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W4RD HEELER
There's No Place Like Home.
Even for a Dog Family
Trixie the family dog was
about to become a mother.
The children of the family
were excited; - they asked
many questions and made
many plans. The parents dis
cussed and finally decided it
would be better off if the
dog were taken out to a
friend's farm, and kept there
until the puppies were big
enough to get around by
themselves.
During the discussions.
while the children were in
bed, the dog Trixie, hearing
her name mentioned, pricked
up her ears and listened. She
knew, by some dog-know
ledge, that she was the sub
ject of the talks.
The friends of the family,
out in the country, said they
"would be glad to keep the
dog, that she could have a
nice bed of straw out in the
small barn where it was
quiet, and warm." So it was
decided, without the consent
or approval of the one most
concerned, the dog herself.
Going Away
The children were told that
Trixie was going away, for
a few days but when she re
turned she would have a fam
ily. Three days later the fam
ily received a telephone call
from their friends on the
farm; "Trixie was the moth
er of four cuddly puppies.
Both mother and babies were
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Jiffy-knit on large needles.
Create a rainbow effect with
scraps of yarn, alternating
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(coins) for this pattern-add 5
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class mailing. Send to Med
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Arts Dept., P.O. Box 168. Old
Chelsea Station. New York
11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME,
ADDRESS, PATTERN NUM
BER. Our new 1959 Alice Brooks
Needlecraft Catalog has many
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colors. Send 25 cents for your
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Time
''
SO THE BOSS DIDNTT
THINK WE'D
I HOW rCOLI M
SOUNCE3,MUM ? GET
X THOUGHT IT V
OtNG. CUPPER-
W4S .4 DRESS t
I ArhalK TONIGHT- ( Tr!E!?E WERE TWENTy
i nw i vr- (J?U70 m i M ipivi 14 i (una
Small Worlds
Around Us
By Lynn M. Watkins
doing fine." Toward evening
of the same day another hur
ried telephone call informed
the dog's owners that only
two puppies were left in the
straw nest. Trixie, too, they
said, was gone.
A search by the farm fam
ily proved unsuccessful
two puppies, along with the
mother dog, just weren't in
evidence. Later, the man on
the farm reported that An
other puppy had disappeared,
leaving only one in the straw
pile. And there was still no
sign of the mother dog.
Both families were wor
ried now. It was decided not
to tell the children. Feelings
in the home were pretty low
that night. The following
morning a loud call came
from one of the children; the
child was excited; he rushed
into the house yelling at the
top of his voice; "Come out
in the garage, there are three
little puppies there on Trix
ie's bed."
The parents rushed out,
there they were, three blind
little dogs snuggled together
on the old blanket. As they
watched, the telephone rang;
"all the puppies are gone now,
and we haven't seen Trixie
either." "The nest in the
straw is empty." "Everything
is all right" the lady told her
friend, "three pups are now
in the garage, and the dog is
just coming up the drive now
with the fourth pup in her
mouth; Trixie has brought
them all home."
Trixie had made four round
trips, covered a distance of
nearly 80 miles, along count
ry roads and city streets; but
she had brought them all
home. They were all together
again. -
(Released by The Register
and Tribune Syndicate, 1959)
'Millionaire' Said
Heavily in Debt
Los Angeles-UPD-A. C. Blu
menthal, a theatrical produ
cer and real estate man
thought to have been a mil
lionaire at his death, was ac
tually more than $47,000 in
debt, it was revealed Tuesday
in Superior court.
. Attorney Milton M. Golden,
executor of Blumenthal's will,
said in a final accounting of
Blumenthal's estate that as
sets amounted to only 82,
082.18 net while debts ex
ceeded 850,000'.
Blumenthal, who died at
the age of 72 in July, 1957,
was a reputed millionaire, be
lieved to be the owner of two
luxury hotels in Mexico City.
His will left his estate to his
brother-in-law, Julian W. Rog
ers, for distribution "in a f air
and equitable manner."
SIGHT-SEEING
Paris-aTD-Tourists who feel
the view of Paris from the
900-foot-high Eiffel Tower is
not good enough will be able
to take helicopter rides over
the city and its environs this
summer, officials said today.
TO VISIT RED CHINA
Cairo -OT- A nine-man mil
itary mission from the Alger
ian government-in-exile will
leave here Thursday for a visit
to Communist China, an Al
gerian spokesman said today.
Don't Neglect Slipping
FALSE TEETH
Do filM teeth drop, dip or wobbla
hen you talk, eat, laugh or sneeze?
Don't bo annoyed and embarrassed
by such handicaps. PAS TEETH, aa
alkaline (non-acid) powder to sprin
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No gummy, gooey, psatT taste or feel
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By Jimmy Hatlo
NEED .4
H4PPY TILL HE'S
RAD HIS PICTURE
H4NDS WITH
THE VENUS
DE UIQJ4
Watcuihg lushwelu
the cr4shei?,
the best time of
T4ANX44TlPOP
7H HtfTl?
6-M., NSW4RK,
! Medford Student Is
Practice Teacher
j Forest Grove - Jerry Kala
! pus, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stan
Kalapus, 2165 Hillcrest rd.,
i Medford, is one of the 30 prac
tice teachers placed in the
schools of Washington county
for the spring semester. Jerry
is teaching physical education
and biology at Gaston High
school.
He is a senior majoring in
physical education at Pacific
university and a member of
Phi Beta Tau fraternity. He
is a graduate of Medford High
school.
RECESS WARSAW TALKS
Warsaw, Poland - (LTD - U.S.
Ambassador Jacob Beam and
Communist Chinese Ambas
sador Wang Ping-nan have
agreed to a two-month recess
in their drawn-out talks on
the Formosa Strait issue.
Court Records
MUNICIPAL COURT
Robert Greer, expired operator's
license, $2.50.
David Gerald Gardner, violation
of basic rule, $10.
William Friesen, disobeyed red
light. $5.
David Rush Carter, four in front
seat, $5; following too close, $25.
Sue Ellen Woodward, no oper
ator's license in possession, $10.
James Alvin Lowman, disobeyed
red light. $10.
Philena May Nicholson, excessive
noise (exhaust), $5.
Lucile Mary Matejka, disobeyed
stop sign. $5.
Kenneth Earl Morse, violation of
basic rule. $10.
Orvin Dell Summers, disobeyed
red light. $10.
Dovle Farriss Smith, disobeyed
red light. $10.
Marquerita A. Burch, disobeyed
stop sign, $5.
James Charles Nistler, violation
of basic rule, $10.
Joseph William Rice, disobeyed
stop sign $5.
Darrell John Deters, violation of
basic rule, $10.
Raymond D. Cook, violation of
basic rule. $,0.
G. Malcolm Thomas, no oper
ator's license in possession, S2.50.
Walter Fred Muth, transient,
drunk in public. $100 (suspended).
Delbert Johnson, 532 V Allison
St., Ashland, drunk in public, $10.
Theodore Franklin Wallace, 1956
Sunset dr., drunk in public, $100
(suspended).
Donald Eugene McLadder, tran
sient, drunk in public, $100 (sus
pended). John Quitman Hyde, Shady
Cove, drunk in public, $100 (sus
pended). DISTRICT COURT
Darrell C. Monk, switched li
cense, $30.
Virgil E. Franklin, Indecent ex
posure. $55.
Douglas A. Harsh, over-length,
$10.
Arthur Gillman, defective clear
ance lights. $10.
John E. Danforth, defective clear
ance lights, $10.
William T. Kamberg, improper
parking. $6.
Loyd R. Hines, overload. $62.
Augustine F. Lewis, clearance
lights, $10.
Lorin G. Severson, no operator's
license, $10.
Louise C. Day, passing at inter
section, $10.
Donald Gayett, petty larceny, $5.
Ramon Batista, no operator's li
cense, $10.
Dorothy J. Crandell, illegal park,
ing. $6.
Pete Zimmerman, overwidth, $15.
Johnnie L. Stevens, no motor
vehicle license, $10.
Arleigh A. Anderson, violation
of basic rule $15.
CIRCUIT COURT
Marsha Magdelena Blair vs. Ch ai
mer Blair, divorce complaint.
Janet Lee Lawrentz vs. Kenneth
Lawrentz divorce complaint.
Ellen Lavern Stewart vs. James
Charles Stewart,- divorce complaint.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
APPLICATIONS
Paul Udell Ray and Helen Marie
Hainer Pitt, both of Weed, Calif.
Douglas Marshall Thomas. Suth
erlin. Ore., and Chirley Ruth Sar
gent, lioseourg.
This Week Only!
No. 2 DRY
2 2X
A V Per M
i
PAT &
LDERS
2802 Crater
PHONE SP
1
Friendliness Displayed by Americans
mpresses Russian
Editor's note: Oleg Kalugin. a
24-year-old graduate of the Uni
versity of Leningrad, Is in the
United States studying at the Col
umbia University School of Jour
nalism as part of the U.S.-Soviet
cultural exchange program. He ar
rived in New York three months
ago and will remain until the fall.
In the following dispatch, he gives
his impressions of American life
and Americans as he has found
them.
By OLEG KALUGIN
Written for UPI
New York -UPD- In a spa
cious, brightly-lighted room of
the U.S. Embassy in Moscow
a bland good-humored con
sular official was talking to a
group og Soviet students who
were going to study in Ameri
can universities in accordance
with the Soviet-American cul
tural agreement of 1958. The
atmosphere was friendly and
warm and somehow it toned
down discontent and chagrin
caused by the two months' de
lay in issuing visas.
Fortunately, this atmos
phere of friendliness has be
come a characteristic feature
of our stay here, and when
asked about their impressions
of this country, the Soviet
students, in all likelihood, will
be inclined to single out this
hospitable, really friendly re
ception they got in the U.S.
from both officials responsible
for the exchange program and
ordinary American citizens.
All Sorts of Visits
Actually, hardly a single
day passes without all sorts
of visits, invitations and dis
cussions. At times we are so
overwhelmed by them that
we cannot devote due time to
our studies.
It is very gratifying to see
that despite the cold war and
rather strained relations be
tween the Soviet Union and
the United States the Soviet
students have been greeted
here with warmth and cordi
ality. We all hope that the
time will come when friendli
ness and mutual respect now
existent in our relationships
with American students will
become part and parcel of
Soviet-American relations.
Three months' stay is too
short a period to judge so big
a country as the U.S.A., and
the impressions we have to
date may appear conflicting
and superficial. However we
have been particularly impres
sed by the interest in the Sov
iet Union.
Little Knowledge)
Many Americans have very
little if any knowledge of the
Soviet Union and its policies.
Still others have quite a fan
tastic picture of the country
but all of them want to know
more. This is really import
ant, for with accurate knowl
edge of each other we can
better understand our goals
and aspirations.
Four Soviet students studyr
ing at Columbia University
were pleased to find New
Yorkers helpful and consid
erate. New York itself is, of
course, a tremendous city
with a lot of things to see.
I personally liked very
much some pieces of modern
architecture in New York,
especially those magnificent
buildings made of aluminum,
concrete and glass which are
located at Park and Madison
ave. It is a pity that such
buildings have not yet re
placed numerous far less im
pressive houses in downtown
and uptown Manhattan. We
have also been struck by a
sharp difference between the
spic-and-span look of the Fifth
ave. area and heavily littered
streets in other parts of the
city.
Some of us visited places
outside New York City and I,
for instance, found the Ameri
can countryside immensely at
tractive, though perhaps too
urbanized.
We have discovered that
American students are very
industrious and enterprising,
and like all students are fond
of jokes and side-splitting hu
mor. Columbia u n i versity
provides fairly good opportun
ities for studies. However we
have been astounded by the
high cost of education here
which, in our opinion, makes
it difficult for a certain num
ber of young people to get ad
equate training and instruc
tion. MIKE'S
SERVIC
Lake Hwy.
2-8376
SI
Among other things, we
have been favorably impress
ed by the high level of me
chanization and efficiency in
various fields of everyday life
here. Supermarkets, kitchen
appliances, vending machines
were very engaging indeed,
whereas the highways and the
motels proved to be most fas
cinating. Useful Program
We believe that the ex
change program is useful to
us as individuals since it
broadens our knowledee of
the world and enables us to
better understand the Ameri
can people.
We also believe that this
exchange will be equally use
ful to our American counter
parts in the Soviet Union.
What is far more important,
however, is that such exchang
es help create a new atmo
Mattson, Levine Kidnap Cases
Remain Unsolved in FBI Files
Washington -0.TP- The two
recent baby snatchings in New
York and the even more re
cent one in California were
happily solved in a matter of
days.
But there are two other
major kidnapings which the
FBI has been unable to solve
in more than 20 years, man
ring its glittering record in
dealing with such crimes.
Both kidnapings, still under
active investigation, date back
to the late 1930s. And both in
volved boys, aged 10 and 12.
The first occurred early in
the evening of Dec. 27, 1936.
Four youngsters were playing
in a room at the home of Dr.
W. W. Mattson in Tacoma,
Wash.
They were Charles Fletcher
Mattson, 10; his brother Billy,
14; his sister Muriel, 16 and
her 16-year-old friend, Vir
ginia Chatfield.
Masked Man Enter
At about 9 p.m., a masked
man banged on the French
doors with a blue steel revol
ver and broke Into the house.
As he enterd the room he was
wearing a scarf across the
bridge of his nose. The mask
slipped, however, and the
children got a look at his
face.
He appeared to be about
five-feet-seven or eight inches
tall, slight in build, coarse
featured and between the
ages of 25 and 35. He wore a
tan checkered cap, dark trou
sers and a zipper jacket. He
spoke with an accent.
At first, the intruder de
manded money of the fright
ened Mattson children. Told
there was none, he seized 10-year-old
Charles and said,
we'll take this kid."
As he backed out of the
room with his victim, the kid
naper dropped a prepared ran
som note demanding $28,000
in cash for the safe return of
the child. But he never con
tacted the Mattsons and the
money was never paid.
Body Found
Nor was Charles Mattson
ever seen alive again. On the
morning of Jan. 11, 1937, his
body was found about 609 feet
from the side of a road six
miles south of Everett, Wash.
The boy had been badly
beaten. When discovered, he
had been dead perhaps as long
as 10 days. An exhaustive in
quiry was conducted. It has
never ended.
Dozens of people have
called at FBI offices through
out the United States and have
confessed committing this kid-nap-murder.
Some of these
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Exchange Pupils
sphere in the relations be
tween our two countries
the atmosphere of mutual con
fidence and peaceful cooper
ation. Oleg Kalugin was selected
as a student in the U.S.-Soviet
exchange program because he
knows English, was a bright
student and enjoyed a good
reputation.
Until last June, young
Kalugin told UPI, he thought
he would be an English teach
er. That's what he graduated
as last June from the Univer
sity of Leningrad.
But the Soviet Ministry for
Higher Education asked if
he'd like to study journalism,
believing him to be well-qualified.
He said yes. Now, he is
prepared to return to the Sov
it Union, probably in the fall,
and join a Russian newspaper
persons have been motivated
by a desire for publicity. Oth
ers have been suffering from
a mental or emotional disturb
ance. Logical Confessions
In some instances, the con
fessions have been so logical
and clear that an intensive in
quiry was needed to prove the
confessors' innocence. .
Through the fall of 1958,
the FBI had uncovered 25,725
suspects in the Mattson case.
Of this total, 25,600 have been
eliminated and 125 suspects
still are being investigated.
The tragic kidnap - murder
of Peter David Levine, the 12-year-old
son of Murray Le
vine, a New York attorney,
also remains an open case in
the annals of the FBI.
The boy disappeared on the
afternoon of Feb. 24, 1938,
Alaska B-Girls Reach End
Juneau, Alaska- (UPD -Alaska's
B-girls, the "drink up"
kids of the 49th state, appar
ently have reached the end
of the trail.
B-girls and their forerun
ners, the dance hall girls,
have been a part of Alaska
ever since the first sourdough
hit it rich in the gold fields.
Flocked To Territory
In Alaska's gold rush days,
Texas Collegians
Too Big for Booth
El Paso, Tex. (UPD- There
are times when even Texans
have to admit it's a handicap
to be too big.
College men at Texas West
ern squeezed and squeezed but
could put only 19 men into a
telephone booth.
That was far short of the
record set by Modesto (Calif.)
Junior college where 32 stu
dents sardined themselves into
a booth.
It was four short of the 23
sophomores who squeezed
themselves into a booth at St.
Mary's College, Moraga, Calif.
But it tied the mark set by
Hatfield College of England.
ROZ SUES U.S.
Los Angeles Actress Rosa
lind Russell sued the U. S.
government for recovery of
$15,476 which she claims she
overpaid in federal taxes on
her $275,000 income during
1953.
9t
DEMONSTRATE
staff or Tass, the official Sov
iet news agency.
Classical Music Hobby
At home, he lives in a three
room Leningrad apartment
with his parents, his wife,
Ludmilla, who is studying to
be a teacher, and their three-year-old
daughter, Svetlana.
He is five-eight, 24 years old,
has blond hair and is fair
skinned.
His hobby at home is listen
ing to classical music from
his library of 200 records, but
he also has a short-wave re
ceiver and says he has spent
many hours listening to the
English-language Voice of
America broadcasts and the
British Broadcasting corpora
tion. "I listen to it to improve
by English," he said in his re
markably good English.
after attending the Albert
Leonard Junior High school in
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Between Feb. 24 and March
1, 1938, the Levines were con
tacted three times by the kid
naper or kidnapers. A ransom
of $60,000 was demanded. The
third and last ransom negoti
ation reduced the ransom to
$30,000. Although the instruc
tions of the kidnapers were
complied with by the Levine
family, no ransom money was
paid.
On May 29, 1938, at about
6:35 p.m., the body of Peter
Levine was found and identi
fied from his clothing. The
body had washed up from the
Long Island Sound near the
breakwater o f Davenport
Neck, New Rochelle, N.Y.
The hunt for the kidnap
killer still goes on.
dance hall girls flocked to the
territory by boat to carve
their own pages in Alaska's
gaudy history. Miners found
in the dance halls an oasis of
gaiety and, in the process,
often departed poorer but
happier.
Many of the dance hall
girls found romance in the
territory and later became
among the most respected
citizens of the northland.
In later years, B-girls took
over the practice of enticing
customers to "drink up" in
various Alaska night spots.
Many doubled as entertain
ers. Bill to Governor
"It's my turn to entertain
the boys, honey, why don't
you buy another round?" was
a standard hit.
This bit of Alaskana died
forever when the Senate
passed an anti B-girl measure
by a vote of 19-1 this week.
The bill now goes before Act
ing Gov. Hugh Wade for his
signature.
The lone dissenter in thei
rooks
1116 North Riverside
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Printed Pattern 9183: Misses
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Size 16 dress requires 33i
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yards.
Printed directions on each
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Send THIRTY-FIVE cents
(coins) for this pattern-add
of Trail
Senate was Senate President
William Beltz. He joined
with Rep. Robert Sheldon in
declaring the lone "nay" in
each house.
Bit of Alaskana Dies
In debate in the House a
week ago, Sheldon made the
declaration that a bit of Alas
kana would die with the pass
ing of the B-girls. He added
that many people respected
in the state today plied cus
tomers to drink in the famous
saloons of Alaska's roaring
past.
CLOGSTON'S
Metal
Weather Stripping
and Screens
Estimates Gladly
Phone SP 3-1014 Evenings
mm
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Electric & Plumbing
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BUY NOW AND SAVE!
Wednesday, March 25, 1959 SA
Would-Be Bank
Robbers Shed Tears
San Francisco - (LTD - Two
would-be robbers handed
Bank of America teller Fila
mene Miller a note Tuesday
telling her to "put $100 In a
sack or we'll blow up th
bank."
"What is this-a joke?" ih
snapped. "Get out of here this
minute."
The robbers grinned sheep
ishly, said "All right," and
fled.
Moreover, since one of them
had signed the note, police had
no trouble tracing them. The
two foiled desperadoes-aged
9 and 13-burst into tears when
apprehended.
FIND OLD SKELETON
Asti, Italy -(UPD- Experts
said today that a huge petri
fied skeleton unearthed near
here is believed to be an Ich
thyosaurus of an extinct pre
historic group of marine rep
tiles. 1 10 cents for each pattern for
first-class mailing. Send to
Marian Martin, Medford Mail
Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232
West 18th st.t New York 11,
N.Y. Print plainly NAME,
ADDRESS with SIZE and
STYLE NUMBER.
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