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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1963)
;10 A FRIDAY. JULY 12. 1963 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON TheyH Do It Every Time i.m. By Jimmy Hado , Ar THE 6UE5T BANQUET, SPEAKER DRA6EOPE WAS IN FINE FETTLE, SO SAV ALL TWE APPRECIATIVE LISTENERS- S CON&PATCW, Ci VOU TALKED TOO fcF"?!-. 6REAT I S" DRAdOV.' VOL! f I ( LONG.' 7CO LOUD.'.' VOU t Lraaa SPEECH, (BEST jUJAD'EM HANOIN'I I INSULTED THE MAVOR'S J ; mmm :DpAGt?OPE J I ON EVERY -A-1 I WIFE.'.' THOSE JOKES v- REALXV Jl EVEU IVWORD.' I-- . WERE ATROCIOUS- ) . J Rjjl TASTE.'ETC ' ' .tj All except one, that is- his welterwek3mt is a verv tou&h audience dca6ropewise - Dennis the Menace , Ou6 -weJASryiNR we Are at their HOUSEyTHEy OWr HAVE NO. CATSUP : The Family Council tdltor't no's: The famllr Council consists of a frnychlatrlst, thrf s clergymen, three edlturi and a women's editor. Karh arUcte le a nummary of a family dlsasreepienl presentee to tilt Council. Tile Council deal! with problem, .major and minor, mcjuntarfld by guidance counselor! and nodal workeri. edited by Mrs. Alma Dewy. (Copyright oearral restores Corp.) Judith P .-Instead ol thrash ing things out he hides In the den. . - Oscar P.-I know I'm right but I'm not a skillful debater like her. , Judith P.-How can we ever settle anything when he re fuses to discuss it? He's con stantly finding fault with the way I do things, but when I try to explain or even ask him how he.'d like me to do dif ferently, he vanishes behind lock and key. We've been married only eight months and the disagreements are piling up. I'd rather fight now than later, in front of the baby we expect. , Oscar P.-1'm not the gold-en-tongued orator Judy is. 1 don't know all the big words, so I can't get anywhere in making her change her ways. I try to tell her it's an extrava gance to drive 10 miles to buy roadside tomatoes, but she goes into her college speech about "power-mad", and my "ego-expression." I can't win with her because she refuses to think. She Just talks non sense. e The Council - Obviously nothing can be settled with "the little man who isn't there," as any lawyer waving his precious habeas corpus will tell us. A refusal to argue, Oscar, is generally deemed a losing of the argument by default. It's a bad habit to get into this early in marriage, for it buries resentments instead of airing and releasing them and these resentments, like undigested particles which ac cumulate over the years Into gallstones, bog down an otherwise healthy relation ship . . . Is It really tongue-tie that makes you flee,- or a chance that you may ' be wrong? Is your ego so wobbly that it can't stand up to a dis agreement? If so, you need help, possibly , professional help. In developing inner poise and peace . . . After that comes, take heart. Quarrels, say the experts, are good for a marriage when they're con structive.' In "The Art- of Staying Happily Married," ur. Robert W. Burns even tells couples how to quarrel therapeutically. "Put . your arms around each other," he advises, "to show acceptance." But then, Judith, speak up and stop In time to let a healthy dialogue rise to a harmonious duet. PUC Fights Rail Rate Division Salem - (UPD - The State Public Utility commis s i o n Wednesday took another step in its nine-year fight to pre vent the Interstate Commerce commission from allowing Eastern railroads to siphon off revenue now going , to Western lines. Commissioner Joncl C. Hill announced that Jack Weisser, aslstant attorney general as signed to his staff, has filed an intervention on behalf of the Western states and was to appear in Federal court in Los Angeles today. Hill said Weisser will support the Mountain-Pacific railroads' request for an injunction to prevent an ICC order setting up new basis for divisions of revenue from going into effect. Hill said it is estimated that the proposed order would di vert $50 million in Western lines' annual revenue to East ern and Midwestern rail lines by allowing them substantial incresaes in their divisions of revenues on transcontinental rail traffic. . . "If the order goes into ef fect shippers in Oregon and other Western states will ulti mately bear the brunt of the $bo million revenue loss," he declared. Hill charged the ICC was using outdated Information to draft the new rate divisions. Seattle Man Buys Pilot Buffs Inn Bend-OIFD-Martln T. Byrne, Seattle, purchased the historic Pilot Butte Inn Thursday for $30,000 at a public auction. Use Remnants Court Records MKoronn municipal court Lowell Edward Tucker, vlolttlinn of twite rule. $10. Carolyn Marie Rlechera, viola tion of basic rule. ao. Mary Bulah Caual, violation or banlc rule, 110. Colburn Leroy Barrel) , excel live nolae. 110. Can William rotter, traffic signal, 910. Starah Loulae dltobeyed violation Jackaon. of baalc rule. $10. Herman Alon Stone, disobeyed traffic signal. $10. Phyllis lona Schrneder, viola tion of baste rule, $10. MftTRICT COURT James Madison Broch, disobey ed stop sign, $9. Boyd Julius Jackson, exceeded baa limit, $23. Walter Dudley Curl, expired vehicle license. $.1. Doyne Wanell Hall, , no vehicle license. $V Brent David Mitchell, no vehicle license, $3. June K. Hosklna, obstructed vis ion, tfl. David Gregg Beard, leaking load, Lloyd Alon Shreeve, no safety chain. $3. Mary Anne Bush, failure to slop. Rex Alvln Nlcodemus, 4. of 430 Norm urape si., driving wntie under the Influence of Intoxicating liquor, ou aeys in county jau liMTSTAR GAZER?? '476-77 jf iausui 21 f 7.19-30-41 1-H55-W V 47-5849 canoe. tm juniJJ JULY 24 h a-TMM. arl?-14-4 BtCUYIIOLLAN- H Your Ooir Acftnrr Guide X r According to the Store. ' To develop mauogt for Saturday, rood words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. orf2 4-25-33-44, fe445-)M3' I Foro 2 'rend 3Rrlortv 4Guor! 5N 6Ol0ren 7(.ller Good ? Hei IO lo. 1 1 Wait HYoo 13 You've UPort l5Ju 16 Jot 17Doy UOr ItAwO TOFrand 3llMemr Z2Aoial 23 KM 24 The 25 Your MA 37Doo 28 For y In-lew JJFor (S)Geai at Or .12Na 33Th.lt 34 And 3iW.lt 36 Futi 37 little .It Noin 3CrttMio 40 Ho. 41 Ettartcttno 42 ChotrM 43FilendaSID 44F.ro 45 And 46 0Merva 47 Beg.no ' 411 Longer 4 For NflFlon. 51 HoKhtohty 5?YoungMor UHepwneu 54 Aral 55 Fldorh 56 The 37 A SITo W6.lom 60iel 61 6? And 63L.lt. 64 1, 5Lo 66Pnen 7Wor enchomie 69 Bnghlen 70Futum 71 Or 72Vidrln( 73 Or 74P,t 75 IndKOted 76 ttfdvir. 77 AllonlMrt 7 R.lerenoa 79 Gill 50 Of 51 W.rh 2 Your RiVokMblet 14 Spir.t. S5Awonincj 66 0rhm 7 You HOI 9 wide 90 Atnwtphere OCT. 14 140V. .9fi.1l JO, )Aamat )ncu&1 saairTAiius NOV. ore 177 rlt-70.78 . CAmcotN D4. 21 S JAN. VijM 7-13-31501 U5-J6-67 V4 'AM;2I fi Fta. n lus 0-2IJ2-43C-I 1J3-64-73 A mas '; "r uwi 21 C.T '4I.JM7J9SJJ Bodies of Three Children Found in Arizona Forest Stockton, Call. - IUH) - The ,'oster mother of three missing .hildren positively identified '.hem Thursday as the: young iters found shot to death in d northern Arizona forest. Police Chief Jack O'Keefe of Stockton, said the identili cation was made from coro ner's photographs and an art ist's drawings supplied by the Coconino County, Ariz., sher iff. Mrs. Bernice Fobbs, Stock ton, made the identification along with her family minis ter, the Rev. J. C. Williams of the Friendly Church of God in Christ, and Williams' wife. The children were Teddy Walker, 12; his sister, Jacque line Walker, 11, and their half- sister, Carol Ann McCain, 14. Mrs. Fobbs, who was their foster mother for 10 years, reported them missing May 27 after they failed to come home from school. Found Bodies On June .6, a Williams, Ariz., man went into a forest area three miles west of Wil liams in search of firewood. He found the bodies of three children. Each had been shot with a .32 caliber weapon, accord ing to Coconino County Sher iff . Cecil Richardson. Aitei the bodies were dumped ir the forest, Richardson said, the killer then shot each ot the children again in the heart with a .45 caliber gun. The Arizona-California con nection was made when a Brawley, Calif., woman visit ed Stockton and heard neigh bors of the missing children discussing them. The woman, Toni L. Pruitt, recalled see ing the pictures of the slain children in an El Centra, Call., newspaper, and she called Mrs. Fobbs. Undersherlff Clarke Cole and Investigator Ennis Smith of Coconino county drove to Stockton Wednesday night with the- coroner's photo graphs and drawings from which identification was made. No Clues fo Killer Stockton Chief O'Keefe said authorities presently have no clues as to the children's kill er: But, he added, officers "now have something to work on." Officers said the children were reported to have told schoolmates shortly before their disappearance that they were planning to run away because they feared their fam- Small Worlds Around Us By LYNN M. WATKINS (Ret later and Trikunt Syndicate, '. - Seahorse Unaxplainablr Constructs a Headdress The tidal push set the fronds of the seaweed undulating. On one of the long, leafy fronds, a seahorse curled his tail, fac ing into the push of the cur rent. The tiny, fins at the back of his pointed head vibrated rapidly, keeping the . little fellow in an upright position. He had no Idea of the ex tent of the weed bed in which he lived. He had no knowledge of other creatures that inhab ited this waving world of veg- Wrap-Button Hit rtajft 4 9012 Y SIZES 10-M ' V , ' (tM iHfVeielljTlS. An apron that is practical and becoming, as well. Excel lent protection for dress. Be thrifty make the apron of remnants; easy sewing. Cherries, appliqued or em broidered. Pattern 7081: trans fer of cherries; printed pat tern. THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (coins) for this pattern add IS cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Alice Brooks. Medford Mall Trib une, Nccdlecraft Dept., P. O. Box 13. Old Chelsea Sta tion, New York 11, NY. Print plainly NAME, AD DRESS, ZIP CODE, PAT TERN NUMBER. 1963 i Biggest Ncedlccraft Show stars smocked acces sories It's our new Nccdle craft Catalog! Plus over 200 fresh-to-.vou designs to knit, crochet, sew, weave, embroi der, quilt. Plus tree pattern. Send 25c now. Coatdrcss crispness vlu able fashion asset In a wrap dress you'll . love first thing in the morning and all day! Sew-easy In pique, poplin. ' Printed Pattern 9012; Miss es' Sizes 10. 12, 14, 16. 18, 20 Size 18 requires 4;L yards 35-inch fabric. FIFTY CENTS in coins for this pattern add 15 cents for each pattern for first class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian MarUn, Medford Mail Trib une. Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, AD DRESS with ZIP CODE, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER FREE OFFER! Coupon in Summer Pattern Catalog for one pattern free anyone you choose from 300 design Ideas. Send 50c now for Catalog. etation ' and probably didn't realize that other seahorses held firmly to other seaweeds a few yards away. ' " j As. the push of the tidal current lessened, the frond on which he was hiding again re sumed its, perpendicular posi tion. With a strong push of his tail, he propelled himself up ward a couple of feet and again wrapped his tail to a firm weed stem. It was more open up here and more sun light , penetrated the limpid water. Sudden Impulse He did not analyze what he was doing, or think about it, but he had the sudden im pulse to pick off a piece of seaweed from a nearby frond. Lettting go his tail hold he fanned the water with his propeller like fins thereby I maintaining, a more or less stationary position. Again, without a single thought, he transferred the bit of seaweed to his tiny, tube like mouth. Grasping the weed with the tip of his tail he pressed it into his . mouth, holding it there until it was wet with saliva. He held it for several minutes. . Now and very deliberately, he bent his tail sharply up ward and delicately placed the bit of seaweed on his head, just in back of the right ear. Patiently he waited until it was firmly attached. The moist, saliva-wet weed stuck to the hard, crusty head. He removed his tail and the tiny vegetable plume waved in the water current. ' For several days he worked. Whenever he wasn't feeding or when the tidal current was gentle, he continued attach' ing bits of seaweed to his head. The weed bits, also en dowed with a senseless life little different. than that which activated the seahorse himself, took root and grew. Now he was decorated. Seemingly he was content, for he ceased his labors and again took up his lazy position in the weed bed. The top of his head was neatly covered with a minute garden of grow Ing plants. Now his headdress exactly matched the environ ment in which he lived; his headgear waved in the gentle push of the tide. Reasons Unknown Just what the seahorse at tempts to accomplish by this self - decorating action is un known. Probably he doesn't know cither. It may be a pro tective measure. Perhaps he disguises himself to make his body appear like the weeds that grow around him. This is the most obvious ex planation but not necessarily the right one; there may be a more complex reason. Could It be that the sea horse is vain? Perhaps he wants to look a little better to the little girl seahorse that will come some day and place a group of eggs in his abdonv inal pouch. Kennedy Fuel Oil Offering tha best in: Oil Heating Equipment Fuel Oil Oil Burner Service Dial 779-1515 i ii J J nnt ly would be broken up. Mrs. I - The children's mother is on '"JkltaiKolOi Hie yuuiiBaicis .a.s.,c w - - their disappearance. I children s fathers. iobbs said jasclcss. these fears were Mrs. Earline Walker Johnson, Vallejo, Calif. She told Stock-1 oil heat . (''','' ' ' ' ' ' '"V'- '''.-' ',,'4 ' , , ' ,m lunawuiiii nn ''"'''"'''"V'' ' '' ' .'; ; .' ' , '':.-.' '. ' . ' i; ,'. i ' ' '., comfortable feeling, isn't it? ' and costs less, too! 1 You start living in comfort as soon as you convert to Oil Heat. Same thing happens when you buy a home already blessed with Oil Heat. What a comfortable feeling to know Oil Heat is safe, warm and dependable, no matter how cold it gets. 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