Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1955)
- TheyH Do It Every I Ujtrvl vf-j ID CTPAtf ARCIVES TOO 1 I MHD HOW DOES IT COM F R4rtf I RARE-JUST SEND IT BACK FOR A ' TO YOU OM THE SECOND TRIP? LITTLE MORE COOKlMS"" THE BURNED-EST.' WSS-THE STEAK "fCaW " 5? IS JUST4UTTLE i s 3r .THERE 7 you just ervEij iVfxS' Y 25Kt-l 1 A LITTLE WORE Y VPUTEvi' - o Demos Planning To Let1 Record Answer Easy on Reds1 Charge Washington U.R) Demo crats said Saturday they will let their Red hunting record in the next two years answer Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's charge that their party will go easy on Communists. Sen. John L. MeClellan CD- Ark), who succeeds the Wiscon sin Republican as chairman of the Senate Permanent Investi- men, "I hope the record this subcommittee will make in the 84th Congress will be a good one. Atny rate, it will speak accurately when made." But Me Clellan would not comment di rectly on McCarthy's charge since it did not mention him or the subcommittee. " Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La.), who tangled verbally with Mc Carthy in the Senate Friday, told reporters, "The Democrats' record will spoak for itself on the efforts to investigate and fer ret out subversive activities. There is a determination anions the Democratic leaders to expose Communism wherever it might be." Siirs Up Ruckus McCarthy stirred up a rugkus Friday after. the Senate passed a resolution promising to con tinue investigating Communists. He said he did not believe the Democrats tiartv will allow Democratic senators to live up to the resolution. "I am firmly convinced that the control of the Democratic party is held by the same group of men responsible for 20 years of Harry Dexter White type of treason," McCarthy said. McCarthy said some of the 54 senators who signed. the resolu tion were "trying to get some dirt off their hands." Bang! went the gavel in the hands of Long, who was -presiding over the sparsely populated Senate chamber. He ordered Mc Carthy to sit down, under the Senate rule which forbids jjues tioning the motives of another senator. Ordered Down Twica Mora McCarthy was allowed to pro ceed, but was forced to take his seat twice more for rule infrac tions before the dispute sub sided. Long said it was the duty of the presiding officer to enforce he rules, and he intended to do it. EATON'S DINNER HOUSE S12 Crater Lk At. ITALIAN AND AMERICAN DINNERS SPECIAL All the Spahetti and Homemade Ravioli you can eat. Includes Home Made Bread. Butter and Coi(ee. QQ S COURSE ITALUaN DINNER $1.50 Open 5:39 PJM. Till 9 P.M. Fri, Sat, un and Mon. Only Medford Senior High Auditorium 10 Big Exciting, Unusual Acts Plus Earl (Fatha) Hines and J His Decca Recording Orchestra. The Most Entertaining Stage S: Hrartinn Ever Presented HeTe! amission $2.50 and $2.00 Reserved Gen'L, Adm. $1.51 : your Tickets at Swem's or Sam's Sporting Goods Time : it . McCarthy said he meant no slur on Sen. Price Daniel (D Tex.), sponsor of the resolution, or many other Democrats like Sen. Harry F. Byrd (D-Va.), a southern conservative. But he added, "The Truman-1 Acheson branch of the Demo-1 Shady Cove -Trail News Shady Cove-?f ail Vernon Baldwin of Shady Cove is leav ing Saturday on a Naval reserve training cruise for about two weeks in the Pacific. He will go from Medford to Seattle by plane and from there go to sea on the- destroyer escort TJSS Romba :h, and on his trip home will come by plane from San Diego. Medford entertained at Mary's Medford enterained at Mary's Casa in Medford with a surprise birthday dinner honoring the birthday of her mother, Mrs. Eva Segessenman. Guests pres ent were ' Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ross, Mrs. Mae Lane of Shady, cove, ana tne begessenmans. The March of Dimes envelopes have been mailed throughout the community, according to Chair man Eva Segessenman and Co Chairman Lola Bartuss. Letters have also been sent to all or ganizations asking their coopera tion by having some money rais ing event to help this cause. On Friday, Jan. 21, at the Shady Cove Cleaners there will be a benefit March of Dimes food sale, sponsored by the Shady Cove PTA and the Shady Cove Home Extension unit. The larg est benefit March of Dimes event scheduled so far in this area will be a dance spensored by Steelhead Post No. 6881, VFW on Friday, Jan. 28 at the VFW hall. Com containers for donations have been placed in all the stores. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Goode moved from the Segessenman house they were renting in the Cove, into the Chris Holder house in Shady Cove last week. The Holder family has moved to Medford. Mr. and Mrs. Arn old Winslow and family of Pros pect have moved into the house vacated by the Goodes. Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Larson of Shady Cove are leaving to spend the winter in California. Word received here is that Mr. and Mrs. Scottie Patrick of Trail are visiting with Mrs. Patrick's nieces in Mill Valley, Calif., for the winter, and that Mrs. Par rick has been receiving medical treatment in San Francisco. Word received from the Bob Holcomb family is to the effect that they are now living in Northridge, Calif.' Maurene Hol comb is working and is also en gaged in song writing. Mrs. Ruth Sanford and daugh ter, Anne, were in Shady Cove briefly on a business trip. Mrs. Sanford announces that they plan to return around April when she will resume her real estate business. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Jones of Shady Cove are vacationing in WED. NIGHT JANUARY 19 at 8 P.M. By Jimmy Hatlo f I crat party has coddled, covered up and nurtured treason." Long told McCarthy later that every president of the United States had been a patriotic Am erican. He said they may have made mistakes of judgment but not of motive. Seattle. ; Mrs. Jacalyn Langston enter tained at her home the afternoon of Jan. 12 with a party honor ing the sixth birthday of her son, Johnny. Games were played and refreshments served. Guests attending were Eda Larson, Rita and Arley Spain, Kenneth and Marion Vincent and Sheri and Lane Watson and adults, Mrs. Arley Spain, Mrs. Bob Vincent, Mrs. Dolf Larson, Mrs. Carroll Watson, the hostess, Mrs. Langs ton and Johnny's grandmother, Mrs. Clara Thurman. Newcomers to Shady Cove are Mr. and Mrs. 'David Gates and family, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Smith and family and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Erkkila and family, All from Burns, Ore., who are living at the Rainbow hotel. The men are employed by J. C. Compton company on rock crushing job for highway con struction. Henry Doak of Shady Cove whose cabinet shop was destroy ed by fire recently wishes to thank all those who assisted in any way in fighting the fire. Tom Quail of Shary Cove is confined to the Veterans' Hospi tal in Portland where he under went surgery recently. At last reports he is convalescing nice ly. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Melton, son, LeRoy and nephew of Med ford were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Athel Dudley of Shady Cove. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Stelle and family of Shady Cove made a trip to Chico, Calif., over New Years, v Mrs. Francis Miller of Shady Cove has returned home after spending the Christmas and New Year's holidays with her son and family Mr. and Mrs.' Bud Deck er of Portland and granddaugh ter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hafner of Hillsboro. Mr. and Mrs. George Hook, formerly of Shady Cove and now of Redlands, Calif., have sold their home on the River road to Walter Mallory of Shady Cove. Bill Littlefield has returned to SOC to resume his studies after the Christmas-New Year vaca tion period. Another Shady Cove student at SOC ii Mrs.' Kay Zimmerlee. The citizenship awards for '53 '54 for the Eagle Point High school were given to Joanne Henderson of Eagle Point and Vernon Baldwin of Shady Cove. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carlton of Puyallup, Wash., were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Croucher of Shady Cove. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Paulson of Shady Cove made a trip to Yreka recently to bring back their daughter, Sandra, who had s p e n t the Christmas holidays with her grandmother, Mrs. Eva McGilvray there. ' Mrs. Travis Littlefield enter tained at her home on Friday, Jan. 7, with a pinochle party for the benefit of the Shady Cove Home Extension unit. A dessert luncheon was served. Games were also played and prizes for high scores were won by Mrs William Croucher' and Mrs. Ed Houston, and consolation' prizes were given Mrs. Ralph Lane and Mrs. Dolf Larson. . - Mr. and Mrs. Grant Hubbell of Trail made a trip over , the Christmas holidays to Salt Lake City where they visited their daughter and family, Master Sgt. and Mrs. Frank Selto. and then went . to California where they visited with Hubbell's sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Herb Put ney at Yerma, Calif., and with another sister, Mrs. Ella Mitch ell at Lodi. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Birch of Medford spent New Year's with the Kenneth Oliver family in Lancaster, Calif., former - resi dents of Shady Cove. McCarthy Attacks Army Secretary r v Charges Deception Washington (U.R) - Senator Joseph R. " McCarthy Saturday switched his attack on Demo crats to; favorite' target. Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens, ac cusing him of "deliberate decep tion" in the Peress case. . McCarthy said Stevens with held the names of Army Counsel or John G. Adams and Maj. Gen. Walter L. Weible, deputy chief of staff, from a list of 30 persons involved in . the promotion and honorable discharge of former Maj. Irving Peress. ... Clashing With Army McCarthy calls Peress, a New York dentist, a "Fifth Amend ment Communist." The disputed list of 30 persons was furnished by Stevens last spring to a spe cial subcommittee which investi gated the Army-McCarthy con troversy. The stormy Wisconsin Repub lican has been -clashing with the Army and Stevens off and on for almost a year about the Peress case. McCarthy- said in a letter to Stevens, which was released Sat urday that the Army's new 10,-000-word history of the Peress case showed that Adams and Weible "were the two men who were responsible for the sudden honorable discharge of Peress." "At this time I -would like to know who made the decision to keep this information from the Mundt committee and practice this deliberate deception upon that committee and the. Ameri can people," McCarthy wrote. The list which Stevens sent Sen. Karl E. Mundt (R-S.D.), chairman of the subcommittee which heard the Army-McCarthy dispute, never has been made public. Mundt gave the list, unread, to McCarthy who" read it but has not disclosed the 30 names. - '-. McCarthy's new broadside against Stevens followed the bit ter debate in the Senate yester day after the Senate unanimous ly approved a resolution, pledg ing it to diligently search out Communists." ; -. . ' McCarthy said he was not "too; hopeful" that the Democrats would continue his anti-Communist campaign. He said the party still is controlled "by the same group of men responsible for 20 dreary years of the Harry Dex ter White type of treason." Twice the presiding officer, Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La.), gaveled McCarthy to silence, and the Wisconsin Republican was forced to sit down for violating a Senate rule impunging the mo tives of colleagues. Defendants Get Verdict In $52,000 Damage Suit Roseburg (U.PJ-A jury here decided in favor of the defend ants in a $52,000 damage suit filed as the aftermath of a fatal accident near Reedsport on Oct. 3, 1952. The suit was brought by Wal lace B. Spurgeon of Drain against Ray Roth and Daniel D. Santry of Olympia, Wash. Spurgeon was a passenger in a car which collided with a truck driven by Roth on. High way 38 between Drain' and Reedsport. J Jl KA I I n HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! MUST END SOON! 7,v?h?OW 1 CONTINUOUS TODAY Mildred Gail Chosen 4-H'er Of Month; Activities Cited ; -Mildred Gail, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Norman Gail, route 1, , Gold Hill,; has . been selected as : Jackson county's outstanding club member for the month of January. ' : Miss Gail has completed nine years in 4-H club work in which she has worked with sheep all nine years, beef eight years and dairy one year. During this time she has exhibited the reserve grand champion steer in 1948, and has been grand ; reserve champion sheep showman in 1946, was awarded the George Nichols trophy for the outstand ing club member, with sheep at the 1951 county fair, and in 1953 was the grand champion sheep and grand champion beef show man. V"' :- A 'V"::,' . She has exhibited at the "state fair five different ' years with fat lambs and steers. She was awarded a trip to state fair' on a judging team in 1951 and this past year was on the highest Oregon livestock judging team to judge at the Pacific Interna tional in Portland.. Miss Gail's other 4-H activi ties include working on the monthly radio program on sta tion KMED, two years as a camp counselor in the 4-H sum mer camp and attendance at 4-H summer -school '.at Corvallis where last year she was presi dent of her 'living group. She has been a junior leader of the Gold Hill sheep club for the fpast four years and has been the general chairman of the Gold Hill Lamb show for the last three years handling the organi zation, judging and presentation of awards. . This year ' Miss "" Gail " is vice-president of the student body at Crater High school in Central Point, is a member of the student council; Future Homemakers of America, Girls'. League and the Torch National Honor society. One of her big interests is the work done in her school with the "Curtain Callers" and -her par ticipation in debate and extem poraneous speech at Crater High school. One honor .she is very Droud of is the "Jerome" which she won in 1952 for being the outstanding actress at Crater High school for the part of Aunt Ella in the play "Hangman's Noose." She is a member of .the Metho- dist church and, sings in the church choir and is active in the Methodist Youth fellowship. She enjoys hiking and swimming piano playing as some of her hobbies. Miss Gail is actively participating in the talent show to be held by the 4-H clubs ol Jackson county in February as tViPir master of ceremonies, a Chef Ralph's LUNCHES 600 up DINNERS $150 up OPEN FROM 12 to 12 DINING ROOM h " appealing (30 FROM 12:45 P.M. 1 J " Sunday, January 18, 1955' ., MILDRED GAIL ; '' January's Outstanding 4-H'er credit to her work in speech. Miss " Gail has one sister, Grace, 15, also an outstanding . MEDFORD'S FAMILY THEATRE Adults 50c CHILDREN Up to 12 FREE .. When Accompanied By Parents LAST DAY MATINEE 1 P.M. Doors Open 12:45 p.m. EVENING SHOWS r Start 7 p.m. Doors Open 6:45 p.m. - PLUS - liE2Sr.3l2l v7nrr rARRai.lORTWRUKK.lOCKlUJIT . Boxoffice OPENS , 12:45 NOW ir WHAT A WONDERFUL, HAPPY PICTURE msmR Barney was fresh and moody and unpredictable sxid the most lovable guy she ever met! WARNER BROS.Mtmr : DCAf3AK3lANX A3 CJJLYTHSYCAtl! HL Iff LOVE COMES TO MP J yOU UV JUST ONE Of THOSE THMGS'ONE LATEST NEWS EVENTS MEDFORD (OREGON) Mrs. Sefh Huntington Succumbs at Salem Salem U.R Mrs.- Seth R. Huntington, 60, ; widow of the late pastor of the First Congre gational Church here, died in a Salem hospital here Friday night. Dr. Huntington died' June 1, 1953.. , ; - . In ' 1953-54 ; she was - house mother of the girls dormitory at Pacific University. ; ' J - club member, : and a . brother, Donald,' 7.' Mr. and Mrsl Gail have ' Gail's Gold Hill market and in addition have . a 90-acre farm north of Gold Hill, 30 acres of - which are under, irrigation. Sixtyrtwo head " of southdown sheep, some, of which are reg istered,' are : carried : with ten head of beef shorthorns. - Her . plans after graduation from . Crater High- school , this spring : call for a full - summer's activity of 4-H in camp, summer school and fair, after which she intends to enroll in college. She has not decided what she will major in or what school she will attend as yet. Holly Wed nesday JUDY RETURNS to the S01EEN...S and More Wonderful Than Ever...in Hollywood's " Createit Story About Hollywood! rp' f GAK1AND, a Jack CARSON S v YOUNG - ' LOW - f. . f 4t Biiiiifnir HOWING22 1?? mm TAT si w-wi, FOR MY BAST ADDED MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEnf , JUDY ANN Sandwich Shop 443 South Central Next to Central Market OPEN FOR BUSINESS Monday, January 17 SERVING - Those Delicious Sandwiches and Chill . ASHLAND V l&m BlfflllDD :atcjfrc:it Charles CKFORO Continuous FROM 1 P.M. VJl V 1 1 W1 Mua Mwattj .5 WarnerColori ETHa fXaOTHY BARRYMORE - MALONE fJechnicolor CARTOON f 9 i