tiltit nrrr" ' -t essstfl-ssC-''
SKETCH OF KERB YVILLE Artist's
ketch of the proposed Kerbyville Ghost
Town being constructed at Eight Dollar
road and Redwood highway in the
Illinois valley for the Oregon Centennial
observance.
Reconstruction of
Kerbyville Starts
In Illinois Valley
Cave Junction Recon
struction of Kerbyville, coun
ty seat of Josephine county
from 1858 to 1885, has been
started at the intersection of
Eight Dollar road with the
Redwood highway, about one
mile north of the present vil
lage of Kerby.
Kerbyville was the first
town in the county to be
platted and laid out. In 1857,
Dr. Daniel Holton, then prac
ticing in Waldo, with the con
sent of Jim Kerby, hired a
Mr. Truax to make a townsite
survey, laying it out in lot3
and blocks on the south por
tion of Kerby'i 160 acre do
nation claim.
The new plat was first re
corded in December, 1858,
under the name of "Napol
eon. In 1860 legislature
changed the name to Kerby
ville, county seat of Jose
phine county.
Replica of Mala Street
The Kerbyville Ghost
Town now under construc
tion will ba a replica of the
main street and will have a
blacksmith shop, a livery sta
ble with horses and ponies
or hire, an assayer's office,
sheriffs office and jail house;
tha general store will boast
tha old open cracker barrel I
and the pot-bellied stove
which ara reminiscent of the
ara.
Western clothes and acces
sories will be available in the
dry goods store, a souvenir
and gift shop and a barber
hop. ara planned.
The old Blue Goose saloon
will house a tenderfoot bar
and Juke box "dance hall"
for the teenagers, while the
old Pioneer hotel will be the
, headquarters for the street
dances to be held every Sat-
, urday night. Chuck wagon
barbecue will be served
daily.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sowell
who are heading the enter
prise said the official grand
opening will be staged as a
Fourth of July celebration
and they will continue to op-
erata throughout the Centen
nial observance.
They hope to have a de
scendent of the pioneer wom
an who raised the first flag
over Kerbyville to perform
the flag raising ceremony
which will mark the official
opening of "Kerbyville Ghost
Town.'
State Parks Show
Increase in Use
Salem Oregon's s't ate
parks has a record 10 million
visitors during 1958, C. H.
Armstrong, the highway com
mission's state parks superin
tendent, has announced.
The total of 10,082,014 is
a 16 per cent increase over
the number who visited the
parks in 1957, the previous
high year, and 65 per cent
above 1954, also a record vis
itors year. .
Ben Hur; Lampman State
park near Gold Hill had 12,-
558 visitors. Other southern
Oregon attendance figures
were Casey state park, 58,317;
McLeod, 19,956; Tou Velle,
95,184; and Tubb Springs,
40,359.
Armstrong said the figures
were computed by use of a
complete automobile count at
all state parks and a conserv
ative estimate of three per
sons per vehicle.
West Virginia is a leading
U.S. producer of bituminous
coal and often accounts for
30 per cent or more of the en
tire national output.
A KMED Winner . . .
f-' i it mmmt, I
KMED Personality, Robbie fobbins, presents Mrs. D. E
Farnham of 125 Clover Lane, Medford, with her check
for $100. Mrs. Farnham correctly identified the KMED
"Better Music" Mystery Tunes.
You, too, can
win W CASH
On KMED'S
Better Music" Mystery Tune
CONTEST
Tune KMED for Details
nbc KRZEID) 1440
"Medford's Memory Music Station"
Congressmen
Seek Substance
For Negro Boy
Washington - (UPD - Several
congressmen are at work try
ing to give substace to negro
Jimmy Johnson Jr.'s dream
of becoming a House page
boy.
One northern lib&ral. Rep.
Abraham J. Multer (D-N.Y.),
said he felt the mix-up over
Jimmy could be "worked out
quietly with the House lead
ership." He said involvement
of other congressmen in the
situation might only make
matters worse.
But chairman Francis E
Walter (D-Pa.), of the Demo
cratic Patronage Committee
said creation of an extra page
boy post would not , help
Jimmy, 14, the Chicago lad
who came to Washington
thinking he had a job and
found out that he didn't.
Walter said more than a
dozen congressmen other than
Rep. Barratt O'Hara (D-HI.),
Jimmy's sponsor, woulfl have
the right under House senior
ity rules to claim any
Rpst.
O'Hara pressed ahea& aa
his attempt to rally BOPfrSesH
liberal congiessmen o sup
port a resolution that wwuia
create the special jeS fctf
Jimmy. The doughty Irish
man vowed that he tpeuig sot
"stand by and eee thi fine
boy go home with a Bre&en
heart because of a mieunde?
standing." Reps. James BaoaewiH (Sf-
Calif.), anfl Adam Claytom
Powell (D-N.Y.), aifi they
would join O'Hara in suppo
ing the resolution. At i-eeswat,
there are no Negro pa gas ia
either the House c Berate,
The Family Council
Editor's note: The TmQy Council consists of a Judge, a psychiatrist,
three clergymen, a newspaper editor a women's editor and two writers.
Each article is a summary of as actual report. Tbe Family Council does
not give advice: it merely reports on problems that have been dealt
with by responsible agencies and counselors.
Terrific fr f eefiS
:Jl
UL33
9332
SIZES
10-16
See how the skirt petals out
as you whirl into spring! At
tract all eyes in this easy-sew
fashion with the new Empire
line above a tiny waist.
Choose cotton, shantung or
taffeta. Tomorrow's pattern:
Doll wardrobe.
Printed Pattern 9332: Teen
Sizes 1 0, 12, 14. 16. Size 12
takes 4?s yards 35-inch fab
ric.
Printed directions on each
pattern part Easier, accurate.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(coins) for this patterns add
10 cents for each pattern for
first-class mailing. Send to
Marian Martin, Medford Mail
Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232
West 18th St., New York 11,
N.Y. Print plainly NAME,
ADDRESS with . SIZE and
SrrLE NUMBER.
Terry K. He throws the
past up at me.
Joe K. - She never told me
the. whole truth.
Terry K. - My husband and
I have been married three
years and have a 2-year-old
son. I was no angel before I
married him and I never pre
tended to be one.
I had an illegitimate child
when I was 16. The baby was
given out for adoption. Even
after that I didn't learn my
lesson, but had other affairs.
Finally, I realized that I'd
better get wise to myself and
try to settle down and live a
decent life.
The reason I told my hus
band about my past is that I
didn't want him finding out
from someone else and then
throwing it up at me. So what
happens? Now everytime we
have a fight he starts throw
ing it up at me anyway. We
have been fighting a lot and
I feel that it's very bad for
our son. He is getting old
enough to start repeating the
things his father says.
Joe K. Terry makes out
quite a case for herself quite
a case, considering she never
told me the whole truth. I
found out plenty of little
things after we were married
- things she didn't think were
even worth mentioning be
fore. What I'd like to know
how muci more is she holding
out on me.
I married Terry against n?
mother's opposition. My
mother is a quiet, conserva
tive woman. She was shocked
when she first met Terry. The
women' in my family don't
talk or dress or act the way
she does. My mother told sw
Terry was just no good zseA
I'd never be hsgpy with her.
When we go out I get em
barrassed by the wey Terry
dresses and acts. All the men
look after her. I try to get her
to ton down, but nothing I
say seems to help. Shs cast't
hifie ter real nature.
Soe. Gcaaoil: Jee is certain
ly well-stec&eA Vita problems
-But fairy isn't e of thea.
Ml rf Joa's problems are in
hk&SBlS enfl tin $atey &B
Feaiizts; ft, ifeoa fectbte eftanoB
ih&pa i (ear bus t save
lite. We gi il t?oslr te-
all etf t&esb.
vnf $kb1y4 bats., i& te
edi tke sri tfeat fee mv 8s
whB$ Bev tfetu lhat may
w Sanaa vf om. fm ffcagss
toA ewaiaia. a ttiry a
how Biibe)iaYuig. Kia AUlifee
aS As Stfte tf cVsas is xtHsrefy
WaH, S te aom-
plain about? As far as we can
see he is complaining because
Terry is different from the
women in his family and from
the ideal they set for him.
That she was drastically dif
ferent from them was some
thing he knew very well be
fore marriage.
It looks as though Joe
went childishly overboard in
seeking his mate. He sought
and found a woman who rep
resented freedom from all
sexual restraint. Now he feels
guilty about the whole thing,
but he chooses to punish
Terry instead of himself for
bis supposed misbehavior.
The touching part of this
story - that Joe doesn't seem
to understand that he repre
sents to Terry the good, de
cent life she wants. She sought
and found a man with a prop
er family background and
rigid standards of behavior.
Probably she felt that he
would not only be a good
husband and father, but would
help keep her in line. Joe
ought to wise up and recog
nize that his wife wants to
become all he admires in
women. She needs his sympa
thy and encouragement, not
his cruel, childish disparage
ment.
(Copyright 1959,
General features Corp.)
Milnes Elected
Head 1 Gasoline
Vig SSilnes, 15 Groveland
are., MedfosS, presiSent of
Fortune Stations, - lac, wee
elected president oS the Ore
gon IftdepeRtibaat Gasslise Dis
tributors as&oeiation at the an
hhbI mmtiftg ia Portland last
Al Hielsem et Eenfl was
eleeea view arsaiflent, and
S"6tA Moaa PortlasaJ vas
oaAeA sewetay-4?eairr. C
A. (Ksiy) Mile? ef yortlaafl
is eeeutjT sscreiarf. James
SyoarWy 4 Bitma w re&rin$
The aaaoeiasteH is eat&SKned
Bui renins SaicUies aaA wha
ataUasM Ml Oregott.
Idilaae aai4 the aamnelailM
wettt am vecr4 teid at?
poos fa amy turiZer incMase
fa3t 9 cwt pear gallatt te
v)Ucit nparessmfs- atare 4has
S3 fF eet at the avwgfe
Tae affiBeauanem da veeom-
SkMkftiBg an increase in auto-
sa4ule registration fees as an
alternative, if necessary, to
fifianee proposed highway
construction, Milnes said.
Last Tuesday, Milnes con
ferred with officials of the
California distributors associa
tion in San Jose concerning
legislative members and the
intermountain convention in
Las Vegas, Nev., next month.
Milnes founded Fortune Sta-
tions in 1951 with its first
station in Medford. The com
pany now operates merchan
dising type stations as far
north as Salem and is cur
rently constructing a new sta
tion at the corner of Jackson
st. and Central ave., Medford
Vienna, Austria-flJPD-Farm-
er Franz Napetschnig was
puzzled when he found his
chained-up dog munching on
a 12-pound piece of smoked
pork. He informed gendarmes
who said that a pack of wild
hounds operating - near the
village of Diex Auf Der Sau
lalpe in the Carinthian moun
tains raided a nearby farm
and took the meat to their
lonesome friend.
Give linens and your own
accessories a personal touch
with easy-to-crochet edgings.
Dainty "finishing touch"
for linens, towels, hankies -for
shelving too. Pattern 7403:
crochet directions for edgings
Vi to 2 inches in No. 38 or
50 cotton.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(coins) for this pattern add
5 cents for each pattern for
lst-class mailing. Send to
Medford Mail Tribune, House-;
hold Arts Dept., P.O. Box 168, i
Old Chelsea Station, New
York 11, N.Y. Print plainly
Name, Address, PATTERN
NUMBER.
Our new 1959 Alice Brooks
Needlecraft Catalogue has
many lovely designs to order:
crocheting, knitting, embroid
ery, quilts, dolls, weaving. A
special gift in the catalog to
keep a child happily occupied
- a cutout doll and clothes to
color. Send 25 cents for your
copy of the book.
IRRIGATION
From
II
to 60 H.P.
50
29
up
Vz H.P. Shallow
Well $3350
Vi H.P. DEEP WELL
With 42 Gallon Tank
and
Air
Charger
$146
Complete
Siskiyou Hardware
Ph..SP 2-2939225 W. Main
MEDFORD, OREGON
We Give S&H Green Stamps
CLASSIFIED
AD DIRECTORY
PERSONAL
Lodge Notices
Special Club Events .
personal
Lost and Found
Instructions
Wanted Male Help
Wanted Female Help .
Male or Female Help .
Wanted Situations
Wanted Miscellaneous .
Financial & Loans
REAL ESTATE
For Rent Houses 20
For Ren Apartments 21
For Rent Furnished Rooms . 22
Rent Room and Board , 23
For Rent Miscellaneous 24
Wanted to Rent 25
Medfora Realtv Board 30
For Sale Real Estate 31
Business Opportunities 32
Wanted Real Estate 33
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
Building Supplie
Appliances
Furniture
Musical Equip. Radio. TV .
Sports and Hobbies
Miscellaneous
Dogs and Pets
poultry
Livestock
Wanted Livestock
Hay. Grain and Feed
Fruits & Vegetables
40
. 41
42
43
. 44
45
50
51
52
53
54
85
Automotive & Equipment
Machinery and Tractors .
Logging Equipment
Equipment for Rent .
Trailers
Parts and Accessories
Cycles and Scooters
Cars and Trucks
60
61
62
70
71
72
73
UNCLASSIFIED COPY ,
Too Late to Classify A
Businesr Directory B
Card of Thanks C
A-TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
DRY FIR SLABS
You haul S&H Green Stamps,
too! MEDFORD FUEL CO.
We ix em while you sleep
Hawkins Nite Garage SP 3-1534
31 Influenza Cases
Reported Last Week
Thirty-one cases of influ
enza were reported to the
Jackson county department of
health last week, according to
Dr. A. Erin Merkel, county
health physician.
T w e h tjy influenza cases
Were reported in Medford, six
ia Ashland, three in Rogue
River and two" in Shady Cove.
Other communicable dis
eases reported included strep
throat, Camp White "1; chick
en poK, Jacksonville 1 Cen
tral Point 1; measles, Medford
!; rhesaatie fever, Ashland 1;
pneumonia, Ashland 4, Cen
tral Feint 1; German measles,
Meteor A 21; asd scarlet fever,
B&ffye Stiver 1.
Classified Rates
day per word
days per word
days per word
days per word
days per word -
. 5c
- 8c
10c
12c
14e
By Line Per Month $2.25
(Minimum First Issue 30c)
Business Directory
Each line per month SI. 75
Minimum per month .S5.25
Dead Lin on Classified Ads
530 pjn. for following day,
except 10 am for Monday;
for Sunday noon Saturday.
Dead Line on Display Classi
fied Ads 10. O0 A.M. Saturday
for Sunday and Monday.
3 PM. the day before publi
cation for Tues. through Fri.
APPROVED CREDIT
CHARGES BILLED
BY THE LINE
DIAL SP 2-6141
A-TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
TREES & SHRUBS. New Stock.
Welcome your visit. ORNA
MENTAL NURSERY. Central
Point.
Will share my nice home with
employed person. SP 2-5365.
NOW YOU CAN BUY
PITTED PRUNES
No more worries about your
children choking on PITTS. Ask
your Grocer for them. STORDOR
GR 6-2478.
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Sunday, February 1, 1959 9A
1 LODGE NOTICES
Medford Lodge No. 83,
I.O.O.F. meets Tuesday.
Feb. 3 at 8 p.m. Joint
installation, r e f r e s n
ments. Vera Stickel. N.G.
Medford Bodies, Scot
tish Rite, Monday. Feb.
2, 1959. 8 p.m. Fourth
and Fifth degrees. Visit
ing brethren welcome.
Refreshments.
Fred A. Purdin, Secy.
Crater Lake Chapter
iso. 32, ram. stated
convocation Tues
day, Feb. 3rd, 8 pjn.
Covered dish dinner
6:30. Visiting Com
panions and Ladies welcome.
Charles Goold. H.P.
A-TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
SPECIALS
New shower stalls complete $48.
66'" Shirley cabinet sink $140.
66 inches of top cabinets $90.
Shirley cabinet lavatorv $73.
21x32 double sinks, complete $45.
5-pr. used mixing faucets, ea. $5.
NEW WINDOWS AT USED PRICES
Hundreds of used doors & windows.
Everything for a building.
HAGGARD
LUMBER & PLUMBING
On Hwy. 99. Phoenix. KE 5-2522
GUITAR Lessons. SP 3-4672.
OFFERING 15 shares COPCO pre
ferred stock. SP 3-2834.
FOR RENT 2 bdrm. apt. Duplex un
furnished. 1401 East Main. SP-2-9214.
RUN your car with out spark plugs
on regular gas. Lectra Fuel Ig
niters. SP 3-1097.
UP to 8 more mi. per gal. Use S.A.
Fire Injectors. 1953 W. Main.
SP 3-6151. SP 3-4971.
For Sale Fireplace wood.
PHELPS FUEL SP 3 5878
Big Green Fir Slabs
summer prices
S&H Green Stamps
MEDFORD FUEL. SP- 2-2111
"OP. TO BURN"
Expert Burner Service
S&H Green Stamps
MEDFORD FUEL CO.
SP 2-2111
BUNDLES OF OLD NEWSPAPERS
for sale 20c each. Mall Tribune
office 33 North Fir
CASH & CARRY
1x8 10" & 12" low grade Tesaw.
$40 M. Painted panel, shakes.
$13.50 sq. 2x6 No. 3 S49 $65 M.
3" ribbon grain mahogany ply
wood 20c ft
S&H Green Stamps
NORTON LUMBER CO.
Phoenix .'. KE 5-2037
Camp White TA 6-9331
3-PERSONAL
HAVE vacancy for 1 man, Rowell's
Family Home, 521 Edwards or
call SP 2-6031.
JANE WESTOVER
VIRGINIA'S
BIG-Y BEAUTY SALON
and welcomes her patrons to
ph. SP 2-9.30 for appointments
SISKIYOU
CONVALESCENT MANOR
State Licensed. 24 nr.
nursing care. 422 N.
Main. Yreka, Calif.
Call Yreka, VI 2-2518
WATCH REPAIR: For good de
pendable watch & clock repair
see Jess Stokes. 246 S. Ivy.
RAWLEIGH HEALTH PRODUCTS
701 N. Modoc SP 2-4438
PRIVATE room for lady in con
velescent home. Ladies only. Call
SP 2-4113.
PROMPT TAX SERVICE
3514 Table Rock Rd. NO 4-1352
Studio Girl Cosmetics
Dorothy Ricks SP 3-6470
ANYONE having- a drinking prob
lem is welcome at Alcoholics
Anonymous. 8 pjn. Wed. & Sat.
Rear of 212 N. Oakdale. SP 2-6657.
WILL buy your mortgages and con
tracts in any location or state.
Must be discounted. Mrs, Norma
Beaver, Route 4, Box 292, Grants
Pass, Oregon, or phone Provolt
4902. Please write or phone for
appointment. Quick action.
WATKINS Products SP 3-5667
The People's Choice
Chose a Rambler!
They Go Well Together
Make Rambler Your Choice, Too!
A-l RADIO
SERVICE adds
NO IV
TV MAINTENANCE
nionmT3a
We have secured the services of MYRON GASTON to Rive you
expert service on your TV set. We are continuing our specialized
service of auto radios.
627 N. CENTRAL
Near Consolidated Freightway
f
SP 2-5056
Your headquarters for expert service with Sylvanir receiving
and picture tubes.
ADVERTISERS C
MSIIliiiiiii
mat
rrr
ircuiation yaiue
In the same way that sterling on silver signifies
a standard of known value, so is the A.B.C. em
blem a symbol of integrity for the circulation of
newspapers and periodicals. It means that circu
lation so identified is measured according to the
rules and standards of the Audit Bureau of
Circulations
The A.B.C. is a cooperative and non-profit
association of 3,450 publishers, advertisers and
advertising agencies. Organized in 1914, these
buyers and sellers of advertising brought order
out of advertising chaos by setting
up standards for paid circulation
and establishing rules and methods
for measuring, auditing and report
ing circulations.
Therefore, the work of the A.B.C.,
of which this newspaper is proud to
be a member, provides you with a direct and
v valuable service. You can buy advertising as you
would make any other sound business investment
on the basis of well known standards, known
values.
At regular intervals one of the Bureau's large
staff of experienced circulation auditors makes a
thorough audit of our circulation records. The
results of this exacting audit show: How much
circulation we have; where our circulation goes;
how it was obtained; and many other facts that
you need in order to know just what
you get for your advertising dollars.
This audited information is pub
lished by the Bureau in easy-to-read
A.B.C. reports which are available
to our advertisers on request. Ask
for a copy of our latest A.B.C. reporty
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
A. B.C. REPORTS FACTS AS A BASIC MEASURE OF ADVERTISING VALUE