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, JUNE 23
JULY 23
T) 9-10-56-59
VI' 60-64-71
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AUG. 23
16-21-31-34
54-58-86-901
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AUG. 24
SEPT. 22!
5- 7-13-26
45-80-87
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4 Meehngj
5 Pay
6 Or
7 No
.4 II
four Coily Activity Guid
Accordina ta thm
To develop messaae for turnu
read words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth sign.
33 SiW
34 To
35 Tc (
36 Slogs
37 Tod.iv
33 Words
3V Or
40 Contacts
41 You'll
42 Surpris
43 Prove O
SEPT. 2J Ht
OCT. 211
2- 4-22-40'V
I43-53-77 V?
9 Snow
10 Friends
1 1 Benet.t
12 Friends
0 14 Keep
to Uecisions
16 Be
17 Drive
18 With
19 Seme
20 Extra
2! Re.xotive
22 0rO
23 May
24 Pnvate
25 Excitement
26 To
27 Mode
28 Set
29 Idle
30 Through
(8)Good .
44 Win
45 Chatter
46 Will
47 Before
48 If Q
49 And W
50 You
51 And
52 Vitally
53 Fnerdly
54 The
55 Cars
56Thot
57 Financial
58 Good
59Wre
60Vjlling
Ad,
erse
61 You
62 Impose
63 Keep
64 To
65 Mcn
66 Raise
67 Upon
68 A
69 You
70 Affect
71 Cooperate
72 Affair
73 May
74 Take
75 Place
76 To
77 Today
78 Yourself
79 Of
8C Or
81 Yc
82 Otner
83 The
84 Future
85 Positive
86 And
87 Rumors
88 Curtain
89 Atl.lude
0 True
SCORPIO
OCT. 2.,
NOV. 22
8-ll-30-3tV-.,1
149-6579-82-
SAGITTARIUS
NOV.
DEC 22
W32-36-47.T
66-83:88L
CAPRICORN
DEC. 23 A
4Q4-48-6IO
AQUARIUS
JAN. 21
FIB. .9 jjQ
V-24-51-57S
72-76-78
MAR. 21 i
1- 3- 6-17Tit
ltt-AJ-55
Fraiflottio Mm
By uOlTED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
4V, T,0S Ang es-J- Leonard Rcinsch, executive director Jor
?c'a ic nali0"al co"vcntio, on problems of houUg
4,600 delegates and alternates:
4i..i'0nevdeie9,te,S, Wil1 invile an up to his suite and
...... a Uia ueai. 11 me oiner tellov.
he may feel annoyed."
London-The Daily Mail on baresliouldered photographs
of honeymooning Princess Margaret:
4i.-"Yi?U haVe nCl Seen Princess Margaret looking quite like
Hits before, nor, one may confidently predict, will you ever
do so in public, and in Britain."
Norton, Va.-Oliver Powers, father of U2 pilot Francis
Powers shot down over Russia, disclosing the last line of a
telegram he revived from Soviet Premier fNikita Khru
thchev: "If you come to the Soviet Union, I will do eveimthir I
can to help you." w
New York-Actress Helen Hayes, on the contract dispute
that has closed Broadway theaters:
"There must be more mutual respect between the pro
ducers and the aciors.Orhe minimum, salary is too low. And
the stars get too muOi. Producers can't make a fortune out
' ' --Q- nniv the stars seem to make money."
Powers, asrAir Force Pilof) Woii Btido
musjuu ner lmsiikig rot? Plying unroot)
4
By JACK V. FOX
Milledgevilie, Ga. -l?li- Bar
bara Gay Powers wanted her
suitor to quit flying before
she would marry him. But
Francis Powers told her she
would have to take the Air
Force and flying, too, if she
wanted !(Ci)i-and she did.
The striking, dark-haired
Georgia girl, now 24 lYTi) only
.18 when she married, has
uorne up well waiting for
news of the fate of U2 pilot
Francis Gary Powers, now in
Russian hands.
Mrs. Powers has gone into
seclusion, spending part of
her time here in the tiny
green and white cottage of
her mother, Mrs. Monteen
Brown, and at the home (i)f
her married sister in Albany,
Ga.
Mrs. Powers no doubt
knows a great deal about her
husband's high altitude
flights over Russia from
Adana, Turkey, where he wa5
based. But government antt
Lockheed officifjj obviously
have warned her to say abso
lutely nothing.
At the one news conference
. 1 sue iieiu, bite tutiu iter iiLisuanu
doesn t nave a suite then , ' ...,.. Tt 0,,ri..j
Why uy a small car when you
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and ECONOMY of a new, fullsize
Oldsmobile for only $f,895 deliv
ered in Medford? ! ?
Price includes oil filter, directional
signals & many other standard fac
tory items-plus heater and defrost
ers, license, polish and tank of gas.
$2,895.00
See It Today!!
"Olds-nobile Sales & Service"
o
DASMLL MILLEB CO.
415 South Riverside
0
Medford
listeners because the U.S.
government h a s admitted
Powers was making photo
graphic espionaLU flights. It
probably is a matter of her
definition of the word.
Shy With Girls
Typical of his shyness with
girls, POci's met Barbara
through her mother. He was
an F-84 Thunderjet pilot with
the 486th Fighter Squadron of
the Strategic Air Command
basedat Turner Air Force
Base outside Albany.
Mrs. Brown worked in the
base cafeteria-and as he so of
ten did with older women -the
young man endeared him
self to her. Mrs. Brown
brought her young daughter
to meet the handsome pilot
from the Virginia hills and
their courtship was swift.
They were married in 1954.
The girl didn't want any chil
dren so long as her husband
was flying and thehave had
j)e. In 195B,Powe),'jresigned
his commission with the Air
Force and took a job as "test
pilot" with Lockheed Air
craft. He was making $627.48 per
m'tTnyh then as a first lieuten
ant. The Lockheed job paid
$1,500 Ononth to start. Pre
mier Nikita Khrushchev has
said Powers told Russian au
thontUes he was making $2,-
ujuv ct iiiumu ana inai ne was
Having to buy a house.
Powers was a top-notch
fighter pilot, one of the top
six in his squadron. But his
record was not particularly
distinguished. His only decor
ation was the National De
fense Service Medal, given to
all men in service during the
Korean War whether they
were in combat or not. He
never was.
But there was something
extra about the young man
that led Lockheed and the
Central Intelligence Agency
to assign him to one of the
nOst dangerous and delicate
of missions.
Dr. Dean Walker, the soft
spoken, scholarly president of
Milligan College which Pow
ers attended from 1948 to
1950, said that in retrospect
he remembers a quality about
the young man that set him
aside.
"I've seen the same trait in
young men singled out for
work by the Federal Bureau
of Investigation," the head of
the tiny Tennessee college
said. "We try to instill the
qualities here.
"It's a certain integrity of
intellect and of character.
Francis had it. He was re
served, but not withdrawn. He
was the type of person you
knew you could count on.
Those of us here at Milligan
are proud of him."
Young Powers is remem-
Wl
bered by one of his college
classmates, Claude Calloway
of Gastonia, N.iE) as a kind of
bug on physical fitness.
Physical Fitnen Bug
"He trained and exercised
faithfully," Calloway said.
"He was never known to
smoke a cigarette. He raised
all pills - never even took an
aspirin. If he had a headache,
he would go to bed and sleep
it0ff."
His grades at Milligan were
not outstanding - roughly a
"strong" C average. They
were not, in fact good enough
for him to be advised to go on
to medical school as his father
had hoped.rjnstead, he return-.
ed to the home in Pound, Va., '
and enlisted in the Air Force.
Stationed at Westover Field
in Massachusetts, the young
man was taken along "for the
ride" with officers at the base
putting in their flying time.
His love of flying was re
awakened and, after a year
in which he became a corpor
al, Powers put inor flight
training with the Air Force.
He went to school at Green
ville, Miss., run by civilians
for the Air Force and got his
pilot's wings on Dec. 19, 1952.
The biography the Air Force
has issued on Powers runs a
scant 200 words and covers
only his routine assignments
to training bases in Arizona
and Georgia, plus two months
non-combat service in Japan
during the Korean War.
Powers was so quiet, so non
assertive that it is difficult to
find the motivations that
pushed the young flier into
an internatloQal incident and
may bring his death as a spy.
A girl at Grundy High
School furnished one bit of
evidence. Powers was the
"class poet" on the night of
graduation in 1946 and she
still has the poem that Fran
cis wrote and read. Here S
how it goes:
"We're parting tonight from
the friends of our youth,
o
"We parlOrom the fc)iool
that our valor inspired.
"It quickened our zeal and
our love for the truth, p.
"And always our Taint
hearts to fervor it fired.
"We shall ever admire, a,s
this moment weQj,
"All the bounteous wisdom
and worth of her name;
"Her children will stay to
her memory true
"While deeds of devotion
add light to her fame."
Nudists
chshi'r
1 lull a-
mnkers
o
Rudisfs Lose
To Rocket Makers
Riverside - il'PD -and
rocket nakers
over a zoning cluing
day and the rocket
won.
The Riversi(P) county board
of supervisors ruled in favor
of granting zoning to allow
Grand Central Rocket Co. to
make and test solid rocket
fuels on a 4,Ul)0-acre sile in
the hills near ht(jy.
Raymond Paul Smith, own
er of a nudist camp in the
area, argued his uiaOlhcd
charges would bo hemmed in
on all but one side by the pio-
Frid.iy, June 3, 196
O o
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. 3
posed plant which may event
ually employ It, 000 persons.
Company officials won out
when they told supervisors
the 160-acre nudist camp
would be surrounded a
buffer zone of up to one-half
mile and screened from curi
ous eyes by trees.
Reading Club foChildfcn
anized in County
A "Smokey Bear Reading
club" for children from the
ages of 6 through 14 is being
organized this summer by the
Public Library of Medford
and Jackson county, accord
ing to Head Librarian Omar
Bacon.
The club Is built around a
"Keep Oregon Green" theme
and is being offered at the
main library and each of the
seven branch libraries. It will
run from June 10 through
Aug. ) at the main library
and will start at other branch
libraries when school lets out
for tiie summer.
Bacon said there are two
purposes to the program. One,
to keep up tli9 student's read
ing skills while they are out
of school for the summer, and
two, to help them learn.
He noted that the program
will offer children the oppor
tunity to read on their own
out of books of their own
choice.
Receive Emblem
Each member of tliCQread
ing club will receive a
Smokey Bear membership
button, donated by the Rogj
River National Forest. In
dition each member will have
'1:
his own record book to write
in the titles of those books
he has read, and will have
a green paper tree with his
name on it attached to a bul
letin board in each of the
libraries. Bacon said that each
time one of the children fin
ishes reading a book he will
have a small yellow star past
ed on the tree. There will be
no book reviews, he said.
When members of the age
of eight and above have fin
ished reading five books, they
will receive application
blank? for participation in the
Oregon Green Guard, an or
ganization sponsored by the
Keep Oregon Green associa
tion to protect and conserve
the resources of the state.
Awards Parly
At the end of the summer
in each library there will be
an awards party for the
groups where awards will be
given to those students who
have read 10 or more books.
Each member will be re
quired to rQid at least thrft
books along the lines of con
sergation during the summer,
Bacon said. The other books
may be of the member's own
choice.
A number of groups have
donated to the program a
number of colorful books and
pamphlets on conservation
which are geared to children's
interest, Bacon pointed out.
They are the Keep Oregon
Green association, the west
Coast Lumbermen's associa
tion, the American Forest
Products association, the Jack
son County extension service
and the Western Pine associa
tion
The Medford Corporation
and Timber Products also do
nated several items.
In addition to the books
donated by various groups,
Bacon said, the library has
many books of Its own on
nature and forestry.
He said the schools have
been cooperative in promot
ing this program among the
students. Mrs. Harry Fuller,
acting children's department
supervisor at the library, re
cently visited the various
schools in Medford and ex
plained the program directly
to the students.
Interested children should
contact the main library or
their nearest branch library
for additional information.
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DEATH DAft STANDS
Ventura, Calif. -(DPI)- Mrs.
Elizabeth Duncan, 56, and Or
two coQfendants in the kid-nap-iTHirder
of her daughter-in-law
have been denied a re
quest for a delay of tQ.'ir
execution in the San Quentin
gas chamber, scheduled for
June 17. Mrs. Duncan was
conviiQd with Luis Mcrya, 22,
and Augustine Baldonado, 26,
of the slaying of Olga Dun
can, 30, on Nov. 17, 1958.
Superior Judge William A.
Reppy turned down the mo
tion for a stay of execiion
Wednesday.
ill
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