Locals
Fait Alarm Medford
Bremen received a report at
3:58 p.m. Wednesday that
there was a house lire at the
residence of Ralph E. Cross,
1892 Delta Waters rd. There
was no fire.
Convalescing Mrs. Bob
Napolitano. 3099 East McAn
drews rd., Medford, and Mrs.
Wayne Birkland, 415 Western
ave., Medford, are convales
cing at their homes following
surgery and treatment at
Rogue Valley hospital.
Accident A car operated
by Robert Leland Bennett, 34,
of route 2, box 196S, Central
Point, was damaged Wednes
day morning after it went
into a ditch on Table Rock rd.
near the freeway overpass to
avoid hitting another car,
Oregon state police reported.
The operator of the other ve
hicle was Karen Marie Wolk
Laniewski, 28, of 3087 Table
Rock rd. The two vehicles did
not hit, police said.
Concert Tonight The Ash
land city band will present
a concert at 7:30 o'clock to
night in the Butler Band shell
in Lithia park. The concert
will be over in time for those
attending to also attend the
Oregon Shakespearean Festi
val play.
Patient Convalescing at
Rogue Valley hospital follow
ing surgery is Mrs. William
O. Friend, 435 West Gregory
rd., Central Point.
BUTTS To Mr. and Mrs.
Norman, 2569 Sunnyview
ave., Medford, June 20. 1962,
a girl, 6l? pounds, at Crater
Osteopathic hospital.
SYKES To Mr. and Mrs.
James John, route 2, box 66S,
Wilson lane, Central Point,
July 23, 1962, a boy, 7 pounds
at Rogue'Valley hospital.
WARNER To Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Gene, 1917 Roberts
rd., Medford, July 24, 1962,
a boy, 6Vi pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
MEYER To Mr. and Mrs.
Michael D., Star route, box
456. Shady Cove, July 24.
1962. a girl, 8 pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
CROW To Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Stanford, 108 South
Keeneway dr., Medford, July
25, 1962, a girl, 5Vi pounds,
at Rogue Valley hospital.
DURHAM To Mr. and Mrs.
Bobbie D.. 929 Bcall lane,
Medford, July 18, 1962. a
boy, 73-i pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
ALLEN To Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar R 939 B St., Ashland,
July 20, 1962, a girl. 7Vi
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital. GIBSON To Mr. and Mrs.
LaVerne, 3653 South Pacific
highway, Medford, July 20,
1962. a girl, 6 pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
READIED COMPROMISE
Washington -IUPH- A confer
ence committee Wednesday
readied a compromise $3,744,
115,250 space authorization
bill for final House and Sen
ate action next week. It in
cludes most of what the Na
tional Aeronautics and Space
Administration wanted, in
cluding about $1.3 billion for
manned space flight.
I SHOW
I STARTS
8 P.M.
I ITIII
7,,A B.UJJ
ctc
"THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF THE YEAR
...RIPS THE HEART!"
BOSLEY CROWTHEH, NEW YORK TIMES
9m fu- prv m&r
OTTO
PAUL NEWMAN EVA MARIE SAINT
RALPH RICHARDSON PETER LAWF0RD
LEE J.COBBSAL MINEOJOHN DEREK
JILL
!'P(piVv I NlW TfHJVtO
CNtS' OCLO O?0GAlD ' SU
A UN'TL'( TltTI REiUM
ADDED ATTRACTION ON
Festival
Plays
T o n i g ht: "Henry IV.
Part II"
Friday: "Ai You Like
It"
Saturday: "Coriolanui"
Sunday: "Comedy of
Errori"
Curtain time: 8:30 p.m.
Obituaries
DAVID A. SCHATZ
David A. Sc h a t z died
yesterday at his home, 115
Elm St., Medford. Funeral
arrangements will be an
nounced by Conger-Morris
Funeral directors.
MRS. CHARLES WILLIAMS
Mrs. Charles H. (Laura)
Williams, 902 Maple Park
dr., Medford. died yesterday
in a local hospital. Funeral
arrangements are entrusted
to Siskiyou Funeral Service
directors of the Chapel in the
Trees Mortuary.
Capitalistic Collectivism Tried
In Spain's Largest
By FRANK BARTHOLOMEW
United Press International
Seville, Spain-lUPl)-A capi
talistic version of commu
nism's .formula for collectiv
ism of farms is under way in
Spairi's largest province.
Results so far, at least to
the eye of the casual visitor,
would seem to be little short
of miraculous.
The province is Badajoz, the
dust bowl of Spain for many
generations.
The program at its incep
tion 10 years ago followed the
classic first moves of commu
nism. Arid table-land on the
Extrcmadura plateau, to the
extent of 323,875 acres, was
taken over by the govern
ment from private owners
who had been dry-farming it
as best they could.
Here the Spanish formula
did a complete reversal from
phase two of the communist
plan for requiring the peas
ants to work state-owned land
as employees of the state.
The Spanish government
irrigated the vast barren area
by harnessing the Guadiana
river to over 3,000 miles of
canals and irrigation ditches.
It paid off the original owners
their non-productive areas in
equivalent value of irrigated
lands.
All former owners were
thus resettled on smaller area
holdings, but with an increase
in agricultural output of over
1000 per cent because of irri
gation. There was enough irrigated
area left over from this com
pensation formula to bring in
an additional 3,800 farming
families to the newly-green
land. They are still coming
in. The population decline of
Badajoz which had been go
ing on for centuries because
the land itself was worked
out and dying, has reversed
itself. The "Badajoz plan"
will have room for another
3,200 farming families as land
reclamation continues over
the next eight years.
A separate industrial phase
of the program, which in to
tal is by far the most ambi
tious ever attempted in
Spain's long history, uses the
dams which have impounded
3 billion cubic yards of the
Guadiana river for power as
"EXODUS" ON SCREEN ONCE
ONLY EACH NITE AT 8:55 P.M.
I
PREMINGER PRESENTS
HAW0RTH
U0 ON TMt HOvIl Y LION UH1 UUHC I'
MNvtrON TO. TtCMHiCOtOM r kU lUwTT
POOUCtD AND 0"CCTD I OTTO PtUin$l
SCREEN P.M. t 12:45 A.M.
1'lL.Vt
. ' : :;r M f x V "
ff- -"i nil i ii r i rent ii - - - 1 ' f ' -" ii.nfl ""' ti -V j mm
PRINCE CONFIRMED - Swedish Crown
Prince Carl Gustaf, center, poses with his
grandfather, King Gustaf Adolf, and his
well as irrigation.
Private investment has been
urged to take part in the in
dustrial phase, with the gov
ernment taking up the slack.
Stars of Ice Show
Winter in Summer
By VERNON SCOTT
UPI Hollywood
Correspondent
Hollywood -IUPII- Show biz
has its kookie aspects, even
in the cool world of profes
sional ice skating.
To wit: The circus winters
in Florida. Movie stars- take
to Palm Springs. Rodeo rid
ers spend the cold months in
traction and baseball players
head for Latin America.
But ice skaters "winter" in
the summer.
Following a 60-city tour
across the country in slush,
sleet and snow, stars of the
Ice Capades wind up in Hol
lywood, home of the glitter
ing show, to thaw out their
chilblains.
Their respite, however, is
brief, barely giving the skat
ers time to lose the blue tinge
resulting from months on ice.
After a few weeks vaca
tion, in June and July, the Ice
Capade troupe reassembles in
Atlantic City, N.J., to begin
the cycle all over again in
what amounts to "spring
training" in August.
August Rehearsals
For six weeks stars and
chorus lines rehearse new
routines in the famed summer
resort during the cay and
perform for paying custom
ers at night. The show pro
vides an excellent escape
from those muggy New Jer
sey evenings.
This year the Ice Capades,
still playing it cool, swiped a
page from Broadway tradi
tion in its own version of a
frozen Cinderella story.
You know the old one
about the pretty girl in the
chorus praying for her big
chance. Then the star runs
off with the guy in the sial
act and little Miss Hopeful
is given the starring role and
becomes an overnight sensa
tion. Well, it happened to Lynn
(Patsy) Finnegan, a 19-year-
rjnwi Doors
llUfif! Show
RfMRFRSfc .
HAMMERSTEIN'SP f 9
ML 1
Y
r
TATE wAIK
PAT BOONE-BOBBY DARIN
PAMELA TIFFIN -ANN-MARGRET
TOM EWELL
ALICE FAYE
CHARLES BRACKEH
JOSE FERRER
Plui Fast Guru and
"THE BROKEN
KJtU MAIL llilUUHLi I'lLffOnU, UnfeUUf
mother. Princess Sibylla, after his con
firmation in Stockholm. (UP1)
Province
Twelve new townships have
been built through the prov
ince and industries establish
ed for processing the farm
products. Eighty thousand
old New York beauty, last
March immediately after the
troupe escaped from the rig
ors of Chicago.
But the featured star, Ca
thy Machado, did not elope
with the seal trainer. The Ice
Capades get along somehow
without a seal act. Cathy al
ready was married and in
formed producer John Harris
that she was expecting a little
ice skater of her own.
And, as happens in all
good Cinderella storiej, pert
Miss Finnegan had but two
days to prepare herself for
the big moment.
Smash Hit
The Irish beauty glided on
to the ice and was an instant
smash, so much so there was
momentary concern that her
torrid twirling might melt
the ice.
"I was delighted, the blue
eyed brunette recalled. "But
I must admit 1 was shaking
inside. If it hadn't been for
Cathy, who calmed me down,
I'm not sure I could have
made it."
But after "wintering" this
summer and the birth of Ca
thy's baby, will Cinderella
Finnegan's coach and horses
revert to igloo and huskies as
in the age-old tale?
Will Palsy return to the
chorus?
"No.'' says producer Har
ris. "There is no rivalry be
tween Patsy and Cathy.
They're both wonderful girls
and we will have enough fea
tured spots in our 23rd an
nual edition of Ice Capades
for both."
All that is needed now is
a socko finish to the Cinder
ella story - the Prince. Patsy
blew the happy ending bit by
admitting there was no Prince
Charming with a skate to fit
her dainty foot.
"Go?h no," Patsy said. "I
don't even have a boy friend.
I'm loo busy learning the
skating business."
Pen al 6:45
Starts at 7:00
v.. i
mmm
B L J id-: . M
ONlw5eoe COLO by DE LUXE
Outlaw Venence!
LAND"
COLOR
CINEMASCOPC
tons of foodstuffs from the
new farms are already proc
essed annually within the
province itself.
New plants include two
linen factories with a third
under construction; two cot
ton ginning plants with two
more being built; two spin
ning factories with a total of
30,000 spindles in operation
and a third under construc
tion which will bring the total
to 45.000 spindles.
Other new manufactures
include fertilizers and super
phosphates for the new home
steads, factories producing
construction materials with
the further extension of the
Badajoz plan itself as initial
customer for cement, steel
and electric power.
Historic isolation of Bada
joz from the rest of Spain is
ending with the construction
of 850 miles of new roads and
almost the identical mileage
in additional rail line exten
sions to carry the newly cre
ated exports to market.
Of especial interest to the
visitor making the 150-mile
trip inland from Seville to
Terremayor, Guadiana del
Caudillo and others of the
new central towns, is the
spirit of the people and the
obvious reversal of the drain
on the population which has
steadily impoverished the re
gion over the years.
Each newly arriving home
steader gels a 10 or 12-acre
irrigated farm. He is furnish
ed with a house and an acre-and-a-half
kitchen garden. He
is also furnished with initial
stocking of farm animals.
During the first five years he
works under partnership con
tract with the National Land
Settlement institute and is re
quired to repay the govern
ment for his farming tools
and livestock. Al the end of
the five-year "screening peri
od," he becomes a capitalistic
farmer with title to his land,
with 60 per cent of the value
of the land to be repaid to the
Plan over a period ranging
from 24 to 30 additional years.
Portland Produce
The following price quotation
are from th Aprtcullnre Marketing
Service of the U.S Department of
Agriculture in Portland.
Errs: Prfcei to rctatlen, cartons.
X Jarpe AA 46-52; large AA 4.1
4ft; large A 42-45: mrrlium AA
41: small AA 27-33. Prices V) pro
ducers: X larfte AA .t4-:i71,: large
A A 3n-3.Vj: Urge A 2B-32- pt
rtium AA 22-27'a; imill AA iE-
Butler: Pricr.i to r.-inllrrs. No 1
prints delivered. AA and A 66,
D fi.V
I Poultry Price to retailors, de
livered. ft,r grade A qualitv. irven.
whole 32-33. cut up .18-42' liRht
type hens, whole 23-2fl. cut up 2fi
34; nrvy tpf hens, whole 3fc-3!.
Weather
KOItKC ARTS
Medlord and vicinity: Continued
fair, hot, and dry through Friday.
Low tonight 55, high Fridty 100.
Western Orejron: Fair and con
tinued quite warm tonight and
Friday, exrepl night and morning
cloud and fog along the coast.
High both days B8-f8 over the in
terior, (i2-RR on the must. Low
tonight 52-5R. Cntstnl winds In the
afternoons and small era If warn
ing displayed
Northrrn California 1 Fair to
night and Friday. Continued warm.
I.OI AI, II A T A
TEMPERATURE- Mean yester
day 7f, ahovr normal O
Record high this date 10S In
Ift.i
Rerorrt low thi date 41 In lftlfl
PRECIPITATION 24 hours to
midnight none Midnight to 10
a m . none.
Total this month, trace. 0 lfl inch
below normal
Total since Sept. 1. 15 W. Inches.
2 58 inrhf he low normal
HUMIDITY, lowest vesterday
18 . highest this a m 77
Mich 4:00 24-
CITY Vester- a m. hr.
dsy l.nw Prer.
Brookings fij so
Cratrr Lak 77 47 ,0S
Grants Pjm .. fin .",7
Howard Prmne 87 4fi
Klamnth falls 87 .12
MEDFORD inn 5ft
, Portland 88 58
' Seattle " 85 5!t
Spokane f)7 .01
Yakima 10) 70
Furtk
S2
71
R"rt Hinff mi
Sarrarrrnto . . 04
San Franrisco .. .. 81
Los Arteries 80
Phoenix in7
fifnvrr , Aft
C hlraeo fto
Miami Ilrsrh W
Students
Relations
New York - 01PII - An inter-
national exchange of tape-recorded
messages and songs be
tween several hundred Ameri
can high schools and a simi
lar number of schools in
nearly 50 foreign countries
giving students "under
standing and a sense of di
plomacy," according to edu-
Durno Accused
Of Doubletalk
Baker - IUPH - Officers of
the Baker Valley Irrigation
District have accused Rep.
Edwin Durno (R-Ore.) of a
little doubletalk.
Their remarks followed
Durno's recent opposition in
Washington, D.C., to a bill
providing $6 million for the
Baker irrigation project. The
House Interior Committee ap
proved the proposal anyway.
Irrigation district president
Alvin Ward said the commit
tee's minority report, signed
by Durno, is an "attack on
reclamation."
Ward said Durno never in
dicated opposition to the pro
ject before, and, "in fact, is on
record through correspond,
ence as supporting the pro
ject and made it clear, when
he was in Baker, speaking
at a breakfast session May
9, that he aws not opposed
to it.'"
School Children's
Hearing Tested
Portland - flJPI) - The Ore
gon Slate Board of Health
said todav it tested more than
175,000 Oregon children for
hearing last school year and
some four per cent were re-1
ferred for diagnosis and treat
ment, i
The health board said the
most common causes of loss
of hearing in children are en
larged or infected tonsils and
adenoids, obstructions in the
car canal, middle ear infec
tions, abnormal eardrums
and diseases in the nose and
throat.
Oregon is one of the first
states in the nation to carry
on a pre-school hearing test
ing program, the health board
said.
Youth Fined lor
Tossing Cigarette
Larry Homer Wyatl, IB, of
565 Diamond st., Medford,
was fined $50 in Jackson
county district court today by
Judge L. L. Sawyer for throw
ing burning material on a pub
lic highway.
Wyatt was cited by Oregon
state police, after he was ob
served throwing a lighted cig
arette out of the left side win
dow of his car along High
way 99. Police said that the
highway was bordered by dry
grass.
Wyatt will work out his fine
by working 20 hours in the
area's parks.
ON CARRIER
Two Medford men are
serving aboard the anti-sub
marine warfare support air
craft carrier USS Hornet
which has joined the Seventh
fleet in the Western Pacific.
Clifford A. Coiner, fireman
apprentice, USN, Is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Clair M. Coi
ner, 129 Tafl St., and Warren
K. Blessing, electrician's
mate third class, USN, is the
son of Mrs. Marie Blessing of
18B5 Barnelt rd., Medford.
Their ship is on a routine
overseas deployment and will
participate in training exer
cises and goodwill visits
while in the Far East.
SUB TO BE CHRISTENED
Newport News, Va. - H'PH -The
Polaris submarine James
Monroe, fifth of a new class
of undersea warships to be
armed with the advanced
1,500-mile ranjfe Polaris mis
siles, will be christened here
Aug. 4 by Mrs. Roswell L.
Gilpalric, wife of the deputy
defense secretary.
BAT-JULY 28
Elks Jazz Festival
Elks Picnic Grounds 7 'til 2
featuring
BILL BORCHERS
OREGON JAZZ BAND
and
BOB ANDERSON TRIO
DINNER DANCING
FUN FOR ALL
Elks & Guests $1.00 Per Person
Improve
Through
cators directing the project.
The program, conducted by
Scholastic magazines with the
cooperation of the United
States Information agency,
was started last fall as the
"Living Letters" tape ex
change. Its sponsors, assess
ing results, predicted even
wider interest in the project
in the 1962-83 school year.
When the program was
launched, Edward R. Murrow,
US1A director, said "schools
of our country can make a
I genuine contribution to the
development of mutual under
standing with other nations."
After an exchange of tape
between eight girl "diplo
mats" at St. Clare High
school in Roslindale, Mass.,
and students at St. Mary's
Secondary school in Accra,
Ghana, Richard C. Wooton,
a US1A aide, said in a letter
to Sister Mary Cornelia of
St. Clare's there had been a
"steady stream of articles
critical of the United States
in the Ghana press and on
the radio in recent months."
But, he added:
"The account of your tape
exchange with St. Mary's is
one of the friendliest items to
appear there for a long time
. . . Your government there
fore is particularly grateful
to you for your participation
in the program."
New Jersey's Mont c I a 1 r
High school was the first
Investment Funds
Noon quotation on taltettd
locks-
Fund niri Askfd
Bullock 11.44 12 54
Chemical Fund 9.17 9.97
Colonial Encr .. 10. 4n 11.37
Eaton Howard Stk 11.8.1 12. 57
Fidelity 1363 14.74
Fundamental Invent. 8.22 9.01
Croup Sec Avta Elec 6.29 fi.90
GroupSec Com Stk 11.46 12.55
Group Sec Petr .... 10.31 11.29
Keystone R-3 14.66 16.0(1
Keystone B-4 8.96 9.78
Kcy.tone K-2 4.43 4. 84
Keystone S-l 18.97 20.70
KeystoneS-2 10.78 11.77
Keystone S-3 1184 12.112
Keystone S-4 .. . 3.57 3 90
Mass lnv Grin Stk. 6.71 7.33
National Growth .. . A.7R 7.41
Stocks 15 57 16.84
TV-Elec 8.71 7 31
United Accum 12.10 13.22
United Canada . . 15.27 16.60
United Continental.. 5.98 6.54
United Income 10.56 11.54
United Science 5 59 6.11
Value Line lnc 4.83 5.28
Variable 5.49 5.94
Wellington 13.29 14.49
Over-the-Counter
Western Stocks
HV United Press International
Bank of America ,
Cal. Phc. IMil
Con. Freinhl
Cyprus Mines
Equitable S. At L. .
First National Bank
..22'.
20
34't
Jantzen 27
Morrison Knudsen 31
Mult. Kennels A
N.W. Natural Gas 27',
Oregon Metallurgical .... I '
PP. & L 24
PGE 23 j
U.S. National Bank fi7
United Uill. 27
West Coast Tel 17'i
Weyerhaeuser 23 '
3.V.
29'4
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPI t USD A Cattle
50. Cutter and utility cows 11.50
15: slaughter hulls weak; scattered
sales other clnsses mostly steady.
Calves 25. Good and choire veal
ers and slaughter 24-27; utility and
Standard 17-21.
Mors an. l rnoe pooriy leaien.
Sheco 100. Sarins feeder iambs
steady to weak.
772-6424
NOW SHOWING
A Bright New Summer Hitl
7:00 and 9:30 P.M.
.In w
nair wsney
MAOMURRAY- WVMWI
CALIM VMI1EY uchn.color
When these fun kwing American! arrive. I
' ' T? MIS I
inonouAl, JUL ao.
International
Recordings
American school to part id-,
pate in the "Living Letters"
project. Their tape recording
went to the Hailc Selassie No.
1 Secondary school in Asmara,
Ethiopia.
Thomas Horn, of Vicks
burg, Mich., High school said
his students have completed
two tapes for Osahlga Oka
High school in Hakkaido, Ja
pan. Student Interest
"Never In my four years of
teaching," Horn said, "have
my pupils been more interest
ed in a foreign country."
A lively tape was sent to a
school in Horn, Austria, by
five students at River Dell
Regional High school, Ora
dell, N.J. It began with a
musical salutation, "Getting
to Know You," included a de
scription of the school and
community, and closed with
Auf wiedcrsehen."
Miss Katherine Krissey of
Karwood Girls school In , Al
buquerque. N.M., said her stu
dents corresponded with Sap
poro Kita High school, Sap
poro, Japan, and were thrill
ed to make their own tape
and to receive one from Ja-1
pan.
In Viroqua, Wis., Richard
A. Roble said his students cor
responded by "Living Letter"
with Haydarpasa Boys ly
cecm, Istanbul, Turkey. They
told of the wonders of Wis
consin farming and winter
sports and asked Istanbul stu
dents to tell them about their
city and country.
In Vallcjo, Calif., Harry
Gray said his students have
sent a tape to Sinsen High
school in Oslo, Norway.
"The word got around
about this project," Gray
said, "and many students have
applied to take part In future
recordings."
Monroe County High
school, Monroevllle, Ala., has
been corresponding with a
city half-way around the
FAMILY
DINNERS
WEDNESDAY NITES
Makt Rtservationt
Early
Phont Toll Station No.
Lakt O'
ELVIS
PRESLEY
FOLLOW
THAT
DREAR9
, ARTHUR 0'CONNELL
I ANNE HUM JOANNA MOORF
" HOatH fWlfie KB5HWAY
A UA CAR L0AD,i
fy DRIVE-IN k
J!l fWTM pacific mmmll.
Hasti ! iisfni
im
WOW! WOW! WOW!
HERE SHE IS
BRIGETTE BARDOT
IN A SENSATIONAL RIOT!
"THE TRUTH"
YOU CAN'T IMAGINE WHAT
YOU'LL SEE AND HEAR
and
a Hilarious Romp
Bill (Wee Gordie) Travers
"MATING TIME"
AND ALL AT ONLY
$1.00 PER CARLOAD
laoi
world - Ashwood High school
in Victoria, Australia.
SHAKEY'S
PIZZA PARLOR
TRY OUR FAMOUS
PIZZA SUPREME
MADE WITH 7 KINDS
OF CHEESE, BAKED
IN 750 OVENS
FRIENDLY FAMILY
ATMOSPHERE
Large or Small Parties
ALWAYS WELCOME
OPEN NOON
DAILY
ORDERS TO GO
773-7721
BETWEEN RIVERSIDE AND
CENTRAL ON EAST JACKSON
215 E. JACKSON
MEDFORD
Take a Scenic Drive to
Lake .f Woods
Enjoy
DINNER OUT
RESTAURANT OPEN
DAILY 7 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
Saturdays 'Til 10. P.M.
Tak Ih Dead Indian Road
38 Milts from Ashland
1 Lakt of tho Woods Ratort
Woods Ortgon
NOW! NOW!
WHAT A SHOW
PERFECT ENTERTAINMENT
FOR EVERYONE
I Aj:..JAssS-. .1
IfflUOBEICEHIIBHTE-
... H TlKHESSEE WllilAMS
St ( IsitoTm kill !,-!?,.
9l IMt lam
LAST TIMES
TOtllTE
IN
mm
'1 WaKbinwron. O C. ?