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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1960)
' ?! : -- s, V Jo - il CIRCUS CLOWNS The comedy of clowns, Bombo, Perkie, Rossy, Mr. Spud and Gogo. always a favorite circus feature, will be Because of fire marshal regulatins, the nuni- among the highlights of the Ken Jenson ber of persons attending the circus will have circus at Hedrick Junior High school gym- to be- limited to 1,700 at the 4 p.m. per- nasium Monday, March 28. The circus is formance and to 1,400 at the 8 pjn. per- being sponsored here by the Elks club, formance, Elks officials said. Among the clowns in this year's circus are Grange llzlzs Lake Creek State Lecturer Victor Crox ton and Mrs. Croxton were visitors at the March meeting of Lake" Creek Grange. Ronald M. Olson was voted to become a member of the Grange. Nora Bradshaw. home eco nomics chairman, thanked the committee that made ail the improvements in the Grange hall. Pearl Bartling reported that she is attending the recre ation meetings which are be ing held in the courthouse auditorium. A ' minute of silence was held in honor of the late Sen. Richard Neuberger. Faye Burrell, ways and means committee, reported on the dances. Due to illness of one of the musicians the Sat urday night dance was can celled. A dance will be given Saturday, March 26. Lecturer Betty Bradshaw received an award for her quarterly reports last year. Croxton explained that the Grange Festival will be held July 30. All grangers in the county and their friends are invited to attend. It is to be held on the Elks picnic area OS t I more psopie can enjoy & h t ?! - -i' $M &3? If K $8 KENTUCKY'S FINEST BOURBON SEYN YEARS OLD i If'-- xt N . h . . - - . fcirtWrSX I 1 I'll ilflii NOTHING .HAS CHANGED... EXCEFT THE PRICE! Still 7 years gentled Still a mellow 86 proof Still Kentucky's Finest Bourbon gp Fifth A barbecue will be held at noon with games during the afternoon. The evening part of the fes tival will be held at Eagle Point in the grange hall and the grade school gymnasium. There will be a program and also dances to end the day. Croxton gave a talk on the Grange and ended it with two poems, "Tell Him Now," and an original one, '"Bend in the River." Next Grange meeting will be on April 8 at 8:30 p.m. BELATED THANKS Mobile, Ala. -OJPD- Postal of ficials opened the following letter which arrived here Monday addressed to Santa Claus: "Dear Santa, thanks for the toys. Merle." Fashion-Page Flash Pi s; m P s rpi a HOT1; Pint fe33&3i Tirh-tnrL twk-tm k. . the fiUUllCUiX - that didn't n atch the clock for seven long years! Straight AVhiskey. 86 Proof. Old Charter Dist. Co., Louisville, Ky. 0 f 9-17 V" MSI The beautiful "poured" sheath takes a wide, wide cape for a collar - and the re sult is dramatic, dashing, pro- Back Stairs: A Familiar Mission By MERRIMAN SMITH UPI White House Reporter Washington-dJPD-Back stairs at the White House: At 5:25 pjn. last Friday, a big car threaded, deftly through the heavy homegoing traffic swirling around the south grounds of the White House and nosed up to the southwest gate of the execu tive mansion. A policeman recognized the occupant and quickly waved the car inside with the courtesy and dis patch usually reserved for cabinet members and the fam ily of President Eisenhower. The man riding beside the driver in the front seat was George F. Allen who sees a lot more of the President than many members of the Eisen hower family. Allen's mission at the White house was a familiar one for him. The President wanted to get away for the week end. His house in Gettysburg was closed (Mrs. Eisenhower was in Arizona with some friends who included Mrs. Allen) and the President had decided to spend Saturday and Sunday at Camp David. This is the White House camp in the Catoctin Mountains of Mary land 67 miles from the Pres ident's office. , When the President thought of a week end at the camp, he immediately thought of George, a 64-year-old, affable, shrewd Mississippian who has made somewhat of a career these past 30 years of being a close friend of Presidents. Made a Career Allen, a millionaire direct or of several dozen large and small corporations, knew the late President Roosevelt quite well. In fact, F.D.R. pushed George into public promin ence for the first time when he made him a commissioner of the District of Columbia. Allen became even a closer friend of President Truman and frequently accompanied him on week end yacht trips. But his friendship with Roosevelt and Truman did not compare with the close rela tionship today between George and the President whom he first knew during World War II when George was on a Red Cross mission to Europe. Urged Farm It was George who influ enced the President and Ma mie to buy their farm in Get tysburg (George had brought one there himself only a few month earlier in 1949.) Allen's trip to Camp David with the President last week end (they were joined later by other friends) was one of many such journeys he un dertakes at the behest of his good friend in the White House. The President had vis ited twice at another of Al len's homes, outside Palm Springs, Calif., and George frequently accompanies the chief executive on hunting vocative. High-placed bow em phasizes sleek waist. Choose cotton, shantung, linen. Printed Pattern 9222: Jun ior Miss Sizes 9, 11, 13, 15, 17. Size 13 takes 3Va yards 35 inch. Send FIFTY CENTS (coins) for this pattern - add 10 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing. Send to Marian Mar tin, Medford Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. JUST OUT! Big, new 1960 Spring and Summer Pattern Catalog in vivid, full-color. Over 100 smart styles ... all sizes ... all occasions. Send now! Only 25c. Rocket Rid& ...on regular gas ! When you Wrive a "60 Dynamic 88 Olds, tou'M tiiul that all its rocketing perform ance conies from lower-cost, regular gas! ou get Rocket Engine zing without ping and save about a dollar bill on every fill! If thrift is uppermost in your mind, see your Oldsmobile Deuler ... and the dollar -sav 3i --'MWSiw -t I JSAZf!l ion imsimtn worn and golfing trips to Georgia. Those who know Allen and the President understand readily why the are such close friends. One paramount rea son is that George knows his way around government, he is a keen student of world af fairs, as well as domestic pol itics, and the fact that he has piled up a sizeable personal fortune in the past 30 years shows that he knows some thing about the world of busi ness and industry. Always Discreet Eisenhower also knows that Allen keeps his mouth shut. The President can blow his stack about world conditions, he can say very frankly what he thinks of a bonehead play made by an associate in gov ernment, he can complain bit terly about the invasion of his privacy by reporters and he knows that Allen will be a most sympathetic and discreet listener. Probably as important as all of the other reasons put together in this factor: Allen asks nothing of the President and gives willingly of his time, engaging personality, vast store of cheering anec dotes and advice, when asked. Milligan to Report On Fire School Central Point - Donald C. Milligan, a Central Point vol unteer fireman, who recently attended the Northwest Oil and Fire Control school in Salem, will give a resume of CALL FOR VOLUNTEERS Cario-OIPD-An office to reg ister volunteers who want to fight the French in Algeria will be opened in two or three days, an authoritative source today. Earlier this month the Arab League Council asked Arab countries to accept vol unteer applications to supply extra troops to the Algerian nationalists. the school for Central Point firemen at the fire station to night. The school which Was spon sored by the Western Oil and Gas association and attended by some 500 persons, was to teach firemen methods of pre vention, control and extin guishment of oil and gasoline fires. Milligan said that Elmer H. Halstead, of the vocational education department of Ore gon, told him that a similar school is planned for Medford in one or two years so firemen in southern Oregon and north ern California wrill have a MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. ) Wednesday, Mar. 23, 1 969 A " better opportunity to learn the methods. GLQOSTON'S Metal Wealhsr Stripping and Screens Estimates Gladly Phone SP 3-1014 Evenings 7 Iifljj 0PEN Monday and ' jj I 1 1 wj&liffl F,iday Ni9h,s Untn sv S-JLJ 1 J Uliy i 1 1 I yUHu-t a,Z$4& SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED QUALITY DEALER! DARRELL MILLER CO., 415 S. RIVERSIDE iU IHi OtNNU O Kiifi SHOW . IVUI WUK ON U&-IV . HUS lOWiU UOMAS AN UM MIWI . MOMMY THtU fftWAY ON US IAMO- GIRLS' WEAR FJ's S5 Reg. 7.98 So cool and care-free! Made of soft printed cot ton plisse in wide choice of cute prints. Drip dry, need no ironing. Top fa vorite PJ's for big and little girls. Sizes 6 to 14. GIRLS' BABY DOLL PJ's Adorable sets in easy care rayon. Pants, top. 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