Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1954)
C 'f 'IT T TT H7"T?T :ii 1 - . uaauwtau, uvcr gunu or innocence oi ur. cam aneppara, jury arrives at criminal Courts Building, to continue deliberation after spending night In Cleveland hotel. (International) Dhe (Eivemi EsucomiirageinraesiiUor TTiry -.at Secoirad Term Son 1956 By JOHN L. CUTTER ' United Press Correipond(pt Washington (U.R) If Presi dent Eisenhower need any en couragement to run for a second term in 1956, he has had it. The men who sat down with him at a White House stag din ner Monday night are about as formidable a pressure group for a second term as any president has faced. There were 18 in all govern ment officials, businessmen, and politicians. They are all big Eisenhower, rooters. And they all want the President to carry the banner for the Republicans in 1956. , There was Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell Jr., Postmaster Gener al Arthur E. Summerfield, Com merce Secretary Sinclair Weeks. There was Mr. Eisenhower's old psychological warfare aide, C. D. Jackson of Time magazine, and James L. Murphy, chairman of the Citizens for Eisenhower Congressional Campaign Com mittee. . Drop Hints Mr. Eisenhower has dropped some hints that he would like to step out of office at the end of his present term after more than 40 years of government service. He has spoken longingly of. taking up residence at his Gettysburg, Pa., farm. But he has not publicly com mitted himself one way or the other. Some political leaders think he sincerely intends to re tire.. Others believe he can be talked into running again to vin dicate his record and to keep the Republicans in power. .The pressures for him to do this already are building up. Nu merous GOP leaders have pub licly declared the necessity of the President continuing to lead the party. And the guests at Monday night's dinner are part of the picture. There is a real concern in some Republican quarters that the Re publicans may be plunged into dissension and a possibly dis astrous split at the 1956 nation al convention if Mr. Eisenhower is not persuaded to stay at the helm. Besides Brownell, Summer field, Jackson and Murphy, those invited to the stag dinner were: Vice-President Richard Nixon; GOP National Chairman Leon ard Hall; Sherman Adams, pres idential assistant; Lucius D. Clay, Continental Can board chairman and an Eisenhower booster; White House Press Secretary James C. .Hagerty; Undersecre tary of State Herbert Hoover Jr. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., U. S. ambassador to the United Na tions; John R. (Tex) McCrary Jr., NBC emcee who chairmaned an elect-Ike rally in 1952; Wil liam E. Robinson, board chair man of Robinson-Hannegan As- I CnAial rAnrnr CltAiiir JLiGUQI AtCllJUy JIIUVYj Springfield at 12,422 Springfield (U.R) Results of special census just completed show Springfield's population to be 12,422, a gain of 1,650 over the 1950 census, City Manager L. B. Bartlett revealed today. Benjamin Kundin, special rep resentative of the U.S. Census bureau, took the count at a cost to the city of $2,000. City offi cials estimate, however,, that more than $12,000 will be com ing back to the city in increased gasoline and v liquor money, which is distributed by the state on a population basis. the dytUerutafi Klelmac Dinnervare r) WARE grr!1 CrS Cs Here's the dinnerware you'll be proed to own, delighted to use, end anxious to tell your friends about. Availabte in open stock in 8 rich, lustrous decorator colors. Easy to wash by hand or machine ... will never lose its shape .. . will never lose its color ' in fact, just .. . A PRACTICAL JOY FOREVER! GUARANTEED against breaking, chipping or crackina ' Bermuda Coral Pafitada Grey Caribbean Mm Caayva Yallew 16 PC STARTER SET 4 10" Dinner Plate : 4 8 ox- cup Granada Greea Sahara Sand Chartreuse 4 Saucer 4 Bread aad Belter Plate Open Till 9 Till Christmas Eve. FREE PARKING FREE DELIVERY t II II X. iT II II II "X. 1 $1495 .SPECIALISTS IN OMtWAKtf . CENTRAL POINT Lily Pons Refuses To Discuss Divorce El Paso, Tex. (U.R) Opera stair Lily Pons refused today to discuss reports she would seek a Mexican divorce from con ductor Andre Kostelanetz. -" Kostelanetz, who was married to the tiny soprano in 1936, was reported to have been in El Paso over.the week end. : If the couple is seeking a di vorce, it presumably would be in Juarez, across the Rio Grande from El Paso. Court officials in Juarez said they had no official knowledge that Kostelanetz, 53, and Miss Pons, 50, were seeking a divorce. But a Juarez attorney said he had conferred with them. The lawyer said he couldn't make a statement. sociates, Inc., and member of the Citizens for Eisenhower Commit tee; Edward L. Ryerson, Inland Steel Co. executive; Charles S. ! Jones, Richfield Oil Corp., Los! Angeles. Thomas E. Stephens, presiden tial secretary; and Air Force Sec retary Harold E. Talbott. Attorney Disbarred By Supreme Court; Attacked Judge Little Rock, Ark. (U.R) Lawyer Harold C. Rains Jr., has been disbarred by the Arkansas Supreme . Court at his own re quest, .because he attacked a judge while court was in ses sion. Rains, of Van Buren, Ark., was accused by the state bar's rules committee of using abusive language toward Chancellor Judge C. M. Wofford, and try ing to pull him off the bench. The brief said Rains was too drunk last June 10 to defend a client properly, and had de scibed the client as "not worth a damn." Judge Makes Query "Have you been drinking this morning?" Wofford asked Rains, according to the court reporter's record. . "If the court please, that is none of your business," Rains said. Wofford then told the bailiff to call the sheriff and Rains said: "Yes, go get him and get him quick. I have had everything out of you I can take. You are al ways asking me in front of peo ple if I am drinking." The lawyer then tried to pull the judge from his chair. In Rains' petition for his dis barment, he said he used "dis respectful and intemperate lan guage in talking to the court," and said it ."culminated in a physical attack upon the court committed in a fit of temper." To Question Confessed Murder About Father Clarendon, ' Ark. U.fo Billy Ray Willingham,. 19, who con fessed the sex and hunger, slay ing of a 25-year-old mother,, to day "wiH be questioned about the death of bis father, and an attack on another woman in Arkansas. . Willingham was held here be cause of "strong feeling" against him in ' Brinkley, Ark., where he admitted he crushed Mrs. Sue Fuller's skull with a heavy piece of kindling wood and sex ually molested her. Sheriff H. H.' McKenzie said authorities wanted . to question Willingham, an itinerant laborer from Alabama, about .the death of his father last May and an attack on a Pine Bluff, Ark., minister's daughter two months ago. - The father, Will Willingham, died at Oakman, Ola., May 7. An Oakman physician, Dr. H. ' S. Watkins, said he died of a cere bral hemorrhage and discounted the possibility of murder. But Carl ' Wyars of Des Arc, Ark, said the elder Willingham died of a blow on the head. 1 ; Why Drive Around . DRIVE . RIGHT IN - Stores Salvation Army Hopes For Return of Kettle Kansas' City, Mo. (U.R The Salvation Army hoped tdday that the thief who stole its Christmas collection kettle in the heart of downtown . Kansas. City yester day . would . return it, with or without the money. ' ', ' Brigadier; D. E.': Norris ex plained "a -worker left the kettle unattended when she became ill and: it was gone when a sub stitute reached the scene 20 min utes .later.,; Norris said he'd be satisfied iMhe thief. would just drop the kettle in the doorway at Salvation Army headquarters. Tuesday. December 21, 1954 . MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNETHREE A Mexican? free-tailed, bat, banded at Carlsbad Caverns Na tional Park, New Mexico, has been recovered in Jalisco state, Mexico, 800 miles south, of the caverns. - Park officials, believe this sets a record. '. Fire Chief Unusually j Unhappy About Fire - Keller, ' Tex. : U.R) Fin Chief M. B. Stevenson was un usually unhappy about a fire to day that swept a cleaning estab lishment and destroyed clothing belonging to 40 persons in cluding the chief. .' : ;: The Sweetest GIFT of ALL Delicious Boxed CANDY MADE FRESH AT . WHITE'S CANDY KETTLE 301 E. Main Ph. 2-6766 Chri Cards strrias AI I Types and Kinds ( Sing les and Boxed Assortments Wrap and Ribbon t&iig&sai c i, -j safest USE TRIBUNE WANT ADS! PENNEY'S STILL HAS LENTY OF WONDERFUL GIFTS OPEN 'TILL 9:00 Pj Mr TONIGHT, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY TI)totttdw9(Q m es u w es w fr 0 C3 i g a q u a w u 1 GIFTS FOR WOMEN 100 NYLON PANTIES Non-run tricot knit in either brief or band leg style.. S-M-L. White, pink, blue . .: g)8 i. ALL NYLON STRETCH ANKLETS , You don't need to know her size.. These anklets ; fit all sizes. White, colors . . PLASTIC JEWELRY BOXES Velvet lined jewelry boxes with inner shelf tray. A nice gift .. 1.... '. . LARGE SELECTION, PURSES Plastic and fabrics in a large, selection of styles and colors. Plus tax .... LOVELY GIFT JEWELRY Pins, earrings, necklaces in lots of styles and ma- . terials. Plus tax : '. COTTON CHALLIS GOWNS T ' Wonderfully easy to wash Challis that dries in a wink. Sizes 32-40 . . BRUSHED BEMBERG PAJAMAS ' ; ' Soft lovely brushed rayon bemberg in a teriffic selection of styles and colors. 32-40 DACRON GIFT BLOUSES : The lovely gift blouse that washes and dries in a ' wink. White and colors. 32-38 .... ;.......: ' GIFTS FOR MEN WARM LINED LEATHER GLOVES gft fRO Capeskin gloves with warm part wool . lining. Xw$ Sizes ZVz to 11. Brown or-black.-' 'LLLL. LjlMy WASHABLE GABARDINE SPORTS SHIRTS Machine washable and vat dyed.- Lots of smart colons 5 MIj ' MEN'S NYLYLE I KNIT BRIEFS Long wearing cotton , briefs with 20 ' nylon added. Sturdy elastic waist band. 30-40 . ...... SANFORIZED BROADCLOTH PAJAMAS Stripes and prints that are machine washable in either coat or middy style. Sizes: A, B, C D WOVEN DACRON MUFF4ERS i Smart; washable mufflers in bright woven plaids". COMBED COTTON POLO SHIRTS I Fine combed cotton with non-stretch neck band. .Sizes S-M-L-XL. : . NYLON STRETCH SOCKS Sturdy, long-wearing nylon that stretches to fit -. all foot sizes.. Lots of colors. .'. TOWNCRAFT WHITE SHIRTS';'! v Famous quality, broadcloth shirts at a 'budget price. Sizes 1436 to 17. Barrel or French cuff s. Her Christmas Stocking This Year . GMGR. SHEER 1 GIFTS FOR CHILDREN BOY'S CORDUROY SPORTS SHIRTS Machine washable shirts in a variety. of smart col ors he will like. Sizes 4-18 . . . : , BOY'S COTTON FLANNEL SHIRTS Sanforized and vat dyed, warm and good looking are these shirts. Lots of .colors, 4-16 .i BOY'S COTTON ARGYLE SOCKS Hand framed argyles jusf like 'dad's.. Lots .of bright color combinations. Size 8-10. BOY'S WASHABLE GABARDINE SHIRTS' . Don't worry about washing these ;Mom. They're vat dyed and pre-shrunk. Lots of colors. Size 4rl6 GIRLS COTTON CANCAN SLIPS . Permanent finish everglaze cotton that will' al ways keep that wide sweep look. 4-14. White only. ; GIRLS STRETCH ANKLETS' ; . Made of long wearing nylon these socks will grow with her feet. White and colors. ..... GIRLS FANCY TRIM PANTIES . ; f(R Fancy nylon trims and lots of coldrs make these . 7 ideal practical gifts.. Sizes. 4-14 v ...:.......; j:. ";y ; fcj &J GIRLS NYLON GIFT BLOUSES; Sheer beauties for the young miss. White and and colors. Sizes 7-14. . SaS W wonder of Yj-r- lis "Mgh TW Wmm 3.2)8 - t7fWW Wlm 2MB tMMK 111' : vr-M JM' MMiM m 1MB GIRLS COTTON PLISSE SLIPS Practical, easy-to-launder slips with . built - up shoulder. White only. Sizes 6-14. : . . Now! i 60-gaage Gaymode nylons made to Penney's exacting pecifi catioDi. They're leer enough for dates, yet w long.wearing ; youll wear them to work. Of course, when ' they're Gaymode nylons, you're at sured.of first quaUty, ' always!.. In four ahadea, plain or dark seams. i:?s-- - 1 denier Proporhoneo . ; O 60-g.ug, 15 denier r ; jr W Gaymodes ------v- tl.n0 Hwl Gtymo O 60-gaugef 1 5 demerw - - , QUALITY MEOFORD