Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 02, 1961, Image 13

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    THURSDAY. MARCH 2. 18B1
R R
MEDFORD MAIL -TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. ORB
i ij
NIXONS MEET GREETERS Former Vice President Kich- liana at Los Angeles International Airport to welcome them
ard M. Nixon and Mrs. Nixon are shown as they personally home. An hour alter the Nixons arrived they were still
greeted thousands of Southern Californians who were on shaking hands. (UPI 'ielephoto)
Surface Rights To Be
Determined in Forest
Determination of surface
resource rights on unpatented
mining claims in the Mc
Loughlin and Applcgate C
areas of the RogUe River Na
tional forest has started, the
bureau of land management
has notified C. E. Brown,
forest ' supervisor.
, The' areas are in Jackson,
Klamath and Josephine coun
ties. Notices will be publish
ed for nine consecutive weeks,
Brown said.
Maps of the two areas are
now being published, and
Piofii Sharing Plans
Show Large Increase
Chicago -IUPD-The Council
on Profit-Sharing Industries
(CPSI) reports that in the first
six months of 1960, the num
ber of firms offering the
profit-sharing fringe benefit
jumped 61 per cent over the
year before.
CPSI said that 2,503 new
deferred profit-sharing plans
were instituted . in the half
year, covering 115,544 em
ployees. The Council said that
more than SB50 million was
shared in 1959 by more than
2 million employees.
copies of the multiple-use min
ing law of July 23, 1955, and
of the procedure for the de
termination of surface rights
are available for inspection
at the forest supervisor's of
fice in the Medford postoffice
building.
A claimant has two options
under the law, Brown noted.
He may ignore the notices,
thereby waiving rights to the
surface until the claim goes
to patent yet maintaining his
original mining rights. The
claimant may file a verified
statement asserting his rights
to the surface, Brown said.
In that case, he added, the
claim will be examined by
mineral examiners.
Claims of questionable
validity will be considered
before a hearing officer of the
bureau of land management,
which will make the final
decision. Both the claimant
and the forest service will
present their testimony at the
hearing.
Brown said that whatever
the decision, the claimant
will retain his mineral rights.
If the decision is in the claim
ant's favor, he also retains
all surface rights.
. v j. JUL i ,i4
Your
Equitable Repieientativt
JIM METZ
1310 Ridgcway
Medford, Oregon
Phone: SPring 2-4294
Put your money to work for you . . . watch it w. Brwuwe
helps in two important ways. First, your savings earn the highest
rate Second they are protected by a 70 year record of sound money
manawment you? money is alway available where and when
u waTlt. Your Equitable man can show you time tested savings
plans . , . to fit any bSdget. any family. It takes only few dollars to
start a high earning Equitable Savings account building up the
money you need for a happier future. mji fc-ifi
Call or write him for the facts. You'll find him friendly, helpful
ami jniurinuuvc.
OPEN AND
SYSTEMATIC SAVINGS
A.P.O. SA VINOS
4 4'2
fQ evrrMt
OPEN AH ACCOUNT N0WI Nwnt tr writ. mi.
I am interested in Equitable Saving! higher earnlnit.
Pie it contact ma lor an appointment.
Equitable' open and systematic savings at 4
earnings.
Equitable's special A.P.O., Automatic PayOff
plan at t'a earnings.
Name .,
lsVINGSt,.LOAN tSSOCIATIOM
I City or Town
II 0H!M ! OrM" Mi WMklntlt.! . )"
Ntt, PMtllriU) Itntorf, Serttrt, SplkiM, iKtmt. IMmt
One of Every 260 Workmen
In Woods Will Be Killed in
Corvallis-One out of every
2V4 workmen in the woods
will be injured this year and
one out of every 280 will be
killed, unless something is
done about it.
With an eye on doing some
thing about it, Oregon's first
Logging Safety Institute was
sponsored this month by the
Oregon State college school of
forestry and the Pacific North
west Loggers association.
Speakers painted a grim
picture of the need for im
proved safety programs. They
noted that 59 loggers were
killed in Oregon last year,
compared to 77 fatal accidents
In all other Industries com
bined. Logging and sawmill
ing, which employs 7.2 per
cent . of the Oregon work
force, has 47 per cent of all
fatal accidents.
At the same time, Institute
leaders pointed the way to
reducing deaths and crippling
and costly injuries. Major
points in "accident preven
tion," they emphasized, in
clude a Bafety . program and
"safety attitude" for every op
eration-llttle and big; safely
inspections: proper selection
placement, and training of em
ployees; accident investiga
tions and reporting; and meas
urement of safety . perform
ance., A moral obligation exists
to prevent injuries to the
workmen and a legal obliga
tion as well because stale law
requires an employer to pro
vide a sate place of employ
ment, R. P. Miller of Inter
national , Paper c o m p n n y,
Longvlew, Wash., emphasized.
The staggering osts in
volved in the sor'y safety
record were outl' 1 1 by K, G.
Green of Hie Oregon stale in
dustrial accident commission
and M. H. Fell of Edward
Hincs Lumber company,
Hincs.
Green reported thai the av
erage cost per claim in log
ging is nearly $050. Indirect
costs of accidents run from
four to six limes that amount
in addition, it was explained.
These include damage to
squipmenl and product, loss
of production lime, lime of
supervisors and olhers in tak
ing care of Ihe injured.
Average Cost
The average cost of acci
dents as estimated by the
Western Pine association is
$2.88 per thousand, Fell said,
and it may be substantially
more lhan thut in fir. .
No logging operator-big or
small-can afford to be with
out a safety program, How
ard W. Peterson, logging man
ager for Crown Zellerbach
Bunker KiSi Co.;
Reports Net Loss
San Francisco - IUPII - The
Bunker Hill company, whose
production wns Interrupted by
strike in lHflO, has reported a
net loss of $4,222,707 for Ihe
year.
The 1980 loss compared
with a profit of $209,172 in
1959.
Heaviest losses, totalling
$3,170,909, were suffered In
the final quarter when the
Kellogg plant In Idaho pro
duced only 1,104 tons of zinc
because of a strike.
Total Income for the year
was $31,358,627, compared
with $46,498,775 the previous
year. The company said all its
plants have been operating
at capacity so far in 1961.
Missionary to Talk
At Lenten Program
Jacksonville - Warren My
ers, a veteran of seven years
of missionary work in Ihe
Orient, will speak at Ihe third
meeting of the Lenten Mis
sion study program at 7;o
o'clock tonight nt the Jack'
onville Presbyterian church
Prior to the main address
by Myers, discussions of the
topic of the evening, "The
World-Wide Appeal of Clirls
tlanity ," will be held.
. Myers originally went to
the Far East in 1952 at the
request of the laic Dawson
Trotman, founder of the Navi
gator's. In the ensuing years,
Myers has worked in Hong
Kong, India, and Vietnam.
His talk will be Illustrated
with color slides.
Oil Industry Leads
Capital Investments '
Chicago-OIPB-The oil indus
try leads the nation in capital
investment, according to Oil
Marketer, an Industry publi
cation. It spends $64,000 per em
ployee compared wllh about
1S,000 for industry in gen
, rai
Russia Claims
Hydrogen Bomb
London-IUPII-Radlo Moscow
has announced that Premier
N i k 1 1 a Khrushchev now
claims Russia invented the
hydrogen bomb.
A broadcast report on a
speech Khrushchev made at
a farm meeting in Moscow
last week quoted him as saying;
"T h c American imperial
ists, having created Ihe atom
ic bomb, began talking about
the creation of a hydrogen
bomb. Our scientists, as the
saying goes, "wound it round
their whiskers , . . and creat
ed the hydrogen bomb before
it was invented in the
U.S.A."
Corporation, Portland, insist
ed.
What can the small logger
do about safety? He can be
his own safety supervisor,
Peterson stressed. He can talk
and act safety on the job; be
sure that his equipment is
in safe operating condition
and that it is properly set up;
be sure that his men have
safety equipment and that
they can use it; and can insist
on safe working practices.
We cannot subscribe to
the philosophy that every so
often someone must be killed
or that for so many thousand
board feet of timber logged
Someone gets hurt," according
to K. L. Gipson, safety di
rector for the Georgia-Pacific,
Portland.
Carefully Considered
Two things must be care
fully considered and checked
each time there's an. accident
-the cause and the cure, he
stated.
, Log truck accidents are gen
erally caused by human error,
not mechanical failure, Dan
B. Cudahy o( Jones Logging
company, Nclscott, reported.
These causes can only be
cured by constant recognition
of the hazards, by daily safe
ty inspections, attention to
equipment, and constant cau
tion. .
Top management must lake
an active part in the develop
ment and operation of the
safely program. It. R. Elliot
of Weyerhaeuser company,
Klamath Falls, stressed. "Ac
cidents are caused and can
be prevented; safety is a mark
of skill and of good sense,"
he summarized.
Robert L. Wilson, forest en
gineering professor, was in
charge of the conference
which will now be an annual
event at Oregon State college.
Vn - - -
Bl 1I9IR1IIBIIIRIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIII1
I Mw HMil
I era l M
M I
3E
Swift's
Mild ROGUE GOLD
if"
iw. v.-i & Uii'
Whole or Shank Half
Bondcss
Fully
S Cccbd
SHAMS
PLUS 50 FREE SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS WITH EACH PURCHASE J
lb.
CHEESE 49
Caveman
BOLOGNA
By the Piece
49V
mam-red Locicer
Cut and Wrapped No Money Down, Up to Four Months To Pay....
41!
Sauce Mix Reg. 25c
I plgs.
FISHER'S
Pancake Mix
4-lfj. Bag
k 4 M &A
t,-aag--.
Honolulu Lady
Pineapple
Juica
12-oz. Size
Can
NowaU she needs is gravy Qailc
for wondeiful gavy every -lime!
Yes, Gravy Quik wakes cooking a pleasure
so fast, so easy with perfect gravy
every time. Just add Loma Linda Gravy
Quik to water, bring to a boil, and there
you have It a smooth, rich, brown, wonderful-tasting
gravy. Low In calories, too,
Just 1 1 per tervlng. At your (ood store,
ANOTHER Or THE FAMOUS
QUALITY SINCC 1906
.. MAXWELL
lA I
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I9t Mb. $125
0 lb. can a
Fireside
VAM3LLA
w;;iff DSS I CCD
7 " 49
Over 90 per Bag
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1202 N. Riverside
H Open Till Midnight I
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rj Silver Dollar Trading Stamps
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ZEE Cnj-LTLTL
Giant Roll ft
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Reg. 35c H
L r C
FRYERS S 11 19
j Each
2V2- to 3-lb. Average
Serve It Com Crispedl
NEW EASY WAY
io fix crisp chicken with
out frying I No shortening,
no turning I
i
Com-CriSped
RECIPE
CORN-CRISPED CHICKEN
2'j to 3-lb. broiler-tryer Chiclen, wf in piaeej
V2 cup PET Evaporated Milk
1 cup Ktllogg's Corn Flake Crumb
1 feasp. Ac'eent
1 leasp. Salt
'd teasp. Pepper
Dip M&m in PET Mill. "Thtn" milk iurt wen'f dot
Roll in rnixkir of crumbt, Ae'ctnt. fait end Bippir.
Ploct chicken in shallow bating pan lintd wild Rtrnotdi
Wrap. Ilhol'i right, no shortening.) lakt in 350 oven
(modcrale) 1 hour, or until drumttick 'a Under.
CHECK OK MARKET'S
QUALITY
PRODUCE!
LETTUCE
for .19c
2
Large Crisp Heads
8
n
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1 p
Continues
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DON'T MISS IT! 8
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NAPKINS
Reg.
2 for 49c
NOW
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2 Lb.
Cello Bags
23
pkg.
1
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CELERY
2 bun. 2 S)
RADISHES AND
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Bunch
Best Foods
Salad Oil
Famous for Quality
LEMONS
Large, Full of Juice doz.
as
Grapefruit, Arizonas
2 LB BAG
1