The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, January 02, 1964, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
The Bulletin, Thursday, January 2, Ify 5JSferS fjgfjf fQ S0 ) their cAcAe7 COOp
GOP solons push medicare plan
By Richard C. Langworth
UPI Staff Writer
LONDON (UPD-Two elderly
cella, 85, and Ella, 78 are
expected to be in an old peoples
home within a week.
"A place like that shed, with
pillows are old burlap sacks
stuffed with leaves.
A candle provides the only
li0htlng. The floor is made of
broken red bricks coated with
mud. There is no sanitation, no
water and no heater. When the
wind blows, the chicken coop
quakes and rocks.
A small vegetable garden pro
vides part of the sisters' needs.
Money for their frugal shopping
comes out of a savings account.
The sisters said they lived in
the shed out of choice. They
have nearly $2,240 In savings
and don't even draw their old
age pensions.
Both Had Colds
The light of publicity shone
on them today at an embarras
sing time. Both sisters were in
bed with colds their first,
they said, in the 30 years they
have been in the shack.
A recent cold snap drew auth
orities' attention to the case.
The manager of the farm on
which the shack stands, Gian
Bisceglia, went to the shed to
check up on the women and
found them both ill.
Bisceglia, who often brings
food to the Misses Finnigan,
telephoned police, who called a
doctor. The doctor said both
sisters were in good health for
their age and appeared well
fed. But public health officials
also came to see them and or
dered that they be moved.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Six
Republican senators are push
ing a public-private plan of
health benefits they believe will
provide a basis for ending the
congressional impasse over
medical care for the aged.
In a statement Wednesday,
the GOP senators said they
would introduce legislation in
the new session of Congress to
make full use of private re
sources and initiative as well
as Social Security financing.
The measure is based on rec
ommendations of the National
Commission on Health Care for
the Aged formed in 1962 at the
suggestion of Sen. Jacob Javits,
R-N.Y.
Sponsoring the legislation with
Javits are Sens. Clifford P.
Case, R-N.J., John Sherman
Cooper, R-Ky., Kenneth B.
Keating, H-N.Y., Thomas H.
Kuchel, R-Calif., and Margaret
Chase Smith, R-Maine.
The administration medicare
proposal for financing health
care for the aged through an
increase in Social Security
taxes is bottled up in the House
Ways & Means Committee.
. It has encountered sharp op
position from some Republicans
and the American Medical As
sociation, who say it would be
a step toward socialized medi
cine. sisters in nearby Hemel Hemp
stead fought today to stay in
the unlighted, unheated chicken
out the remotest kind of com
fort, could not possibly be a
home for anybody," local health
coop they have called home for
30 years.
officer Dr. R. S. Hynd said.
"Nobody will take us from
here," Miss Marcella Finnigan
Have Been Happy
But Marcella. a native of Ire
said defiantly as the winter
wind whipped through gaping
land, said she and her sister
have been "the happiest people
on earth" since the day 30
years ago when they took up
squatters' rights on the shack.
cracks in the shed's board
walls.
"It would kill us to go into
a stuffy home."
But local officials, who called
conditions in the old henhouse
horrible, have applied for a re
moval order under national wel
fare laws. The sisters Mar
Rags and brown paper only
partially block holes in the
walls. The sisters sleep in a
double bed made of boxes nailed
together. The mattresses and
RECOGNIZED George D. Craig (right) of Madras, USAF
airman third elasi, is presented an honor graduate certificate
by Major L. F. Richason, his new commander at Holloman
Air Force Base, N.M. Airman Craig, 18, was in top 7 per cent
of jet engine maintenance class at Amarillo AFB, Texas. Son of
Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. Craig, Madras, he is graduate of Crook
County High School, Prineville. He is now assigned to 366th
Organizational Maintenance Squadron at Holloman.
The public' has made no great
rush to return to stock market
By Jesse Bogua
UPI Staff Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - One of
the wishes made by the stock
brokerage and trading commu
nity at the start of 1963 will
have to be brushed off and re
vived for 1964.
It was the expressed hope
that "the public" would return
to the market in the same num
bers and with the enthusiasm
with which it entered in 1961
and early 1962, before the May,
1962 slump sent many scurrying
for cover.
There were a few glimmer
ings in the last quarter; some
hopeful figures on the openings
of new accounts. But an infor
mal survey of four leading
Top officials
not affected
in auto cuts
WASHINGTON OJPtt - The
Military Establishment's fleet of
199 chauffeured cars will be re
duced to 110, but none of the
best known officials will be af
fected, the Defense Department
said today.
In strict Pentagon parlance,
only 10 of these vehicles are
called "limousines," although
the rest look snappy enough to
deserve such designation.
The 10, all rented, will bo re
tained in service for the mili
tary and civilian chiefs of the
Army, Navy and Air Force, the
commandant of the Marine
Corps, the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff and the secre
tary of defense and his deputy.
A Pentnnon spokesman said
he was unable to identify the
89 officials, mostly in Washing
ton, who will lose the luxury of
being chauffeured to their ol
Bees and official Catherines.
The spokesman said this had
not been determined, indicating
thai a lot of people in high
places are wailing lor Hie econ
omy axe to fall.
Tho chauffcrcd cars are one
of the most coveted of the extra
benefits that go with high posi
tions. In the Military Establishment,
tho chauffeured cars now are
provided for tlnee-aud-four-star
generals and admirals, for pres
idential nppoinlees such as as
sistant secretaries of defense,
and for some other officials
will) Influence and prestige.
President Johnson has ordered
a sharp eulbnek in tho uso of
limousines in all government
agencies.
Ho called for a reduction
throughout the government from
491 to 130. It was not entirely
certain how many of the De
fense Department's cars were
Included in tlieso figures.
The Pentagon said its staff of
chauffeurs would bo rut in pro
portion to the reduced number
of cars, which would mean a
reduction of about 45-pcr cent
Increase due
in jet flights
SEATTLE (UPI) - Nonstop
Jet flights from hero to Tokyo
will be increased from one to
four per week by Northwest
Orient Airlines, It was an
nounced Wednesday.
An airline spokesman said the
nonstop flights in Hoeing 707
Jets, which began on a onoc-n-wcek
basis In November, will
bo increased to four per week
by May 24. The flights now go
every Saturday and are sched
uled to be added on Tuesdays,
Thursdays nnd Fridays.
The Seattle-Tokyo flights will
orlginnle in New York, make a j
landing at Chicago, land at Se
attle and then take the 5,000-
mile North I'ncific route to ,
Tokyo. I
brokerage houses indicated
there was no great rush by
"the public" to reenter the
stock market.
"Through the third quarter,
the public definitely was stay
ing out," said a spokesman for
ona of the largest stock broker
age houses in the world. "But
there were signs in the last
quarter of reviving interest."
"Public interest has not come
back to anything near the ex
tent that it was in 1961 and
early 1962," said another.
A third said that between
September, 1962 and September,
1963, the public s accounts with
his house showed selling on bal
ance almost day in and day
out.
"It changed last September
somewhat, but not drastically,"
this source said. "On, say, 15
out of 20 days there would be
buyng on balance. October was
fairly good; November could
not be taken as any measure
ment, because events made it
a spotty month.
"Maybe in December one day
was one way and one another.
But there has been nothing like
Will."
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner
& Smith, in its recent review
of what its branch managers
called the 10 top business news
events of 1983, noted, however
that the stock market rebound
had carried the averages to all
time highs during 1963 in rec
ord volume although much of
the public remained on the side
lines. "The public" in this case re
fers to the persons in the mar
ket, other than the institutions
such as investment and insur
ance companies, funds, founda
tions and trusts, or the mem
bers of the exchanges.
In its recent study of trans
actions for one day of the mar
ketlast Oct. lfith's perform
ancethe New York Stock Ex
change found that by percent
age, public individuals account
ed for 53.4 per cent of the
shares bout and sold in round
nnd odd lots on the exchange,
the highest figure since June,
1959, when tho percentage was
53.5. The market was going up
on that particular day.
This study showed that per
sons earning less than $10,000 a
year accounted for 15.9 per cent
of the public individuals' vol
ume, lowest of 12 studies made
by the exchange. The exchange
attributed this to the fact that
there has been a relative de
cline In the number of U.S. fam
ilies earning less than $10,000 a
year.
Multnomah has
no polio in '63
PORTLAND (UPI) For the
first time ever, there were no
reported cases of polio In Mult
nomah County for a period of a
year.
The Slato Board of Health al
so reported only two paralytic
cases for the entire state in
1963. Another one occurred, but
the victim recovered.
The absence of the dread dis
ease in Multnomnh County was
credited to mass Immunization
programs.
It's
94
in
64
everytime!
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