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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 24, 1956)
Quotes From the News By UNITED PRESS Moscow Soviet Communist party chief Nikita S. Khrushchev warning the British and French to be careful in the Suez canal dispute lest war break out: "The Arabs will not stand alone." New York Acting U.S. Attorney Thomas B. Gilchrist reject ing scide scars on the face as the reason hoodlum Abraham Telvi, named by the FBI as the assailant of Columnist Victor Riesel, was murdered: "There's a very good motive for the killing of Telvi. but to dis close this motive would reveal to those who should not know the identity of witnesses." Libertyville, 111. Democratic presidential nominee Adlai E. Stevenson his little black dog, Muldoon, who ate the lapel off a cameraman's jacket and chewed a hole in a visitor's rain coat: "This is a nice pooch, but he's not very smart." Convention Hall, San Francisco Nebraska delegate "terrible" Terry Carpenter whose nomination of Joe Smith for vice president handed the cut-and-dried convention its only laugh: "I'm a lone wolf. I do anything I think should be done." Kansas City, Mo. Former President Harry Truman on recall ing he attended his first convention in 1900 when the Democrats nominated William Jennings Bryan for president: 'I have been going to political conventions ever since. Some times I get pushed around and sometimes I don't. It really doesn't make much difference." Las Vegas Derek Goodman after his nightclub scuffle with Ted Jordan, husband of stripper Lili St. Cyr, in which the two men crashed into a chuck wagon and were enveloped by two bowls of salad: "We had a battle. It's all over." Morse Says Demos Saved Trade Unions Springfield, Ore. (U.P.) Sen. Wayne Morse told an audience of sawmill workers here yester day that the "Republican admin istration tried to knife the trade union movement last year but Senate Democrats stopped them cold." The Oregon Bemocrat, who is seeking reelection this year, maintained that "if the Eisenhower-endorsed Goldwater bill had passed Congress, our coun try would have been thrown back to the days of wholesale union busting that preceded" pass age of the Wagner Act during the New Deal." Morse said that under terms of the bill, the federal government would have delegated to the states jurisdiction over labor re lations. He said that "most state gov ernments Oregon included are controlled by reactionary John Kennedy's Wife Suffers Miscarriage Newport, R.I. (U.R) Mrs. John F. Kennedy, wife of the junior Massachusetts senator, was reported in good condition today following a miscarriage at Newport hospital. The Kennedys had expected their first child in October. Mrs. Kennedy, the former Jacqueline Bouvier, -became ill at the home of her stepfather and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh D. Auchincloss, and was taken to the hospital Thursday. Her husband, who nearly won the Democratic nomination for vice president at the National Convention in Chicago last week, is in Europe. He flew to Paris last week end and was sched uled to visit the Middle East on a senatorial inspection tour. politicians who would be glad for the chance to undermine the rights that belong to organized labor." New Stiff-Strawed Gray Vinter Oat Released for Area A new stiff- strawed, high- yielding gray winter oat has been released by the Oregon State college agricultural ex periment station and is being re commended for fall seeding in this area, according to W. B. Tucker, Jackson county agricul tural extension agent. The new oat, named Crater, is adapted to southern Oregon and areas in the Willamette val ley, where lodging of fall oats is a problem, Wilson Foote, OSC agronomist, said. He emphasized that the outstanding characteris tic of Crater is its strength of straw. Experiments Held In experiment station trials at Oregon City, Corvallis, and Med ford, Crater has consistently stood up better than the com monly used Gray Winter oat during years when lodging was severe. And while Crater hasn't al ways been the highest yielder, it has performed well in yield trials. Foote reports that during five years of test at Medford, Crater gave an average yield of 114 bushels per acre compared to 109 bushels from Grey Win ter. In trials at Corvallis, Crater has come up with yields almost as high as from Grey Winter. Test Weight Same Crater matures about the same time as Gray Winter, and the test weight of the two varie ties is approximately the same. The new winter oat is the re sult of a cross of the Flughum and Custis varieties made by the U. S. department of agriculture. Foote says at least 2000 pounds of Crater seed should be available for use by growers this fall. Warren Lauds Calcutta As Crossroads of World Calcutta, India iU.R) Chief Justice Earl Warren paid tribute to Calcutta today as "one of the great crossroads of the world." "Your country and ours have the same objective and I will be trying to understand how to ap proach your problem," he said in a message to the people of India. ' " Mr: Warren arrived here Thursday for a four-day visit. il P Giant Full Width Freezer Slide Out Meat Tray C N -1 V Handy Shelves in Door X ?VlO rAO S CoId Clear-To-The-Floor Design V"- Twin Sliding Crispers You Will Be Proud To Own a Kelvinator x.e.ivjwiATO'a. V.'-' -.. i. ..C.t.JCTOR V .. . 5tSL V2. SOVTttt PAN.ERS.PE. V - ZgjyHx pmVF 'N PARKIN -'";,ta The Family Council Editor'! note: The Family Council consists of a judge, a psychiatrist, three clergymen, a newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writers. Each article Is a luminary of an actual report. The Family Council does not give adrice; It merely reports on problems that have been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. J.R.L. My children demand I retire. Td His working makes it look bad for us. . J.R.L. We are an elderly couple with four married chil dren, all of whom are doing well, but I am still able to work and to provide' for our needs. We had our rough times when the children were growing up, but now I feel that we would not suffer hardship even if I have to retire. Our children seem to feel that my working is a reflection on them, and they are constantly at me to retire and let them pro vide for us. I don't like to do this for a number of reasons. I would hate to lose my independ ence. I do not know what I would do with myself if I were to stay home all the time. I am also afraid that, sooner or later, the problem of supporting us might become a burden and even cause ill feeling in the family. Of course, I appreciate the fact that our children are both Method of Hunt for Lost Boy Discussed Longmire, "Wash. (U.R) Mount Rainier National Park Superintendent Preston P. Macy and search party members met last night, to discuss ways of im proving the hunt for 13-year-old Richard Mizuhata, who has been missing since Sunday. The youngster, a Boy Scout from Seattle, became separated from his troop in the Carbon River area of the park. Young Mizuhata is near-sighted and would be unable to see more than seven feet if he has lost his glasses. The boy also has a speech impediment and is un able to shout. Use Tribune Want Ads For Action, able and willing to help, but I think my wife and I would be happier if the children did not have to make sacrifices on our account. Ted My brothers and my sister are doing very well and would not consider it a sacrifice to pool together a sum sufficient to take care of our parents. We all remember how they used to struggle to make ends meet, and how much they did to give us a good start in life. Frankly, we are concerned about the kind of impression it will make on our children who are beginning to grow up and who are living in the lap of luxury to see their grand father still working for a mere living at his advanced age. We would feel a lot better if our parents spent more of their time sight-seeing, traveling and doing the things they never be fore had time for. The Council The only valid point the children have is their concern for the impression that the grandchildren may . get as they grow up. It is hardly nec essary, however, to force their father to retire into a life of un welcome and possibly unendur able idleness. The elderly parents, on the other 'hand, need not spurn the money that the children wish to give them. They might agree to accept their help, with the understanding that they will use the money for luxuries, for gifts to the grandchildren, for charity, and as a reserve for the future. If the children are made to realize that the grandparents are being decently provided for b their parents, they will not have a bad impression. On the con trary, they may well become proud of a grandfather who in sists upon working at his ad vanced age despite the fact that grateful children have made it financially unnecessary. (Copyright 1956. General Fea tures Corp.) Friday. August 24. 1956 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THHEE Low-Protein Reducing Diet Seen Dangerous Chicago (LLP.) The American Medical Association warned to day that indiscriminate use of the now, low-protein reducing diets could be highly dangerous. The AMA Journal published reports from two doctors and from its own council on foods and nutrition warning that se rious hazards have not been Chiloquin Man Drowns In Swimming Accident Fort Klamath, Ore. (U.R) Bennett Weeks, 50, of Chiloquin, drowned yesterday afternoon in the swimming hole at Denton Park, 4Vi miles north of Fort Klamath on highway 62. made clear in the widespread publicity about the "Rockefeller" or "Fabulous Formula" diets. Roseburg Man Killed In Logging Accident Reedsport (U.R) Georg Miller of Roseburg, Ore., wai killed yesterday in a logging ac cident in the Loon lake area. Miller, 55, who owned his own truck, was hauling logs for the Firshau Logging company. He had stopped his truck and was tightening a binder chain when a log rolled off on him. He ap parently died instantly. BE SURE TO ATTEND THE 4-H CLUB- F.F.A. 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