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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1956)
o o FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) Medfopjv-tribunk "feeryone In Soytfiern Oregon Rem da The ftlaii Tribune" fublihed Daily Except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO 37-19 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141 ROBERT W RUHX. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALP LATHAM Buxinesa Manarger ERIC AtXEN JR Manaxinc Editor KARL H ADAMS City Editor HARRY CHIPMA-N Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sport Editor OLIVE STAKCHER Society Editor DAIE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. o An independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Uedford Oregon under Act of Ma rch 3. 1897 ; "T SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance Per Copy 10c. Dally and Sunday One year SIS 00 Daily and Sunday Six months 8 00 Daily and Sunday Three mot 4.25 Sundav Only One Tear 4 -20 By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland Central Point Eagle Point. Jacksonville Gold Htll Phoenhc Shady Cve Rogue River Ttlent and on motor routes: Dally and Sundav One year 118 00 Daily and Sunday One month 1.50 Carrier and Dealers 10c per copy All Term Cash in AJvance Offlrial Pper of the City of Medford Official Paperjit Jackson County United Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF A CD IT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative WEST-HOLIDAY COMPANY INC Offices in Nw York Chicago, de troit San Franci5Ct. Los Angelea Seattle Portland St Louts Atlanta Vancouver B C NATIONAL EDITORIAL I f- ASSOCI-ATLC n6 no jC" NEWS PA ft PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from" the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30, 40 ajid 50 year? ago-. 10 YEARS AGO Not. 25. 1946. (Monday) A completely covered opera tion is featured by the Ideal Building Block company which 'recently began production on Bamett rd. near South River- s aide ave. ' w From Arthur Perry's Ye Srgudge-Pot column: "WETNESS CAUSES WEEKEND MISS HAPS." i- (Hdline Del Norte Triplicate.) alcholically and metrologically. 20 YEARS AGO Not. 25, 1936 (Wednesday) 'Equipment being lined up for surfacing eight miles of the new Siskiyou highway. Sixty per cent of the turkey crop of the Rogue River valley sold., during the Thanksgiving Btrade, according to County Ag . ent Robert G. Fowler. 30 YEARS AGO ' Mot. 25. 1926 (Thursday) Arrangements underway whereby the W. J. Virgin and 'Mail Tribune radio station will have direct telephone connection with station KFWV, Portland. Pauline Frederick will make her appearance in light comedy In "Lady Frederick." at Hunt's Craterian theatre, Monday. 40 YEARS AGO Not. 25. 1916 (Saturday) Rogue River Fish Protective association votes for an uncon ditional stand for closing Rogue river to cofhmerical fishing. Erection i a box factory in Medford dependent on acquisi tion of 30 acres of land at a reasonable price, "according to Ewauna Box company, Klamath Falls. " 50 YEARS AGO Not. 25. 1906 (Sunday) A. E. J. Percival, manager of th Hotel Percival at Eileen, the new town at the Bine Ledge mine, is in Medord. . From Local and Personal Column Special meeting of Medford lodge 103. A F. and A. M. will be held Monday at the Masonic hall. What's the Answer? Can Ion Get 4 of the 7? Copr. 1935 Editorial Research 1. Four, three, two, one or no Southerners 'were on the Su preme Court at time of its anti sanregation decision on. public schools?- 2. Most cities do or don't get most of their revenue from a general T,roPertv tex- 3. The Rockne car of long ago was a General Motors, Ford, Chrysler, Studebaker or Hudson product? 4. Chapman Revercomb is the newlv elected Re'publican Sen ator "from which eastern state? 5. More motor vehicle deaths accur every year in California, Illinois, Michigan, New York or Texas? . 6. Hea'd .of the. U.S. foreign aid administration is Harold Stassen. Alien W. Dulles. John B. Hollister or Herbert-Hoover, Jr.? ' 7. Maximum weight for trucks on federal-aid roads is set by the U.S. Bureau of Roads, Inter state Commerce Commission, Congress or each state for its own roads? ' The Answers: 1. Threw Black (Ala.). Reed (Ky.). Clark (Tex.). 2. Most do. 3. Studebaker. 4. West Virginia. 5. Califprnia. 6. Hol lister. 7. Each stale for its own roads. " - MAIL TRIBUNE A "Minority Report" Surveying the past Thanksgiving week, we again feel compelled to issue a "minority report." We can't agree with the majority a majority of the top ranking news commentators at least, that the United States has suffered a severe defeat in Egypt and the Near-East and the Russians a great victory. Of course' all the returns are not yet in. In this critical time the international picture may change over nights ! But a9 of today we would say the great victory of Thanksgiving week was won by the United Nations, and the great defeat of the week was suffered by Soviet Russia. This is taking the long view of course. But after all it is the long view that really counts. And in the long view a world power any world power, that can't keep its satellites loyal except by applying the "iron fist" and shooting down defense less women and children, is doomed. It just can't be done, and history, particularly modern history, proves it. Not today or tomorrow, of course, but eventually this attempt of the Russian dictatorship to do what the Kaiser and Hitler tried to do is going to fail, and the appeal to brute force and abject fear, by the Kremlin in Hungary, in our judgment, proves it. As stated it can't be done. Just as the day of human slavery has passed, sd the day of world con quest by force against the will of the conquered, has passed. DRESIDENT Eisenhower touched on this same theme in his last news conference. He said he was not the table thumping type, the tough martinet who sticks out his chin and tells his listeners what they have to do or else. He preferred to persuade them.- Persuade them he is right, and thus get their spontaneous volun tary and continuing support, for support obtained through fear and force, will only last as long as the fear lasts, and that is, relatively speaking, brief. Quite true. A ND so with Russia. So long as the Kremlin could persuade the people of Hungary and the world that to adopt Com munism and submit to the dictatorship of Moscow was something they wanted to, do and was in their own self-interest, Russia represented a grave danger to this country, and all free nations. But when ex actly the contrary reaction is aroused as in Hun gary (and we suspect is present but quiescent in Poland, East Germany, and practically all the So viet satellites) with only superior force left to put down the passion for freedom, then the bear that walks like a man" better stop showing his teeth and growling, he better, in fact, take a long look at his hole-card, and make sure no one is going to cut off his retreat, to safety and security within his own natural and national boundaries. AT LEAST that is the way we interpret one of the most tragic and shocking events of Thanksgiving week. We consider the inhuman atrocities perpetrated in Hungary by Russia will eventually do more to bring about the downfall of the Russian dictator ship and give assurance of security for this country and the free world than anything that has happened since the close of World War II. The hatred thus aroused toward Russia, not only within the boundaries of the decimated nation, but outside of- them in the entire world will en dure long after the folly of the' British-French at tack on Egypt, for example, has been forgotten. R.W.R. The UN The United Nations had every reason to heartily enjoy its turkey last Thursday, on our national day of "Thanksgiving." As remarked, the world picture may change it is still in a state of rapid flux but sufficient unto the day are the glad tidings thereof, and there were many for the U.N. on the 22nd of November. But for the U.S. action through the U.N. a hot war would undoubtedly have occured and while it might have resulted in a British-French-Israel victory within another week or ten days, World War III would certainly have been and world disaster (to mix metaphors somewhat) might have been in the fire by now. As a result of the U.N. there is no war no hot war at least and the cold war has dropped close to zero, as of this writing. . -1 s . --"'.. THERE are many important things still to be ac A complished. No. 1: the independence and integrity of Israel, which both the U.N. and the USA have pledged must be finally and firmly established. Israel was 'really created by the U.N. and it -certainly could m no way justify deserting its offspring at this crisis in its exist ence. Egypt and the Arab world must also be guaran teed safety from the air too many Israelite forays allegedly in retaliation. Somehow someway the Suez canal must be internationalized, and all nations, including "Israel, must be given free and uninterrupted passage, as was pledged by treaty over half a century ago. AS USUAL, it is easy to say what SHOULD be done, but not so easy to say HOW to do it. But with the entire world agreed as to the suicidal folly of leaving such a settlement to atomic force and Sunday, November 25, 1956 is "Tops if threatened, and the fat MdttGr Of FaCt THE STRAINS AHEAD Washington The central point that has virtually escaped notice in the present crisis is that severe ll X' 'J strains already felt by the Western al liance are downright tri fling, are real ly nothing, compared to the strains that lie ahead. The Egyp tian solution sponsored by the American policy-makers and the United Nations is quite certain to produce a long chain of conse quences elsewhere in the Mid dle East. These local consequen ces, in turn, will surely produce further appal ing strains that may well imperiel the very existence of the grand alliance that has so long guarded free dom in the world. The process has be Stewart Alsop gun already, and in a most in structive manner, in the little country of Transjordan. After dismissing Glubb Pasha from command of his Arab Leg ion, young King Hussein of Transjordan adopted the policy of maintaining an uneasy bal ance between Egypt and Britain. This Jordanian balance was not immediately upset, when Egypt was attacked. Although previously pledged to come to Egypt's aid, Trans jordan made no move while Nasser's Sinai army was being humiliatingly defeated by the Israelis, while the British and French were landing in Egypt, while Nasser, in fact, was be ing pushed to the wall. But then American diplomacy and Soviet threats combined to transform Nasser's great military defeat in to a great political victory. The effect in Transjordan was instantaneous and electrical. The pro-Egyptians in the Parliament have now rammed through a resolution calling on the govern ment to denounce the treaty with Britain, which has protected their country since Transjordan became a sovereign state. The resolution has not yet been put into effect by Suleiman Nabolsi, the Jordanian premier. But it is only a matter of time before Transjordan breaks his historic link with Britain, and in effect become an Egyptian dependency. . THIS illustrates the kind of development that must now Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address at the writer although under certain circum stances the use ol a pen name or initial for publication is permis sible The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eve to clarification and condensa tion Letters submitted for publica tion must not exceed 400 words. Comic Strip is Praised To the Editor: This may be somewhat unusual coming from an airman, but have you ever wondered whether or not any thing good has come out of a comic strip besides giving enter tainment to the readers? Something good could come out of the Steve Canyon "comic strip" if the people realize that it is actually pointing a finger of guilt at them. Milton Caniff has seen the problem that faces ALL servicemen and he is try ing to enlighten the people that have narrow minds. I will agree that the story as I read it m your Sunday edition may seem a little exaggerated, but actually the problem in basic concepts is quite the same. A couple of first hand examples to back up my statement are: 1. One evening a gang of young men beat up an airman for no reason at all except just that he was an airman. By the time the Air Police arrived at the scene he was in pretty bad shape and needed emergency medical attention. (This type of thine happens all the time.) 2. The only thing that the merchants of Biloxi, Mississippi (where Keesler Air Force Base is located) can seem to say after an airman has had to wait for service and finally got to make a purchase is, "Be sure and come back pay day." Then when you do come back again you get just as bad service as when you were there the first time, and very seldom do you ever get any of that "Southern hospitali ty" you always hear so much about. What I am trying to point out is that maybe the Steve Canyon "comic strip" will open the eyes of some of the people and make them realize how shabbily and disgracefully they are treating the men who are protecting the rights that keep this country free. A2C Gary D. Fleming Donaldson Air Force Base Greenville, S. Carolina i i E ."-- - World War III, it would appear reasonable to expect at least a workable settlement in due time to be reached without it And that would mean talking it out instead of shooting it out. And when it comes to talking things out and successfully we feel sure even the crusty old, pachyderm, still to the right of Louis XVI, would agree the UN is tops. R.W.R. By Joe and Stewart Alsop be expected all over the Middle East. Syria is in the Egyptian bag already. In Iraq, the days of pro-Western Nuri Pasha are almost certainly numbered. Af ter Transjordan goes into the bag, Iraq will eventually fol low. Then the heat will be put on in the vital oil sheikdoms of the Persian Gulf, Kuweit, Ba hrein and Hatar, and last but not least in line, the Egyptian heat will be felt by Saudi Arabia. 1 These political developments have been foreseen by the Amer ican policy-makers, who say rather smugly that "the British and French are through in the Middle East. But the Amer ican policy-makers have no co herent answer whatever, to any of the! really horrifying questions that will surely be raised by the British and French being 'through in the Middle East." President Eisenhower himself has described this region as the most strategically vital on the face of -the earth. This is true for many reasons. But lake only one of these reasons the ef fect on the second power of the Western alliance, Britain, of the prospective loss of control of her Middle Eastern oil supplies. a ASA sort of hole card, the " British now mean to hold the vast oil riches of Kuweit and the other Gulf Coast Sheikdoms by naked military force if need be. But are we prepared to support the British in this new aggression", which will raise a worse storm than the attacK on Suez? Or shall we press our British partners to look pleas ant while their throats are cut? Then too, if all Britain's Mid dle Eastern oil sources are lost, it will cost Britain just about SI billion a year. The shaky British balance of payments can not conceivably stand this furth er drain. If the oil goes, Britain will go bankrupt. After declar ing bankruptcy, Britain wiU have to abandon her NATO and other strategic commitments, and will go out of business as a serious world power. But how is American policy going to be ad justed to cover the loss of West ern strength caused by British bankruptcy? TN THESE American circumstances, the policy-makers are now content to talk vaguely about "the U.S. moving into the Middle East to fill the vacuum left by your less fortunate al lies. But do our policy-makers really think, for instance, that the U.S. can take over Britain s Middle Eastern oil resources, pension of the British people, and still keep Britain as a loyal ally? Surely the country deserves more realistic answers - to the whole grim array of questions of which these are a small sample. 1956 New York Herald Tribune Inc. 100 Candidates Fail To File Expenses Washington U.R) About 100 candidates who ran for the House Nov. 6, including many who won, have failed to file re quired reports on campaign spending, the office of House Clerk Ralph R. Roberts said Sat urday. In a letter to the delinquents Roberts' office enclosed the nec essary forms and extracts from pertinent laws. The laws sub ject violators to fines of $1,000 and terms of one year in jail. Greater penalties' are provided when the offense is wilful. However, as a matter of prac tice the offense is always con sidered a technical one and no House candidate, as far as the clerk's office knows, ever has been prosecuted for it. This year's crop of missing reports is not unusually large. Labor Parly Calls For New Elections London U.R) The oppo sition Labor party renewed de mands Saturday for Prime Min ister Anthony Eden to resign or call new general elections. But Eden, before flying off to Jamaica to recuperate from overwork, spiked resignation ru mors. "I am assured that on my re turn I shall feel completely fit, ready to resume my duties at once and fully," he said at the airport Friday night. The Socialists have been de manding Eden's resignation ever since the Suez, Canal crisis erupted last summer. SPEAKS FOR ITSELF Oneida, N.W. U.R) Mrs. Mary A. Cooper was stopped during a walk on her 100th birthday and asked to comment on her longevity. "No com ment," the spry woman snapped. Today and By Walter AFTER THE CRASH In these days those whose business it is to explain and to comment on the news are hav ing it impress ed upon them, if they did not know it be fore, how big is the differ ence between making decla rations and Walter Luanmil " "vjr a great power like the United States it is al ways a question, to be weighed with great care in each specific case, how far it should go in making ' declarations which ex press sentiments but are not to be followed by actions that cor respond to the sentiments. There are two schools of thought on this question. The one holds that a declaration by the United States has great in- In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS I suppose that on that memor able first Thanksgiving morning back in 1621 the Plymouth colo nists were chiefly thankful that in the hours of the night before the savages hadn't come out of the dark forests and slain them aU. So let's give thanks this Thanksgiving day of 1956 335 years later that the communist savages haven't turned loose overnight and killed US all. (We're doing the usual job, though, of killing ourselves. The teletype reports at dawn that eight persons have already been killed in traffic smashups over the country.) 'T'HAT, however, is freedom. - Killing ourselves by our own reckless driving is better than being stood up against wall and shot by a tyrannical master because we won't con form to the rules He lays down for us. So let's give thanks for our freedom. QOMETHING to remember: Before they .sat down to their Thanksgiving feast, the Plymouth colonists on that au tumn day in 1621 marched up Burial Hill (their feast was on Cole's Hill) and held a grave and serious memorial -service for those who had died during the first hard, grim winter. It would do US no harm to give a little more serious though to our forbears who suffered hardships and death to build for us this wonderful country we live in. TT'WAS quite a feast they sat down to when they got back from Burial Hill. It included turkey, quail, partridge, wood chuck, duck, calms, oysters, baked fish, lobsters, deer, wild fowl, corn bread, Indian pud ding, turnips, potatoes, beets, carorts, wild honey and maple syrup. There was no complaining about the prices the supermar ket charged them, because there wer no supermarkets then. AU they had to do was go out and get it and bring it home and pre pare it. They didn't even have to worry about parking places when they went out to get it. Pretty soft! But I expect we moderns would rather pay the price at the supermarket than to go out and get it as the Plymouth colonists did. It's easier. T RECKON we aU have a vague idea that Thanksgiving Day has been a national affair ever since we have been a nation. Not so. It took a long time to make it a national holiday; ' . And . '. As usual A WOMAN had a lot to do with it. SHE WAS quite a woman. Her name was Sarah Josepha Hale, and she was left a widow at 34, with five children to fend for. She did a successful job of fending. In 1830, she became the editor of Godey's Lady's Book, the first woman's maga zine in America. To get an idea of the difficulty of her job, you should take a look at some of the women's fashions as pictured in Godey's Lady's Book. Imagine running a magazine all dressed up in clothes like that! One of her first crusades was for a national Thanksgiving day, and she worked at it for more than 30 years. It wasn't until 1863 that victory came. In that year, President Lincoln issued a proclamation setting aside the last Thursday of November "as a day of thanksgiving and praise to our beneficent Father." IMAGINE being thankful in 1863 for it was then that our grim and awful Civil War was reaching its grimmest and most awful days. But if you will look back over the pages of history I think you must come to the conclusion that it is in their hours of sorest trial and gravest danger that people and nations APPRECIATE MOST their blessings. It is in our periods of prosperity and plenty that we are most inclined to carp and complain because we haven't GOT MORE. Tomorrow Lippmann . I fluence on world opinion, and that world opinion has a great influence on the actions ol gov ernments. The other school, while not denying that this is true, is a believer in verbal aus terity. It holds that the declara tions lost their value, like print ing press money, if they are made too often and too easily and with too much resounding rhetoric. This school adheres to the Theodore Roosevelt maxim that it is best to speak softly and to carry a big stick. POMMENTATORS are likely to be impressed also these days with the stubborn and varied difficulty of things, and to feel a bit shy about calling upon the government to step for ward with new bold imaginative policies. I say this as one who has lone felt that what the Eisen hower administration has been calling peace was an excessive ly complacent reliance upon truces which avoided fighting but settled nothing. In the Middle Eeast we are living now amidst the ruins of that policy. But it is not only the American policy .that is in ruins. So too is the British poli cy. So too, also, is he United Nations policy a3 it existed up to the time the fighting broke out. And so too, I believe Nasser's policy as he conceived it and planned it before the Bri tish, the French and the Israelis struck. What we have in the Middle East is not the failure of. the policy of one government but a general failure in which all the great powers individually and the United Nations collectively have great responsibility. As a consequence of the general and all around failure the mold of things is broken and the pieces can never again be put together as they were before. PROVIDED we see things clearly and not with self righteous eyes, we shall not be surprised, indeed we may be glad, that a new and compre hensive policy has not as yet been improvised and declared to the world. Though Washington made a bad start with its first actions in the U.N., it has since then recovered its poise, and it has made, I think, three sound decisions. It has warned the So viets effectively against military intervention. It is giving full support to the U.N.'s police force. And it has announced its readiness to cooperate in dealing with the coming oil shortage, treating Western Europe as one economic community. This is a long way from any thing like a Middle Eastern settlement. But that settlement is far off and will be reached over a long and rough road. It is something ' that after the debacle of policy we have gotten our feet on the right road. Copyright 1956 New York Herald Tribuna Inf. Reds MassProducing Guided Missile With Ton Atomic Warhead Bonn, Germany (U.R) Rus sia is mass-producing a super sonic guided missile capable of dropping a one-ton atomic war head into a three-squaYe-mile tar get 650 miles away, military in telligence sources said Saturday. The rocket is the most power ful of a stable of Soviet missiles new going into production, in cluding a tactical rocket with a 200-mile ranpp anrl A etirtmarinA missile which can be fired from 70 yards" under water at a tar get 150 miles away. '. "! The medium - range missiles with their one-ton warhead are a development of the World War II German V-2. Western intelli gence sources believe it was built from captured V-2 blueprints by German scientists who were forcibly deported to Russia at the end of World War II Tactical Missile The tactical missile is known as the "Korolov Rocket" or "Weapon 102." Russia's rocket and missile re search center in Moscow, under the direction of Gen. A. S. Ja kovlev, has also developed a super-sonic anti-aircraft rocket, radio-controlled to strike faster-than-sound bombers at high alti tudes. Western reports said. Unconfirmed reports say the Russians already have some 20. 000 of the bigger "J03"-type roc kets in stock. Experts here recalled that So viet Premier Nikolia A. Bulgan in only recently threatened to "rocket" London and Paris. The two capitals are just about 650 miles away from the nearest pos sible rocket launching site in Germany or Poland. Intelligence Reports Intelligence reports said that the Soviets operate between six and 10 Smallpr l-nrlrot and development centers in Rus sia, many of them with German scientists brought to Russia "as forced labor after- the war and now working udder "voluntary" contracts. These test centers, reports POTUCK Jfiy M-T Staff and Contributors) " uhntoaranher Bob Vromaa wanted to get the best possible pictures of the recentclipse of me lliuuu, aw &v j , . .. 1 , J to th moon as wjumi. He climbed to the top of a handy shed. If makers of Volkswagen automobiles want a testimon ial gn the roominess of their little vehicles, they might caU on the Alan JewetU and Ken neth Campbells of Medford. The two couples, much to the amazement of a beUhop and doorman, loaded them selves and nine siible pieces of luggage into one of the cars recently 'and drove from San Francisco to Medford. Line Coach Paul Evensen kept a wary eye on members of theo Medford High football squad last week when he pasl out cigars to Medford Kiwanians. Coaches and playe of the Black Tor nado were luncheon guests of the club. Evensen, celebrating the ar- rival of a lughter, wanted to be certain that there were smokes enough to go around for his hosft and he tinted the Tornado gridders to maintain their rigid tguning. Overheard as soma yopg ( men came out of a local thea ter, where a picture was show ing with one of the nation's most recent rock 'n loll per formers: "Now lefs go see a show." Talking about shows, last week a member of the younger generation telephoned a friend, and little brother answered. Asked where his older lather was, the little one said: "He's gone to see Elvis Pres ley and Love Me Tenderfoot." Chicago Policeman Struck With Arid Chicago (U$) A 39-year-old Chicago motorcycle police man was victim of an acid at taek late Friday when he stop ped a car containing four nn at a West Side intersection because it had no license plates. The victim, Donald Passeri, was treated for acid burns on his face and neck at the Illinois Re search Hospital. Physicftns said he was able to see after receiving emergency care but that one of his, eyes wa? "apparently serious ly affected." Lt. James McMahon, head of the homicide bureau, said Pas seri told him the acid was thrown on him when he walked to the side of the car after curbing it. "I got a glimpse the vial, and thei mV eyes were burning. My face was burning, and I couldn't see," Passeri said. He said he heard someone laugh, and the cr sped away. said, work (ki propulsion prob lems, development, test-weapons, anti - aircraft, rockets, atomic heads, pilot-and radio control de vices, as well asanew types of rockets. Phoenix Boys Repair Toys in Shop Class Phoenix Something new is being tried this year in the shop cjpss a Phoenix High school. Upon the suggestion of shop instructor John Marler, the : boys hae undertaken the job of repairing broken toys to be given to underprivileged children on Chriftmas. Working during regular shop classes, the boys' have taken en thusiasticly to the idea, and al though they are not required to work on the toys, most of them vohftiteered quickly when the project gyas suggested. eAccrding to Marler. repair ing toys is interesting1 to the teenagers, giving them exper ience in all phases of repair workfrom welding and making replacement prts Qto sanding and refinishing ana they feel they are working for a purpose. rTheVroblem now is that there are "so .any boys interested in the project that there aren't enoufi toys to go around. Marler urged "residents of the Phoenix areas to turn in toys that can be salvaged at the high school or caS 2-8793 and they will be picked up. 9 . U Santa Claus Get. .Ticket inRacine Racine, Wif U.R) Santa Claus got a traffic ticket in downtown Jtacine. . Santa was traveling in a mot orcade were. Pjice stopped the procession and gave each driver a ticket for excessive horn blow Use Tribune Want Ads o . o