12 The Newi-Reyiew, Roteburg, Ore. Thurc., Feb. 2, 1961 ; N ' if f ""UK S I V A .t i VTw Judge Orders Mitchell To Jail After Refusing To Lower Bond PR ESIDENT-J. Irwin Miller, 51, of Columbus, In diana, in the new president , of the National Council of Churches. Ho is the first lay man ever elected to the post. ORLANDO, FIa..(AP) - "This is a nightmare," actor Cameron Mitchell said of the circumstances that are keeping him in Orange County jail under $50,000 bond be cause his former wife says he is delinquent in alimony payments. Unless he can raise the bond he may lose the starring role in a 39-week television series called "The Beachcomber" being filmed here. Mitchell, 42, failed in two ef forts for freedom at hearings Tuesday. Circuit Judge Frank A. Smith said he could see no suh stantial guarantee the actor would remain here under jurisdiction of the court unless the high bond remained in effect. "Why can't I talk?" Mitchell kept asking his attorneys during the hearing. After the judge ended the hear ing, Mitchell fell to his knees with hands clasped, "Please, your honor," he cried, "in the name of Jesus Christ my father was a minister let me talk, please. My very life is at stake." Judge Smith ordered Mitchell taken from the courtroom. The TV and movie actor ap parently will remain in Orange County jail until March 6, when a hearing is scheduled on his wife's complaint, unless he raises the $50,000 bond. One of Mitchell's attorneys, James Byrd of Orlando, said so far as he knows the actor "doesn't EMPLOYERS PAY $94,000 SALEM (AP) The state De partment of Employment said Tuesday it took 353 employers to court last year for not paying their unemployment compensa tion taxes. The total was 281 in 1959. The department collected $35 million in taxes. The employers tried for nonpayment were forced to pay $94,000. have enough to put up a $500 bond, much Jess $50,000." Mitchell said he gave his wife everything when they separated b'i years ago after 16 years of marriage. "I have nothing now," he told a reporter. He said he has to pay his wife about 40 per cent of his gross income under an interlocutory de cree issued in California last May. (Papers filed in the case indicate he was ordered to pay her 24 per cent.) "I have to live too," he said. "Forty per cent for her, 10 per cent to an agent, 5 per cent to a manager and on and on it all comes to about 128 per cent, "I paid her $2,050 a month for five years. I come from a poor family. When I think of these sums of money she's spending, I get sick inside. That's all we used to fight about was money." His wife Johanna, daughter of wealthy meat packer Fred Men del, lives in Pacific Palisades, Calif., with their four children. Build On Existing Farm Programs, Is Kennedy's Advice To Solons By EDWIN G. HAAKINSON WASHINGTON (AP) Demo crats and Republicans who steered farm legislation in Con gress in recent years had this EARLY AWFUL Alexandre; of Paris dreamed up this nightmare hairdo. .It was in-; spired, he says, by Spanish! headdresses in paintings by, Velasqu.es (1599-1660). J advice today for. (lie Kennedy ad ministration: Build on existing farm programs. The legislators saw little chance in Congress for any drastic farm proposals. - . - , The advice comes before the new administration gets down to drafting the farm proposals Presi dent. Kennedy will submit to Con gress within the next two weeks. A three-member task force com mittee on "the key elements of the agricultural situation" handed the new administration its farm program recommendations Tues day. They came closer, in some respects, to meeting promises of the Republicans rather than of the Democrats in the 1960 cam paign. The committee opposed in creases in price supports for ma jor commodities and expressed the view that farmers would be unlikely to support rigid farm pro duction control measures. Kennedy's campaign farm pro grain and the Democratic plat form favored higher price sup ports and measures to control farm production and to halt sur plus output. On Capitol Hill today, Sen. Al len J. Ellender, D-La., chairman of the senate agriculture commit tee, said: "With the possible ex ception of wheat and its surpluses, I think the best chant'es are to improve and continue our existing programs." In the House, Rep. Charles B. Boeven of Iowa, senior Republi can on the House Agriculture Committee, said he doubted that Congress would pass a general farm bill this year. Another veteran farm legisla tor, Sen. George D. Aiken, R-Vt., questioned the alarm of some persons over the surpluses of food Salem Couple Visits With Umpqua Relatives Mr. and Mrs. Fred Klaboe of Salem were recent weekend guests at the home of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Myron Iv erson, of Umpqua, reports Mrs. George Munson, correspondent. Mrs. Iverson and daughter, Nan cy Elizabeth, have just returned home from the hospital. . Mrs. Guy (Maude) Cole has just completed her first book entitled "Away Back When." It is now at the printers and should be avial able to the public the last week in February. A reception in Mrs. Cole's honor has been planned, but a date has not been set. and farm products in this coun try. "If (Soviet Premier) Nikila Khrushchev could match our farm production he would feel he was on top of the world," Aiken said. Members of the task force were Lauren K. Soth, editorial paxe editor of the Des Moiues Register and Tribune; J. 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