Theyll Po Jt Every Time
UN--. By Jimmy Hatlo
WELL,
ALLSETFOR
MY VACATION"
OUST PICKED
UP MV PLANE
TICKETS SEE
Y3U IMTWO
WHAT PLIGHT
ARE. SOU GOING ON?
LETS SEE VOUR TICKETS'
ubiquitous aibune
coach fli6mt-no-n0.7
HERE, MISS POTHOOKS
CALL BOCA.AIRUNES
HAVE THEM CANCEL THIS
FUGHTAN PUT CHEDDAR
ON A JET.' WHAT HOTEL
VOU GONNA STAy AT
CHEDDAR? WIRE THEM TO
CANCEL VOUR RESERVnON-
YDU GOT TO STAy ATTHE
poppycock
THE BIS ARRANGE!?
IS AT rr AGAIN.' WHOSE
VACATION IS IT ANY-
WAy r CHED WONT
KNOW IF HE'S ,
VGU CAffr GET AWAY
FROM THE .'EVEN
ON TIME OFF if HE'LL
NECKTIES NEXT-
WHO'S GONNA COUGH
UP THE EXTRA DOUGH
FOR THEDE LUXE
TRIMMINGS? NOT
BOSSO.' THE SWINDLE
sheet is his. private.
GOLDMINE'
HE'LL SEND A WIRE
AOAyORTWO
RETURN AT ONCE-
OUST THOUGHT OF,
SOMETHING."
SS Irving TO GET AWAV
! S-seSSe"114
Demand for Treasury Notes
Past Week's Big Market News
By ELMER C. WALZER
UPI Financial fdilor
New York - (LTD - The stock
'market barely held its own
during last week, paling into
mrrMm iiijii j significance
to an almost
r
sensat ional
dem and for.
- lthe treasury's
n e w 5,' p e r
V 4 3 : J cent f our-year-and-ten-month
notes. '
The treasury
offv ed $2 bil-
laaer vruzer lion Of tne
notes and received subscrip
tions for more than $11 bil
lion.. Bankers said the issue
was priced right to attract in
vestors and it did from coast
to coast. 1
: The difficulties in this fi
nancing by short term offer
ing were competition with
savings institutions that might
upset the mortgage market,
competition with business it
self - with its 3 per cent
savings bonds. . t -f
? But the treasury was more
than pleased with the re
'. Sponse. ; And the bond market
periled up. The new issue sold
' at a premium of a full point
Kat one time and better de
linand was noted for other
bonds. - '; . .. ....
J Top of Money Squeeze
' ; There were indications this
might be the top of the cur
rent money squeeze but the
penalty of easier money might
involve some curtailment of
business expansion.
1 The bond success steadied
the stock market vhich also
got some help from a buoyant
London market which soared
on the sweeping victory of the
Conservathse Party in nation
al elections. .
: Domestic news included re
call of striking dock workers
through operation of the Taft-
Hartley act applied by the
President late in the week, a
deadlock, of s' 1 wage nego-
tiations, and mixed business
statistic . - ;
Gains appeared in electri
city output, automobile out-
putpapd steel production. Car
' loadings and coal output de
cjjned. Retail trade showed
reductions in some sections;
Building slipped," ck. .
Space Dominates Trading
The so-called space issues
dominated trading in the
stock market. , Russia's new
moon, circling rocket brought
talk of increased spending on
missiles here. The electronic
Issues stood - Tjut all week.
Other strong' spots included
the aircrafts which make the
missiles and the makers of
rocket fuel.
- 1 Airlines got a whirl when
September reports showed
substantial gains in air travel.
Some of tbe papers moved
higher. Late in the week the
soft drink issues were Did up,
' Oils sagged to new lows on
;tax selling and then came
: back from their lows.
; Railroad issues held in a
i very narrow range. New York
Central was soft for a time on
another dividend omission.
Steels finned after irregular
ity in several sessions. Con
tinental Steel rose when the
management indicated it may
vote to split the stock.
Drugs had their strong
spots. So did the tire issues.
General Tire raised its divi
dend and declared a 2 per
cent stock dividend. Many
special issues showed good
gains. Some encountered dif
ficulties. Schenley fell off for
a time when a leading broker
age house removed it from its
investment list. Brunswick
Balke fell on , retirement of
debentures which will result
in an increase in its outstand
ing stock. Phillips responded
by its officials..
Week's Shares 11,862,845
Sales' for the week totaled
11,862,845 shares, a daily
average of 2,372,569 shares.
This compared with 13,638,-
990 shares, or a daily average
of 2,727,798 shares in the pre
vious week and 19,104,940
shares for the week 3,820,
988 shares daily year ago.
The Dow - Jones industrial
average : closed the week at
638.98 up 0.41 point; railroad
158.67, off .0.18; utility 87.93,
off 0.93; and 65 stocks 212.33,
off 0.37.' , The Standard &
Poor's 500-stock index lost 20
cents a share on the week
which meant a billion dollar
loss in valuation for the en
tire market
American Motors with sales
of 295,300 shares led the mar
ket in trading volume. It rose
from 4714 to a new high at
64 and closed the week at
624 up lVs points from the
previous week.
Eisenhower Marks
17;
69th
Health Said
Washington (CPU - President
Eisenhower will celebrate his
6 9th birthday ' Wednesday,
ending a., year ; in which he
has enjoyed general good 1
health and carried" on a high
ly vigorous round of activi
ties. " " ". .
Only two other presidents-
Andrew Jackson' and James
Buchanan-have attained age
69 while serving in the White
House. They did so in their
final year in office. Eisenhow
er could become the oldest
man ever to be president be
fore his term expires 15
months from now. :
Generally Good Health
He will enter his 70th year
in what Press Secretary James
C. Hagerty described recently
as ; generally good h e a 1 1 h,
apart from remnants of the
cold he tried to cure .with
sunshine - in-California last
week. - ? .,- v
And he will be nearing the
end of : a ' calendar year in
which even his most vocal op
ponents have described him
as a more active, more effec
tive and more successful presi
dent than he was before.
No announcement has been
made as to how lie will cele
brate his birthday with the
first lady and their family.
But Eisenhower already will
have two big birthday observ
ances " b e h i n d him when
Wednesday arrives. .' "
Monday night he was the
honor guest of 1,100 members
of the White House corre
spondents association at a
black-tie dinner marking his
birthday.
Flies To Abilene
. Today he was to fly by Air
Force jet transport to his
home town of Abilene, Kan.,
for ground-breaking ceremo-
It's Time for the
Annual Crater Lion
LIGHT BULB SALE
Be at Home
Tonite and
Wednesday Nite i
Proceeds - go ' for work of;
Crater Lions SIGHT AND
BLIND programs.'
Bulbs are packaged, contain
two,60's, two 75's, two 100's
and two 150 watt bulbs
for $2.00. ...
nies at a new library to be
built in his honor. He will
stay overnight in Abilene and
fly back to Washington early
Wednesday.
The President, now in what
has been described as his hap
piest era in the White House,
can look back at Oct. 14, 1955,
when he observed his 65th
birthday in a hospital bed in
Denver, recovering from his
heart attack of the month be
fore. : Ileitis in 1956 and a mild
stroke in 1957 marred the
health picture in subsequent
years. But " the ' President's
69th year has been devoid of
serious illness and has been
the occasion for a step-up in
personal activity. -
Tuesday, Oe. 13, 1939
MAIL TRIBUNE, M.dford, Or.
13!
HORNBROOK
Man Hurt in Jeep Accident
By KATHERINE CHAPMAN
Hornbrook-Mrs. Rush (Kit)
Greive, Nevada City, was a
caller this week at the home
of her mother-in-law and
brother-in-law, Mrs. Florence
Greive and C h a r 1 e s. Mrs.
Greive is staying in Yreka
with some of her children in
order to be near her son, Wil
liam R. (Bill) Greive, 43, who
is confined to the Siskiyou
General hospital there.
Greive is in critical condi
tion with multiple fractures
of the chest and upper extrem
ities. He was injured in a
hunting accident about 5 p.m.
Oct. 4, when he and a com
panion were . attempting to
drive a jeep out of a canyon
near Six Mile creek in the
Siphon lake area west of Cal
lahan. The brakes on the
jeep failed and it overturned
backward. .
His companion, Frank
Brahs, suffering from a brok
en foot, walked 5 miles to
their base camp to get help.
Because of the inaccessibil
ity of the area in which the
accident occurred, it was not
until 3 a.m. Monday that a
rescue party including Sheriff
Al Cottar and Dr. R. W. Ba
yuk were able to reach the
badly injured man, who was
unable to move.
After arriving at the scene,
assisted by Forest Ranger Bill
Howard of the Callahan dis
trict, it was determined that
there was no place for a heli
copter to land, so Greive was
packed out on " a stretcher.
With the assistance of other
deer hunters, he. was brought-
out of the canyon,1 then taken
by jeep to. the main Callahan
rd. where an Etna ambulance
was waiting to take him to
Yreka. "
By the end of the week,
Greive had shown some im
provement, but he is still re
ported on the critical list. He
resides in Yreka with his
wife, Verna, and son Edwin. -
Mrs. Ivon Howard returned
Oct. 4 from a ten day visit in
Palo Alto and San Francisco.
Week end guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ivon Howard were
friends from Seattle, Wash.,
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Greenway,
who were en route to San
Francisco.
Grange Hews
Eaale Point Grange
The Eagle Point Grange will
hold a potluck supper at me
grange hall Saturday, Oct. 17,
at 6:30 p.m...for regular
booster night for the grange
and 4-H achievement award
night.
Those attending are to take
their own table services, a hot
dish and dessert or salad to
serve their own family and
invited guests.
The Home Economics club
met af the home of Mrs. Tom
Vestal Butte Falls Highway
on Sept. 30. The meeting was
called to order by Mrs.
Charlie Hoover in the absence
of the chairman, Mrs. J. D.
Brown. Roll call was answer
ed bv 11 members on what
was done this summer.
A thank you card was read
from Mrs. Lester McFall for
the gift received from the
club. - v
It was reported by the
chairman of.the.ways and
means that the grange served
approximately 175. at the ham
dinner given recently. The
potluck dinner to be Oct. 17
was discussed as well as the
dinner to be served to approx
imately 200 at a 4-H Leader's
association to be held on Nov.
7. Final arrangements will be
made at the next meeting.
, A letter from. Mrs. C. H.
Young, . who now lives in
Texas was read. She was a
former member, it was re
ported that Mrs. John Clarke
was ill and a letter of greeting
was written by the members.
The next meeting will be
Oct. 28 at ..the-.home of Mrs.
C. J. Clifford, with Mrs. Ray
Harnish and Mrs. Ethel Coy as
co-hostesses.
A single glass of milk pro
duces enough energy for the
average person to play nine
holes of golf, climb 186 stairs,
houseclean for" ' two hours,
dance for one hour or play
cards for three and a half
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cran
dall, Burlingame, Calif., were
week end guests at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Smith.
Having Sunday dinner with
them were the Smith's son,
Bob, of Roseburg, and a
friend Hugh Whipple, Med
ford, who were here hunting.
v Mr. and Mrs. Frank. Bear
were initiated into Pomona,
or the fifthdegree of the
Grange, at Greenhorn Grange
in Yreka OcL 5.
Mrs. Paul Greene attended
a meeting at St. Mark's Epis
copal church, Medford, Oct.
5, at which the Rt. Rev. Roger
Plumpton Wilson, Anglican
Bishop of Chichester, Eng
land, was speaker. Mrs.
Greene made the trip to Med
ford and back with her pastor,
the Rev. John Martin, SL
Mark's Episcopal church,
Yreka, and Mrs. Myrtle Me-
amber and Mrs. Grace Ran-
dolDh. also Yreka. While at
tending the meeting, Mr. Mar
tin met a priest he had known
while a missionary in Alaska,
land also one from near Herm-
iston, Ore., his first parish.
, Mr and Mrs. L. C. Walsh
returned home Thursday.from
a four day ' visit in Salem,
Ore. with her brother and sis
ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. W,
Cameron, her sister and broth
er-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam Nothelfer, and her sis
ter, Miss Florence Cameron.
At the annual election of
officers of Stella chapter, Or
der of the Eastern Star, Yreka
on Oct.. 2, two Hornbrook
residents were elected to of
fice. Thev were Mrs. Tom
Watt, conductress, and Mrs
Dwain Hamner, associate con
ductress. Mrs. Watt's hus
band has served the chapter
this year as worthy patron.
- Mrs. Dudley Killingsworth
was in ' San Francisco the
week end of Oct. 4, visiting
her daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sherman.
Mrs. Killingsworth attended
the Los Angeles Rams - San
Francisco Forty - niners foot
ball game in which she had
hoped to see her son-in-law
play. Sherman was side lined
with an injured foot and was
unable to see action. Sher
man, a former Yreka High
school star, is a captain and
defensive right end of the
Rams.
friends here on Tuesday,
Coker and his two brothers
attended grammar school here
a number of years ago. .
Mrs. William Wiley accom
panied Mr. and Mrs. Mel Bar
ron and Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Johnson, all of Hites, to Yreka
Tuesday, where they attended
a Girl Scout rally.
' Mr. and Mrs. James Pi ant
and son, Davey, are visiting
this week at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Hutchins and
children Beverly and Bobby.
The Piants "are from Lawn
dale, Calif. .-
" Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Coker,
San . Rafael, were visiting
Funeral services for Phillip
H. McCanna, 52, were held
Friday at Girdner's Funeral
chapel, Yreka, with the Rev.
J. W. Erxleben of the Assem
bly of God church officiating.
Interment was in the family
plot at the Henley-Hornbrook
cemetery.
Mr. McCanna a resident of
the Hawkinsville area, died
Tuesday evening at the Siski
you General hospital in
Yreka, following a heart attack.
He was born in Wyoming
on Nov. 25, 1907, a-a naa
been a resident of the Hawk
insville area for the past four
years, where he had follow
ed mining. Previous to that
he had lived in Hornbrook
and in Kerby, Ore.
Survivors include his wife,
Myrtle; four sons, Phillip H.
Jr. of Crescent City; James of
Manton; Donald and David,
both Yreka; five daughters,
Mrs. Ada Azeltine, Horn
brook; Mrs. Nellie Hatcher,
Las Vegas; Mrs. Myrtle
Wright, Corleen and Betty
McCanna, all Yreka; brother
Charles; sisters, Mrs. Ida Dun
ning and Mrs. Ada Gilbert,
all Sacramento, and Mrs. Eva
Karney, Montague. There are
also several grandchildren.
Townsend Faces
Religious Storm
In Wedding Plan
Brasschat, Belgium - (OPD -
Another religious storm was
blowing up today in the latest
chapter of the lives and loves
of handsome Peter Townsend
who lost Britain's Princess
Margaret four years ago this
month. '
The former Royal Air Force
hero was anxious to avoid any
religious difficulties but the
announcement of his engage
ment and forthcoming mar
riage to Belgian beauty Marie
Luce Jamagne, heiress to a
cigarette fortune, saw possible
trouble ahead.
Church Rites Impossible
Miss Jamagne is a Roman
Catholic, and church, sources
said Townsend's divorce from
his first wife, who is still liv
ing, would make a church
ceremonv impossible. It was
the fact that he is a divorced
man that ended his romance
with Princess Margaret.
Townsend, 44, told a news
conference that the question
of the church ceremony was
a "very delicate question" and
that "I can only say that all
its aspects are being studied
thoroughly."
Only One God
"I have worshipped in many
places all over the world, in
cluding Buddhist and Hindu
temples," he said. "I believe
there is only one God for all
men."
Townsend is an Anglican
He has two sons, aged 14 and
18, by his former marriage.
Miss Jamagne's parish
priest was reported to be dis
turbed over the engagementk
which was announced Satur
day, but neither To wnsehd
nor his fiancee seemed per
turbed about the matter.
Townsend and the slender,
dark - haired Miss Jamagne
said they hoped to be married
"very discreetly,' within some
three months."
Festival Board to
Be Elected at Meet
Ashland Election ' of five
members to fill expired terms
on the board of directors of
the Oregon' Shakespearean
Festival association will be
held at the annual meeting
of members ; in Ashland city
hall 'Wednesday, Oct. 14 at
7:30 p.m.'
A Nominated for the five posi-
tions are. Joseph Moore, Jack
Edson, Frank Bash and Judge
Roy Bashaw, all Medf ord,.and
Rudi - Vest, , Bob Reinholdt,
Jack "Thompson, Mrs. Jessie
Lombard, Dan Engle and Dick
Cottle, Ashland. Vest- and
Reinholdt are present mem
bers of the board.
Monthly payroll, expendi
tures for Federal, state and
local civilian government. em
ployees ran to more than two
and a half billion dollars last
year, according to the Tax
Foundation, Inc.
Husbands! Wives!
Get Pep, Vim; Feel Younger
Thousands ot couples are weak, wom-o
exhausted because bodv lacks iron a
Vitamin Bi. For a vounser feeling after 40.
try new, improved Ostxex Tonic Tablets.
Contain iron and high-potency dose Vita
min ot tor quick, new younger pep, vim.
3-day "get-acquainted" size only 69tf. Or
get lvconomy size, save $1.67. All druggists
APPLE GROWERS:
II
mittp
mow hill tree-de
strop:
rchard mic
sit'
wth
OITHO 'Eridnh
' i n i '
Ground spraying withRTHOEndrin is the most effective
most economical method for control of orchard mice.
Up until now, the control of orchard mice
has been an expensive, time-consuming
task. Previously used control measures
such as hand-baiting, and the use of wire
mesh screen, required costly , hard labor
and were not always effective. Now,
ground spray with ORTHO Endrin gives
you-a sure, efficient method of control.
For complete information on the con
trol of orchard mice, call your nearest
ORTHO Fieldman.
Helping the World Grow Better
California Spray-Chemical Corp.
A subsidiary of California Chemical Co.
' OH ALL CHCMICALB BEAD DtftCCnOKS AMO CAUTIOMS BCFORC VS
rui
si
..-
send a child to the store?
How is it you know you're taking no chances
when you let a youngster take your shopping list?
Isn't it for the same reason that you buy 70
of your family's food without actually seeing it? .
You know thai -
A good brand is your best guarantee
. . '. and that the name on the label is your best
buying guide. You have learned to count on good
brand names. . You know .the company standi
back of them. You' know they protect you. . ..
The more good "bfaifids you get to know, the
fewer buying mistakes you'll make. Get ac
quainted with those brands in this newspaper.
You'll get more value for your shopping money
ifyoudo. . : . - :
. BRAND NAMES FOUNDATION -
- ' Incorporated
A Non-Proftt Educational Foundation
- 37 West 57th St., New York 19, N. Y.
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
jp" -