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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1956)
1" nwiiu nnjw.i.nm mi ii mil i, in ii ,1, Tuesday, June 12. 1958 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE FIVE THEY OPERATED ON IKE The actual surgery per formed on President Eisenhower was the work of a four man "operating team" composed of Dr. Isidor a Ravin, professor of surgery at the University of Pennsylvania, shown (left) arriving at Walter Reed General Hospital in Washington; Maj. Gen. Leonard D. Heaton, commandant of Walter Reed General Hospital; Col. Robert To Gants, chief of the hospital's department of surgery, and Lt CoL Max D. Smith, assistant chief of surgery (the last two not shown). Mrs. Eisenhower awaited the outcome of the operation in the presidential suite. With her was their son, Major John Eisenhower, and the President's youngest brother, Dr. Milton Eisenhower. Father, Dad or Pop, he's very special! end him ... !' 1 riTirDic S7 . Naval Archifec! Positions Open The federal civil service an nounced this week that examina tions are being offered for career-conditional appointments as ! Naval architect GS-5, GS-7, GS-9 and GS-11. Entrance salary ranges from $4,480 a year for GS-5 to 56,390 a year for GS-11. Applicants must have reached their 18th birthday by the date the appli cation is filed. Positions are with federal government agencies in Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington. Application forms are avail able at the Medford post office, ning for reelection something to Administration About Convinced Of Licking on Foreign Aid Bill By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Correspondent Washington (U.R) The Eis enhower administration is just about convinced it must take a licking in Con gress on the issue of big time foreign aid spending. Both parties are divided on the question. But the ma jority of sen ators and rep- resenta lives Lyle t wusoa are expected to support big re ductions in proposed foreign mil itary aid. The House voted a $1,100,000,000 slice Monday. The House vote is accepted in politically sensitive Washington as fair notice that American citi zens are beginning to queston the use to which their tax money is being put.-Politicians seeking to learn why military aid was relatively popular a year or so ago and today is se verely reduced could come up with a couple of reasons without much effort. Sustained High Taxation One is the sustained high tax ation of the U.S. voter. It is known around the world that the American citizen is a lucky devil with indoor plumbing and at least one automobile. Hot and cold running water and a De troit heap, however, are not enough to ease the pain of the tax bite. Taxes were high during the war. They eased off thereafter only to soar again in 1950 for Korean war rearmament. That was six years ago arW the tax load is little diminished. A tax cut right now would take a lot of steam out of the effort to re duce foreign aid spending. It would give a congressman run- say to the folks back home who protested against the flow of money overseas. No tax cut is likely, however. The financially conservative at titude tnward a prospective Treasury surplus this year is that it would be better to reduce the public debt a little bit than to reduce taxes, which further would cheapen the lonr.; suffering dollar. It is worth only about 50 cents, as it is. A Look Overseas For another explanation of the voters' chill on foreign aid the inquiring politician might look overseas. There is a feeling that some of the allies of the United States are somewhat less than doing their own part and are considerably less than sta ble. France, for example. From April, 1917, when the United iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipiiiiimiiiiii RED Your Neighborhood Red Scissors Premium Store Says "THANKS A MILLIO For Your Patronage" with 100 r. on each of 2Ai3t'c & UheseitemslX mg&Q WA ' I AH-v AAiii METAL SERVING TRAY ;CM TOLE ROSE PATTERN Size: I7V lT ' I x l2Vi'. 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PLEASE! Remember, Offer Expires August 31st, 1956. Get These Premiums At MEDFORD, OREGON Marine Marvair, 220 West Main PORTLAND, OREGON.. .Red Scissors Coupon Store, 1115 S. W. Aider St Ahmyt Km fh covpem from ffost quality prooWt. AJk for big 40-pag catalog, showing hundndt of bmautihl gifts of local ffad Scissors Prtniutm Store, or Rtnd post cord toz Red Scissors Coupon Plan, 830 Mission Strwt, San Francisco 3, California. Polygamous Mother Wins Court Fight St. George, Utah U.B A polygamous Utah mother looked forward today to regaining cus tody of her seven children who were previously taken away from her and placed In foster homes. Mrs. Vera Johnson Black, Short Creek, Utah, won the court battle to regain her children after she promised to teach them to avoid the practice of plural marriage and obey the law of Utah. An order returning the chil dren to Mrs. Black was signed Monday by Judge Durham Mor ris of Utah's Sixth Juvenile Court. The children will be for mally returned tomorrow after noon. They were taken from her Jan. 12, 1956, because Mrs. Black refused to sign an affidavit promising to give up polygamy and desist from teaching them the practice. The case had been regarded as a test to determine what should be done with children of the polygamous fundamentalist sect at Short Creek astride the Utah-Arizona border. Short Creek was raided h? authorities in July, 1953. Later the Utah Juvenile Court ordered the seven children of Leonard and Vera Elac'c, "Fundamental ist cult membBrs," taken away from them. Blaci: had three fam ilies and at the time h.id fath ered 26 children. Heart Association Warns Vacationers Newark, N.J. (U.R) The New Jersey Heart association issued so.ne tips to the nation's vaca tioners today, warning that sum mer weather often lures people into too much activity. Persons who have led com paratively sedentary lives during the 'indoor season'," the associ ation said, "should remember that they may be putting an un due strain on their hearts by plunging headlong into a full scale program of strenuous ac tivity. The association advised vaca tioners to enter the summer play program gradually. It also said that persons who embark on a weekend of relaxation at their cottages should relax instead of cramming Saturday and Sunday with work. Eisenhower Greets Medical Convention Chicago (U.R) President Eisenhower sent personal greet ings from his hospital room to the opening session of the Amer ican Medical association conven tion Monday. Dr. Elmer Hess, retiring AMA president, said the President dic tated his greetings from air arm chair in Washington's Walter! Reed Hospital, where he is re covering from an abdominal op eration. Presidential physician Dr. Howard Snyder telephoned the greetings to Chicago. Hess praised Snyder and other doctors attending the President for the "forthrightness and frankness with which the presi dent's condition was reported from day to day to the American people." Grange Upper Applegate HEC The Upper Applegate Home Economics club will meet Wednesday, June 13, at the home of Mrs. Edward Finley at 12:15 p.m. Luncheon will be served. All Grange ladies are welcome to attend. Dental Tradition Says: "Never Retire" I hwvm never done better work than now and I have no inten tion of retiring. Dr. S. Ralph Dippel D.M.D. States entered World War I, and over the years France has cost the United States quite a lot of money without ever quite getting off the floor. Most re cently, from Indochina to Al giers, the cost has been terrific in one way or another. The French people are in a tight spot. Their divisions which should be an important part of the western defense against So viet Russian aggression are mostly engaged against colonial rebels in North Africa. 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