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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1955)
TWELVE MEPrOHD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Tuesday. July 19. 1953 Nixon Seem (GmnmiPffS ffor Continued f& rva n 77 fl Jl-.. senoce as wattooirs wumioier y wo is-cawer Case of Tuberculosis Reported to Office One case of tuberculosis was reported to the courtty health of fice last week. A total of 21 cases of communicable disease were listed during the week. , These included 12 of measles, 3 of -strep throat, 2 of german measles, and single cases of infec tious hepatitis (at Butte Falls), mononucleosis and trench mouth. 62 bom . . . sayt Dr. AsWey Montagu, prominent social biologist. ou may not agree, but you can bo are this article will be dis cussed, argued. -could even influence your point of view. Hero are some of Dr. Mon tagu's reasons why.. .and Jour- aal mothers' answers. "Hospitals tend dehu unice the mother-child rela tionship." "With warm, loving parents, children will grow into nice peoplc.what difference where they are born?" "From the standpoint of in- . fection, home care is aafer than the hospital." "Why does Dr. Montagu feel a small apartment is less full of infection than a hospital? Homes are not set up for this aort of thing." Don't miss this provocative article. ' ' Plus 27 other articles, stories and features. N Out today on all newsstands 3i Lrle C. Wilson By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Correspondent '.'Washington (U.PJ You can take your pick now whether President Eisenhower is groom ing Vice Pres ident Richard M. Nixon for continued service or a promotion .after 1956. The urgent hope and con siderable con-' fidence of most top drawer Re publican lead er., sro in agreement that ' the vice president is being groomed merely for continued service as No. 2 man on a 1956 Eisen hower Nixon ticket. However that may be, Mr. Eisenhower repeated a tremen dous political gesture in Nixon's direction before taking off for Geneva. In a handwritten note he authorized the vice president to summon and preside over a cabinet meeting and to convene a legislative conference if such were needed. Nixon has pre sided at cabinet meetings before this when the President was ab sent from Washington, but this is the first with Mr. Eisenhower in foreign lands. Expresses Satisfaction .'. This continuing expression of confidence in the young age 4-2 man from California is the latest of many. The Presi dent so frequently has express ed satisfaction with Nixon's con duct in office as to convince al most anyone that he'd like him on the -ticket again, if there is an Eisenhower ticket. Nixon's barbed campaign charges last year that the Demo crats has been soft on' Commu nism enraged that party's lead ers. Mr. Eisenhower movea shortly before the election to five the nr est ice of his own en dorsement to Nixon's political strategy.. It was one of those pear Dick" letters with a real sock. . " "Whenever my burdens tend to feel unduly heavy," the Presi dent began, "I admire all the more the tremendous job you have been doing since the open ing of the present campaign." Salute To Mrs. Nixon There was more, including .a right hand salute to pretty Mrs. Pat Nixon. As recently as last month in San Francisco, Mr. Ei senhower was privately telling California state party leaders how Nixon had matured in of fice. Somewhat earlier he philo sophized for a news conference on the relationship of presi dential nominees. A No. 1 nomi nee who was given an unsatis factory No. 2 running mate should refuse to run, the Presi dent said. He added a few cheers for Nixon and the job ht was doing. This bit of philsophy quickly was interpreted as meaning that Mr. Eisenhower would refuse to drop Nixon for a compromise right-wing Republican vice presidential nominee next year Sen. William F. Knowland of California, for instance. Know land is one of the so-called Taft men. He has bucked the admini stration on foreign policy and on the isue of Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.). There have been other ex amples of Mr. Eisenhower's fondness for Nixon, personally and officially. For his part, the vice president is among the most active of the draft-Eisenhower Republicans. - (mi I ) & m wTiTT tt- tivt nnn hits and streetcar riders stew about Los Angeles Transit Lines strike, Elroy Uresti skates down Wil shire Boulevard to and from work. (lnUitatioiudSoundphoto) - M t - y mm i ort on tne u& , ...v iie has n-- - , . cranunea vm i : flavor. Each is croiu , can't do better than expertft BbertMx after box. choose for you,boxafter A orvlV A" s i - mm, 4 v w 0 n e ...and peaches are jut one of the inviting fresh fruits and vegetables featured this week in the .AU I bade cm azibem thai; doesat pisase jdu Two Suspects Held For Abducting Girl Hobbs, N.M. (U.R) Hobbs ftHav held two men on PVUVV. of abducting a 19- year-old girl from her Chicago home.' Police identified the suspects ax Raol Martinez Vargas, 23, El Paso. Tex., and Abel Flores Acosta, 21, Chicago. The ffirl. Josephine Rodri 011 AT niH nnlice Acosta came to her home and tolM her , he was leaving for California and asked hr to ffo with bun. She saia she told him "No, you 'must be crazv." The vbunz woman said Acosta aslrori ' her' to walk him to the l-car and when she did, he pick her un ana tnrew ner in. Hobbs Policeman Monty Phil lips arrested the two men after stonnine them for soeedinc. He saw - the woman lying on' the hack seat arid she told him the story when he asked for her identification. . c Bridges Deportation Hearing To Resume San Francissco (U.R) The naturalization trial of Harry Bridges resumed today after a three-day recess called to allow the West Coast labor leader to testify before a congressional committee m Washington. The 54-year-old president of the International Longshore men's and Warehousemen's un ion is being tried before Federal Judge Louis E. Goodman in a government civil suit designed1 to strip him of the 'Citizenship he acquired here in 1945. The government charges that Bridges lied , when, to qualify for citizenship, he swore he was not and had not been a member of the Communist party. If the charges are proved, Bridges could be deported to his native Australia. .The trial "marks the govern ment's fourth attempt to deport the ILWU chief.; Testimony in the present trial is expected to wind up late this. week. . , Russians Pledge To Curb Air Incidents ..Washington (U.R) The Rus sians have followed up their re cent offer to pay half the dam ages in the shooting down of an American plane with a pledge to try to prevent future plane incidents. Informed sources said the pledge was contained in a note which Russian Charge D' Affairs Sergei R. Striganov delivered yesterday to acting Secretary of State Herbert Hoover Jr. It concerned the downing of a U.S. Navy plane by Soviet aircraft over the Bering Sea June 23. 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