They'll Do It Every Time
i By Jimmy Hatlo
Its like pulling tiser
teeth to get the lodge
brothers to support
their own charity fund-
- . r-
nVAci-hMA MlrtMTy A MANY Bil-V ? ...il.Tl
: uyftoP TO TAKE
?Ei?rra no
HAVE TO CHIP IN -4
UTTLE
INDIGENT
n ikJP.
n
But let a
Guest pitch
mam put
the clutch on
FOR SOME
TRICK CAUSE
WOW
Pickup,
pa BOX 2345.
TOMRa I,
FLA.
BESEECH yOO.GENTLE 1
MENSAVE THE CARIBOU
HERDS OF GOOLA-SOOLA
GIVE TIU.IT HURTS-
HEAR.' JCAnEO0i
MEAR!
DARN.
VTOOTINV
GOTTA
UMsr
CARIBOU.'
-19.
Grange News
Criffin Creek Grange
Griffin Creek Grange held
Its regular meeting May 14
with most officers present.
The agriculture committee
reported that recent rains
have been a boost to crops
and pastures in the valley. It
also reported that fat cattle
are getting ready for market,
which may mean a decline in
prices.
Earl Croft encouraged
members to bring flowers
more often for decorating the
hall for meetings. Herman
Kamping read an account of
the potato grower and spoke
of the decrease in the number
of farms in the farming states
because small farm operators
are taking jobs in the cities.
Pomona Grange will meet
at Griffin Creek Grange in
July and the Central Point
Grange will give the fifth de
gree Saturday, May 23. To
morrow night is visitation
night at Belview Grange.
The Pomona Grange has
asked other Granges to assist
the Centennial program by
giving chuckwagon break
fasts. July 11 was set as the
date for the Griffin Creek
Grange's breakfast.
Mrs. Roy LeVander, chair
man of the HEC, announced
the club will pieet May 20 at
Near Malta- are two British
colonies of which little is
heard. One is the island of
Gozo, 27 square miles, and
the other is Comino, one
square mile.
the home of Mrs. Eva Farns
worth. Lecturer Mrs. Clyde Stru
gill planned a program which
included readings and skits.
Win Darby read an account of
the Applegate compiled by
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McKee
who have been residents of
the Applegate district for
years. It was the third story
of early Oregon history read
by Darby.
Refreshments were served
by men in honor of Mother's
Day. ...
Iju; n
'm'Jo -cT) c-:1
Cr . .
(SORRY NOW Los Angeles Councilman Rosalin Wyman (right), one of the leading,
'campaigners to bring the Dodgers to Los Angeles, averts her face as she tenders'
a $50 check to Howard Holtzendoff of the City Housing Authority,. Check was a con-
tribution to a collection ' taken for benefit of the Arechigas family, evicted from
Chavez Ravine in Los Angeles to make room for the Dodgers' new baseball stadium,
paring an explosive, day-long hearing at the City Council regarding the evictions,
Mrs. Wyman was i booed by an angry audience i .300 persons, and finally fled the
"chamber in hysteria. ;' "
American Industry Developing Products Run By Solar Energy
Editor's note: The uses to -which
mu is already putting solar energy
are described in this, the second of
two dispatches.
By ROBERT G. SHORTAL
UPI Correspondent
New York (DPD Some day
you may cook, run your appli
ances and heat your home
with energy derived from the
sun.
American industry is devel
oping a whole line of consum
er products powered by solar
en-f-iy. They have only
tapped the surface in what is
fast shaping up as a multi-billion-dollar
market.
The sun-source of all life
on earth-has fascinated man
down through the ages. This
interest became more practi
cal after the discovery of elec
tricity. The goal was to con
vert solar energy directly into
electricity and put it to work
for mankind.
Great progress has been
made toward this goal. Solar
energy is being tamed. One
of the newest applications is
a still camera which automa
tically sets its own lens, using
the energy of light as its only
power source.
Many Other Ways
Solar energy is being put to
work in amny other ways:
-Hoffman Electronics Corp.
has a solaradio that gets its
power from batteries housed
in the handle. The batteries,
which convert sunlight into
electricity, can power the ra
dio for months after being ex
posed to the sun's rays.
-The Seth Thomas Division
of General Time Co. has a so
larium clock powered by cir
cular cells. A week's expos
ure to sunlight will run the
clock for a full year.
-The Garrett Thew Studios
are turning out solar cigarette
lighters. A small parabolic
mirror focuses the sun's rays
on the tip of the cigarette
which fits into a holder at
tached to the mirror. '
-Umbroiler Co. has come
out with a solar powered bar
becue grill. . ,
Solar Stove
-Pioneer Plastics is produc
ing a solar stove made "of two
conclave rectangular reflec
tors of aluminized plastic.
Cooking . temperatures vary
from 350 to 450 degrees.
-Otarion Listener Corp. has
an eyeglass hearing aid that
can use either sola renergy or
a tiny battery. Thin silicon
cells placed in a clear plastic
dome capture the sun's rays
and turn them into electricity.
The Arizona Institute of
Atmospheric Physics has built
a solar research house which
scientists may lead the way to
a practical, low-cost harness
ing of solar energy for resi
dential heating and cooling.
I -The Massachusetts Institute-of
Technology has con
structed a three-bedroom
house that gets most of its
heat in the winter and all of
its hot water from the sun.
Solar energy already is pro
viding auxiliary heat for
many homes and heats water
in thousands of homes in Cali
fornia and Florida. In Mexico
and India solar energy is used
for cooking.
Industry's most immediate
fascination with solar energy
centers on the solar furnace,
a device that concentrates
heat from the sun on a small
area just as children use a
magnifying glass to burn pa
per. Principle Not New
This principle, is not new.
Archimedes, the Greek scien
tist, is famous for having de
stroyed a Roman fleet during
the siege of Syracuse in 212
B.C. by focusing hte sun's
rays on it with a burning
glass.
The modern solar furnaces
can produce temperatures
ranging to more than 6,000
degrees fahrenheit, about 60
per cent as hot as the surface
of the sun itself. Last year,
the U. S. Army activated a
furnace that concentrates the
sun's rays from 1,420 square
feet into a four-inch square.
The Army's furnace can
generate heat up to 5,000 de
grees and can burn through
quarter-inch thick steel in sec
onds. The furnace is being
used to test quartermaster ma-
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. 1 0
Tuesday, May 19, 1959
.v. S-.y.-T.y...------:---t''tf;frr-iyr-,i .'AIM. .u.aA. vA v vafrM&K&(&
E
Join
Now!
Join now. If already a subscriber,
renew promptly. (
Send your name, address and sub
scription fee ($5 for families living
together, $3 for individuals) to:
MERCY
FLIGHTS
INC.
P.O. Box 522
MEDFORD,
OREGON
lt could be yoursl
It could be your neighbor's.
MERCY FLIGHTS, INC. has carried nearly 1,000 patients. Many of
their lives have been spared because of the quick, efficient transporta
tion in medical emergencies provided ONLY by Mercy Flights.
And what is the cost of maintaining three planes, a hangar, life
saving equipment, and stand-by voluntary flight crews, 24 hours a
day, 365 days a year?
Only $5 for you and yout family. Only $3 if you are a single
individual.
Your subscription fee keeps Mercy Flights' planes flying. No one
knows who will need them next.
It also will provide you with FREE air ambulance service if needed
for a medical emergency. w
This service is provided NOWHERE ELSE IN THE WORLD except in
Jackson and its neighboring counties. , -
Published as a Public Service By
Th Medford Mail Tribune '
wc v w x x c, IW. WRVlii mm I n V w
Employment in
Portland Mounts
Portland (DPD Employ
ment has opened up and 5,300
more persons were at work
in the Portland area during
the month of April, according
to the Oregon State Employ
ment Service..
Unemployment " has drop
ped to 5.3 per cent of the
available labor force, com
pared to 6.8 per cent in
March. In April, 1958, it was
9.1 per cent.
The agency said that sea
sonal employment in con
struction, lumber and wood
products, transportation and
agriculture was primarily re
sponsible for the rise.
4-HCIub News
Eagle Point Dairy Club .
The Eagle Point Dairy club
met May 13 at the McDonald
home.
All were present but one.
We had one visitor, Cheryl
Stanley.
Tim Palm led the flag sa
lute. We had our meeting
from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. We
met to talk about our pre-fair
and learned how to read DIA
charts and how to judge.
Our next meeting will be
Saturday, May 16, at the fair
grounds.
Lucille Burk,
Reporter.
Santa Monica, Calif. -flJPD-Actor
Mickey Rooney was di
vorced by his wife, Elaine
Mahnken Rooney, Monday
when she testified her hus
band's odd hours and table
hopping antics made her
nervous.
Two-Paris Perfect
Ml WS4Zi rff
fill 4 f ml
hL" lit f i
TmWAn
n ' SE' am
For town or country, sew
this easy-to-make dress 'n bo
lero that travels the seasons
smartly. Note cool neckline,
diagonal bodice buttoning,
easy skirt. Tomorrow's pat
tern: Misses' sheath.
Printed pattern 9102: Misses'
Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42,
44, 46, 48. Size 16 dress and
bolero require 4 yards 39-
inch.
Printed directions on each
pattern part. Easier, accurate.
Send THIRTY-FIVE cents
(coins) for this pattern-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,
ADDESSS with SIZE and
STYLE NUMBER.
terials used to protect troops
from the thermal effects of
nuclear weapons.
The Air Force is building
a furnace that will be able to
generate temperatures of
8,500 degrees, which is 80 per
cent as hot as the sun's sur
face.
The searing heat from solar
furnaces is being used by in
dustry to test all kinds of ma:
terials and devices, from rock
ets and nose cones to new and
improved methods of smelting
copper.
Everybody Goes For Our . .
Royalon Melmac Molded
DINNER WARE
Choice of . . . May Time Candle Light Fancy Free
Vassar or Wheat
SPECIAL PLACE SETTING
1 Decorated Dinner Plate
1 Decorated Saucer
OPEN STOCK
PRICE $7.15
Now $2
1 Fruit
1 Tea Cup
95 For the
place setting
WE HAVE IT!
the AIL-HEW
MODEL 925
DeWALT
POWERSHOP
CUTS BIG
2'i"DEEP
V4
Patented totally-enclosed
motor delivers more than
2 H.P. Exclusive, built
in Roto-Grip Motor Brake
stops. motor instantly
Drop-leaf "Saf-T-Table"
up front Cut-off Scale
on guide fence plus
many other great engi
neering features!
FREE DEMONSTRATION
$23900
Terms of Your Choice
NEW ft and VU H.P.
STANLEY
Heavy-Duty Routers
Special
SPIN
ROD
H&! 7-foot hollow
glass spin rod. Two
piece construction,
crew locking reel
seat, special cork
handle. Excellent
medium action.
Regulai
$11.95
SPECIAL
$795 .
THE ONLY ROUTERS WTTH
THE "BUILT-IN" LIGHT!
The only tool for making dove
tails; tenons, dadoes . . . hun
dreds of decorative cuts.
e New Micrometer Depth Ad
justment. Recessed Safety Switch.
New Clamping Leter.
e Comfortable, Three-Position
Handles.
Full Vision Bast,
Special Introductory Prices
7h h.p. H264 $62.50
VU h.p. H267 82.50
CONCRETE
NAILS
HELYX spiral hardened nails
to drive into concrete. No
holes to bore. Hubbard Bros,
stock Vi inch to 2V inch
lengths.
Borden Resinite Flex-Tred
Tough DuPont nylon ana
vinyl three-ply construc
tion combines high qual
ity with economy. Rag
ged enough to withstand
even the highest residen
tial water pressures for
years. Dependabe "Shur
Lok" couplings. Easy to
handle "Shur-Grlp" sur
face. Carries Commer-'
cial Standards Seal of
Quality 209-S7 . . Fully
guaranteed.
W DIA. x SO FT.
$595
58" x 50 ft. $7.95 Va" x 50 ft. 1 2.45
Now At A New
LOWER PRICE
f GRASS TRIMMER
Eliminates "hands and
knees" lawn trimming
Wilt trim up to 250 ft. of lawn in 5 mil,
utes. Special design permits us ef full 5.
length of blade ... not just Hie ends.
Perfectly balanced and light in weight
(only 3Vi lbs.). Rugged, precision-built.
safe, easy to use. Only
Pprter-Cable offers yog
a low-priced gross trim-,
mer with these features.
2995
Repair Your Farm
Equipment On-the-job!
f BEND TO ANY M F0R
V SIZE OR SHAPE Mf REPAIRING
V -nf All FARM
KBDI-BOLX i. cold. . UlrUIUCBV
drmi-20 ttronger 3 ltlAs.ninCRl
Specie! finish egj tntfe?! COMSINtS
prevents rusttng. 3R SXXjfM
"A'"iV fL r
Lengths tAKB cmtivatom
IsraiADsu
HUSKMS
SAIHS
MOWHS
I DISC HASROWS
tOAPESS ACTORS, It.
Here is e comnletelv new rmif .nil
construction material for farm and home.
REDI-BOLT has literally hundreds of uses
cut to size as straight bolts, or bent to various
shapes after heating with a blow torch or
stove flame.
Black Plastic
SHEETING
Hubbard's stock both 6 mil and
4 mil weights in black weather
proof polyethylene p!astic sheet
ing 20 feet wide. Sunproof
prevents sun burning and sun
bleaching. Absolutely water
proof. Buy any amount. 4 mil
sheeting, 20 ft. wide.
40
LINEAL FOOT
Revere Copper Clad
Stainless Steel V2 Qt.
SAUCE PAN
and COVER
$A69
SPECIAL
Now Only
tcpl
pm D0.T.'
KM YOURSELF
Burn paint
Wf& 0' 131 floorin2
m&t'' Repair 8utter
Antique furniturt
iliif Solder io a fifty.
WITH INSTANT LIGHTINt
with
disposable fuel cylinder
lightweight Jess than 3 Iba.
fully loaded.
Portable fits in tool box er
pocket.
Disposable cylinder con
tains enough fuel for months
of normal use throw away
when exhausted. Replacement
cylinder costs only 51.95.
Now while present stocks last
choice of model shown or the
$9.48 deluxe push-button mo-.delTX65
FOR
ONLY
5595
rtfREf
WORK-FREE DUSTING
Qew4
COTTON MOP
Exclusive "maglc-actlon" swivel
socket does the twisting and turning
for you. Pad of high quality, fine spun
cotton yarn, shaped to fit In
corners. Pad la washable,
replaceable.
295
Now treated with Endust!
Italian
Decanters
Unusual shaped 24 inch blown
decanters of modified hour glass
style with tall stopper. These
are not like the plain style tall
decanters which are being offered.
3
Free Delivery
Within Medford
City Limits
$1.00 or More.
nnnnrrr.irr.oi7i7r. - i
PHONE SP 2-6189 1 11 ir a niTT JP"'
MAIN and RIVERSIDE
MEDFORD, OREGON