Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 01, 1963, Image 8

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    FRIDAY,
Murder of Wealthy
Rancher In August
By GORDON RICE
United Press International
PRINEVILLE (UPI) Two
boys playing along an Irrigation
ditch north of picturesque Smith
Rooks Aug. II made a discovery
that has touched off one of Cen
tral Oregon's most bewildering
murder cases.
The boys came across a man's
body, caught on a wire lence
that dipped Into the canal.
' Identification came rapidly:
Phillip Reinhardt. aged 72,
wealthy Powell Butte rancher,
missing from his home since the
night of Aug. 5.
' But 10 weeks later, county
and state law enforcement oiil
cers say they are no closer to
finding out wno killed mm than
- uiey weie mat uav.
"We just hit a dead end,"
says Crook County Sheriff J. T.
King. "We don't know where to
go."
Sgt. Lowell Hertzel, who com
mands the State Police office at
Bend, is a little more hopeful.
"We've been slowed up a lot
In our investigation," he admits,
"but we're still working on our
own ideas, you might say."
Police in three counties were
looking for Reinhardt before the
body was found.
Vanished On Monday
- He disappeared on a Monday
night, and on Wednesday his
wife of three years, Hilda, 62,
went to the police.
Her story was simple.
She and her husband had
quarreled. Reinhardt, angry,
prepared to drive away in one
of the family s cars, she said.
She blocked his exit with anoth
er vnhipln nnri RpinhnrHl van
ished on foot across a field.
That was the last time anyone
admitted seeing him alive.
Mrs. Reinhardt, in distress,
called a neighbor and her min
ister, Rev. D. L. Penhollow, a
respected churchman and De
schutes County judge. Rev. Pen
hollow calmed the woman, say
ing her husband undoubtedly
would forget his anger and
come home. He suggested Rein
hardt probably would be even
more unhappy if he returned to
find police searching for him.
But Reinhardt wasn't coming
home.
His skull had been fractured
three ' times and his body had
seven broken ribs. Dr. R. C.
Henry, head pathologist at Ore'
gon's State Crime Laboratory,
thought the death weapon might
be a hand axe.
Furthermore, Dr. Henry told
Sheriff King, the body apparent
ly had been out of the water
some time belore it was tnrown
into the canal. Reinhardt was
fully clothed except for his
trousers and hat.
The toes of his shoes were
completely worn through, ap
parently from scuffing on rocks
as he floated down the canal.
The body was found 8V4 miles
from his 40-acre cattle ranch
southwest of the Powell Butte
Post Office and store.
Investigators descended on the
family ranch.
"Everything has been search
ed," says King. "Wo didn't find
any weapon, no blood, nothing.
There's nothing to indicate
where he was killed."
Lawmen turned their attention
to anyone who might have want
ed the rancher dead.
"Not a soul," King snys. "We
can't find an enemy. He's loan
ed money to quite a number of
different people, but he wasn't
the kind that pressed anybody."
"If he didn't like you, he ig
nored vou."
His widow told police ne nan
$60 dollars in cash and a $100
check in his billfold when he
disappeared. The c h e ck has
never been cashed.
"We interviewed everyone in
that area. No one had seen any
transients," King recalls.
Accident Discounted
Could it have been accidental?
"We don't see how," Sgt.
Hcrtacl says.
"We have considered Hint he
might have been struck by a
car and someone panicked and
threw him in the cannl," says
King, "but he must of laid
somewhere for several hours
first and it's a little hard to see
anybody doing that."
How was Reinhardt killed?
By whom? And whore? The
canal runs through three coun
ties between the ranch and the
spot where his body was found.
Mrs. Reinhardt last week of
fered a $5,000 reward for any
one who can provide that infor
mationif it leads to the convic
tion of the persons responsible.
So far there have been no
takers.
.Bonnar W. Dysart, M.D. John Retzlaff, M.D.
Phyiician Physician
Diagnosis & Internal Medicine Diagnosis & Interna! Medicine I
OPENING OF THEIR OFFICE
PROFESSIONAL PLAZA BLDG.
Ii ; 650 Royal Ave., Medford 779-1881
NOVEMBER 1, 1063
They'll Do It Every
lUWQUAT,OL.' BOy.' VOU'RE
IDOmQ A SIT MS6ED-ER'
y ( BIG-HEARTED BULLISTER-YA WON0EBFUL REST IS
MAHAPPmi JUSTlVHEfRIW.N5SHAIES V CHIMNEyTAKEpOWN
UH HA-HA HAPPENS I JUST'
BOUGHT A LITTLE HIDE-AWAY UP
COUMTI5VNEEDS SOME FXIN'-'
LIKE TO HAVE YOUR ADVICE-WHy"
DONT yOU COME UP AND fiET A
GOOD REST OVER THE WEEK
WED HAVfc FUN AND - UH -
YES, kUMQUATBRING ALONG
yuUI-i 1UU.S,JUST IN CASE
'1W
SI
Fireplace Esthetic
Not Utilitarian
WASHINGTON (UPI) -When
it comes to good old American
know-how, the home heating in
dustry is right up there with
the best of them.
The past few decades have
produced truly marvelous Im
provements in home heating.
Technological progress heaped
on top of more technological
progress.
Good, clean, cheap, warm
heat is now within the reach of
virtually every American home
owner. You can have your heat
coming from the ceilings, the
floors, the walls or the base
boards.
You can heat with gas or oil
or electricity or coal or, as
far as I know, corn shucks.
As a result of all this rapid
advancement in the home heat'
ing field, more and more poo
pie are burning logs in fire
places.
Only an idiot would try
to heat his home with a fire
place if any other means were
available. But central heating
systems hove made it possible
to view Die fireplace as esthe
tic rather than utilitarian.
What is more pleasant on a
winter's evening than a cheery
blaze behind the hearth, the
aroma of hickory smoke billow
ing through the house, sparks
burning holes in the carpet?
Trudging out into the snow to
bring in more logs. Trudging
out Into the snow again to car
ry out the ashes. These are a
few of my favorite things.
In case you have been depriv
ing yourself of the joys of an
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
THE GHOST writer for a Commencement, speaker at a
Southwestern college had dictated his remarks to a sec
retary who typed them in triplicate, then unfortunately,
put alt three copies in
one binder. When the
speaker bumbled to the
bottom of Page One, he
turned over to the car
bon and read it off
gravely while the audi
ence listened in growing
glee.
The lid blew off com
pletely when he read
Page One for a third
time!
A poll by a big advertis
ing agency established the
fact that In the eyes of a
representative segment of the American public the ten most per-suo-iivo
wonts in the English languuRO In the older named
are You, Easy, Money, Save, Love, New, Discovery, Results,
Proven, and Guarantee.
Ann Colonne, Ft. Wayne's favorite TV personality, warns sus
ceptlblo young bachelors never
seems "sensible." "Any girl who really 13 sensible," explains
Ann, "will never let a prospective husband know it until after
he has him miiely bugged."
O 1WS. by Bennett Cerf, Distributed by Kins; Features Syndttttf)
Powell Butte
Still Unsolved
Time
END?.
OH,
open fire In your living room
and are thinking of adding a
fireplace to your home this
winter, here are some tips that
may prove useful:
Make certain the fireplace
is located close to the thermo
stat that controls your furnace.
The heat from the fireplace will
cause the thermostat to shut off
the furnace, thus permitting the
rest of the house to become tee
cold. You may freeze all night,
but what a saving on fuel bills!
Learn to operate the damp
er. It you leave the damper
open, the smoke will escape up
the chimney rather than pour
into the adjoining rooms. At
the price of firewood these
days, you can't afford to let
smoke go to waste.
Pay no attention to your
wife. Women don't know a thing
about starting fires. Go ahead
and use a little gasoline. Alter
all, they're your eyebrows.
For maximum enjoyment,
lie flat on the floor in front of
the fireplace. The air is better
down there.
Make certain your fire in
surance premium nas been
paid.
Inspect the fireplace care
fully at the onset of winter to
make sure no bears are hiber
nating in the chimney.
Have all members of the
family become proficient in
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation,
A storage battery does
actually store electricity.
not
to marry a girl because aha
KUMky WILLGET "VBULLy EVEN GOt
ELECTROCUTED. THE GUVj MARRIED FOR FREE
I i WIRING THOUGHT AC, DC II PROGRAM-WIN
y V IN WASHINGTON U I
I IWJ 11 MIMLUIIL, LLUD TUUK Wlf-C . I
By Jimmy Hatlo
l-KOUT A WALL-
Bulk of Products
Be Produced
By Automation
PORTLAND (UPI) -Virtually
all manufactured products will
be produced by automated ma
chinery with in 20 years, a New
York industrialist said here
Wednesday.
The forecast came from E.F.
Shelley, vice president of U. S.
Industries, Inc., a developer and
manufacturer of automated
machinery. He spoke at a sym
posium on "Labor, Management
and the Public Interest" at the
University of Portland.
Shelley said automation will
be an "overnight" affair in
comparison to the Industrial
Revolution.
His talk was one of three
scheduled at the two-day sym
posium. The other speakers are
Leonard P. Aries, vice presi
dent of the National Conference
of Christians and Jews, and Al
bert J. Hayes, president of the
International Association of Ma
chists. Latter Figure
Hayes pointed out at a news
conference that unemployment
has risen from 2.9 per cent in
1953 to 5.7 per cent today "and
we think the latter figure is
conservative."
He said labor must not trv to
impede progress, but must work
with business and government
to find ways to take care of the
undesirable by-products of au
tomation.
Aries said discrimination is
costing the nation's taxpayers
$30 million a year, most of it in
the form of welfare payments
and damage caused by delin
quency and crime. '
Another, less measurable, loss
comes from keeping young
workers in menial jobs when
they have the mental ability to
go to school and learn a more
advanced job, he said.
4-H NEWS
Milk Pail Wrangler
The Milk Pall Wrancler 4-H
Dairy Club met at the home
of Roger and Leslie Welburn for
the October session of the group,
all members of which were
present.
Ways to raise money for the
purchase of flags for the club
were discussed and members
decided to have a cake sale at
the Valley Lockers at Talent at
10 a.m. Nov. 23.
Members voted to add a ser-
gcant-at-arms to the list of offi
cers and Donnie Enloe was
chosen for this position.
Patricia Jones of Medford was
welcomed as a new member of
the club.
Mr. Cahail, leader of the club,
showed motion pictures which
his wife and he took of the club
members at the FFA and 4-H
fair in Medford.
Refreshments In the Hallo
ween theme were served by
Mrs. Welburn and Mrs. Cahail.
The next meeting of the club
will be held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Tony White on Colvcr
Road at 8 p.m. Nov. 11.
Tony White,
Reporter
Eight Craiy Stitchers
The Eight Craiy Stitchers 4-H
Club met to elect new officers
recently. Those elected are Bar
bara Wood, president; Karen
Hugdahl, secretary, and Sharon
Hugdahl, news reporter.
Karen Hugdahl gave a report
on her trip to State Fair. Marth
anne Goodwin also attended
State Fair from the club.
New record sheets were pass
ed out and the meeting was ad
journed. The next meeting will
be at Margaret Goodwin's.
Sharon Hugdahl,
Reporter
.1
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDKOHD,
School
Medford High School
Edited .by Elaine .Daven
port: staff, Kay Sneed, Varna
Fairchild, Dale Hockersmlth
Kay Lusk, Roxanne Goucher,
Paula Harper, Pat Retier,
Dave Smith, Anna Richard
son, Craig Savage, Tom Kerr,
and Penny Sage.
Tickets are now on sale for
"Inherit theWind" by Jerome
Lawrence and Robert E. Lee,
Thespian Troup's first produc
tion of the school year. Reserved
seats are $1.50, general admis
sion $1, and student general ad
mission tickets are 50 cents.
Members of the cast and mem
bers of the troupe are selling
tickets. A ticket booth has also
been set up in Room 61, MH5
drama room, which is open dur
ing and after eighth period.
Season tickets are still on sale
for $3 and will be on sale up to
opening night of the first per
formance. The season ticket
gives the bearer a reserved
seat at one performance of each
Thespian production.
Members of the Natural His
tory club took a 35-mile bicycle
trip through Sam's valley re
cently. The 12-member group
took the trip in order to ob
serve the area to, from, and
within the valley. They were led
by Eugene Brown, Natural His
tory Club adviser.
Today marks the end of the
first nine weeks at Medford
High School. Report cards will
be mailed to the students after
their arrival at the high school
from Medpac processing. Stu
dents should receive the cards
any time after Thursday, No
vember 14.
The MHS Snomads are spon
soring a "Snow Queen" contest.
A girl will be chosen from the
club members to represent the
MHS Snomads and the Rogue
Snowmen at all formal affairs
that the clubs will participate
in, including public appearances
both on television and radio.
Ten semi-finalists have been
selected. They are Chris Bar-
tel-i, Mary Cheny, Cristy Finch,
Joan Hearin, Carol Murphy,
Trudy Poling, Jeanne Salade,
Donna Budge, Nancy Elmgren,
and sue Elmgren. i rom the ten
girls, five will be selected by the
members of the Snomads as
princesses. The final voting will
be on the part of the Rogue
Snowmen who are sponsoring
event.
A tea in honor of the faculty
was held recently in the cafeter
ia during and after eighth per
iod by Girls League. The teach
ers were served refreshments in
a Halloween setting by the of
ficers of the league.
MHS Marching bond will par
ticipate Saturday in the South
ern Oregon College Homecom
ing activities. They will march
in the parade Saturday morning
have lunch in Ashland, and pre
sent the pre-game and partici
pate in the half-time activities
at the football game that after
noon. Tornadia week, Medford
High's homecoming event, will
begin Nov. 4 with the sale of
Tornadia week ribbons. During
the week each club will have
the responsibility of decorating
a downtown store window in or
der to bolster community spirit.
Thursday the traditional bon
fire will take place, and Friday
night at the game the homecom
ing king and queen will be
crowned before the game with
Medford s rival Grants Pass.
Saturday nighi, the week's fes
tivities will be culminated with
the Tornadia dance.
CP Junior High
By Connie Riley
Our junior high school wel
comed many new students to
school this year.
New seventh graders are Aub-
ry Alexander, steve Andrews,
Alvin Beacham, Thomas Binker,
Paul Bruce, Karen Erner, Pen-'
ny Farster, Margo Finnell, Bon
nie Gairson, Kathy Frohreich,
Raymond Henshaw, Susan Hen
drikson, Linda Cline, Terry Low
ells, Jackie McCart, Carol Prill-
man, Steve Ray, Chuck Rich
mond, Donna Sisson, Linda
Snow, Mary Spangcnburg, John
Truly, Joyce Watson and Pat
Stroh.
Now eighth graders are Kent
Anderson, Mark Basclcr, Steve
Christcnson, Tamara Close, Bar
bara Ebcrt, Danny Gairson,
Steve Jones, Bob Lipton, Yo
landa Meza, William Sparling,
Susan Stewart, Marvin Van
Wcy, Lana Woody, Pat Robin
son, Jan Stroh, Paula Baustian
and Tom Cordona.
Activities offered during
eighth period are art, band,
chorus, speech, and crafts. The
art classes are making mosaics
from magazine advertisements,
posters and lettering projects.
The junior high band has a
membership of 23 eighth grad
ers and 47 seventh graders, a
total of 70. They are working
on "The Syncopated Clock,"
"Donker Schoen," "A Lot of
Loving To Do," "The Enchant
ed Lake," and "Consider Your
self." The chorus is practicing the
scale and learning new Songs
as well as singing some old
OREGON
Mens
ones. Vivian Bnttsan, seventh
grade, is the accompanist.
The speech class began their
activities by writing notes of
praise. Each student used two
assigned words in front of the
class and from there progressed
to imitations, reports, and pan
tomimes. Now each student is
working on a monologue or dia
logue. The class checks critique
sheets on each performer. Those
presented that show the most
possibility may be given before
larger groups later on.
The crafts class is working
with ceramics and copper tool
ing. This course is given to a
mixed group this year.
The eighth grade had a skat
ing party in Grants Pass re
cently. The seventh grade also
went skating.
School pictures were taken
this year by Edwards Photog
raphy Studio. They have not
been received as yet but are
expected soon. Purchase of the
pictures is optional.
The PTA held its first meeting
recently. At this meeting teach
ers were introduced. Dr. Betty
Lou Dunlop from Southern Ore
gon College was guest speaker.
Junior high teachers intro
duced were Mrs. Letha Backes,
Mrs. Ruth Broomfield, Mrs. Flo
rence Bailey, Mrs. Maurine
Shore, Mrs. Helen Caster, Mrs.
Lorna Meyer, Mrs. Lou Onstad
and Mrs. Jackie Holbrook, li
brarian assistant, Keith John
son, James Owen, Earl Barn
hart, Kenneth Brew, Robert
Murphy, Lynn Jenkins, Mark
Putnam, Scott Philips and La
Rue Morris. Jack McCoy is the
junior high principal.
Several teachers are new to
our school this year. Scott Phil
ips, choral director, taught in
Yoncalla, Ore., last year. This
year he har music for grades
four through six and junior high
chorus.
Mrs. Letha Backes is teaching
seventh and eighth grade read
ing. Last year she had a similar
program in California. The band
director, Kenneth Brew, was at
Rogue River High School last
year. He has the junior high
band and helps with the sixth
grade beginners.
Howard School
Mrs. Audrey Berry's and Mrs.
Huldah Fisher's third grade
rooms are studying about plants
in science, students have seen
some interesting films on how
seeds grow into plants, what
plants need to stay alive, and
how seeds are scattered to make
new plants.
There are several plant ex
periments in the windows. Bev
erly Chism, Launa Welch, Mar
cia Prince,, and Allan Roberts
brought bean seed experiments,
and Kathy Bateman brought
two carrots to see if they will
root and make a plant.
Mrs. Jacqueline Rigg's fourth
grade has a new student from
Jackson School. Her name is
Sherri Beatty.
in science we are learning the
scientific method of performing
an experiment.
We have started the SRA
Reading Laboratory program.
Mrs. Nita Birdseye's fifth
grade class has created a large
mural showing frontier life in
the days of Daniel Boone. It
includes figures of Boone and
family, boats, animals and
birds, trees, covered wagons,
and stockades.
Officers for the next six weeks
have been elected. They are
Billy Jones, president; Gary
Gresham, vice president, Jose-
lyn David, secretary; Tom Mad
den, representative to student
council.
The class has been studying
the works of French painters
including Renoir, Cezanne and
Degas. Prints of the paintings
have been displayed on the bul
letin board.
The Howard School chorus
now includes 44 boys and girls.
Plans are being made for a
sixth grade girls ensemble.
Jack Bailey's fifth grade elect
ed class officers for the second
six weeks period recently. They
are president, Ann Thames;
vice president, Dennis Vosika;
secretary, Vicky Bogener; Red
Cross representative, Mike
Sleight; student body represent
tative, Vicky Bogener; messes
gcr, Sally Hughes; paper monl
tor, June Octinger; room clean
er, Shirley Pardee and Judy
Jackson.
In history geography we are
studying about how the country
gained the Louisiana Territory
and Florida. We are making
maps oi tne U.S. in 1803 show.
Ing the Indiana Territory, Mis'
sisslppi Territory, West Florida
East Florida, Louisiana Terri
tory, Spanish Territory, and the
uregon territory.
Ron Singler's sixth grade
class has finished a unit on
"Our Changing Earth." Toward
the latter part of the unit they
went on a field trip to the Ore
gon Slate Forestry Department.
We were taken on a tour of
their office, fire fighting facili
ties, and given an insight into
their farm forestry program.
Class olficers were elected for
the six weeks period. Terry t ay
lor was elected president; Mike
m 1 mm
Ma&fc. . ' Lsal ifslS'l.a'iff
ARRESTED Arrested in Chi
cago Thursday by FBI agents
and charged with transporting
counterfeit bonds in interstate
commerce was Erwin B. Arvey,
44. Arvey is the son of Illinois
Democratic National Commit
teeman Jacob Arvey. Arvey is
a former stockbroker and is free
on $25,000 bond in connection
with a similar indictment re
turned against him in Los An
geles. (UPI)
Trinidad To Be
Port for Soviets
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad
(UPI) Russia plans to make
Trinidad a regular port of call
for the Soviet "fishing boats"
which cruise the Caribbean on
what U.S. authorities believe
are sdv missions, it was rannrr.
ed Thursday.
Authoritative sources said 15
or more Russian trawlers con
ducting what the Kremlin de
scribes as "fisheries research"
in the Caribbean Area will
make regular stops here to
stock up on supplies and water.
One Soviet fishing boat ar
rived here Friday, but was un
able to purchase as much as its
caDtain wanted hepatisp hp
didn't have enough West In
dian currency.
W. W. Sutton ppnpral spprp.
tarv of the Amnlpamntprl Wnrlr.
ers' Union, charged that Com
munists here are trying to pro
mote disunity among sugar
wnrlfprs and nntnn InnHnrc Sut
ton said he doesn't think the Red
effort will prove successful.
O'Grady, vice president; Tonya
Walley, secretary; Tonya Wal
ley, treasurer. Last six weeks
officers were Jim Pardee, presi
dent; Terry Taylor, vice presi
dent; Kieth Henderson, secre
tary; and Tonya Walley, treas
urer. Jim and Terry are presi
dent and vice president respec
tively of the student body. Tam
ara Perry is treasurer, and
Dawn Martin Student Body rep
resentative.
Two new students in our class
this year are Jeanie Adams and
Danny McKee.
Mrs. Flossie Murray's special
education class was visited by
Mr. Brown and Mr. Marks re
cently. Mrs. Ralston visited one day.
too. She brought Tommy's baby
sister with her.
Mrs. Murray's special educa
tion class got its room ready
for a Halloween party. They
made witches and jack-o-lan-terns.
Randy made a scar crow.
We have three new pupils in
the second grade at Howard
School. Brook Doty came from
Jewett School in Central Point,
Dennis Stengel is a transfer
from Jefferson School, and Mary
Willey came from Ashland.
Our room mothers brought us
a special treat on Halloween.
Mrs. Beardsley's room mothers
are Mrs. Jack Wood and Mrs.
Paul Rupp; Mrs. Margaret
Mann's are Mrs. Art Friesen
P
1206 N.
K
mm m m
The Medical
Bv
Emeritus comultant In Medicine
iviayo clinic
Emeritus Professor of Medicine
Mayo Clinic
CReiister snd Tribune Syndicate,
19G3).
Retarded Children
I rejoice when I read of the
efforts President Kennedy is
making to help all those retard
ed children in our country who
could be helped and taught to
earn a living. As I write this,
I think of a mentally retarded
woman who keeps house for two
of my dear friends an able
physician and his wife. For
many years she has taken good
care of them; they love her and
she loves them.
I think also of a slow-witted
man who for years in a factory
stood watch all day over a ma
chine that made bolts. As my
friend, the chief engineer of the
factory, used to say, the very
fact that the man was an easy
going plodder made it possible
for him to make bolts all day
and every day, year in and
year out. If he had been brilli
ant, in a few days he would
have been bored stiff, and he
would then have wanted to re
design the machine.
Today, a former student of
mine, Dr. Stafford Warren, who
is going to help President Ken
nedy with this projr?t, writes
that one of the first things that
he and his group will do is to
make a list of all the simple
and routine jobs they can find,
and then they will try to train
mentally slow young people to
take over such work.
In Protected Shops
As Dr. Warren said, in the
average American community
of 100,000 people, there are at
least 3,000 who are mentally re
tarded. Some of them, and es
pecially those who have an oc
casional seizure, may have to
work in protected shops where
they won't get fired if occasion
ally they black-out and fall.
I am told that today in many
mental institutions, there are
quite a gew persons who could
be out in the community and
supporting themselves if only
for a short time after their dis
charge they could be cared for
and protected a bit, and fitted
into a job. Some day we will
probably have a protected shop
built alongside of a special
boarding house for persons who
at times will need some en
and Mrs. Cecil Hughes, and
Mrs. Cecil Hughes, and Mrs.
Joanne Wickman's are Mrs.
Virgil Broadwater, Mrs. Robert
Kruggel and Mrs. Harold
Prince.
FREE ADMISSION!
WILLIAMS
GHOST TOWN
SPECIAL CHILDREN i
BIRTHDAY PARTIES '
10
Per Group of
Six Children
Only
For Information Call
All You
Can
Eat
Open
TONIGHT & SATURDAY
November 1st and 2nd
S1 XV- YX a
Riverside - Phone 773 -
"Where Everybody Meets"
Roundup
FT
couragement and help per
haps from a psychiatric nurse.
Here on my desk is a letter
from an unhappy woman who
writes me from a state mental
institution. She was committed
years ago, when she had an.
acute episode in which she be
came mentally confused. Soon
she got over this so well that
ever since she has been a wait
ress in the hospital dining
room. Naturally, she has craved per
mission to go back into the
world and to a job there, but
tne auinornies nave reiusea to
let her go because they say that
for a while she would need
some shelter, some help, and
someone who would take re
sponsibility for her. But, be
cause her parents are dead, and
she has no family to take her
in, she stays in the mental hos
pital. This is bad for her and
bad for the taxpayers.
It would pay her state to
search out all persons like her
and then to build a place in
which they could live and earn
a living. What is sad is that so
often we human beings are in
clined to cling to ancient meth
ods of doing things even when
a little examination of the prob
lem would show how it could
easily be solved to the satis-
laptinn nt nwpcu nno
The only original
Do It Yourself Hamburger'
"8 -'Pee Gu$t
(frozen)
Stop in at Dell's Hambur
ger Stand, 323 E. Sixth
Street, and take horns a
3 or 6 months' supply.
So convenient for quick
dinners, extra guests,
teenagers snacks ... if
you can't think of a
thing for that next meal.
DELL'S
HAMBURGERS
323 E. 6th St.
Medford, Oregon
Open Every Day!
Includes:
Cake
Ice Cream
lemonade
Pony Rides
Train Rides
835 - 1118 or 855-1025
- Til
m
V'l ; Gold Hill
to Sardint
:JV) Creek
.y follow signs
CHUCK WAGON
RESTAURANT
Q Children
Under 12
60c
Saturday t Sunday Only
12 Noon till 9 P.M.
5474
4
9
6
11