,000 for
new radars, navigation aids
and other airways improve
ments, with the additional
sums going mainly for a more-than-jdoubled
corps of person
nel who operate and maintain
America's airways.
DOORS
and tub enclosures
SELBY
GLASS
CO.
Phone SP 3-3613
303 North Bartlett
OUTDOOR LOVERS
ENJOY CAREFREE
0
with HOLSUM
because they can count
on Holsum Premium
Quality Bread for quick
energizing, well-balanced
meals.
Holsum Bread
Q HOLSUM UNintO IAJ
lAKBtS
t