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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1958)
MAIL TRIBUNE. MtdferJ, Ongen, ThurtJiy, Augutf 28, 1958 9 Alaskans Turn Attention To Individual Races Anchorage, Alaska -(UPD-Al-askans, with statehood assur ed, today turned their atten tion to individual races in the territory's primary elec tion. Voters from Point Barrow to Ketchikan approved state hood by a 5-1 margin in Tues day's election. Returns on individual con tests showed Democrats pil ing up an approximate 4-1 margin over Republicans. Re '" -. """-. - w- xtm - i. , , , 4 Fermiey O0SO QPftOff 9g B ' J of 9 back-to-school special! WOMEN'S BLOUSES An incredible value! Roll - up - in better cotton fabrics! Solid ' classics; new paisely prints; ... blouson styles, tuck-ins! Sizes 32 to 38. PENNEY'S DOWNTOWN, MEDFORD tt-.:.:..w.. NO-IRON SLIPS 98' PvoraTize embossed cotton slips cve9" . , ., , with lace trimmed booice. Needs no ironings, stays crisp and fresh, White. Ages 4 to 14 miiwMwm girls' school favorite B FLIP STRAP CASUALS Penney's tiny-priced -shoes can skip rope for miles -and not show it! Sturdy, smooth leather, stitch-down rugged soles, studded front strap! Brown, red. Sanitized. raw if I, Roll-up sleeve! sleeve blouses - color tailored woven stripes SCHOOL DRESSES 3.00 Big New Selection! One-time Pen- , ., ... ney buy! You get top-mill cottons that machine-wash and touch-iron, Ages 7 to 14. 2 66 Sizes 9 to 3 BOYS' 100 SHETLAND WOOLS FULL FASHIONED SWEATERS Very new! Warm-as-toast, 100 Shetland wools in easy-fitting relaxing silhouette! Perfect campus wardrobe convertible, great oyer slim skirts, pleated or flared skirts! Smart with Bermudas, too! Get sev eral! Grey, beige, oxford heather; red; white. Sizes 36 to 42. PENNEYS STREET FLOOR SHETLAND ORLONS slipon cardigan 2.98 3.98 ; Cashmere-soft hi-bulk orlon clas- sjc sweater sets from a big name maker! They wash amazingly like new, keep their shape. MEN! ' jXV bin iW SLIM, M TRIM ?V 'H HIP W y IIUGGIN' jf$f FOREMOST SUPER DEMIFI . . . PACKED WITH POWER! Authentic Western! That's the way Penney Foremosts are made! Ruggedly hpilt of the strongest cotton denim (13?i ounce' reir,forced, vat dyed, Sanforized. , 298 SIZES $2.49 sizes KNIT PAJAMAS 1.98 The very softest cotton knit ... , , . brushed to touch perfection. De- lectable melon to blue colorings. No iron! v "-re x HALVES 1 DRYING TIME! NEXT-TO-NO-IRONING! THE ANSWER? BIG MAC9 TEBILIZED WORK SHIRTS "Better appearance, less shrinkage, easier care" says our lab comparing new Te " bilized chambra? with stan dard chambray! All extra features, too. 29 to 36 SHOP MONDAYS 9:3.0 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Other Days 9:30 to 5:30 SPECIAL! Look Expensive CORDUROY CAPRI PANTS 1.99 Deluxe quality pinwale corduroy fashion pants from one of our fin est makers. Very, Very specially priced. Machine washable, all the best colors. Sizes 0 to 18. UKt nam GIRLS' CAPRIS 1.50 Zio ankle tapered jeans with uni- . . , , versify strap back, pole pockets! Rugged sanforized twill in red or black. Ages 7 to 14. x f - T ' j T Big Mac's sizes 14Vz to 17 turns were not complete and it may be a week before some of the Indian and Eskimo vil lages inside the Arctic Circle are heard from. Stepovich Holds Edge One exception was Republi can . Mike Stepovich, former governor, running unopposed for one of the U. S. Senate terms. He held a 7-5 edge in his "popularity contest" with Democrat Ernest Gruening, also a former governor and unopposed for his party's nomination. Democrat E. L. Bartlett, delegate to Congress, had an 8,000-vote lead over Republi can R. E. Anderson of Jun eau and apparently clinched the other Senate term. He was unopposed. Valdes Man Leading William E. Egan of Valdez held a better than 2-1 lead over Victor Rivers of Anchor age and J. Gerald Williams of Juneau in the race for he Democratic gubernator ial nomination. John Butro vich Jr., Fairbanks, was un opposed for the Republican nomination. Roy Plummer, Anchorage, held a narrow 500-vote lead over Ralph Rivers, Anchor age, in the race for the Dem ocratic nomination for the one seat in the U. S. House of Representatives. Henry Ben son, Juneau, unopposed, won the Republican nomination. News About Servicemen JOINS WAFS Miss Marilyn R. Brown, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George I. Brown, 641 South Holly St., recently joined the WAF. A 1958 graduate of Medford High school, Misi Brown will undergo nine weeks of basic training at Lackland AFB, Texas. PLACES NINTH Marine SSgt. Wayne L. Chapman, son of Mr. and Mrs.' R. V. Chapman, 343 Mae st., placed ninth out of 235 competitors in the interna tional match course with the pistol; 14th out of 285 in a second international course match and 26th out of 272 in rapid fire silhouette match in the national pistol matches at Camp Perry, Ohio. Sgt. Chapman is represent ing the Marine Corps against some of the country's finest marksmen in the world's ser ies of shooting being held at Camp Perry Aug. 7 to Sept. 6. IN LEBANON Army Spc3c Douglas V. Peters, 22, son of Mrs. Mil dred Vincent of 326 Benson st., is serving' with Task Force 201 in Lebanon. Task Force 201 is composed of airbone elements of the 24th Infantry division in Augsburg, Germany, and sup port command troops from Army units throughout Eu rope. They were airlifted in two phases by cargo-type air craft from Augsburg, via Andana, Turkey, to Beirut. He is a member of the 24th division's 24th Aviation com pany. , . COMPLETES COURSE Army Pvt. Lofen A. Ander son, son of Mr: and Mrs. Rob ert W. Anderson, star route, Applegate, recently complet ed the supply specialist course at Fort Leonard Wood. Mo. Anderson entered th Army last March and pom. pleted basic training at Fort Ord, Calif. ' The 23-year-old soldier fnr. merly worked at the Rogue River National forest. A i o. graduate of Jacksonville high scnool, he attended Pacific University in Forest Grove. Deaf Mute Unable To Get Help for Friend WolverhamDton. Ensland- (DPD- Graham Warrilow, 12, watched helDlesslv as Reasif McKnight, 4, floundered in Jie middle of a canal near here. Graham cannot swim He is a deaf mute and could not scream for help. The only persons who can understand him by lip read ing are his parents. Graham ran half a mile home to fetch his father but by the time they got back to the canal it was too late. Reggie was dead. MASS FATALITY Eight persons were killed in a two-car nead-on crash north of Harrisonville, Mo. Sitting in the back of this demolished car is Mrs. Myrtle Galloway, pregnant mother of the 5-year-old boy wh o was killed. Mrs. Galloway suffered minor injuries and shock. Also among the dead were Andrew B. Jones, his wife and two children, all of Sun Valley, Calif. (MP Campaign Managers FeeB Confident (Upsurge Chicago -(UPD- Republican campaign managers felt an upsurge in confidence from the grass roots today for just about the first time since the beginning of 1957. This was the feeling which the; party professionals took away from a two - day na tional committee meeting at which 1958 campaign plans were discussed with state GOP spokesmen. The meeting was featured by, a, series of pep talks, in cluding a telephoned speech by President Eisenhower on Wednesday, to rout defeatism in the GOP's own ranks. But as the party prepared to open its drive to win back control of Congress, the oddsmakers still favored the Democrats. Tentative campaign plans were reported to call for the President to talk more direct ly to the voters in campaign speeches this fall in the states of New York, Iowa and Cali fornia. Vice President Rich ard M. Nixon will have a longer travel scheduled. Spirit of Optimism At the meeting here, Re publicans from various states gave the national party chiefs a fresh spirit of optimism.' Similar meetings last year were gripe sessions marked by complaints about Secre tary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson. President Eisenhow er's budget and administra tion proposals for federal aid for schools. A national committee meet ing last winter reflected the first Republican scare about the political impact of the re cession. State chairmen who met in Washington two months ago worried about the disclosure that presidential aide Sherman Adams had ac cepted gifts from a favor-seeking friend. Dead Issues ? With these issues dead or apparently fading, the GOP now is leaning toward a "peace and prosperity" cam paign pitch like that of the 1956 Eisenhower reelection campaign. There also is wide spread agreement on making an issue of the Democratic record on labor reforms. "There is more optimism among Republicans here than Hurricane Daisy Causes Disturbance By United Press International Hurricane Daisy produced the only major disturbance on the nation's weather map to day, dousing the southeastern coast with light rains. The hurricane intensified during the night with . winds reaching 125 m.p.h. near its eye. The storm was located early today about 230 miles east-southwest of Wilmington N.C., and heading in a north by northeastern direction. . Weathermen warned Daisy would kick up rough seas and tides of two to three . feet above normal along the North Carolina coast today or Fri day. Light rains from the storm occurred along the coast dur ing the night from Virginia to Florida. Queen Crowning To Open Astoria Regatta Astoria -0IP&- The 38th an nual Astoria regatta opens at 8 p.m. today with coronation of. a queen to be selected from seven princesses. Maj. Gen. Chester McCarty of the Air Force is the Regat ta admiral. in Washington" was the sum mation of. one . of the party pros, i "There is a better feeling now and we've no place to go but up," was the. comment of another. , "We'd have been clobber ed if the election had been two months ago." However, some of the rosy forecasts from the states were still received with a de Miscellaneous Case No. 1 Occupies Attention of Supreme Court Justices Washington - (UFB - The Su preme Court today called up case Miscellaneous No. 1, John Aaron, et al., versus William G. Cooper, et aL The hundreds of persons who sought admission to the Canadian Bar Poor Relations Los Angeles .(UPD Presi dent Arthur Kelly of the Ca nadian Bar association Wed nesday deplored the break down in the traditional friend ly relations between the United States and Canada. "In these two nations," he told delegates of the 81st an nual American Bar association convention, "relations have deteriorated to such an extent that their improvement has be come a matter of concern on both sides of the border." Kelly blamed the deteriora tion on sutble . activities of those who want to see a break down in relations between the two countries and by those who make too much of super ficial differences. . Remedial Action Urged . "It is not beyond the realms of possibility that much of this mistrust has been in flamed by the subtle activities of those whose interests will not be served by the preserva tion of coordinated action of the democratic nations of North America, but even if this be so, we are the more to be blamed for allowing any such disturbances of the neces sary cooperative action of our countries and more than ever are required to initiate remedial action," he said. The Canadian attorney said one nation is critical of an other because of differences that may obscure the basic similarities of two nations in their goals. Court Records DISTRICT COIHT Gary A. Heath, violation of the basic rule. $15. PhiliD Johnson, imperfect muf fler, $15. Paul A. Reisch, overload. $125; overwidth, $15. Don R. Rice, inadequate muffler, $10. Andy C. Mead, overwidth, $15. Norman ButU, pauinf on crest of hill, $10. Rufus Roberts, overload, $18. CIRCUIT COURT Joan Y. Winterbottora vs. Ken neth L. Winterbottom, divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Walter Charles Cabral and Patsy Jo Strickland, both of Oakland, Calif. James . Arthur Pond, Medford, and Joanne Rae Henderson, Eagle Point. Walter Kruf, Talent, and Su zanne Emilie Coates, Spokane, Wash. Paul Dale Vincent. Medford and Darlene Buelah Cook, Jackson President Raps gree of skepticism by some of the national party manag ers.! Private estimates about the chances of winning control of the House, and Senate tended to be much more cautious than public predictions. But Eisenhower told the meeting that the party could achieve "great gains" in both branch es of Congress if it could turn out a big vote this falL marbl e-pillared courtroom may never have heard of John Aaron of Wililam G. Cooper. But they knew the important nature of their legal dispute, which the nation's highest court called a special session to hear. About To Make History History was about to be made in the great white Su preme Court building across the street from th& U.S. Capi tol. . John Aaron is a Negro boy seeking to return to Central High school in Little Rock, Ark. He went to Central last year, under a federal court order admitting youths of hi race to the previously all white school for the first time. William G. Cooper Is a member of the Little Rock School Board, which wants to postpone integration at Cen tral High to avoid any more violence at the troubled school. The Presdient of the United States sent in troops to maintain order there last year. Vacations Interrupted The nine Supreme Court justices interrupted their sum mer vacations to hear the arguments on whether John Aaron nad a handful of other Negro, pupils should be ad mitted to Central High next week. Justice Harold H. Bur ton flew back from a Eu ropean trip, instead of return ing by ship as he had planned. Court aides said newsmen put in twice as many requests for seats in the press section as there were places for them. The court maintained its tradition of barring photo graphs in the courtroom. Re quests for pictures and radio and television interviews on the marble steps outside were rejected. Lightning Fires Way Above Normal Portland -fl!PD- The U.S. Forest-Service reported today that the number of f i r e t started in National forests of the Pacific Northwest by lightning so far this year, has been about three times the average during the previous five years. On Sunday and Monday of this week, some 200 fires were Most of the trouble was coused in the Willamette, Wenatchee, Siskiyou and Um atilla forests but the Des chutes, Mt. Hood and Okano gan forests also suffered nu merous strikes. The Willam ette forest recorded more than 50 lightning fires in the De troit and Cascadia districts alone. ' Perfect rubies are mora rut than perfect diamonds. :