Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 05, 1958, Image 3

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    U.S. Departure
May Be Delayed,
Officials Hint
Washington -ITT Official
sources said yesterday the de
parture from Lebanon of all
the 7,500 American troops
still there might be delayed if
Lebanese political unrest
flares dangerously.
The state and defense de
partments still plan to have
the last soldier out by Oct. 31.
Officials said that for the mo
ment they saw no reason to
change that schedule. But
they cautioned that continued
strife between anti-government
mobs and the new ad
ministration of President Fuad
Chehab might alter the situ
ation. Key To Future
Key to the immediate fu
ture, in the opinion of quali
fied officials, lies in the forth
coming meeting of the Leban
ese parliament where Chehab
was said he intends to de
mand approval of the new
cabinet headed by Premier
Rashid Karami. Chehab has
said he hopes to call parlia
ment next Thursday.
Former President Camille
Chamoun, the pro-American
leader whose plea to Washing
ton last July brought U. S.
marines to save his tottering
regime from foreign - backed
rebel assaults, strongly op
poses the new cabinet because
it failed to include any of his
supporters.
Chamoun Claims Adherents
Chamoun claims he has
enough adherents in the par
liament, 34 or 35 of the 66
members, to block confirma
tion of the Karami govern
ment. American officials doubt
this. But if Chamoun proves
correct and parliament rejects
the cabinet. President Chehab
is expected to order general
elections to select a new par
liament.
The fear here is that this
could lead to new disorders
throughout the country and a
division of the political bat
tles in half-Christian half-Mos
lem Lebanon along religious
lines a fearful prospect
which so far has been avoided
Seattle Girl Dies
As Car Collides
In Avoiding Deer
Cannon Beach - (UPD A
head-on collision on a foggy
stretch of Highway 101 Fri
day night fatally injured
Carmen MacCurdy, 19, Seat
tle, when the car she was
riding in veered into another
vehicle after hitting a deer.
She was dead on arrival at
Seaside hospital. , .
Three1 persons were injur
ed. They were Roy C. Beers,
25,. Nehalem; Beverly Swan
son, 18, Astoria, and Eugene
Bowman, Westport.
Bowman, who was alone in
his car, was taken to an As
toria hospital with leg frac
tures, face lacerations and
other injuries. Miss Swanson
was hospitalized in Seaside
with leg and pelvic fractures
and face cuts. Beers, driver
of the car in which the girls
were passengers, was treatPd
for hand injuries and bruises
and released.
. State policeman Harold
Kottere said Beers' car was
southbound when it struck a
deer one-half mile south of
the Cannon Beach junction
The animal was killed out
right.
I R
3
MEETING newsmen in
Washington, Admiral Harry
D. Felt, Pacific Fleet commander-in-chief,
says siege
of Quemoy will be cracked
just as blockade of Berlin
was broken by air lift.
OS,
HOW
CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
HEALS
NEW ADMINISTRATOR
Charles Ivan Gustafson,
above, has been named ad
ministrator of Rogue Valley
hospital, replacing Miss B. J.
Larsen, who recently resigned
to become married. Miss Lar
sen had been administrator
for six years. Gustafson has
been assistant administrator
at Good Samaritan hospital,
Portland.
Chamber Managers
Elect New President
Pendleton - H'PD - Oregon
Chamber Executives yester
day elected Fred Brenne,
manager of the Eugene Cham
ber of Commerce, as new
president of their organiza
tion at the conclusion of a
convention here.
Brenne succeeds Stan
Grove, manager of the Salem
chamber.
Other new officers includ
ed: Fred Schenider, La
Grande; first vice president;
Buford Wilkerson, Tillamook,
second vice president; and R.
Frank Tucker, manager of the
Klamath county chamber,
secretary treasurer. '
British Troops
In Grim Manhunt
For Cypriot Killer
Nicosia, Cyprus-JUPD-Thous-ands
of British troops yester
day pressed a grim "gloves
off manhunt through Fam
agusta for the terrorist killer
of a fellow-serviceman's wife
and mother of five children.
Two "boys in black" who
shot and killed Mrs. Cather
ine Cutliffe, 40, and seriously
wounded her companion, Mrs.
Elfrieda Robinson, were
sought. Both women were
shot in the back while shop
ping on Famagusta's "Murder
Mile" Friuay.
A curfew was immediately
clamped on Famagusta," now
the major stronghold of the
Greek Cypriot underground.
All the main roads leading
into the city were blocked
while furious paratroops fan
ned out through the streets
to round up some 800 Greeks
for questioning. ,
Greek sources said one to
six persons had been killed
and about 300 injured by the
angry troops. British authori
ties denied there had been
any brutality or t h.a t any
deaths had resulted from the
search but conceded that at
least 150 persons had been
injured.
Chinese Model Draws
Line At Bathing Suits
New York -(UPD- A Chinese
model flown here from Hong
Kong is being sent home be
cause she will not wear a
bathing suit in public.
A bathing suit company
(Jantzen) brought Helen Lei
Mei and her wardrobe of 70
dressed and matching acces
sories here by airplane Wed
nesday. "Her explanation," a com
pany official said, "was that
bathing suits have a different
connotation in Hong Kong."
REAL FAN Anthony Albano, 61, of Brooklyn, N. Y.,
climbed a light-pole in right center field at County
Stadium in Milwaukee to watch the opening game of
the 1958 World Series between the Yankees and the
Braves. Albano sat undisturbed on his perch through 10
innings, but then was unable to come down alone, and'
it took the fire department to rescue him. Here he is
shown being lowered by firemen about an hour after
the game ended.
PRESS GALLERY AIDE
Washington -(UPD- Anthony
P. Demma, 60, assistant sup
erintendent of the House press
gallery, died Friday in the
Washington Hospital Center.
He was a helpful friend of
newspapermen and congress
men during a quarter century
on the staff of the press gallery.
Maria Mitchell, "born in
Nantucket, Mass., was the
first distinguished woman
scientist in the United States.
Her field was astronomy.
The largest private branch
telephone exchange in the
world is in the Pentagon
building. It contains about
75,000 miles of trunk lines.
Construction Crew Finds
Imperial Mammoth's Tusk
ogists in search of more re
mains of the extinct member
oft he elephant family.
On hand were Dr. Allen;
Portland -(LTD A rare ar
cheological find was reported
in Portland yesterday and
oddly enough it was less
than 500 yards from the new
Oregon Museum of Science
and Industry.
Dr. John Allen, head of the
geology department of Port
land State college, said part
of the tusks of one of the
great Imperial mammoths
that roamed the region in the
ice age had been uncovered
and he called the find "tre
mendously exciting."
Workmen grading the hill
side along Southwest canyon
road uncovered the tusks
near the new overpass across
the highway. One tusk was
destroyed and part of a sec
ond one was damaged before
a highway engineer, Ronald
Scroggins, recognized them
as bone. Today the area was
sw.arming with amateur geol-
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Sunday, October 5, 1958 i
Paul Howell, geologist for
the Corps of Engineers; Lloyd
Buff, vice president of OMSI;
Ralph Mason of the state de
partment of geology, and Lou
Hancock, dean of Oregon pal
eontologists. They ' estimate
that the mammoth died some
where between 10,000 and 1,
500,000 years ago.
Part of one tusk is seven
inches in diameter and was
uncovered about 80 feet be
low the original surface.
The U. S. Marines have
landed in China 17 times to
protect, American lives and
property.
One of the world's great
harbors, that at Rio de Janeiro
in Brazil, is 15 miles long.
RHODODENDRON
HYBRIDS
Branched C JX
& Budded
English Laurel
Well branched
iBeat,,0n 5Q
For hedge or specimen
Garden Center
NURSERY
South Pacific Hwy. between
Phoenix and Talent
ROGUE VALLEY STATE BANK
MEDFORD . . . OREGON
CONDENSED STATEMENT SEPTEMBER 24, 1958
RESOURCES
LOANS AND DISCOUNTS
Less Reserve for Los:
United States Bonds
.$1,403,746.53
8,668.05
Municipal Bonds and Warrants
Banking House, Fixtures and Equipment .
Cash and Due From Banks ..
'Stock in Federal Reserve Bank ;
TOTAL
Capital Stock
Surplus
Undivided Profits
DEPOSITS
LIABILITIES
Interest Collected, Not Earned
TOTAL
$1,395,078.48
1,744,450.19
271,134.73
74,007.37
832,659.15
6,000.00
$4,323,329.92
$ 100,000.00
100,000.00
38,7,10.27
. 4,041,840.71
42,778.94
$4,323,329.92
W. H. Young
Clarence H. Young
Leonard Bradshaw
Ralph E. Pierce
Neal A. Curry
Gertrude F. McCorkle
Ron E. Cordon
OFFICERS
- - - President
t Executive Vice-President
and Manager
Vice-President
- - - - Vice-President
- - Cashier
Assistant Cashier
Assistant Cashier
DIRECTORS
W. H. Young
Clarence H. Young
Leonard Bradshaw
Ralph E. Pierce
J. H. Stanley
Frank P. Farrell
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Member Federal Reserve System
Serving Jackson County Since 1911 Local Ownership and Control
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