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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1959)
TheyUDo It Every k-v. ... . A MEMO TO ALL DEPARTMENTS- "THERE IS ENT1RELV DUCKIM& DOWN TO THE LUNCH BOOM DURING W0RWN5 HOURS -UHWILL VOO TURN UP CONDITIONER A BiT.MISS POTHOOKS r J.RS6DOME PRIVATE 'SPRlNGLESS MATTRESS ACROSS STREET EVERYBODY eo HOME EARLY- Squatters, Fire, Deer Trespassers in BLM Squatters, root rot, fire and deer these are among the trespassers that plague the bu reau of land management in its prptection jf federal tim ber. . ' Bob Hostetter, assistant manager in charge of plans for BLM's Medford district, outlined these and other prob lems and existing remedies in a talk here Monday noon. Hostetter also told his audi ence, at the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce round table, something of BLM's pri mary mission of resource management. Squatteri, he said, include persons who set up house keeping on no n-producing mining claims. Working Claims BLM encourages the work ing of producing claims, Hos- EXTRA CASH CREDIT PLAN Why do it the hard way? Call on the Commercial Credit Plan whenever you can use extra cash. Our- loan service is fast, friendly and convenient. Rates are reasonable. That's why thousands of families prefer to use Commercial Credit Plan It's the pay way that fits your pay day! Keep this ad as a reminder to phone or visit us. HOW MUCH DO YOU NEED? There s An Easier Way to COMMERCIAL Cash Monthly Payments For YoaGit 24 Mi. UM. 12 M. $100 $9.25 200 $10.41 $13.07 18.51 300 15.62 19.60 27.77 500 26.04 32.67 46.29 750 39.06 49.01 69.44 1000 52.08 65.35 92.59 - A service offered by Commercial Credit Plan, Incorporated of Medford 311 N. DARTLETT ST. Phone: SP 3-3664 Time TOO MUCH HE'S COT IT NICE AnI' COOL, THE AlR IN THERE rrs LIKE A- RDhJA(-p m rr uccc fry THE LET tetter pointed put. But, he said, many of the more than 2,000 claims in the Medford district appear to be on non mineral land. The government in each case must first determine whether the surface rights be long to the bureau or to the claimant, Hostetter explained. Then, he continued, it must be determined whether the land is actually mineral and thus Court Records MUNICIPAL COURT Joyce Madean Smith, disobeyed traffic signal, $10. Robert Daniel ' Jurgenson, viola tion of basic rule. (10. Douglas Marshall Kinney, viola tion of basic rule, $10. Jerry Ross Conner, defective equipment (exhaust), $2.50. Rosemaruy Schleigh, violation of basic rule, $10. Amerigo F. Cottogini, no oper ator's license in possession, $5. Jessie Estelle Walters, improper passing, $10. Richard Louis Schroeder, improp er left turn, $5. Rodney Franklin Davis, violation of basic rule, $10. Richard Allen Therres, violation of basic rule. $10. Doris Marie Corliss, displayed expired plates. $5. Roland Lloyd Raber,. disobeyed red light. $10.' Dale Ernest Graham, violation of basic rule. $10. Donna Lee Regan, failure to leave information at scene of accident, $10. Alma Louise Reed, disobeyed red light, $10. David Richard Neet. driving at nigni wimoui neaaiignt, $z.su. William Deward Jenmngs, dis obeyed red light, $10. Norman James Belmont, disobey ed stop sign, $5. Don Cline, ' violation of basic rule, $10. Jesse R. Torres, no operator's license in possession, $10; failure to cnange registration, $io. Joe Blass Sullivant, disobeyed yellow light, $10. Arinur waiter varu,eeuwen, no tail lights. $2.50. Lyle Edward Lunceford, violation of basic rule, $10. Carol Jean Dyke, disobeyed red light, $10. Sylvia Elizabeth Stotler, no tail lights, $2.50. Elmer Hurd, disobeyed red light, $10; no operator's license in pos session, $5 Teddy Roosevelt Wilson, no reg istration in vehicle, $5. Thelma Trena Howe, wrong way on one way street. $10. Barbara Jean Hamblen, disobey ed red light, $5 Walter Earl Adams, star route box 217. Prospect, disorderly con- auct. Andrew Jackson Gibonev. 11321'., Court St., Medford, disorderly con duct, $25. Howard John Stoll. disobeyed rea ugnt, sio. DISTRICT COURT Betty E. Bransford. failure tn maKe traffic stop. $10. Dick L. Flora, failure to make traffic stop, $10. Shirley K. Oswald, parking in prohibited area, $6. Frank Williams, failure to yield rigm oi way. a is. Orval O. Oliver, overheight load, $15. Kage G. Moreerman. failure to mate traffic stop and to yield the right of way, $15. Leiah v. DeRuche. failure to make traffic stoo. $10. Thomas BenUy, no operator's lic ense. $10. Elmer Allen, no motor vehicle license, $10. Howard L. Anderson, overload $330. KoDert L. Jolliffe. overwidth. $15 Sammv M. Walls, no oneratnr's license, $10. Rollyen L. Glasford. "failure to maKe traffic stop. $10. .Richard L Davis, failure to dim lights. $7.50. LeRoy R. Holmes, failure to make traffic stop. $10. Frank W. Catalona, failure to make traffic stop. $10. frank J. Miller, failure to make traffic stop. $10. Arthur S. Anderson, failure to make traffic stoD. $10. William t . Burke, failure to make traffic stop, $10. Albert P. Tucker, failure to make traffic stop $10. Jesse R. Torres, no operator's license, $10. i Noel E. Dunlap, failure to make name stop, 510. Jack J. Dugger, no safety chains, $15. John A. West Jr., failure to dim lights. 87.30. Nathan L. Harper, no operator's license, sio. Dean R. Lowe, no operator's lic ense. $10. Marjorie V. Leonard, violation of Dasic rule, William Ray Johnson, passing witn insufficient clearance, sis Jerrel N. Kirklin, overheight, $15. Thomas R. Caldwell, failure to make traffic stop, $10. Donald W. Pierce, failure to make traffic stop. $10. Lonnie A. Dickens, racing on mgnway, o5. Glenn C. Allen, overload. $60. James A. Doren, improper chang ing of lanes. 10. George A. Sharp, failure to dim lights. $7.50. Edward Walker, failure to make traffic stop. $10. CIRCUIT COURT Elizabeth Johnson vs. Russell S. Johnson, divorce complaint. Zrma Hawkins vs. Ernest L. Haw kins, divorce decree. Mary Louise Erwin vs. William O. Erwin, divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Earnest Roy Bell and Katherine liana Long, both of Talent. By Jimmy Hatlo 'UUST ONE BIG HAPPy FAMILY, HES ALWAYS SAYING'" HE 6IVES HIS POOR RELATIONS HIS HEAVY UNDERWEAR IN A r-. i err... . ' ' AND IN THE WINTER HE'S NICE AND WARM AND WE FREEZE OUR ifjr . EARS OFFjlKttfi !lr HAPFV DAYS IN THE OUTFIT THAT'S ONLY SEMI-AIR-CONDITIONED a TUAHX ANO ATP QP 7 HATLO HAT TO Among Areas subject to mining location. BL,M is currently seeking to inventory existing claims to discover who are bona tide miners with producing mines and who are simply living on claims having no mineral value, Hostetter reported. He added that a lack of bureau personnel was hampering this project, however. Certain Claims Checked He said determination of whether certain claims are valid are made at any rate in individua" cases, such as when sale of timber in the area is under consideration. Hostetter mentioned root rot, woolly aphids and spruce bud worms as examples of infes tations that can decimate tim ber stands. He sh-wed his au dience a can of concentrated acti-dione, an antibiotic fungi cide that has proved effective against white pine blister rust. He said it was hoped this anti biotic, which is mixed with water and applied as a spray, could protect the sugar pine, in the Medford area as well. Fire he described as another destructive trespasser. He not ed that arsonists, and careless smokers, hunters and trash, slash and grass burners are re sponsible for many costly con flagrations. Form of Trespass Hostetter explained that the encroachment of a .fire onto federal land is, technically, a form of trespass. He said the government can seek dam ages from the person who started the fire, or let it get out of control, and also from owners of property between the fire's origin and the fed eral land if they did not take adequate steps to halt its march. Deer and sheep, Hostetter reporte recently consumed all - seedlings on a 200-acre tract in the - Klamath river area." He said he understood no more reforestation was to be undertaken in the Tilla mook burn in northwest Ore gon until the deer there are controlled.- Methods ' of repelling ani mals are not yet very success ful, he said. He noted that the U.S. fish and wildlife service is experimenting wjth a syste mic poison that would render seedlings lethal. But, he said, the objective of land manage ment is not to kill off all the deer but to maintain a bal anced use. ' ' Proved Fffeclivo He reported that a repellant called "Endrin" in seeds has proved effective against ro dents, especially the white footed deer mouse. In discussing BLM's man agement of revested O and C railroad grant lands and pub lic domain lands, Hostetter told of provisions for recrea tional use. He described plans for re creation at Howard. Prairie, reservoir as a good example of cooperation between BLM, the bureau of reclamation, the national park service and the Jackson county court. He said plans for individual home sites on the reservoir were dis carded since it was thought more persons would benefit if the reservoir was simply open to general public use. He reminded his audience that Jackson county is inter ested in developing a recrea tion area on the Applegate ri ver under recent federal leg islation permitting the lease of O. ad C. land to political subdivisions. Separation of Sexes In California School Rooms Suggested San Francisco (UPD A San Jose obstetrician, the mother of seven, has called for a sep aration of the sexes in Cali fornia classrooms through the sophomore year of high school. Dr. Ethel Dana Atkinson testified before the 17th hear ing of a citizens advisory com mission set up to recomme'nd state laws to bolster the school system. Mrs. Atkinson said that girls generally had greater mental maturity than boys until they reached the age of about 15 years. "It isn't too good for a boy and a girl to be seated next to each other and have the girls excellipg the boys for 10 years," she said, "It takes a man to raise a boy. Certain women teachers get mad at the boys because they don't do better, and these teachers get an 'anti-boy' com plex." No More Taxes Needed Mrs. Atkinson said her ''sen sible" proposal could be put into effect "without adding a penny more to taxes. Early separation of the sex es in schools was, she said, "a tradition in New York City . . .'not an experiment." She said she felt it was the role of the family to make Satellite May ' Still Be Orbiting Inglewood, Calif. -(UPD- The missing space capsule from the Discoverer V satellite may be circling the earth tor day, five days after the Air Force had hoped to recover t, The Air Force Ballistic Mis sile Division announced Mom day that one reason for its failure to recover the 300? pound instrument package could have been that the retro-rockets did not fire. The retro-rockets were to have slowed down the capsule so it would fall from orbit. . Other possible explanations were: The parachute may have failed, allowing the capsule to plunge to earth unchecked; or its radio may not have worked and it dropped un detected. The Air Force had hoped to carry out the first recovery of a satellite capsule last Fri day over the Pacific Ocean. Cyclists Killed Near Port Orford Yachats, Ore.-OPDTwo teen age Port Orford motorcycle riders were killed Monday in a fog-shrouded collision. with a car one-half mile north of here on Highway 101. Dead were Larry Milton Myers, 17, and Glenn Gale Collier, 19. ' . .- ' , State police said the pair were southbound when their cycles collided with a car driv en by Jacqueline Ellifritz, 17, Yachats. The woman was shak en up, but not seriously in jured, officers said. Officer Wayne Jacobsen said the absence of skid marks from either of the motorcycles made it apparent that neither rider saw the auto in the thick fog. Jacobsen said , that Miss Ellifritz "was turning from the highway into a motel where she works when the collision occurred. ... when a food shopper's "paradise' will be opened to you Watch for if J mmmm Golden Guernsey Milk nider9s Quality DAIRY FOODS t sure that boys and girls de veloped" normal relationships. An alert, witty woman who began teaching her own chil dren to "enrich" their regu lar schoolw"ork in Los Gatos, Mrs. Atkinson also: -Complained that reading primers no longer ppnvey high standards of duty to a young pupil, but rather "he is left With Dick and Jane, who do nothing more inspiring than be taken to the zoo by grand mother." - Stated, as a practicing gynecologist, that "gang show ers" were "very undesirable indeed brutal" for some young girls. -Claimed that "physical edr ucation" was merely loosely organized athletics "it wouldn't be so bad if students were taught good posture, but they're not." An earlier witness, industri al chemist Benjamin Gordon, of Concord, Calif., roasted the "required trivial courses" at Mt. Diablo High school. Exam Questions Cited The father of three young sters, Gordon cited two ques tions he said were used in a compulsory freshman orienta tion course exam in social studies: "The president of the fresh man class is . "To get into a student dance you must haye a ." And he cited a truefalse question from another requir ed course, this one in senior problems: "To a farmer or small busi nessman, marriage is usually an economic asset." One of the commission mem bers, Mrs. Henry McCarthy, of Van Nuys, Calif., leaned across the conference table. "If this will make you feel any better-or worse," she said, "senior problems is required in the Los Angeles city schools. And they're introduc ing sophomore problems in some schools too." v MEW IDEA! Turn famous cocktails into frosty tall drinks with Canada Dry Club Soda. Bubbles curb morning-after! 1 lIPp aa BIG BLOODY MARY: Recipe 2 oz. vodka, 2 oz. tomato paste, several drops of Worcestershire, 2 drops tabasco, dash salt, pepper, lemon juice. Chill with ice, stir well adding Canada Dry Club Soda. NEW MODERATION TREND. For a happier today and tomorrow it's easy does it! Cocktails made into tall drinks with sparkling Canada Dry Club Soda fit the pattern. The ineffable, exclusive bubbles make drinks that are better for you: Bubbles speed liquid through'system 80 faster than plain water. Bubbles aid digestion "Bubbles curb unpleasant aftereffects Canada Dry's secretfavorformula enhances liquor's taste! PEPSI-COLA Try and Stop Me . By BENNETT CERF - TTTHO SAYS opportunity knocks once, Sam Himmell rises to ! inquire. Television is giving us, a chance to see movies' we missed thirty years ago! "X love to watch the late, late show, continues Sam, but one thing raises hob; it's something TV can't out-grow-r-my early, early job!" Little Kathy was allowed to serve the tea. when her actress mother entertained the elderly drama critic The tea arrived a full half hour late, Kathy explaining, 'I couldn't find the' tea strainer, so finally I used the fly swatter." 1 Ad in a Fort Lauderdale daily: 'For sale, 38-foot cruiser. A beauty equipped with twq bailing pumps. May be seen by appointment Bring diving helmet.' Ray Healy has come up with a foolproof labor-saving mousetrap. You buy it with the mice already in it. . C 1959. by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Featuru Syndicate. Quotes From the News By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Washington-Rep. Graham A. Barden (DtN.C.) speaking ef efforts by a Senate-House committee to reach a compromise between a tough House labor reforin bill and a milder Senate measure: i "We'll get along all right, Conferees, always have worked out something." Santiago, Chile-Venezuelan Foreign Minister Luis Ar caya, describing the significance to the Organization of Amer ican States of the "Santiago Declaration" condemning dic tatorships: "We are no longer merely a forum for elegant discussion. We can now respond to the real aspirations of our peoples." London-Mrs. Nelson A. Rockefeller, telling how she and her husband feel about the forthcoming marriage of their son Steven and Anne Marie Rasmussen, who once worked as a maid in the Rockefeller home: "We could not be more pleased. My future daughter-in? law is a wonderful girl. I think the young couple will be wonderfully happy." Hesleden, England-The Rev. William Bosley, 55, convict, ed last week of drunken driving, preaching a sermon in which he apologized to his. congregation: : "He that is without sin among you, let him cast a stone." BOTTLING COMPANY ANOTHER LATE, LATE SHOW FAN MOUNTAINOUS MANHATTAN 2 oz. of whiskey, y oz. dry vermouth, dash bitters, add ice, stir 'til frosty cold. Top with Canada Dry Club Soda. Garnish with cherry or curly lemon peel. Exhaust Fume Bill Approved by House . Washington-(UPD-The House has approved a watered-down bill aimed at determining whether auto exhaust fumes are dangerous to human health. Originally a House Com-; merce subcommittee voted in favor of legislation that would have banned motor vehicles which discharged unburned hydrocarbons in an amount dangerous to health. This "was amended by the full committee, however, to provide instead for a study of the matter by the surgeon general, who would be directr ed to make recommendations to Congress in two years. " The bill, passed by voice vote Monday, now goes to the Senate. " NOW Is PRE-SEASON SPECIAL Split Peeler Core Wood BIG DOUBLE LOADS! ALL DOUGLAS FIR .. .. ....... ,.r.,v$2 1.50 ALL WHITE FIR 13.5Q MIXED 5050 FIR ..r.r.r.?. 17.50 Prices are F.Q.B. Medford, f.O.p. and will apply to qualified deliveries up to Oct. lit. Order Early To Secure Yours! PHONE SP 2808,6 Timber Products Co. - "Fuel From Timbtr Since 1918" . Madford, Oragen MARTINI TALLBOY t Recipe 2 oz. dry gin, dash bitters, cool with plenty of ice, topping drink with light, dry, fizzing Canada Dry Club Soda. Gar nish with onion. MEDFORD, OREGON MAIL TRIIUN& Meffortf, , Tuesday, Aug. 1, 1959 There are about 15 million marriages yearly in the U.S. TREAT YQURSILF to a luxurious weektnd Spend a carefree weekend at the Marion Motor Hotel. Get away' f ronv the jangling phone and doorbell. Free yourself from KB and yard duty. The Marion wilt take over cooking and dishwash ing chores while yon play with 'the ' mermaid in the beauUTul Marion popl. Motel rates from $7 -MARION MOTOR HOTEL JOB V Coaatrciel Sale. Oiit fherw EMpira 3-4123 the Time! MM 3 KANADM n