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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1958)
r IT- 10 Ml- TR1BUWR Oregon, Wefaehy. Octobtr 1, J 958 " I PpnUtraf'ons I Portland Zoo To Taken ft Classes 11 .f" 'CUM SI Will COIT T . through' riiMn, ' sel. prof . KSonn SPring 3-5341, 7h educatin office at 4W sch001- Registrations 1 , Si be taken between 8 alsVJ noon Saturday. ayses include clothing, ing, lampshade, milli- knitting, cake decora 5 sculpture, water color ting, public - speaking, ;ative writing, 'beginning ; nish, leather craft, draw ls and sketching, oil paint Ij 8. general mathematics, ilide rule, English, parliamen tary procedures; blue print reading, mechanical drawing, art appreciation, upholstery, nurses aide, and preparation and butchering of wild game. College extension courses, which will start the week of Oct. 6, include constructive accounting, methods and re search materials, language arts, the malajusted child, school law and organization, alcohol studies in school curri culum, fundamental body movement, posture . and tumbling. Preparation and butchering of wild game is scheduled for Close Until April Portland -(CPI- The new Portland zoo will be closed to the public until next Ap ril because of lack of funds for policing. Harry Buckley, superinten dent of Portland parks, said funds are exhausted for po licing the new zoological gar dens, even on week ends. Since early summer the city has permitted visitors into the colorful park on week ends even though construction was still underway. Buckley re ported that some visitors had damaged the plastic winter coating on the streamlined train Zooliner that is now out of operation . for -new track construction. It was reported earlier that a 10-year-old girl, Dixie Allen of Portland, suffered a se vere bite on her hand when she approached too near a chimpanzee housed in a port able cage in the center of the main zoo building. The chimp has since been moved. POLISH EDITOR DIES Chicago -(UPD- John K. Mos strubala, 58, executive editor of the Polish Daily News, died Tuesday. B fX CI, fX two nights, Oct. 7 and 9, be tween 7:30 and 10 p.m. Charles Shepard and Orrin Brown will be instructors. PROPOSED AW ISSCE 2,000,000 Shares (amount cuirmtly bcfiift relstrd; WELLINGTON EQUITY FUND, INC. . Capital Stock (Par Value f 1) Offering Price $12.00 Per Share (In single transaction! lmoMni lea than f25,M each) Phone or write for your copy of the Preliminary Prospectus. Ecmc Northwest Compani Edmund E. Hass, Vice President Suite 303, Fluhrer Building. Phone SP 3-731. 5 South Central Avenue Please send me a Preliminary Prospectus on Wellington Equity Fund, Inc. (B) Name Address City State READY FOR CLASSES Negro students present a mass of smiling faces as they arrive at Booker T. Washington High School in Norfolk, Va., to attend classes as usual During the present integration crisis, most hitherto segregated schools have been closed in an effort to stall integration in them, and most of the remaining schools that are still open are the Negro schools. CENTRAL POINT Political Rally Planned Central Point -A political rally will be held Oct. 16 at the Central Point Junior High school gymnasium. Working together to put on the rally are PTA groups from the A. J. Hanby school and the Margaret E. Patrick school, Gold Hill, Sams Val ley school, H. P. Jewett school at Central Point and the Cen tral Point elementary and junior high schools. From the candidates for governor on down, political candidates have been invited to take part. Each candidate is to limit his speech to two minutes with the Central Point Junior High school pep band acting as time keeper. Following the program, can didates will be available for interviews. Bill Abbott will be master of ceremonies and Stanley Parrish will give the invocation. The PTA units invite every one interested to attend this public affair. Coffee and' cookies will be served. Each PTA mother attending is asked to bring a dozen cookies to the rally. The Crater High school Fu tune Farmers of America held a meeting last Monday in the Agriculture department of the school. Allan Barnes, chapter president, led the meeting. Following a discussion period, the boys voted to purchase a new tractor and plow. Earlier this fall, a new mower had been purchased by the Crater FFA chapter. Don Denning re ported that a motion was en tertained to build an imple ment shed near the vocation al agriculture department to house the farm equipment. At the present time the farm ma chinery is not housed during the winter. The motion, which had not been investigated or proposed to the executive council, was reported to a committee of seven men appointed by the president. It was decided that the Crater chapter would not send a delegate to the Na tional FFA convention due to the fact that the treasury funds were not sufficient after the purchase of the new equip ment. Mike Redmond, treas urer, reported that it would cost two hundred dollars to send two boys to Kansas City. The national FFA convention will be held there in early October. The Crater High school FFA chapter now has an en-J rollment of 96 members, of which 47 are freshmen, mak ing it the second largest in the state of Oregon. The Ag: I boys are studying a unit on The Farm Tractor," Ag. II classes are working in farm shop, Ag. Ill boys are study ing "soils and managements" and Ag. IV students are study ing "ag. math, and farm management." Charles A. Meyer, principal of Central Point elementary and junior High school, re ported that all boys going out for football will be home by 5 p.m. Boys will not practice longer than one and one half hours and all state require ments will be met by the school. The Central Point Junior High school football schedule for the month of October is as follows: Oct. 2, South Grants Pass Junior High school, there at 3:30 p.m.; Oct. 10, McLoughlin Junior High school there at 3:30 p.m.: Two Drivers Cited Following Accident Two people were cited by state police yesterday follow ing an accident involving three cars on Highway 238 about two miles west of Med ford. -- Cars involved were operat ed -by Dorothy Hollis, 28, Jacksonville; Richard G. White, 102 Fifth st., Jackson ville; and Harold LeRoy Lar kin, route 1, box 314A, Med ford, according to police. . They said the car operated by Larkin stopped quickly in front of the one operated by Dorothy. Hollis. The latter, in stopping, swerved into the on coming car driven by White, and struck the rear of Lar kin's vehicle, police noted. No one was injured, they said. Police - cited Dorothy Hollis. for having no opera tor's license, and Larkin was cited for improper signal. JET MAKES TEST RUN New York - (LTD - A Pan American World Airways jet liner flashed from Seattle, Wash., to Bermuda in " six hours and one minute Tues day. Then the Boeing Strato jet, which will be placed in passenger service soon, made it from Bermuda to New York in one hour and 51 minutes. . TYPHUS DISCOVERER DIES . New Brunswick, N. J. -4UPD-Dr. John F. Anderson, 87, the discoverer of . the causes of typhus and spotted fever, died Tuesday. Oct. 16, North Grants Pass Junior High school here at 3:30 p.m.; Oct. 23. Hedrick Junior High school here at. 7 p.m.; Oct. 30, Ashland there' at 3:30 p.m. CLEAN ELECTRIC HEAT . . . Electric Heat Radiates Warmth like the rays of the sun . . . occupants of a room in a home heated electrically are kept warm as if standing in direct sunlight . . . and no unit of heat is wasted! Electric Heat Is Healthy Heat no oily soot or messy flame by-products to damage walls, drapes and furniture or to con tribute to head colds and sinus trouble . . . Electric Heat Is Efficient and Economical . . . electric systems eliminate maintenance, furnace cleaning, and replacement-parts expense . . . can be installed for much less than other heating systems . . . afford per fect room-by-room automatic temperature control. For full information about electric heat, and for counselling on your individual heating problem, call the Commercial Department of any COPCO office. This service is free to COPCO customers. WRAPS YOU 'ROUND LIKE A BLANKET! LIVE BETTER5 THK CALIFORNIA OREGON POWER COMPANY A Western Company owned and operated by Western People Brownlee Fish Barrier Not Ready Portland -(UPD- A net bar rier for downstream migrant fish at the Brownlee dam on the Snake river was not ready for use Tuesday after noon but Dr. L. Edward Per ry, federal coordinator of the middle Snake program for Northwest fisheries agencies, said it would be completed in "a short time." The Federal Power commis sion waived a license require ment that fish protection fa cilities be completed and in operation before the starting of turbines at the Idaho Power company dam site. The waiver expires today. - Dr. Perry, reporting to his Portland office from Brown lee, said indications were that Idaho Power was not planning to put a second Brownlee generator on line today. Perry said the situation at the Oxbow dam site was much ''improved" with 805 Chinook using an emergency1 fish lad der and trap: The salmon were caught and transported around the construction site to continue their spawning run up the Snake river. A controversy over the Oxbow fish trap grew out of charges by Oregon Gov. Rob ert D. Holmes that the fish passage facilities provided by Idaho Power at the Oxbow ste had been inadequate. RIVER BOAT SINKS Rio De Janeiro -UPD- Offi cials said today five persons drowned Tuesday when a river boat carrying 30 passen gers sank in a sudden storm on the Madeiro river. crops in! vs5& rn ?vn picked for U; Come a-running for the crispest, juiciest, eatin'est apples ever . . . SNOBOY! they're at your grocer's now! 5 W Win 0)T ( LJ ilawuAial liny Looking For Good Buys? CAST YOUR BALLOT FOR THESE . n LADIES NYLON 1st quality 51 gauge, 15 denier ladies nylons. Colors taupe or beige in sizes BVi to 11. A big value. ' . 3 Pair $"S27 KITCHEN TOOLS Spoons, forks, ladles, po tato mashers, cake turners, strainers. All with bright red wood handles. At this low price you will want one of each. 5 for 97 COTTON RUGS 24" x 60" or 27" x 48" Cotton rugs in an assortment of ten different colors. A regular $2.98 value. SALE $99 PRICE If DRAIN BOARD TRAYS Made of solid crease re sistant rubber in red, yel low and pink. Reg. 1.98 Value AAg SALE PRICE 7T Framed PICTURES Chenille RUGS 36" x 60" Fringed all around with processed latex backing. Washable, colors: green, red, turquoise, rose, grey, blue, white, brown, pink. 5T197 Only II Each :'v;;w?t;'-,'-.S,ft7v 16" x 20". A large assortment of landscapes framed with 1" oak Regular $1.59 value. SALE PRICE 97 ASSORTED Cream Sandwich in two pound packages. Fresh and delicious. Cookies 2 ,b 59 FATIGUE MATS S0FA PILLOWS 18x30" Make your work easier Stand -on one of these soft foam rubber mats. Colors white, black, yel low, grey, .coral. STORE HOURS: Daily 9:30 to 5:30 p.m. Monday 9:30 . to ,9:00 p.m. Each S $5197 Filled pillows covered with decorated drapery fabrics. Plain and print designs. Reg. I19 value SALE PRICE "SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY REFUNDED" it w m&MMm& B on (up I 39 NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE MEDFORD, OREGON I