Moose Governor
To Visit Here
Judge Louis K. Thaler,
Ithaca, N.Y., supreme gover
nor of the Loyal Order of
Moose, will attend a meeting
of the local Moose lodge Mon
day, March 14, when initia
tion for new candidates is
scheduled.
Thaler was elected supreme
governor at the 1959 interna
tional convention after serv
ing as supreme junior gover
nor.
, He has been active in the
New York Moose association,
and has served as prelate,
president, parliamentarian
and chairman of the building
committee.
An active lawyer, he was
elected special county judge
and special surrogate of
Tompkins county, N.Y., in
1945. His present term ex
pires in 1961.
Thaler also served as a dist
rict deputy supreme governor
and was a member of the Su
preme Council. He has been
awarded the Pilgrim Degree
of Merit for his service to the
Moose fraternity.
HP
1 .
LOUIS K. THALER
Sets Medford Visit
4-H Club News
Empire Builders
The regular meeting of the
Empire Builders was called
to order March 7 in the court
house auditorium by Presi
dent Dave Foote.
It was decided to have a
party April 8 at the court
house. Grants Pass Empire
Builders will be invited to one
of our meetings in the future
and as of now we are collect
ing stamps. To learn more
about our new project come
' to our next meeting.
The meeting was adjourned
and refreshments were served.
Marjorie Wonderly,
Reporter
rr- 1 r "T" 1 r
,,-f'-'"j NsStT
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HUNGRY SOLDIERS EAT Three of the
four starving Russian soldiers rescued by
the USS Kearsarge hungrily eat their first
meal of soup and bread after they were
brought aboard the U. S. ship. The soldiers,
left to right, Pvt. Kruchkowsky, Pvt. Pop
lavski and MSgt. Zygonschi, were adrift
in their disabled landing craft for some 49
days with just a few cans of beef and a
little vodka. (UPI Telephoto)
Vacation Program
Set at Local Y
A special spring holiday
program at the Medford
YMCA for students starting
school vacations Monday has
been announced by David E.
Curzon, physical director at
the YMCA.
The program will consist of
junior Olympic contests for
grade and junior high school
boys, and a basketball tourna
ment is planned for high
school age youth.
A program for girls is
planned between 1 and 2:30
p.m. Monday, Wednesday and
Friday.
The junior Olympics will
be held for boys of ages 8 and
9 at 10 a.m.; boys 10 and 11
years "oId"at"lta.m.; and a
free play time ls'scheduled at
noo'n. Junior high boys junior
Olympics are scheduled at
3:30 p.m. and High school
boys at. 5 p.m.
Tuesday and' Thursday ac
tivities will be for YMCA
members only, officials said.
Grade school ,b6ys have activ
ities scheduled between 2 and
3 p.m.,' junior high boys be
tween 3 and 4 p.m., and high
school youth ' between 4 and
5:15 p.m. .
An outing for boys 8 years i
old and over is planned Tues
day and Thursday. Boys will
leave the YMCA about-9:30
a.m. and return about 4 p.m.
They must take lunch, and
present Y membership cards.
News About Books
From the Library
Following is a list of new
books received at the Public
Library of Medford and Jack
son County during the past
week.
Gardening: The Evergreens,
Beale; Shrubs and Vines for
American Gardens, Wyman;
The Japanese Art of Minia
ture Trees and Landscapes,
Yoshimura; The Gardener's
World, K r u t c h; Tuberous
Rooted Begonias, Otten; Be
neath the Greenhouse Roof,
Potter; Ground Cover Plants,
Wyman; Trees for American
Gardens, Wyman; Vegetable
Production 'and Marketing,
Work.
The West: National Park
Conference Proceedings,
1912, 1917, U.S. Dept. of the
Interior; Cruisings in the Cas
cades, Shields.
Literature: Advertisements
for Myself, Mailer; Green
Grow the Lilacs, Riggs; The
Tradition of the New, Rosen
burg; The Feast of the Virgins
and Other Poems, Gordon.
Science: A Natural History
of New York City, Kieran;
Principles of Guided Missiles
and Nuclear Weapons, U.S.
Dept. of the Navy; Project
Satellite, Gatland; Behind the
Sputniks, Krieger.
Reference: Rural Route
Maps, Jackson County; Tscheu
Pub. Co.; The Sixth Antiques
II
We are "Winding-up" our 6th Annual
mmm sal
POSITIVELY ENDS TUESDAY NITE!
Cash-in on these BARGAINS
Deluxe EXA SPECIAL!
POLAROID CASE Exa Camera, F2.8 lens, 135mm tele-
$m am photo lens, flash unit, case, waist-
iveg xi ?3 J f ,evel finder' Re9- Price $135-00-
Sale Priced V Sae price $79.00
l-0nly Exakta Camera bargains galore
F2.8 Meritor lens, case, flash unit, Still Remaining on Our
Steinheil F4.5 telephoto' lens, 35mm nniE TABI E
wide angle lens. Reg. price $389.95. 2 PRICE TABLE
Sale Price $259.00 Look 'Em 0ver!
" . Special Argus C44
Special Graflex Century Camera Outfit
35mm Camera Camera, case, flash unit, 100mm
Case& Electronic Pi J AflF telephoto lens, flash extension brack-
..... Vl 1 B)v et, 35mm wide angle lens, variable
flash unit, one I I IfJ ,. , -f .
Dnly.Rejf. 179.85 I I Power fmder' ne ony! Re9-
ON SALE FOR $266.75.
Sale, Price $169.50
The Latest 4x5 Super 4X5 SPEED GRAPHIC
GRAPHIC CAMERA CAMERA
F4.7 Kodak Ektar lens, coupled p4-7 Graflex optar lens, coupled
range finder, revolving back optical T,"9 ?nder' hu" T6
" . 11 000 sec, ground glass focusing
fmder. Reg. pr.ee $420.00. BranJ new, Reg price $330.00.
Sale Price $357.00 Sale Price $265.00
2lix3U Century Graphic SPECIAL ON ALL FILM
CAMERA in s,ock!, .
BUY 2 for Regular Price
F4.5 Gnf tar $flfl50 Get Third One FREEI
W (While Supply La,tsl)
MONDAY & TUESDAY ONLY
COME IN TODAY! Open Till 9 PJV.; Daily 8:30 A.M. to 10 P.M.
Hudson's Rogue Camera
613 East Main St.
Phone SP 3-5345
and Their Current Prices,
Warman; Pesticide Handbook,
1959, Frear; Summary and In
dex, Dec. 1959, Consumer Re
ports. Other non fiction: Child
Growth and Development,
Hurlock; My Universe and My
Faith, Spilman; The Masks of
God, Campbell; A Guide to
Labor-Management Relations,
U.S. Dept. of Labor; A Small
Car in Your Family, Consum
er Reports; Ceramics, Roy;
Nomography, Levens; Blue
print Reading for Electrical
Trades, Delmar Pub.; Build
ing Trades Blueprint Reading
and Sketching, Delmar Pub.;
Engineering Drawing, Lom
bardo; Japanese Music and
Musical Instruments, Malm;
Rivers in the Desert, Glueck;
My Life on the Mojave, Pax
ton. Humor; Billy Liar, Water
house; The Quest of 'Excali
bar, Wibberley; The Great
Alphonse, Levine; My Friends
the Miss Boyds, Duncan; The
Baron in the Trees, Calvino;
All My Fathers, De La Fere.
Serious fiction: False Coin,
Swados; The Landscape of
Dreams, Savory; A Dream of
Falling, Rank; The Lincoln
Lords, Hawley; The Dedica
ted, Gibbs; Strike for a King
dom, Gallie; Green Water,
the Sea, Bawden.
Historical romance: The
Fresh and the Salt, Stringfel
low; Enough Good Men, Mer
cer; The G r e a tv Command,
Jones; The Bridge on the
Drina, Andric.
Western stories: The Wild
Breed, Young; Marshal of
Broken Wheel, Joscelyn; Twin
Guns, Evans; Outlaw Express,
Field; Reckoning at Rimbow,
Fox; Kennedy's Gold, Bonner.
Mysteries: Killing at the
Big Tree, McCarthy; The
Country of the Strangers,
Wees; Plot It Yourself, Stout;
The Shivering Mountain,
Somers; Swan Song, Robert
son; Warning Bell, Ransome;
Death on the Grass, O'Don
nell; Send Another Hearse,
Masur; Tiger on My Back,
Gordon; The Devil's Own,
Curtis; Bullet Proof, Dean;
The Case of the Copper Cat,
Douglas; Swing Away Climb
er, Carr; Malignant Stars,
Barry.
Other fiction: Half Angel,
Jefferies; Echo of A Bomb,
Derby; The Strange One, Bod
worth; Maid of Honor, Zimmerman.
United Passenger
Traffic About Same
Pasenger traffic of United
Air Lines at Medford last year
was about at the previous
year's level, K. W. Cook,
ground services manager here,
has announced.
United Mainliners flew
45,097 passengers into and out
of the Medford airport. Cargo
volumes reached 213,525
pounds of air freight, an in
crease of 21 per cent, and
31,364 pounds of express, a
gain of 4 per cent, he said. ,
Mail was off 16 per cent at
82,104 pounds.
Last year United carried
7,521,000 passengers over its
14,000-mile system linking 82
cities in 24 states and British
Columbia, Cook said.
Retarded Patients
Subject of Program
The severely retarded pa
tients at the Oregon Fairview
Home will be the subject of a
documentary film report at
11:30 o'clock this morning
over station KBES-TV.
The film is the eighth in a
series, "In Our Care," which
concerns Oregon institutions.
Today's film is the second in
a two-part series on Fairview
Home.
The films are produced by
the Oregon state board of control.
Third in Series
Of Police Agency
Courses Slated
Capt. Leland D. Weaver of
the Salem police department
will be in Medford this week
to instruct a course in accident
prevention techniques being
offered to officers from Jack
son county law enforcement
agencies at the Medford city
hall Wednesday, March 16.
The course will be the third
in a series of six being offered
to provide city and county po
lice officers with training in
advanced police subjects. The
first course, on surveillance,
was held last Wednesday.
Capt. Weaver, who has been
with the Salem department
since 1957, has completed
courses in police work, fi
nance and personnel adminis
tration, and techniques of mu
nicipal administration taught
through the International City
Managers' association.
Completes Course
He recently completed a
course on traffic law enforce
m e n t, administration and
techniques at UCLA which
was conducted by the Traffic
Institute in cooperation with
the International Chiefs of Po
lice association.
Weaver has received other
training in the field of jail
operation, industrial safety
and police administration, con
ducted by such agencies as the
U. S. department of justice,
bureau of prisons, Oregon
state industrial accident com
mission and the Oregon Asso
ciation of Police Officers.
The police training classes
are being sponsored by the
Oregon Association of City
Police officers and the Ore
gon State Sheriffs' association
in cooperation with the FBI,
Oregon state police, League of
Oregon Cities and the bureau
of municipal research.
Pamphlet Tells of
Vets Eligibility
Eligibility r e q u i r ements
and rates of payment under
the new pension system ef
fective July 1 are explained
in the revised Veterans Ad
ministration pamphlet, "Fed
eral Benefits for Veterans and
Dependants," now on sale at
the U. S. Government Print
ing office, Washington, D.C.,
S. T. Brannock, contact rep
resentative, VA Domiciliary,
Camp White, announced Sat
urday. The booklet, also called
VA Fact Sheet IS-1, lists all
major benefits available to
U. S. veterans, explains the
nature of the benefits, eligi
bility requirements, and -tells
where eligible veterans and
their dependents may apply
for the benefits, Brannock
said.
A single copy may be pur
chased from the printing of
fice for 15 cents. A discount
may be secured for quantity
purchases.
Grange News
Gold Hill Grange
Four charter members of
the Gold Hill Grange were
honored at the March 4 meet
ing of the Grange to com
memorate the 25th anniver
sary. Those honored with 25
year silver pins, silver cer
tificates and flowers were
Earl Craft, now a member of
the Griffin Creek Grange,
Soren Christensen, Marie
Christensen and Jim Estrama
da. The program, arranged by
Lecturer Icie Walker, includ
ed a piano solo by Grace
Bruce, courtesy drill by eight
women, a duet by Betty Ma
loy and Dorothy Esken, ac
companied by Grace Bruce;
melodies of old songs by
Ester Fabrick accompanied
by Foster Luce, and a read
ing by Jessie Burk.
The agricultural committee
reported on livestock and that
hay is a little more plentiful.
Ways and means turned in a
large sum of money from the
dances held at the Grange.
The home economics commit
tee turned in the proceeds
from the land bank dinner,
Lions and dance lunches.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Tay
lor were appointed to the
youth committee with Mrs.
D. Eskew, chairman of the
standing committee.
County Deputy Roscoe
Roberts conferred the first
and second degrees on Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Stripling,
Gold Hill, Live Oak Grange.
A total of 131 persons were
present. They included
Grange Master Jerome Fritz
gerald, Sams Valley; Lloyd
Lacy, Phoenix; Herman Kam
ping, Griffin Creek, Orie
Moore, Roxy Ann, Ben Boyce,
Central Point, Frank Hall,
Live Oak Grange, and Ben
Fulton, Butte Falls. Moore
was honored for his birthday.
STAMPS FOR CASH
Syracuse, N.Y. - (UPD - The
local Kennedy - for - President
club has announced it will
give trading stamps in return
for campaign contributions.
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Q
Sunday, March 13, 1960 A
if; I
1 '".W
1-i.).it. , . ..1rir,Ji..-...MMMJ
CAPT. LELAND WEAVER
To Conduct Course
School News
H. P. Jewett School
Bill Brewster, principal of
the H. P. Jewett Elementary
school, Central Point, said
students of the school have
been enjoying art classes the
past few days with Warren
Holbrook, art supervisor of
District 6C. Several tech
niques, using various mater
ials such as finger paint, tem
pera, chalk and water colors,
have been used. The students
expressed visually their con
cepts of the springtime activi
ties in which their classrooms
are participating.
The first tulips to be taken
to Jewett school are going to
be greeted by other gay tulips
already there. Students in art
craft are making papier-mache
tulips from the cup-shaped di
visions of . egg cartons. The
children paint them in rain
bow colors.
Mrs. Viola Schwab's room
has been studying about tele
phoning. The class practiced
with a set borrowed from the
telephone company. A film
was shown on telephone courtesy.
Students in Mrs. Katherine
Leavitt's room have been
learning about the four sea
sons. They have been keeping
a weather chart. The children
in the room have drawn pic
tures of what they hope to do
during spring vacation. Mrs.
JLeavitt s second grade stu
dents visited the Central Point
library last week.
BUY NOW
Results of a fire drill last
week were reassuring, Brew
ster said. He considered the
importance of students rapid
ly vacating the cafeteria dur
ing the lunch hour. The build
ing was completely cleared in
one minute and 35 seconds.
Jackson School
On Wednesday, March 9,
the students and teachers at
Jackson school observed a
flag ceremony in memory of
Orgeon's Junior Senator Rich
ard L. Neuberger. After the
flag salute, the Oregon state
song was sung.
The bulletin board is love
ly. Mrs. Louella Schneider
made the flowers. We like the
Irish harp too.'
Hugh Shurtleff and the
pupils in his home room had
charge of the student body
assembly March 4.
A play "The Last Snake in
Ireland," was presented. Lar
ry Russell was St. Patrick,
Judy Rickard was the snake.
Narrator was Paul Greeny.
Others having parts were
Gary Custance, Paul Chinn,
Jack Young, Richard Cole,
Alice Schafer, and Mike
Clark. Piano duet by Earlene
Pidcock and Susanne Cearley.
Piano solos were by Billy
Fredenburg and Virginia Mil
ligan, clarinet solo by David
Uhrine, accompanied by Ear
lene Pidcock, Jeanne Ben
nett was the M. C. Prompter
was Steve Wilcox; curtains,
Blane Hassel; scenery, Maria
Ysunza, Virginia Milligan,
Judy Richard and Anita Coff-man.
Mrs. Merlyn Harvey, Mrs.
Raymond Baker, and Mrs.
James Medley will attend the
OEA convention in Portland
during spring vacation.
SMASH DOPE RING
Moscow - (UPD - A dope ring
has been broken by Soviet
police, it has been disclosed.
Newspaper reports said a
brother and sister headed the
ring which bought opium
from state and collective
farms in the Kirchiz Republic
where poppies are grown for
pharmaceutical purposes.
Folger's Coffee
2-lbcan 1,35
1 -lb. can 68
CHRISTIAN'S
MARKET
Corner Stewart & Lazier Lane
during our big once-a-year
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