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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1956)
fEN METFCPD 'OREGON! OFF TO A FLYING START Maj. J.' Ray Donahue hurtles his F-86 Sabreiet "iSknJ Kow" down the runway at Hamilton Air Force Base, Calif., as he gets the s!;,iti!! fl.-ij from Col. Bertrand Rhine and Clyde P. Barnett. The Ricks Trophy Hire is a 1900-mile flight from California to New Orleans. All seven pilots in the race are flying Air National Guard F-86 jets. Ike Being Urged To Bring End To Maneuver To Abolish Nixon By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Correspondent - Presi- i!' Kitii':iwt i bcum urccd L'.'-.th H,,- hall and run with it " - I I r 11 f X I f rcport- the first Housr confer ,1 f W h n o ' ence in weeks. The cotifer i nee is sched uled for next Wednesday. It as been sug estod thai the I.M best way to unravel last week's mystery of Harold E. Stassen's attack on Vice President Richard M. Nixon would be for Mr. Ei senhower to begin the confer ence with his own explanation of what was what. If the unraveling ronies in ti e ordinary question and an-wor conference routine, there i- !,!.elv 'o be more, rather than It -s. nv. sl ry before the show is A of Republicans er,d ihr di-pu'r 'i!- M,lrn' Wl I noni i- t it. They feel that nee d ti c continuing controversy sure ly attracts increasing public at tention to the state of Mr. Ei scmurwer's health and the pecu liar importance of the number tv. o Mto! Awdits Own Nomination That is a point winch the Democrats eagerly are attempt ing to advertise, and the Re- Gen. Bullmoose Bid for President Will Start Today Who do peopl want to run for Preside candidates ah, nit. No. why it's go mooe or r character l; it tins fall? Not the everyone's talking sir! You'll soon see to be General Bull- one. This fabulous the star of the new I.i 1 A ncr seouence which starts in Mail Tribune today. You'll find it on Page 2. Sec. 2. r.u!lmono is the arch-titan of them a!!, the financial wizard whose brain spins dollar signs a-i,i : '"ti'.ioss statements. His 1. VinlilnA'-rtNIM HURRY" Million A MfNuTE.'.' oe is worth a million dollars minute . . an eld lady takes am minutes to hobble in front :' h:s c; r and ziugo. There goes ao million. If c-ttly ue had a real presi- vitcb things couldn't hap . -. mutters old Bullmoose. '"ere wouldn't be time to lose is.-ri of money. People i. , frt.r ;0 waste that i .,, r 'he evolution of v l'''.:Hr',i'se Plan and the Bull-"".-e rrc-iriciit drive. The r; -. i::,.:r rm.y not be your idea ' van you'd like to see i V'.:iic House but he's ia: . ":;to: to iuh'en your day slit !:-.;:;. laulis . . . and who uo'.'.s. ttie Bai!m(ioe Plan ,ert w, ki:,-s may ai: be liv- Newsman Learns How hies Go Through Canal London (U.R: A newsman asked the British Foreign Office; spokesman today how ships are coin" through the Suez Canal now. I pssume sharp end first,' spokesman replied. the , A J 1 i, MAIL TRIBUNE Y' 1 ri ,-- ! publicans have been helping ! them. ! As of now. Mr. Eisenhowers I position may be summed up like j this: He would be delighted to j have Nixon on the ticket again, j but it is not customary to select a vice presidential candidate until the presidential candidate has been named. Mr. Eisenhower lias been crowded mighty close to saying Woman Lies Six Days Without Help Sac City, Iowa (U.R'. A 73-year-old woman, who could not walk without crtuches, was reported in "fairly good" condi tion today after lying for six days at the bottom of a steep hill where she fell. Mrs. Lillian McKeen was found by neighbors at the foot of the bill on her 10-acre farm where she lived atone. She was taken to a hospital here for treatment of shock and exposure. Mrs. McKeen said she fell and tumbled down the hill dur ing her usual walk last Monday evening. In the fall Mrs. McKeen lost her crutches, without which she could not walk because of a pre vious hip fracture. She remem bered trying to reach two sticks nearby and using them in a vain effort to right herself to walking position. The elderly woman called for help, but eventually her voice grew weaker and weaker. A neighboring farm couple first noticed Mrs. McKeen was missing when they spotted papers and mail piling up on her front porch. They passed the word around and eight farmers joined in a search. She finally was located at the bottom of the hill. Hiroshima Maidens Find Jobs in Japan Tokyo U.Ri Five of the nine atom bomb-scarred Hiro shima maidens who recently re turned from treatment in U. S hospitals have found jobs in Japan, the newspaper Mainichi reported Sunday. Moioko Yamcshita. 24. was employed by a Hiroshima busi ness firm: Masako Wada, 23. and Keiko Kawasaki. 22. found jobs in the account office of a de partment store: Takuko Shibata, 26. was hired by the Seibi Elec tric Co.. and Atsuko Y'amamoto, 24. was employed by a Hiro shima hotel. When the group of 25 Hiro shima maidens left for the United States last year the faces of many were so scarred they spent all their time secluded to avoid attracting attention. Dulles Sees Good From Panama Talks Washington IU.R' Secre tary of State John Foster Dulles said Sundav the Panama con- (..mn,., nf American riresidents ! "was outstanding in the gains it recorded for American solidar ity." "Nothing so intimate, and at the same time so comprehensive has ever occurred." he said "The good results will long be enioyod." Dulles gave his appraisal on h"s return from Lima. Peru, iv here he attended the inaugura tion of President Manuel Prado. He went to the inauguration from the Panama conference, Use Tribune Want Ads QUICK and EASY! Monday July 30- 1956 he wants Nixon to run again, but hasn't quite said it. Instead, he has given every appearance of preferring to wait until his own nomination has been ac complished before making an un qualified request that Nixon be tapped again. Headlines in Making That position could make some more headlines if Mr. Ei senhower sticks with it. There would be no question about Nixon Wednesday at the Presi dent's first news conference since his abdominal surgery at Walter Reed hospital early last month but for Stassen's effort last week to link Mr. Eisen hower with a movement to bounce Nixon and to nominate Massachusetts Gov. Christian A. Herter in his place. Mr. Eisenhower now must be asked all over again if he wants Nixon to run with him. Chances are he will say he would be de lighted. He's said that before. He also will be asked if he would like to run with Herter. If the President says Herter would make a good candidate, too. the stop-Nixon story will be alive again. It isn't likely to live because Nixon's renomination is practically assured. But it will make some more headlines which will be vastly pleasing to those who do not like Nixon, both Republicans and Demo crats. Only in Ethylene dibromide w as developed for maximum power in giant airliners. Now Standard adds it to Chevron Supreme to give you Skypower for your car . . . bring out the full power that's built into modern high-compression engines! This exclusive formula vaporizes deposits that collect in the combustion chamber. That's the rea son you get new freedom from knock feel that ''new car"' response to your foot on the gas pedal! Democrats Confident Of Efforts To Avoid Loyalty Oath Fight Washington 'U.R Demo crats were confidence today they will avoid at their Chicago con vention next month another parly-shattering "loyalty oath" fight like that which almost caused a North-South split at the 1952 convention. A Democratic National Com mittee spokesman said a rule worked out since the last con vention by an advisory commit tee of northerners and southern ers should prevent a repetition of the 1!)52 hassle. No Challenge Indicated He also said the committee has received no indication of a contest or challenge of any dele gation. Three southern delegations from South Carolina, Louisiana and Virginia were almost tossed out of the 1952 conven tion in a floor fight over the so called loyalty oaths. It required that delegates pledge themselves to use "every honorable means" to see that the convention nom inees were placed on the ballot in their states. The compromise rule the na tional committee has recom mended for adoption docs not re quire convention delegates to pledge themselves to support the party nominees in November. It declares that state Demo cratic parties are expected to see the nominees are placed on the ballot in each state and members of the national com mittee are expected to "declare affirmatively" for the ticket. j Good Faith Cited ! But delegates to the conven- lion will participate in "good faith" and no pledge or "addi , tional assurances" will be re quired in the absence ot ere-1 dentials contest or challenge." Former Democratic National Chairman Stephen A. Mitchell announced last year that, under the proposed new rule, he plan ned to challenge the seating of Gov. Allan Shivers of Texas and former Govs. James F. Byrnes of South Carolina and Robert F. Kcnnon of Louisiana. They were the three Demo cratic governors who participat Nepai-U.S. Friendship Association Formed Katmandu. Nepal (U.R; A seven - member Nepal-United States Friendship Association was formed here during the week end to 'further strengthen the ties of friendship and good will between the people of America and Nepal." The association. formed by distinguished persons in Nepal's art and literature, is the first of its kind in the world's only Hindu and Himalayan state. Chevron Supreme --an aviation gasoline formula1 to give w We take better care of your car with S. 0. products STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF ed in the 1952 convention but bolted to President Eisenhower in the election. However, none of the three is a delegate to this year's convention. Probably the most prominent Southern Democrat who support ed Mr. Eisenhower in 1952 and who will be a delegate this year is Scn.-Designate J. Strom Thur mond of South Carolina. How ever, there has been no hint of a possible challenge of Thurmond. Sole Survivor Of Union Army Nearing Death Duluth. Minn. (U.R. Albert j Woolson, 109-year-old sole ur-; vivor of the Grand Army of the Republic, clung to a thin strand j of life early today in St. Luke's hospital here. Attendants said the critical condition of the former drum mer boy was unchanged since he lapsed into a coma at 4 a.m. (EST) Saturday. He has not re sponded to treatment, but his soldier's heart refuses to quit. Woolson. hospitalized since last Memorial Day, has been in an oxygen tent for several days. He was given nasal oxygen and intravenous injections after his relapse Saturday. j Hospitalized Six Times j The sole survivor of the Union Army of the Civil War ; had been home from the hospi- j tal only a week when he re turned Memorial Day. He was. hospitalized six times during the past two years for treatment of ; lunc congestion. Doctors had to remove fluid from his lungs be- cause his aging heart could not i pump the fluid out. Woolson has been the Union Army's only survivor for sev eral years. Three veterans of the Confederate Army, however, are still alive. During the Civil war, Wool son enlisted in the first Minne sota Heavy Artillery at the age of 16 after his father lost a leg in the battle of Shiloh. He was assigned to garrison duty in Tennessee. Japan Foreign Minister Observes 69th Birthday Moscow (U.RI Japanese! Foreign Minister Mamoru Shige mitsu celebrated his 69lh birth day Sunday by dining with Mos- members of his own peace treaty delegation plus 10 correspon- i dents. ' Clean-burning Skypower helps prevent valve and piston ring wear. And it has carburetor-cleaning "Detergent-Action" to end rough idling and gas waste. But what you'll notice first is the fresh power that levels out mountain grades, pick-up that takes the strain out of passing. Why not try a tankful of Chevron Supreme with Skypower today! If your car doesn't need Supreme, get all the power it can deliver with Chevron Gasoline! Blind Man Tricked On Literature Hand-Outs Saigon sU.R: Police ar rested a 47-ycar-old man on charges of distributing Commu nist lilPratura hi a i-illno-. in 3 I northern nrovinre i You'll Vietnam, the Vietnam Press News Agency reported today. But they released him when they discovered he was blind. He told investigators the liter ature he was distributing had been described to him as anti Communist tracts. Use Tribune Want Ads Why wash this precious cotton dress at home? the Sanitone Cotton Clinic is the safe.. Jar mm It is almost impossible to recap ture the exquisite daintiness of sheer summer cottons at home, no matter! In addition to giving But I us tnese aencate cotton taDncs, science DacK an tne tissue-crisp lreshness 1 has also provided a way to keep their and delicate charm those lovely cot- g original loveliness indefinitely. tons had when brand new. 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