Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 05, 1963, Image 17

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    I TheyllDoItlvf
RuMCAkE WAS SURE HE'B
H'MitLr LIKE A CHAIJ
WAS PUT OM THE WI7NI6
DEADLY BICYCLE RIDE
Basking Ride, N. J. (UPI
Mrs. Clarissa Harris, 68, South
Orange, was killed and her
husband, William, 70, was in
jured Sunday when their bi-cycle-built-for-two
slipped on
loose gravel and fell over.
Subscribers
To report improper or non
delivery of the Mail Tribune in
Medford, phone 772-6141; Ash
land call at 416 Bridge st. or
phone 482-3002; Yreka, phone
Victory 2-2898 before 6:43 p.m.
daily and 10:30 a.m. Sunday.
If regular delivery arrives
shortly after you call please
notify office, thus eliminating
special messenger service.
TSvSuAwaSfc" il'SONE OUV WHO A f WHERE DO VOU LIVE Vf 488A.48BA
M YpacAe b )( OP I l8 OCCUPATION, H Eft- WHAT
S&iwExrecTEQ AmMfA2,U if.anv? well TVpiDvouSAy?
? ALLTLJP AiJCu cnc 1? ANSWERS' A I'M WAlTINO.' r Tr
Dennis the
Its
'Thats Nice of m euTMy fish
Try and
-By BENNETT CERF-
BROOKS ATKINSON, columnist and critic of note, loves
his country estate its fields, its trees, its birds and has
barred lumber tycoons and oilwell diggers from the prem
ises. One big oil com
pany, absolutely con
vinced there was oil un
der his property, offered
him a fabulous percent
age if he'd allow them to
drill. "You'll disturb my
birds," Atkinson told
them. "Off with you!"
The president of the oil
company, frustrated,
wrote Atkinson, "What
are you going to do? Sit
around supporting a
bunch of bluebirds for
the rest of your life?"
An antique shop up Bedford way featured an extensive collec
tion of old snuff boxes. "They were handed down to me," ex
plained the proprietor, "by my dear departed grandmother."
"Oh," nodded a customer. "Your grandmother took snuff." "Not
at all," said the proprietor. "She took snuff boxes."
Supposedly, Strickland Gillian's two-line poem,
Adam
Had 'em.
(which was entitled "Lines on the Antiquity of Fleas") is the
shortest on record, but Charlie Rice has come up with a worthy
competitor which he labels "Reflections on a Certain Vegetable"
Parsley
Is gharsely.
C 133. by Bennett Cert. Distributed by Klnt Futures Syndicate
To Sufferers of
Rheumatism and
ARTHRITIS
Would you like to discover
why drugs give you only tem
porary relief?
Would you like to know how
you may reduce your aches and
pains without drugs and with
out surgery, a proved non
medical way?
Would you like to know how
you may avoid vears of need
less agony and deformities that
may cripple you?
Would you like to know how
over 70.000 people got along
with a non-surgical, non-medical
natural treatment?
Would you like to have dis
pelled some of the mystery sur
rounding arthritis and rheuma
tism so that you may eat, drink
WUtLff
SO COMES
JPUEH US
STVLNO-.
Scientists Are Brought
Into High Schools
New York-IUPD-If only 5 per
cent of the 1.3 million physical
scientists and enginners in the
United States were to devote
a few days each year to educa.
tional instruction, the nation's
junior and senior high school
students would have direct
access to 65,000 of the finest
technical brains in the world.
So says David S a r n o f f.
chairman of the board of the
Radio Corporation of Amer
ica, who developed a pioneer
ing program in education de
signed to produce a greater
Menace
wATMaitwmv:
Stop Me
O, No
and live in a manner to he'o
your condition?
If you will send $1 to the
Ball Clinic you will receive a
clearly written, down-to-earth
book on arthritis, rheumatism,
sciatica, neuritis, lumbago and
associated chronic ailments. This
book has been written on the
basis of nearly half a century
of experience in diagnosing and
treating these ailments.
It will be worth many, many
times its price if it helps show
you the way to reduce pain,
without so-caMed "miracle"
drugs. Your money instantly re
funded if you are not pleased.
Send $1 cash, check or M.O.
to BALL Clinic, Dept. 2609-A,
Excelsior Springs, Mo.
By Jimmy Hatlo
UlS DAV IM roi idt-
AND YOU OUESSED IT-?UMCAliE
DOESfT KNOW FgOM htTHiM6DOM-
i
number of young scientists to
meet a threatened national
shortage.
The program, sponsored
jointly by the New York
Board of Education and RCA,
brought eminent scientists and
engineers into the classrooms
of four New York junior and
senior high schools for more
than 50 demonstrations and
lecturers on space age technol
ogy. "It is my conviction," said
Sarnoff, "that our program, or
others similar to it, can be
duplicated wherever school
systems and technological fa
cilities exist side by side."
Students Participated
In the academic year just
ended, more than 200 students
participated in the program.
It was concluded by a reverse
visit which brought the stu
dents into RCA's laboratories
and space centers. There, the
students watched the scien
tists who had visited them in
their classrooms actually at
work on projects ranging from
satellites to the optical be
havior of ions.
"As this program has al
ready demonstrated, a bridge
between industrial science
and the classroom can be effi
ciently and economically con
structed," Sarnoff said. In an
informal survey conducted at
the end of the program, 91 per
cent of the participating stu
dents said the course enriched
their science studies,
Log Cabin Maker
Said One of Few
Woodinville, Wash. IUPI1
Sam McCrae of Seattle thinks
there just isn't any better
type of house built these
days than those made of logs.
This sounds more logical
when you realize that Sam
makes his living hewing log
cabins. In fact, Sam is just
about the only real, old
fashioned log cabin maker
left in this neck of the Paci
fic Northwest woods.
Currently, he is busy as a
beaver notching logs and
erecting a "trading post" mu
seum at Gold Creek park.
The development is part of
"Ft. Bixby," a re-creation of
the Old West being built
from the ground up by W. G.
Tyrrell.
McCrae is a perfectionist,
by his own admission, and at
the rate he's going the proj
ect is hardly comparable to
those in the days when the
pioneers held a "cabin-raising
bee" and put up a livable
shelter in a day or less.
After the Gold Creek proj
ect is completed. McCrae
plans to sell Pacific North
west residents on the idea
that log cabins are not out
of style, especially for vaca
tion living.
McCrae is a Canadian citi
zen, although he has lived in
the United States for the last
14 years. He commutes daily
from Seattle where he lives
with his wife and two-year-old-son.
'Welding Show'
Tours Country
Chicago-fUPli-A big yellow
i bus rolling from town to
j town throughout the United
States collects no fares and
1 carries no passengers. It's a
"welding road show.
The 30-foot vehicle is
crammed with equipment for
demonstrating of a variety of
Chemetron corporation's
NCG gas-shielded arc weld
ing processes and related
equipment to welders, educa
tors and others in the indus
try. The large amount of power
required by the welding units
is supplied by a generator
carried aboard and a striped
flwninff ran hp nnfurlpri from
j the side of the bus to cover
an outsitM demonstration
area.
Montana's coal reserves are
estimated at 222 billion tons.
MMPrUHD
Yolktv Nof Yuko
For Gorman Man
By VBLLTVOTOR LONG
Umitee Press Intetnetionel
Bonn-CTD-The reporting of
news has itself become news
in West Germany.
In recent incidents:
-A West German television
producer came under a bar
rage of eggs thrown by two
angry subjects of a recent pro
gram.
-An East German Commu
nist radio news editor was ar
rested in West Germany for
allegedly endangering the
state.
-Another West German
television reporter was almost
lynched by refugees from
tsreslau who thought he re
ported too favorably on the
Communist Polish administra
tion of the city.
The victim of the egg-throwing
already had lost a pro
ducer's contract because of
pressure from Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer's Christian
Democratic union.
No Censorship
Despite all that, there is no
form of censorship in West
Germany. Foreign correspond
ents find officials easier to
reach here than in most capi
tals and the German daily
press is competitive and con
troversial.
The weekly press in addi
tion delves deeper than that
in most other western coun
tries. The eggs were aimed at
Gerd von Paczensky. Two
Croatian refugees drove half
way across Germany, from
Bonn to Hamburg, to make
this form of protest against a
Paczensky report on the fist,
knife and bomb fights among
Yugoslav refugees and tempo
rary workers in this country.
The Communist under ar
rest was Georg Grasnick, chief
editor of the Deutschland-
sender (Radio Germany) in
East Berlin.
Grasnick was arrested
while in West Germany cover
ing the trial of a fellow travel-
convicted of slandering
leading officers of the armed
forces.
Spokesmen for the office of
the federal prosecutor general
say the arrest had no connec
tion with the trial.
Grasnick, they said, is sus
pected of endangering state
security because the radio sta
tion of which he is chief edi
tor aims its broadcasts at West
Germany, inciting the people
here to "class war."
He is thus doing the things
for which the Communist par
ty was banned in West Ger
many nine years ago, said the
spokesman. He is liable to
arrest and trial here, they add
ed, because the result of his
criminal acts would be dan
gerous to West Germany.
West Germany lets any
German enter or leave it at
will. Any Communist official
newsman, saboteur or what
ever from East Germany may
come here freely. The West
German theory is that there
is but one Gemany.
But the Communists say
there are two German states.
They have an iron curtain
around their area. Only ap
proved representatives of the
regime can cross it. No West
German newsmen are permit
ted to live in East Germany,
and only a few are allowed
to make short visits.
The West Berlin association
of Journalists protested the
Grasnick arrest, saying this
would make it even more dif
ficult for the few Western
newsmen allowed to enter
East Germany.
Officials of the Bonn Min
istry for Justice said the prob
lem was that, under existing
law, the prosecutor general is
required to arrest and prose
cute such people as Grasnick,
Regional Speech
Research Subject
Austin, Tex.-flJPIi-A Texan
named E. Bagby Atwood has
become the Noah Webster of
the East Texas piney woods
by turning the techniques of
scholarly research to a probe
of how the denizens of that
region talk.
"Hant," Atwood explains,
is a ghost or spirit, not to
be confused with "hain't,"
meaning "ain't."
East Texans don't talk
about wishbones, Atwood
says. It's the "pullybone"
they wish on. And a wood
pecker, Atwood says, be
comes a "peckerwood."
Other East Texasisms:
-"Catty-wampus" - diagon
ally. -"Christmas gift:" - Christ
mas morning greeting.
-"Dad-gub" - mild exple
tive. MENUS CENSUS
New York - lUPli - Ask any
question about the use of any
food product and the answer
will most likely be found in
the "Menus Census." This is
the result of a year-long
study of food preparation and
consumption in the American
home recently completed by
Market Research corporation.
General Foods, General Mills,
Pillsbury and Kraft Foods
were prominent subscribers.
MAIL TMlbUNL, MtUtUHU.
yen when it is politically a
mistake.
A1oJLJo Classify
FOR RENT 3 bdrm h0UK ,,
baths, carpet, practically turn.
relrequiredJJ jjy772-85 1 1 .
FOB RENT Like new unfurri72
bdrm. home in Camp White
Central Point area $73. Onlv re-
iE?nni5',e Pr"n need apply.
664-2761 after 6 p.m.
FOB Dfvt i hj...r " , : .'
uuiiu. nuuie inn
sunporch. Adults. No pels. Close
FOR LEASE New 6 Bdrm. house
ft a 4 bdrm. with w wall carpet,
fireplace & play rm. Also for
Rent Several 2 bdrm. houses. No
Dogs Please. Inq. after 5 at 273
Lozier Lane.
FOR RENT 2 bdrm. unfurn. house!
1313 S. Peach X.sn mn 771-1 -;jo
FOR RENT Newly remodeled &
inictumcn luuy turn. Dacnelor
apt., utilities pd.. except elec
tricity. 773-3349 even
FOR RENT Furn. 2 rm. apt. In
meoiora. 912 wk. or 40 mo. All
util. pd. ti4-30f)4 after ft P M
FOR RENT 3 rm. furn. apt., close
In. utilities pd. 772-2287.
FOR SALE n acres. 6 vr. oid3
Dorm, nouse. am. garage, barn &
storage rm. $21,000. Crater
School dist. Will accept a 2
bdrm. house, close t. town as
FOR SALE Mahogany Duncan
"i,'ie uinmg sei. saoie exienos
to 8' 4 ". Complete with pads. 6
ladder hack chain. 2 host chairs.
$130. Also other misc. household
items. 772-0332
FOR SALE Howard B.ihy Crnnd
piauu iiinuc uy oaiawin. fchlo.
772-9532.
FOR SALE Bolex 8mm movie
camera. 3 turret lens IF 1.5. F
2.7 or F 3.3i Frame counter, ex
posure meter, trl - pod A title
equipment. Will handle 100'. 30'
or 25' rolls of film. Price $150.
Includes some Hollywood 8mm
movies. 772-9352.
FOR SALE 12 gage Remington
nuiomauc snoi gun. 3un savage
rifle with K-2.5 Scope. 300 H&H
Magnum rifle. All guns in excel
lent condition. 684-3231.
FOR SALE 3 yr. old Sorrel Geld
ing. Well broke. 535-1714.
FOR SALE 1037 Plymouth Con
vertible. Full power accessories.
S450. 2373 Merrlman Rd. 773-5761.
p : i SfA
j: - fit wf.W
LOVING CARE IS NEEDED
when you're driving, too!
There are so many ways to express your love for a child
amuse him, caress him, understand him, protect him
from hurt and harm.
Because drivers kill and cripple more children than any
disease, a car is potentially one of the most dangerous
places your child can ever be. So protect him whenever
he is in the car with a seat belt.
If every car owner in America had seat bells in his car
o
"vies.
OMtuioM
''EiSssl.p T , , , s. hi. 85
. . I'd rather read
Klamath Area Blaze
By United Press International
A pesky 550-acre timber
and brush fire southwest of
Klamath Falls was contained
again Sunday night.
About 80 men working
with tractors drew lines
around the man-caused blaze,
which began Friday on Ham
maker mountain.
The fire on state-protected
land was contained Saturday
but high winds carried the
Published to save lives in cooperation
r:;:?Mcr;i;r;c.T: MEDFORDKfeTRiBUNE
(he Classified Ads myself!"
Contained
flames beyond the lines into
more timber.
Fifteen fires broke out on
slate-protected land Sunday
including a 200-acre brush
blaze near Pendleton. The
other 14 burned over a total
of 76 acres.
Twelve were set by light
ning and three were man
caused. Fourteen small lightning
set fires broke out in the
Wallowa - Whitman National
forest.
with The
MONDAY. AUGUST
tecident Reported on
n jem-cuu tuiusiuu on
Table Rock rd. near Vilas rd
Sunday resulted in minor
damage and no injuries, state
police reported..
A car driven by Jackson
Calvin Jones, 23, of 1032
West 13th st., Medford, struck
a car driven by Charles Bry
ant Barnes, 65, of 4502 Crater
iEGAL NOTICES
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Sealed bids will be received by
the Jackson County Court at the
Courthouse at Medford. Oregon, on
or before 10:00 a.m. on the 14th day
of August 1083, for the furnishing
of D DT. Chemical for the Mos
quito Control Division of the Jack
son County Health Department.
Instructions to bidders and spec
ifications may be obtained at the
office or the County Court and the
Purchasing Department.
JACKSON COUNTY COURT
Earl M. Miller
Countv Judrr
Edwin H. Taylor
County Commissioner
Donald E. Fabcr
County Commissioner
SMOKEY SALUTESThe Careful Fisherman
and used them we could reduce severe injuries by one
third, deaths by 5,000 a year!
It's terribly important to drive with loving care, always.
And to support strict law enforcement in your town, for
where laws are strictly enforced, accidents and deaths
go down. But can a-parent who wants to protect his
loved ones and himself possibly overlook the protection
afforded by seat belts?
.1 t t
B 5
iai sssssss
Crater Lake Highway
liSKe nisnwav nirif,rw am
Barnes slowed his car for a
right turn, police said.
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE dp FINAL HEARING
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE STATE OF OREGON FOR
JACKSON COUNTY, PROBATE
DEPARTMENT
In the Matter of the Estate of
May C. Hayes, deceased
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the undersigned has filed his
final account and report in the
above entitled estate and that by
order of the Circuit Court of Jack
son County. Oregon, Probate De-
same has been set for Tuesday,
nuusi At, iuoj. in tne circuit
Court Room at the Courthouse lit
Medford, Jackson County, Oregon,
at the hour of 8:30 o'clock A.M.
All nerinm havfnc Afc!i.Ha
thereto are hereby notified to
present the same on or before
such time.
Date of first publication of this
notice Is July 29. 1963.
James Collins Hayes,
Arimlnlstratnr
Roberts. Kelllngton, Branchfleld
k Heffernan
Attorneys for Administrator
He handles his matches and cis.
1 relies and campfires as carefully
as he would a hnnrw1 mil
8, 1963
and reel. Because he knows that nine out of
every ten forest fires are caused by man he
always iouows amoKey s ABC s.
Always break matches in two.
Be sure you drow n all fires ouL
Crash all smokes dead out in an ash tray.
-Only you can
PREVENT FOREST FIRES I
Published as a public service In cooperation
with Tha Advertising Council and the
Newspaper Advertising Executives Association.