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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1955)
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) "Everybody ta Soutbera Oregon Reads The Mail Tribune Published Daily Except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 7-39 North Fir St. Phone 3-C141 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager E. C FERGUSON Managing Editor ERIC ALLEN JR. City Editor HAkRV CHIP MAN. Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor JACK JACKSON Sunday Editor GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1897 " SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance: Per copy 10c. Daily and Sunday One year $12.00 Daily and Sunday Six months 650 Daily and Sunday Three mos. 3.50 Sunday Only One vear S3.50. By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point Jacksonville. Gold HilL Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent and on motor routes: nn Daily and Sunday One year $13 00 Daily and Sunday One month 1.23 Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press Full Leased Wire ""MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Advertising neiJiacu. WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY INC. Offices in New York. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Aneles. Seattle. Portland. St Louis Atlanta. Vancouver B.C. NATIONAL E DITOtlAL ASVodl-ATIION 7 v Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and i0 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Nov. 23. 1945 (It was Friday) Banner headline on front page: MEAT RATIONING ENDS TONIGHT. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: For two summers there has been a great civil hue and cry about "Keep ing Oregon Green." It's a won derful slogan. It should be amended to include the leading football fields. 20 YEARS AGO Nov. 23, 1935 Medford residents paid $14.82 each in taxes in 1935, according to figures from secretary of treasurer's office. Jack Hueston, Rogue Valley Country club professional, an nounces turkey tournament. 30 YEARS AGO ' Nov. 23. 1925 (It was Monday) Fraternity and sorority presi dents at University of Oregon place ban on students dancing the Charleston. . Senator Robert N. Stanfield schedules two speeches in Med ford. 40 YEARS AGO Nov. 23. 1915 Loss of sugar beet factory in Rogue valley probable because of lack of necessary acreage for beets. Interest in proposed poultry show her increases with letter from C. F. Williams, publisher of Northwest Poultry journal. What's the Answer? Can You Get 4 of the 7? Copr. 1955. Editorial Research Report 1. Tax in the states for unem ployment benefits is paid equally by employer and employee, aU by employer, or all by employee? 2. Imports of residual oil, a competitor of coal, have in creased or decreased in recent months. or stayed about the same? 3. In first half of this year about 2500, 12,500, 25,000, 125,' 000 or 250,000 foreign cars were sold in We U.S.? 4. Which Catholic was recent ly suggested by two prominent Southern Democrats for the 1956 Democratic presidential nomina tion? 5. The game of chess has six, seven, eight, nine or ten differ ent kinds of prices? 6. Sidi Mohammed ben Yous- sef is a prominent Arab leader in Egypt, Morocco, Syria, Turkey, or Saudi Arabia? 7. The music of 'Show Boat'1 was written by Oscar Hammer- stein, Oscar Straus, George Gershwin, Jerome Kern, Franz Lehar, or Victor Herbert? The Answers: 1. All by em ployer. 2. Decreased. 3. About 25,000. 4. Gov. Lausche of Ohio 5. Six. 6. Morocco (he's Sulian again). 7. Kern. - Civil Service Slates Four Examinations Examinations for the positions Sf economist, medical tecnnician, mprfiral X-rav technician, and bindery woman, have been an nounced by the U. S. Civil Ser vice commission. All positions to be filled are in the Washington, D.C., area. No written test is required for any of these examinations. Ap plication blanks and further in formation will be available at any first class post office. "W1 VNEWS PAPER SSK. PUBLISHERS V-ASSOCIATION MAIL TRIBUNE The Hospital Drive A man we know and admire has been a patient in one of Medford's hospitals for several weeks now. It was from him that we got "the word" on the need for a new hospital in this area. He pointed out that both hospitals are filled a good bit of the time. Some days it has been necessary to set up beds in the halls or in visiting rooms. The actual physical capacities of both hospitals are al ready strained past comfort and convenience. "And," he joked, "if this procession of babies keeps up, there won't be room for anyone else at all." TTHE babies, of course, are only a part of the reason why a new hospital is needed. The population is much larger than it was when the present hospitals were built, for one thing. There are now about 63,000 people in the county, and ac cording to a survey of hospital bed, needs, several hundred more are necessary if state standards of hospitalization are to be met. Another is the increasing age of the population. The number of older people is increasing, and this means that more and more beds will be necessary to accommodate those suffering from the infirmities of age. CTILL another is the fact that many specialized forms of medical treatment are not now available in Medford. It was to meet this problem that Mercy Flights, Inc., was set up nearly six years ago. The fact that more than 400 patients have been earned by that non-profit organization is a demonstration, in itself, that we're still "isolated" from some of the services we need. Probably many of Mercy Flights' patients will in the future be brought to Medford, instead of being taken to Portland, when the new hospital is completed. DERHAPS the most pressing reason of all, however, is the fact that Community hospital (its tech nically known as Rogue Valley hospital, but few peo ple call it that after all these years) has pretty much outgrown its usefulness in its present state. It is located in an old building, and studies of the possibility of adding on to it have shown that not to hp an adenuatp. solution, both because the site is limited and because the old 1 i Tl It. point wnere it will not De saie mucn longer ior use as a hospital. A rpnlacement is needed therefore and needed badly. And the plan worked out by the men and women who nave studied tne matter ior many montns seems to be about the best one possible. "I17E ARE all users, or prospective users, of hospi- tals. As such we are fortunate in the circum stances under which this drive is starting. First of all, several substantial contributions by a few people have already provided some $600,000 of the , total amount needed. Secondly, we are pretty well assured of a big allocation of federal money toward the proj ect. This leaves an estimated some $1,900,000, to be raised by public contributions. Each individual who hospital will have to make it is worth to him and his pital facilities m Medford. be based on how much course. But it should also be based on his decision as to whether he and his family can much longer afford not to have adequate hospital facilities available. E.A. Air Travel This is being written a day or two before the writer is scheduled to take an airline trip. Consequently, he has taken an unusual almost a morbid interest in news of recent air crashes. He reads about them with a (gulp) sense of unease. Pleasanter reading are the statistics which show that travel on scheduled airliners is one of the safe est of all modes of getting from one place to another. THE scheduled airlines, and most of the non-skeds, too, have chalked up passenger-mile safety records which prove their planes are as safe, or safer, places to be than almost anywhere. The fact remains that in an airplane the passenger is entirely dependent for his safety on the precautions taken by someone else. Which may be why so many drivers, who are largely responsible for their own safety, and who have the "it-can't-happen-to-me" feeling, wind up in the ditch or in a hospital. E.A. Accidental Death Insurance Case Heard Portland (U.R) Trial of a claim for $100,000 of accidental death insurance policies opened here yesterday in the case brought by Mrs. Jane Lyons, widow of Coos Bay Lumberman James Lyons. The 49-year-old timber tycoon died in 1953 while hunting doves in the state of Baja California, Mexico. Hearing the case is U.S. District Judge of San Francisco, sitting without a jury. Howard K. Beebe, attorney for Mrs. Lyons, told the court that Lyons died after he was struck in the face by a shotgun blast. There were no witnesses to the accident. Mrs. Lyons intends to prove by medical evidence that shock from the accidentally self-inflicted gunshot wound overstrained her husband's healthy heart and caused his death. ' The defendants, including Lloyds of London and Glens Falls Indemnity Company, contend Wednesday. November 23, 1955 building is getting to the J l 1 J? $714,000, out of a total of makes a gift toward the up his own mind how much family to have better hos That decision will have to he can atrord to give, of that Lyons suffered from a heart ailment and the the cause of death was natural. St. Helens Blaze Takes Third Victim Portland (U.R) A fire last week at St. Helens has claimed its third victim. Seven-year-old Nicholas Bee son died in a hospital yesterday of burns received in a fire that killed his twin brother, Victor, and their nine-year-old brother, Michael. Seven other children escaped uninjured or with lesser burns. The blaze destroyed the five room house of Mr. and Mrs. Ed mond.Beeson of St. Helens. Salem (U.R) The city of Enterprise gained 14 per cent in population in the past five years, a census taken by the state showed last week. Hews Developments Must Be Embarrassing To Nehru By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and his two eminent vis itors from Moscow must be em- barras s e d by current news developments. Nehru, Sovi et Premier Ni kolai A. Bul ganin and com munist party boss Nikita S. Khrushchev are prai sing their own and each other's count r i e s as cnarles ftlcCaun lovers of peace and good will. Nehru has emphasized that the "f?reat cause of human progress" can not be served by violence and hatred. "Denial of freedom and racial discrimination are not only im proper, but are the seeds from which grow the evils of war," Nehru said in one speech. Rnleanin and Khrushchev are vinilHins? ur their country as a model for all to admire. At the same time, they are neglecting no opportunity to complain of the defects and misdoings of the Western democracies. And while this is going on, the Indian newspapers report that 10 persons were killed in wild riots in Bombay, inaias largest citv caused bv what tne rioters call racial discrimina tion. Five County Men To Participate in Horticulture Meet Five Jackson county men will actively participate in the 70th anniversary meeting of the Ore gon State Horticultural society in Corvallis, Dec. 1 and 2. The meet will include a pre view of new varieties, latest re search in control of insects, plant diseases, weeds, and the use of hormone sprays to increase fruit size. The society meeting, held at Oregon State college, will have two general assemblies and spec ial sessions for research and industry reports on small fruits, stone fruits, apples and pear, and vegetables. Root To Report Apple and pear growers will hear a report on heating orch ords with wood waste, given by Bob Root, Medford; export mar ket prospects; and latest trends in fruit packaging. Don Korth, Phoenix, will act as chairman for the sectional meeting on stone fruits. R. J. Higdon, Kings Hwy., will mod erate a panel on plant nutrition. Ward Spatz, Medford, will par ticipate on the panel. Cliff B. Cordy, county agent, will moderate a panel on irriga tion and draining, and give a re port on observing horticulture in Florida. Don Berry, county agent, will take part in a panel discussion of what's new in stone fruit disease control. Evans Valley 4-H Awards Presented The Evans Valley 4-H club achievement program "was held at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 21, at the Wi mer Grange hall. A potluck din ner with a candle lighting" cere mony was followed by games and dancing. Presentation of pins and cards designating the number of years of 4-H work completed was made by Orth Miller, Medford Branch of the First National Bank, and Gene McCurley, agricultural field representative for the First National Bank of Portland. Those receiving first-year pins were Roy Buck, Barbara DeRo baum, Kathy Johnston, Keith Johnston, Bobby Machado, Di ane' Mars and Christine Penn. Those receiving second - year cards were Maryeda Frost, Kar en Byers, Jeanne DeRobaum, Sharon Martin, Timothy Mur dock, John Penn, and Barbara Wood. Third-year 4-H pins were pre sented to John Machado, Rose Marie , Machado and Terrie Roach; fourth-year cards, Charles Badcock, ' Barbara Headrick, Margaret Stone and Jo Ann Wood; fifth - year, Janet Erick son; sixth year, Yvonne Erick son and Ann Buck; ninth year, Beth Buck. Dead line Sunday Classified Is at noon Saturday. 10 a.m .Monday for Monday; other days 5:30 orevious day LFAHAL FOR THE PAIN OF ARTHRITIS, RHEUMATISM, AND NEURITIS. 51 At Your Favorite Drug Store 1' 3. Russians The same newspapers report that in freedom-loving Russia six men were executed, after secret trials, for alleged com plicity in the villainies of J-.av-Beria. the secret police chief who was shot two years ago. At least the Russians can say to themselves that the bombay riots could not have Happened in their country. Russians take what they get, and praise the Kremlin. At least, wnen mey think out loud. Nehru 'can console himself with the thought that in India there are no mass executions for offenders against his regime. No doubt Nehru, Bulganin and TTVirnohohev will continue to ex press their admiration for eacn other. The Ptnmhav outbreak, how ever, mav well be foUowed by others even more violent. Nehru's Idea The reason is that one of Neh ru's vast oroiects is to consoli date India into 16 states, and a int nf Tndians do not like the idea. India's 360,000,000 people con sist of innumerable racial and religious groupings. Fourteen different languages, out of the many, are recognized by the gov ernment as official. The trouble in Bombay was caused by Nehru's decision- to cut up the Bombay area into three states. The idea is to divide the state according to the language of its peoples. Bombay is to be one state, a second one is to be the state of Maharahshtra. But more than 40 per cent of the 3,000,000 people of Bombay City speak the Mahar- ahstra language. They want to be incorporated in Maharahstra state. The same problem exists in other areas, and in some of them the complaints of discrimination also may take violent form. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although under certain circum stances the use ot a pen name-or initial for publication is permis rible The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensa tion Letters submitted for publica tion must not exceed 400 words. To the Editor: How wonderful is the account of little Joe Wil lie Haynes a true Thanksgiv ing story with a happy ending. The 11-vear-old Nesro bov who was nearly killed, had serious bram surgery and is now well, will have a iovous Thanlcseiv- irig and a Merry Christmas with his family, thanks to a skilled surgeon and fine hospital care. Here, L. B. Pierce, is the an swer to your letter which ap peared in the Medford Mail Tribune Nov. 16. Medicine is one of the places where idealism wins over ma terialism. I am sure that nobody need ing help is ever turned away irom enner Sacred Heart or Community hospitals, or that any. doctor refuses to care for those in trouble. In an automobile accident about three years ago, kind and efficient police officers sum moned an ambulance which took me to Community hospital. Recently I have had major surg ery at Sacred Heart hospital. Ex pert care and great personal kindness in the case of every one, doctors, nurses and aides, Was given freelv T am cure neither little Joe were forced to pay in advance wnen ne was admitted to Sacred Heart. County cases are given as good care as millionaires. Carry medical insurance if possible; if you can, pay your bill in full. After all, the staff has to eat. If you can't, talk frankly with hospital authorities and doctors before going in, if it is not an emergency, and budget your navmentc tf iVp flat broke, say so. But be truth- iui ana don't buy luxuries until your bills are paid. Oregonians might get togeth er and have a county hospital in each county as California has Los Angeles County hospital is une oi xne imest m the world. But millionaire Or nanner vmi'll get skilled, kind care right here. ii nospuai staffs, nurses and doctors resigned and went out after big money where would Jackson county be? After all, funerals cost mon ey, too. Edith Y. Ingle 338 Bessie st. Medford, Ore. New Kind of Safe Medicine forAwful ASTHMA attacks If you dread those awful att&cla of asthma that dog np your bronchial breathing tubes bo you choke, cough, pant, wheeze and gasp for air, don't wait for the next attack to hit bat right now start taking the new medicine called BATOR TABLETS that work such wonders fast. Without potassium iodide, with, out any of the old-fashioned drugs that irri CENTRAL REXALL DRUG Main & Central I HA ... - -L , What our Pilgrinv lathers and the Indians ate 334 years ago when they sat . down in friend ship at Plymouth, Mass., was basically the same as that which will be served this Thanksgiving Day because it was predominant ly of American origin and pro duction. But our forefathers would be hard put to identify some of the foods. Many, like turkey, In dian corn, pumpkins were taken to Europe and improved and brought back many years later to take their place on our table, different in size, appearance and taste. Some even with new names such as Irish potatoes and Turkish cucumber (pumpkin). First, let's consider the tur key, the bird which symbolizes the occasion. Although flocks of 300 and more turkeys lived in the nearby forests, our domesti cated turkey does not come from these birds alone. It came from a near-relative which lived in Mexico and was already domesti cated by the Aztecs and served as the main meat course at many a sumptuous repast at Emperor Montezuma's castle before the conquistadors came. The Span ish conquerors carried it back to Spain. Thence, it spread through out Europe quickly. When re- imported to America with the ac quired name "turkey," it was further cross-bred and improved And still further changes are being effected: of the 30,000,000 birds, which will be cooked in the U.S. and Canada this month and next, the majority will be white Beltsville turkeys small birds with extra large breasts weighing perhaps 4Vi pounds though prime and fat. (A dozen years ago it would have been im possible to buy a mature bird under 12 pounds!) Cranberry Native The cranberry, without which no turkey would taste right, is a native-born citizen, found only on theAmericancontinent thriv ing in boggy, coastal areas. It is the same. As for the cornbread mad from corn, the corn of those days was a vari-colored scrawny prod uct and beside the golden, beautiful hybrids of today, would go almost unrecognized. At our feast, we must not min imize the potatoes. Both the sweet and "Irish" are American- born and bred. As for the "Irish," shortly after Columbus landed it was shipped from its original home in Peru to Spain. After years of . cultivation there, it found its way to France and from thence to Germany and England from where it came homeward by way of Bermuda to the young Virginia Bay col ony. It was called Irish be cause 'it was widely distributed on "the Emerald Isle and Irish im migrants to the U.S. brought large quantities of the white po tato with them. Finally, the dessert--without a pumpkin pie would indeed be an incomplete meal. Fifty years after Columbus pumpkin became so popular in Europe that it lost its American identity and be came known as "Turkish cucum ber." As such, it was re-introduced into the U.S. after being cross-bred with -African and Asiatic varieties, and happily took back its original name, pumpkin. (Released by McClure Newspaper Syndicate) Free: Bv special arrangement with the editors of the Encyclo pedia Americana, my panel of judges will award eacn weeK to the reader who sends me the best true-life nature adventure, the best nature observation, or the best question on nature and wild life, a complete 30-volume set of this world - famous reference work in a handsome Sealcraft binding. Each week, new sub missions will be considered. Sorry, I simply can't answer your many friendly letters. Please address your letter to: IS THAT SO! c'o Medford Mail Tribune, Box 575, Sausalito, Calif. SHOPKEEPERS WARNED New York (U.R) Police Commissioner Stephen Kennedy warned Christmas shoppers to day to beware or they may be giving away more than they in tend. The shopping crowds offer 'increased opportunities for pickpockets, he warned. tate so many, new BATOR TABLETS work through the blood stream (1) to loosen and help get rid of the thick secretions that dog the breathing tubes (2) to counteract the spasmodic coughing, choking, wheezing and gasping before it starts (3) to ward off the allergy of asthma and thus let you breathe freer and easier again. NOW AT DRUGGISTS New Bator Tablets are now available at dray gists without a prescription. Entirely safe, these tiny tablets contain nothing harmful, nothing habit forming. Fast, in just a few short hours a eourse of Bator starts doing its wonders internally through the bloodstream Bator allays the asthma attack in advance, lets you sleep, lets you live in more normal peace and comfort once again. Complete satis faction or money back. Get new Bator Tablets from your druggist today. Matter of Fact THE STATE OF THE DEMOCRATS Chicago Beaming confidence with a slight underlayer of ner vousness about describes the mood of the Dem o c r a t i c Party, to judge from the big Democ r a t i c j amboree which has just taken place here. The rea sons for the confidence are obvious. In the first Stewart Alson - place, excent for the role nlaved hv Ariiai Stevenson, and Stevenson's re markable speech, the perform ance here in Chicago has been a pretty dull one. But it has been dull for a reason pleasing to Democrats. For they have nota bly failed to provide amusement to the onlookers by trying to claw each others' eyes out, after their usual fashion. There have been eroanines and mutterings, of course, but nothing like the fearful clashes tnat used to take place when Democrats gathered together. The reason is, of course, that the issues which tore the Democratic Party apart in 1948 and 1952 civil rights and off-shore oil have been muted if not disposed oi. This surface display of unitv has taken place, moreover. against the background of a re markable record of success at the polls. Indeed, the consistent Democratic voting trend, in a time of prosperity and while a Republican President has en joyed unprecedented personal popularity, has been a mysteri- our phenomenon. Consider the record of the last three years. In the special elec tions in 1953, almost before President Eisenhower had set tled himself in the White House, seven out of eight House seats went to Democrats, while two districts, in Wisconsin and New Jersey, went Democratic for the first time in history. This might have been written off as mere happenstance, if the same districts had not gone Dem ocratic again in 1952. In that election, . the Democrats won both houses,, the first time in American history that a Presi dent lost both houses to the op position two years after his elec tion. The Democrats also grab bed' a whole slew of governor ships, and polled a higher pro portion of the total vote than at any time since the mid-'thirties. rpHE off-year elections of Nov. 8, in the unanimous view of the Democrats who gathered here, strongly confirmed the trend. Some Democratic suc cesses, thev admit, were whollv local affairs. But they argue that it is silly .to suppose, for example, that Democratic may ors replaced Republicans in 48 Indiana towns simply because of local conditions in all those towns. ' The Democrats are sure that the Indiana vote represents farm rebellion of serious pro portions against the Administra- tion. And they believe that the Democratic trend in certain towns in Connecticut and else where represents a drift of the commuting and middle-class vnte away from its normal Rennh- ncan allegiance. Finally, the Democrats are nr. erating on the assumption that Dwieht D. Eisenhower will not run again. Although it is not often acknowledged, this is the most important single reason for the Democratic confidence which has been on display here. "Won't it be nice, one Democrat re marked, "not to have to run against an American institu tion?" And vet that underlaver of nervousness also exists, all the same. The Democrats, particu larly those from the farm states, are sure that farm discontent presents them with an enormous ly effective issue, and many of them are angry with Adlai Stev enson for not exploiting the issue more aggressively. But oth A dramatic, new compact light weight efficient hearing aid nothing less than Zenith's finest quality. Not just a one or two transistor unit, but a Zenith quality miW-transistor hearing aid with W-Doy Money-Boci GmraahM, Oae-Yecr GEORGE E. i new i 131 West- Main CORDS BATTERIES REPAIRS FOR ALL MAKES By Stewart AIsob erwise, they have a dearth of real, emotion-stirring issues. "It's going to be tough to run against peace and prosperity," one of them remarked. Whoever' the Republican can didate may be, moreyoer, he will be lavishly financed and he will have at his disposal the most brilliant practitioners of the new techniques -of television politics. Most important of all, as the Democrats are unhappily aware, he will have Dwight D. Eisen hower: "TOU can just imagine it," one Democrat remarked thought fully. "There will be Ike, the ailing and beloved President, maybe on the back porch at Get tysburg, urging the voters to elect a Republican candidate to carry on his policies. Don't think that will be easy to beat." And there is one more reason for the underlayer of Democratic nervousness. Some very shrewd Democrats have a nasty suspi cion that the Democratic elec toral successes since 1952 don't really mean what they sesm to mean, as far as the Presidency is concerned. They suspect that the voters, who have increas ingly shown a disconcerting tendency to split their tickets, have gotten used to having a Republican in the White House with Democrats in charge of. Congress; and that the voters" iiue n tnat way, and do not mean to change. (C) 1955. New York Herald Tribune, Inc. ACTOR HURT Hollywood (U.R) Film actor Dan Dailey was reported "rest ing comfortably" at Cedars of Labanon hospital today after suf fering a sprained neck in a fall from a horse. Financial Independence does not just happen. It is built over a period of time bit by bit. Your savings or investment ac count is the place for your fund of the future. FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASS'N " of Medford 27 North Holly . 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