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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 10, 1955)
As We Live ly ELIZAIETH HU1L0CK, PH.D. Girl's Love For Sailor Distrotm Htr Mother Arguing in the dark rarely solves a problem. To be able to change a person's point of view, you must have concrete facts. (Q) "My 16-year-cld high school daughter thinks sho's madly in love with a navy man, ZZ ysars old. Ho eomtf from another state and we don't know a thing about him. I can't make her un derstand how dangerous it is to go out with n. Hurloek a m a n so much elder and from parts un known. We hare no way of knowing if he has a wife back home or anything else. She is very pretty and looks to be 18. I am very worried that she may be another girl left behind when the ship sails out. She thinks the boys she knows are loo young and that she's quite grown up. She is sure that she has met the one and only man for her. I have tried to explain to her that many a girl is left behind when a sail er's ship sails away, ' but she claims he is different. How can I convince her that she is making a mistake by allowing herself to fall so deeply in love with this man?" (A) You will have to have sounder arguments than you now have. A girl in love allows her heart to rule, not her head. You will have to find strong and definite reasons to bring her back to earth and make her see the matter realistically. You do not know that this young man is going to sail away and never see your daughter again. True, some sailors do, but you cannot say that he will. You must know something about his past to predict what he may do in the future. ' I suggest that you take this problem to your minister. Ask him to get in touch with the minister of your denomination in this man's home town and find out something about his family, his background, and his reputation. A minister is in a position to get such information and present They'll Do It Every Time 4S.IS UXX.SIS-y'OU'RE MAKItfV 4 MOUNTAIN OUT OP -4 yMOLEWUL-ATER AIL. LUSUWELL IS A r- V (3ROVVK1 MAN HER&jDEAR-DRlNKj THIS'-EVERYThING i WILL BE OKAy oops.' ' 5ME5 60NKA SEE " MIS SMILING FMCEii ALL RK5UT BUT IT VONTBESMIUNSi By Jimmy Hatlo I '.. . . . .. . LONG f LC5 I JUST KNOW SOME' THINGS HAPPENED TO 14IM- NE ALWAYS CALLS WHEN HE'S DELAVED-Otf- IF ONLY I COULD SEE MIS SMILING FACE AGAIN' HELLO) POLICE DEBART- MEWT- IB rCMON HE'LL SLEEP ALL DAY TOMORROW, BUT XYE . GOT TO GET UP AND GO TO WORK-v ', SUM.' DON'T BE SILLY I WANT TO BS MERE WHEN THE PUN BEGINS- rI COULD HAVE TOLD HER A DOZEN PUCES TO FIND HIM-' Tuesday. May 10, 1935 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THRHS Back Stairs: Tourists at White House Ad '5-10 iCOft 1BI. XTSO STATl'SES SYNDICATE, lu, WOKLO SJCHTS lESeAVtD. Helpmstwe worri some WIFE SIT IT OUT LL HIMSELF ROLLS IN ''AWAANDATIPOFIHE .HAW HOT .19 - AL 4NOJE4N, Philippine Committee Blocks Troop Movements Manila, P. I. (U.R) The pow erful Senate finance committee yesterday agreed to block any future government move to send Philippine troops out of the coun try to serve with collective de fense forces such as the SEATO army. The committee agreed no mon ey allotted to the defense depart ment could be used for any un dertaking outside the Philippines. it in an unbiased way. If the re port you receive is unfavorable, I am sure you will then be able to make your daughter realize that she is being very foolish in allowing herself to become so emotionally involved. On the other hand, you may discover that he is a fine young man whom you would not object to having as a future son-in-law. (COPYRIGHT 1955. GENERAL FEATURES CORP.) Dead line Sunday Classified if at noon Saturday: 1 a.m. Monday for Mcnday: other days 9:30 previous day Letter Carriers Elect Salem Man La Grande (U.R! R. Eugene Morrison, Salem, yesterday was elected president of the Oregon State Association of Letter Car riers at the group's annual con vention here. Bend was chosen as the next convention's site. Other officers elected at the close of the two-day meet were William Corey, La Grande, yice president; Joe Crandall, Eugene, Secretary; Jack Grenz, Albany, treasurer; Larry Rose of Med ford, chairman of the executive board; and Gilbert Jones, Port land, and Edgar V. Amo, Salem, board members. - . NO PLACE FOR WOMEN Boston, Mass. (U.R) The chairman of the Boston Licens ing Board recommends that wo men stay out of bars because "taverns are a man's world where he can talk, drink and watch sports on television with out being interrupted." The board chairman is a woman. Antique Show, Sale Set Friday, Saturday Collectors are looking for ward to the second annual an tique show and sale, to be held at 'the Jackson hotel in Medford Friday and Saturday, May 13 and 14. The event is sponsored by the Chin Up club, an organ ization of the physically handi capped. Proceeds will be used for the group's handicapped aid fund, which provides crutches, wheel chairs, hospital beds or other needs for the disabled. Dealers are coming from Mil waukie, Clackamas, Coos Bay, Eugene, Tigard, Klamath Falls and Portland. Included among the thous ands of dollars worth of an tiques to be displayed and of fered for sale include glass, china, jewelry, rugs, lamps and other items. - Show hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. each day. , Br MERRIMAN SMITH U P White HouseWriter Washington (U.R) Back stairs at the White House: Tourists and even a few old time Washingtonians escorting out - of - town relatives are streaming4, through the White House this spring at a rate of about 30,000 persons a week. Last Tuesday, for example, nearly 7,000 passed through such rooms of the executive mansion as are open f.o the public- Thev marvelled at the brilliance of the Red, Blue and Green rooms, at the breath-taking elegance of the glistening East Room. Their voices hushed at the sight of the ultra-dignified State Dining Room. Velvet ropes and ever-present White House police officers dis courage attempts at souvenir collecting. On a private tour of the prem ises during the Truman admin istration, an official escorting a very small group was shocked to discover that a socially promi nent New York dowager had quietly dropped out of the party and was missing. He rushed back through the drawing rooms of the stately mansion to find the lady strug gling as she attempted to ram a massive crystal ashtray bear ing the seal of the president into her not-quite-large-enough handbag. Confronted, she made no bones about it. The lady wanted a souvenir and a darned good one. Gently, the ashtray was re stored to its proper place. The lady had only one request of the VShite House staff member please don't tell her husband who was waiting for her several rooms away. A vandalous sightseer once ripped or cut away a section of the red silk wall covering in the Red Room. He got away before being caught. This couldn't hap pen today however. The same vandal couldn't get that close to the wall. The tourists reached a peak at the White House during the cherry blossom season earlier in the spring and around Easter. During the rush period this year, the White House sightseers were running better than 8,000 some days. To an amazingly large degree, the crowds this month consist of high school. boys and girls who are rewarded with a trip to Washington, frequently in the school bus. There are two grades of extra special White House tours. One is a leisurely trip through' the executive mansion, starting about 9 o'clock in the morning for 25 to 50 special friends of members of the presidential staff, cabinet officers or other key adminis tration figures. The plus-ultra tour is re served for smaller groups of very close friends of Mr. Eisen hower's inner circle. This is the only tour that includes the presi dential offices, the cabinet room and the swimming pool. The 'other two classifications the 9 a.m. semi-private and 10 a.m. public tours see only the pub lic rooms of the White House TO TOUR U. S. Bonn, Germany (U.R) Five members of the office of. West German Defense Chief Theodore Blank will fly to the United States today for a 25 day tour of Army installations, the U.S. em bassy announced. proper. These trips involve too) many people to have them cours ing through the offices during working hours. " . (Vodka in oraoge juice) It leaves you breathless m r rmwioff V0DKA SOaraof . Mat (ran 1 00 gninaeutnl spirits. ' Ste. 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