Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1952)
EIGHT MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Sunday. Mar . 1" Renewal Studied on Behind Iron Curtain Washington (U.R) Congress ioon must decide whether to re tain in foreign aid legislation a provision to help underground activity In Iron Curtain coun tries. The House Fdreign Affairs and Eenate Foreign Relations Com mittees have left the provision Intact in the foreign aid program for fiscal 1953, which begins July 1. However, the State Depart ment and U.S. delegates to the United Nations have insisted that this country never has used the provision- and doesn't plan to use it. Attacked Kremlin The amendment, sponsored by Rep. Charles J. Kersten, R.-Wis., has been bitterly attacked by the Kremlin. It earmarked $100, 000,000 to help persons who fled from behind the Iron Curtain ' "When you mean BUS, say Continental Trailwayil" CONTINENTAL TRAILWAYS BUS DEPOT 148 N. FRONT PHONE 3-18S3 Lylt D. Rogeri, Aganf and "for any selected persons who are residing in" Russia or other European Communist nations. The House and Senate com mittees approved the same pro vision for the 1953 program, plus carry-over of unspent funds. This government has used only a few million dollars of the fund so far to establish camps to care for escapees. Other congressional develop ments: McGran.ry Sen. William E. Jcnner (R.-Ind.) accused James P. McGranery, general-designate, of "evasive and contradic tory" testimony In presenting his views on constitutional powers to the Senate Judiciary Commit tee. Sen. Homer Ferguson (R. Mich.) said he would wage a floor fight against the nomina tion, but some Republican sena tors conceded privately they could not block Senate confirma tlon. Crops Chairman Allen J. El- lender (D.-La.) said the Senate Agriculture Committee would give former Assistant Attorney General Alex Campbell a chance next week to answer charges he relayed payments from a Louis iana warehouse firm to ousted Agriculture Department official Jack Cowart. Campbell prompt ly accepted the invitation and said he would tell the committee "the facts'." Military Pay-Sen. Blair Moody (D.-Mich.) introduced a bill to give servicemen in combat a $45 monthly pay bonus. The combat pay provision was knocked out by a Senate-House conference committee earlier this week wncn it approved a compromise military pay bill. Veterans Pension! The Sen ate approved and sent to the White House two bills increasing GAIN WEVJ JOY IN LIFE Thtri) It no nod far you to b Hrl, ncrvoui, cranky r nttipold (f 4w to dietary dAcUncii which occur only when thi doily intake of IVvitamlnt nd Niacin It Utt than minimum requirements ovtr prolonged period. The non-iptciflc tymptemt do not in themielvet provt m dietary de ficiency and may hove other catmi or bt due to functional condition!. If TOuVt resigned yourself to a life physical power and energy e without companionship... without BKXEL SPECIAL FORMULA may fun and parties . .-, limply be- be just what you need to pep you cause you haven't the necessary up... to (five you new vim, sparkle. Bxel Special Formula the wonderful new vitamin com pound, my be exactly what you Deed to put you on your feet again If you , . . like 10 many, many then , . . are tufferlnir from com mon lymptomt of specific deflclen - eiei. Where tuch conditions are due to lack of B-vitamine, Iron and trace riinerali, known to bo essential In aman nutrition, Bexel may be the 'miracle drug" you are looking for to put yon in tip-cop inapt again I i k I l POTENCY GUARANTEED You take Just ONS eaiy-to-ewallow Bexel eanaula a day, and that't alll Itcostd you only about fl a day, .. a tiny price to pay to, protect yourself ajfnimt the misery and sufferings of symptoms which o- cur ai a result of pro longed deficiencies of essential vitamins and minerals In your diet. Your mo'nty back if you don't fttl &( tirnfttrtn bottlt of BtxtU Product McKesson A Robblns Irldgeport, Conn. PENNYWISE DRUG 'Next Door to Hubbard's) WALGREEN AGENCY FBI Head Starts 29th Year on Job With No Ceremony Washington (U.R) J. Edgar Hoover began his 29th year as director of the FBI Saturday. There were no ceremonies to mark the anniversary. The top G-man was at hii desk as usual before 9 a.m., directing the agency he helped build Into one of the world's greatest law en forcers. As he recalled the day when he took over the FBI, the 57- ycar-old bachelor admitted that he "gasped when then Attorney General Harlan Fiske Stone told him he was the new director. "There would have been a greater gasp if I had known then the magnitude of the job it was to become in later years," he told the United Press Saturday. "I took the Job on one condi tion that it would be free of politics. Stone scowled and said that was the way it was going to be. Hoover had his way. He start ed out by eliminating all Doliti- cal appointees from the ranks of the Bureau of Investigation, as it was known until 1935. He has kept it clean of politics ever since. Registration Open For Queen Aspirants Registrations for queen con testants for the loth annual Rogue River Roundup June 14 and 15 are now open, according to Jackson County Mounted Sheriff's posse show committee men, sponsors of the roundup. Judging of queen contestants win take place Sunday after noon, May 18, at the posse grounds at 1:30. It is imperative that contestants register as soon as possible, committeemen point ed out. Young women between the ages of 16 and 20 inclusive are eligible. They are required to live in Jackson county and ride a mount owned by themselves or families. Junior troop members are eligible but Ladies Mounted troop members are not. Contest ants may not be close relatives of troop or posse members, the chairmen added. Judges will be members of out-of-town riding groups. Jackson Claims Russians Could Cripple America Washington (U.R) Rep. Hen ry M. Jackson of Washington says the Soviet Union now has enough atom bombs and bomb ers to cripple most If not all of America's major Industrial areas. Writing in the May Issue of veterans' disability and pension benefits by an estimated $202, 000,000 a year. RulM Sen. William Benton (D.-Conn.) instroduced a resolu tion to set up a 10-member com mission to streamline Senate rules. Benton said present rules are so complex that at times only 'a handful of our respected and long-tenured senators" are able to handle legislation on the floor. aw itJT -J VIM -Jgr RETURNED TO SCENE OF CRIMES Harvey Bistany (right), arrested in Providence, R. I., and questioned concerning the Brooklyn killing of Arnold Schuster and recent Greater Boston bank holdups, arrives in Boston wila Detective XX. George - Killcn for further questioning. Full Impact of Bus Strike Felt by Pacific Northwest , Portland (U.R) The Pacific Northwest Saturday felt the full impact of the bus strike which started Thursday. No new ne gotiations were scheduled in the tieup of three major bus lines in five western states by the AFL Motor Coach Employees union. No emergency relief was in sight as many would-be bus pas sengers sought other means of transportation. Only one of the operating bus lines, not in volved in the tieup, extended service. Continental Trailways State Highway Stand Adopted by Conclave Washington (U.R) The Na tional Highway Users confer ence has adopted a . resolution paralleling the stand of the Ore gon Highway Users association against special taxes on motor vehicles. The conference, sponsored by trucking associations, national automobile groups and farm as sociations, Friday adopted a reso lution saying that any registra tion fees and gasoline taxes should be levied against car and truck owners. Oregon delegates to the con ference said the resolution was almost identical with a proposed initiative being circulated there by the Highway Users associa tion. The resolution said that "the highway users share" of high way costs should be confined "to registration fees and motor fuel taxes, which should be reason able and equitable in amount and incidence." the nationally-distributed Civil Defense Memorandum, Jackson Urged the rapid development of an effective civil defense organi zation to offset Russian military gains. Jackson said he would support Preisdent Truman's request for $600,000,000 for civil defense purposes. SUNDAY MONEY SAV ERS AT THE E IK C IE TT IE m n A (ID pen 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Pork Chops, lean and tender ......lb. 55c Del Monte Early Garden Peas, No. 303 can, 2' 35c Del Monte Creamed Golden Corn, 303 can 2 33c Del Monte Catsup 14 oz. bottle 17c FOR YOUR DESSERT 1 Pkg. Birds Eye Frozen Strawberries 1 Pint Snider's Ice Cream Both Makes a Delicious Sundae All Other Week-End BARGAINS Extended Through TODAY SUNDAY started a new three-trip schedule between Portland and Aber deen, Wash. Astoria -Isolated Astoria was virtually isolated by the strike. Rail service to the coastal city was discontinued several months ago and West Coast airlines cut its service to Astoria to one flight a day be cause of the gasoline shortage. Astoria's Mayor Peter Coso- vich has begun negotiations with the Spokane, Portland & Seat tie railway company for limited pasenger service into the city for the duration of the bus strike. Want Trains Efforts are being made to get three trains a week to make trips between Astoria and Port land. Even the use of passenger cars on the rear of freight trams would be a help, the mayor said. Harry Shields, general passen ger agent for the line, said it might be possible to arrange the service. State's Librarians Conclude Annual Session at Ashland Ashland Member of the Ore gon Library association conclud ed their annual meeting here Saturday, after a day and a half of business sessions and recrea tional and social gatherings. The librarians, nearly 200 of them from all sections of the state, met for an opening ban quet at Elks temple here Friday evening, with Mrs. Pauline C. Howard, acting librarian of Reed college, Portland, aa toast mist ress. Speakers Included Eric Allen Jr., city editor of The Medford Mail Tribune and president of the board of trustees of the Med ford Public library, who spoke on relationships between librar ies and the press; Dr. Laurence E. Tomlinson, librarian of Lewis and Clark college, Portland, who described the American Heri tage project of the American Library association, and Dr. Arthur Kreisman, of Southern Oregon college, who reviewed "This American People," a book on America's heritage by Gcraid Johnson. Saturday Program Section breakfasts were held Saturday, followed by business meetings and a noon luncheon. Speakers were Miss Lesley Hcathcote, president of the Pa cific Northwest Library associa tion; a report on the Shakespear ean festival and Vining reper tory company by Prof. Angus Bowmer, a n d a discussion of "Visual Southern Oregon His tory," by Mrs. Myrtle P. Lee, curator of the Jacksonville li brary. Afternoon sessions included panel discussions, with Miss Ele anor Stephens, state librarian, as moderator. Later groups toured the valley, including Jackson ville, the SOC campus, the Med ford library, and Lithia park. A box supper at which colored films of the Rogue valley were shown concluded the meetings in the evening. Cattlemen Open Meet Monday in Prineville Prineville (U.R) The 39th annual Oregon Cattlemen's as sociation convention opens here Monday with a "Cattleman of the year" award highlighting the agenda. It will be the first time the award has been made -in Ore gon. Herman Oliver, veteran John Day cattleman, will make the presentation at the annual convention banquet Tuesday night. Speaker! will include Gov. Douglas McKay, Nelson Crow, of Los Angeles, publisher of the Western Livestock Journal, and Marshall Dana, assistant to the president of the United States National bank. Dr.rl tin Sunday Cluitfltdi li noon Saturday.. NEW LOCATION BACK OF THE ARMORY The Charleston, South Caro lina, earthquake of 1886 claimed some 100 deaths and was felt in the Mississippi Valley region. TON 6HT 7 oXIock P.S.T. Otto J. Frohnmayer Will speak to the combined listening audiences of both KYJC and KM ED Mr. Frohnmayer, a resident of Jackson County for the past 19 years, a former member of the School Board, past president of the Southern Oregon Bar Association, and a 3-year member of the Board of Governors of the Oregon State Bar, will speak on the subject of t "The Importance of Choosing the Right Man for District Attorney" KMED 7 P.M. KYJC ti. Adv. Ort. I. Fronnmayar 1 rTkilt hdtvaU tim f txtr rtA It Will Be in Demand When It's 10 Years Old Take a new Cadillac home with you use it with common prudence and give it reasonable care and ten years from today, there should be many, many people anxious to drive it and call it their own I The soundness of this prediction is attested on used car lots throughout America. Every day, buyers are taking possession of Cadillacs built before the war and are doing so with pride and anticipation. There are many and vital reasons for this enduring value of a Cadillac car. First, of course, is quality. Cadillacs are built to the highest standard it is practical to enforce in the production of a motor car. The watchword and the goal of those who de sign and build for Cadillac are one and the same how good and how enduring can this car it made? Year in and year out, the search for improvement goes relentlessly ahead. Small wonder that the car keeps its youth and its performance far, far beyond the normal span. THE COLDES ASiVERSARY And then there is its sound and enduring beauty, Cadillac styling is a development with continuous improvement and refinement. Older Cadillacs, of course, are not to be mistaken for the current ones; but, regardless of age, they are still Cadillacs and are distinguished and dignified in their own rights. And then, of course, there is the wonderful Cadillac name which never loses its significance, no matter how old the car which bears it. Vear for year and age for age, a Cadillac is always aside and apart from other cars. It is not unusual for a Cadillac to pass through four or five or even six different families each one owning it with pride and driving it with pleasure. Think of this when you buy your next car. If you get a Cadillac there can be no doubt that others will be eager to own it when it has served you the normal span. Whv not come in and see and drive this wonder ful carf We'd be happy to welcome you any time. SKINNER'S GARAGE 143 South Riverside, Medford Phone 2-6264 .