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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1960)
O O ll f t r i MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. ORE. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 6. 1960 Feeding the Family By ZOLA VINCENT rood Editor Quick Look At Eating Pattern! oi Europtani, Engllih London, England The to dividual coffee pots and tea cots of Copenhagen, Frank furt, Garmlsch, Paris and London all dribble on snowy white table cloths just as they do in restaurants back home Otherwise there's little simi larity in food preparation or presentation in countries re cently visited b;' your foods editor. Cross any border and the entire character of eating behavior and habits changes instantly s- The classic smorrebrod, the myriad open-face sandwiches und indescribably delicious Danish pastries make the food of Denmark memorable. The Germans are a hardy people involved in a great deal of outdoor activity. They like their food heavy, sub' stantial, with stick-to-the-rib Qualities. They enjoy break fast, mid-morning "b r e a d- time" which means bread with sausages or other snack -Lunch Is a ritualistic thing of several courses likely to in elude a bowl of thick split pea .soup with him, a platter of pigs' kuckles, bratwurst, Deulschcs beefsteak, hack- brnten with Spatzle (dum plings) or other pork or veal specialty, boiled, stewed sauteed or potted . . . along with sauerkraut and the In evitable boiled potato. A pud ding with a thick fruit sauce along with a glass or two of beer and maybe a bottle of wine tops this repast. Coffee limes comes at i.iO, accom panied by cake or pastry In a kaffce or pastry shop. The evening meal is about the same as' lunch. Gorman Veal Specialty ' ' Most delicious meal en Jbyed by this writer In Ger many was just off the Auto bahn at the Rasthof between Trantfun and Stuttgart on a rainy night. Here, our host suggested the specialty of the .house which proved to be a thick veal cutlet with a pock et which contained a thin slice of Westphalia ham and a slice of cheese resembling our Mozzarella. This was breaded and fried and brought to the table sizzling hot, with a salad variety that included both fresh cabbage and sauerkraut. Herring, a favorite appetl- ler. is offered In great va riety, and the smoked Rhine salmon offered with black bread and butter is simply wonderful. Breads are many and delicious. Next to the boiled potato and sauerkraut or cabbage dish, the Germans have a passion for knodels (dumplings) and the lighter - spnctzle. Bearlest Birthday Munich, home of brewing. is Drcrmring for one of the biggest sprees, in Its history. The Oktober Fest is 150 years old th Is year, and the orga nizers are aiming at making it the beerist birthday of them all. The fest is a 18-day binge that annually attracts more than. 6,000,000 people to thn PHDital citv of Bavaria . With the beer, there will be chickens, pretzels and an endless variety of uerman sausages. Bands will play night , and day. There will be horse racing, fireworks ais Dlnvs. and a band contest fea- turlna 60 bands from all pans of the world. Ah! to be m Munich in October. French Gourmands Many foreigners maintain that eating In France is one Pleasure after another. Cer tain It is that there is more conversation about food than any other subject. Every na tive knows and reveres his tory's most honored gourmand Joan-Anthelme Bqillat-S a v a rln whose erudition and sen suality prompted him to write a "Physlolosy ot Tate" In the early 19th century. It 1 snid that 8,000 restaurants In the young lady with a ground meat patty topped and entire ly covered with an egg steamed sunny-side up. No bread or other accompani ment. The writer foregoes comment. English Breakfast , London residents describe Its climate as three months of winter and nine months of lousy weather. ' London lacks the brilliance of Paris, the gaiety of pre war Vienna, the majesty of Rome, the charm of Copen hagen, but it offers the tra veler memories of thousands of fascination people who have lived there; statesmen and soldiers, sailors and pi rates, poets, actors, empire builders and wonderful accentrlcs. ' It also offers the traveler a five-course breakfast to re member, to linger over and to savor after weeks of the Continental breakfast of cof fee and croissants. Here the breakfast menu offers a choice of grapefruit juice, orange Juice, tomato juice or stewed fruit; choice of porridge, all bran, corn flakes and shredded wheat; a choice of kippers. haddock . or fried fillet of fish; a choice of fried eggs and bacon, sausages with ba con and tomatoes, or cold ham and tomatoes ... Or a variety fo breakfast special ties to order., , Along with choice . of tea, coffee and chocolate ; and preserves. Top British, Meal A , foods writer for . the London Dally ' Express of fered'" the following , as his 'Idea of a top British meal Said "he, "In Victorian days, there' was a fashionable the ory that only continental food was good. But in the . North and West of Britain, farmers' wives have never' been af fected by .Continental fash Ions in food, but have always prepared their own local spe cialties. Their 'simple recipes are returning to fashion and here is a meal such as our ancestors enjoyed; . coming straight from the country kitchen. You will find it well worth trying". , The menu- Cock-A-Leckle Soup, Devon Squab Pie, Friar s Omelette. Cock-A-Loekle Soup Cover one small boiling chicken with, water in a deep pan, adding a pinch of salt. Bring to boil, skim and add one- carrot, one small turnip and one peeled onion stuck with two cloves. Simmer un til chicken is tender then re move bird. ' Clean - one small bunch leeks jemovlng outer leaves, and cut in short lengths. Strain the stock, add leeks and two ounces (one-fourth cup) rice 'and boil for 30 min utes,, seasoning to taste with salt and pepper. Cut half the chicken meat Into small pieces (use the rest for another dish), and put into the soup. JuBt before serving, add a teaspoonful of chopped parsley. Devon Squab Pie - Trim fat from neck-of-mut-ton chops and arrange in a pie plate In alternate layers with two chopped onions and six . large ''. peeled, -sliced apples. Sprinkle each layer with ground allspice, pepper and salt. When- dish is full, pour in one-fourth pint (one- half cup) water or siock. Cver with Dastry. leaving a hole In- the center of the crust. Bake In hot oven, 450 degrees, for 15 minutes; then reduce heat to 300 ana con tinue cooking for one hour. Friar's Omelette ' -Put six large apples in a. fireproof dish and bake in a moderate oven tin son, Scrape out pulp. Cream four ounces (one cube) butter ana two ounces (four tablespoons; Stimulation of Interest in Real Estate Investments Seen By HENRY J. BECHTOLD . UPI Financial Editor New York - (UPD - President Ernest Henderson of Sheraton Corp. of America raised some eye brows in industry re cently with the announce ment that his firm was con sidering reor ganization in to a real estate I n v e stment trust. Henry Bechtold He said the move was being made to take advantage of the tax exemp tions permitted under the new real estate investment trust law recently signed by President Eisenhower. Trusts which distribute 90 per cent or more of their ordinary income . are taxed only on Income they retain. Stockholders, of course, must pay the government Income taxes on the dividends. High Tax Revenue Seen Henderson said the new law likely will serve to stimu late new investment in real estate, create jobs in con struction, and despite criti cism to the contrary, actually bring added revenue to the government. ,'' He said he was sure the stimulus to realty investment would mean Uncle Sam get ting more from personal in come taxes on realty Invest ment profits in the long run than he now gets from corpor ate realty profits. In reviewing this new law In Its federal tax guide, Prentice-Hall, Inc., said it creates a new tax entity that may some day rival stock invest ment companies (mutual funds and closed end investment firms) in competition for the investor's dollar. Compare in Several Ways It noted that real estate trusts compare with stock in vestment companies in several ways. Their economic advan tages are similar. Each offers a means of pooling funds to enable small investors to take on big investment projects none could take alone; the safety of diversification of in vestment; expert investment counsel. -The supervision of state Secret Orders for Rain Researchers Chicago -(Science Service) Secret orders, in sealed en velopes, on cloud - seeding werv: issued to a University of Chicago weather research team, trying to unlock the secrets of the raindrop this summer. The ten - man weather re search team, headed by Roscoe R. Braham Jr., associate pro fessor of meteorology at the University, used this secrecy as part of a special process to "randomize" the order in which days are selected for seeding clouds with silver io dide. The weather team was on location in the Missouri Ozarks for its weather spying under a National Science Foundation grant. The object of its research is to identify and isolate physical processes associated with production of rain in summer cumulus clouds and to study rain-producing effects of seeding clouds with silver iodide. regulatory agencies and of the federal government where shares are sold across state lines offers an additional in vestor safeguard in each case, Prentice-Hall stated. ; Their main points of dif ference are in investments, realty and mortgages against stock and securities and, until now, in their tax status. Prentice - Hall pointed out that real estate investment trusts actually aren't new -they date from "Massachu setts Trusts" of the late nine teenth century. But, it added, their growth was stunted by Supreme Court decisions holding such trusts taxable, at corporate rates, on all net in come. Therefore, according to the tax guide, investors used real estate trusts sparingly. And while real estate investment trusts languished, stock in vestment companies mush roomed - investment com panies are not taxed on earn ings distributed to sharehold ers if the companies meet cer tain terms. Close Parallel Under the new law, the guide stated, investors in real estate trusts will be treated as if they had invested direct ly in realty or realty mort gages, instead of directly, through the trust. In short, it was pointed out, the tax treatment of real estate investment trusts will closely parallel that of invest ment companies. The new law does not go into effect until 1961, but Prentice-Hall said that "now is the time for realty investors to start planning to reap its advantages." Wide Turn by Tank In Parade Smashes Car Winooski, Vt. - Raymond Larkin i Jr., of : Englewood, Calif., carefully locked 'his convertible and went to watch ' a National Guard parade. r When Larkin returned to the car he found that a 26-ton tank had swung too wide on a corner and crushed it. Roper & Roper PAINTING CONTRACTORS ANNOUNCE THE OPENING of Medford Branch 527 Austin Ph. SP 3-7946 George D. Evans General Manager ,..., n.i1 nnn p num. one Paris today do hm honor; tablespoon grated lemon rind, that the 20th century gour- pinh o nqtrneg; beat in mands Idolizes him. Even the f0Ur egg yolks. Butter a pie b.fstcck pommcs frltes (beet- plate; spi-lnkle with bread steak and pota oes) are served crumbs and pour In the apple "a la Savarin and the meat mixture. Cover with bread Is cut perpendicularly to the crumbs (using M cups fresh grain as he suggested breadcrumb, in all), dot with The ordinary boeuf hour- butter and bake in a mode- BUife-non, rm-au, ana coq rate oven. 350 Arrets, for au vin could easily be mis. taken for stew, boiled meat, and chicken were it not that some time In his lite, the chef was influenced by Brlllat- Savarin. The bouillabaisse of Mar- sailles, a steaming fish soup made of, or so it seems, any thing that floats or swims, is delicately balanced to fit the trained and studied taste A the maltre de cuisine. The choucroute of Alsace has just the right amount of thyme, just a slice of pork, lust touch of vinegar approved by the master. Certain it Is that French chefs are dedicated to their work; take great pride In de lighting the diner wun tac-u-lous creations. It takes a teenager from America to fol low an epicurean dream of hors d'oeuvres with a request for "hamburgers". After a very ' long time, the elegant waiter In tailcoat presented IVi hours. Tracers Company Seeks Couple Here The Tracers company nf America, New York City, ls trying 10 locate a Koy F. and Doris L. Peterman whose last address was in care of thi California Oregon Power company, Trail. ncvuraing 10 a letter re ceived from the company by the Medford Police deoart- ment, th,e Pcteouans are two nomcrs whose whereabouts are unknown, The comnntw is hired by leading corpora tions to located missing stock holders or their heirs. Persons having Information about the Petermans are ask ed to contact the Medford city police, "' . '.-'.' '" v '."-'. '! Here's the car that reads you loud and clear the new size, yoursize '61 Chevrolet A car so right for you in so many ways that once you compare it with the rest of the crop you'll agree nothing else near the money measures up to it. ; . 1 , V ' We started out by trimming the outside size a bit (to give you extra inches of , clearance for parking and maneuvering) but inside we left you a full measure of Chevy comfort. Door openings are as much as 6 inches wider to give feet, knees and elbows the undisputed right of way. And the new easy-chair seats are as much as 14 higher just right for seeing, just right for sitting. Once you've settled inside you'll have high and wide praises for Chevrolet's spacious new dimensions (in the Sport Coupes, for example, head room has been upped as much as 2 inches, and there's more leg room,, too front and rear). Chevy's new trunk is something else that will please you hugely what with its deep well shape and bumper-level loading it holds things you've never been able to get in a trunk before. : Yet generously endowed as this car is with spacious ness and clean-etched elegance, it holds steadfastly to all the thrifty, dependable virtues Chevrolet buyers have come to expect. Your dealer's the man to see for all the details that make this sensationally sensible '61 Chevy a new measure of your money's worth. H OTOBEiFtJL CHEVROLET t ..... I MP ALA 4-DOOR SPORT SEDAN one of five Impales that bring you a new measure of elegance from the most elegant Chevies of all. Notice what beautiful sense the new roof line makes th front door entrance height is nearly 2 inches higher. fr 1 gp NOMAD 9-PASSENGER STATION WAGON. You have a choict of six Chevrolet wagons, each with a cargo opening nearly 5 feet across and a new concealed compartment for stowing valuables. There's nover been a trunk like it beforel The floor's recessed more than half a foot to form a deep well for holding things you used to . leave home. Packing's easier, too the loading height is as much as 10W inches lower. . INTRODUCING THE '61 CHEVY SCATHE the lowest priced full-sized Chevy with Ug-car comfort at small-car prices! Now you don't have to go without style, space and one of the world's best rides to get a car that's low priced and econojnical to drive. Chevy's new '61 Biscaynes 6 or V8 give you a full measure of Chevrolet quatity, roominess and proved performance yet they're priced down with many cars that give you a lot lessl Chevtyou , Body by Fisher newness you can use more front seat leg room andj . 1 thanhuashaved-downdnveshafttimnel,morefootroomintherear. See the new Chevrolet cars, Chevy Corvairs and the new Corvette at your local authorized Cnevrolet dealer's. 9th at Bartlett MEDFORD Phone SP2-6115 O THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6. 1960 Q O MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. A 9 Fragments Believed To Hold Clue To Pvlakeup of Rloon Under Study Washlngton-fflPD-Fragments thought to be part of the moon are being studied by i the national aeronautics and space administration here. Ex perts believe them to hold ' clues to the chemical' and geological makeup of the , (satellite. Dr. John O'Keefe, assist ant chief of the theoretical 'division of the Nasa's God- dard Space Flight center, out- ling his theories, said . "the 'v fragments are called textites. i They are composed mainly of f silica (a quartz-like sub ;, stance), are often-teardrop ' shaped and in theory originate 't from the moon." Dr. O'Keefe explained that v "a meteor impact of the moon " caused an explosion of mat ter which expanded outward '. Into space. A portion of the dislodged matter went into orbit around the earth like one ot our artificial satel lites." "Generally only one piece of matter will orbit around the earth at one time, he said, "and will weigh from one ton to several hundred thousand tons." Orbit of Material Shrinks O'Keefe stated that at the closest approach to earth the chunk of moon matter is at a height of 60 miles or less. The orbit of the moon mate rial then shrinks. When the material comes within the earth's atmosphere it is slowly and fiercely heat ed so hot that the matter liquifies and is thrown off as drops. These cool and fall to earth as textites. O'Keefe stressed that the textites are produced by re-entering satellite nose cone. "Therefore," he said, "the investigation and study of textites may help under stand some of the problems of space travel, especially those (3 of re-entering the earth's atmosphere." Layered Like Onion "The most useful point that the study of the rock im plies is that the moon is stratified or, to put it more I chemically and may indicate I of oxides of various elements simply, 'layered like an on- the time when the moon's The rock is an unusually dry ion," O'Keefe said. surface was formed, he said, substance containing almost Further Investigation may The make-up of the moon no traces of water. Texture show that the outer parts of matter is about three-fourths of a textite is glassy and its the moon are like granite silica and the rest composed weight almost comparable to that of glass. No elements foreign to earth have been discovered in the analyses, O'Keefe reported. On Feb. 9, 1913, a mass meteor group passed earth New Filter Enables Smoker To Get Type of Drag He Chooses Washington (Science Serv ice) - A custom filter patent ed here permits a smoker to take full-filtered, partly fil tered and non-filtered drags from the same cigarette. One half of the tip of the cigarette is filled with filter material. The tip's other half is filled with tobacco. At the very end of the tip is a half moon opening a smoker can rotate so that he gets only filtered smoke, only non-fil- forces similar to those on a tered smoke or a proportion of each. Jacob A. Saffir of Los An geles says his invention lets a smoker take mostly filtered drags, "for possible health reasons," but then finish up "with some good, strong, un filtered puffs." . Removes Ice. Frost A wrap-around windshield with - a transparent film or coating to conduct electricity for heating and removing ac cumulations of ice, frost or A. Gaiser of Muncie, Ind. He assigned his patent to ' t h e Libbey - Owens - Ford Glass company. A big bag for protecting fruit trees from frost, an an tikick device for cows and a shoulder pad with improved protection of the top of the shoulder were also patented. The bag, which could be placed over a tree by a boom truck, is made of a .003 inch thickness of polyethylene plas fog was patented by Romey tic. The inventor, George J, Nelson of Milwaukee, Wis has found this thickness per mits enough sunlight to enter to mature the fruit and keep the area warm. The bag has vents for the circulation ot air so that the bag can be left on all winter, Nelson says. Straddles Cow's Back The anti-kick device is a yoke-shaped device that strad dles the cow's back just for ward of her rump and legs. It clamps along the hollow above the hips and against the flesh and muscles of the cow's flanks. It was invented by Millford S. Bullard of Crowley, Tex. The improved football shoulder pad is designed to eliminate the conventional pad's weakness between shoulder epaulet and the main part of the pad. In conventional pads, the construction leaves the top of the shoulder relatively unpro tected. So inventors Manual E. Morgan, Albert D. Feith- USES IS CIEOT CQKUUR More space;!; more spunk and wagons, too! ' 77ie newest car in America: the CORVAIR 700 LAKEWOOD 4-DOOR STATION WAGON. Like all Corvairs, it's powered by a dependable air-cooled rear engine. More room more for you, more for your things. More dependable operation. Smarter, smoother styling. More miles per gallon.' Wagons. Corvair for '61: a complete line of complete thrift ; cars from Chevrolet. To start with, every Corvair has a , budget-pleasing . price tag. And Corvair goes on from there to save ; you even more. With extra miles per gallon . . . ' quicker-than-ever cold-start warmup so you start saving sooner . '. . a new extra-cost optional heater that warms everybody evenly. Riding along with this extra economy, more room inside for you, more room up front for your luggage (sedans and coupes have almost 12 more usable trunk space). And our new wagons? You'll love them think .- they're the greatest thing for families since houses. The Lakewood Station Wagon does a man-sized job with cargo, up to 68 cubic feet of it. The Greenbrier ; Sports Wagon you're going to have to see it gives you up to 175.5 cubic feet of space for you and your things. Compare that with any other U.S. wagon goingl Corvair's whole thrifty lineup gets its pep from a spunkier 145-cu.-iu. air-cooled rear engine. Same rear engine traction, same smooth 4-wheel independent suspension ride. See the polished and refined 1961 Corvair first chance you get at your Chevrolet dealer's. This sporty CORVAIR 700 CLUB COUPE gives you almost 12 more luggage space up front plus a longer range fuel tank. For 1961 Corvair put the spare tire in the rear in coupes and sedsns where it doesn't take up an inch of luggage spsce in the front compartment. you're looking at the handsome CORVAIR 700 4-DOOR SEDAN. Provisions for heating duels are built right into its Body by Fisher for more equal distribution of heat front and rear. g f3 4 7r l-ESi.f?& ;4fe This shows you for sure who remember that middle-seat passen gers have feet, too. It's Corvair's practically flat floor. Now in production-ike GREENBRIER SPORTS WAGON with up to twice as much room for people and things as ordinary wagons (shown with oplional-at- fyll extra-cost third seat in position). See the new Chevrolet cars, Chevy Corvairs and the nevu Corvette at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer COURTESY CHEVROLET man and Edmund R. Carman, all of Carbondale, 111., have created an extra padded sec tion that fits over the unDro- tected area and extends down so that It can be tied under the arm The pad does not He flat on the shoulder, where it might impeae arm movement. At tached near the neck, it rises so that a player with the pads on would appear to have very nign snouiaers. A new stereoscope system won a patent for Roger Lan nes de Montebello of New York City. With wide angle lenses and curved film, Mon tebello says his system pro duces images in his stereo viewer that surround the eyes. Montebello says the eyes can move naturally to look at va rious parts of the panorama which parts are seen in three dimensions. George W. Cornelius of Por tuguese uena, u a 1 1 f was granted a patent for an after burner apparatus for purify ing auto exhaust. He assigned the patent to the Holley Car- Duretor company in Van Dyke, Mich. A process for recovering fluorine from phosphate rock won a patent for John N. Ca- rothers and Rudolph J. Hurka Jr., both of Atlanta, Ga. A method of manufacturing heavy water (deuterium ox ide), invented by Paul. Har teck of Troy, N. Y., was granted a patent which Tar- teck assigned to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Sol Trlebwasser of Wan- plngers Falls, N. Y., received a patent for a method of pre paring single crystal ferro- electrics. The patent was as signed to the International Business Machines corpora on a 57UU-mile path from Saskatchewan province in Canada to the South Atlantic off the coast of Brazil. This group may have been wit nessed by as many as 10,000 persons throughout its show. O'Keefe believes this me teor group was composed of textites because of the path it followed and the resulting physical phenomena. "T h i I was probably the only time these bodies were seen In orbit," he said. No textites were recovered from this group. The textites are found in scattered parts of the world in strewn fields called patch es. These patches may be a few score of miles long to several thousand miles in length, O'Keefe said. They are found mainly in southeast . Asia, Australia, On the Ivory coast of Africa, and only in Czechoslavakia in Europe. In the United States they are found only in Texas and Georgia. Extensive study is being done on textites by H. Julian Allen and his co-workers at Ames Research Center in California. Salem Woman Revives Infant Bonneville, Harvey Sign 20-Year Pact Portland - IUPD - A 20-year ' power contract between the Bonneville Power Administra tion and Harvey Aluminum Co. was announced today by the Interior Department to permit expansion at The Dalles. The contract calls for sale of 75,000 kilowatts of firm power and 78,000 kilowatts of secondary power for establish ment of a new two-potllne aluminum reduction plant. Deliveries to the plant art scheduled for not later than Dec. 31, 1963, and will add an estimated 75,000 tons a year of pig aluminum produc tion capacity to tne present operations of the company at The Dalles. Gross power rev enues from the contract are expected to exceed $2.5 mil lion a year, the department said. . Salem (UPD--A 27-year-old Salem mother who "never took a first aid course re vived an 8-month-old neigh bor baby. Wednesday night after the infant was found by his mother unconscious in a bathtub. Little Geir SaUer was sub- Voter Registration Deadline Oct. I Salem -(UPD- State Elections . Director Jack F. Thompson said today that the Oregon , Supreme Court decision in volving the deadline tor Voter's Pamphlet , material does not affect the Saturday 1 merged in water when nls deadline for voter registra- mother returned from a aulck tlon. trip to the kitchen Mrs. Salter, a Widow, be gan to use mouth-to-mouth respiration and told her 0- year-old son Eric to summon a neighbor, Mrs, Bert Henry. Mrs. Henry immediately applied artificial respiration and the baby revived about 15 minutes later. The boy was treated at a Salem hospi tal and released. Mrs. Henry told first aid men she never took a first aid course, but saw a demon stration once. , Shot Goes Through House at Albany Albany-tUPD-A woman near here was awakened early Wednesday when a bullet tore through her bedroom missing her , head . by six inches. Mrs. Patricia Maler report ed the Incident to the Benton county sheriff's office. She said the bullet passed under her head after striking the bed's headboard As- far as we're con cerned," he said, "the dead- ; line ls still Oct. 8 at 8 p.m.." Thompson said the law reads, that registration will : be closed 30 days preceding the election, which Is Nov. 8. Elmo Smith, Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate, , went to the Supreme Court when his pamphlet material was rejected Aug. 80, the.; 70th day before the election. ' The material was rejected on the contention that it was a day late. The high court in Its written decision Wednes day said 70 full days do not have to fall between the deadline and election day. t Kaiser's St. Helens Workers Get Pay Hike , St. Helens -HOT- Employee! J of the Kaiser Gypsum Co., , here received a seven-cent an hour pay hike, retroactive to June 1, according to a com pany announcement Wednea-, day. ' Claude B. Harper, vtca president, ' said the Increase, was the result of a one-year Contract signed with Local , Officers said the shot might 2822 of the Lumber and Saw- v have been fired by a hunter. I mill Workers Union. ' 9th at Bartlett MEDFORD Phone SP 2-6115 OPENS SAT. PERSON VS U ROBERTSON V OF "WELLS FARGO' plus Cayuw Rldirt IN iioihim" RODEO s HORSE SHOW LIVESTOCK EXP0SITI0 Conn wrly, im th ixhlblli tnfora th big arint ihow. Watt Sid ctri lik St. John's ftrldst, fellow llgnl direct to P. I. Entlr any gatt. 1 I m. Hm. Jf I Ml IhMi Sl M 4 CMIarm attaV II nil, ma nawRata lint. SI.M Ht I, lt Malt $ B mats .eaa UNMIIKVID IIATI- Sat. Matlnaa, Oct. 8 H W MSIRVID SIATI Ham thaiHiodM (Inc. Can. AMiIrt 1.W, M OO Nana Jhaw-nadao NUtiilyilO ) Mlllrua lil.-Sun., I-X J1V 9