Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 21, 1958, Image 16

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    A MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Tuesday, October 21, 1958
HILTS
Young People Have Party
By MRS. M. F. CAVIN
Hilts A party Saturday
night, Oct. 11, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Rainwa
ter, hosted by their daughter,
Barbara, brought a group of
young people together for
games and dancing.
Marcia Kay Cavin, Marsha
Simmens, Charles and Gloria
Chase, Pat Fox, Rebecca Hab
john and Randy and Rhoda
Rainwater. Refreshments of
hot dogs, potato chips, relish
es, cookies and punch were
served at the close of the evening.
Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Thomp
son and daughter, Marilyn,
visited Sunday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bradley in
Medford.
Sympathy is extended to
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert (Buster)
Lane and family at 2984 Buck
shot rd., in Medford, on the
death of their son Frankie,
age 14, Saturday, Oct. 4.
Frankie was accidentally
killed while hunting in the
Roxy Ann area with two
companions.
"Bus" Lane wa3 employed
several years ago at the Fruit
Growers Supply company and
he and his family resided here
at that time. Frankie attend
ed the local school.
The Hilts Community club
met Thursday, Oct. 9, at the
club room in the Community
Center building. Mrs. Ernest
Spannaus was hostess.
As was decided, both canas
ta and pinochle were played,
with high score for pinochle
going to Mrs. Ozzie Bernheisel
and low to Mrs. Frank Graves.
Prizes for canasta were won
by Mrs. E. Savage, high, and
Mrs. Frank Ayres, low.
Members playing were Mrs.
Art Hartman, Mrs. Ozzie
Bernheisel, Mrs. Frank Ayris,
Mrs. Fred Haynes, Mrs. Joe
Caston and Mrs. Frank Oh
lund and Mrs. Ethel White of
Hornbrook, as well as a guest
player, Mrs. E. Savage, . of
Yreka. Mrs. Savage is Mrs.
Ohlund's neice.
Mrs. Ray Middleton Jr. and
daughter, Kathy, returned
home Wednesday, Oct. 8, after
spending several months with
her husband in South Caro
lina. Middleton is stationed
there with the U. S. Army.
The first of the week Ray
arrived here on a 23-day fur
lough. They are at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Middle
ton Sr.
Victor Van de Weghe spent
the weekend at the home of
his brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Leland Stickney, in
Medford.
He was brought home Sun
day by Mr. and Mrs. Les
Boardman, also of Medford,
who were overnight guests at
the Van de Weghe home.
Boardman is Mrs. Van de
Weghe's nephew.
Mr. and Mrs. Donivan
Ward and daughter, Gayel,
attended a birthday dinner
at the home of Mrs. Robert
De Voe and family in honor
of Mrs. De Voe's mother,
Mrs. Jackie McCullough.
Another guest was Mr.
Frank Ward of Hornbrook.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Whit
taker and family made a trip
to Salt Lake City last week
to attend a three-day semi
annual conference for the
DAVID RESTAURANT
SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT
315 North Riverside Avenue
CLOSED TODAY -TUESDAY
OPEN WEDNESDAY, OCT. 22
Vehicle Hits Pumps
At Service Station
Walter Glenn Smith, route
3, box 169U, was cited for de
fective equipment (no emer
gency brake) Sunday morning
after the vehicle he was
driving crashed into three
Golden Eagle gas pumps at
Oil City Service station, 1880
North Riverside ave., Med
ford police reported.
Latter Day Saints church.
Mrs. Harvey Fry and Mrs.
Carrol Davenport attended a
recent luncheon at a friend's
home in Ashland.
Mrs. M. G. King who un
derwent major surgery in the
Ashland hospital, returned to
her home Thursday, Oct. 9.
Mrs. King is able to be out
and has called on several of
her friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Wid
ness and son, Mike, have
moved from McMinnville in
to one of the apartments. Mr.
Widness is employed as a
pond man. Mike is in the sev
enth grade and has enrolled
at the local school.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick "Wil
liams spent several days last
week at the home of their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Nelson Watts, in
Chico. , .
On Friday, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Williams drove down to
return his parents to Yreka,
where they were the guests
of another daughter, Mrs.
Violet Williams, for the re
mainder of the week.
The regular meeting of the
Hilts PTA was held in the
cafeteria room at the school
house Thursday, Oct. 16.
- Mrs. Edna Barr, 25th dis
trict of PTA, president of
Yreka, gave a resume of the
18 propositions to be voted
on in November.
Plans for serving the din
ner at the regular meeting of
the firemen Nov. 3 were dis
cussed and Mrs. Al Simmen
was placed in charge of the
preparations of the meal.
Several members volunteered
to bake pies for dessert.
Mr. John Fenton's third
ahd fourth grades won the
popsicles for having the larg
est percentage of parents
present. Hostesses were Mrs.
Rodney Eastman, ' Mrs. Gil
bert Luper and Mrs. Robert
Preston.
Theyll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo
Let a
6AL 6UEST
HELP WITH
THE DISHES?
NOT
dSPlDISTR4
SHE WOULDN'T
THINK OP
Zrr AH I HELP YOU
W WITH YOUR BREAK
cactt ntsHES SO WE
CAN GET AH EARLY
CT4DT COR OUR
. SHOPPlMG SPREE?;
' THEREo ONLY a i-eiT
PILE EM UP DO
ukyi i -nie niwwF u
DISHES TONIGHT
, She's been
piling dishes
up FOR TWO
OR THREE DAYS
SO LISTEN TO
HER SAD SONG
NOW
fKAMX AH0THOF
THE HATLO HAT TO
INITIALS ONLY-
DES MOINES
li, IOWA
JUST LOOK AT TUP
WORK I'M EXPECTED TO
DO .AROUND THIS DUMP' NOROCrV
LIFTS A FIN&ERTO HELP EVERY
WOMAN IN THIS TOWN HAS A
uAin rv lm i ft iikti
I M A SLAVE f!
Vita . X-
7
w 10 -V
e 1M. Kin, fUtmfl
Back Stairs: New Sign Greets Ike
By MERRIMAN SMITH
UPI Correspondent
Los Angeles (UPD - Back
stairs at the White House:
As President Eisenhower
tours the country, he runs into
new signs along the highways
over which his motorcades
proceed.
One new' addition to his
vast collection of roadside
greetings was outside Salina,
Kan., where a group of young
military school cadets .were
drawn up in as stiff attention
as their excitement of the
moment would permit.
, Their sign said: "Hi sir."
When the President stopped
at Cedar Rapind, Iowa, he
just wouldn't let well enough
alone and now he realizes that
some mysterious fate will
keep him on his diet whether
he likes it or not.
The President was leaving
a tent at the national corn
picking contest and spied a
big cake which proclaimed
"Welcome Ike" In white and
yellow icing.
"I just can't leave," he said,
"without a piece of that won
derful looking cake:"
Whereupon one of the host
esses cut a big slab and hand-
, ,. ,. ... ,e .... , w . Mwi 1 -.- . . " - - ' -i-, -JStpJ" 1 N
-.j jj
" ' i
"As Authorized Dispensers of Olyropia Beer, we are responsible for serving the premium
quality product you have come to expect whenever you order Olympia on tap. The
' Certificate you see on the wall behind me is your assurance of brewery-fresh beer with
all of the character and flavor that made Olympia famous. We serve Olympia at the
correct temperature . . . from sparkling-clean equipment ... in an atmosphere that is both
friendly and wholesome. The Olympia Brewing Company stands squarely behind us... helping'
maintain our quality standards... so that we can continue to serve the 'finest beer on tap.' ,
"In our window, welcoming passers-by, is the familiar blue-and-red neon sign which marks
each Olympia Authorized Dispenser. For a glass of draft beer served just as carefully as it
was brewed, always look for this sign. It means refreshing good taste on tap."
OtYMHA BREWING COMPANY, OWMMA. WASHINGTON, U.S.A. OV SD-5
the Water
ONLY WHERE YOU SEE THIS BLUE-AND-RED SIGN IS OLYMPIA. SERVED ON TAP
ed it to, him. He took it gin
gerly with one hand and at
tempted to sign a lady's auto
graph book with the other
hand.
Several other ladies showed
up with papers to be auto
graphed and the President
was hemmed in. As he tried
to do everything at once, the
cake seemed to- explode and ',
he started to drop it, then
grabbed for it.
A cascade of icing fell over
his gray suit. He grabbed for
one stray bit of cake and got
icing up his . sleeve. Finally,
he had to step away from the
ladies and dust himself off.
But not without leaving a
few telltale spots.
When the President visited
last week in his old home
town of Abilene, he stayed
at the Sunflower HJtel where
he last was a guest in 1954.
Each time, the hotel manager
claims, that the President
comes to town the secret ser
vice makes the Sunflower in
stall new elevator cables.
As one of the hotel clerks
said "We now have the largest
supply of slightly used eleva
tor cable in all Kansas."
In the Eisenhower Museum
in Abilene, there is a display
Doll's Wardrobe
FOR DOLL
14--22"
TALI
910CV
' Sew-easy Turns scraps of
fabric into a dream wardrobe
for her favorite doll. The
Christmas gift she'll treasure.
Printed Pattern includes
jumper, blouse, party dress,
hat, coat, pajamas, robe, petti
coat and panties.
Printed Pattern 9100: For
dolls 14, 16; 18, 20, 22 inches
tall. See pattern for yard
ages. Printed directions on each
pattern part. Easier, accurate.
Send thirty-five cents (coins)
for this pattern add 10 cents
for each pattern if you wish
Is class mailing. Send to Mar
ian Martin, Medford Mail Tri
bune, Pattern Dept., West 18th
St., New York 11, N. Y. Print
plainly NAME, ADDRESS
with ZONE, SIZE and STYLE
NUMBER.
SLAB
WOOD
Green & Dry
Immediate Delivery
Phelps Fuel
PHONE SP 3-5878
of auto license plates used by
the President over the years.
One is a 1948 New York li
cense number "DE III." The
President had this number
when he was president of
Columbia University.
Could this b e prophetic?
The District of Columbia num
ber on the car of Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon is
"111."
As far as any one can re
member, the first time Eisen
hower was ever photographed
as President worshipping in
a purely religious church ser
vice was in St. Mathews' Ca
thedral in Washington. This
was last week when he at
tended the Pontificial Re
quiem Mass for the late Pope
Pius XII. . .
The usual policy of press
secretary James C. Hagerty
is to refuse flatly to let pho
tographers inside a -church
where the President is attend
ing a service.
London-(UPD-Lord Mayor Sir
Dennis Truscott quoted a
schoolgirl's essay about his
job:
"The Lord Mayor is covered
in fur and goes around in a
coach. .He is a newcomer to
the city, but he has a lot of
affairs there." t '
Men Who Exercise Regularly
Said Less Likely To Have Stroke
Deloi Smith
waiting for
By DELOS SMITH
UPI Science Editor
New York - (UPD - Science
has come through with clear
although complicated proof
that men who
exercise regu
larly are less
likely to have
heart attacks
and "strokes"
than men who
don't
That is what
c ountless
p hysicians
have been
before reallv
raising hob with the sit-down
living habits of countless ag
ing males. It had long been
suspected on the basis of sta
tistical evidence.
To get the physical proof
in human bodies, Prof. H. W.
Fullerton, long a world lead
er in scientific efforts to un
derstand the blood chemistry
which leads to heart attacks
and "strokes," first devised
super-sensitive measurements
of the clotting times of blood.
Used Medical Students '
Then he and his associate,
D.. G. A. McDonald, applied
the, measurements to healthy
young medical students. On
test days they reported ' to
the testers fresh from a night's
sleep, with empty stomachs.
Blood was drawn for test
tube measurements of clotting-times
and then they were
given a breakfast of eggs, ba
con, and ample butter for the
toast.
Three and a half hours la-
Red China Seen
Unafraid of War
New York -fflPD- Mrs. Elea
nor Roosevelt said she be
lieves that Communist China
is less afraid than either Rus
sia or the United States of
starting an atomic war.
The former first lady said
the Communist Chinese "are
perhaps not as worried about
an atomic world war as other
countries might be." She said
they have no great concentra
tions of population and "they
have so many people 600
million that they are ac
customed to losing large num
bers." '
ter, more blood was drawn
for more test tube measure
ments of clotting times. The
breakfast was high on fats,
and meals high in fats will
make the blood more readily
clottable while the meal is be
ing digested. But that is the
kind of meal most people have
three times a day.
The test-days of the young
men were divided between
strictly sit - down mornings
during which they exerted
themselves physically only to
the extent of walking from
one classroom to another, and
exercise mornings when after
breakfast they walked three
miles, rested a while, and
then walked another three
miles.
Results Given
Their blood at the end of a
sit-down morning clotted
much more quickly and read
ily than at the end of an ex
ercise morning. Blood clots
naturally, of course. The sci
entists measured the effects
of the high-fats breakfast as
an "acceleration" of normal
clotting time. The exercise all
but "abolished" this acceler
ation, they found.
The meanings of. this is
rather clear when you keep
in mind that blood clots in
blood vessels of heart or brain
MONEY
At Crater Finance you may
borrow for any worth
while purpose on your
FURNITURE - AUTO
SALARY
and repay in monthly In
s t 1 1 m e n t $. You may
choose the terms most suit
able to you up to 24
months.
Loans may be paid in ad
vance, or in full al any time.
Crater Finance
CORPORATION
135 Pine Street
Central Point
Phone NO 4-1273
Frank Wilkinson, Mgr.
Convenient Parking
causes a block of blood flow
which produces heart attack
or stroke, in reporting to the(
technical journal, "The Lan
cet," the scientists said other
things than blood chemistry
were involved, such as hered
ity. But men may exercise or
not exercise, as they choose;
heredity they have to take.
They stressed the necessity
of regularity in exercise. "The
business executive who under
takes little physical activity
throughout the week is un
likely to compensate for this
by playing several rounds of
golf at the week end," they
said.
Dr. Fullerton is professor
of medicine at the University
of Aberdeen, Scotland and
McDonald is. an assistant.
I 1
Vote for Larry
SHEEHAM
Democratic Candidate for
SHERIFF
Of Jackson County
Who, if elected, will cooperate
with authorities and families to
resolve juvenile problems and
also, will investigate the procure
ment of county cars for the
Sheriff's department.
i
Pd. for by Shteehan for Sheriff
Comm. C. J. Babb, Chmn., Rogue
River. Ore. '
r
Mnuf i Tur rniuiDArr fltacca Arnnn Tsrafi-
I1VII i I Ilk Willi rlv I UlVi klrailVUUiUkibA
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