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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1958)
o Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often ihe case. Spirit and Word To the Editor: God clearly states in the Bible that man kind is classified into two dis tinct groups, the believers and the unbelievers. "Phe believ ers are those who have put God to the test and have prov en that living word. Every one is challenged to make that test for themselves, as set forth in Rom. 12:12, wherein we can prove what is that good and acceptable, and per fect, will of God. God through his goodness has allotted man three score and ten years to come to him self, and get out of the pig pen O as the prodigal of old, and pre O pare for that place that Christ is preparing for them who Jove Him. The Bible says "many are called and few are chosen," and we are told just why that is the case. Eccl. 8: 11, states because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men are fully set in them to do evil. There is a program put on the air by the Medford Minis terial association, which could be, and should be, and would be, very educational and con structive, if the answers were brought forth from the Bible. On May 18, the scripture was sent in, "He that believ eth and is baptised shall be saved." The question was asked, why is it all ministers do not agree on, that scrip ture? After listening to the discussion, and hearing one of them get so far off the beam as to feel that he could make light of the 16th chapter of Mark, one could only feel that these men had classified them selves. John the Baptist was a be- NEW IDEA Brighten smoke-fagged tastes with Canada Dry Hi-Spot Lemon Soda . . quenches your thirst too! 15 TAKE THIS THSII TASTE TEST TODAY! Try Canada Dry Hi-Spot Lemon Soda: 1) after too much smoking, or over in dulgence 2) after too much high -seasoned foods 3) when you're just plain thirsty . . . ' jou'll find it the most saturating, satis fying soft drink. P.S. It makes a "doozy" of a highball too ! Tastes superb with 2 oz. of bourbon, whis key, vodka? or gin in a tall glass with a couple of ice-cubes Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company 'liever and dared to take a stand against sin. Remember he was filled with the Holy Ghost from the day of his birth. He lost his head be cause he dared to stand against the sin of adultery. Paul in Gal. 5:19-21, stated, "I have told you before and I tell you again, they that do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God." Why is it the, present day ministers cannot learn how Elijah start ed a revival? After obeying, he looked up into the face of God and said, "God, I have done all this according to thy word, let it be known this day that thou art God in Is rael, and I am thy servant." The fire fell, and always will when the word is believed. The bargain counter plans are the ideas of man, God never compromised His plan for this generation, or any other. Christ told Satan, man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceed ed out of the mouth of God. The spirit of God and His word agree, there is only one conclusion a person can come to. if our spirit does not agree with the word of God, we could have the wrong spirit. Frank Howell 205 Laurel st., Medford. Seeks Woman To the Editor: We wonder if you will help us contact some people my husband saw on the street there in town. We do not know their names, but would like to locate them. Last Thursday afternoon, June 12, about 4:30 p.m., my husband came out of the Medford Radio shop at 19 North Fir st., carrying a recorder. A few doors from this ra dio shop he saw a lady with two crutches either entering or leaving the car. A man was with her. For Christian reasons we would like to contact her for we know we couid help her. Thank you. Mrs. G. C. Cunningham Box 381, Central Point NOrmandy 4-1722. Tims for a Bird To the Editor: A young rob in fell into the chimney at Fred Meadow's home last Monday night, falling all the way to the bottom with no chance of getting it out. It was terrible to hear the flut tering and cheeping of the lit tle fellow. It was in the chim ney overnight and believed to be dead, but the next morning it was still putting forth ef fort. Mr. Meadows is very busy at the cabinet shop at this time but he laid his tools aside and spent about two hours trying to free the bird. He wasn't able to succeed. In the evening, finding the robin still alive and though his work was demanding his time, he got rope, wire, etc. and strug gled some more with the bird, succeeding in snaring it and gently pulled it free of the chimney. It was nearly starved after being imprisoned a day and night, so carefully holding the robin in his hands he encouraged it to eat while trying to soothe it. It was then placed in a bird-feeder at a neighbors, where it gradually gained strength and was last seen feeding happily and very much alive. He had to spend a little more time at the shop Tues day evening but he felt it was well worth it. Mrs. R. J. Donelson, ,1002 Sunset ave. Medford. Washington's famous cher ry trees, given as a gift by Tokyo to the U.S. in 1912, bloom about 12 days each year but the dates are unpre dictable. After too much smoking, bring your tired mouth back with the scintillating bright flavor in Hi-Spot. ItVthe clear, lemony quality and sparkling bubbles from Exclusive "Pin-Point Carbonation" that give you a brand new, happy. . . fresh-mouth taste. CANADA! LEMON SODA of Medford Washington Report By William PUSH FOR MITCHELL Washington By every sign, a 1960 Vice-Presidential build up for Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell is be ing powerful 1 y launched by the Nixon Dewey con trolers of the Republ ican party. If an Opera ation Mitchell wiiiam s. white is not in mo tion, it can only be said that rarely have so many coinci dences pointed the same way. . For Mitchell is being push ed forward, with every pub-, licity apparatus available, to a front-and-center position on labor legislation. This is being done by frank ly thrusting aside and infur iatingthe senior Republican Senators who are the party's normal spokesmen in this field. Even , before Mitchell had been put so far out in front, high Administration figures has passed the word: "Mitch ell looks good to Eisenhower for No. 2 in '60." At that ear lier date, the Secretary's name was responsibly given to this correspondent as at the top of a list of six "possibles" for the Vice-Presidential nomina tion President Eisenhower was discussing with his asso ciates including Vice-President Richard M. Nixon. THE other names on the memorandum were those of Robert B. Anderson, Secre tary of the Treasury; Fred A Seaton, Secretary of the In terior; William P. Rogers, the Attorney General; Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., chief of our mission to the United Nations, and General Alfred M. Gruen ther. national head of the Red Cross. In this whole matter it is important to bear in mind the element of time. For the list of six possible running mates, with Nixon as the Presidential candidate, was made available before Senator William F. Knowland's near - disaster in the California i primaries for Governor. ' Highly realistic Republi cans including some of Knowland's admirers have now concluded that his com paratively poor primary show ing means that the Republi cans must "soften up toward labor in 1960. Knowland ran on a "right-to-work" platform bitterly re sented by labor leaders. His prospective defeat in the Cali fornia Governor's race by Democrat Edmund (Pat) Brown has gone very far toward shrinking the list of six GOP Vice-Presidential possibilities down to one Mitchell.' . IF Knowland had done well, the tendency would have been to provide Nixon with a conservative running - mate or at least One having no spe cial ties to labor. Any such prospect has all but vanished now. Influential Repubican "pros" now concede not only that some appeal to labor must be made but that it would best come from a Vice-Presidential candidate especially agreeable to the urban and largely East ern Catholic voters. The reckoning rests upon the supposition that it would be dangerous to assume that Sen ator John F. Kennedy, a Mas sachusetts Catholic with pret ty good labor backing, will not wind up on the national Democratic ticket in 1960, if only in second place. . Mitchell is urban and East ern from New Jersey and a Catholic. True, he has thus far been pictured, in the confused legis lative in-fighting, as being for a "harder" labor bill than are the Democrats. This, how ever, need not be and almost certainly will not be the n nal and decisive image left by the Secretary. ?OR immediate partisan Re- publican advantage wouia hest be served by so stirring up matters as to lead to the failure of any labor legislation ftt all in this session. And whatever his motive, Mitchell certainly has been stirring up matters. Clatskanie Youth Drowns in Slough Clatskanie (UPI) Lar ry Jacobson, 15, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Jacobson, of Clatskanie, drowned Monday while fishing in a slough with a brother and another boy. Larry and his brother Joel, 13, and Dennis Ilmari, 13, were catching carp in the Clatskanie slough in about four feet of water, police said. One of the boys told officers Larry waded into water about eight feet deep and disappear ed. The boy did not, come to the surface. roof S. White To have no legislation would detour the harsh neces sity of putting the Republi cans generally on record in a Congressional election year. Specifically, it would avoid committing them either to Knowland's "tough" approach or to the milder one favored by the Nixon-Dewey Republi cans. There still would be time enough for Mitchell to pla cate labor before 1960 after Knowland's i n c o n v eniently uncompromising presence had gone from the Senate, which he leaves next January. Finally, there is this power fully suggestive indication that Operation Mitchell is in deed going on just as it seems to be: Mitchell is an old prot--ege of former Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York, and Dewey is an influ? ential adviser of Nixon. If Dewey could have had his way, Mitchell would have been President Eisenhower's Secretary of Labor from the beginning. The late Senator Robert A. Taft vetoed an orig inal Mitchell appointment be cause Mitchell was a "Dewey man." The Secretary entered the Cabinet only after Taft had died 'and after the depar ture from the post of Martin Durkin. (Copyright, 1958, By United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) FAMILY Em "" ' 1 1 ,i A.AJ-...u.,.lt.,..- .-r.. 1.nri-. . r .... f. - . ..juuL.j qpWWiifM BIG 1-hp TRu coLD portable iFSSSSSSsr 7'Aamp n air cbilditidner ! jlSBBH ftSTiJ J 'h 1 V j. t Weighs only Wpoond.5 ' . fe8! g; . mmWt Uses 115V outle , 1 i Porto-cod , v , " 1 1 UD DamahI ew:Lxi: slides in. a. 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Ony Mongolia Commies Tell Of Strides in Five-Year Programs Editor's note: Following is the second of three dispatches on Outer Mongolia. Material for the dis patches comes froni Communist Chinese sources. By PETER SUM Hong Kong (UPI) The Mongolian People's Revolu tionary (Communist) Party has 42,500 card- carrying members and more than 6,500 candidate members. ' Total strength of the party is roughly one-tenth of the country's total population. Mongolia, which became a Communist state when the party took leadership in No vember, 1924, has had two five-year economic plans since 1948. And according to Communist claims, the coun try today is well on the road to socialism. What has socialist Mongolia achieved during the past 10 years? Mongolia basically is the home of nomad herdsmen tending their livestock. Com munists, therefore, first want all of the country's herdsmen incorporated in state-operated herdsmen's cooperative's. According to Dordja Dam ba, first secretary of the cen tral committee of the Mon golian People's Revolutionary Party, by the end of the coun-' try's second five-year plan (1957) "35 per cent of herds mens' households arid 5.2 mil lion head of livestock had SAVINGS DAYS AVINGS'ON SURfflRfflECS COB3IF6 24.88 I j5 DOWri"" $5 Down Delivers a Cooler or Air been enrolled in coopera tives." Damba pointed out that the figures were "a great leap forward" from those at the end of 1952 the end of the country's first five-year plan when only five per cent of herdsmen's households and half a million head of live stock were in cooperatives. He said that cultivated areas expanded 50 per cent during the five-year plan from 1948-1952. On the industrial side, the party secretary said that at the end of the 10-year period, industrial output made up 41 per cent of his country's total production. The number of workers employed by facto ries was roughly 27 per cent of the country's half-million population. According to Communist Chinese evaluation at the end of 1957, Mongolia had over 24,000,000 head of livestock and over 700 livestock coop eratives. Mongolian Communists al so claim the country has wip ed out illiteracy during the two five-year plan periods. "The socialist education and culture enterprises in Mongolia is also prospering," they claimed. "At present there are over 430 middle and primary schools, and four in stitutions of higher learning str?i i fifftD Twin-blower portable room , brings heat relief to any Cools, Ventilates Reg. 72.95 59.88 I $5 DOWN 3-speed control for high, medium or low cooling. Directs air in every di rection. Built-in pump saves water. MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Tuesday, June 17, 1958 5 in the country." They added that "more than 100,000 students and all children of school age are now in various schools." G. Tuvan, minister of pub lic health, in describing achievements in the country's health work over the past 10 years, pointed out that there were now 9.7 hospital beds per thousand population. The current three-year plan calls for establishment of 10 new hospitals throughout the vast stretch of country which comprises more than 1,500, 000 square kilometers. :THf ' .1 IF -SSH R 23 lav f: i res M ' u v) ENDING AN ERA OF GREATNESS, Dr. Robert GorSon Sproul retires as president of the University of CalifcOnfc after 28 years. He waves goodbye from rostrui at Uni versity of California, Los Angeles. (UPI rejgpaf) ss.- cooler room Reg. M495 3C3-GFD tap'y cooler cools f rem 3 fe 5 iverego rooms ECONOMICAL COMFORT "Metal grille with adjustable lou vers for 2-way air deflection. Dial-type air volume control. OTHER MODELS SALE-PRICED Conditioner Today The Mongolians are very proud of their achievements during the past 10 years, ac cording to the Chinese Reds who occasionally pass o in formation regarding the world's third largest Commu nist country. In the words of Z. Sambu, member of the political bu reau of the Mongolian Peo ple's Revolutionary Party and president 6f the Presidium of the People's Hural (Congress), "the achievements are all due to the further consolidation of the people's democratic system in Mongolia." ."- -;-.-.-;- V 104.88 j $s down"" The body wai recovered.