K jS iHLJ CjKsS o 'Hri - wto. jjrjjgjj 1 rOsir-1- f i LJ d hh a avfrriso i o coN"- I J Nfv L- , V'fii.LiHi0 J-gciTNJ- iliL"1 J T" rTir D PJJ D ALASKA n REPUBLICAN D "JS 1 vC I 0 HAWAII I I DEMOCRAT v' i"- L. S I I ELECTED PREVIOUSLY DEMOCRATS CONTROL STATE HOUSES Riding the crest of President-elect John F. Kennedy's victory wave, Democrats won IS of the 27 gubernatorial posts at stake, including the big Illinois and Michigan prizes. GOP candidates won governorship races in 12 states. The new national state house lineup, see Newschart, will be 34 Democrats and 16 Republicans compared to last year's 33-17. Post-holiday shoppers will find wide array of foods The following guicni to the na tion's plentiful food buys for the week ending Nov. 26 was prepared for United Press In ternational by the U.S. Depart, ments of Agriculture and In terior. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Post holiday food shoppers will find a plentiful array of first-rate foods to choose from this weekend. Turkeys continue one of the outstanding buys, along with broiler-fryers. Red meats will be plentiful, too, such as beef roasts and steaks, and in pork, roasts, chops and bacon and hams. Many markets will feature legs of lamb and lamb chops as budg et Items. Dairy products also re main in abundant supply, with many choice items to choose from. At the vegetable bin, most old time favorites are still available. These include brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, cucumbers, onions, potatoes, sweet potatoes, turnips, radishes, squash of sev eral kinds, snap beans, celery, and lettuce. Many markets have good supplies of green peppers and- carrots. In the fruit line, look for excel lent supplies of cranberries, grapes, pears, apples of numer ous varieties, oranges, grapefruit, lemons, limes, bananas and avocados. Emergency action is urged to establish medical care SALEM (UPI) The governor's advisory committee on the federal-state medicare program Wed nesday recommended "emergency legislation" introduced early in the 1961 legislature to establish the program in Oregon July 1, 1961. The committee's preliminary finding estimated cost of the pro gram at $13 million a biennium, with half coming from the federal government and the other half from the state and counties. Share of the counties was esti mated at $850,000 a year. The!committee estimated that between 55,000 and 65,000 persons in Oregon over 65 would be eligi ble for the medical care pay ments. The preliminary report calls on the legislature to designate the State Public Welfare Commission to administer the program. Eligibility requirements for the aid include Oregonians who: 1. Are not eligible for old age assistance. 2. Have annual incomes of less than $1,500 or $2,000 (or a married couple. 3. Have assets other than a home, personal effects and insur ance cash values of less than $1,500, or $2,000 for a married couple. The preliminary report will go to affected state agencies and private groups for reaction before the committee makes final recom mendations. Final Report Jan. 1 Committee chairman Joseph Harvey Jr., Portland, said the committee hopes to have its final report for Gov. Mark Hatfield about Jan. 1. Other recommendations: Bring Oregon law in conform ity with federal law on medicare. That the state welfare agency make direct payments to vendors for benefits needed if eligible per sons so desire. That each eligible person be given the option of purchasing and-or continuing a health insur ance policy toward the cost of which the welfare agency would pay up to $8.73 a month. That such health insurance policies be subject to advance approval by the welfare acency. That medical benefits be es tablished as follows: A Benefits not to exceed those defined by the Public Welfare Commission as "minimum adequate" for existing welfare programs IB Benefits to include all necessary physicians' services with a $100 per case de- LIVE ENTERTAINMENT MINNEAPOLIS IVPP -in the window of a local bar: TV. Fights every ni(jhL" Sign "No MIDDLE WEST In fish, plentiful items include both fresh and frozen shrimp and scallops, also fish sticks and por tions. Now for a more detailed report I on plentiful foods in this area: West (Arizona, California, Ida ho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, TTijlll Wfishinrrti-Hi Wvnmitidl. ... bw.., . Plentiful supplies of turkeys and i cranberries are available this I week. Supplies of red meats are i aitiD e for the demand. I There is a plentiful supply of ready-to-cook fryer chickens, egg supplies are lighter and higher in price, and a fair selection of fresh fruits and vegetables is available. j rnces on rea meats ana poul try are mostly unchanged from a : week ago. Egg prices have again ad- j vanced and are 1 to 4 cents a j dozen higher in all Pacific Coast j markets. j Ample supplies of butter con- j tinue unchanged in price. Plentiful frach fmiic onrl xiarta. ! tables include apples, pears, cran berries, bunched vegetables, cab bage, cauliflower, celery, lettuce, dry onions, squash and tomatoes. In good supply are avocados, grapes, grapefruit, lemons, or anges, corn, peppers, potatoes, and sweet potatoes. In fish, the best buys are sal mon, halibut, rockfish, cod, and dungeness crabs. ductible and a $2,000 per year maximum (C) Benefits to include 31 days per year hospitalization at $10 a day for room and board and 80 per cent of cost of other ! hospital services, $2,000 per year maximum, and (D) Benefits to include $5 a day for nursing home care after hospitalization. Man's recovery from cancer baffles doctors BREMERTON. Wash. (UPI) Every lick of the clock adds bonus second to the life of Joseph : W. Mayerle, 39, tavern manager. I This life bonus now totals more than 18 months for Mayerle, a World War II veteran who Was told he had incurable lung cancer in April, 1959. j Doctors have yet to determine how the cancer disappeared, and Mayerle doesn't know either. Ho is certain only that he has never j felt better, and his last X-ray Nov. 8 showed not a trace of the disease. ' "On my last check-up at the Veterans' Hospital, they told me I was in fine health," Mayerle said. He said he works about 15 hours a day at the tavern he manages. Mayerle has only a few hours each day and Sundays to enjoy his 13-month-old son, the child he never would have seen if his can cer had worsened instead of mys teriously disappearing. ' Mayerle discovered he had can cer in the early spring of 1959. He hadn't been feeling well, his appetite was poor and he was los ing weight. "I thought I had a very bad cold when I checked into the hos pital," he explained. "At first the doctors thought I had pneumonia and they drained considerable wa ter off my lungs. Then they de termined it was cancer and op erated. They found the cancer had progressed too far to be cor rected by surgery and sent me home to die." But instead of dying, Mayerle was determined he would live to see the baby. He decided he would live as normally as possible, and he ate whatever he chose and as much as he wanted. "Cancer patients who are told they don't have long to live are inclined to give up. They lose their appetite, don't eat properly and go from bad to worse," he said. NORTHEAST nS3 Ml COLOR FITS MOVIE HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Adver tised on the marquee of a local movie theater: "The Nudist Story, In Blushing Color." h jjj & i if! $3 a i ut . i a - i m r ii x i it - ii iiif ii f s . x i i i. . w y . i ki. x t i, . buua iui kudi wa u : ik' Iuii m ammwiB virrirti -nm mh - -11 -' r,i -,-.r ru, uuAiiiiiiA'ui.:u a S1 1 rat aHlim Jl iijMutive Magazine LoacH! l&fV 16mm Camera yi 2 Standard Lens and Telephoto lift REG- frB&m SAlE! II I&129.50 M MS' i REG- M OS8 I f? 78.00 WW ; i Electric Eye Camera 4 t- 'y Keystone K-4 8mm Turret 7JWJ v Keystone K-23 AX Capri J - I 8mm Camera I I REG. C 88 . I i A ' I A I A' . ' Zeiss Ikon Plastic r Kodak " 35mm Camera ; Chevron Camera ; ; With Flash ; Save! reg. 88 ; reg. QQ88 ; 39.95 198.00 v iraniis TliraS-Wise , ir.ii,,! I, l Hl- Ulilin (in, nil ! j The Bend Bulletin, Thursday, Nov. 24, 1960 19 i ! Observers see 'foil shower' over wide area CHICAGO (VPII Observers j over a wide area of the Midwest reported sighting brightly lighted j objects ui the predawn sky Wed-1 nesday and it appeared that most of them saw a "foil shower." I There were other objects in the skv to attract Ule attention of ob- servers. A giant weather balloon was launched from Sioux Kails. S.D., and a Tiros II weather sat- ellite soared southeastward over ; (he Atlantic from Cape Canaveral ! about the time the foil drop was seen. The balloon was in western I Iowa when most of the sightings ; were made. The Tiros satellite j was over Uie sea. The Tiros can not be seen by the naked eye. Reports of the object came from , Ohio to Iowa. i Weathermen said the foil drop was made by a high-flying jet plane in the Detroit area. The foil, used by the Air Force to jam radar, was lighted by a sun still below the horizon to the fighters. I Air Force authorities said the ! object was the balloon. But most kEar AFTER-THOUGHT HOU.YWOOD 1 1 Til Two decades alter iompoer Alfred Newman cruised (lie South Pacific he put his feelings of the trip to music. The eight time Oscar winner combined his talents with choral director Ken Darby in turning out -port of Para(iise" (or Capiloi jpford, 11 a on the foil snowor explanation. ; In. Washington, an Air Force 1 spokesman said Pentagon officials conferred by telephone with the North American Air Defense Com ; mand at Colorado Springs, Colo., and Truax Air Force Base. Mad- i ison, Wis., and concluded that ob servers had seen the balloon . launched at Sioux Falls. Air Force I officials said the balloon appar ently got into a jet stream. I At Chicago, an Air Force spokes man said airport control towers had confirmed the Weather Bu reau's tin foil solution. He said (he tin foil is dropped from planes to blank out portions of radar scanning sets with a mass of ra-1 dar echoes. The spokesman said he had received no official Air I ' Force opinion on the object. 13 All New Merchandise Drastically Reduced Just In Time For Christmas Savings! Bell & Howell 8mm 220 Movie Outfit Includes Bell & Howell 70 DR Model Reg. $385.00 Bell & Howell Electric Eye 1 Bell & Howell 8mm Camera I 8mm Camera Turret Model I 220 Model Reg. 7088 I Reg. C.88 129.50 J 39.95 HHHBMWI mBKinmiiigBMU Bell & Howell Bell & Howell Magaiine Load Magaiine Load 16mm Camera 16mm Camera Model 200 Model 200 Turret- Reg. OA88 Reg. IQ88 119.00 ou 209.50 107 IlJonaiinelTEIectris Kod.k Rotary 8mm Camera Flash Holder Reg. QQ88 Reg. 088 79.95 J7 10.95 L Argus C-3 Camera Now Reduced! 44 88 REG. 74.50 President-elect reported devotee of touch football By Dick West UPI Stiff Wrlttr WASHINGTON (ITU There's a lot of speculation going on now as to who will be in the Kennedy cabinet. 1 think wc also should give some thought as to who will play on his touch football team. As you undoubtedly know bv now, our president-elect is a de olee of this particular sport, as are several other members of his family. They love to gather on (he leensward and throw the old lull around. It seems logical to assume that, once he gets in the White House, Kennedy will do for touch foot hall what Eisenhower did for golf. And we all know what Ei senhower did for golf. There has been some talk that Kennedy would remove Ike's putt ing green from the White House lawn and replace it with a foot ball field. However, (he president elect has remained silent on this subject, so at the moment it is still in the realm of conjecture. Would Seek Invitations Assuming that this does happen, many of our politically and so telephoto lens and case. AC light bar, two flood lamps, deluxe luggage-type case. REG. 89.95 16mm Camera SALE! $19388 A Ansco Memar 35mm Camera Sale) 2a 3 88 REG. 39.50 dm. cially minded citizens will be cla moring for invitatiuns to play touch football with Kennedy. Some of them reportedly have al-' ready gone into training. It occurred to me that there may be some people who are not t lamiliar with the game, so I I thought I would digress here long enough to explain the fundamen tals. Basically, in touch foolhail you pass on every play and tag the runners instead of tackling them. In some parts of the country, the game is known as "pass ball" and "touch tackle." It is popular with amateur athletes because you don't need much equipment jus! a football and a vacant lot. or a big back yard. I Predicts Royally Hike if you want to know more alxnit the fine points of the game, you can buy a book on touch football. written by John V. Grombach, at many sporting goods stores. 1 predict (hat Grombach's royalties will sharply increase in the next fi w months. Yashika 44 Camera Twin f:35 Lenses 21 88 REG. 29.95 IV" Viewmaster Sy. feW Personal Sterea W Camera Outfit K Includes Camera, Case, Close-up attachment, and flash attachment- REG. 123.75 j fife, i an- $4Q n Keystone K-25-Capri 8mm B Movie Camera j i35mm Camera 1 Walz 35-S " I ml j 35mm Camera ii with fl:1.9 lens iff j REG. JOS8 1 99,50 Mnm5 'fi 1-7 AUTHOR ARRESTED Norman Mailer, 37, author of "The Naked and the Dead," is in a New York police sta tion following his arrest on charges of stabbing his wife, Mrs. Mailer was reported in critical condition, and had been stabbed during a party at her home, saying at first she had fallen on brolen glass, but later admitting be ing stabbed. tin For Speed Graphic Form Grip Save over $1 1 REG. JW 34.95 m& ,,iii,,,..?M.i!y S&H Green Stamps Free Delivery v4 i (