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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1952)
EIGHT MEDFOHD (OREGON) Everyone In Southern Oregon Reads The Mall Tribune rublithed Daily Except Saturday by uvnvnRn PRINTTNO CO. 17-29 North Fir St. Phona 8-141 ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor ERNEST R. GILSTRAP. Manager HERB GREY, Advertising Manager E. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor B1P AI.f .FM JR Cltv Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporta Editor nf.TUB sTAPPHER. Society Editor GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mr An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Uediord, Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES a Mail Tn Advance: Daily and Sunday one year 113.00 Daily and Sunday ix months 6.80 Daily and Sunday three moi, 3.50 Dally and Sunday one month 1.26 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point. jpifnnviii. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue River, Talent mi nit motor routes: Dally and Sunday one year 915 00 Daily and Sunday one tnontn 1-23 All Terms Cash In Advance Official Paper of the City of Mrdford Official raper oi eacason i,ouniy United Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY. INC Offices in New YorK, unicago, u. troit, San Francisco, Los Angeles Seattle. Portland. St Louts. Atlanta vanrouver. p.u. NATION At IDITORIAl NIWSPAPIf PUwllSHItS ASSOCIATION Flight or Time Madterel and Jacktea County We. Hry ha Hi tiles at Mia Mail Tribune 10, 20. 10 ana" 40 aaan 10 YEARS AGO June 1, 1942 ; (It was Monday) Oregon ration boards prepare to accept applications for home canning sugar-"under new lib eralized plan." FroTn Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: V for Vic tory and W, for Weather, War, Worry and Worms In the Wal nuts. 20 YEARS AGO June 1, 1932 (It was Wednesday) Rogue valley berry and vege. table growers urged to attend meeting to discus plans for com' batting "a complete breakdown of prices. Unofficial 1 n f o r mation re ceived here states pay for men fighting forest fires in this area has been cut to 20 cents an hour under administration's economy drive. SO YEARS AGO June 1, 1922 (It was Thursday) Medford Mayor C. E. dates charges "politics" caused his dis missal from state fair board by Gov. Ben W. Olcott. Court tells local woman her "vile concoction nearly killed two men In Central Point" In sentencing her to six-months Jail sentence and $500 fine for boot legging. 40 YEARS AGO June 1, 1912 (It was Saturday) Sixty-year-old man arrives In Medford on "heavily laden" bicycle en route to Portland from Los Angeles on Job-hunting trip. Thirty-four seniors, largest class In Medford high school history, receive diplomas In com mencement exercises at Nata torlum building; class four times larger than that of 1910. In the Day's News Br FRANK JENKINS In Washington Bernard M. Baruch tells the senate prepared' ness subcommittee (at an open hearing) that MORE THAN 20 BILLION DOLLARS IS BEING WASTED ON THE DEFENSE PROGRAM. THIS waste of defense billions, he said, resulted from failure to put into operation the, vast system of inflation controls that congress voted after the Korean outbreak. He added: "These powers were not used for months during which living costs soared, all savings were cheapened and the real purchas ing power of every defense dol lar was slashed by one-fifth. "This needless Inflation al ready has cost us 12 billion dol lars In higher costs of defense and is likely to exact another 10 billion dollars in needless trib ute over the next fiscal year." THOSE are rough words, but they are substantially true. For months after war flared In Korea, we dawdled while prices soared. Then we applied ceilings that were so full of holes that nobody had any real trouble getting through them. I MAIL TRIBUNE Editorial Correspondence - San Francisco, Cel., May bridge without thinking what Golden Gate affair is much far more impressive and spectacular. More dramatic. More alive. The entire structure sways in a hard wind. We crossed when a gale was blowing In from Japan around 45 miles an hour, so It added up to quite an adventure. The marvel Is how mere man could have constructed such an overwhelming and perfect edifice for daily trans-por-tatlon. It's a terrible chestnut but, Your correspondent was in San completed in May, 1937 exactly 15 minutes until one thinks of dirt since then World War No. Old Man World has never been the havel Well, of course, so many of the firing line now a high casualty rate must be expected. But it was with a real sense of sorrow which just arrived of the sudden death of John Mann, It just happened we had seen him the day we left and thought he looked even friskier than usual. But what' a PERFECT way to depart Just fall asleep in the normal course of events, only decide NOT to wake upl So many can t do it that way. find it as difficult to ae part from the land of the living, as enter It. Birth and death they are so seldom as peaceful, natural as they SHOULD be. John Mann never quit. That Long after he had entered the area the job, planned changes and improvements, with apparently the same ardor and enthusiasm he had The coming generation could with to follow we can see few around the present business world. Averlll Harriman would, we President, but because of our traditional political taboos has about as much chance as Cornelius Vanderbilt. A. H. blew in yesterday allegedly to do some campaigning but it is hard to take him seri ously in this capacity. He has been a sort of official "trouble shooter" for the Roosevelt and Truman administrations, and we suspect that "is his real role now. President Truman claims he will not do anything in the way of choosing his successor, but that does not mean he won't do everything to keep Senator Kefauver from being the 'convention's choice. And barring an unexpected stampede in favor of the Senator from Tennessee, in tnis Mr. Truman will Drobably succeed. The son of the great multi-million aire railroad magnate of the Gay in this direction. Incldently Harriman, In spite groundalso his "modest" fortune of $50,000,000 would be a far worthier successor to the "New" and "Fair-Deal" administrations than any of his competitors, for he really believes In the principles of both. His ideology is not as Idealistic as that may sound, in fact he is an extremely practical person, a hard-headed business man, who has become convinced that the way to preserve Ameri can democracy and the capitalistic system Is not to sit on the safety. valve of the body politic, but to inner stresses and strains of economic and social progress. He is far to the left of Democrats like Connallv of Texas. In his attitude man believes that such a liberal policy, as far as Big Business or little business for that matter is concerned, is a matter of enlightened self-interest. In that 100; and regrets that because he has such a slim chance of ever Went down In the elevator with Judy Garland this noon and she had Just gotten up and was apparently headed for the country, for she was wearing slacks, a turtle neck sweater and saddle-type sport-shoes. Her maid was with her similarly attired. Perhaps It is golf hadn't thought of thatl Judy looks much smaller in an elevator than on the stage, or in the movies, and less attractive. In fact she Isn't pretty, but she has that something that definitely appeals it comes under the heading of personal magnetism vitality a SPARK very few people have it those who do are fortunate, but sometimes have to pay for it as we have an idea Judy lias. She Is packing them In at the Curran with her Palace Vaudeville show, and to your correspondent at least when she sang "Over the Rainbow" from one of our old-time favorites "The Wizard of Oz" all was for given. That song alone was worth the price of admission. And the strong nostalgic appeal was not all for In this song Judy discarded her raucous voice via the loud-speaker, and her rowdy antics with her Insipid chorus-boys, and was Just her old time appealing, girlish self. It took us back to the scare-crow and the tin-man and a certain theatre in Chicago that was long before Judy was born, but Judy brought some of the older boys and girls! The ease with which the ceilings could be penetrated soon became so apparent that the idea spread that anybody who didn't go out after higher prices and higher wages was a sap. ' . The result was a tragic period during which the minds of Amer icans became fixed upon the making of a quick buck at a time when our minds and our hands SHOULD have been whol ly occupied with preparations to defend ourselves against a pow erful and brutal enemy. BECAUSE of our dawdling, nrofiteerlno and Dolitics clay ing, Russia Is now readier for! IMMEDIATE war than we are. On that point, Baruch told the senators: "No decisive victory In the cold war is possible AS LONG AS THE SOVIETS HOLD AS TERRIFYING AN EDGE IN MILITARY READINESS OVER THE WEST AS THEY DO TO DAY." Looking ahead, he urged con gress to trim out all possible un necessary and postponable ex penditures. He added: "When you live under the shadow of war, as we do today, all actions must be valued in terms of TIME." THAT recalls a story told to me the other day by Major Gen eral Tom Rllea, adjutant gen eral of Oregon, He was on the campus of one of our Oregon schools of higher learning re cently, he said, at a time when high school seniors of our state were present for a look-see. A meeting was called to give him the opportunity to discuss mem bership in the Oregon National Guard with these youngsters. Some 500 or B00 of them were present on the campus, he told me, but ONLY SIX showed ud at the meeting and what all six wanted to know was how to keep out of military service: T can't believe," he said, "that A this attitude Is the fault of our young men thenjselves. Our boys in Korea have given a thor oughly good account of them selves. They have met every test they have been called upon to meet All accounts agree that Sunday, June I, 1932 29 Never cross the Golden Gate a wonderful work Is MANI The shorter than the Bay bridge, but no fooling, how time DOES fly! Francisco when the bridge was 15 years ago, and it seems like what has happened to this ball-of- II didn't start until two years later! same since. And so few families us older boys and girls are In and shock that we read In the MT was a remarkable tnmg aoout mm. of "borrowed time," he kept on shown in middle age and youth. profit take him as an example and about to take his place In believe, make a good Democratic Nineties will undoubtedly assist of his Groton and Polo-club back give It free play, as a relief to the Byrd of Virginia, for example, or toward organized labor. Harri this department agrees with him of the prejudices above indicated, getting to the White House. it back and of a few tears from K.w.K. they are as good soldiers as the world has seen. "I think It must be the fault of the parents. In their quite un derstandable yearning to keep their boys at home as long as possible, they must be uncon s c 1 o u s 1 y ' Influencing them against the idea of military serv ice." INCIDENTALLY, General Rllea pointed out that if this is true parents are going against their own strongest desires if they do not urge their boys to get into the National Guard. If they en list before they are 1814, they will be administratively deferred from Induction Into the army as long as they remain in the Guard, attend 90 per cent of the drills and go to camp. WHATEVER the causes of this situation described by Gen eral Rllea may be, I think it will be generally agreed that there is no grim purpose among us to get ready for war if war is what has to be. If not, WHY NOT? Personally, I think the fault lies with our -leadership. Until we get leaders who are CONSE CRATED to the preservation of the United States of America as it has been handed down to us by our forefathers, we will con tinue to dawdle and doodle as we have been doing. Rogue River Police Chief Resigns June 1 Rogue River Rudy H. Sieger, chief of police at Rogue River, recently submitted his resigna tion. It Is effective June 1. Sieger said he resigned In pro test to the budget for the next fiscal year, which did not raise his pay and expense account from the current $225 a month plus $10 monthly gasoline allow ance. He had been chief for three years and is a retired southern California policeman. He also is a cabinet maker. The city council Is expected to take action on a successor at the regular Jun S meeting. Crosstown gggg 4 "Why Is it every time the doctor puts me on a diet, you start cookin' stuff I like?" Matter of Fact THEFT IN TEXAS Mineral Wells, Tex. T here are moments when an honest re porter rami cpII a spade a spade, no matter who would prefer to have it call ed an agricul t u r a 1 imple ment. This mo ment, after the Texas Republi c a n Conven tion has reach ed its peculiar, predestined cli Joseph t Alsop max, Is one of them. ' With the on-the-spot approval of Sen. Robert A. Taft's person al representatives, the Texas delegation to the Republican Na tional convention has been stolen for the Ohio Senator. And this steal has been accomplished by a system of rigging as grossly dishonest, as nakedly anti-democratic, as arrogantly careless of majority rule, as can be found In the long and sordid annals of American politics. These are grave statements, but they can be proved to the hilt. The simplest approach is to take the typical case of Harris county, which contains the city of Houston and has 144 votes in the Republican State convention. In Harris, as in all other coun ties, the process of electing Re publican State Convention dele gates was theoretically control led by state law and the rules laid down by the Republican State Committee. State law pro vided that ."qualified voters" should gather in precinct meet ings, to name representatives to a Harris County Convention; and further provided that this county convention should name the 144 delegates to the state convention. The Republican State Conven tion ruled that "qualified vot ers" meant any persons willing to sign a short pledge of Re publican allegiance. a a a TTENCE the precinct meetings were plainly open, under the law and rules, to all Independ ents or former Democrats de siring to become Republicans and ready to sign the pledge. This was strongly emphasized by the chief Taft leader in Texas, National Committeeman Henry Zweifel. Only a week or so be fore the precinct meetings were held on May 3, Zweifel Issued a public statement urging all Democrats or Independents de sirous of becoming Republicans to attend the Republican pre cinct meetings and vote for the candidate of their choice. Zweifel, who has run the Re publican party here like a small, exclusive but pretty nasty club, reckoned without the tremend ous surge of Texas sentiment for Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. As a result of this sentiment, the Harris County Republican pre cinct meetings on May 3 were considerably better attended than the simultaneous Demo cratic meetings, although the Democrats also had a big fight on. More than 22,000 people turned out, where in the past the Republicans could muster only a few hundred. Thearesult, In precinct after precinct, was defeat for the as-j tonlshed and appalled pro-Taft leaders of the Republican Old Guard, and the election, under the law and rules, of pro-Eisen hower precinct representatives to the Harris County Republican Convention in a certain number of precincts. The pro-Taft Old Guardsmen then organized walk-outs and rump precinct meetings. In Pre cinct 38, for example, with 340 persons attending, the vote went almost two-to-one for Elsenhow er. More than 100 of the pro Taft voters accepted the major ity verdict, but a walk-out of six persons was led by a hanger-'. on of Zweifel s. Pat Doyle. a a THIS six man walk-out made Precinct 38 the subject of a ! contest. Other typical contests i were In Precinct 176, where 476 1 By Roland Cot by Joieph Aliop persons attended the precinct meeting and four walked out: and in Precinct 70, where 269 voters attended and the Taft rump was a cozy group com posed of two married couples. In ' the home precinct of the Zweifel National Committee- woman, Mrs. Carl G. Stearns, 175 voters were present, and Mrs. Stearns and her husband rallied a rump of only twenty seven. 4 The Harris County Republican i-nairman, Joe ingraham, is a strong Taft enthusiast but a fair- minded man. When the returns were certified from the pre cincts, he appointed a committee of five, composed of three pro Taft Republicans and two pro- Eisenhower men, to consider all contests. This committee found that 19 pro-Taft representatives had also been duly elected with out contest; but that 69 places were in dispute. Hence, the uncontested Eisen hower representatives, whose right to sit and vote in the Coun ty convention was never ques tioned by anyone, had a clear majority of 146 to a maximum of eighty-eight. Doyle and his six, the two married couples and Mrs. Stearns and her forty-seven could all have been recognized as the legal authorities in their respective precincts, without af fecting the Eisenhower victory in Harris county. In these circumstances, the convention was held on May 6. Prior to the convention, Mrs. Stearns ran an advertisement in the newspapers Inviting al friends to attend the County Con vention, whether they had any rignt to be tnere or not. When the County Convention opened, County Chairman Ingraham in dicated- that he proposed to ac cept the majority verdict, much as he disliked it. e a . A LMOST all the elected repre- sentatlves to the convention, pro-Eisenhower and pro-Taft, rump or legal, joined with Ingra ham in legally electing a pro Eisenhower delegation to the State Convention. But Mrs. Stearns and her husband led a walk-out, largely composed of those who had answered her ad vertisment. This group then chose a pro-Taft slate of Harris County delegates without the slightest reference to the law, the rules, or anything else ex cept the orders of the state lead ership to keep Texas in the Taft column by any means and at all costs. This reporter listened, wide eyed with astonishment, while this fantastic story was told, with heavy documentation, to the State Executive committee here in Mineral Wells. Harris County Chairman Ingraham carefully set forth all the facts, with heavy closing emphasis on the key fact that in Harris County the whol ly uncontested Eisenhower rep resentatives had a heavy major ity of precincts. Throughout Ingraham's testi mony, no effort whatever was made to Impugn his facts, or to prove illegality In the Harris County precinct meetings and convention. No one argued that the Eisenhower forces had not carried Harris County by an enormous margin the actual figure was 18,700 to 3,700. The only argument lamely made was that a number of the Harris County Eisenhower voters were the ex-Democrats whom National Committeeman Zweifel himself had invited into the precinct Dr. Robert J. Urie OPTOMETRIST Moving To 28 SOUTH CENTRAL AVENUE Next to Sub-station Postoffice COMMUNICATIONS Lattara la tha Editor mail kair the uuni and addraia oi tie wrltai lloouih under certain eircum tancci tha usa of a pan aaraa or Initial for publication la permla Iblo. Tha Mall Tribuna reiervei tha rlsht to edit all lettera with .-. view to clarlftcaUon and conden ation. Lettera eubmttted for pub Ucatlon must not exceed 4e word. Poor Mayor Flynnlt To the Editor: Poor Mayor Flynn he gets heck if he does and heck If he doesn ;. So iie will Just have to put his head down and "cry." There are so many big things in life to pay attention to that DST is just a minor issue. Was amused at the letter "Not All Happy" and I wonder If the lady who wrote it realizes that "the farmer feeds the world," and if it wasn't for the farmers and other folks liv ing in the outlying rural dis tricts who produce the fresh vegetables, milk, eggs and so on,' the lady on Spring street might have to tighten up her belt. So let's all pull together be cause we ain't mad at anyone. Caroline Harding, Trail, Oregon. Babson . . Salaried Workers By ROGER BABSON Babson Park, Mass., June 1 (Special to Mail Tribune) I am much concerned about the fi nancial plight of some white- collar workers. I am talking about small business man agers, school masters, book keepers, sales clerks, doctors, and the clergy, These have been our com' munity leaders. They have rep resented much of what has been best in our communities. To de stroy them financially is to de stroy an important segment of our American way of life; and that is what is happening. This is the group of people who from 1935 to 1939 earned salaries ranging from $2,500 to $3,500. Only last week I talked with a salaried executive of one company. In 1939 he was mak ing $3,000 per year. Raises since that time have brought his sal ary to $4,000. In 1932 he took out insurance policies which would pay $500 per year toward each child's education. The col lege to which he planned to send his children then cost $950 per year. Today the charges are $1,500. With inflation and increased taxes .this man cannot afford the education he had planned for his children without going into debt. It is this segment of our popula tion whose bank accounts have shrunk, who have been forced to cash in war bonds and insurance policies not for television sets and new cars but to pay the food, clothing, and shelter bills. Yet, this executive Is probably getting pay above what the aver age reader of this column re ceives. Teacher Shortage Explained The 1935-39 $2,500-a-y ear male teacher would need much more today to maintain his 1935 39 living standards. How many school committees have raised their teachers as much as they should? The result Is that our teachers have constantly had to pull in their belts for the educa tion of their children, hospitali zation, and their old age. This ex plains why there is a shortage of teachers. Those teachers whose salaries , have increased most are the young college in structors, who have had an aver age rise from $1,900 in 1940 to about $3,000 today, an increase of 58 per cent. This unfortunate situation Is meetings. In the end, the Zwei-fel-Taft stooges simply threw out the legally elected Elsenhower delegation from Harris county and seated Mrs. Steam's phony pro-Taft delegation. Next day, the hand-picked Convention Credentials commit tee confirmed the executive committee, and by an unparal leled open fraud, the members of Mrs. Stearns' fake delegation were allowed to vote for them selves on the convention floor. This is the sort of thing, remem ber, that occurred all over Texas, and this Is the sort of thing that Taft managers David Sinton In galls and Brazilla Carroll Reece warmly encouraged and ap proved When Mrs. Stearns was asked how her tiny minority could have the legal right to name the Harris County delega tion, she replied with pretty con fusion: "I Just don't know. But we seemed to, and anyway we're going right along with it." (Copyright, 1932, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) fir lw.klI Signing of German Peace Contract Tops World News of Week By PHIL MEWSOM United Press Foreign Analyst The week's balance sheet be tween the good and bad news In the hot and cold wars: . - THE GOOD 1. The signing of the West German place contract and the European Army treaty were concrete steps in defense of the West against Communist aggres sion. Both face a rocky road be fore ratification but they could be the forerunners of the long- desired United States of Europe, and they are the instruments which will put teeth in the .North Atlantic Treaty Organiza tion. Both were accomplished in the face of tha stiffest Russian opposition. ' -Results Ineffective 2. French Communists called for all-out demonstrations not wholly due to inflation. Some of the troubles are due to the school teachers and parents themselves. They have failed to instill into the youth a love for work and a desire to be of real service. Our communities are now suffering from this neglect of fundamental training. Perhaps the school' teachers are them selves partly to blame for their present predicament. Salaried Workers vs. Wage Earners . '' wage earners, on the other hand, through group' pressure- namely labor unions have gain ed ground fast. Durlng'the 1935 39 period, manufacturing work ers earned, as a group, about $23 per week. Today i they v make about $68 per Week! This repre sents an- Increase of approxim ateiy ?1B7 per cent in wage earnings. Now I don't begrudge these workers this Increase not at all. They're not going to live too riotously even at $66. I am glad they have benefited. By way of contrast, however, the most fortunate college professor in a relatively small number of col leges has received an increase of only 40 per cent during the same period. - , What I am concerned about is that those white-collar workers in our community who, by the nature of their training and ex perience, have been our leaders have not received the same kind of treatment as the production- une worner. Does this mean that the only way to get the problem recognized is through group pressure? , If top management does not realize the inequities to tnis group of workers, I am afraid they are inviting disaster. irice. Tax Increases . Not Expected in 1952 '"' .: Perhaps the one consoling fac tor for the white-collar worker is that commodity prices and fed eral taxes will probably not in crease further in 1952. Thisfl however, is small encourage ment for a substantial block of our most solid citizens. On the other hand, all should realize that raising wages is not the cure for the disease or the answer to the problem. Too many white- collar workers have lost Interest in their work and are trying to do as little as possible rather than as much as possible. Only when employers and all their workers forget themselves and again earnestly co-operate for the good of everyone will the in flation problem be solved. Editorial Comment LOOKING TO WW III ' The Department of the Army has asked for $3,777,000 to reha bilitate Camp White to get it in stand-by condition for military training. And the Department pf Justice is going ahead with plans to rehabilitate Tulelake deten tion center to make it into a concentration camp for subver sives. Washington evidently Is looking ahead for World War III- Oregon (Salem) Statesman. A new miniature walkie-talkie radio, one half the size and weight of its predecessor, is the Army's latest version of mobile communications, ,i , wife- Dor. t worry about the big drinks tha mutt )....'. against Gen. Matthew B. Ridg way, new NATO commander, but the results, although bloody, were relatively .Ineffective. Growing confidence of the French government that it can handle its Internal Reds was seen In the decision to jail Jac ques Duclos, France's No. 1 Red, on charges of acting against the nation's internal security. .- 3. Brig. . Gen. , Haydon L. Boatner's "get tough" policy in the Koje Island prison camps seemed to be paying dividends, and U. N. guards seemed grad ually to be regaining control of their tough prisoners. American and British troops entered Com pound 66 Thursday for the first time since the kidnaping of Col. Francis T. Dodd. Soon the big compounds will be broken up for smafler ones holding ' 500 men each. THE BAD 1. But while the situation on Koje is Improving, the news from the stalled Korean truce talks at Panmunjom was all bad. It seemed a break must come soon, but, rather than bringing peace, It might bring on a re newal of full-scale war. Somber warnings of an immense Red build-up in Korea have come from both London and Washing ton. 2. . Neo-Fasclst victories in Italian municipal elections were warnings that followers of the late Benito Mussolini are on the march in strength again, and that Premier Alcide de Gasperi's center government may be in for a bad time. The Fascists and their Monarchist allies only need to take about 70 ' seats in the Chamber of Deputies to wreck the center coalition's control and give Italy the same sort of un stable government from which France has been suffering. Heading as Expected 3. The Russians and their East German allies were reacting a expected to the West German peace pact and the European Army treaty. There was fighting in Berlin and the. Communists were setting up a three-l-mile-wide no-man's-land along the dividing line between East and West. Other Russian moves could be expected. Russia's warning to Iran against accepting U. S. mili tary aid might be a straw in the . wind. - . Plans for, Roundup Parade Announced By Sheriffs Posse fMvlrv fraternal anA muetpnl organizations of Medford and the vallev are invir.prl hv . .Tarlrenn County Mounted Sheriff's posse men . to participate in me lum annual Rogue River roundup parade Saturday. June 14. at 6 p.m. , Entries should be made be fore June 9 hv wrltlnff tha roundup parade chairman, L. W, i,iienquist, n) Box 248, Med ford, who will assign position! and furnish further information if desired. Since the roundup this year will be staffed at thn nnna grounds on Sage road, the point of line-up and parade route through Medford streets will be changed, possemen said yester day. Route Given The Darade will form at w( Fifth street between North Oak- dale avenue and North Ivy streets. From there It -will en south on Ivy and continue east on Main street from the Medford hotel to Riverside avenue, then north on Riverside to Sixth street and west on Sixth to tha Medford hotel. Possemen are anvinne tn mnlr this one of the roundup's largest ana most interesting parades and asked the cooneratinn valley groups in making it so. - ine rounaup will be present ed Saturday evening after the parade and Sundav afWn nnn. June 15. guys. It'i tha LITTLE guy who u , r.7 . Multi-Minenl Milk" . 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