O o
o
FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1960
MEDrOlD MAIL T1I1UHE. MED FORD, ORK
TheyllJDo It Every Time
By Jimmy Hatlo i
P5 THERE'S THE PROPEVERVBODy WORKIN6 MERE IS
nu oc.A CI6AROXTAIL IS I SECRETARY OF SOME LOD6E
Tnr DM r'?5t'0L VS SENDING OUT THE STAMP MACHINE TAKES A
W ?b7?-Ati GO 7 THE FAMILY ( WORSE BEATIN6 THAN MATILDA'S
-7-4 0LPEClAL DELIVERY? U BILLS IN THE BONGO DRUMS
TJ HERE HAVE A CIGAR.' COMPANY '
T" UH-DO YOU WANT ME ENVELOPES f ' N jf
H TO PAY THE POSTAGE? f V AGAIN- f HE USED TO JIGGLE fiTpPii
g'rl HEH-HEH ONE OR MONEY IN HIS POCKET.. DE
A A TWO OF 'EM ARE 5;-- i BEAMEY THOUGHT HE
'4rAi Km ) aX mail-room bovsi
PlWll V I TO SEND OUT HIS
gglgJP iHS PERSONAL MAIL--
Program Announced
Expanded Summer
The Medford parks and rec
reation department, in cooper
ation with the Medford school
district, is offering as expand
ed summer recreation pro
gram in Medford parks and
school playgrounds.
The program will 'pclude
games, sports, social activi
ties, arts and crafts, music,
drama, nature lore and special
events.
The 1960 program centers
will be at Howard, Wilson,
Jackson, Washington and
Hoover schools and Haw
thorne park. At each location
there will be recreation lead
ers who will organize and
supervise all activities.
At four of the program cen
ters there will be both men
and women instructors. The
woman instructor will super
vise the arts and crafts and
the 5 to 8 year old age group.
The man will supervise the
baseball program and the
older children.
A complete list of the spec
ial summer activities being
offered was distributed by the
school district and recreation
department in the Medford
public and parochial schools
prior to dismissal of classes
for the sumn.er.
City Recreation Supervisor
Ken Lyons is in rharge of the
over-all program.
Individual publicity will be
given to specific events at the
time they are offered.
Additional information on
the program as a whole or any
part of it can be obtained by
calling the parks and recre
ation department in the city
hall.
Wa'er in Salem
May Taste Funny
Salcm-(IT1)-The secretary of
the state sanitary authority
testified Thursday that the
proposed North Santiam pow
er project of Consumers Pow
er, Inc., Corvallis, could re
sult in making the Salem city
water supply taste funny un
less proper water treatment
facilities were provided.
The Oregon Water Re
sources board concluded a
hearing here late Thursday on
the application of consumers
power for a preliminary permit.
Fire Hils Dance
Studio in Salem
Salem - IUPII - The Salem
branch of the Arthur Murray
dance studios was hit by fire
Thursday night and damage
was estimated at $5,000.
The firo, which apparently
broke out in a reception room
about 10:30 p.m., damaged
that room, offices, a ball
room, and other rooms.
The intense -'CH rnu
sic records, portable radios
and shattered plate glass windows.
Some Wall Street Experts Say
ear Market Has Come To End
By ELMER C. WALZER
UPI Financial Editor
New York -IUP1I- Some of
the market men who on
March 8 classified the market
as a bear mar-!
ket now be-j
neve me ocar
m a r k e t is
over.
They hold
that while it
lasted it was
a short, fierce
bear market
and it hurt
many of the Elmer Walzer
old-line basic stocks most.
Several leading market
commentators are taking up
the case for a market rise too.
They look for the traditional
summer rally in the market.
The month of June usually
is a standoff for the market
as it prepares for its summer
rise in July and August.
Convincing Precedent
This brings up the problem
of whether the "summer" rise
may be misplaced in the late
spring. And if it is, the market
men wonder if there'll be
enough steam to keep it going
in the summer.
L. O. Hooper, analyst for
W. E. Hutton & Co., notes
there is quite a convincing
precedent for a mid-summer
rise.
In the past 41 years, he
notes, there has been a mid
summer rise in the Dow-Jones
industrials (average 13.3 per
cent) in 37 years, and in the
Dow-Jones rails (average 18
per cent) in 39 years.
"The subsequent high," he
says "has come as early as
June 30 and as late as Sept.
30 but it has averaged Aug.
6 in the rails and Aug. 11 in
the industrials;
"In view of the indifferent
behavior of the averages in
recent months, the probability
of a mid-summer rise in 1960
would seem to be higher than
usual."
Eldon A. Grimm, analyst
for Walston & Co., finds sev
eral reasons for expecting a
rally in basic stocks over the
coming months.
In the first place, he be
lieves the party in power with
election five months away
will do everything in its
power to get the business
cycle "rolling upward" again
by late summer and autumn.
Secondly, he says the gov-
earns
;!s2t happens to paint AFTER you buy it?
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Sherwin
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EARTH
crpi
you will be sure to get. . .
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ernment is likely to aid busi
ness activity. He believes
easier money will aid resi
dential building and other
lines of activity that were
hurt by tight money.
Lists Reasons
"Many other things might
be done too - such as lowered
margin requirements for the
purchase of securities, a drop
in the prime interest rate, a
considerable step -up in the
awarding of defense con
tracts, a move by Congress to
hike defense spending by $2
billion or $3 billion," he says.
He lists the world race with
Russia as his third reason,
and comments as follows on
it:
"Mr. K's speeches lately
have been stormy and bom
bastic. The struggle between
Communism and the Free
World has been intensified.
We must make our defense
forces, our civilian defense.
our world leadership, and our
scientific know-how superior
to that of the Soviets. We just
can't afford the luxury of
old-fashioned recessions un
less we want to risk the very
existence of the U.S."
He finds many old-fashion
ed stocks quoted at recession
levels and this is his fourth
reason for anticipating a re
covery.
"A long list of stocks
quoted at around recession
levels," he says. Hence if the
economy starts upward in
earnest, there's plenty of room
for gains in certain steels,
rails, oils, motors, coppers,
chemicals, aircrafti, papers,
and other categories, it would
appear.
Good Yields Aitraelire
"Furthermore, dozens of
these issues.offer yield of 434
per cent, 5 per cent, 5'i per
cent, 6 per cent, and even up
to 7 per cent. With money
easier, good yields are more
attractive than formerly."
Standard & Poor's injects
a word of caution. Noting
that the action of the stock
list has been commendable
in its persistent refusal to de
cline, it adds that "sustained
aggressive action may await
signs of a business upturn."
Strawberry Harvest
Now in Full Swing
Salem -HJPD- Continued fair
weather put the 1960 straw
berry harvest in the mid-Willamette
valley into high gear
today with one major proces
sor reporting receipts 50 per
cent over estimates so far.
Expanding picking was re
ported here and at Woodburn,
Stayton and most other sec
tions of this strawberry grow
ing center.
Guardsmen Start
Two-Week Camp
Portland -IUPU- Seven thou
sand Oregon and Washington
National Guardsmen of the
41st Infantry Division will
converge on ton Lewis,
Wash., Saturday for the Sun-
set division's annual two-
week summer camp.
Oregon troops leave their
home bases early Saturday
morning to join advance de
tails which departed Wednes
day and Thursday to prepare
the area.
Governors of both states are
expected for the annual Gov
ernor's Day parade Saturday,
June 18 at Gray Field.
fflfe) Put Kw S
4 Mm on
I 1 jAl SOLUABLE J l raSCS d
?T MmA JV SACCHARIN S "S "
El Af& f&4 '000 SSil. 39c IODINE 15c
-JllLfe llriJ (CTTq 4 oz. CALAMINE LOTION 15c
U1" Lift Iq a, hi VftrblNP ft RflCFWATFR flQ
'MJQ sr"' ELECTRIC '
ySs f I WsQT 'ffAfl B y T"c"'n Non-Oscillating , h-f- Vferf Vt
tnvksJH -00 8.inchf $fl49 Llfi
Shove lotion mm
100 in.ini-h nunc t.tfPPTV' tmJfyW
To Size 48
9353
36-48
Cool, slimming as a lettuce
leaf - softly accented by scal
loped collar and pockets! Ex
tra-easy to sew in iron-free
fabrics, you'll reach for this
casual four days out of seven.
Printed Pattern 9353: Wom
en's Sizes ?6, 38, 40, 4Z, 44,
46, 48. Sizes 38 takes 3Ya
yards 35-inch.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(coins) for this pattern - add
10 cents for each pattern for
first-class mailing. Send to
Marian Martin, Medford Mail
Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232
West 18th St., New York 11,
N.Y. Print plainly NAME,
ADDRESS with SIZE and
STYLE NUMBER.
JUST OUT! Big, new 1960
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Catalog In vivid, full -color.
Over 100 smart styles ... all
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Sherwin-Williams
P'3333l
covii
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CORNER SIXTH and FIR
STORE HOURS:
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8 till 5 P.M. Saturdays
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o
Offstreet Parking
(raler Television
CENTRAL POINT
j t .
13 Yeor ft ' 1 A
Experience I ' . Labor
Serving A, T-s I . and
the ,Ur j Part.
RogU9 A U J 90
River f f kT-r !( V ' Day
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AL OLUFSEN
Raytheon Bonded Electronic Technician
Serving Central Paint t Medford . . . Same Rates
BONDED, LICENSED and INSURED
Days Phone N6 4-1797
Evenings .... Phone SP 2-2248
FATHER'S DAY JUNE 19
LU I f
Cologne
Tolcum.
Pressurized
Smooth Shave
lotion 3.00
ENAMELED STEEL
TACKLE BOX
C $1.69
ALUMINUM FRAME
LANDING NET
69c
$2.75 RUBBERIZED
POPLIN CREEL
Snap Spring Closure Ci QO
3 Pockets with Snaps ,,au
SNEI.LED HOOKS
INVISIBLE NYLON
BAIT-HOLDER
Cards of 6 O cards 4C.
d t 19. fur
RODS, REELS
& OUTFITS C
Oscillating
Rigid Plastic WADING POOL $5.88
$9.95 SPIN-CAST OUTFITS
Miracle Cast or Brown Dart Reel
Glass Rod $7.95
2 (INFLATABLE) RING POOLS
ROUND 41 Inch Diam. x V $2.69
SQUARE 60 in.x60 n.x9 in $6.8B
28"x55"
BEACH
TOWEL
C0MPAC BANTAM SPIN REEL
With Solid Glass Rod $8.95
Compac Hollow Glass Rod $9.95
PLASTIC
AIR MATTRESS
$1.99
$2.69
2 V, Lb. Cotton Lined
Ravon Cover
$7.49
3 Lb. 100 Cclncloud
$11.68
RUBBER
Watertight
From
$1.19
Boys' and Men's
SWIMMING
TRUNKS
79c to $1.39
SYIMFIHS
Riviera Basque
White Rubber
$1.79
to $2.49
PURE BRISTLE
HAIR BRUSH
51-88
ADJUSTABLE
GILLETTE RAZOR
With
Pillow
JOHNSON'S
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J-WAX
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$95
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$4.95 W&Sti 1
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GARMENT BAG
Jumbo Qflft
Plastic ","
GENUINE BRIAR
PIPES
Many styles to choose from
from 79c
REMINGTON
ROLL'A M ATIC
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For the cleanest,
smoothest
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I B LiiirTTT. 1IITTT: 1 . 1 1 jhjySI for every
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Retl-A-Mattl
$18.88
Auto Home $20.88
BLADE ELECTRIC
SHAVEMASTER
RAZOR NOW
Formerly
J24.95
Your choice of hundnomrr
travel cane (whlrh con
vru to wall-cradle hold'
er or maicuhne ilfl-dlailay case,
NORELCO SPEED SHAVER $14.88
$9.95 SCHICK
BUTANE
LIGHTERS
$3.88
CIGARS
AUREUA
BILTMORES
25's .... $3.45
50's .... $6.75
Film Developing & Printing
YOUR
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LOCAL SERVICE
In By 10 - Out by 4:30
Regular Prices
I'j-DAY SERVICE
Standard 8-Expoure Roll
CONTACT QQl
or JUMBU M M
COLOR PRINTS 24c
ItlETRECM.
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the easy scientific way
to lose weight
$19 per can
Lafayette
"Fair Lawn"
OSCILLATING
SPRINKLER
Reg. $7.95 CQ
Fully Gmrinteed ,ffci,'
Add Federal Excise Tax on Taxable Merchandise Free Delivery in Medford
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