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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1959)
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford. Or. A Sunday, June 21, 1959 Registrations Taken for Course Registration for the two week Red Cross water safety instructors course will con tinue through 9 ajn. tomor row at the Hawthorne frool. The course is open to all per sons 18 years of age or older who hold senior life saving certificates, Robert Haworth, city parks and recreation di rector, said. The classes will be held 'daily, 9 ajn. to noon, from June '22 to July 3. Those com pleting the work successfully will be certified as Red Cross water safety instructors. .All life 'guards and instruc tors at the city pool will take the course, Haworth said, and it is hoped that others who plan to teach in the Medford area will take advantage of the instruction. The first week will be de voted to the perfection of swimming and life saving skills and the second to in struction techniques and prac tice teaching. In-service training for Haw thorne pool employees will be given by Ed Knapp, director of the Hawthorne pool. Mrs. Helen Tweedy will be in charge of the swimming and life saving. Ed Stocking, Red Cross area representative from Eu gene, will direct the second week on teaching. f Th DeluM Anglia 16 jwflJiJSiXsdA, l..,J"r' "'"I'TTa New English-built: Ford WILY $)(5)C3 per month Ol V 35 Miles Per Gallon CRATER LAKE MOTORS Main at Fir MEDFORD jr " 1 - fi. W i 1 'ZMii Ill II ft: 1 . . . of Being King, of an array of Fine -Gifts or Choose a HEALTHY, HAPPY FAMILY! : ; ; Yes, any Dad would exchange all his worldly pos- sessions tor a . ' most treasured Give Dad his wish All through the year every year. STAY HEALTHY, by drinking plenty of nourish ing MILK Nature's most perfect food. Its energy building vitamins last and last without a "let down." You Never Outgrow Your Need For MILK. Drink at Least 3 Glasses of MILK a Day TheyH Do It Every Doo6es,the real .estate MAM, GOT A RED-HOT PROSPECT-SO HE WENT RIGHT TO WORK ZOO So HE HUSTLED AROUND AND FARM FOR THEM ONJLV ID FIND ME THIS Start at Festival Ashland Blocking rehear sals have started at the Ore gon Shakespearean Festival here. Following casting last Mon day, directors started imme- jdiately.. the .task of "putting the shows together." During blocking rehearsals, all the movement, the general Highway 99 CENTRAL POINT fjr 1 f ff 3KU . ' JUST IH1AID) A CIH1DC Healthy Family because they are his possessions. Time WE'RE LOOMNO BOQ A - ACQB GRADE-A WE'LL" DAIRY FARM PAV. KNOW .cash; LOOKING ALL OVPD PORMXI .' DOttT TELL YOU BOU&HT ONE-ROOM SMACX a 1353, tinr yVatnrct Syndicate. Inc WorW ing Rehearsals I attitudes of scenes, the posi- tioning of characters on the stage, ; and the mood setting are accomplished. Workmen still are finish ing work on the theater's new $275,000 stage. Crews work between 6 a.m. and 2:30 p.m., when rehearsals are staged at the site. . Julie Tummers will enter tain the company at the Mon Desir Dining Inn,' Central Point, in the annual "Twelfth Night Revel," which occurs 12 nights after the company meets for the first time. The Revel has been held for the past three years. Production work : on "The Masque of the New World" began early last week. The special production, written for the Festival company as a salute to Oregon's Centen nial, involves the major por tion of the theater group. Di rected by Jerry Turner, it will prologue each perform ance of "Twelfth Jf ight" dur ing the Festival season. The 40-night season opens July 28. The National Wildlife Fed eration says the best method for determining the age of deer, elk and moose is to examine the animal's teeth rather than to count the num ber of antler points. By Jimmy Hatlo WELL,Tli. SCOUT AROUND .AND SEE WHAT I CAM Do-rrs nice vou folks EXACTLY WHAT 1 ?M DECIDED TO UVE IN THE CITV BOUGHT IT FROM MOOCH -AND rOMDAWV- EDI Lifer. righti rpgrcwf. Eagle Point Drive Is Progressing Eagle Point - The fund rais ing drive in Eagle Point for a new Scout Community Center building is progressing better than anticipated,-according to Harry Hanscom, chairman Throueh the efforts of many residents,, about one-eighth of the funds have been realized, The building committee met June 17 to discuss plans and report on what has been done. Hanscom stated that anyone who has not been con tacted of wishes to contribute to the fund may call him at Hlllcrest 6-3852, or write to box 393, Eagle Point.' Included in the discussion was the point that any organ ization that wishes to assist in the creation of the new park may also contact Hans com. Woman Only Saying Hello To Husband t San Francisco (UPD Police converged on Nancy Bell, 28, of Mill Valley, Thursday when she was spotted acting suspiciously near the north tower of the Golden Gate Bridge. - She explained she had no plans to commit suicide, but was merely signaling "hello, darling" in Morse code to her merchant marine husband who was returning from a six month voyage to the Far East. Anything he'd . ..... News About Books From the Library Summertime is "light-reading" time, according to Mrs. Jane Baker. Medford librari an. In the summer a good many Jackson county readers turn from their winter studies to the reading of fiction or less serious non-fiction. In addition to the usual heavy demand for mysteries, westerns,; and science fiction at the Medford Public Li brary, there are increasing re quests for books on outdoor sports, travel, and especially best-selling novels. 1 -"How to keep within1 the library's book budget and yet buy most of the novels that library patrons will want is one of the big problems of a librarian, Mrs. Baker said. . Since it is not possible for the librarians to read all of the books before they are purchased, the library sub scribes to various book re viewing services, which print in advance a synopsis of the plot and comment on its liter ary merit and probable sue cess. The following books have been added to the Jack son County library's adult col lection this month: Serious fiction: Mrs. Panop oulis, Godden; Love and Mon ey, Clad; The Chains of Love, Oldenbourg; The Sweetbread, Maurois; The Little, Disturb ances of Man, Paley. Historical romance: The Light Infantry Ball, Basso; Celia Garth, Bristow; The Young Titan, Mason; Taos, Blacker; Born of the Sun, Culp. Adventure 1 1 o r i s: The Stars Are Too High, Bahnson; Pack of Sunset, Cleary; 'Ad venture's End, Harris; .The Man From Sonora, London.. Romance: The Hill is Level, Marshall; A Tigress in the Vil lage, Swinnerton; FBI Girl, Marlowe; The Yellow house, Shepard. Mysteries: Prelude to Mur: der, Gilbert; A Red Rose for Maria, Downes; The JJ7th Pre cinct, McBain; Malice Matri monial, Fleming. ,' Stone Reviews Plan for Parks Washington, D.C. - Recrea tional development in the vi cinity of the Oregon Caves has been outlined to Congress man Charles O. Porter (D--Ore) by Forest Service Re gional Forester, J. Herbert Stone of Portland. The regional forester said the entire Sucker creek .area "will receive early examina tion in our National Forest Outdoor "Recreation Review program." This year the forest service plans to complete the rehabi litation work started in the present - Grayback camp ground. It also will maintain the site until inundation by the proposed Sucker creek reclamation project "forces its abandonment." Stone said future site planning will in volve areas above the pro posed pool. He said the Powder House site is one of those which will receive im mediate attention. Porter said hei was pleased with the announcement and the fact that the forest serv ice recognized the recrea tional potential of the area. The regional forester told Porter the existing facilities at the Grayback campground and the development of the Powder House site "should accommodate the recreation use until the Sucker Creek dam is constructed." The regional forester said the forest service estimates that inaccessibility of the up per Sucker Creek and Bige low lakes area will mean "as much as six to ten years be fore the potential recreation sites" of the two areas can be developed. . Earlier this year, Stone told the congressman that should use of the Oregon Caves area demand immediate relief, a four-acre site is available just across the Caves highway for a temporary campground. Porter had contacted the forest service to learn what sort of recreational develop ment was planned for the Oregon Caves National Mon ument area. During the Boer War, Brit- i ain sent many of its prisoners to a big detention camp on Bermuda. . . DAILY'S Body & Pain! Southern Oregon's Oldest and Finest 29 S. BARTLETT Phone SP 2-2395 Sports: Famous Guns From the Winchester Collection, Bowman; The Experts' Book of Boating, Brindze; It Takes Heart, Allen. House and garden: Kipling er's Family Buying Guide, Changing Times; Designs for Outdoor Living, Brimer; Tree Fruit Production, Shoemaker; Ornamental Trees, Maino; How You Can Grow Beautiful Roses, Flower Grower-, In door Gardening, Flower Grower. Travel and adventure: Won ders of the World, Cottrell; How To Traver Without Be ing Rich, Strong; Mount Hope, Howe; Tahiti Nui, De Biss chop. History and biography: The Long Road to Humanity, Co blentz; The Hidden Face, Gorres; Kangaroos in the Kitchen, D'Essen; Last of the Great Outlaws, Croy; Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter, De Beauvoir; My" God and My All, Goudge. Social subjects: Drinking and Intoxication, McCarthy; Escape to Utopia, Webber; The Independent Federal Reg ulatory Agencies, Salomon; Who Live in Shadow, Mur tagh; Cross-Currents, Forster. Reference: Encyclo p e d i a Americana, 1959; Internation al Year Book and Statesmen's Who's Who, 1959; Catalogue of Colour Reproductions of Paintings - 1860 -1957; Cata logue of Colour Reproductions of Paintings Prior to 1860. , Other non-fiction: On the Track of Unknown Animals, Heuvelmans; Why I Am an Episcopalian, Krumm; Practi cal Electronics, Hertzberg; Mechanix Illustrated Small Car Guide, Philips; Things That Go Bump in the Night, Jones. Teen-age: Carol of Long Chance Mine, Reynolds; Peril ous Pilgrimage, Treece; Elaine Forrest, Visiting Nurse, Ho bart; Bonus Kid, Archibald; Crow Killer, Thorp. BIG GREEN RED FIR Slabwood Double Load . 300 cu. ft Jumbo Load 400 cu. ft ?I200 $14 Order Early - Quick . Delivery Phelps Fuel Go. SP 3-5878 A free service of THE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE The average person is the U.S. ate 103 pounds of pota toes in 1957, compared with 130 pounds per year in the 1930's. The United States National OF PORT LA N D RESOURCES Cash on Hand and United States Government Bonds. Municipal and Other Bonds Loans and Discounts Net. '.. Stock in Federal Reserve Bank. Bank Premises (Including Branches) i . . . Customers Liability on Acceptances Interest Earned Other Resources LIABILITIES - Capital...... Surplus....:.... Undivided Profits Reserves for Interest, Acceptances Dividends Declared Deposits. Interest Collected Not Bills Payable Other Liabilities. - fur - OREGON'S OWN STATEWIDE BANK Vacatiocn ENJOY EVERY VACATION MINUTE . . . but before you leave v ask for the Mail Tribune VACATION PM .... . Medford Mail Tribune VACATION Circulation Department PAC Medford, Oregon ORDER 2 PImm save my Mail Tribune while I am en vacation, beginning when I return en.. certain,' plea call Mail Tribune when you return! pj Name -'. . Address City.. , . .. . iumuumuummuummumuuuummuuumumummuuuut Drug Topics Magazine re ports that Americans spent more than $39,040,000 on hair shampoos purchased in drug stores last year. . Due from Banks ...........$ - - 7. $ 23,000,000.00 . 23,000,000.00 ............... 23,772,091.85$ Taxes, f tc Earned. ..:.... rftil itafMmt mduJt i9 fcraneim ii Oragse HiAD OWCi: POtTUND, OUOON MEDFORD DIRECT BRANCH OF THE UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK OF PORTLAND SERVICE We will hole the Mail Tribune while you are on your vacation. Each issue will be held in our office while you are away and will be delivered to you personally by your carrier upon your return. VACATION PAC SERVICE IS FREE! No papers to pile up on your porch. You will be able to catch-up en all local news and special features when you return. When you leave on your vacation just complete this handy order and either give it to your carrier . . . mail it ... or just bring it in to the office. WE WILL DO THE REST ... ..and deliver all of them to ..(If date The American Foundation for the Blind estimates that there are between 11,000 and 14,000 blind children In the nation's schools. Banc 154,949,570.89 261,184,281.91 85,809,077.21 365,194,757.89 1,380,000.00 .12,797,753.30 81,544.52 3,996,412.11 841,903.47 . $ 886,235,301.30 69,772,091.85 8,013,118.47 81,544.52 747,500.00 787,809,824.30 6,729,751.37 8,000,000.00 5,081,470.79 $ 886,235,301.30 Mmbr federal Dtpeiil tiwrnne Csfpratta Complete This Vaeation-Pac Order Today or Phone the Circulation Dept. SP 2-6141 me un BRANCH