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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1952)
FOURTEEN MEDrORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Monday, April It, 1181 Members of Nudist Colony for $50,000 for false arrest. She said that before the inci dent it wasn't generally known among her Maumee, O., neigh bors and her pupils in nearby Toledo that she was a nudist and secretary of the American Sunbathing Association. "I didn't try to keep it a se cret," she said. "But I didn't go around shouting it from the housetops, either." Miss Church said she was wearing shorts and a halter when the officers entered, al though several other sun-worshippers were in their birthday suits. ' Many Cameras She said she and other mem bers of the group, dressed and undressed, were forced to sub mit to photographs, "and there were so many cameras around that whereever we turned, we were looking into a lens." Defendants are Sheriff Ray Gensler of Monroe County, for mer Prosecutor Foster Luce, and nine deputies and state troopers. The fire which destroyed th city of Bandon, on the Oregon coast, September 26, 1936, spread more rapidly than any other known fire. Said Practical People Detroit (U.R) A jury of five 1348, when police entered Ihe Dead line Sunday Clautfieda U at noon Saturday!. men and seven women deliber ated Saturday a music teacher's claim that nudists are "very practical people." They even drilled peepholes in the fence around their camp "so we could look out and guard ourselves against peeping Toms." "We're very practical people, your honor," Miss Edith Church, 42, told Federal Judge Frank Picard. But ' the lookout wasn't on duty that sunny day in August, "Bruins Club" nudist camp near Monroe, Mich., and arrested 18 members, including Miss Church, for indecent exposure. Miss Church claimed she lost her S4,000-a-year public school teaching job in Toledo because of all lite publicity. She is suing the officers and other officials READ Mail Tribune Want Ads II. I. WiL, ' - j Jin ,,Mt;,i.;,f ' f l 1 (?) See it now! I ff The wonderfully new and different-- - ' 0Tl rUDi (TIB vi m I- 4 .;;. , ; .X; 'T V y-. FIGHTS TO KEEP ABOVZ WATER Farmer Hurson DcNolf barricaded his home near Albany, 111., with a double row of fences and filled in bctwscn them with sand. Inside his yard (arrow) on the right he placed a large water pump to bail out the flooding Mississippi River. 4-H Club News Huch Happy Hemmerf The Happy Hemmers club of Ruch met at the home of Mrs. Louis Buckley. Shirley Dunlap and Nancy Lou Redhead were absent. Several o! the girls have their first project about finished. Mrs, Louis Buckley served re freshments. Nancy Lou Redhead, Reporter As We Live LAW WON'T LET MAN DESERT HIS FAMILY When a man gets tired of his wife and finds a pretty young face, he often tells his wife he wants a divorce and, if she will consent, he leaves leaves her to take care of herself and their children. Fortunately, the law provides for the care of such cases but few women are aware of It. This Is true of the wife who wrote: (Q) "My husband wants a divorce to marry another woman. We have been mar lied for 17 years and have 3 children, ranging In age from 10 to 15 years. My husband wants me to get a job but I haven't been well and I doubt if I could work and lake care of my family. Isn't there some place I could go to get help?" (A) Of course there is some place you can go to get help for yourself and your children. Our courts will quickly put stop to your husband walking out on you and lcav- ing you to gel along the best you can. When your husband mar ried you, h e made the Dr. Hurlock promise to take care of you and any children you might have That promise is Just as good to day as it was the day you were married. Your husband may have forgotten it but the law has not. Go to your minister and ex plain to him what your husband wants to do. He can make ar rangements for you to take the matter to court and get cither a legal separation or a divorce. In ithcr case, your husband would be obligated to support you and the children, whether he like it or not. Your children are at au age when they need a falhor nwell as a mother. Is there no way to persuade your husband to give up this other woman and settle down to his role as husband to you and father to his children? She May Lose Interest If you refuse to give him a divorce, the other woman may lose Interest in him. Under such conditions, the problem might solve itself. If, however, tilings have gone so far that there is no hope of reconciliation, try a legal separation for a year or two before you consent to a di vorcc. During that lime, your husband may have a change of heart. As for your working lo free your husband of his respohsibil ities, that is ridiculous. Even if you were in the best of health, there would still be the home to take care of and children who still nerd you at home. Only if your huvband were living at home and still needed your help should you consider working. You should never sacrifice your- Tele-fun by Warren Goodrich "Give your father plenty of time to answer ... It's hit dinner time and you know he eatt like a horse!" You'll complete more calls if you give the other person time to answer at leant a minute... Pacific Telephone. By ELIZABETH HURLOCK, PH.D. self and your children to make things easy for the other woman. If you have a personal prob lem, write Elisabeth Hurlock In care of this newspaper. (Copyright 1952, General Features Corp.) California FFA Boys Visit Here; See Valley Farms A group of Future Farmers of America from Willows, Calif., visited in Mcdford and on farms and ranches in the vicinity Sat urday on the first out-of-state farm tour ever made by a Cali fornia FFA chapter, it was re ported today. The group Joined the FFA chapter of Crater high school, Central Point In a full day of in spections, cattle judging con tests and visits which took them to a number of valley farms. There were 20 boys and 6 leaders in the Willows group, and with the addition of the Crater high chapter and leaders, some 80 persons attended a luncheon Saturday noon at the Hoover farms. The groups inspected Talent alfalfa fields at the Bud Bohncrt place, and saw Jackson County common, alfalfa glowing next to it. Later they went to the "Hoover - Up place, to tlie Lotus and LadinA clover grow ing separately and mixed, In types of pasture, and inspected farming methods and equipment. At Bud Hoover's ranch, the boys inspected cattle chutes and equipment, and were shown over the artificial lakes in the area by A. E. Brockway, engineer, who explained contour irriga tion, pasturing and desert grow ing conditions. They also Inspect ed new 750-ton nnd 1,250-ton silos under construction, and were shown some of the con struction machinery in use by Homer Hall, of Tru-Mix cor poration. See Shops. Cattle Later they inspected the shops at the Claude Hoover farm, and visited the Ralph Cook ranch, inspecting his polled Herefords, equipment, buildings and calves, Japanese Promise To Rearm Against Communism Threat Tokyo, (U.R) Japan joined the free world Monday as a new and equal partner and immed iately promised to rearm against Communism. Six and one-half years of Al lied occupation rule ended at 10;30 p.m. with the coming into effect of the San Francisco Jap anese peace treaty and the U.S. Japan Security pact. Japanese Flag Raised The flag of the Rising Sun was raised alongside the Stars and Stripes over U.SS. military bases to symbolize the end of the occu pation and the beginning of Jap an's alliance with the nations which forged her defeat and re construction, Prime Minister Shigcru Yos hida sounded the keynote of Ja pan s re-emergence as a sovereign nation with a promise lo lead the country toward rearmament at the side of the U.S. "Unfortunately, our horizon is darkened by the menace of Com- and also toured other ranches of the area. At the livestock judging con test on the Hoover farms, The Willows FFA team won the meat cattle contest and received a "diamond" pin (a dime welded to a safety pin) as an award. The Crater high team won the cow and calf class, and the visitors had to help prepare lunch as the losers. County Agent Earle Jossy led the tour, and other leaders par ticipating included Leonard Kunzman, FFA leader at Crat er high school; Con Davis, school superintendent at Willows; Glen Eidcmore and Jim Hanson, in structors from the California county. A similar tour for Grants Pass FFA boys, and possibly a chapt er from Willows has tentatively been arranged later in the spring. I munism, which seeks to conquer the world through insidious propaganda and infiltration and by force by open, armed ag gression," he said. Pact Explained "That is why for the protec tion of unarmed Japan as well as for the common defense of the Pacific we have concluded a se curity pact with the U.S. "That i. why we must under take to build up a defense power of our own." ! He called Japan's peace terms "magnanimous" to a degree "un paralleled in history." The Japa nese foreign office also rejected disarmed neutrality in a "white paper." It pledged Japan to mar shall its strength on the side of the Western democracies. j Relations Resumed With the coming into effect of the peace treaty, 29 Allied na tions of World War II resumed : diplomatic relations with Japan. ; India, which boycotted the San Francisco peace conference, end ed its state of war with Japan and restored diplomatic relations in exchange of notes. j Japan and Nationalist China also signed a separate peace ', treaty in Taipeh, Formosa. It ', recognized President Chiang Kai- j Shek s authority over Chinese territory which now or in the fu ture may be held by the Nation-; alist government. 1 Only Communist China and Russia remain technically at war with Japan. 1 Carpenterville, located south of Gold Beach in Curry County, ; is the highest point on the Ore gon Coast Highway U. 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