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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1955)
.SHT MZDfORD fORECON) MAIL TRIBUNE Trlday, Mtreh 23, 1939 Right To Me for 1 8-Year-0lds May Be Placed on General Election Ballot Oregon Senate Puis Decision Up io Adults Salem OJ.P.) The adults will get a chance to decide if the right to vote should be extended to 18-year-olds, as recommended by President Eisenhower, if the Oregon House approves a pro posal to place a constitutional amendment on the ballot reduc ing the voting minimum age from 21 to 18. The Senate voted 21 to 9 just before adjourning yesterday to leave it up to those who already have the vote, at the 1956 gen eral election, whether Oregon should let the young folk vote. Sen. Mark Hatfield (R-Salem) said citizens at 18 now are fully enough informed of civic affairs to vote intelligently. Georgia now lets its citizens ; start voting when they reach 18. j The Washington Legislature has j voted to refer the matter to the people. Awareness Shown Sen. Hatfield said that Presi dent Eisenhower, as general in World War II probably came into contact with more young men 18 to 21 than any American. AfW becoming thoroughly ac quainted with their capabilities, he urged that they be given the right to vote. The Salem senator said youth have demonstrated their aware ness of civic affairs by the time they are 18. Under our present law, he said there was a "citizen ship lag" between the ages of 18 and 21. Only one of three high school graduates continue to college. The other two, who have studied civic affairs and become interested in govern ment, have an intervening pe riod between their studies and the time they can vote and lose a certain amount of interest. Said Bipartisan Issue Sen. Monroe Sweetland (D Milwaukie) said it was a bipar tisan issue, with both Republi cans and Democrats in favor of the proposal. Sen. Paul Geddes (R-Roseburg) said youth showed outstanding intelligence at a hearing held by the judiciary committee last Sat urday on the resolution, but the youths themselves were divided on the issue. In the only discus sion against the measure, he said those 18 to 21, while intelligent, were impetuous; more interested in establishing homes than ac cepting tha responsibilities of citizenship. Broader Tax Base for Oregon Included in Tax Committee's Plan To Balance Books Salem (U.R) Rep. Loran Stewart (R.-Cottage Grove) and his tax committee told the House and Senate late yesterday how they propose to balance Ore gon's books, but they admitted it was no permanent solution and the job would have to be tackled all over again in 1957. Stewart made a series of fis cal points in his explanation of the program: Paul McNutt Died in Disappointment After Yielding To Roosevelt By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Correspondent Washington U.R) Paul V. McNutt died in disappointment rr.i;ti obscurity well able to remember and probably to regret what might have been. The time of his eclipse was mid - evening of July 18, 1940. The place: Chicago Stadium Lyle C. Wilson where Frank lin D. Roosevelt had directed that the Democratic National Convention assemble to draft him for a third term. It was the day and night of the bitter showdown on Mr. Roosevelt's determination that Henry Agard Wallace should be the next vice-president of the United States. Just previously the Republicans in Philadelphia had nominated Wendell L. Will kie for president and Sen. Charles L. McNary of Oregon for the second spot. Willkie al most could have been FDR's selection because the President knew he could lick him andJ relished the chore. The men nominated by the Democrats were sure to be elected. Pressure Builds Up It was a set-up year for Mr. Roosevelt and for those Demo crats faithful to him. Of all the other there came only to Mc Nutt the chance to upset the cherished plans of the mightiest politician of his time. The op portunity came. McNutt seized it and let it go. Nearly a dozen Democratic aspirants to the vice-presidential nomination had pulled out of the contest by the time the conven- Around Hollywood By ALINE MOSBY United Press Correspondent u Hollywood (U.R) The world still looks black-and-white to most TV viewers. But color TV will be nailed down to stay Sunday when NBC opens the first new color studio with the fanfare of one -'O of TV's biggest all-star shows. faWiiMtrmitrJ viewer com- Aline Mot by plains that the supercolossal musicals are de signed for color sets, yet most of the audience hasn't the $900 to enjoy the glorious red, blues and greens. Some trade experts insist color isn't sweeping TV and lowering the prices of sets as fast as ex pected. First for Color But NBC indicates color TV will march on regardless. Next Sunday the network unveils the first studio built only for color TV, a colossus in Burbank equip ped with an impressive array of lights and control boards like the inside of some futuristic space ship. The new color studio means more color TV programs will be produced in Hollywood, an un comfortable reminder to the movie studios over the hills. The kick-off program, NBC claims, will be one of the big gest yet as to the number of ap pearing stars. The program, "En tertainment, 1955," will have Bob Hope representing the movie business and Dinah Shore, records. Leontyn Price will represent opera in a tele cast from New York while Hel en Hayes and the play that wins this year's Antoinette Perry Award will appear for the stage. Jimmy Durante will do a segment representing television. Other celebrities appearing in person or via film include Char leton Heston, movie pioneer Adolph Zukor, Judy Holliday, Caesar Romero,. Jimmy Cagney, Fred MacMurray, Donna Reed and John Derek. A salute to radio is conspic uously absent, but producer Jack Rayel, who sped her from New York to master-mind the program, shrugged that "I tried." "Fred Allen was going to do his 'Allen's Alley from radio with Dennis Day playing all the characters," he said as he paused between hehearsals in the new color studio." But Day cams down with pneumonia. He'll be sick for another two weeks. So we just had to leave out radio. We wanted to include the circus but that didn't work out either." The biggest headache of pro ducing a "spectacular", he add ed, is the problem of which stars should twinkle the brightest. "The performers are very sweet, but their agents'" he groaned. "Each agent is very concerned that his client gets the same billing in the same size type and has the same amount of time on the program as the other stars. "But once I produced the 'Home' show with 30 women," he added after a thought, "and nothing could be worse than that!" Multnomah Moves Fund For Welfare Payments Portland U.R) County Com missioners yesterday authorized transfer of 589,831 from the emergency fund to the general assistance fund to be used to off set a recent cut in welfare pay ments. The resolution carried a pro vision that the State Welfare Commission furnish matching funds so general assistance pay ments can be restored to at least 87 per cent of those made before the reduction last month. If the state commission approves the increased payments would start in April. tion got around on July 18 to picking the man. White House pressure was too much for them.J Wallace stayed in as Mr. Roose velt's choice. Speaker John H Bankhead was in as the last- stand, anti-New Deal candidate. And there was McNutt, who had been named the year before to be federal security administra tor, a maneuver generally re garded as intended to put the brakes on the former Indiana governor's ambition to get the 1940 presidential nomination for himself. Gets FDR's Call On the evening of July 18 it was still a contest with good prospects for McNutt over Bank head and Wallace. Failing that, the political experts fieured McNutt could at least split the New Deal vote and give Bank head a chance to slip in. A very large proportion of the delegates was frantically looking for a way out of supporting Wallace. That's the way it was when McNutt was called away. The White House was calling. And from Washington spoke Mr. Roosevelt in one way or the other telling McNutt to get out. What passed between the two men has never been published. But it persuaded McNutt. Very shortly afterwards Mc Nutt was on the convention plat form. The hoarse and angry crowd would not let him speak. The word already had passed that "Paul is going to quit" and they did not want him to do it. Last Political Say But he silenced the conven tion crowd in time and had his say. And that, politically, was the last heard of Paul V. Mc Nutt who had a real chance, if he could have withstood FDR's pressure, to be vice-president of the United States. Four years later, FDR had to drop Wallace but not for causes which could have disqualified McNutt. So take it from there McNutt might have been nomi nated for a second vice-presiden tial term the one that fell to Harry S. Truman. Dairy Cooperative Against Minimum Portland (U.R) Directors of the Dairy Cooperative Associa tion today announced their op position to any new state milk marketing law which would set minimum producer prices. A bill providing for a new milk control administration with authority to fix producer prices has been introduced in the Legis lature. It has the backing of the Grade A Milk Producers Asso ciation and several other pro ducer groups. However, directors of the co operative, the state's largest milk processing and marketing organization, ,said they believe provisions of the bill would re sult in lower prices to producers than are now being paid. The Leathernecks To Get Purple Heart Award Washington (U.R) Marine Corps announced today that it will award the Purple Heart to Leathernecks killed or wounded while carrying out the corps' traditional duties of pro tecting American overseas inter ests in time of peace. 88? PH. 2-9070 IF NO ANSWER PH. 2-9661 TP 4 RADIO REPAIR "We Service All Makes" AUTHORIZED RCA VICTOR SERVICE USE READY-MIX CONCRETE. Phone 2-5336 or 2-5897 M. C. LININGER & SONS 1. Oregon's tax base should be broadened to include more of the one-third of the wage earn ers who are now paying no in come tax. Can't Avoid Increases 2. Budgetary controls can hold down costs but can never avoid the increased costs based on in creasing population and the pub lic demand for new services. 3. Further study should be given to the Californiai system of a combined sales and income tax whereby the lower income groups pay . no income tax and the upper and middle groups pay both taxes. Principal interest among leg islators was in the new income tax law proposed by Stewart's committee. He explained that it would hit the upper income brackets hardest but would draw in a few taxpayers who are now escaping altogether a broader base in other words. Special Election Stewart revealed that his Postal Pay Raise Won't Be Retroactive Washington U.R) The Sen ate decided today that any pay raise it approves for postal em ployees will not be retroactive. By voice vote, the Senate agreed to an amendment by Sen. Harry -F. Byrd (D.-Va.) making a proposed 10 per cent pay in crease effective on the first day after it becomes law instead of retroactive to Jan. 1. The 10 per cent increase proposal had carried the retroactive provision. The administration was threat ened with defeat in its efforts to hold postal pay increases to 7.6 per cent. The administration bill, spon sored by Sen. Frank Carlson (R.- committee was considering ur the first time a piece of legisla tion that would automatically call for a special election within 60 days after referral petitions are filed against any part of the revenue tax program. Though the legality of such a plan is still being investigated, it would speed the process by which the voters would decide the state's fiscal dilemma, if a referendum succeeds in stalling enactment of the tax plan. Chamber Directors Hear of Gas Ruling A description of effects of the recent supreme court decision, which requires regulation of the price of natural gas at the well head, was given to directors of the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce yesterday by Hal Ed wards, of the Standard Oil com pany here. Edwards is supporting a bill which would establish the intent of congress as not requiring such regulation. A committee of the board was named to prepare a resolution on the matter for submission at the next meeting. Don McNeil, chamber mana ger, reported that a discussion on the state tax problem will be conducted in Grants Pass Satur day evening, .and that Medford people are invited to attend. State . Rep. L o r e n Stewart, Grants Pass, chairman of the house tax committee, will lead the discussion, which will be taped and broadcast over radio station KUIN, Grants Pass, and later over Medford stations. The average housewife spends one third to'one half of her work ing day in the purchase, prepar ation and care of food and related Kan.) contains np retroactive pay activities, estimates the Twenti- for most workers. eth Century Fund Fire Fighters To Sponsor Auto Show The auto show which will be presented in connection with the Pear Blossom festival on April 23 will be sponsored by the local unit of the Internation al Association of Fire Fighters, in cooperation with the Med ford Automobile Dealers asso ciation, it was announced today. The show will be a part of a fund-raising program undertak en by the fire fighters to raise some $20,000 for the purchase and equipping of a disaster car for the Medford area. It is hoped to net some $1,000 through the show. Details are being worked out by Floyd Courtright, chairman of the show committee, and will be announced soon. It was also reported this morning that many donations have been received so far, but they are "just a drop in the bucket compared to the $20,000 needed for the project. Individ uals or organizations wishing to contribute may send their dona tions to Fire Fighters, Medford. Water Heaters All the HOT WATER You Want Whenever You Want It No Down Payment on Approved Credit Only $020 O A Month "Medford' Exclusive Horpoint Dealer" Gity Appliance, Inc. 127 North Central Phone 3-5743 Across From Penney's Portland Meatcutters Schedule Vote Monday Portland U.R) Portland's meatcutters will meet in two groups at the labor temple here Monday to vote on a "filial" menagement offer to end a two month labor dispute. The management offer was made yesterday evening at a ne gotiating session attended by Federal Mediator Leroy Smith. Smith, who did not disclose its terms, said the offer probably averted a strike for this weekend. OPPORTUNITY THIS AREA Nationally known company has immediate opening for ambitious person to own and operate local distributorship. Experience and full time not necessary. Applicant must give three character references before Medford and vi cinity interview can be arranged. Write giving telephone and address to Box 3281 D Medford Mail Tribune. Applicant Must Have $10,000 (Which Is Secured) Our Liberal Financial Assistance Enables Rapid Expansion This is NOT a vending machine operation. Extremely high return for those who are conscientious. No high pressure men wanted as no selling is required. CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT FOR RENT I Motor Cranes . Back Hoes Motor Graders I Draglines Clamshells Shovel Fronts I Crawler Type Tractors with Dozers 105 Air Compressor 315 Air Compressor I Wagon Drill Paving Breakers 9 Jack Hammers O 5 & 7 Yard Dump Trucks MILL PONDS CLEANED CONTACT 1.1. C. LININGER & SOUS' MEDFORD, OREGON - PHONE 2-5336 or 2-5897 .At. It's been happening week after week. More people coming in every day to see, sit in, sample and select the '55 Buick of their choice. More people than ever before in our history, ; That's why you see so many new Buicks on the road today. And that's why to meet this unprecedented popularity Buick production has been boosted to the highest levels of all time. Buick Sales Are Soaring The simple measure of it all is this: Buick is so "hot" an automobile that it now outsells all other cars in the U nited States except two of the best known smaller cars. And for reasons sound, substantial and thrilling. Buick styling, you see, was never so crisp, clean, distinctive. Buick horse power was never so high Buick m -MIITON BEM! STAtS TO iUKX-t t tM titt m interiors never so rich Buick's great ride never so satin-smooth and steady. But there's something else, too something vastly different and exciting. Never before was there any motoring thrill like the thrill you get from Buick's spectacular new Variable Pitch Dynaflow. It lets you do what a pilot does switch the pitch of your driving propellers one way for gas saving in cruising another way for instantaneous accel eration and getaway. Your propellers are inside the Dynaflow unit, spinning in oil. You change their pitch merely by pressure on the gas pedal. You get action that was never in any earth-bound vehicle before. No wonder we're writing up orders and selling Buicks at a rate that's making this the biggest year in Buick history. And no wonder when yousee our price tags that more and more people can afford the price of a new Buick. For all the way up the line from the budget-priced Special to the custom built Roa dm aster each Buick is a stand-out buy in its field. Why not come in for a visit this week and get a down-to-earth look at the hottest Buick in history? Dynflov Drme is standard om RosJmatter, optional tt extra cost on other Series. Thrill of the y&stf is IBuIgIz -WMM KTTII AUTOMOMLES AH BUILT IUICK Will tUILD THEM. DRIVE FROM FACTORY SAVE UP TO $18800 See Your BUICK Dealer 143 SOUTH RIVERSIDE PHONE 2-6265