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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1960)
8 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Thursday, Feb. 11, 1960 OICC Rules on Bowling Alleys Portland - (UPD - The Ore gon Liquor Control Commis sion Wednesday clarified its regulations applying to bowl ing alleys which have licenses for alcoholic beverages. . The OLCC said that sales, services and consumption must be confined to lounge and restaurant areas. The Commission ruled that services and consumption are not to be permitted in the alleys. Successful 'Hi-Fi' Produces Mumbles Watkinsville, Ga. -(UPD-Roy Crowley hailed his "hi-fi" speaker arrangement as a complete success after it pro duced mumbles instead of jazz. Crowley had connected a microphone in his grocery with the speaker by his bed side as a "do-it-yourself" bur glar alarm. Police said the mumbles plus noises of fum bling brought Crowley to the store where he caught Ernest Kile, 28, and Patrick Roberts, 18. in the act of burglary. There were four trailer parks in New York City at latest count. Goldwafer Jet Plane Blows Tire Spokane (UPD A tire on an F-104 jet fighter plane piloted by Sen. Barry Gold water (R-Ariz.) blew out just after it touched down on the runway at Geiger Air Force Base Wednesday afternoon. No one was hurt and offic ials said the aircraft was not seriously damaged. Goldwater, a brigadier gen eral in the Air Force reserve, had been flying the Lockheed Starfighter for about half an hour under direction of Capt. Maurice A. Shaff. mm r aH ""-ti your beau mmJj' 4 SSI Sf ' "01 5.00 V What a clever way to cover your Valentine with hearts and kisses! His favorite Arrow white shirt is covered with romantic prints. With the first laundering, the "magic" red vegetable coloring disappears, reveal ing a bright, white fashion.. Delight him with one or. more, brightly packaged for the occasion. VALENTINE HANDKERCHIEFS with vamsning noveuy prims oop PURE SILK VALENTINE TIE.. ..2.50 ARROW VALENTINE BOXER SHORTS (valentine pattern washes oat) bright red short with white lace trim . . . relax! trim is removable! 1.50 Ullman Opposes Porter's Crater ILake Chairiifft Idea By A. ROBERT SMITH Mail Tribune Washington Correspondent Washington (Special) - Rep. Al Ullman believes he holds the whip hand over Rep. Charles O. Porter on the ques tion of installing an aerial gondola in Crater Lake Nar tional Park - and Ullman is strongly opposed to it. Congressman Porter has been trying to arouse support in Oregon for the project by which tourists would be trans- Eugene Register - Guard and WILLIAM DRISCOLL Named Vice Chairman Driscoll Named fo Heart Fund Post William Driscoll 156 High land dr., has been named vice chairman of the Jackson county Heart drive, accord ing to Floyd Hart, general chairman. Driscoll will have charge of special events planned for the latter part of February and will assist with overall plans for the month-long drive which culminates in .a door - to - door collection on Heart Sunday, Feb. 28. "One out of every two deaths in the United States is due to heart and blood ves sel diseases, but in Jackson county the percentage is even greater, with 62 per cent o;: deaths attributed to heart dis ease," Driscoll said. Other appointments an nounced by Hart were Robert Lindstrom, 3459 Hollywood ave., publicity chairman in charge of radio and televis ion,, and Mrs. Paul H. Sparso, 341 Cerritos ave., . co-chairman in charge of newspaper publicity. Hart also reported that President Eisenhower has praised the "vigorous work" of the American Heart asso ciation in fighting heart dis ease. In a letter to Dr. A. Carlton Ernstene, Cleveland, AHA president, Eisenhower asserted that "For more than a decade this association has been in the forefront of the campaign against diseases of the heart and circulatory sys tem. Its vigorous work has earned wide praise and grati tude. I am confident that its program in research, educa tion and community service will result in . further health gains for our people." ; Anaconda Copper Strike Settled Butte, Mont. (UPD The rec ord 117-day strike against An aconda Co. operations in Mon tana was settled today. Three federal mediators who took part in the negoti ations announced, the settle ment at 5:30 a.m.. after 19i hours of marathon bargain ing. . . ' : The announcement said the 3,300 copper miners and smeltermen at Butte, Great Fails and East Helena .would return to their jobs as soon as union members ratify the agreement. The workers are members of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smel ter Workers, an independent union. Details of the agreement were not announced, although a union spokesman said it was a three-year pact containing "substantial improvements in wages and contract terms." Negotiations had broken down seven times previously since the bitter dispute began just eight days short of six months ago. Woman Declared Innocent of Murder Portland (UPD A Circuit Court jury Wednesday found Ruby Lee Howard, 24, inno cent of a first degree murder charge. . . The woman, mother of three children, has been ac cused of killing a former boy friend. Winston Arlee ' Rob erts, 31, with a pistol last Aug. Im ported down to the surface of the scenic lake and returned up the steep grade by a me chanical contraption which he thinks could be obscured by foliage. "We don't want a Coney Island atmosphere in our na tional parks," declared Con gressman Ullman. He said the installation of such a device would be "con trary to the basic concept of the national parks." In Ullman's District Ullman noted that he is a member of the House Interior Committee, which handles all legislation dealing with parks. Crater Lake is located in his district, not Porter's, Ullman observed. He is also a mem ber of the National Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission, which is sup posed to draft a report on the nation's needs for recreation areas for the future. "I think in this instance I hold the whip hand over Por ter," Ullman said of his Ore gon Democratic colleague. "I wish he'd stay on some of his other pet projects." The Baker solon said he thought continued advocacy of the project to be "highly unrealistic" because "there is not the slightest chance to get approval of it." Porter's office is starting to tabulate a massive poll of opinion on the gondola idea. Questionnaires were sent to over" 100,000 residents of his western Oregon congressional district. Crater Lake Park lies just east of the line which divides Ullman's east ern Oregon district from Por ter's. Praised and Condemned The idea has been praised and condemned recently by a number of Oregon newspa pers. The two largest news papers in Porter's district,1 the the Medford Mail Tribune, have come out editorially with scathing rebuke for the project. A third paper in Por ter's district, the Grants Pass Courier, supports the venture. Outside Porter's area, the Oregon Statesman at Salem has given its blessing to the : chairlift. but the Corvallis ! Gazette Times has lampooned ' - j Opposition editorials have ; expressed horror at the j thought of defiling the natur- al setting of a national park j with a mechanical contrap- i tion used to lure tourists down to Crater Lake. For Older People i The Oregon Statesman sup- i ported the idea with this ar gument: "The hike from the rim of Crater Lake to the water level supposedly takes 20 minutes down and 40 min utes back up. . Every year thousands of people, because of their age or physical ail ments, stand at the rim wish ing they could make the trip to the lake's edge ... As a nation we are growing older. More people are traveling af ter they retire. Our national parks should be a place for their enjoyment as well as for the rest of the population. We hope the chairlift is built . . . For those who want the trail, it'll still be there." This is Porter's point pre cisely. But how he will ever be able to implement the idea is a mystery. He won't neces sarily need legislation approv ed by Ullman's committee, for the National Park Service could go ahead under its reg ular authority to improve the parks. The trouble is the park I service officials don't regard this as an improvement - any thing but. They will stall Porter as long as they pos sibly can. Bonn, Germany -WT- West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's trip to the United States and Japan will begin March 12 and end April 1, the government announced Wednesday. The chancellor will visit New York, Wash ington, California, and Hawaii on his way to Japan. He will confer with President Eisen hower and Secretary of State Christian A. Herter. Four Hospitalized In Salem Collision Salem - (UPD - Four persons were .hospitalized Wednesday after a small bus and a car collided south of Salem on Highway 99. All suffered non-critical in-i juries. Taken to Salem Memorial hospital were Mrs. Ethel Cos co of Salem, driver of the bus, 5-year-old Karen Putnam of Salem, who was a bus pas senger and Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. Myers of Graton, Calif., in the car. The bus was en route to Southside kindergarten. Two other children in the bus, Rhonda Cosco, 5, and Jane King, 5, were uninjured. CORNER 4TH AND FRONT PLENTY OF FREE PARKING Store Hours-Daily 8:30 A.M. to 8 P.M. Sundays 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF- DH. MORRIS FISHBEIN" tells about two cows who were idling beside a fence in a pasture as a shiny new truck whizzed by. On the truck a sign proclaimed, "Grade A milk. pasteurized, homo gen- LfffS- ized, fortified with vita mins A and D." A tear trickled from the eye of the older cow. "It makes me feel so inadequate!" she sobbed. .. In a New Mexico ceme tery one battered tomb stone bears this barely de cipherable epitaph: , "Here lies Les Moore, killed by four slugs from a .44. No Les, No Moore." Speaking of epitaphs, here's-one from a cat ceme tery near White Plains: "To Twinkletoes, Dearest of Cats: How we miss her from the mat! We rue the day when Death said 'Scat!'." (9 1960, by Bennett Cert Distributed by King Features Syndicate -Frozen Foods Swansen't BeefChicken or Turkey TV DINNERS Ea. 55 Blue Goose Garden Peas 8 r $1 00 Tip Top Orange JUICE jr 6 oi. DRINK O Tins $100 ARIZONA Grapefruit Sweet, Juicy, Ripe 8-lb. Cello Bag Garden Fresh RADISHES and GREEN ONIONS 2, .15 Cream Flake Shortening 57 3-lb.- tin PEACMES Bagley Salad Pieces S00 tins 4 PEARS Bagley Irreg. Sizes S00 2Vi tins Fresh Eggs -49 Grade A Large t Stockton Tomato Catsup 7 b,:$1 $100 Instant Coffee Folgers Shurfine Evaporated Milk 10 oi Jar $129 I 8 $1 $100 WORRELL'S PALACE SLICED BACOH jSJOO TENDER BLADE BEEF JiCt ROAST Lb. 3 SELECT STEER BEEF SIRLOIN OR ROUND STEAK u, 67 t Prices Good Thru Sunday Limit Rights Reserved - M Get out that gin gbam table cloth and paper plates jl ,11 NO NEED TO WAIT 'TIL SUMMERTIME Morning Milk shows you how to spark up those mid-winter days with a festive COOK-IN in yojr own home. Six exciting recipes for melt-tn-your-mouth chicken, including a new, easy way to prepare fried chicken and cream grary . . . Chicken Tetrazzini . . . Chicken Trop kana . . . easy Chicken Ak King and others. Get these recipes at your grocer s display of Morning Milk or at his meat department, WARNING! Don't expect your CHICKEN COOK-IN to be t one-time show. Based on mj own experience last winter, your family wtit demand repeat performances right up to summer cook-oat time. Bat you won't mind, for you'll actually enioy trying all six of these chicken recipes. And youK be delighted with the assist yom get from Morning Milk, oSe double-rich evaporated milk that tastes so good. Home makers are delighted M discover that although K has one-third fewer calories, K costs only half as much as cream. Another good reason to btrf more MORNING MILK looks like cream, poms like cream, UsUs even better! wmmmmm? mm?. mmmrm, sea l f" j er - ' beVo . ..t,e V--.r w