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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1960)
;AVxkiJ'V.v ,! r ? v STANQ OPENS The concession stand in light bulb saleAbove, Ragsdale (left) Is the Jackson county courthouse, which has presented the "key" to the stand by project been out of operation for several years, was chairman Die Walsh. Candy, gum, cigars, reopened last week with former operator cigarettes and other "convenience", items John Ragsdale, who is blind, back at his old will be sold to the general public as well as post. Financing for the opening of the stand to courthouse employees, Ragsdale said, was through the recent Crater Lion's club , Negro Is Refused Medical Treatment By Portland Doctor Portland, Ore.-IUPD-A Port land doctor refused treatment to a Negro woman seeking medical attention, according to the civil rights division of the Bureau of Labor here. Russell Peyton, a repre sentative of the division said the woman was denied treat ment when she arrived for an appointment at the physician's downtown office last Wednes day. She had made the ap pointment earlier by tele phone. Peyton said she got the doc tor's name from the Mult nomah County Medical soci ty. She had recently arrived from Chicago and was seek ing a specialist, Peyton said. Peyton asserted the woman was taken aside after waiting for some time in the outer of fice of the doctor's clinic and told it was the doctor's policy not to" treat ."colored" patients. Peyton said the-doctor and his receptionist confirmed the woman's story.' Ppvtnn nriHed that there is no Oregon law which would prevent the doctor from deny ing treatment to a patient be cause of race. The County . Medical soci ety's president, Dr. Charles E. Littlehales said the society is on record as being against dis- crimination. "In giving referrals, the so ciety never inquires about a person's race, color or creed," he said. "Patients usually are - tha namoe rtf thrPP fllial- ified physicians. They are in vited to call one of these physicians and discuss with him the details of their med ical care." Dr. Littlehalci said the job oi me society is iu bwyc Hu manity. We are not interested in a person's race or national ' origin. And likewise we don't ck a nhveirtan his race, creed . or color when he applies for membership, in the Muuno- Minnesota Crash Claims Hives nnvpr. Minn. - (UFD - A young Presbyterian minister and his six children were kill ed Friday night when his car rammed head-on into a con crete abutment on a narrow county road bridge four miles south of Dover. Authorities said the abut ment, at the edge of a bridge four feet narrower than the 1 road, sliced nine feet into the clergyman's auto and pinned five of the children in the wreckage. The Rev. John Eastman. 28, Lewiston, Minn., and h 1 s i youngest child, John, eight ! months, were hurled from the car by the impact. Other vic tims were identified as his . three daughters, Pamela, 7; Mary, 5; Carol, 2; and two other sons, James, 3, and Thomas, 18 months. The Rev. Mr. Eastman died on the way to a Rochester, Minn., hospital 15 miles north west of Dover. The children were pronounced dead at the scene. Authorities said the clergy man's wife, attending a high ' school play in Lewiston at ' the time of the accident, was told of the deaths and placed under pHation. Officers said the Eastmans were on their way to visit Rev. Charles Schwenka at Plainview, Minn. mah County Medical society." Peyton said the doctor, whose Identity was not dis closed, made It clear he didn't want to give up his position. Welfare Department Collects $28,261 Salem - llPD - The Oregon Justice department's welfare recovery division collected $28,261 in October, Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton said Fri day. The division collects monev from nonsuDDorting fathers and in public welfare fraud cases Multnomah, Wash ington and Clackamas counties ac counted for $19,934 and the balance of $8,327 was collect pH in Marion. Linn: Yamhill Polk, Tillamook, Lincoln and Benton counties. . Medford Tribune SECTION B MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1960 PAGES 1 to 1 OF SMITH & MEN By Jack Smith e tlto Tlmii-Mirror Syndlctu Some New York health ex pert says that if we knew what was good for us we'd eat six casual meals a day instead of three formal ones. He recommends what he calls "ad lib" meals for chil dren, even in school. He says you can't teach anybody any thing on an empty stomacn. I'd like to point out to this fellow that he didn't invent ad lib feeding. It was invent ed at my house. There hasn't been an empty stomach around here since the de velopment of the electric ice box. On week ends we run the liveliest short-order house in town . You have to get up early to reserve one of the burners on the stove. I was lucky enough last Saturday to get the left rear. I fried an egg and five strips of bacon. I like to put two strips of bacon in the ice box to make an avocado sandwich with later. One of the boys was boiling mush and eating a persim mon to hold him until it was ready. The other was having an Argentine beef sandwich with sliced pickles and a glass of pineapple juice. My wife was boiling an egg on left front and heating up an old piece of halibut on right rear. She likes leftovers for breakfast. The boy cooking the mush took it off the burner and put on a mess of pancakes. He ate the mush with raisins and a glass of tomato juice while the pancakes were cooking. The other boy snatched left front as soon as my wife's egg was boiled and made a piece of French toast. When right rear was clear the other one commandeered it to make some maple syrup. After my egg was cold I found a vacancy in the elec tric toaster and made a piece of raisin bread toast. I put apricot jam on it to sop up the yolk with and went into the living room to read the paper. The boys came in to read the comics. They were eating an orange and a banana. I went outdoors and got the axe and tackled the stump. I hope to finish it off before New Years Day. When I when back inside somebody was making a waffle. I decided to have my avo cado sandwich. I opened the ice box. The bacon was gone "Who ate my bacon?" I de manded. - "What bacon?" my wife said. She sounded guilty. "You know what bacon," I said. "You mean those two little bitty strips of bacon?" "Yes," I said, "I mean those two little bitty strips. "I did," she said. "I didn't know they belonged to any. body." The avocado was gone too I don't believe the boys could have ad libbed it. They were heating up some chili con came. "You guys will spoil your Portland Shooting May Be Solved Portland - IIW - Police have tentatively identified one of five men arrested near Salem last week as the man who shot William E. Taylor dur ing an Oct. 6 holdup at the Shop Kwick Food Market in Portland. Taylor, who almost died from the shot, has recovered according to police. The bul let entered Taylor's jaw and lodged in the back of his neck in such a way that it cannot be removed without endanger ing his life. The identification was made by Taylor Thursday in a police lineup at Salem. The men in custody arc Robert Lee Ar nold and Dennis Lee Siscel, both of Portland, Richard E. Bankston and James Jesse Roberts Jr., both of Salem and Fred Joseph Winkler, recent ly released from the Oregon State Penitentiary: Detectives declined to identify the per son believed connected in the Portland holdup. Thornton Seeks To Halt Transfer Of Post Office Salem, Ore. - (DPI) - Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton said Saturday he will fly to Wash ington, D. C, to explore the possibilities of Oregon heading off the proposed transfer of the regional post office headquarters - from Portland to Seattle, Acting Gov. Walter Pearson asked Thornton to Investigate legality of the move, ordered by Postmaster General Arthur Summerfield, Thornton said he has not yet reached any conclusions as to whether Ore gon has any legal way to block the action, Oregon officials at all levels, both Republican and Demo crat, have criticized Summer field's order. Pearson, who Is chief execu tive while Gov. Mark Hatfield is visiting South America, earlier this week called for a Congressional Investigation. Thornton said he will con fer with local counsel in Wash ington, postal authorities and Oregon Congressional offices. Democrats have charged the move Is a payoff of the Eison hower administration. Thornton said that while he is in Washington he also wants to check on several other mat' ters, including an Oregon casa pending in the U.S. Supreme Court. lunch," I told them. "We haven't had breakfast yet, have we?" asked Doug. I found an old slice of livcr wurst and made a sandwich. My wife went in the living room with an apple to read the department store ads. The boys poured the chili con came over grilled cheese sandwiches and went out to the patio to eat. I was alone. I made another search for the avocado. I found the seed on the sink. I put a Caruso record on the hi fi and lay. down for a while. One of the boys came in to fry the leftover mush. By then it was time for lunch. Again this year Simply Stop in at Our Office for CURRIER & IVES 1961 CALENDARS With 12 beautiful 8Vi"xl3W' Currier Ives prints in color suitable for framing, Don Stathos, insuroi THE MALI . , L 1005 E. Main noCtt V 0OftS,, Phone mirtulM AOtHI - l.AnSR ffesfev PRISES SLftSIUEB TO ! 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