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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1956)
i TVEL VE MEDFOHD (OREGON) TheyH Do It Every 0C:F.".M A LISTEM TO TWE V-r--Vl NEVER ME4RO 4 OF f J? v u-v T-S , -7 j?TSl-E .' V B.5 WOMMMcR - , N THEM F4IR-WBJTUER GUVS E I wi.T1 J WHODOE5NTP4y lTME "7TNeRS THEY PUT OUT OFt- ' Ry CAy J m,s Sills in Jweir rrst V business- EKSUGm-JLLMy CL4iMS I BUM CHECK- PWSDS.'TMEy'RH WEGGTTUP I TS CR4MED WE STdRTEO US OFP-A - GETTW TCO PLJCEOli5-'A OVEPTME VVE ALMOST H4D CUf? V J AHO MlGHTy RD BR y LICErJSE PICKED UP k ', THEIR OWN GOOD - ' FSTTTTxT.. V SELLING TO -efl tI n rr V thorns-, I JWL-wJPXiWmf "There's 4t lest one 0fff TffJ fl Vvi A ; 17 Eirfcf OP "ese guys in s7r$pU4v VPJJP EVERY PEST4UR4NT V LINE-4NDHEC4N VVfV ' -ff TRf ST4V THERE- 1 " "" ' - ... ..... ., Mf, ' JJ T-71 COLO. fr Ike Told Only Half the On Peace; Washington U.R) Adlai i E. Stevenson packed his bags to-, day for another campaign tour, charging President Eisenhower told "only half the facts" about the outlook for peace and prog ress. The Democratic presidential nominee, winding up a week of staff planning here, motored to suburban Silver Spring, Mcl., Thursday night to reply sharply to the President's Wednesday night television talk. Stevenson accused the Presi dent of making "misleading im plications' when he talked about "and dismissed curtly" two Stevenson proposals. One was that the United States explore ways of halting hydrogen bomb tests. The other was that this country consider whether the military draft, might be ended. Clergy Share Viewpoint Stevenson told a crowd of about 3,800 that when Mr. Eisen hower called the H-bomb pro posal a "theatrical national ges ture" he "indicted not only me but churchmen and political leaders the world over . . . who have made similar proposals." The Democratic nominee said these leaders included Pope Pius representatives of some Protestant churches, and others. Kefauver Accuses Brownell of Being 'Evasive and Slick1 Missoula. Mont. tU.PJ Democratic vice presidential candidate Estes Kefauver ac cused Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr. today of being "evasive and slick" about the Dixon-Yates case. The No. 2 Democratic candi date fired his latest blast in the Dixon-Yates controversy as he pounded at the public power issue in campaigning through the power conscious Pacific North west. Kefauver said In a statement that Brownell took "liberties with the truth" when he said he took "prompt and vigorous ac tion" in the Dixon-Yates matter. The Democrats charged there was a conflict of interests in the Dixon-Yates contract, which has since been canceled. Forced To Move The contract called for a pri vate utilities combine to build a steam power plant near Mem phis. Term., to supply electricity to Tennessee Valley Authority. ' The truth is, he took no ac tion on his own initiative." Ke fauver said. "The only action Brownell took was first, to help suppress the truth, second, to try to defend the legality of this scandalous deal, and third, when td I llNSUBANClJ fly, J MAIL TRIBUNE Time " By Jimmy Hatlo I Progress, Adlai Says Aides said Stevenson might devote part of today to screen ing a few of the films he has made for television use in his campaign. Also on his program were brief appearances late to day at two party offices here. The candidate will leave Sat urday on a nine-day plane trip covering almost 7,000 miles. Stevenson was working today on the first speech of that tour, to be delivered Saturday at a plowing contest in Newton, Iowa. Stevenson also said in his speech Thursday night that "if the President intends to fore close debate on these proposals, I think he does the nation a dis service and I must dissent and persist in my efforts to invite public attention to matters of such grave concern as the hydro gen horror and national secu rity." Comments on Speech Stevenson said "The Prejident gave us a reassuring picture of progress and peace in the world today. I think it is unfortunate that lie chose again to state only half the facts." He said Mr. Eisenhower spoke of rolling back Communism in Viet Nam without mentioning that half of that country had been lost to the Communists. he was finally forced into it, to grudsingly admit the illegality of (he very same deal." In a speech delivered over a telephone circuit to a Democratic rally at Kalispell. Mont.. Thurs day night, Kefauver attacked President Eisenhower's so-called "partnership" plan for de velopment of rivers. Weather prevented Kefauvcr's plane from landing at Kqlispell, and he flew instead to Missoula, 'Toll Gate' Said Necessary Kefauver charged that Mr Eisenhower "will not let the American people have the power developed in their own rivers unless it goes through a private utility toll gate." The Eisenhower partnership plan, which calls for cooperation of the federal and state govern ments with private interests, means that taxpayers pay for the dams, Kefauver said. "But the power company gets the generators and sells the power for its own profit," he said. "This leaves the govern ment with the non-revenue pro ducing features, such as the fish ladders and navigation locks." He also charged that "not one single kilowatt of electricity has been produced under the Ei senhower partnership policy." LYNN COLBY jj My company offers all 31 If rem Hat m family, own a boat, or dm a etr . . . jtm want the beet protection money will bay- Yom aui always rely on State Farm inaurance lor all three ... at reasonable rates. Before you arrest in farther protection for your family, your home or your ear . . . let bw tB yoa aboot Sute Farm's bodfet-planned fr pay a km roar STATf FARM Agmrt JOHN A. CARTER VIRGIL R. WILKES LYNN COLBY 133 South Central Phone 2-9322 Friday. September 21, 1958 Facts, He said the President talked of defending Formosa but "must have forgotten" that former President Truman sent the Seventh Fleet to defend the Chi nese Nationalist island. "When he said 'We have seen an end to the old pattern of tragedy,' he left out any refer ence to the ominous tensions which today mark Africa and the Middle East," Stevenson said. Baseball Player's Airplane Sought Baltimore. Md. (U.R) An oil slick and a plane seat cushion have been discovered by Coast Cuard units searching Chesa peake Bay for a light plane pilot ed by baseball catcher Tom Gas tall of the Baltimore Orioles. Gastall. 23-year-old Fall River, Mass., athlete who received a reported $40,000 bonus to sign with the Orioles last year, re ported by radio at 6:20 p.m. EDT Thursday that he intended to crash-land his Aerocoupe in the bay. The slender, dark-haired ma jor leaguer took off in the single engine aircraft at about 5 p.m. from Harbor Field, according to J. J. Wellner, the field's traffic control operator. Wellner con firmed that Gastall was last heard from about 80 minutes later when he reported he was in trouble and would crash-land in the water. Gastall, who has been flying for about a month and a half, reportedly took advantage of an "off" day in the Orioles' sched ule to make' a flight as part of qualification for a pilot's license. He was believed to be alone in the plane. Rome (U.R) The world's milk producers launched a campaign today to advertise their product in winp.ririnkintf Rnmp. Posters showing happy milk-sipping chil- ren. iiower-cnewing cows ana grinning cats went on display in peparation for next week's 14th International Congress on milk and its derivatives. Mexico City UJ.R) An aver age of 2,000 migrant farm work ers are leaving Mexico daily to harvest crops in the United States, the Labor Ministry said today. Court Records POLICE fOlRT Rachel Faye Standley. no operator' license. S5 Walter Reuben Frame, disobeyed stop sign. $.V Otto Scarbroueh, no operator'i li cense. S5. Jim Dean Armstrong, disobeyed stop sign. S5. John Edward Combs, disobeyed traffic ignal, $5. Beverly Ann Mood, violation of basic rule. $10. Kenneth Dean Rotan, violation of basic rule, $10. William D. Duns tan, violation of baMc rule. $10. Donald Lawier, violation of basic rule. 110 Sam William Jennings, violation of basic rule. S10. William Dour las Edwards, disobey ed stoo sifrn. $5. Joseph Erwm McFadden. violation of basic rule. $10. John Stephen Kasser, violation of basic rule, $10. Herman Lee Duncan Jr.. violation of basic rule. $10. Lawrence Leonard Clark, excessive noise Dipes. 510. Howard Lloyd Lehman, violation of baic rule. $10. Robert Raymond Myers, violation of basic rule. $10. DISTRICT COIRT Christine Hazel Randall, no motor vehicle license. 55. j Da r re 11 Leroy Glenn, no operator's license. 510. j James Carl Wab'ow, no clearance 1 lights. S10. Leman Harrison Ntmmo. failed to stoD at stoD sicn, $10. Robert Oliver Hoover. Illegal oos- ession of intoxicating liquor. 525. Michael Thermon Hams, illegal possession of intoxicating liquor. $25. i Julius Leroy Jones, switched vehicle I license and driver's license suspended : for six months. S25. Charles Burton Broomfield. over- load. SS3 50 Charles Zinell. overload. $32 Berkeley Wayne Keller, operating moior vehicle while driver" license suspended. 530. bail forfeited. MARRIAGE LICENSE j APPLICATION Jack Turner Jones, route 1. box : 299. Medford. and Shirlev Marie , Schroeder. H9'i Portland ave . Med-, Bock Stairs: Rewriting of Speeches By MERRIMAN SMITH United Press White House Writer Washington aU.R) Back stairs at the White House: Some of the Republicans who work closely with President Eisenhow-er. in the preparation of his speeches have been watch ing with interest the recurrent reports from the camp of Dem ocrat Adlai E. Stevenson con cerning his speech-writing hab its. Stevenson frequently goes to the last possible minute rewrit ing his speeches. Mr. Eisenhow er at one time had a very strong tendency to rearrange a speech right up to delivery time. His staff has impressed upon the President, however, the im portance, particularly in a cam paign year, of getting advance copies of a speech delivered to the press as much ahead of time as possible. Even though a speech is to be televised nationally, a major po Quotes From the News By UNITED PRESS Castel Gondolfo, Italy Pope Pius XII telling some 400 scien tists from 22 countries their efforts to conquer spcae are legiti mate: "When God told man: Conquer the earth. He did not intend to limit the efforts of mankind to our planet, but to extend them to the whole created universe." Lo Angeles William Allen. 20, talking to police officers after being struck in the chest by an arrrow fired from a crossbow throuqh the back entrance of the liquor store where he clerks: "It felt like somebody hit me with a rock." Boston Confessed Brinks' bandit Joseph (Specs) O'Keefe tes tifying how he and eight other defendants studied plans of the Brinks' alarm system: "Even Pino Anthony looked them over and he usually con fined himself to comic books." Washington Adlai E. Stevenson chiding President Eisenhower for "misleading implications" about Stevenson's draft and H-bomb proposals as doing "both of us an injustice": "If the President intends to foreclose debate on these proposi tions; I think he does the nation a disservice and I must dissent and persist in my efforts to invite public attention to matters of such grave concern as the hydrogen horror and national security." London Secretary of State John Foster Dulles explaining to the Suez conference the need for the proposed canal users associa tion to have its own pilots: "Some of us may not be willing to have pilots from countries not entirely friendly to us and who engage in espionage to pilot their ships through the canal." The Family Editor', note The Family council thrtt clergymen, s newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writers. Lach article is a summary of an actual report The Tamil, Council does not rive advice; it merely reports on problems thai Jiav been dealt with by ictiuuajuiE .(cucic, ana counselor. Grace He freezes up when my parents come Arthur They gave me a very hard time. Arthur I cannot understand why it should be so, but it seems that every time my in-laws come to visit us. my wife and I get into a nasty argument. The funny thing is that we never seem to argue except when her parents are visiting. When we are alone, when friends visit or when my parents call, we never seem to run into any difficulty. My wife accuses me of deliber ately befng unpleasant in order to hurt her parents, but I feel it is the other way around. Or dinarily we are never self-conscious. We say what we please to each other and anything goes. The minute her parents show up. my every word is analyzed and found wanting. If I speak light ly, my wife picks me up for belittling her, and if I weigh my words carefully, she picks me up for being cold or pompous. It is true, of course, that I feel queer when her parents visit, because they gave me a very hard time before our mar riage. They were not at all sub tle in expressing their disap proval of me. I have swallowed all that, however, and have never said an unkind word to them. I have, in fact, always been at tentive to them, have bought my father-in-law gifts and have tried in every way to impress them favorably. But it seems no use trying. Graces My parents have mis understood Arthur, but that is no reason why he should go out of his way to confirm their wrong suspicion. They always warned me that he would be difficult, incon siderate and cruel to me. He has been anything but that, ex cept that he freezes- up to me the minute they show up. I feel very hurt that they hould always leave our house ' shak ing their heads in pity for me when they are so wrong. I want Why Suffer Longer? When -Others Fail COME TO US ACT NOW! Our Njtura'i HERB remadiei will help roil t ra giin rout good hullh. Our rcmeditl hi b successful in tiding the sick all over the stile tor over 18 yean. Remedies for disorders, sinuses, ' heart, liver, stomach, gas and "leers, constipation, piles, asthma, female complaints, kidney, bladder, blood, rheumatism, back and headaches. For Male, Female and Children. BRANCH OFFICES: Albany Salem Eugene North Bend waort litical candidate gets far greater circulation for his ideas by early distribution to all news media Some of the White House technicians who watched Ste venson on tele ision from Har risburg, Pa., last week thought there were three basic technical errors in his presentation; His voice at times was too low, the lighting was far from flattering and Stevenson rarely looked straight into the camera. Mr. Eisenhower, thanks in large part to the experienced advice of Robert Montgomery, tries to look straight at the TV cameras as much as possible. This, say the White House ex perts, vastly increases the direst speaker-to-viewer element in a major televised address. At the Republican rally on the Eisenhower farm in Gettys burg last week, Vice President and Mrs. Nixon served as co hosts with the Eisenhowers in receiving about 600 Republican Council consists of a judee. a Dsvehiatrlst , Arthur to justify me in my mar riage. but hp Kppms unahlp tn behave like himself on those oc casions. The Council: This may be a case of making the dog bad by giving him a bad name. It is difficult to subdue the self-con sciousness that is forced on a person when he is made the target of sharp accusation. Grace may be making an er ror in her approach. She is con cerning herself with the lesser of two considerations. She is too eager to justify her marriage to her parents and not sufficient ly concerned with her husband's feelings. She would accomplish much more if, instead of complaining to her husband about his self- conscious behavior in the pres ence of lies family, she would ex plain to her parents that Arthur is self-conscious with them be cause of the strain the created by their unjust criticism of him before marriage. One appreciative word from her parents a remark to the effect that they are happy to know that they were wrong about him would go very far to dispe.1 his self-consciousness and help him to be his usual agreeable self when they call. If it were Arthur who could not accept the parents, she would have to work on him; but it is the parents who have been unwilling to accept Arthur, and it is certainly time for them to express their acceptance (Coypright 1956. JAPANESE TO CHINA Tokyo U.R) Japanese politi cal parties will send a joint dele gation of members of parliament to the celebrations of Commu nist China's National Day on Oct. 1, it was reported today. The Communist China Foreign Af fairs Association sent an invita tion to the Japanese parties j Thursday. It was accepted a few j hours later. j Dead line Sunday Classified ta at noon Saturday; 10 a.m Monday for Monday: other days 3:30 nreviousday S. 8. FONG Herb Specialist CHARLIE CHAN OFFICE OPEN SUNDAYS ONLY 12 NOON TO 4 P.M. CHINESE MEDICINE & HERB CO. 624 S. Riverside Medford state leaders. Before the big tent meeting got under way, however, Mr. Eisenhower discovered that Mrs. Nixon had never been inside the Eisenhower home. He quickly ordered up his fringe-topped jeep and sent Mrs. Nixon scooting across the pas ture for a quick look at the house and a brief visit with the first lady before the two ladies joined the big Republican throng. Mrs. Nixon, in a dark blue dress and bright green hat, was so reserved and conservative in her deportment that she seem ed at times to be apprehensive about appearing before such a crowd. Mrs. Eisenhower, on the other hand, was a gay hostess at a picnic, flitting from group to group in her gay red "Ike" dress which carried pictures of the White House and her hus band's former army five stars. Ask some of the White House staff these days why the Presi dent has undertaken certain ac tions or seen certin groups, and they'll merely jot down on tile nearest scratch pad in capital letters, "DETIAEY" which means "Don't forget, this is an election year." Other election year notes Photographers were not permit ted to make pictures of the President playing golf last week in Gettysburg. Also, just in from Texas, a new campaign gimmick an imitation Texas auto license plate bearing these characters, "IM4IKE2." Around Hollywood By ALINE MOSBY United Press Correspondent Hollywood (U.R) Elvis Pres ley will be unleashed in his first movie with his usual sideburns. wiggles and gee-tar but h i s teen - age followers also will see him as a serious ac tor who gets killed in the end. Presley's picture debut AllneMo.br in ..Love Me Tender" is no modern rock 'n' roll movie. "If it had been I wouldn't have taken the part," drawled the sleepy-eyed king of rock 'n' roll. "I won't make a rock 'n' roll picture. Why should I? I do it on TV and more people sea that than movies. So in pictures I want to do something differ ent. - "This is a period picture, about the time of the end of the Civil War. I guess you could say its sort of a dramatic part." Dies in Picture Elvis is shy about telling the plot for fear of frightening his ardent admirers, but another member .of the cast says the sing er is killed in the film and thus loses the girl, Debra Paget, by default to Richard Egan. But before he's knocked off Elvis sings four songs a' love ballad, a spiritual and two folk songs at a church picnic. The latter two are done to Elvis' gui tar and some of the famed Pres ley hops and shakes. "Did you ever see a dead man sing?" he shrugged. "I just can't stand still and sing, frozen-like. Sure, I jump around a little bit in the hoe-down. 'Learnin' a Lot' "I'm learnin' a lot," added Presley in his boyish, straight forward manner as he posed for photographs in the 20th Centur Fox portrait studio. "I won't say I can act, but I'm tryin". I wear I Civil War period clothes and I ; keep my sideburns because they ! wore 'em then." Elvis, by the way. appears to j be weary of defending himself j from grown-ups who cry he's the j ruin of the younger generation. ' He currently is campaigning to ; do away with the title of "The ; Pelvis" that has been tacked i onto him by the press. i "That's one of the most child-; ish remarks from a grown per son I've ever heard," he snorted in disgust. "I wish the press i would take that title back and eat it." Use Tribune Want Ads GRAN SATURDAY NIGHT Sept. 15th At The Rogue ixon Says Take Offensive on Farm Prices Debate En Route With Nixon 0J.P.) Vice-President Richard M. Nix on took his whirlwind campaign tour into the important farming slates of the Great Plains today with a determined attack on Democrats critical of President Eisenhower's farm program. Nixon made it clear on several occasions during the first three days of his exhausting vote-seek-! mg swing that the administra tion does not intend to retreat from its stand on farm policies. He said the GOP will take the offensive, not the defensive, on farm prices, even in the politi cally explosive Midwest, where I the Democrats hope to make major gains. Nixon flew to Rapid City, S.D., from Spokane early today for a brief rest before launching his Midwest campaign attack. His schedule called for speeches to rallies at Rapid City and Fargo. N.D., with a windup at Minnea polis tonight. Saturday, he appears at Sioux . City, Iowa, en route to his first "major" speech Saturday night at Colorado Springs, Colo. Nixon spent some measure of his time Thursday criticizing Sen. Estes Kefauver, the Demo cratic vice presidential nominee, for accusing President Eisen hower of working against the "little people" of this country. "I believe that the great ma jority of the American people, regardless of party, will resent Kefauver's condescending and contemptuous reference to the so-called 'little people in Amer ica." Nixon told a Spokane audience. Nixon said he would be fail ing in his duly if he kept quiet when Democrats "question his sincertiy and his devotion to the interests of the American Prohibition Predicted in Campaign Planks Atlanta (U.R) A temperance leader predicted today that both the Democrats and Republicans soon will adopt "prohibition or total abstinence" campaign plat form planks. Mrs. H. F. Powell, treasurer of the National Women's Chris I tian Temperance Union, told the organization's 82nd annual con-! vention that "this political atom bomb" would have a "much- j needed" sobering effect on the j nation. While consumers today spend j SI 0,090,000,000 annually for al-j coholic beverages, the number of ; alcoholics in the nation has risen to 4.500,000, Mrs. Powell told an ; opening convention session. 1 QDAMCCE SATURDAY NIGHT . EAGLE POINT The Only Spring Floor In Southern Oregon DANCE TO THE COMBINED MUSIC OF DICK SPAIN, BILL LIVELY and The Rogue Valley Boys Featuring The BEST In Western Swing - TUNE IN BILL'S WESTERN ROUND-UP TIME ON KWIN NEW PARKING LOT - Plenty of Space - HELD OVER BY POPULAR Valley Ballroom GOP To people." He demanded that Kefauver apologize for his remarks. Nixon said he will continue his practice of not commenting on personal attacks against himself. Sees Close Elections "I'd stand on my record re gardless of what my opponents say about me," he said. "How ever, whenever they attack President Eisenhower, I'll feel called upon to answer." Nixon said that after his swing through the West, he con siders the Senate races in Calif ornia, Nevada. Oregon and Wash ington to be "close" for the Re publicans. However, he said he believes, that in Idaho, "our. chances ap- pear to be better there than in other states" of the Northwest. Sen. Herman Welker is seeking reelection in Idaho. In Portland, it's the DANMOORE HOTEL A Home Away from Home. AH rooms remodeled and refurnished . . Free Garage. Free T.V.'i in most rooms. Daily's U-Drive Medford Airport HYPNOTISM Has been successfully used In muscular rheumatism, constipa lion, menstrual disturbances, migraina headache, insomnia, stuttering, tc. For Information regarding Hypnotism see W. L. WHELDEN 336 S. Riverside. Medford. Ore. DEMAND! IN PERSON Star of WSM Rdio TV and RCA Victor Records! With His Band I j I j OPRY ford. 1