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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 6, 1955)
SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Tuesday, September 6, 1S5S Republican Chairmen Gather for Schooling in Politics G 9 0 G GOLDEN GUERNSEY Homogenized wvtMw ty LK o You enjoy unusually fine flavor, appealing golden color, inc the special milk from GUERN SEY cows. And now, GOLDEN GUERNSEY Milk is more delicious than ever, because it's homogenized. Milk and cream are mixed to gether for the same tempting flavor in every glass. GOLDEN GUERNSEY Homogenized is more easily digestible, too and gives your family extra protein, extra vitamins and minerals. The Guernsey Cm the only fJfi you milk like this- Order Golden Guernsey Homogenized Milk NOW! GOLDEN GUERNSEY t toatftahti ipaM I IK Oak Grove School Starts Sept. 12 Oak Grove school, 2838 Jack sonville highway, will open for grades one through eight Mon day, Sept. 12. A full day's classes will be held the first day. The cafeteria will operate and meals will be available for 20 cents. Children who will not have ! reached their sixth birthday on or before Nov. 15 will not be eligible for entrance. School Principal H. Bruce Metzger said the district will not provide transportation and asked students riding bicycles to follow closely safety . rules on the busy roadways near the school. The 1955-56 Oak Grove staff includes James Conway, George Drobough, custodians; G u i 1 a Knapp, Ethel Champion, cafe teria; Marjorie Gandee, first grade, remedial reading and spelling; Alice Kamman, second I grade, upper grade art; Audrey Berry, third grade, librarian; i Dena DeKorte, fouth grade, vis j ual aids; Florence Connors, fifth i grade, sixth grade art; Max Kil- lingsworth, sixth grade, eighth grade PE and spelling; Hugh Shurtleff, seventh grade, chorus; Elmer Ayres, eighth grade math and science, sixth grade science, band; II. Bruce Metzger, eighth grade social studies, health, principal. District 69 board of directors is James H. Hopkins, Wallace B. Brill, and Keith N. Hockersmith. MINK WARNING St. Paul (U.R) Instructions to National Guard pilots at Hol man field here: "All pilots note use caution while flying over White Bear and Afton areas mink farms. Remember, the mink you kill might be your wife's new coat." Holyoke, Mass. (U.R) Harry W.Rogers, 71, for 50 years a street car motorman, boasts that he hasn't missed a Harvard Yale football game in 56 years. the 'UntrT frmrH TP us Refresher Course To Concentrate on Overall Strategy Washington iU.PJ Republi can state chairmen gathered. to day for a four-day refresher course in practical political poli tics. Their goal: Win .with Eisen hower in '56. Although the President re mained silent on his intentions, party chieftains based the course on the assumption that he will seek a second term. The state leaders were sched uled to be greeted by Vice Presi dent Richard M. Nixon in the late' afternoon and attend a re ception tonight in honor of Na tional GOP Chairman Leonard W. Hall. Classes Begin Wednesday Classes att he campaign school begin Wednesday with Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R-Ariz.), chairman of the GOP Senatorial Committee, and Rep. Richard Simpson (R-Pa.) chairman of the same committee in the House, acting as instructors. They will discuss campaign techniques gen erally, concentrating on issues and overall strategy. Republican leaders, sure that Mr. Eisenhower will run again and win, planned to concentrate at the school on ways to recap ture Congress from the Demo crats and to elect more GOP governors. The party brass took advan tage of Labor Day political state ments to renew their pleas that Mr. Eisenhower lead them in '56. The state chairmen presumably will echo the same sentiments when they fly to Denver after their session here to talk directly with the President. Nixon Confident Nixon told a news conference Monday that the people closest to the President are "more opti mistic that he will run again than at any time since he was in augurated. ' Sen. James H. Duff (K-Pa.), a leader in Mr. Eisenhower's cam paign in 1952, told a radio audi ence he is sure Eisenhower is going to be the guy" in 1956 and ; added, "I don't think he can be licked." And Sen. Frederick G. Payne (R-Me.), in a formal statement issued through his office here, said the solution of world prob lems "demands President Eisen hower's wise and firm leadership for another four years." KAaHashasripenea full-developed se , unWemish- Each of our tree to cramm eating SUmfjL - peach experts cno i - . . . and peaches are just one of the inviting fresh fruits and vegetables featured this week in the a AH your money L) back on any item r that doesn't please ycu y . o r Nixon Sees Presidential Race Between Ike, One of Three Demos Denver (U.R) Vice President ' Estes Kefauver of Tennessee. Richard M. Nixon forsees a 1956 presidential race between Presi dent Eisenhower and one of three Democratic candidates, Ad- lai E. Stevenson, Gov. Averell Harriman of New York, or Sen. CM. Merrill Riles Will Be Wednesday Graveside funeral services for C. M. Merritt, 89, of Klamath Falls, who died there Saturday, will be held at Siskiyou Memo rial park at 3 p.m. Wednesday. The Central Point IOOF lodge 193 will have charge of services, with the Rev. D. E. Millard of ficiating. . -The deceased, a former resi dent of Central Point, is sur vived by three brothers, Elmer, Los Angeles, and John and Gene, Klamath Falls; a daughter, Mrs. Edna Book, Klamath Falls, and four granddaughters. Webster Arrives In England On Exchange Flight Lt. Lome Arthur Web ster, 34, of the Royal Canadian Air Force, recently arrived at Royal Air Force station, Lecon field, England, for exchange du ties with the RAF. The lieuten ant was accompanied by his wife, Nellie, and two daughters, Pamela and Laurie Ann. Webster was born in Grand Forks, B.C., and educated at the grade and high schools in Cen tral Point. His father, A. H. Webster, resides at 401 East 12th st. IDENTICAL Des Moines, la. !U.R) The 21-year-old identical twin daugh ters of Jack Shivers have re membered him in the same way on his past two birthdays. Jackie and Jean live hundreds of miles apart and did not consult about J what they would send their fa ther. Last year they sent identi cal gifts and this year identical birthday cards. Court Appearance Scheduled Today Bernice McClain, 46, of Ash land, was to appear in district court this morning on charges of offense against the public de cency. She was arrested Aug. 25 and released on $500 bail. In other Jackson cases, Ken neth Benton Glaspie, 20, and William Allen Self Jr., 19, both of Ashland, are being held in the county jail after arrest by city police for contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Two minor boys, 17 and 14, were released to Multnomah county authorities yesterday- af ter being arrested here for lar ceny of an auto. The pair reside in Seattle. State police arrested two men on charges of drunk driving over the week end. Charles Edward Hamack, 60, of Central Point, and Harold Evans, 32, of Talent, were being held on the driving charges in county jail this morn ing. David Haskin Zuck, 37, of 412 Western ave., was arrested on a charge of being drunk on the public highway. Nixon expressed his views on the national political situation at a press conference after a top secret national security meeting with President Eisenhower. But he emphasized he did not dis cuss politics with the President. Most Republican leaders, he said, are confident the President will run again and are basing their campaign plans on that as sumption. He predicted a "horse race" for the 1956 Democratic presi dential nomination among Stev enson, the 1952 nominee, Harri mann and Kefauver. He dis counted the tendency of '.'profes sional politicians" to underesti mate the "down to earth vote getting ability" of Kefauver. Farm Problem Important Nixon told reporters he "never saw the President look better" than he looked yesterday. "I feel he is in tiptop shape both physi cally and mentally," he added. The vice president admitted that the GOP may be in serious political trouble in the farm belt because of falling crop prices. But he said he is not as pessi mistic about it as some people thing the Republicans should be. Nixon said the mushrooming growth of television as a blanket medium for reaching millions of voters may mean drastic changes in national campaigning methods next year. He said that may mean more' TV appearances for the top can didate and less of the old-fash ioned "whistle-stop campaign ing." He flatly dismissed the con troversy over Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) as a campaign issue in 1956 and predicted the GOP will win because it is Court Records MARRIAGE LICENSE ' - APPLICATIONS Jm Arthur Almond, 65. of Earfe Point, and Gladyi Marie Perry, S3, of Eagle Point. Dead line Sunday at noon Saturday. Classified U at "more unified than at any time since 1952." Nixon's repudiation of McCar thy, his one-time committeemate in the Senate, was the bluntest brushing aside the Wisconsin Re publican has received to date from a top ranking elected offi cial of his own party. ROBERTSON School of Business 40-42 N. Riverside, Medford, Or. PHONE 3-4264 Plan to Ust your Fireplace More NOW is the BEST TIME toger the BEST CURED WOOD -PEELER CORE WOOD- (From the Heart of th leg) 16-18-in. or 24-27-in. length Split and or Rounds PHONE 2-8086 FOR QUICK DELIVERY TlMBERP MCeFOR Company omoN Use Mail Tribune Want Ads Dr. Hexlock people think I As We Live By ELIZABETH HU1LOCK, PH.D. WORRIER CAN'T ENTER INTO OTHERS' FUN Some people are gay and cheerful most of the time, with the result that people like them and like to have them around. How can a person acquire this art? (Q) "I have noticed that people, who are popular are the ones who are gay and cheerful. I am a serious-minded person and it is hard for me to be gay. Also, I worry a lot, and 'this does not make me a cheerful person io be with. I do not hare many friends because am too serious and don't hare fun. The boys are always telling me not to carry the world on my shoulders, but to realx and have some fun out of life. I would like to have fun and I would like to be pop ular, but I don't know how. Can you give me some suggestions?" L. B. S. (A) The best suggestion I can give is the one the boys have al ready given you, in their jesting way. Stop being so serious about everything, and try to have fun. This, of course, does not mean that you must be careless and irresponsible, but it means that you must learn when to be ser ious and when not to. When you are with people who want to have some fun, re lax, laugh, and try to enter into the spirit of what is going on. Remember that relaxation is just as important as work. To be gay, you must feel gay. This means that you must stop worrying. The person who is al ways worried about this, that, or the other thing is so weighed dawn with fear that he cannot laugh and see the fun in any thing. Think Less of Self , Another thing you must learn if you want to be more cheerful and more friendly, is to think less about yourself and more about other people. The person who is "self-bound" and most people who are serious-minded and worriers are self-bound cannot forget himself long enough to i enter into the fun that others are having. He is so concerned about what others will think of him and whether he will make a good impression that he bores others with his seriousness. (Copyright 1955, General Features Corp.) When You TRAVEL SEE GEORGE LEWIS ROGUE TRAVEL SERVICE A FREE SERVICE We Reserve and Sell Airline and Steamship Tickets PHONE 2-6779 LOBBY HOTEL JACKSON VJti, CO! Kindergarten or "fresh," they'll go back t school in proper style in exciting wearables far our fashion-filled store! 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