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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1950)
TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Monday. April 10. 1950 Utah Senator Proposes Local Public Corporations To Manage Interstate Water Washington. Apr. 10 (U.R) Sen. Arthur V. Walkins, (R. Utah), proposed today that con gress permit local public corpor ation! instead of federal agen cies to manager governments financed water and power pro loetji nn Interstate streams. He said such groups could do away with a "policy ol lenerai ownership" without sacrificing needed integration in develop ment of basin-wide water re sources. Continued operation by the government, he said, threat- ventua v in me w n t c country." Would Authorize Aociations Ho Introduced leeislation to authorize formation of "Inter state Water and Power Users associations' 'to confer on them Nearly 20,000 Return to Jobs In Past Month Salem, Ore., Apr. 10 U.R Nearly 20,000 worKcrs reiurnea to their jobs in Oregon during March, the state employment service reported today. But a new influx of job-seekers held the actual monthly gain to 16.000. Local offices of the service said 58,605 persons still were looking for work, 10.5 per cent fewer than a year ago and about 40.000 under the winter peak earlv in February. Klamath Falls reported 2.400 without jobs, an increase of 375 during March. Reports about new industries opening up up brought hundreds across the California border, officials said. The only other Oregon com munity with more unemployment April 1 than a month before was Toledo, where a labor dis pute resulted in 1.050 idle as against 050 March 1. Declines from 40 to 60 per cent In unemployment were re ported from Hood River, Tilla mook. Oregon Cjty, Lebanon and Roscburg mostly due to resumption of logging and lum bering operations. The number without work dropped less than 20 per cent in Portland. Corvallis, Eugene, Freewater, Bend, La Grande and Grants Pass. Astoria, Pendleton and Eugene reported more unemployed than on April 1, 1040. ened "nationalization of the pow er Industry in the west and IJONJMMBN; ! i ttOCMT AM) muo trot a. the fnllowine DOweri 1. To make contracts with fed eral agencies for project con struction and for cost repay ments. 2. To operate and maintain projects and to "hold them in trust" for shareholders, 3. To Issue stock to water users in proportion to water rights they hold. 4. To repay costs of project construction out of assessments levied against stockholders and out of revenues from power sales. 5. To sell power to "public and private power systems" as well as to those public agencies now entitled to priorities under federal reclamation law. The priorities would be preserved under Watkins proposal 6. To permit financing of "poor" projects out of revenues from richer projects. Charter Corporation The associations could be rec oenized by the secretary ot in terior to perform these functions on the application ol a majority of governors of states within an interstate river system. the sec retary would "charter a body corporate" after receiving ar ticles of incorporation from the eovernors Watkins said federal owner ship and control of projects stem med largely from the fact that new developments cover sweep- ine areas where no authorized local agency exists to contract with the government. He said valley authorities nave been suggested as the proper vehicle for grand-scale water de velopment, but have met "strong resistance in the west." H i s Dronosed associations would consist of shareholder members who would elect not less than five and not more than 21 directors for three-year stag eered terms. The directors, in turn, would be authorized to ap- noint administrative staffs, but only by an affirmative vote of three-fourths. Mi h Ik Meters tl reier fmrnM Gl, Civilians Face Drug Theft Charges Anchorage, Alaska, Apr. 10 (U.R) Military police seized two civilians and a soldier today and charged them with attempting to steal a quarter of a million dol lars worth of narcotics. Capt. James H. Meyer, mili tary special investigation agent, named the three as John Fran cis Brown, 25, Charles Houston Tittle, 37, both Anchorage cab drivers, and Sgt. Bernard Le- vine, Sa, SUOSth hospital group. TOGETHER AGAIN Red Wing, Minn. U.R) Mrs. Harold Lee, 46, has been reunited with an elder brother, C. A. Johnson, after a 44-year separa tion. Johnson, now a Canadian postal employee, was taken from his sister in the early 1000s when their mother died. She was adopted by a physician and was sent to Canada. Christian Science Speaker Points to 'Way of Freedom' Knowing God and man through spiritual understanding is the way to find freedom from fear, from sin and sickness, free dom from lack and limitation, a Medford audience was told Sun day by Arthur Perrow, Chicago, 111., in a Christian Science lec ture. Everyone may become aware of man's "God-ordained freedom in truth freedom from all the falsities and limitations of physi cal sense testimony" witn the light which Christian Science throws on the messages of the Bible, he maintained. Member of Board Mr. Perrow, for years a Chris tian Science practioner in Chi cago, is now a member of The Christian Science Board of Lec tureship. He spoke in Medford high school auditorium under auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist, Medford. Sub ject of his talk was "Christian science: Ihe Way of Freedom. He was introduced by Edward Humphrey, first reader. The answer to every prob lem the solution for every dis cord is already established in divine perfection, and can be found through spiritual under standing, the lecturer main taincd. "There is no such thing as un answered prayer, when one prays aright with faith and un derstanding," he said, "because the answer is already estab lished, awaiting our acceptance, our acknowledgment, of the di vine presence and its power to supply all good, to meet our ev ery need. Freedom in Knowing Prayer does not change the purpose of divine love," he said. "Prayer means knowing the truth as it exists eternally, the knowing which Jesus said is requisite to our freedom." This freedom, Mr. Perrow made clear, includes freedom from fear, fail ure, sickness, and all other types of discords. He told of a time when, very ill and in great pain, he turned to the Biblical passage (I Kings 5:4): "But now the Lord my God hath given me rest on every side, so that there is neither adver sary now evil occurrent." Pray erful study of this passage, he said, brought about his-healing. "Even the first word 'but' un der the circumstances meant a great deal to me," he related. "I interpreted it to mean that re gardless of the situation, regard less of what the condition might be called, the outstanding and only truth remained that God had already given me rest, peace, so that contrary to mor tal sense testimony of the mo ment, there really was no ad versary there was no evil oc curring. I was healed instantly." Dead Una on Clanlfled Ada: ft:30 pm for following day-. 10 am. Mondny for Monday: noon Saturday for Sunday a.m. want oeuctovs Amis MA HURRY? s LEADER RANGE Of course, ft" I electric' ONLY $18995 At Little At 25c A Day Here 'i famous O-E "Speed Cooking" wonderful, wonderful meals, spar kling cleanness, superspeedy cooking in brand-new electric range at a really low pricel And It's a beauty! Porcelain-enamel finish, inside and out. Gleaming, white plastic hardware, chrome trimmed. Smooth-acting switches. Hi-speed Cal rod heating units that give you five f.rorf cooking speeds! Plus a world of grand features' SEE IT TODAY I See eur templet line el ether 9-1 "Speed Cooking" liecttlt Ronaos HI-SPEED CAIROD UNITS HEAT UP REALLY FASTI MASTER OVEN BROILS, BAKES AND ROASTS LIKE A DREAMI BIO THRIFT COOKER MAKES ECONOMICAL MEAL-PLANNINO EASYI NO-STAIN OVEN VENT HELPS KEEP THE KITCHEN SPARKLINGI YOU CAN PUT CONFIDENCE IN GENERAL ELECTRIC AND THE HOME APPLIANCE CO. American Scientists To Clean Up Radioactive Region With Geigers Oak Ridge, Tenn., Apr. 10 iu.ru un May 1, while Kussia beats its military breast, 22 American scientists deep in Oak Ridge's . secret area will arm themselves with Gciger count ers to "clean up" after a mock atom bomb "attack." Thousands of miles away, in Moscow, communists will mass in Moscow's Red square to watch Soviet military parades in tradi tional celebration of the commu nist "May day." Quiet Demonstration Here, the demonstration will be a quiet one. But officials of the atomic energy commission regard it as the first concrete step toward putting civilians on guard against radiation effects of an atomic attack. Scientists attending a five week "teacher training" course in atomic warfare defense at the Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies will form the mop-up force. Instead of hand buckets and tin hats, trademarks of the civil ian defense wardens of World War II, they will move into the "hot" area with Geiger counters to find the worst contaminated spots and rid them of radiation. Area Selected An area adjacent to the "graveyard" o f radioactive waste materials near the national laboratory here has been selected for this atomic age "obstacle course." The props will include cast-off buildings and a variety of construction materials. The "bomb" will be set off when the dcaejly rays of a short lived isotope are released Into the atmosphere. Radioactivity will penetrate deepest into the building blocks, but also will enter stainless steel frames of windows. Garbed in ordinary coveralls rubber shoes and hats, the sci entists will judge how close they are to a danger area by the rate of clicks from the Geiger counter. Portable survey meters, which measure radiation quantitative ly, will tell them how much time they have to decontaminate be fore they are overcome with "radiation sickness." Some Treated Chemically Some of the least radioactive materials, depending on the por ous quality of the surface, can be decontaminated simply by washing with water. Others will have to be treated chemically to neutralize the radioactivity. The rest will be staked off and posted. H. J. McAlduff, a health-physicist at the laboratory who is in charge of the "attack," said it will be conducted under care fully controlled conditions. It will, however, afford the first practical demonstration on an or ganized scale of radiation decon tamination "using common sense" methods, he said. The scientists, representing 16 states from Florida to the mid west, are learning even now to take a Gciger counter apart and repair it. In laboratories and classrooms. AEC health-nhvsi- rists are teaching them about the dozen or more elements formed when an atom bomb bursts. Similar courses are under way at AEC installations at the Brookhaven, N. Y., national lab oratory and at the University of California at Berkeley, After the courses are ended the scientists attending them will have the job of passing on their information to other persons in their own states, principally edu cators. Portland. Ore.. Apr. 10 (U.R) Fishermen today reported a late run of smelt in the Columbia river off Clatskanie. JUST SWAP PLACES Macon, Ga. lU.fi) Turnabout' fair play. Judge Cecil A. Baldwin and A. M. Pooler agreed at a meeting of the Georgia Industrial Home board. Baldwin was chair man of the board and Peeler was oresident. They just swapped. Ti'iTmnnnin TwMfli.i twaa aaa aaa l a, TILIPHONI OPIRATOR Mrs. Ethel James: "My throat gets a workout all day long, I made the 30 -Day Mildness Test and changed to Camels. They agree with my throat they taste so good I" RADIO ANNOUNCIR George Ansbro: "Throat irritation certainly doesn't go in my job. I smoke only Camels. They're right for my throat always cool and mild. And Camels have the flavor!" COSMtTIC DEMONSTRA TOR Madeline Ostrowe: "I talk to thousands of shoppers. When I smoke, I have to think of my throat. Camel is my ciga rette. Camels art so mildl" ill YES, CAMELS ARE SO MILD that in a coast-to-coast test of hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels and only Camels for SO days, noted throat specialists, making weekly examinations, reported Not one single case of throat irritation due to smoking CAMELS fe,-.(T-i: 'JISSM iv". ' ',' : - I" ' T trr- ; MmtPr " TffceW ... : Vv Si i - if jjtrpil i Will you help fulfill the world's great hope? Trill it your chance to help conquer cancer. A vital chance for the millions of Americans who will fall victim to the disease. Yes, millions now living will have to battle for their lives against this grim killer. Where it will strike no one can say, The man in the next block? Your next door neighbor? Even... your own home? Not a pleasant thought, Is it? But entirely possible. What are yon going to do about it? Will you help to bring hope to those living under the shadow of this cruel disease? HOPE through continued and intensified research to un cover the cause and cure. HOPE through an education program to teach recognition of symptoms and the urgent necessity of prompt treatment. Many are being saved, but tens of thousands die who could and should be saved. HOPE through improved services for those already stricken. Your dollars can mean the difference between hope and despair between life . . , and death. Gin you afford not to help? Published as a Public Service by The California Oregon Power Company 115 EAST MAIN ST. PHONE 2-4585