Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 11, 1960, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    MONDAY, JULY 11. 10B0
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
5
4
It
3
1
.V-:. 'Wi ll
-- 'ylk,-.-
SUCCESSFUL MAN Nupolcon Mill, 70, was backwoods
Vlriflnn boy who miido Kod by writing t best ncllor culled
"Think unci Crow Kiel)." llowovor, he docs not rate till
wtnllli as Iho measure of life's auccoss, To hi way of think
ing, a ninn with st'lf-respoct la a auccesa. (UPI Telophoto)
Wall Street Chatter
New York - IUP0 - Walter
K. Guliniin of Slcnrm & Co.
aaya the. reason the itock mar
ket la ncllng better than busl
ness la because tho market
export tho Federal rtoiervc
to loosen up on credit.
However, he auya, mony
Wall Street sophlstlralea think
the Kit wunta to aeo the mar
ket lower than It la now he
fore It nuikea the move. Gut
man thinks the Fit will wait
until August to do anything,
eipeclnlly If ordera In that
month are disappointing.
The security analyst hopes
the old technique of spurring
the economy by easing money
and margin requirements will
work. If It doesn't, ho says,
we'll be In for a rough time
because no thinking is being
done about possible new
ways.
Dacho & Co. says tho con
tinued strength In Diamond
National suggests even higher
levels ahead and recommend
again that trading commit
ments he made in Kayser-Roth
If a breakout occurs through
HVi.
Chart pattern for Diamond
Alkali is extremely bullish
and shows an extremely wide
base of accumulation, accord
ing to Chartcraft, Inc. Near
term prlco objective Is 77, It
soy, and long term 102,
Reynolds & Co. estimates
1060 earnings for Canadian
Breweries, Ltd. at $3.40 a
share, tip 10 to 15 per cent
from 1030 levels. The com
pany has grown Into the
world's largest brewing or
ganization through a policy of
frequent acquisitions, mer
gers and expansions and fu
ture growth seems to be well
assured, Reynolds says.
City of Hope Drive
Extended to July 31
The City of Hope campaign
has been extended to July 31,
according to Mrs. Jessie Sit
ton, 324 Vancouver ave., cam
paign chairman, today,
Mrs. Sltton explained that
many of the marchers had
been unable to contact resi
dents on June 16. She said
that resldonts will be contact
ed during tho next two weeks
for contributions to the drive.
Success as Person
Hard To Achieve,
Author Declares
Now York-IUPD - Nnpoloon
Hill, a buekwoods Virginia
boy who made good, bolluvcs
It is easier to build u fortune
than to bo successful us a per
son. HIU, at 70, got rich writing
a best-sollcr called "Think
and Grow Rich," but ho does
not rata his wealth as the
measure of his succchs In life.
It Is how he feels toward
other peoplo and how they lip
pour to fool to wind him thut
make him rcgurd his Ufa us
successful, Equally Importunt,
he said, la how ho fools ubout
himself. A man with self
respect Is a success, to his way
of thinking.
"Success in llfo Is morn im
portant than money," Hill
said In an Interview. "Deal
ing with people, fighting with
yourself and winning out are
harder than muklng a success
In business."
Thtory of Help
Hill Is the co-author of a
new book on how to win
friends and aclf-rcspcct titled
"Succoss Through a Positive
Mental Altitude." Ho wroto
the volume with a multi-millionaire
insurance executive,
W. Clement Stone. Together
they hove developed a theory
that "PMA," which stunds
for. "positive mental attitude,"
can help a person to do Just
about anything, If he really
wants to do It.
It la with great pride that
Hill la able to any that he tries
to practice what he preaches.
But It hua not always been
that way. If ho had nut had
the help of a step-mother
with "PMA," he said, he
might still bo a nobody.
Hill was born in a one-room
log cabin on Pound river in
the mountains of southwest
Virginia, not for from the spot
made famous by John Kox in
his "Trail of the Lonesome
Pine." He was born In pover
ty and never saw a railroad
train until he was past 12
years old.
His mother died when he
was 0, and a year later his
father married again. That
was the most important event
In the life of Napoleon Hill.
"She showed that If you
can push the right buttons to
motivate a person you can
work wonders," Hill said. "At
the age of 9, I was not only
atupld, but I waa mean, I was
training myself to be a sec
ond Jesso James. My step
mother motivated me another
way."
She also motivated Hill's
GROUND BEEF
mm
FRESH - LEAN BEEF
L
B
S
29
SUPER MARKET
CENTRAL POINT
A GOOD PLACE TO TRADE - 350 PINE STREET
Pork Sausage
Bulk Country Style
Seasoned Just Right
00
3 lbs. $a
Chuck Roasts
BlacU
Cuts
Nice and
Tender
mi
FOLGERS
COFFEE
Mb. 2-lbs.
3 T5
NABISCO HONEY
Graham Crackers
2 a 65
POTATOES
U.S. No. 1
10 & 59
Price Effective Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Onlyl
father. Instead of living In
poverty doing whut odd JoIib
he could, ho went to school
and became a dentist and a
prosperous one at that,
Napoleon, named after a
rich undo who died without
leaving his namesake a cent,
bocumo a newspaper reporter
with tho encouragement of
his stepmother. Ho worked
his wuy through school as a
reporter and soon was launch
ed on his life's work of writ
ing success stories about fam
ous men for a magazine.
An Interview with Andrew
Carnegie stocrcd Hill to ex
tensive research lusting 20
years on rich men and how
they got that woy. This re
search made HIU a rich man,
himself, for his "Think and
Grow Itich" sold well Into tho
millions of copies.
The Week in California
Hearing Scheduled for July 21
In Farm Labor Controversy
By United Prass International
Tho Labor Deportment
scheduled a public hearing
for' July 21 In Washington on
a request from California
growers to change federal
Jnb-rcfcrall rules In cases of
farm labor controversies.
Tho arguments will heard
by examiner Clifford P.
Grant, who will submit rec
ommendations to Labor Sec
retory James P. Mitchell.
The Issue arose over the
question of referring Amer
ican and Mexican farm work
ers to ranches In California
where a labor-mangement dis
pute exists.
The State-Federal Employ
ment Scrvlcca have been pro
hibited for 20 yeara from re
ferring workers to joba that
are vacant becouse of a strike
or lockout or other disputes.
California farmers claim
the regulation will ruin them
because of the perishable na-
STORK IN BOOTIES Wearing a pair of booties, a baby
stork walks past admiring visitors at the Chessington Zoo at
Surrey, England. The stork Injured his leg when he got
caught in an enclosure wire and had to have part of his leg
amputated. He'll be fitted with specially-made steel supported
boota later. (UPI Telephoto)
Lineup of Demo
Vote Preferences
Los Angeles -HTIu Status
of tho Democratic president
ial rac as tabulated by
United Press International
on tho basis of Indicated
first ballot preferences!
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson 407
Sen. John F. Kannedy 899
Adlal E. Stevenson 50
Sen. Stuari Symington.. 79
Favorite sons 163
Uncommitted 123
Needed to nominate 761
Kennedy Favored
By Oddsmakers
New York - IUPD - Broadway
oddsmakers were betting 7-5
today that Sen. John Kennedy
would receive the Democratic
presidential nomination.
But If Kennedy's support
ers placed any faith In odds,
they were in for a disappoint
ment. The oddsmakers were
betting 7V4-5 that Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon would
be the next president.
NO ALCOHOLIC DRINKS
Los Angeles IUPD - One Los
Angeles law that is strictly en
forced will find no favor with
some visitors for the Demo
cratic National Convention.
No wine, beer or liquor is per
mitted either on the grounds
or in the Sports Arena when
the convention will be held
or in the huge Memorial Col
iseum, scene of the acceptance
speeches.
Kidnaped Boy's
Belongings Found
Sydney (UPD - A school
beany, lunchbag and grammar
school textbook belonging to
an eight-year-old kidnap vic
tim were discovered in a lone
ly forest today. An anony
mous caller told police the
boy cquld be found at the bot
tom of Sydney harbor.
Police Commissioner Colin
Delaney said he feared the
first kidnapers in Australian
history had lost their nerve
and killed young Graeme
Thome, son of a $220,000 gov
ernment lottery winner.
The boy disappeared on his
way to school Friday. Several
hours later, his parents re
ceived a telephone call from
a man with a foreign accent
demanding $56,000.
ture of their crops and the
absence of permanent farm
hands to harvest it. The Agri
cultural Workers Organizing
Commlttco (AFL-CIO) con
tends any change In the re
ferral rule would amount to
recruiting strikebreakers by
the government.
Mitchell said he waa calling
growera and union officials to
gether for the hearing becauae
of "conflicting atatements" he
received when he met with
the two factions aeparately.
In another development on
the troubled farm labor scene,
Sutter County District At
torney John Hauck said he
would ask the county board
of supervisors to adopt a tight
ordinance to control any viol
ence that might occur this
harvest season.
Hauck's statement came
after the state attorney gen
eral ruled that antl-picketlng
ordinances in San Joaquin,
Yuba and Sutter counties
were unconstitutional.
The ruling found the ordin
ances "unworkable" except as
they pertained to the prohibi
tion of violence In picketing.
State laws now outlaw car
rying concealed dirks, daggers
and switchblade knives,
Hauck said. He said he would
seek to supplement state law
by a local ordinance ban
ning knives more than three
inches in length, straight edge
razors, ice picks and blud
geon-type weapons.
Elsewhere, there were these
development.
CAMPUSES: Gov. Edmund
G. Brown said he would give
his views on the establishment
of a new University of Cali
fornia and state college cam
puses before the 1961 legisla
ture meets. But the governor
told newsmen he would not
make his proposed expansion
program final even then.
Brown asked reporters to
"scotch" rumors that he was
opposed to a new campus at
La Jolla for the university.
FOWLERt Celebrities of
the entertainment, sports and
newspaper world paid final
tribute in Los Angeles to auth
or Gene Fowler, who died of
a heart attack at the age of
70. Jimmy Durante, one of
those about whom Fowler
wrote, former heavyweight
champion Jack Dempsey and
actor Thomas Mitchell were
among those serving as pall
bearers. PLANEi A single - engine
Navy attack dive bomber
crashed In the San Bernar
dino mountains, touching off
a forest fire. The plane, sta-
Dentists Pick Reno
For 1963 Conference
Portland - IUPD - The House
of Delegates of the 11th an
nual triennial dental confer
ence here Sunday selected
Reno, Nev., as the site of the
12th conference to be held in
1963.
L. D. Sullivan of Carson
City, Nev., was elected presi
dent for the 12th conference.
The delegates also voted
Alaska and Hawaii into the
conference as full members.
Sunday was the first day of
the Pacific Coast Dental Con
ference being held here.
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
"TTOW," marveled a visitor being shown little Susan's
JL L
r
piggy bunk, "linve you managed to amass a whole bank
full of quarters in less than two months?"
"I've worked out a sura
fire system with Grand-
pa, cxpimueii uuur niuu
Susan. "I think up some
ridiculously simple ques
tion ho enn answer, and
then he nlways gives mo
a quarter."
Mr. Franklin Jones has
been reading a lot of nowly
published autobiographies
this year and is, to put It
mildly, not Impressed.
"Probably nothing," ho
notes, "testifies to tho im
aginative genius of somo of
the current crop of writers so much as their autobiographies."
From a test paper at Amherst: "Tho three sexes are male,
fomalo, and Insect. The first Is frequently called the third by
the second."
0 11)60, by Bonnott Ctrl Distributed bar King futures Sjnxtioatt,
Honed at Moffett Naval' Air
Station near San Francisco,
carried only ita pilot.
DEADLINE! The deallne
for filing an initiative peti
tion to abolish capital punish
ment in California passed
with nobody filing. After
Caryl Chessman was executed
May 2, several groups had
said they would try to file
245,000 signatures with Secre
tary of State Frank M. Jordan
to qualify the measure for the
November ballot. But Jordan
said the deadline passed, and
no word of an initiative had
come to his office.
Quotes From the News
BY UNITED t-Htaa iniLnnAiiunAu ;
Los Angeles Gov. Michael V. DISollo of Ohio on the
selection of a Democratic presidential nominee at the con
vention here: '
"There is no question about It . . . Kannedy will M
nominated on tho first ballot."
Wilmington, Del. Drs. Margaret Dinamore and Con
stance Volk, two women physicians who came In first in)
the Powder Puff Derby, on why they decided to complete!
the 2,059-mile transcontinental flight despite bad weatherf
"We have appointments with patients Monday morning."
Niagara Falls, Ont. Seven-year-old Roger Woodward,'
bruised but not seriously hurt after an accidental 168-foot
plunge over Niagara Falls:
"Now I want to go to sleep and forgot overruling thai
happened." i
Benson, Ariz. A spokesman for about 120 members ot
a religious sect starting their second week in bomb shelter
because they fear a nuclear war will start soon:
"The Lord told us to go in and the Lord will tell ui
when to coma out" .
UNITED JETS ...
EAST AND SOUTH
FROM PORTLAND
THE ONLY JETS EAST
THE MOST JETS SOUTH
PROM PORTLAND TOl
CHIC A OO - 3 hrs. 50 min.
New YORK-6 hrs.
SAN FRANClSCO-lht.Z5min.
LOS ANGELES -2hn,
Jets are smoother and quieter than any i
propeller-driven planes. And they cut flying
times dramatically ... get you there
fastest! Enjoy lots of room, lots of comfort and
United extra care all the way. '
For reservations, First Class or Custom Coach,
see your Travel Agent or call United
Air Lines, SPring 3-6233.
THB EXTRA CAM UNI ,
We Were Not Monkeying Around All Day Today!
We Marked Our SPRING and SUMMER SHOES
DOWN to ROCK BOTTOM PRICES!
Sale Starts Tomorrow at 9 a.m.
FOR WOMEN
Air Step
DRESS SHOES
Values to $13.95
Now
$F and589
Life Stride Dress Shoes $790 & $Q90
Values to $12.95 NOW..
1
FOR MEN
Roblee and Pedwin
DRESS SHOES
Values to $13.95
N.w90and$89
ONE LOT
Not all Sizes, now only .
$90
FOR WOMEN.
Asia I tl ( IIvaaa Aits! AaabiaI CIaaa aiiIii
$190
viic lui ui high dim uajudi giiucd uiiij
GIRLS' FLATS
Bone or White, all sizes, Val. to $7.95
$495
Now
and
$590
CHILDREN'S SHOES
Values to $7.99
Now$290-$395 &$590
WASHABLE PLAY SHOES . ...... now only 5 2
90
Girls' Flats & Sandals I HAND BAGS
Values to $6.95 Your Choice
Now$290and39 Only ?298plus tax
ALL SALES FINAL
15 South Central
SHOE STORE
Fluhrer Building
1