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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1955)
O '- o o FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MECFORDSlTWBUia "Everybody ia Southern Oregon Radj The Mail Tribune Published Dally Except "Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. (7-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-8141 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager E. C FERGUSON Managing Editor ERIC ALLEN JR. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETTT Sport Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered a second ela matter at Medford. Oregon under Act oi w Marcn a. iow SUBSCRIPTION RATES By MaU In Advance: Per copy 10c. Daily. and Sunday One year $12.00 Daily and Sunday Six months 6.50 Daily and Sunday Three mos 3.50 Sunday Only One year 3.50 By Carrier In Advance Medlord. Ashland. Central Pomt Eagle Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent, and on motor routes: Daily asd Sunday One year 15.00 Daily afd Sunday One month 1 Carrier and Dealers 6c per copy. All Terms Cash in Advance 6fficlal Paper ot the City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF ClKKULai.ua Advertising neprenmuvc. .T wIsT-HOLLIDAY COMPANY. INC. Offices In New York. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland. St. LouU Atlanta. Vancouver B.C. ' NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASOCATllN NfWSPAMt k PUBllSHItt ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time0 Medford and Jackson County History atom the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and 10 years ago. I zzrx 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 7, 1945 (It was Sunday) :Donald Campbell, Medford city councilman, inspects alumi . num plants declared surplus gov ernment property in Portland; declines to divulge names of backers in $200,000,000 project. From" Arthur . Perry's Ye Smudge -Pt column: Upstate press writers persist in calling Coach Simpson Alvin and Albert. It's Alexander, (Al for short). 20 YEARS AGO Oct- 7, 1935 Talent Mayor Hart . notified that Talent's application for $35,000 in sewer funds approved 3 by government; construction to start by Dec. 15. Pear shiDments from valley Qtwtol 1,531 cars; 18 cars of apples snipped. 30 YEARS AGO Oct. 7,1925 P. M. Kershaw is elected to council seat by petitions sub mitted by Medford Ward 2 res idents. Madford city council adopts plan to install slow signs at downtown intersections. o 40 YEARS AGO Oct. 7. 1915 - ' Recall petitions reported in circulation against four city councilmen for their attitude op posing proposed rebonding plan, Q : Vhat's the Answer? Can You Get 4 of the 7? Copr. 1955. Editorial Reseated Reperi 1. The U.N. General Assembly is opening its 10th annual ses sion in Geneva, San Francisco, Paris, New York or London? 2. With an average antenna most TV programs are well re ceived up to about 20, 45, 70, 95 or 120 miles from the sta tion? 3. Hie Atlas Mountains are in Spain, Switzerland, California, Morocco or North Carolina? 4. President Eisenhower has or hasn't promised that U.S. farm surpluses will not be used to dis rupt world crop prices? 5. Which one of these states O is perfectly rectangular: Pennsyl vania, North Caroline, Kansas, Wyoming, California? 6. Passenger planes now do or don't, regularly fly nonstop from New York to Pajris? 7. Decibels measure speed on the ground, wind velocity, alti tude, sound or humidity? The Answers: 1. New York. 2. About 70 miles on the average. 3. Morocco. 4. Has promised. 5. Wyoming. 6. Do. 7. Sound. KNOWS WHAT HE WANTS Boston (U.R) One of 10 visit ing Russian housing experts was asked by a hotel waiter Thurs O day whether, he wanted lobster thermidor, steaK or cnicisen lor dinner. Without hesitation the Russian answered, 'Til have two eggs, sunnyside up, thank you." GfJ EGAL NOTICES NOTICE ' Jackson County Stockmen's Asso ciation has endorsed the "Red Hat Day Pledge and Program". The members who have livestock on the range and pastures have, in previous years, ex perienced heavy losses in livestock killed and estray stock due to leaving gates open and fences broken. Such losses have necessitated the owners posting their property with "No Hunt ing" and "Trespass Notices" which they expect to enforce io the full ex tent of the law until such time as so called sportsmen can learn to respect the rights and property of others. The members realize this works a hardship on the true sportsmen. The Jackson County Stockmen's Assn. MAIL TRIBUNE Newspapers and You We don't get very excited about special "weeks" or "days" or "months" any more. Never did, really. There are too many of them; as publicity-getting de vices they are overworked; most of them don't mean anything anyway. Which is a poor way to start writing about "Na tional Newspaper Week," we suppose. But the fact is that this is Newspaper Week, and our lack of en thusiasm for "weeks" in general does not extend to the subject-matter which is now being called to public attention. THOSE of us engaged in what we call "this screwy newspaper business" are all a bit "teched in the haid" about the subject anyway. We feel that the at tractions of newspaper work far outweigh the disad vantages. We believe we render a real service to the public in a way which no other type of organization can. If we didn't believe that wholeheartedly, we'd probably be doing something else. Perhaps the most important single function of a newspaper is to bring to the citizens of the community the information which they need as a basis for deci sions about self-government. From the city hall on up through the federal government, the single best source of that necessary information is the daily newspaper. DUT on top of that, the newspaper, ideally, furnish- es a great many other things entertainment, information about our friends and neighbors and their doings, information about what business and in dustry are doing and all at a price which makes it one of the biggest bargains in history. It brings com ment and opinion, and through its "letters" column offers a public forum for discussion of matters of in terest to everyone. In its advertising columns, the newspaper serves as a daily "marketplace" delivered to the home for leisurelv reading and study. It brings the sales mes sage of its advertisers in enduring black and white, for. reading, re-reading and comparison. TTHE theme of newspaper finrhte fnr vnnr rio-hr. rn This ficht. is wao-ed wherever there is a newsDaner. although the most-publicized segment of the battle is waged on the national front. But even in Medford, sometimes it is necessary to get into, a scrap to obtain information wnicn we Deneve our readers are enutiea to have. : ; . Some public officials feel that reporters are just plain nosey busybodies, trying to pry into something that is none of their business. The fact is that report ers are the eyes and the ears of the public, for in no other way, consistently, can the people of a commun ity find out what is going on in courthouse, city hall and capitol. . One thing newspapers continually watch is a ten dency a perfectly human one for public officials to get the feeling that what they do is sort of a private affair. Certainly it is true that it is easier to conduct a business without someone looking over your shoul der. BUT the point is that in America the voter and tax payer is the ultimate authority in government not an elected or appointed official. And the voter and taxpjeyer is entitled to being conducted. Sometimes the newspapers fail. Sometimes they don't pry and poke and question hard and long enough. Sometimes they take it upon themselves to decide what the public should or should not know. If they fail in these ways, they are failing in their responsibilities to their readers and to their advertis ers. . ' , THE U. S. Constitution, in its First Amendment, pro- hibits Congress from passing any law abridging freedom of speech and oi the press. The founding fathers did not guarantee freedom of the press for the benefit of newspaper people. Far from it. They guaranteed freedom of the press so that the people of this nation could be informed of the actions of government without the government dic tating how it should be told. Freedom of the press is a freedom of the people, and every time it is circumscribed, the people are the principal losers. Those of us in this "screwy busi ness" feel a responsibility for guarding that freedom. ; E.A. Heart The fact that poliomyelitis is on its way out as one of mankind's most dreaded diseases is largely attrib utable to the fact that Franklin D. Roosevelt was one of its m'ost notable victims. Perhaps the illness of President Eisenhower will have much the same effect on the efforts in re search and fund raising to conquer heart disease. LJEART ailments in recent years have come to be one of the principal killers in America partly as a result of the pace at which life today is lived, and partly because other killing diseases have been elim inated or modified as major threats. Doctors report a great surge in men over 40 com ing in for heart checks since the President's attack, and the medical explanations of the many types of heart disease also have focused attention on the prob lem. E.A. Friday, October 7, 19SS week is "The newspaper kn nw." know now nis business is Disease Vigorous Moves To Smash Peron System Top News for Week By CHARLES McCANN United Press Correspondent The week's good and bad news on the international bal ance sheet: -THE GOOD 1. Ousted Argentine Dictator Juan D. Peron flew to exile in Para guay. In Buenos Aires, P r o v i s ional President Ed uardo Lonardi moved vigor ously to smash the system which Peron had built up to keep himself in power. Lonar di started tak- Cnaries McCann lng ; Over the unions, combined in the Gen eral Confederation of Labor, which had given Peron most of his voting strength. He dismissed the Argentine Supreme Court which had given rubber-stamp to Peron's decrees. In Asuncion, the Paraguayan capital, Peron said in an exclusive interview with the United Press that he still regarded himself as "consti tutional president." 2. Relations between the Unit ed States and' President Tito of Yugoslavia were cleared up, and strengthened measurably, as the result of a visit to Belgrade by Robert D. Murphy, assistant un dersecretary of state. A long standing dispute over the extent to which the United States was entitled to supervise the use of military aid was settled. Agree ment was reached to start nego tiations for $40,500,000 in eco nomic aid to Yugoslavia. 3. Premier Edgar Faure of France and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer of West Germany reached full agreement on the attitude they will take on the issues of European security and Babson . . . By ROGER W. B. BABSON Babson Park, Mass. (Special to Mail Tribune) What has hap pened to our good friend Presi dent Eisen hower has been the match to set off the explo sion which has been due for some time. Those of you who have fol lowed this oer w. Babsoa weekly col umn will remember that I have often noted five "sticks of dyna mite" which were awaiting something to set them off. 1. B u y i n g by investment trusts, pension funds, and insti tutions. The money has come in to these so fast that the fund managers felt they must invest it. Furthermore, they naturally turned to the biggest companies. 2. Tremendous building of houses. This exceeds that of pre vious years. The money is well spent, both to house the owner and to help the twenty-seven in dustries vhich benefit from the building of every house. Home purchasers, however, should have been made to put up more money of their own, and not buy houses on shoestrings. 3. Greatly increased install- LEGAL NOTICES STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT. CIRCULATION. RE QUIRED BY THE ACTS OF CON GRESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912, AS AMENDED BY THE ACT OF MARCH 3, 1933, AND JULY 2, 1946. Of Medford Mail Tribune published daily except Saturday at Medford, Oregon, for October 1,1955. 1. The names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, and business managers are: Publisher. Medford Printing Com pany, Medford. Oregon, Editor. Robt. W. Ruhl. Medford, Oregoi; Managing Editor, E. C. Ferguson, Mtdford. Ore gon; Business Manager. Gerald T. Latham, Medford, Oregon. 2. The owner is: v. Medford Printing Company, Med ford, Ore.; Mabel W. Huhl. Medford, Ore.: Robt. W. Huhl. Medford. Ore.; Southern Oregon Pub. Co.. Roseburg, Ore.; Roxanne Ruhl Simmons. Mt. Kisco, N.Y.; Alicia Ruhl MacArthui, Dickinson Centre. N.Y.; Alta Lindsey, Medford, Ore.; Herbert G. Grey. Med ford, Ore.; E. C. Ferguson. Medford, Ore. 3. The known bondholders, mortga gees and othe: security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amound of bonds, mortgages or. other securities are: None. 4. Paragraphs 2 and 3 include. In cases where the stockholder or secur ity holder appears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of the person or corporation for whom such trustee is acting; -also the state ments in the two paragraphs show the affiant's full knowledge and beliei as to the circumstances and conditions under which stockholders and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner. 5. The average number of copies of each issue of this publication sold or distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the 12 months preceding the date shown above was 15.479. GERALD T. LATHAM Signature of Business Manager. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 7th day of October, 1955. Alta Lindsey Notary Public My commission expires Oct. 16. 1957. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT No. 9518 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has filed her final ac count in the Estate of Rachael Cobb, Deceased, and that the 31st day of October, 1955. at 10:00 o'clock A.M., in the Circuit Court, at Medford. Jackson County. Oregon, has been set as the time and place for hearing objections to said final account, and the settlement thereof. Dated and first published this 30th day of September. 1955. ERMA J. HAHNER, Administratrix German unification. These issues are to be discussed at the "Big Four" meeting of the United States, Great Britain, France and Soviet Russia in Geneva Oct. 27. THE BAD 1. The revolt in North Africa plunged France into a cabinet crisis. Premier Faure fired four of his cabinet members, includ ing influential Defense Minister Pierre Koenig, who refused to support his plan to give home rule to Morocco. He decided to risk his job by forcing a vote of confidence in Parliament on his policies. In Morocco, French armored columns supported by jet fighter planes still met fierce resistance from the tribesmen who suddenly revolted last week-end. 2. The North African situa tion also brought a crisis in the United Nations. In a move spon sored by "anti-colonial" dele gates, the annual General Assem bly voted to debate the situa tion on French Algeria. In doing so it overrode its Steering Com mittee. Angered, French For eign Minister Antoine Pinay led his delegation in a walkout. The French cabinet ordered the en tire delegation back to Paris. France holds that the North African situation is none of the U.N.'s business 3. The United States failed in an attempt to induce Premier Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt not to go through with his plans to buy arms from Communist Czechoslovakia. George V. Al len, assistant secretary of state, was sent to Cairo'to talk to Nas ser but got nowhere. Nasser as serts that he must get weapons because he fears aggression by Israel, and will buy them from the Communists if he can not get them from the United States and its allies. Explosion rnent purchasing. I do not criti cize the purchasing even on in stallments of automobiles, elec tric refrigerators, washing ma chines, modern kitchens, and other things which improve the efficiency' of the home; but buy ing TV sets, with hardly a down payment, may be questionable. 4. Military expenditures a great factor. To the extend these are paid for by taxes, they are not too serious; but they cannot be depended upon. Furthermore, although necessary, the expendi ture is uneconomic. 5. Poor yields of stocks after payment of taxes. Except in the case of Pension Funds, Institu tional Investments, and other non-taxable purchases, low yield may be he greatest factor. After most investors deduct the income tax from their dividends, the yield is altogether' too small to run the risk of buying stocks. Effect Upon Business What the market will do from now on: I forecast that most ma jor dips will go lower than the preceding dip. Yet, each dip in due time will be followed by an upward reaction. This latter will probably not reach as high as the preceding upward move ments. What will really happen to the stock market will depend upon general business, which in turn determines employment.. Employment determines retail sales, which supply the factories with orders, thus completing the economic cycle. President Eisenhower's health will be a great factor in deter mining the immediate future of business. Many large undertak ings have been held in abeyance pending a decision from Presi dent Eisenhower as to whether he will run again.. This work will doubtless now be held up until it is known who the Presi dential candidate will be. Per haps this means that the con tracts will not be signed until after the election, if they are signed for some years to come. ' What Ike Would Like to Do ' Intimate friends of President Eisenhower and his wife have known that he does not like the details, the public speaking and entertaining demanded by the Presidency. He enjoyed being General of the Army where his work was largely confined to thinking and planning. Others carried out the details. No one opposed him or ignored his or ders. We now know he will not run again. But I believe that he would have liked to be Secretary of Defense or Secretary of State or Chairman of the Security Board. His holding such a posi tion would add greatly to the Ad ministration and give the coun try faith. When manufacturers and mer chants telephone me asking what they can now do to prevent a business depression, - I reply: "Spend more money on advertis ing." As stated above, future business and prosperity depend upon retail' at the grass-roots level.' To simulate these sales, two things are "required: More advertising and better employee relations. I. hope that every busi nessman and wageworker wiU do his part along these lines dur ing these critical weeks. In the Day's News Br FRANK JENKINS Let's take a look today at "beef bacon" which got into the news the other day in a big way when it was announced that it was a principal item on Ike's breakfast menu. What is it? How did it get its start? Frs an interesting story. "Beef hacon" rnmpi from the rib plate cuts of choice fed beef, which formerly was used chiefly in boiled beef dinners. These cuts are tenderized and chemi cally cured and smoked. It is sliced and pack like pork bacon. It is leaner than most pork cuts and has good keeping qualities. It got its start when some smart marketing expert began to think about ways to market more beef . It occurred to him in the course of his lucubrations that there are millions of people who can not eat pork. At the same time, it crossed his mind that a lot of people have a yen for meat at breakfast but shy away from beef in the morning because it is generally regarded as a luncheon or dinner meat. So the idea of treating beef in such a manner as to make it look like bacon (which is a standard breakfast meat) and maybe taste like bacon to him. ' TIE presented his idea to the M- assistant executive ... secre tary of the American National Cattlemen's association (a smart salesman named Radford Hall) and the upshot of it was that the cattlemen's association took the idea up with a packing company in Nebraska, which started ex perimenting jwith it It was first served at the 1954 Cattlemen's, association conven tion in Colorado Springs. It struck the fancy of the cattle men, and the sale of it was push ed actively. It is now on the market on a national scale. TT is marketed under the name of breakfast beef. The name "beef bacon" was applied to it more or less by accident in the bulletin from the summer White House in Denver. NaturaUy enough, the cattlemen are not displeased with the wide pub licity for their new produce that resulted. , Their assistant secretary com ments: "There is already quite a demand for breakfast beef, and the TJublicitv arising from the bulletin about the President's breakfast naturaUy helDs." Hall believes that some mem bers of the Cattlemen's associa tion introduced breakfast beef to the President. He adds: "He likes the product and continues to eat it." QO there's the story of beef ba- con. It wasn't just a publicity stunt. It was , a carefuUy-thought-out plan to increase the consumption of beef. It wasn't introduced as a substitute for pork. It was marketed under its own name as breakfast beef. It was a good product and it caught on. The incident of the President's breakfast was just a lucky break. T THINK perhaps this point should be emphasized at this time: The cattlemen didn't demand that the government buy up and store away the cuts of beef that weren't going too well on the market. Instead, they thought up new ways to make them at tractive and GET THEM CON SUMED. . ; - As a result, they are far bet ter off than they would have been if these rib plate cuts that weren't going very weU as boiled beef dinners ' had been bought up by the government at a guaranteed price and stash ed away in government owned or government leased cold stor age warehouses. ' - - The primary business of food is to be CONSUMED. When it isn't consumed, but instead is bought up at a guaranteed high price and stored away, the re sulting accumulation of it hangs like a dark thundercloud over the markets of the future. STINKING PENNIES San Francisco (U.R) Muiiici pal Judge Clayton Horn ponder ed today the retaliation he would take against a Navy offi cer who paid a $6 traffic fine with pennies dipped In a foul smelling chemical. Judge Horn said an eye-watering count of the pennies sent in by Lt Cmdr. Vernon E. Sutton, 47, revealed there were only 599 pennies in the package. 231 MUTTON ROAST Lb. iMH Who am I? I have a fox'i cunning; a squirrel'! curiosity; a bear's om nivorous appetite; a skunk's de liberateness; a wildcat's ferocity; a porcupine's indolence; a coy ote's intelligence; the forefoot skiU of a monkey. Although related to the great six-foot giant panda, my abode is in North America and you'll find me in every state of the union. I am equally at home on land and in water and footsure in trees. I often prowl right into the suburbs of our largest cities. Normally my fur is thick, soft brown and the tail ringed with white or gray. I walk on the soles of my five-toed feet, leav ing a footprint curiously like that of a small child. My ears are large, my features sensitive. When victuals are plentiful, I eat heartily and become, pleas ingly plump weighing up to 30 pounds and more, though my usual weight is closer to 15. I eat cherries, grapes, plums, berries, acorns, pecans, crickets honey, fish, frogs, earthworms, crawfish, mussels, fish, turtle eggs, birds. I raid cornpatches for corn when it is "in-the-milk" and melons. Many of us who live on marshlands, streams or lakes dip our food in the water. Some say it is because we are fastidious eaters, others because we lack saliva. After a nine-weeks' gestation, three to six young are born in early spring with fluffy warm coats, rings on tails and a black mask our family emblem. 'In three weeks, eyes open; In two months, we make short foraging trips, with our . mother in the lead. : , When danger threatens, moth' er shoves tiny tots up the near est tree and leads the would-be attacker on exhausting and usu ally fruitless . chases through marsh, mud, and swamp. In combat, I am courageous never faltering, whatever the odds and with sharp claws and teeth have made mincemeat out of many a prized hound. When young we are , easily tamed .and make affectionate pets but as old age comes on, around 10 "years, we become cranky, understandably so. In colonial days, our oil was used for keeping leather in good con dition and oiling machinery; our skins were used for clothing and were an article of barter at fron tier stores; our tasty flesh was roasted for sumptious repasts. Today, more than a million of our pelts go to market each year. I am: A. Dog, B. black bear, C. grey squirrel, D. raccoon, E. fox. I am D., a raccoon. (Released by McCIur Newspaper Syndicate) Free: By special arrangement with the editors of the Encyclo pedia Americana, my panel of judges wiU award each week to the reader who sends me the best true-life nature adventure, the best nature observation, or the best question on nature and wildlife, a complete 30-volume set- of this world-famous refer ence work in a handsome Seal craft binding. Each week, new submissions will be considered. Sorry, I , simply can't answer your many friendly letters. Please address your letter to: IS THAT SO! care Medford Mail Tribune, P. O. Box 575, Sausali to, Calif. COFFEE HANGOVER Los Angeles (U.R) The Paul Pascutzo Trucking Co. nursed a $24,229 coffee hangover today. Thieves stole a truck and trailer, containing 34,000 "pounds of cof fee from the company's yard Thursday. Bonn, Germany (U.R) Plans were underway today to set up a West German defense council Leaded by Chancellor Konrad Adenauer to coordinate all mill-, tary, economic and financial matters related to the nation's defense. EAST BEEF ROAST SIXTH ST. FRESH Side-Pork 1 39 I Wu,. 1 I Editorial Comment 1 LEO "TICK" MALARKEY ' (Editor's note: Leo J. (Tick) Malarkey, who died in a Port land hospital last week, was well-known in the Rogue Val ley when lived most of the last few years of his life. He was the originator and long time author of the MaU Tri une' Pickin' Pears column.) The lower Columbia region has lost one of its best-known and best-liked residents in the death of Leo "Tick" Malarkey, who last week In Portland Vet erans hospital lost a long fight against a fatal illness. , (. Tick had many friend throughout this area, as well as through the whole state Of Ore gon. He had a capacity for mak ing friends. He was reared in Oysterville. lived in Warrenton for years, and was for a quarter century an Astoria business man where his slogan "Malarkey That Man Insures Anything" was for a long time as familiar to local citizens as the Columbia river on Coxcomb hill. Tick was a World War I vet eran and never lost his interest in veterans' affairs. He was long an active memtier of Clatsop post of the American Legion. He played football at University of Oregon and was on one of its greatest teams the outfit that went to the Rose Bowl against ; Harvard in 1916 and almost up- ' set that highly-favored team. He never lost his interest in ath letics and sports. Tick followed the football fortunes of his be loved unirsity to the end of his life. He was once for a time the sports ditor of this news paper. . Tick was always cheerful and energetic, even during the years cf his fight against illness. He contributed much to the life and character of this community, and he will be missed by a multitude who knew him well. Artaria Budget . PURPOSE OF THE FUND Until the national commander of the American Legion, Seaborn P. Collins, attacked the. goals of the Fund for the Republic and questioned its patriotism, ' the organization and the work it is doing had been commended by responsible citizens the country over. It is regretable that Mr. Collins spoke before he was fully informed. In the hope that he may not further damage the work, of the Fund, its chairman, Paul G. Hoffman, has written a letter which includes this para graph of explanation: Since ' its inception, the Board has regarded the sphere . of the Fund as including the entire field of freedom and: - civil rights and has taken as itsj basic charter the Declaration! of Independence and the Con stitution. From the beginning, the Board has held that the major factor affecting civil lib erties today is the menace of communism and communist influence in this country.? Coupled with this threat is the grave danger to civil liberties in methods that may be used to meet the threat. The Fund has e financed research on a large scale into - the extent and nature of the internal commu nist menace and its effect on our community and institu-. tions. We hope to mSke a con tribution to the better under standing of effective proce dures for dealing with the communist menace while at the same time strengthening the American traditions of lib erty and freedom. Pendleton East Oregoniaa NO CHOICE New London, Conn QJ.R) Accused of speeding through three towns, Guion P. Manee was given the choice of three courts in, which to appear. He failed to show up in any of them. There Is No Substitute for an Insured savings ac count. Start with any amount. You'll discover friendly, per sonal service. ': FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS LOAN ASS'N of Medford ' 27 North Holly - Am Intritutioa Dedicatee' Te Those Who Save r- SLICED BACON 1 1