Quotes From the News
O By UNITED PRESS
Washington Sen. Styles Bridges (R.-N.H.) asked whether he
thinks Congres will reduce the administration's $1.95 billion budg
et for foreign economic aid:
"Oh, sure."
London The tabloid Daily
newspaper, commenting in a page
Between Queen Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh:
"Fly Home, Phillip The Way To Kill A Silly Rumor."
Chicago Howard Talley, associate professor of music at the
University of Chicago, admitting that music teachers are disturbed
because they find rock 'n' roll followers among the young are
those who have low school grades:
"Some of them are sociological cases."
Miami Former President
three-week vacation, referring to
dependence. Mo., and the head cut he received in the fall:
"We haven't teen ih sun in 20 days. In fact, it was so foggy. I
hit myead. But as you know, my head is pretty hard."
New York Newspaper Correspondent William Worthy, tell
(mg how he will deal with government demands he hand over his
passpwt because he entered Red China:
"I have it right here in my pocket and it's going to stay there."
New York Gov. Averell Harriman. attacking the Eisenhower
Doctrine:
"In spile of Nasser's record and his Kremlin associations, we
have worked ourselves into a position of dependence upon his rea
lonaQenes and goodwill to protect our vital interests."
The Family Council
c a, "''of'1 ": Tbe Family Council consists at a Judte, a psychiatrist,
isjrn eiarsymen, a newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writer! Each
article la a luminary of an actual report. The Family Council doei not rive
advice; It merely reports on problems that have been dealt with by responsible
afenclea and counselors.
Laura D. We want to see
our mother.
Mr. K. D. I tried to shield
.
Laura D. My brother and I
were brought up believing our
mother was dead. Recently, we
learned through a conversation
overheard between our fath
er and our stepmother that our
mother is alive and is now in a
mental inctituttnti
O I am now 17 and my brother
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Beginning of the open road to nowhere
This is the beginning of satellite Europe where truth
and freedom are often only empty words. But real truth
can pour into these countries over Radio Free Europe to
build a spirit of freedom. This network broadcasts up to
20 hours of truth a day. And truth is the one thing the
Iron Curtain can't shut out. Keep it coming with Truth
Dollars to CRUSADE FOR FREEDOM, c row beat pMimonar.
Published as a public service in co-operation with The Advertising;
Council and the Newspaper Advertising Executives Association. '
Mirror. Briiain'i largest daily
one headline on a reported riit
Truman, after arriving here for a
a fall he look at his home in In
is 16. We want very much to
see our mother. We think we
may be able to help her. We
feel that our father has been
very cruel to her and to us by
keeping us separated like this.
My brother and I are very
happy at home. Our stepmother
has cared for us, but she never
really loved us. Our father isn't
affectionate either. We feel that
we have missed mother love. We
are nearly grown-up now and
our father has no right to keep
us apart.
Mr. K. D. My only aim in
telling the children their mother
was dead was to shield them
from all knowledge of what kind
of person she was. She never
wanted them and never made
any attempt to see them after
she deserted them as babies. She
was unfaithful to me after the
first month of our marriage. I
have reason to doubt that the
children are really mine, yet I
have always loved them and
tried to protect them.
My wife and I are heartbrok
en over this discovery the chil
dren have made and the attitude
they have taken. My wife has
done far more than her duty
toward them and loves them
very much. I feel that my son
would not take this attitude.
but Laura has stirred him up.
The Council Lies often seem
to be the easiest way out, yet all
too often they become a trap.
Much of this misery could have
been avojded if Mr. K. D. had
brought his children up in the
belief that "mother went away"
when they were very young be
cause she had many problems
and could not care for them
properly.
Unfortunately, the shocking
truth has come to these chil
dren at a crucial time the
time when they would normally
experience rebellious feelings to
ward their parents and doubts
as to whether they are really
loved. Teenagers often look to
ward some person they have
known outside the family group
for "real" love and understand
ing.
Laura and her brother must
now be told the full truth ex
cept the fact that their father
has some doubt as to whether
they are really his children.
Since he has loved them and
taken care of them, he would
do better to put that doubt out
of his own mind, as far as it is
possible to do so.
Mr. and Mrs. K.D. should try
to explain to Laura that her
feelings about her father and
stepmother are simply not based
on fact, but are a normal part
of growing up. She should be
told, perhaps by the family phy
sician, that she cannot help her
mother and, in fact, might hurt
her by a sudden appearance at
this time. She should be told
she can see her mother when she
is older, if she still desires to.
It might help to give her some
. -Js
U
PILOT DIES A HERO Part of an Air Force F-84 Thunderjet can be seen m the
wreckage of this home at Mountain View, Calif, as it goes up in flames. The pilot
Captain Robert Mulvehill, 32, was attempting to land at nearby Moffett Field, a Navy
air base. Navy experts theorized he rode nis flaming plane down to avoid crashing
into two nearby schools. The plane exploded almost directly over the rooftops, cut
ting a three-block trail of destruction. Only one woman was slightly injured. She
escaped her flaming home by leaping through a window.
Back Stairs: King Saud and
By MEHRIMAN SMITH
United Press Correspondent
Thomasville, Ga. !U.R) Back
stairs at the traveling White
House:
King Saud of Saudi Arabia
may have spread joy with
watches and money around
Washington, but he failed to
drop any majestic tips around
the White House.
The password among the help
these days is, "Did you get your
watch?"
The public thinks the presi
dential plane, the Columbine
III, is reserved exclusively for
the use of the Eisenhowers.
Actually, the situation is this:
The President has first call on
the plane, but the ship is used
almost daily for Air Force train
ing. The pilot, Col. William Dra
per, who doubles as the Presi
dent's Air Force aide, estimates
that presidential flying time oc
cupies only about one-fifth of the
working time of the plane.
Before the President goes into
a new airport. Draper may spend
as much as a week "shooting"
trial landings to train his crew,
and test the conditions of a new
runway.
The Columbine III did not
make the current trip to South
Georgia. The plane is at the
Lockheed plant in Burbank,
Calif., for a periodic overhaul.
No commercial airline could
afford to change engines as fre
quently as the Air Force installs
new power plants in the presi
dential plane.
If and when the President
gets together with British Prima
Minister Harold Macmillan in
Bermuda, it will take the White
House a matter of weeks to set
up the mechanical arrangements
for the conference.
When Mr. Eisenhower met
with the former prime minister,
Sir Winston Churchill, and the
premier of France in Bermuda
in 1953, the planning from the
White House end took more than
six weeks.
Bermuda is a delightful tour-
report of her mother's condition
from time to time, if she ex
presses an interest.
(Copyright 1957,
General Features Corp.)
For schedules or
7 aj
s& - t a. j e ' am.-v n jer:
S t'
ist spot, but the communica
tions are somewhat archaic. It
just could be that Mr. Eisen
hower might want to meet the
British prime minister in some
other spot. The weather in Que
bec is lovely In March.
This is the time of year when
rumors start flying about the
President vacationing during the
summer in the lake section of
Wisconsin. One of these years,
the rumors may pay out, but the
way it shapes up today, the
President will go back to Colo
rado before late summer.
Press Secretary James C. Hag
erty rejoined the White House
staff here after a long delayed,
two-weeks vacation on some of
Florida's better golf courses.
When the President arrived
here Friday afternoon, Hagerty
was at the side of the plane.
heavily tanned and looking like
an ad for a health cure.
Jim had one principal ingre
dient for a good vacation: He
didn't read the newspapers and
listened to the radio only when
a band was playing.
Larger Packages of
Ice Cream Being Sold
Chicago U.R Americans
are buying ice cream in larger
packages.
By the end of 1957, there will
be as many half-gallon units of
ice cream sold as pints, accord
ing to Harvey H. Robbins. sec
retary of the Paraffined Carton
Research Council.
Half-gallon sales have climb
ed 25 to 30 per cent annually
in the past several years, Rob
bins said, and during 1956 the
industry sold 660 million pints
and 470 million half-gallons. If
the trend continues half-gallon
units will share sales equally
with pints, Robbins said.
The increase in half-gallon
sales represents new business.
Robbins said, with only a small
part of the increase at the ex
pense of pint or quart sales. He
attributed the half-gallon con
tainer's popularity to increased
use of home freezers.
First transoceanic cable was
laid in 1866.
Money-saving
joint fares
GEO
fares call 2-6161 or your
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Monday. February 11, 1957
Utah Becoming
Turkey Capital
Salt Lake City (U.R)
Utah, a state most famous for
uranium and pretty girls, is rap
idly building a new reputation
as the nation's turkey capital.
William Barlocker, president
of the Utah Turkey Federation,
estimated the state, now the
nation's heaviest exporter of fes
tive birds, marketed a $15,000,
000 crop of gobblers in 1956.
Of 2,717,000 turkeys grown in
Utah during 1956, 90 per cent
were sold elsewhere.
But the industry in a boom
year, has its problems. J. Arza
Adams, president of the Nation
al Turkey Federation and a
Utahan, said it will be several
years before turkeys again car
ry the low market price tags
they bore this year. At least
he hopes so.
Many producers are "going
broke" because of over-production,
he claimed. Adams blamed
low prices, too, on faulty mar
keting procedures. But he fore
cast continued troubles unless
growers trim their breeding
stock.
Meanwhile, Utahans, not con
tent with merely hatching the
birds and maturing them for
the butcher's showcase, have
found a way to rake in more
profits by carrying the process
a step farther.
Plants, which a few years ago
began preparing "oven ready"
turkeys, this year turned out
41,000,000 pounds of them
cleaned, plucked and ready
Mother Visits Son
On University Campus,
Miami (U.R) A middle-aged
Greek mother who visited her
son at the University of Miami
campus decided to remain in the
United States nad get a college
degree herself.
Mrs. Elizabeth Sophianopou
los, from the Greek island of
Corfu in the Ionian Sea, visited
her son Spyros, a food tech
nology major and enrolled at
the Miami school to work for a
degree in interior decorating.
On completion, of her studies,
Mrs. Sophianopoulos said she
will return to Corfu , he island
home about one-fourth the size
of Rhode Island, where her hus
band is a doctor.
The newly-enrolled freshman
whose other son, Alexander, re
cently graduated from McGill
University in Montreal and is
employed by the telephone
company there, said she likes
campus living and likes the Unit
ed States.
"But I am amazed at the
strenous lives the Americans
lead," she observed.
"BATH" NOW! "
gw irPssisswsw ia4Br
mm V
" mm
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN
UP ANCHOR A real sea
dog is Jeremiah as he
strikes a Captain Bly pose
aboard the SS. Oregon in
San Francisco. Jeremiah
and 11 o t h e r bloodhounds
are on their way to join the
police department in Manila,
Early Diagnosis of
Gum Disease Helpful
Chicago (U.R) Early di
agnosis of diseases of the gums
can prevent much loss of teeth
among adults, an Air Force den
tal Corps officer says.
Maj. Clifton O. Dummett, of
Elmendorf Air Force Base, An
chorage, Alaska, discussed gum
diseases in the Journal of the
American Dental Association.
Dummett said persons over 35
years of age lose more teeth
from the so - called periodontal
diseases, popularly known as
pyorrhea and gingivitis, than
from any other cause, including
dental decay.
He cited one study which esti
mated that 50 per cent of all
men by the age of 45 either are
afflicted with some form of per
iodontal disease or have lost
teeth as the result of it.
PICTURE TUBES
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E THAT
February 20, 21, 22, 23
MEDFORD SENIOR HIGH
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
Aulo Inferiors
To Receive Care
c
Chicago XU.R) Motorists will
be taking as much care of their
car interiors during the coming
year as they do with their liv
ing rooms.
This is indicated by increased
consumer demand for seat cov
ers and a growing preference for
the luxury lines.
The Auto Seat Cover Manu
facturers' Association estimates
that when the books are closed
on 1956 the industry will have
disposed of a whopping 12.5 mil
lion sets of covers averaging $20
each, for a retail volume of $250
million.
It is a 10 per cent increase
over the record sales activities
of 1955.
The "new look" in seat coders,
is subdued colors and designs to
replace the flashy effect of re
cent years. At the same time the
public is demanding more lux
urious and costlier materials.
"It's the new tren," observed
Howard F. Leopold (president
of Ero Manufacturing Co. of
Chicago), "because people want
it that way. It's something like
a change in woman's fashions."
The new, subdued look is in
tune with the more subtle two
toned color combinations seen
in the interiors of the 1957 mod
els now coming out of Detroit.
Officials predicted that one of
the public favorites in 1957 will
be puffed saran, a plush plastic
material with a puffed-up ap
pearance. Its plushiness especial
ly when interwoven with deli
cate silver threads, has appealgi
to the growing luxury market.
Sales received their largest
single boost this year from seat
covers made of clear plastic
the kind you can see through
and terry cloth the kind you
can wash.
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