Observer, La Grande, Ore., Tucs., June 2, 1959 ANN LANDERS Answers Your Problems Dear Ann: I divorced my wifciToll your sister thanks for the two years ago. She was the town'offer, but you are satisfied with tramp, but I didn't know it until things as they stand. (How about fab after we were married. I got cus tody of our two small children. Seven months ago my company transferred me out of the country for a three-year period. My ex wife begged me to let her have the children. She promised to be have and showed me on paper how she could manage the sup port money ($340 a month) and not have to go to work. When she promised to devote full-time to the.children, I agreed. I came home two weeks ago on o short vacation. The kids never looked healthier cr happier. My ex-wife seems to have straighten ed around a lot. -So far as I'm concerned, she's kept her word. The problem is this: My sister wants the kids.. She says theyd be better off with her and she'll keep them if I give her the sup port money. She claims a leopard never changes its spots. What do you say? Boston. t Dear Boston: Your ex-wife is not a leopard she's a person, And people do change. If the children are healthy and happy and their mother has kept her word, leave them with her. Ifs entirely possible that your ex- wife has settled down for keeps. Missile Fund Slash Wanted WASHINGTON tOPIi Hep William E. Minshall (R-Ohio) said today he would ask the House to slash 200 million dollars more from Bomarc missile funds in the defense appropriation bill. Minshaii s announcement fore shadowed a floor fight over the 'relative merits of the Air Force Bomarc and the Army's rival Nike-Hercules air defense missiles when the $38,848,339,000 military money bill comes up for debate Tuesday. Rep. George H. Mahon (D-Tex.) chairman of the appropriations subcommittee which wrote the bill, said he looked for fights over some amendments. The bill carries all but $399. 861,000 of the amounts requested by the Eisenhower administration to run the armed forces in the, year which begins July 1. " i However, it calls for a major reshuffling of programs, cancell ing or reducing some and strengthening others. One program which was curtailed sharply by the Mahon subcommittee and by i, the"fuir ApTrfipl'iiitions' Committee was the Bomarc. , The committee knocked out $162,700,000 of the $362,700,000 rc ouested for Bomarc production. leaving intact $64,600,000 for test j and evaluation of the missile. It did not touch 95 million dollars for the Army's Nike-Hercules. Minshall told a reporter that the Air Force has had Bomarc on its drawing boards and in the plan ning stage for nine years "and they still haven't come up with anything." He said Congress should provide money only for test and evaluation of the missile. a reconciliation?) o Dear Ann: ' I'm a heartbroken meter. I know you can't help me but maybe you can explain why such things happen. I have three daughters and the youngest is 18. Last night she told me she's going. to marry a boy she met two months ago. This means I'll have a third bum for son-in-law. I raised my girls to know right from wrong. They're good looking and have beauty contest figures. Why did they all fall for hood lums who don't even treat them right? My oldest girl is waiting for her husband who is in jail on a lar ceny charge. The middle daugh ter has been home seven times since last May. tine married a loafer who beats her up regularly. She comes home until the bruises heal then goes back to him. This last daughter plans to marry a boy with a police record and no job. Why do some girls deliberately choose no good men? H. B. M. Dear H. b. M.: Some girls de liberately choose "no good men" because they envision them selves as "uplifters of the fall en."- They think they can eocv vert that sow's ear into a silk purse. They don't realize when the bloom is off the romance, any Pa9e aiCr.rL.orl Unneu May Trap Bear WASHINGTON UPD-The di rector of the Washington Zoo be lieves that a bucket of sviked honey may be just the trap to catch the capital's elusive black bear. ' Dr. T. H. Reed, the zoo direc tor, was called in by police after numerous . attempts to nab the 200-to-300 pound bruin failed. The animal first was spotted about a week ago. One of Reed s proposals was that a bucket of honey be put out somewhere near where the bear has been spotted. "The bucket of honey snould be laced with a quart of good Irish whiskey. That would attract the bear, get him drunk and put him to sleep if he got enough of the stuff in him,'' Reed said. "All we'd have to do then is pick him up, put him in a cage and let him sleep it off. That s the way they do it in the national parks." . attempt at reforming is consld ered plain, ordinary nagging. And then there are the foolish qirls who select a fellow because he's good looking or exciting in the woo-pitching department They're willing to be kicked Wound by a handsome guy even though they must frequently view the Adonis through a black eye. Women who thrive on physical abuse have sick personalities. They feel inferior and worthless. Psychiatrists tell us they uncon sciously seek out men who will "punish" them. ' I'm afraid I haven't made you feel better. Mother, but you want' ed to know why some girls make bad choices, and these are the facts. . . 'The Hanging Tree' Movie Comes To Granada Theatre STARS IN FILM 'The Hanging Tree," a Baroda production for Warner Bros, com ing Wednesday to the Granada Theatre, is a picture of "firsts." The Technicolor film stars Gary Cooper, Maria Schcll and Karl Maiden. It is the first time, for example, that Cooper has portrayed a doc tor in a Western film, though he happens to be just as fast with a six-shooter as he is with a scalpel. It is the first time Miss Schell has appeared in a Western-type role, but her presence is valid since she plays a European girl who comes to America in search of freedom and fortune. The film is also a first for two bright young Hollywood men, Mar tin Jurow and Richard Shepherd, who make their debuts as pro ducers. It is also a first for two bril liant young New York actors, Ben Piazza and George C. Scott, both of whom make their motion pic ture debuts in "The Hanging Tree." It is the first work by author Dorothy M. Johnson to be filmed. Her novelette has been acclaimed BOUNCING BULLET KILLS PERRY. Ga. lUPIi Larry Slit ton, 15, was killed Monday by a bullet which ricocheted off the surface of a pond. Police said Sut ton and Martha Ann Moblcy, 14 were shooting at a snake in a fish pond. Hawkins said a .22 caliber bullet, apparently fired by Martha Ann, ricocheted off the surface of the pond and lodged in Sutton's heart. ' NjjSj. Yippee! by critics as one of the finest stories of the early west in years. This is also the first time that a story by a Montanan (Miss Johnson), which takes place in Montana, has starred a Montanan (Mr. Cooper). "The Hanging Tree" was dir ected by Delmer Daves from a screenplay by Wendell Mayes and Halsted Welles. The film also fea tures the song, "The Hanging Tree," which has been recorded bv Columbia Records with the popu lar singer, Marty Kobbins, handl ing the vocal. . , MARKETS PORTLAND LIVESTOCK PORTLAND (UPI)-(USDA) -Livestocks f Cattle. 200,;. holdover 150; in cludes B loads (fed steers; trade slow; 2 loads low and average choice around 1050 lb. fed steers steady at 29.60; load choice oi-nnnH itfM) In. weak at 2R 65- faw utility ows Monday 18-20; can- ners-cutters 14.50-16; utility bulls 23.50-24.50. , . Calves 65; slowr early bids weak to L00 lower; few good- choice vealers bid 29-33. Hogs 400; trade opening slow; 21-hoad lot No. 1 butchers 190 lb. 19.25; several lots 1 and 2 butch ers 190-225 lb. 18.75-19; mixed 1. 2 and 3 grade 180-235 lb. 18-18.50; sows slow, 300 - 550 lb. salable around. 12-15.- . - Sheep 500; mostly spring lambs; active, steady; choice 80-110 lb. spring lambs 23.50-23.75; good 80 lb. 22.50; few old crop lambs un sold: cull-choice ewes 3-6. PORTLAND DAIRY .. PORTLAND (UPD Dairy mar ket: i Eggs To retailers: Grade AA large, 38-3i)c doz.; A large, 37-38c; AA medium, 32-34c; AA small, 25 28c;, cartons l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA and Grade A prints, 65c lb.; carton, lc higher; B prints, 63c. Couple Facing Murder Charge SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) Wanda Brogdon, 33, and her lov er, Kenneth Merriam, 36,- will go on trial July 13 on charges of murdering Mrs. v Brogdon's two small sons. ! ,.l v The Rockford, 111., couple plead ed' innocent and innocent by rea son of insanity to the charges yes terday before Superior Judge John A. Hewicker. They already have undergone a sanity trial and were declared sane by a jury. Merriam admitted strangling Mrs. Brogdon's sons,: David, 3, and Virgil, 5. He told deputies he and the mother had decided to get rid of the boys because they were a "bother-V There'll be a big time this weekend at the 51st annual Eastern Oregon LIVESTOCK SHOW For Food Al Its Best Eat Here! We Specialize In Thick. Steaks and Chicken WIPER At CAFE 208 DEPOT BONNIE LA BONTE LA GRANDE VALUE-RATE the ROCKET The man who knows value goes Olds ! More and more mrdium-prirc car buyers who want the most for tlicir money arfcV joining the swing to Olds. t W'hv? Because tliey figure up all the extra quality features and conveniences Olds has as standard etpiipment. They carefully con fjiilcr tbe economy of the Korkct Engine . . . the low-cost maintenance of an Olds ... its higlirr riAalc value. But most of all they ask themselves, "Is n's llie kind of car my family nnd I trill Ik proud to own . . . one that a ill give us the full measure of fun and comfort we want . . . is this the car whose style will stay in style?" The overwhelming "yes" can be found in the zooming sales success of the '59 Olds mobile. Sec your Oldsmobile dealer today . . . Valuc-Kule the Rockctt THIS WEEK dealers displaying Ihh sign have a free scale model of a '59 Olds for you. All you have to do is drive In and have your pre sent car appraised while you VMUI-JtATE. Ihe Rocket on Ihe rood I miA Jf tl l MINIATURB MODEL I With tppnlttl . . . nd I Rockal Rotd-Ust Y st?- 1 BY EVERY MEASURE... THE VALUE CAR OF THE MEDIUM PRICE CLASS II. J. GOSS MOTOR CO. - 1415 ADAMS .SIC THE CINIRAl MOTORS IXHI1IT AT THE 0REC0N CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION IN P0RT1AND, JUNE M-SEPTEMIER 17 WE WILL CLOSE FRIDAY, 12 NOON FOR. LA GRANDE DAY AT THE UNION LIVESTOCK SHOWI TiThnTTTTTlTV7ta Let's ALL Go ' ' . 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