Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, August 13, 1962, Image 13

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    EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD, Monday, Aug. 13, 1962 Page 13A
I lull i fcXN i avi
Until Tuesday Morning
Figure Show low Tmpraturos
Fair
Skies
Emerald Empire Weather
EUGENE-SPRINGFIELD
(All times daylight)
Forecast: Fair through
Tuesday with a predicted high
of 80 degrees Monday, pre
dicted low of 49 degrees Tues
day morning, expected high
Tuesday, 82 degrees. West
ern Oregon: mostly fair with
highs of 80-90, lows of 48-56,
through Tuesday. Low clouds
or fog on coast.
Statistics (readings at the
U.S. Weather Bureau, Mah
lon Sweet Airport, Eugene):
Highest temperature Sunday,
79: lowest Monday a.m., 47;
rain in 24 hours ending 8 a.m.
Monday, none; total for Aug
ust, 1.18 inches; average for
August .40 of an inch; read
ings at 10 a.m. Monday; hu
midity, 80 per cent; wind,
JFK Won't Answer
All the Questions
By SAM DAWSON
Of the Associated Press
NEW YORK W When Pres
ident Kennedy tells the nation
tonight just what date he thinks
the Congress should cut tax
rates and why, he'll be ending
one episode in the summer's
best ballyhooed cliffhanger.
But like the old movie serials,
he may leave as many or more
questions than he answers:
What will Congress do? Will
lax cuts now or next January be
linked with tax reforms that
close some loopholes that is,
cost some individuals or indus
tries more? Will a tax cut, when
and if voted by Congress, give
the economy a real boost or just
a trouble-breeding treasury def
icit? Will it stave off a reces
sion so many fear, either later
this year or sometime in 1963?
The President has more in
formation than presently avail
able to any outside the govern
ment, or to most within it. But
the statistics which swayed his
decision of necessity reflected
the past some gathered a
month ago, a few even farther
back.
Some, like orders for durable
goods or government spending
plans, give a clue to what is
likely to happen in the future
but even those are subject to
change, either up or down. His-
i. i
Circuit Court
Records
DIVORCES GRANTED
(Allf. 6, 1962)
Josephine R. Schulti from Robert
fichultz; Ella Fave Arnold from Ho.
ward Arnold; C. Kathleen Lane from
John E. Lane; Phyliss D. Moore from
Franklvn L. Moore; Joe Sylvester
Stratton from Mary Jo Ellen Strat
ton; Mctvln E. James from Sandra E.
Jnmes; Vada M. Boydston from Ste
phen C. Boydston; Vivian L. Schroe
dor from Dean W. Schrocder; Bon
nie Cowlea from Harold Cowles;
Laura M. Seheele from Norman F.
Scheeie; Ronald L. Casebeer from
Carrie Ruth Casebeer (annulment);
Carol Lee Cloud from Doyle Wayne
Cloud: Dorothy M. Morse from Ar
thur E. Morse.
COMPLAINTS FILED
(Alls. 7, 1962)
Walter Hanschar and Norma Han
arhar vs. Louis W. Soukup and Mil
dred Sotikup and California Rlct
Growers Inc.: Suit to recover money.
Daniel F. Miles and Edna Johnson
Miles vs. Ethel Irene Johnson, the
unknown heirs of Ethel Irene John-
son If she is deceased, and John Doe
Johnson, the husband of Ethel Irene
Johnson, if she was married: Suit
to quiet title.
Gold Star
Laundry
SHIRTS
(regular)
PANTS
(any kind)
OVERALLS
and JUMPERS
no extra for March
MECHANICS
COVERALLS
WASH AND
DRY
32e
55e
55e
70c
12
SPF.CUl Plftt'Ol NT
ON CASH AND CARRY
GOLD STAR LAUNDRY
304 Blair - Dl 5 0791
Data from
Expected
(AP Wlrephoto)
Eugene and Springfield, plus all of western Oregon, is due for fair
weather tonight and Tuesday, weathermen predict. Most of the na
tion will be free from showers tonight, except for the northern
Plains and parts of the middle Atlantic and New England states,
where scattered showers are expected. Cooler temperatures are
forecast for the Ohio and Tennessee valleys and in the northern
Rockies. Warmer weather is predicted for the Plains states tonight.
j FOREST FIRE
UAPiut-n I umuMHUW
W 9.9. Prevailing wind Sun
day, N10.
Stage of rivers at 8 a.m.
Monday, Willamette at EWEB
Steam Plant, 10.1 feet; Mc
Kenzie at Armitage Bridge,
1.1 feet.
Sunrise and sunset: Tues
day, 6:15 a.m. and 8:19 p.m.;
Wednesday, 6:16 a.m. and
8:18 p.m.
torical patterns also offer warn
ings or promises although
since World War II business
history hasn't repeated itself in
the precise cyclical ways the
economists once preached.
Businessmen will take close
note of the President's decision,
even if they differ among them
selves as to his reasons for it.
The slock market especially is
likely to react to his prediction
of the course the economy
seems to be taking and to his
plans for guiding or changing
that course, if those contain any
surprises.
But since World War II, busi
nessmen have had to learn to
live with two sometimes con
flicting factors:
Day-by-day changes, often
unpredictable and in unlikely
corners of the world, can upset
well-laid . plans more quickly
now than in the past.
Many of the old influences
have lost their zip, or have been
dulled by economic tranquiliz
ers. Recessions or booms, there
fore, aren't as predictable as be
fore, nor as strong as a given
set of circumstances once would
have assured.
Entirely new forces in the
world today give different col
oring to old economic indica
tors. What the Common Market
in Europe can do, what the So
viet Union may do, what forces
the U. S. government may bring
to play, all can soften the im
pact of a recession or curb
the zest of a boom.
But this doesn't mean thr.i
reading the economic lea .caves
is any easier.
Nor docs President Kennedy's
decision on the timing of a tax
cut change all the forces press
ing on the economy, some push
ing it higher and some holding
it back.
The economic story is still a
serial and for some time to
come is likely to continue to be
a cliffhanger.
a.5
ir
P5
ie CARRIAGE
ISO Park St.
n own town Eujt'nt
i i-. . t PRESENTS - ,,,:-. -Mr - 4
"TOMORROW'S STARS" 1
All-Talent Contest
All talent In all a ice croup, it lnrltd to addition dallr
2:30 to 4:O0 p m. 8 T. at the Carriage Trade for the EK.HT
WKKK TALK NT CONTEST. Prlifi nightly for winner
two it oak dinners. Hklr winner receive numeroua
prize and ftweek winner rerelteji 2MM Savings Bond.
Fill ont entry blank at Broadway Coffee Shoppe. 15 K.
Broadway, Immediately. Audition atart Monday, Am. 11,
Telephone 01 34&II.
Anyone Can Enter!
So Obligation , . ,
U.S.' WIATHCR BUMAU
WARM
TEMPERATURES
(24 hours ending 10 a.m. Monday)
Noon Sun 74 Mldnite Sun.. 97
2 p.m. " 78 2 a.m. Mon. 55
4 p.m. " 78 4 a.m. " 50
8 p.m. " . 75 S a.m. " 48
8 p.m. " 89 8 a.m. " -- 55
10 p.m. " 61 10 a.m. " 60
Readings at U.S. Weather Bureau,
Mahlon Sweet Airport, Eugene.
OREGON
Max. Min. Prrp.
Astoria
68 50 .04
Baker 84
Brookings 73
50
53
54
46
52
55
Burns - 4
Klamath Falls 78
Lakeview , 80
Medford 84
Newport . 66
North Bend 74
Pendleton 85
Portland 75
Redmond 81
Roseburg 83
Salem 80
The Dalles 82
57
47
59
53
58
NATIONAL
Max. Min. Prrp.
Atlanta 3
65
56
60
Bismarck 84
Boston 69
Chicago 81
Cleveland 88
Denver . 87
Detroit 80
Fairbanks flfl
Fort Worth 98
Helena Jfi
Honolulu 84
Juneau 69
Kansas City 84
Los Angeles 87
Memphis 91
Miami 87
Minneapolis 72
New Orleans 92
New York 80
Oklahoma City 95
Omaha 80
Phoenix 1U
Pittsburgh 87
57
65
71
63
75
48
62
60
72
76
62
70
57
82
65
57
39
63
61
58
51
54
75
65
.25
Rapid City 8fl
Reno 89
St. Louis - 84
Salt Lake City ... 100
San Francisco 71
Seattle 70
Spokane 82
Tampa 93
Washington 83
.07
T Trace.
FIVE-DAY FORECAST
Eastern Oregon Temperature
near normal with a cooling trend
averaging a few degrees below
normal. High mostly In 80s; low
mostly In 50s, except 40s south
part Eastern Oregon. Few show
ers Eastern Oregon; Precipitation
occurring about Wednesday and
Saturday.
Western Oregon Temperatures
near normal with cooling trend
averaging a few degrees below
normal; maximum 74-84 Western
Oregon; low mostly In 50s, mora
than normal precipitation north
western Oregon and a few show
ers southeastern Oregon. Precipi
tation mostly occurring Wednes
day and Saturday.
Blood Bank
Donors Needed Monday
A Positive 2
A Negative 0
O Positive 6
O Negative 1
B Positive 1
Rare types needed on call:
AB Positive, AB Negative.
Donors are requested to call
Lane Memorial Blood Bank
for appointments on Fridays.
Lane Memorial Blood Bank,
790 E. 11th Ave., Eugene,
phone DI 5-0336. Open 12:30
3 p.m. standard, 1:30-4 p.m.
daylight, Monday, Tuesday
and Thursday. Friday by ap
pointment. Closed Saturday.
Agreement Signed
BANGKOK I Thailand and
the United States have signed
an agreement for joint construc
tion and use of international
communications facilities for ci
vilian and military aircraft
southeast of Bangkok, officials
report.
TRADE
AFFILIATED WITH
NATIONAL TALENT
AfiENCIKS
This may be your
chance!
Industrial Interest
In APower High
By JESSE BOGLE
or the United Press International
NEW YORK In the past
year, one plant joined the op
erating list of nuclear-powered
generating facilities devel
oped by investor-owned electric
companies in the United States,
and changes in other figures
show the high degree of inter
est the companies maintain in
future developments in this
field.
Creating a nuclear-powered
generating facility is not a rush
job, and perhaps more signifi
cant than the figures for plants
in operation are the changes
from 1961 to 1962 in the num
bers of plants under construc
tion, in preliminary planning,
or under consideration.
A recent report from the elec
tric companies public informa
tion program gave some meas
ure of the activity, short and
long range, shown by utilities
in the growth of nuclear-powered
generating.
The report was issued as of
June, 1962. Taken in compari
son with the last previous edi
tion, issued in April, 1961 or
approximately 14 months earli
er, here is what it showed:
Latest addition to the operat
ing reactor group was that of
the 5,000-kilowatt experimental
Saxton reactor, at Saxton, Pa. It
was built by the General Pub
lic Utilities Corp. on the Penn
sylvania Electric Co. system.
The Saxton reactor went "criti
cal" last April 13, although full
operation was not scheduled un
til later this summer.
Five other reactor plants in
which electric companies are
participating are slated to go
into operation in 1962 and an
other in early 1963.
They are listed as under con
struction or design.
In 1961, Saxton was in this
category, but has moved up to
the operational group. Including
Saxton, last year seven plants
were listed as under construc
tion; in 1962 there are eight.
The 1962 additions to this cate
gory are in widely-separated
parts of the country: The 40,000
kilowatt Peach Bottom reactor,
being constructed on the Phila
delphia Electric Co. system; and
the 325,000 kilowatt Bodega Bay
plant under design by Pacific
Gas and Electric Co.
In the 1961 report, the Peach
Bottom project was listed as un
der design.
Listed in the 1962 category of
preliminary planning or nego
tiation are a Southern Califor
nia Edison Co.-San Diego Gas
and Electric Co. project, a 375,
000 kilowatt unit, and a New
England Electric System proj
ect of 300,000 to 350,000 kilo
watts. A year ago the Southern
California project was under ne
gotiations and the New England
project was in the planning
stage.
Two more now classed as un
Deputy Commander
UNITED NATIONS in
Swedish Maj. Gen. Carl Gunnar
Ferdinand, 60, has been named
deputy commander of the U.N.
force in the Congo. He will
serve under Ethiopian Lt. Gen.
Kebbede Guebre.
BUTTERMILK
All you can
drink ior ...
10e
Echo Spring's
PATIO PARADISE
BKMisn DAinv nnivr-iN
ON COIIL'KO ROAI1
COME AS LATE AS
SHOW TIME FOR
GOOD SEATS
OSTlANO't
MEMORIAL COLISEUM
Tuts. Aug. 14 thru Sun. Aug. 17
All Saall nres!
$3.50 $3.00 $2.50 $2.00
To. ImM.a'
2 Sham Dilly-2:30 PM I 1:00 PM
2 Shorn Sundar-1:30 PM 1 5:10 PM
CHILDREN under 11 T.
Vi PRICE oil psrlormancsi
We. tttn M. Metie
Moil Orders filltd Promptly
OPENING DAY, AUG. 14
SOLD OUT I
Tiffceti Uf H (iiirfarmoMfti,
II . twttpt OH"'l 0t,
T , Awfl. 14
HOW TO OR0M T MAIL
Wat riMr yt' WfMOtlAf
co. mow, poMicAei a. Off".
air tick), flat na tie M'ff")"'
f:tm tf tick ttvtirtxt. IH' v"kf
O-laj' Hif-PV l.rtsMi, pint "'
ftatMl Ml-rsMrtM4 ! for ff
ftwr f ftftctl.
der consideration are the Nut
meg Electric Co.'s atomic proj.
ect and the Jersey Central-New
Jersey Power and Light com
panies. "Whether they will be built,"
said the report, "depends up
on competitive considerations.
Their significance lies in the
fact that both are recent pro
posals for large-scale plants, and
as such, they may reflect an
increasing interest in commer
cial nuclear power projects."
One project which was in the
"under design" category in the
1961 listing, however, fell by
the wayside. It was a project of
the East Central nuclear group
and the Florida
nuclear group.
West Coast
"TOMORROWS STARS"
All-Talent Contest
Ail talent In all age groups is In
vited to audition dally 2:30 to
4:00 S. T. at the Carriage Trade.
Fill out entry blanks at Broad
way Coffee Shoppe, 159 E. Broad
way, Starts Monday, Aug. 13.
Phone Dl 3 6511.
errill's
a Marauders
THE COUCH
I Presented by WARNER BROS.
H f JEFF CHANDLER hardin
H PETER WILL ANDREW ClAUPC
BROWN - HUTCH1NS - DUGG AN- AKjNS
CO-FEATURE
Bl
Join Umpqua Dairy and the Jeff's Collie gang
Atfiftl
1963 SYLVANIA CONSOLE TV
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Hurry... This Is a Limited Time Offer
Here' vniir rltfltir In crl a liraiiliful Tinval
Doctors, Lawyers,
Students, Housewives
mm
Feature Times
MONDAY TfESnAY
(Times listed ar Pacific Standard
Time. Persons observing; daylight
time should add one hour to each
time listed lo find the starting time
of movies.)
FOX Merrill's Marauders, U:35,
4:10. 7:5(1: The Couch. 2:20. t, 9:35.
I1KII.IO l.ollta, 8:30. Ai.
McDONAI.D nirdman of Alca
traj. 1:10. 3:50, :35. S: IS.
McKENZIE (Siirlnsfleldi Littlest
Outlaw, 7:30. Bon Vovage, 8:45.
EUGENE DRIVE IN Short sub
jects. 7:45. The Music Man, 8:45.
MOTOIl VU DKIVE IN (Spring
field 1 Big Red, 7:50. The Uvlng
Desert, :50.
NEW EUC.ENE DRIVE IN (Glen,
wood) The Sad Sack. 8. 11:40. TIM
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Off the Payroll
TEHRAN, Iran ( The shah ;
has taken his son, Crown Prince j
Rcza, off the government pay-!
roll and from now on will sup- S
ply his salary out of his own I
pocket. i
WVM THEATRE
Hy. 99W. 1H Ml. N. of O Pass
Open 7:00 H- Show Dusk
STANDARD TIME
TONIGHT
llurpM UiirMru
JtnRY WAID'S praMlen of
JOANNE WOODWMII
TWO BIG
KIDDIES
DAZE
with Tackl & Little Tic
Wednesday & Thurs.
DOUGLAS
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AUGUST 15-19 ROSEBURG
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PLUS a new 1963 SYLVANIA TV at a real saving
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always easy to park in...
Sea Cow Netted
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast (Pi
Fishermen from the port of
Grand Lahou have netted a
manatee sea cow weighing
more than 300 pounds and
measuring 13 feet.
BASED ON THE BOOK BY
TOM GADDIS of EUGENE
BURT .MASTER
BIRD MAN OF O
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MAIDEN - RITTER - BRAND
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CHILDREN 10 to 12 SOo
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5th & Main RI 6 6523
EUGENE
846 OUva DI 4-0331
How did they ever
make a movie of
LOLITA
?
mm it ik rtooxra cue iwiaxiura
Open 6 P.M. Movie 6:30 DST
HURRY. ENDS TUES.
Plus "Littlest Outlaw"
rbroa-vu oniva-in thmtii
TONIGHT
BOX OFFICE OPEN 7 p.m. P.S.T.
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