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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1963)
16 B SUNDAY. JANUARY 6, 1963 MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo T . IHfcN THEY TAKE ONE STEP S55 Ui-t- iwh ESKy AND STAND ROOTED YAK-YAKIN&".. HAVfc r" s I A4 T I . 5 TOSAVTO -ri! LCr-l I A N U EACH OTHER KJi :gL. -y where would how's about up.. f I I First ? ivant to J covers? whatS on I . 'Sl I SEE THE SAME J SALE? SUALL WP J iOii 3T ESCALATOR Ross Willis, if -0,-i: WANTED IN ARKANSAS A 17-year-old girl picked up in Mcdford late Wednesday as a runaway is wanted in Ar kansas on grand larceny charges, authorities have noti fied Jackson county Juvenile officers. The girl is from Bentonville, Ark. Court Records MKDKOHI) MUNICIPAL COUKT i tor's license In possession. $3; dis- J. Bradley Morris, violation of i ODcyea iramc ngnai. io. impro- baafc rule, $10. Marcus Elmo Norton, driving with obstructed vision, $10. Robert Lewis Feebler, violation of basic rule, $10. Walter Edwin Hatch, disobeyed traffic signal. $10. Robert Edward West, no opera- "Mobilheat" The Oil to Burn America's largest Selling Heating Oil MODERN Oil Heited Homes Are Worth More Safer Cleaner Cheaper We Sell end Take Trade-Ins AUTOMATIC Oil FLOOR FURNACES COIEMAN OIL STOVES WARMING MORNING WOOD CIRCULATORS MEDFORD FUEL CO. Court and McAndrews Phone 772-2111 Lilherm Victor Peterson, per right turn, $10. Elmer Fred Peterson, defective equipment, $10. Roger Duane Simpson, improper left turn, $10. Edwin Cull Howell, disobeyed traffic signal, $10. Lorraine Ruth Boris, violation of basic rule, $10. Merle Richard Ware, disobeyed stop sign, $10, Iris Lorene Bennett, violation of basic rule. $25. Elmer James Hopkins, disobeyed traffic signal. $10. Family Council Editor's Nice: The Family Coun ell contiiti of a Judee. a pychta trlst. three cleriynini. a newspaper editor a women's editor, and two writers. Kach article is a summary of an at lual case history. The Council reports on problems that have been avail wnn ay respon sible agencies and counselors, (Copyright 1 i 6 : General Features Corp.) UISIKKT COURT Archie Ren Forbes, violation qf baic rule. $15. John Dole Baucom, improper passing, $H, Arnold R'v Johnson, disobeyed stop sign, $7,50. Richard Vv. Kerns, right turn from wrong lane. $5. Richard W. Kerns, right turn wrong lane, $5. Arnold Ray Johnson, disobeyed top sign, $7.30. John Dnle Baucom, improper passing. $lo, Archie Hne Forbes, violation of basic rule, $15. N orris James Niccum, Corvallis, driving with suspended operator's licetiKo, $50. William Alfred Carrico. no ve hicle license, $5. Earl LChlie Stephenson, ovcr hcicht load. $15 Don Henry Valentine, violation of basic rule. $10. tiaylord r ranees Howard, vio lation of basic rule, $10. Willis Leo Kemper, no vehicle license, $5. William Earl Lock, overheight load. $15. Robert James Hcuman. passing with insufficient clearance. $15. LeRoy J nines Shoppard, viola tion of baste rule. $23. Vernon Ray Stickcl, violation of baste rule. $in. Dean Jacob Hagcn, improper passing, $20. Clarence Francis Conrad, no safrty chains. $10. Jerry Gilbert Runey, overlond, $31. Chester LeRny Ayres, violation of hasic rule. $2.1. C.nrv Lvno Brttt. four in dri ver's seal. $5. t nr( t'linKtm llarirnu trilla f inn of basic rule, $25. Oil, gat, or electricity are all "clean, dependable, efficient and modern" methodi of heating, the difference is money. ARE YOU PAYING MORE FOR HEAT - ENJOYING IT LESS? Add Up Your Savings This Winter and Sec! Heat Costs Less than Gas or Electricity STUDY HOME: Conlcmporary with 3 Bed rooms, 1600 Sq. Fl. LOCATION: Modford and Vicinity HEATING COSTS: Gas Costs 41 More Than Oil Heat COMPARISONS: Electricity Costs 97S MORE Than Oil Heat GET THI FACTS . . . Ak your local oil dealer or writ, the Oil Heat Instilulc. 433 N E. 22nd Ave nue, Portland, for the MATING tNGlNLER STUDY and prove to yourself the FACT is Oil Heat costs less. MEDFORD OIL HEAT DEALERS Kennedy Fuel Co. Modford Fuel Co. Naumes Equip. & Fuel Co. Northwest Heating Oils Olympic Pet. & Equip. Co. McLaren Oil Co. Valley Fuel Co. Western Oil & Burner Co. Faber Fuel Co. Sanner Oil Co. Hillyer Oil Co. Jackson County Co-op Mrs. F.I. - I'm convinced that spanking makes a child sneaky. Mr. F.I. - At least he knows when he's done something wrong. Mrs. F.I. - Our son is 3 years old. If he does some thing wrong my husband asks him if he did it. Naturally the child says no. So my husband spanks him lor lying. Then he makes him say yes he did the naughty thing. And he spunks him again. I can t see the sense of so much spanking. A child grows used to it and doesn't really learn anything for the future. I think ail that Frank is ac complishing is confusing Jay. He'll just lie whenever he thinks he can get away with it. He s not learning right and wrong. He's just learning to hide things irom us. Mr. F.I. - Now is the time to teach a child to tell the truth. You can't do that just by talking to him. What are you supposed to do when a child climbs up for his moth er's hair spray and empties the can by spraying it on him self and the furniture? And then denies it? A youngster must learn discipline. When I spank him he knows he has stepped out of line. And he knows he must respect me when I tell him something. And he learns that he must not lie and make things worse. I think if wc catch Jay up short now when he misbe haves it will save him-from getting into real trouble in his teens. The Council: Spanking usu ally serves only as a good attention-getter for the child, and an anger-outlet for the parent. As for "teaching" psychologists are convinced it teaches, yes, but all the wrong things, crrtainly not what the parent likes to think it teaches. Young Jay Is learning not to get caught. He's learning that parents have bad tem pers, and that fathers are bullies. Mr. I. nopes that spanking will insure that Jay won't take hair spray and mess up the place again. Well, lie may not do that again. But he'll do a dozen other equally adventurous and exciting stunts if he's a normal kid. He'll weigh the consequences and decide, more often than not, to take his chances. Be cause he hasn't learned the fact that Dad's orders are lov ing ones, prompted by pro tcctivencss. With a very young child, occasional spanking may clear the air and, as we've said, bring his attention to his misdred. But investigators have found that routine spank ing merely teaches a child to "go underground." lie re presses his natural responses for a while, but they come out later cither in great wildness as a teen agor and young adult, or in unwarranted bit terness toward others. A very sensitive child may just give up rally on initiative, and tall back on a "dream" lite of in action. What to do? First of all, reduce the temptations to naughtiness. There are toys which offer a child many of , the sensatory "thrills" he gels i from the nuistn't-louch tools I his parents use. Next, be firm and consistent about the few tilings you do insist upon. If you must spank, be sure it's for a reason you can explain : to the child, now or later, I such as danger. Children usu ally obey when they know J why an order is given. Even if young Jay can't understand why, he must feel he gets spanked only for a "capital" offense. The I 's ate good parents. They are offerinu Jay a valu able boon - control. But it will lead to that greater boon, self-control, with less spank ing and more real leaching. Small Worlds Around Us By LYNN M. W ATKINS (Register and Tribune Syndicate, 1963) Horntail, Longtail . . , Now Stranger Habits of Sawfly Having covered some of the strange habits and unusual performances of the horntail and the ichneumon wasps it would only be natural, in the sequence of continuity, to look at the sawfly another pe culiar character with bizarre habits. In fact this creature is downright fantastic. The other two oddballs of inscctdom use a drilling procedure to perforate open ings in plant tissue in which to deposit their eggs, but the sawfly, true to its name, saws the holes instead of drilling them, and therefore becomes somewhat more unusual. Probably you have seen a saw fly some time or other, as they are rather common and there are many species, with out knowing how strange they perform or how different they are from the common ly or familiar bug. Similar to Cricket The sawfly has a stout, plump body, black in color with some yellow markings. It looks something like a cricket in general outline ex cept that the sawfly is equip ped with wings, and, of course, is smaller than the common cricket. In flight the sawfly appears to be laboring to keep aloft, as the body seems heavy. It looks as if there had been a slight mistake made in de signing it, as if the fuselage was a little large for the pow er plant, but with full thrust the creature attains consider able speed and probably can be considered a fast flyer. For the continued survival of the race of sawflies it's a good thing they can fly as fast as they do, for they have a very active enemy, the com mon little bird known as the "flycatcher," whose appetite for sawflies is constant. It lias been estimated these in sects supply at least one-third the bug-intake necessary for appetite satisfaction in these little birds. Even if the adult sawfly escapes the flycatcher, its eggs and larva are apt to be eaten by mockingbirds and a couple of dozen other bird species that help to keep these insects within control lable limits. Grotesque Looking The larva of the sawfly, often destructive when in suf ficient numbers, is a gro tesque looking grub with a greatly enlarged head. Some sawfly larva feed on plant leaves, others work inside twigs and flower stems. Some cause the peculiar, round ball- lake objects commonly known as galls. The female sawfly is sus pected of injecting some sort of fluid into the plant stem when she deposits the egg that causes the plant stem to swell and form the gal!. Open one of the galls and the tiny cater pillar will be found inside. Some species of sawfly lar va are brightly colored green or yellow with black spots. When alarmed they assume strange positions; they have the strange habit of twisting the rear end of the body to one side, or may even wrap it around the twig on which they are feeding. However, the actions of the larva, as well as their do- FIRM GUILTY Washington -1TI'- The Na- linnal Labor Relations hoard Friday ruled the Victory Plating Works. Inc. of Port land guilty of unfair labor practices in liltil NAME D iTnsT 1,1 1 iZ E N Portland U'H Curlnnd P. (Cork) Mobley, Xr. has been named Portland Junior First Citizen of 19H2. Labor Will Ask Increased Benefits Portland - (VPI) - Organized labor will ask the 1963 Ore gon Legislature for increased financial benefits for injured and unemployed workers according to executive sccrc' tarv James T. Marr of the Oregon AFL-CIO. In a speech to the Oregon Building Congress here. Marr urged that unemeployiucnt benefits be raised to 50 per cent of the state's average weekly wage. State law indicates a single man is entitled to 50 per cent of his wages and a married man 60 per cent if he is in jured. Marr said. Instead, he contended, the single man now is receiving only 32 per cent and the married man 39 per cent. Marr also plugged for aotop tion of changes in the stale's workmen's compensation law which were recommended by ! a special governor's commit- tec. Kennedy Fuel Oil Offering the best in: Oil Heating Equipment Fuel Oil Oil Burner Service Dial 779-1515 struclivencss, strange as that is, must of course take third or fourth place to the stranger method the female uses In her method of oviposition. Here is where the name sawfly has a meaning, for she really does saw a hole in the plant stem. In the place where-hcr tail out to be is the complex little saw. Capl. Perl Among Course Graduates Capt. William F. Perl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Perl, 1909 East Main St.. Mcdford, is one of nine 49th tactical fighter wing officers in the Air Force stationed at Spang dahlem, Germany, who has completed the new Air Force method of language study recently conducted there. The 85-hour German lan guage course was given in four-hour daily classes, Mon day through Friday, and was designed to evaluate the stu dents' learning ability under the concentrated program as opposed to the more normal two-hours-a-day program. This is the first group to start the new audio -lingual language program and the first experimental class to graduate under the new Air Force program of the two language proficiency. As such, they are the first graduates of this type course in the en tire Air Force. LOOKING FOR STATUE Haverhill, Mass. -IUPIi- Po lice have asked for public aid in their search for the thief who stole a $250 statue from the Penlucket club a week ago. The statue is called "Di ogenes and Lighted Lantern in Search of an Honest Man." Drive-In Restaurant In CP Burglarized Central Point The Burger Drive-In restaurant, Central Point, was broken into Friday for the second time, Central Point police reported. Thieves took approximately S15 from a vending machine and music box. The cigarette machine was damaged when thieves attempted to get ci garettes from it, police said. Entrance was gained by prying open the rear door, ac cording to Central Point Po lice Officer William Russell. Earlier in the week thieves broke into the restaurant, but nothing was taken then. Owner is Larry Finnell. luj (inn ft f'lIM Urn hww -CMi' ' hm I'll iWMM$$ , ' ; kirn wi i I h ! ( . i i I - t 4 , , 1 i ; vv w .'7 I : ik'ti j 1 1 Cil i S kill Ub t ih ffl l j - f I f jivL. i nt' " I I t s4 .J f . i lllj Ill' ft m H " H rM H H 1 11 i I J i - J t L .t. L. 1 LLI 1 i 1 J i I I j l ; I in" '' "' " ' T 15!!x''M w J 4 vnii PAY ONLY l I 1 alu0 1 I During Sealy's 1 1 82nd AnnWetwySal Ss I II J mi (Qood HcHjMkeeplngj I 1 1 M . tviMt'iii ..y I up MnmiHBii Sealy's tremendous buying power and stepped-up production for this Anniversary event made it possible to drop the price to $39.88 ... and you save $20 in the bargain! You get all the same $59.95 inner construc tion features sturdy innerspring unit, smooth button-free surface and a beauti ful, brand new woven stripe ticking. Buy now and take advantage of this once-a-1 year Sealy sale. Don't delay; at $20 off quantities will be limited. $59.95 Health Flex innerspring unit has hundreds of tempered steel coils Button-free surface has no bumps or lumps to disturb your rest New, full 8-oi. woven stripe cover is extra durable for years of extra wear SPECIAL TWIN SIZED Lomplere box spring and Mattress and Headboard & Legs ONLY SAVE AT GATES BECAUSE YOU'RE PROVIDED WITH: Personalized Credit Free Offstreet Parking FREE Delivery Service No Finance Company Member AFA 400 Store Buying Power PHONE 772-4153 unnnaiittimiioJ3 MEDFORD GRANTS PASS FREE PARKING 341 N. Central Beside the Store Between 3rd ft 4th Sts.