Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 24, 1962, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    I A
MONDAY. DECEMBER 24. 19S2
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON
rTRIBUM
""CvMvona in Southern Orecon
ReadaTfte MUTribun1
"ubllshed Daily exceptSaturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
13 Norther 3.. Ph.77a-Bll
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertliinl Manar
r-va a 1 r T LATHAM. Bui. Mir
ERIC VI ALLEN JR., Mn. Editor
EARL H ADAMS. City Editor
uarrv fHlPM AN. Telae Editor
rnruARn jkwett. SDorta Editor
OLIVE STARCHER Women'! Editor
DALE ERICKSUNUircuwuwnj"
Entered at fcecond claaa matter at
Medlord. urea on unaer (iw u.
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ru Mail In Advance.
Daily and Sunday 1 year $18 00
Daily and Sunday moa 10 00
Dallv and Sunday 3 moa. 5.00
Sunday Only One year 5.00
Slncle Copy (Mailed) Juc
By Cainei And Motor R""'-,
Daily and Sunday 1 year i'-OO
Dally and Sunday I mo. 1.7a
Sunday Only 1 mo. 500
Carrie! and Vcndora Cop.Y 100
OfHeiarPaper of City of Bedford
. Official Paper of Jackion County
United Prew International
rtill Leated Wire
U. P. I Telepjiolo Newaplcturea
MEMBER. Of AUDIT BUREAU
Of CIRCULATIONS
Advert'lalnl Representative:
NELSON ROBERTS 4 ASSOC'
ATES Ot'icee In New York. Cnl
caco Detroit. San rranciaco. Loa
Angelra Seattle. Portland
Den'-er.
NATION A I
NEWIPAPII
aUSUSHMS
association
editorial
sicQtin
Flight o' Time
Medlord and Jackson County
History from tha tiles of Tha
Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
nd 50 yean ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Dac. 24, 19S2 (Tuasday)
Ginger Rogers is apcndlng
the holiday season with her
mother at the Rogers' ranch
on the Rogue river near
Shady Cove.
Jennings Pierce was elected
1853 president ot the Jackson
County Chamber of Com
merce at a noon meeting today.
20 YEARS AGO
Dac. 24, 1942 (Wadnaaday)
Bert Luman, Mcdford, re
turns from service In Austra
lia with U.S.. Army.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "A
number of ruralites A-cardcd
In the burg Thursday in the
final getting ready for Good
St. Nick, alias Kris
alias Santa Claus."
Cities Without Newspapers
A major circus is playing the New York Coli
seum, but a great many Manhattanites who
haven t seen the posters don t know about it.
A Washington, D.C., comedian is making his
New York debut at the Blue Angel night club,
but who's to know? A singer of considerable
national reputation drew only seven customers
to a Cleveland spot one recent evening.
These are only a few of the side effects of
the newspaper strikes sandbagging New York
and Cleveland. The blow to Christmas retail
sales is too obvious to detail. Suffice it to say that
if Chrismas business doesn't hit a record high,
the newspaper strikes will be largely to blame.
IXHAT'S a city without newspapers like?
" There is no disposition here to discuss the
merits of either strike. The only purpose is to
tot up the score, to point out some of the things
Clevelanders and New Yorkers are missing.
News, obviously. Not even with tremendously
augumented coverage can television and radio
replace the daily newspaper. There is little or
no "in depth" treatment of the news. And local
news can be covered only scantily at best. You
might not even know that one of your friends
died.
This is not a erim ioke. The New York strike
was only in its seventh day when the "Wall
Street Journal" reported : "Funeral directors say
attendance at funerals is down, and florists are
selling fewer funeral sprays than usual."
Its no news that people as well as store man
agements miss advertising. They don't know
which movie is playing where, even though the
theaters have taken to the air in a big way. Open
ing a legitimate play in New York is murder
without those opening night reviews.
The Miami-Nebraska Gotham Bowl football
game on Dec. 14, for which a crowd of 20,000
to 30,000 had been anticipated, drew 6,100. (The
pro Giants, whose fans are loyal as the subway
alumni of Notre Dame, lured 62,000 to the same
stadium the following day, and some 15,000
equally steadfast pro basketball fans turned
up at the Garden on Dec. 11 for a doubleheader.)
"It' Fine When Do You Think We'll Get
The Other Wall. And The Roof?"
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name nd address of the writer,
although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial
for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribuna reserves the right to
edit all letters with view to clarification and condensation. Letters
submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters
p.inted in this column do not necessarily represent tht views of the
oaper; in fact the contrary is often the caie.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
30 YEARS AGO
Sac. 24. 1932 (Friday)
Stale highway commission
gives approval to construction
work on Ashland-Talcnt sec
tion of Highway 09.
Winnie Ruth Judd, charged
with murder of two women
friends, appears before Ari
zona grand jury.
40 YEARS AGO
Dac. 24, 1922 (Saturday)
Poner Neff announces
plans to construct a business
building at northeast corner
of North Central avc. and
East Sixth st.
Susanna H. Carter, Jack
sonville, elected vice presi
dent of Oregon Stale Teach
ers association.
SO YEARS AGO
Dac. 24. 1912 (Monday)
Burglar carrying loot, In
cluding sack of flour and two
sides of bacon, walks into
arms of policeman while leav
ing scene of theft in Mcdford.
Entire Mcdford tire depart
ment, Including Chief Eugene
Ainann, on sick list; cit; offi
cials request men with fire
f i gluing experience to help
out.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nina at tan cartact It iiiaarlerj
avtn at ei9ht li axcallant; fiva at
ail it aoed.
1. In wlmt country is the
famous village of Waterloo?
2. From where do most of
the world's diamonds come?
3. Approximately how
many square feel are there in
an acre?
4. Arrange in sire from
largest to smallest: earth,
moon and sun.
3. What was St. Paul's
trade?
6. What measurement of
the calendar Is calculated
from the time it lakes the
moon to circle the earth?
7. What amendment t ) the
U. S. Constitution freed Hie
slaves?
B. What is alluvial soil
9. What two South Amer
ican countries have no sea
coast? 10. Which President first
poke over the radio?
Aniwarai 1. Balqlum. 2,
Kimbarly, South Africa. 3.
43.380. 4. Sun, aarth, moon.
S. Tant making. . Month, 7.
Thirtaanth. I. Soil dapoiltad
by water. 9. Bolivia and Par.
ajuay. 19. Harding, in 1923.
CONSIDERS orriCE
Washington - Itfli - Pence
Corps Director Snrgent Shri
ver said Sunday he would
consider running for gover
nor of Illinois If the oppor
tunity arose at some suitable
time In the future.
CDITORIALS those lovely conflicting opin--J
ions sports, the columns and the comics,
stock market quotations, specialized news (about
business or labor, say) medical advice cross
word puzzles and other games, entertainment
reading, home-making and other woman-only
news all this goes by the boards.
No help-wanted ads, no apartments for rent
nor houses for sale. A leading personnel agency
in Manhattan says its job applicants have drop-
Kringic, ped to half since the strike began. Charitable
appeals by the papers notably the Fresh Air
Fund of the N..Y. "Herald Tribune" and the
Neediest Cases Fund of the N. Y. "Times" have
been hit especially hard. And psychologists say
that some people are so dependent upon news
papers that they will be seriously atiected by
the absence of their daily ration of print, though
the mental specialists disagree on whether the
reactions will be good or bad.
The strikes have consequences far beyond
their own communities. Bowatcr, the Canadian
newsnrint comnany. on Dec. 19 announced it
would lav off 500 emulovees if the New York
strike isn't settled by Christmas.
Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wn tz on Dec.
19 warned that the New York strike might go on
all winter. And "Variety" speculates that "pos
sibly three of the seven (struck) Manhattan-
based dailies will not publish again should the
strike continue for a length of time." E.R.R.
The Fey Ones.
As Mr. Santavana said: "SANITY IS MAD
NESS PUT TO GOOD USES."
I think there is a gentle madness w hich comes
upon us in the Christmas season, generally un
noticed by those of similar derangement.
We are reinhabited by the child which once
we were. And live for a time in an elfin nether
world. And our childish honesty shines through.
We become less ashamed of our need of others
and speak of it. And because we know we have
no enemies, the future is filled more with prom
ise than threat.
We suddenly see that we would not trade this
time we live for another. And the insight of our
delightful Christmas mania reveals beauty and
even greatness among people who are de
nied it only by our normal unawareness.
The sadness of what we have not become
is lightened by the child's sense of possessing
within himself the whole world, and the season's
hint of immortality.
And mothers feel as if they are dressed up in
their motliei's' high heels. And fathers
laugh like boys again. And we pay
more heed to who we are than
who we seem to be.
In this time there really are flying reindeer.
And just over the hill a stable bathed in starlight.
And every mad one of us is the grandest thing of
all a magician who produces for every story
a happy ending.
So Merry Christinas to all. And the heartiest
halloo to the fey ones who go about their un
knowing mission of rescurrecting once a year
man's dream.
W. W. Straley, President of
Pacific Northewest Bell, in the
company magazine,
"Cascades."
As this is written, there
are no earth-shaking develop
ments in the big news.
So
Let's fall back on the
weather.
DO YOU remember the
story the other day to the
effect that the Weather
Bureau has gone out on a
limb with a 90-day predic
tion the first time in its long
history it has been willing to
guess that far ahead?
The general drift of the
long forecast was that one of
the big- high-up jet streams
has gone on the loose and
wandered away down to the
southward. As a result, the
Bureau's experts said, it looks
like a hard winter for the
Eastern United States but a
normal to mild winter for the
rest of the nation especially
the Pacific Northwest, where
ESSENTIALLY ABOVE
NORMAL temperatures and
below-normal rain and snow
can be expected.
To be sure, we've had some
fog. There are cynics among
us who maintain that at times
the fog has been so thick that
you could cut it with a knife
and pile it up beside the road
in blocks. But cynics are ex
tremists. Their opinions have
to be taken with a grain of
salt.
All in all, giving a little
here and taking a little there,
it has been a wonderful fall,
and it is beginning to look
like the Weather Bureau
sharps may have known what
they were talking about when
they issued their first 90-day
forecast.
WELL-
looks like the Bu
reau's experts may have
known what they were talk
ing about. Dispatches tell us
that "bitter cold and heavy
snow slapped the North and
East on the last full day of
autumn. Snow fell from Kan
sas and Nebraska to the
mountains of Virginia and ac
cumulations of it up to five
inches are expected before it
quits."
The temperature tumbled
to 12 below at Walcrtown,
N.Y. Highways had already
become hazardous. Four traf
fic deaths were caused in
Southern Illinois alone by
slick highways.
And so on.
HOW ABOUT our Pacific
Northwest and the blue
bird weather that has been
predicted for us? So far, we
haven't been doing too badly
especially down here in
Southern Oregon.
ONE question:
What dors flip Farmpr's
Almanac say about it?
If the Farmers Almanac
goes along with the Weather
Bureau, we can sit back in
confident expectation of an
extraordinarily beautiful fall
and winter.
I1UT-
" I'm unable to find what
the Farmers Almanac has to
say about it. The book stores
I've consulted have no copies
of this noted publication,
without which no home li
brary is complete.
Docs any resident of this
area have a copy? It would be
interesting to know what po
sition the Farmers Almanac
takes in this matter. It goes
the Weather Bureau consid
erably better in the way of
confidence in its predictions.
It issues its predictions a
WHOLE YEAR ahead.
AND WHAT about Douglas
county's Mount Nebo
goats which for half a cen
tury have been far-famed
wealhcr predictors. Their
fair weather habitat is high
up on Ncbo and their un
erring custom is said to be
to COME DOWN several
days in advance of a change
to bad weather.
Where are they now? Are
they high up? Or low down?
Softwood Lumber
Industry Assaults
Puerto Rico Market
Washington - HOT - The
U.S. sotfwood lumber Indus
try has begun an all-out as
sault on the $3 million a year
Puerto Rican lumber market,
which Canada has had sewed
up tiRht for two years.
Lumber nulls in urcgou
and Washington State Have
been lining up to take advant
age of a new law aimed at
narrowing the price gap tic
tween Canadian and U.S.
lumber on the Caribbean is
land. The law, passed in the
closing days of Congress, par
tially lifts the restriction that
required products shipped be
tween U.S. ports to be car
ried in US.-flag vessels.
It allows lumber to be ship
pod to Puerto Rico in foreign
flag vcsslos - whose rates
are as much as 40 per cent
below U.S. rates if the
Maritime Administration (inds
that no U.S. ships are "rea
sonably available."
Priced' Out Ot Markat
No U.S. lumber of the type
Involved has been sold In
Puerto Rico in the past two
have received tentative or fi
nal permission hope to sell
at least 20 million board feet
in Puerto Rico by next Oct.
23, expiration date of the one
year experimental law. This
would equal nearly one-third
the island's total 1961 con
sumption. Shipmanti Daclinad
U. S. lumber shipments,
which once dominated the
Puerto Rican market, declin
ed steadily from 19 million
board feet in 1931 to nothing
in 1961 and 1962. Canadian
shipments rose from little
more than one million board
feet in 1951 to 73 million last
year and 57 million in the
first nine months of this year.
The Puerto Rican market
was worth about S3. 2 million
to Canada last year and about
$3 million in the first nine
months of this year.
Total Canadian softwood
lumber sales in the United
States Inst year wore about
$260 million, and are esti
mated to have increased this
year.
The U.S. lumber industry
"By lhair word"
To the Editor: I, too, wonder
at the form of tomorrow's
communication. In my foolish
ness I vision all good men
living the universal language
of Ecumenicity no matter
their tongue. In my years of
a modern martyrdom it was
imparted to me that all words
are either good or evil after
the thought that gave them
birth none are neutral! You
bless or curse with your every
word. Millions worked and
now work with words, but this
awful truth is news to most.
Yet a holy man early said "By
their words ye shall know
them ". And indeed we shall
tomorrow!
Our heirs will know the
genitive worth of a word in
stantly and thus escape anv
evil usage as we do physical
hazard today. Communication
tomorrow will give all good
peoples this perfect enlighten
ment in their youth. Thus all
of them will speak and write
naturally in the service of
God. Communication will be
the world motion of the Spirit
then unifying all the worth of
the earth, exorcizing all
athesism of its scientific, psy
chiatric and communistic evils
in their associations with the
good. Our heirs will thus live
in the Light that gave us life;
the godless millions in the dy
ing tight they have ravished
technically from the firma
ment of Heavens.
Man's indiscriminate usage
of both good and evil words
without thought of their
primal context is the genesis
of world confusion and most
offend.
In the beginning was the
Word. I humbly relate this
unutterable universal har
mony rising far above the
angelic choirs as sounding
the Infinite Majesty of God.
Rising from man's first pleas
ing sound our earthly words
faintly echo this most wondcr
ous of all Mystery. And this
rising echo our words
will become the infallible
communication of tomorrow.
In those days our heirs will
never err in thought or word
or deed fur this awful Truth
will have become their way of
me and the wonder of it will
be their universal language,
rising forever, even through
the far wonders of the new
heaven and earth, in praise of
God.
And the power of these' true
words of our communicative
tomorrow will so exorcise
world thought that our chil
drens' children as they
write and speak will ad
vent a thousand years of
Peace.
William Thomas Cuddy
V.A. Domiciliary
White City, Ore.
much in the news, and so
often on the ballots. Its pur
pose is prevention of and re
duction in the number of den
tal caries its value in this
area is proven, despite claims
to the contrary by opponents
to the measure. Its "poison
ous" quality is scarcely an
issue when viewed in the light
of the tiny amounts necessary.
To illustrate this, let me use
iodine a substance very
well known to be absolutely
necessary to body function,
yet poisonous in larger
amounts, also well known.
The same is true of most medi
cines and many minerals.
Chlorination is another
matter entirely, with abso
lutely no connection with
fluoridation. Its purpose does
have something to do with its
poisonous quality ft is add
ed to the water in extremely
minute quantities as a puri
fier, to make the water safe
to drink and cook with. Its
use is mandatory in areas
where water is impure or
where there is a question of
contamination such as there
is now in our area. Fortunate
ly, this generally is not the
case here, and chlorination is
only a temporary necessity. An
interesting thing about chlor
ine is' that it is another neces
sary item for body function,
taken in as sodium chloride
(table salt).
I hope, Mrs. Henderson,
that I have in no way insulted
you, as the only intention I
have had is to correct a mis
conception. (Miss) Dayle Ann Stratton,
804 Bennett ave.,
Medford.
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
U"ILM STAR Paul Newman recalls the time he appeared as
guest star on Garry Moore's "I've Got A Secret" TV
panel show. The whole panel was lured up to a ball gams
ai jdimee oiaaium so
that Newman, disguised
as a white-coated vendor,
could sell each of them a
hot dog. Nobody recog
nized him. Henry Mor
gan even complained that
he had been short
changed. When Newman
appeared on the TV show
a few evenings later, the
panel didn't come within
a mile of his "secret."
The late and famous edi
tor, Ellery Sedgwick, offer
ed this challenging advice
to a graduating class at Amherst: "It is mv constant miiraum.
to persuade young men just starting their business careers that,
instead of joining some company organized, successful, and rcil
mcnted, they should sign up with a leaky ship, scrape down her
decks, caulk her seams, refit her sails; for it is on the slipperiest
decks that adventure beckons, and a speedier chance provided
for rising in the world."
Overheard at a public school recess: "My father once ran awav
with a circus when he was a boy but the police caught him and
made him bring it back."
At a bridge party: "My son's new girl friend Is so hefty sha
could play fullback for Ohio State. You know what she wears
on her charm bracelet? Old license plates!"
In a men's locker room at the Century Golf Club: "My wife cm
now talk at the rate of 140 words a minute with gusts ud
to 175." P
1963. by Bennelt Celt. Distributed by Kms Features Syndicate
Strictly Personal
By Sydney J. Harris
(ci Field Enterprises. Inc.
Likes Program
To the Editor: I should like
to ask the good readers of
M.T. if they are listening to
the startling information that
is being given each week dav
on Station KRVC at 7:45 a.m.
If possible, it would be well
to do it.
Mrs. R. E. Dandles
1300 Slcwart ave.
Medford
was
Santa's Childhood
To the Editor:
When Santa was a little lad
I wonder, was he good or bad?
If he ever shot a rubber band
I'll bet his mother slapped his
hand.
He might have even chased
the girls,
And taken scissors to their
curls.
It seems to me that he
good.
And helped his mother bring
' in wood.
He d do the disl
I night,
, And always tried to do them
I right.
No one knows just what he
did.
When Santa was a little kid!
Janet Frederick
(age 111)
172 Whitman Place
Mcdford
every
KRVC Plug
To t he Editor: I wish to
express my thanks to you tnd
to Mr. Bulniun (or his letter
printed in the Dec. 19 paper.
I received that poem too. "His
Name at the Top."
1 wish everyone within the
Advertiser Control
To the Editor: As we re
member, it was last week's
Thursday air-wave tribunal
that took our daily newspa
per's editor to task for de
fending the printed word as
less susceptible to advertiser
control than that of the radio
and TV. There were ramifi
cations in the mostly female
mc-toism chanty, but the ad
vertiser control appeared the
meat of the interesting dis
cussion, of Wednesday edi
torial. Now my first-hand experi
ence in seeking material for
the hoped-to-be-printed word,
leaning it to the requirements
of the publication that pro
duces that all important pay
check, checking cut-lines, gal
ley proofing for the clacking,
ever hungry Linotypes, places
me firmly on the MT editors
side. For all this involved
channeling does put the ad
vertiser on the fringe con
trol of what docs or doesn't
get printed.
So very different is my ad
mittedly limited first-hand
gathering of news for the
radio media to the receiving
sets. For here, to my con
cern and astonishment, the
advertiser is right in the mid
dle between. To illustrate.
let's go back to the late twen
ties when a carbon-crumble
mike was acquired and acci
dentally made to work very
well, relayed through a play
er to the parlor radio. Wel
come visitors one evening
were our photographer tilli
cum, J. Vern Shangle. and
wife Ruth. With my wife and
others entertaining, my ab
sence was unnoticed. The ex
tolling of the one time Shan
gle Personality Porlraits from
the radio was little noted till
it verged into some sly digs
at said Personality Portraits.
Poking my head out of ail
improvised pantry radio
room, my friend, J. Vern,
was seen striding to the tele
phone, eyes blazing fire. Not
ing my guilty grin, lie chang
ed course and came at p'c
with a wild and lethal packed
swing, which luckily was side
stepped. It is hoped friend .1. Vern
and Ruth will go along with
this, for it does seem worth
while in high-lighting the in
timacy of the advertiser with
radio and TV. However, let
me add how much wo enjoy
and appreciate the sponsors
who make it possible on oc
casion In lift my voice from
the multitude of the mules
in protest or indorsmcnt of
what goes on about us, cvci
commercials when not too
long or loud relative to the
NO. VIRGINIA
There is no ruddy fat man
with merry eyes and a white
beard, who comes down the
chira ney at
night to re
ward little
boys and girls
for being
good.
Because,
you see, Vir
ginia, all over
the world
there are mil-
Hams lions of little
boys and girls who have been
as good as good can be but
they get no toy,s, and some
times they awake on Christ
mas morning without enough
food to cat.
There are fathers and moth
ers, Virginia, who have been
appointed by God to love
their children and they
give them love, although they
cannot always give them pres
ents.
And these fathers and
mothers are more wonder
ful and magical and mys
terious than Santa Claus
could ever be. They bring
something infinitely more
precious than dolls and
trains to their children
they bring the mark of
God's love down to every
boy and girl.
And. sometimes, a v e n
these fathers and mothers
are taken away. But there
are others in the world, di
vinely touched, who look
pcrintendent Charles A. Mey
er, of the District 6 School
board, for the school bus,
supplying transportation for
the children, the American
Legion Post 129. for use of
the hall, Joyce Roberts for
the entertainment, her piano
selections and Christmas re
cordings. Economy Market,
Fabers super Market, Paul
sen and Gates Super Market,
Central Point, and
sens Dairy. Medford, whose
thoughtful donations helped
supply the refreshments tor
the youngsters; Scott Hamil
ton, driver of the school bus;
the hostesses serving, and the
students from the Crater
High School. Future Home
makers of America, co-hostess
.
Cay HalU-tt. president
Donald E. Lacy
Ernie Kennedy'.
Publicity Chairman
Bill Russell
Rick Taylor
Vernon Capps
Robert Bailey
Central Point Jaycccs
Central Point. Ore
after lhesa children and
share with them their mea
ger possessions.
Compared with this mir
acle of care and tenderness,
Santa Claus is a pala figurs
of fantasy. For he, you see.
only rewards boys and girls
who have been "good." But
in the eyes of God, and par
ents, all boys and girls are
truly good at heart.
Presents at Christmas ara
fun, of course, but do you
imagine, Virginia, that tha
children with the most pres
ents are the happiest ones?
When there is little love in
a home, there is little merri
ment and without merri
ment, the doll is dust and
the train is tin.
All over the world, on
Christmas morning, children
will be waking up without a
visit from Santa Claus or
with a gift you would hardly
look at, an orange, an extra
slice of bread, a frayed piece
of string.
Yet if there is someone w.'io
loves them, who frolics with
them and heals them, they
have a greater gift than any
fat man in a tight red suit
could possibly bring them.
There are fathers who work
for their children, and moth
ers who sing to their children,
and God who gives fathers
the strength to work when
they are weak, and mothers
the spirit to sing when they
are sad.
No, Virginia, there is no
Santa Claus there does not
need to be.
Milk Production
Lowest in 37 Years
Corvallis - ll'PH - Milk pro
duction in Oregon in 1962
Jorgcn- dropped to the lowest level in
37 years, Oregon State Uni
versity said today.
The decline was caused
mostly by smaller numbers of
dairy farms and total number
of milk cows, the school's ex-
i tension agricultural service
said.
The slate's output during
the first 11 months of tho
year slood at 1.18 billion
pounds, down 31 million from
i the same months in 1961.
Total production for the year
I was sure to be less than 1.1
billion pounds (or the first
lime since 1925, the school
I said.
years. U S. lumbermen said j has asked the Tariff Com
the high transportation costs mission for quota and tariff
under the old regulations restrictions against Canadian
priced them out of the mar- lumber, but no decision is ex
ket. peeled before January.
One big C . nrm ine
listening range of KRVC of our wav' of life,
would listen to Carl Mclnlirr Same f'r tv i
Jew Jersey, S1u comfortably at home.
watching that h'ard.to-bclievc
appreciates i acrobatic rtisolav from far
away Sweden. Fir all in all.
it's all worth while a oart
of Collingswond
4.i to 8 15 a m
Anyone who
vooci mu.su- should slay tuned
into KRVC. 1350 on votir dial I
II I. M
(Name on file)
Central Point. Ore.
Georgia Pacific Co. of Port
land, Ore. received final
approval to ship to Puerto
Rico In foreign (lag vessels
Dec. 14. It plans its first ship
ment in late January or early
February.
Three other firms received
tentative approval Dec. II
and are expected to be given
the (inal nod soon.
Four more have applied.
The four which already
NAMES ASSISTANT
Palm Beach, Fla - UTH
The vacation While Hons.
Sunday announced scleciiiu
of Dr. Stafford I. Warren
vice chancellor of the I'nivcr
sity of California at I.
geles as a special as
Stafford will help
and coordinate new
proved federal, stale
Tha Difference
To the Editor: Though ob
i viously sincere. I'm afraid
Mrs. lima Henderson does
o still tunc chlorination and
fluoridation confused - and
; within the limns of my own
i knowledge and without em-
of our loved America.
F. J. Clifford
Rt. -. Box 2U0F
Central point. Ore.
cal programs to comKit the!
effects of menial retardation.!
An-; ployim; the subtle intolleclu.il
issistanl. 1 insult th.il Mr. Jeiiney seems
deveioo so adept a! I shall try to
and int-i explain to her and others the
and l(- difference between the two.
Fluoridation,
known, is the
as
issue
If well
so ery
Shopping Tour
To the Editor: The Centr.il i
Point Junior Chamber ot
Commerce wish to lake this I
opportunity to thank the !
many mercnanis and resi
dents of Central Point for the
wonderful cooperation Riven
us with the annual Christmas
Shopping Tour, making it
possible for hu youngsters to
have a happier holiday sea
son Also we want to thank Su-
.
Wrh o
mm s 14
miym
a'n'th."'.0" ' m ,tom h.n!. and from
ma rest ara irom friendil"
I?
I