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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1952)
fa SEARCHING FOR SURVIVORS oi Pan American plane crash off San Juan, Puerto Rico, rescue plane and boat comb shark and barracuda Infested water. Only 17 persons survived; 52 dled.ntrnottonoj; As We Live RUNNING AWAY WON'T ERASE YOUR TROUBLE (Q) "Would I be doing wrong by joining the army for four years of foreign service? I have been married and have a four-year-old daughter. I tried Jo keep my home to gether but my wife ran off and got a divorce. She mar ried again before the ink was dry on the divorce papers. . Since then, she has made life 1 hard for me. Every time I meet someone nice and have a few dates, my ex-wife gels In touch with her and breaks up our friendship, She says she does not want me to put a stepmother over her child, and she doesn't want to see me married again. I love my child and know she needs a mother's care. My child would be well taken care of if I went overseas." (A) You will not solve your problem by running away from it. And. it will certainly be hard on your child to have both of her parents de sert her, even if you arrange for her to have good care dur ing your ab sence. There are other men in a position to fight for their Dr. Hurlock country and who do not have the home responsibilities you have. Unless the war situation becomes worse than it Is now, your daughter needs you more than your country does. Don't use this as an escape from a sit uation that has become difficult to handle. Instead, take the bull by the horns and work out a solution to your problem. Your child needs a mother's care and you need help in bringing her up to be the woman you want her to be. That means remarriage, By ELIZABETH HURLOCK, PH.D. whether your former wife likes it or not. She should have noth ing to say about the matter after leaving you and her child for another man. Should Leave Community So long as she makes trouble for you every time you go with another woman, your best pol icy is to go to another commun ity where she cannot keep tabs on what you are doing and make trouble every time you estab lish a relationship with another woman. So long as you remain where you are, you will be at her mercy. That is bad when you are dealing with a selfish and unscrupulous person. There are plenty of good jobs all over the country at the present time. You might be able to arrange for a transfer with the company you now work for and thus have an established job to go to when you move. Or, you might go to another com munity where you have rela tives or friends who can help you to get established. Your child is so young that moving to a new community will not be a hardship for her and it will eliminate the possibility of your former wife's meddling any fur ther in your life and your child's. Dr. Hurlock will help you with family problems. Write her In care of this newspaper. (Copyright 1952, General Features Corp.) Gold Hill Gold Hill Health Unit will hold its annual pot-luck picnic dinner Tuesday, May 6, at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Arthur Boye on North 99 highway. Officers will be elected for the coming year. This will be the last meet ing of the unit until September, Gold Hill Garden club will meet Friday at 1 p.m. for its on North 99 highway. Officers will' be elected for next year. Installation ceremonies will be held at the June meeting. : The square dancing class spon sored by Amethyst R e b e k a h lodge will hold its next session Hiday, May 2, at 8 p.m. at Odd Fellows lodge hall. The public is invited. Warren Kimball of Eagle Point will give instruc tion and act as caller. All women attending are asked to bring sandwiches or cookiese for re freshments. All teen-agers are especially welcome. The benefit chicken dinner served Saturday night at the Gold Hill Community Methodist church by the Women's Society of Christian Service was attend ed by most of the resident of the community and was a finan cial success, according to Mrs. Nora Wait and Mrs. Wilbur Mar tin, chairmen for the event. Travelogue motion picture films were shown afterward in the church auditorium upstairs, through courtesy of Conger-Morris of Medford. Proceeds will go to the church treasury. J. he gymnasium of the Gold Hill grade school was filled to capacity Friday night for the physical education demonstration given by pupils of the upper grades, under direction of Wil liam Hall, physical education instructor. Tumbling acts, folk dances and other features were presented. The concluding "sur prise" number was the hit of the show. Five small boys at tired in crepe - paper costumes with ruffled skirts and ruffled "panties," performed a can-can dance. Admission, refreshment proceeds will go to the school activities fund. Ralph Todd, grade school pu pil, son of Mr. and Mrs. Angus Todd of Fifth avenue, suffered a broken arm Friday afternoon while he was practicing tumbling acts in the grade school gym nasium, in preparation for the physical education show Friday night. He was taken to Sacred Heart hospital in Medford, where his arm was set. He spent the Hearing Scheduled on Case of Stolen Diary Washington (U.R) Army Sec retary Frank Pace Jr., said Mon day a hearing will be held to de termine whether Maj. Gen. Rob ert W. Grow, whose personal diary fell into Communist hands, should face a court martial. The 57-year-old Grow served in Moscow from July, 1950, un til last Jan. 20 as military at tache in the U. S. Embassy. He was recalled as a result of the diary incident. His diary was believed to have been stolen by a "Soviet agent" while Grow was in Frankfurt, Germany, last sum mer on a visit. Photographed excerpts from the diary were used in the Communist press to "prove" that the United States was advocating preventive war against the So viet union. brought home Saturday after noon. His mother reports tnat he is getting along nicely. The Sihkiyou District meeting of the Oregon Federation of Gar den clubs, to be held Thursday, May 1, at the American Legion hall in Central Point, will be at tended by a delegation of mem bers of the Gold Hill Garden club. Planning to go are Mrs. George Smith, club president; Mrs. George Dorman, secretary; Mrs. Paul Holderness, Mrs. El mer Kraus, Mrs. Lester Thomp son and Mrs. James Clement. Mrs. Ernest W. Jermark of Ash land, district chairman, will be in charge of the meeting. Mrs. Fred Lester returned Sat urday from a week's trip to Davis, Calif., to visit her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs Howard Shontz. While she was there, Mr. and Mrs. Shontz be came the parents of a baby son Mrs. Lester was accompanied on her trip by her two children Vicki and Ricky, who attended school at Davis during the week, There have been no further de velopments during the past week in the matter of the State High way Commission's request for the city to give up a portion of its Ben Hur Lampman park across the river from Gold Hill, as right of way for the new sec tion of highway to be built there The offer made by W. G. Stuntz, right of way agent, at a special council meeting April 14, that the state would build an access road to the park in return for being given a small portion of it, still remains open with no action taken by the council. There will be no council meeting unti May 5, unless a special meeting should be called. John Hays of First avenue was taken to the Community hos pital m Medford Sunday morn ing, after being suddenly stricken with a heart attack. annual pot-luck picnic luncheon, at the home of Mrs. Arthur Boye night in the hospital and was Dead line en Classified Ade: 6:30 p.m for following day: 10 a.m. Mon day: noon Saturday for Sunday a Among 23 cars entered in standard classifications in the 1952 Mobilgas Economy Run... CHAMPION. ..COMMANDER V-8 finldnf F Mo m tern M LOOK AT THESE SENSATIONAL STUDEBAKER GAS MILEAGES r Champa (hffifo I ah-Jl 1 r-..i ma5 . IN the 1952 Mobilgat Economy Run, Studebaker ' i uccessfully defended iff reputation for stand out gasoline) mileage over a tortuous 1415-mile course from lot Angeles, via Mojavt Desert, Grand Canyon and Salt lake City to Sun Volley, Idaho, at speed averaging more than 40 miles per hour. The Studebakers, piloted by experienced drivers under A. A. A. Contest Board rules, made operating economy history. Each Studebaker had overdrive, optional at extra cost and used regular, not premium, gas. See cars ust like these Studebakers at your nearby dealer's. , Tuesday. April 29, I9S2 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREE I 1 Plastic IfcgrtB Wrap lviiva;,i etV VVR'' 'f'U i nse your fa mil with W3 flavor taste tt: Holsum's better baking brings you delicate flavor and aroma in bread such as you've never tasted before . . . satisfying flavor that sharpens your appetite freshens your taste makes you want more! Pick up the new plastic-coated wrapper the keeps Holsum flavor fresher, coin no more. mm J LJLJL!