Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 05, 1957, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Gi
o
O
-G
c
o.
CAB Asked To Exert
Authority Regulating
Plane Test
Washington tU.F5 The Sen
ate Commerce Committee has
called on the Civil Aeronautics
Board to exert immediately its
authority to regulate plane
flights over crowded city areas.
The committee Monday un
animously approved a resolution
directed to the board after re
vising it to include flights like
those which led to the Pacoima,
Calif., tragedy last week.
Remote Areas Suggested
feP fighter and an airliner,
bothr on test flights, collided
over a crowded Pacoima school-
yard. Eight persons were killed
depression Signs
Seen by Hoover
Washington - U.R For
mer President Hoover warned
M'inday night he can "detect
the sign' of a hair-curling de
1 pressvm because "mine has al
ready been curled once."
O o Mr. : Hoover, whose adminis-"-trajlon
w the beginning of
ljL tri list great depression, said
O (ties aifna ere visible in the
-v ;turrent inflationary trend. He
q2i blamed the trend on "pressure
C iroaps" and government spend
O cta--
"Tw do not need to be told
that volets inflation is stopped,
th and ta bump," he said in
preen to the third National
Reorganization, Conference.
Mr. Hoover cited Treasury
c Secretary George M. Hum.
phrey's recent warning that con
tinual big federal spending
could1 lead to a depression "that
O Will curl your hair."
Unless inflation is curbed "on
its wayup," Mr. Hoover said.
O "old " man economic law will
return with a full equipment of
hafr curlers."
G President Eisenhower pre
Gsented the 82-year-old Republi
can c"el6r statesman" a cita
tion. -at the conference for the
"incalculable good" Hoover has
3 dor n promoting government
al reforms.
The Family Council
Editor nat: Taa Family Council consists of m Judge, a psychiatrist,
tfir clergyman, a newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writers. Each
article) 11 a aummasjr of an actual report. The Family Council does not give
advice; It merely reports a problems Uiat nave been dealt with by responsible
agencies and counselors
GlorjtvD. I, want Larry to
Hake a white-collar job.
O Larry D. I like the work I'm
doing.
O
Cfcloria D-Iy husband and I
. are now separated after a mar
riage of ten years because he is
too much under the domination
of his parents. I am very un
happy 'about th separation be
cause of our two children and
because I really love Larry, jet
I am miserable with him.
You see, Larry works like a
slave for his parents at heavy
manual labor. It is dirty, ex
hausting work. He comes home
looking lilee a worn-out bum. I
am not used to seeing a man like
this.0
Mi father and my brothers are
white-collar workers and Larry
Vias the education and personal
ity to be the same. He worked
ad a satejtrmn for a while and
as quite successful, but he
. gave up this job to go back to
wcjfk for his parents. Hours
mean nrtthing when he works for
them. They squeeze every drop
ofclaSor out? of him, as they do
out of thetr two other sons.
COi've ,fld Larry I won't come
barlt, unless fee takes a white-Ocolajir-job.
oo
r Larry D-I love my wife and
children, but I feel Gloria is be
Qing unfair and stubborn about
tins. She is so stuck-up she just
(Bjoecn't like the neighbors to see
O me eorrte home ih dirty work
clothes, but I m not ashamed. I
make an honest living, a better
one-than I could make as most
white-collar Jobs.
O My parents do not dominate
' nvc. as Gloria says. I have been
- sreeustomed to this heavy work
O o sine I waa a boy. As a matter
O Of fact, I missed it when I work
ed a j g salesman. don't enjoy
. seHtngx?-
My parent don't exploit my
bgjtrj anei me, either. We kid
O around a lot during the day.
Maybe3 re waste a lot of time.
U U
o o
C3 ,
The Fabulous
Town and
2 for 1
Is in Fuji Swing . . . Never Such Savings
DONT MISS ITI
- All Sales Final No Charges
Town and Country
"Specialty Shop"
EAGLE POINT, OREGON
Flights
including three school children.
In the Houe, Rep. Edgar W.
Hiestand (R-Calif.) asked Con
gress to support his demand that
the CAB designate remote areas
for test flights to prevent air
collisions. He introduced a
resolution similar to the Senate
committee version.
Chairman Warren G. Mag
r.uson (D-Wash.) said the Senate
committee staff has reviewed
the civil aeronautics act and is
convinced the CAB has the
necessary authority to regulate
all types of flights.
Magnuson said he undersands
the board has agreed informally
to "look into the entire situa
tion." Quick Approval Seen
If the board tells the com
mittee it needs additional legal
authority, Magnuson said, "I'm
sure" the committe will send it
to the Senate floor "immediate
ly." He said he believes such
a measure, if needed, would
be approved quickly by the
Senate.
The CAB Monday appointed
two examiners to conduct hear
ings into the California col
lision and the crash of a North
east airliner at New York last
Friday. The times and places of
the hearings will be announced
later.
Talent Girls Taking
Course in Care of Sick
Talent Senior girls at Talent
High school are now taking a
six-week course in Home Care
of the Sick and Mother and
Baby Care. The course is re
quired for all senior girls.
Home Care of the Sick in
cludes procedures believed to be
needed most frequently for the
sick at home, school officials ex
plained. Emphasis is placed on
care and comfort of the bed pa
tient, giving of food and medi
cine and simple treatments or
dered by the doctor.
Mother and Baby Care is giv
en in preparation for the future
life of the girls in the home, of
ficials said. Training is given in
preparation for motherhood and
care of the child after its ar
rival. Then the work has to be done,
so we stay overtime. Gloria
won't believe my parents don't
force me into this.
Someday my brothers and I
will inherit a good business and
we'll be able to hire others to do
the heavy work.
The Council: Both Gloria and
Larry are being extremely un
fair to themselves and their chil
dren by not making concessions
to one another. They have every
reason to have a happy marriage
and home life and will find no
greater happiness apart.
Gloria is wrong to insist that
Larry is being dominated by his
parents when he shows so clear
ly that he enjoys his work for
them and has many advantages
by sticking to it. She is being
very snobbish and very foolish
when she places a white-collar
job above manual labor. Many
white-collar men would give up
their jobs for more money and
better opportunities for the fu
ture if they had the chance to
do so and the ability to perform
this kind of labor.
On the other hand, Larry rec
ognizes that his wife has a right
to object to his long hours. She
has a right to his company at
the end of the working day. He
should quit his goldbricking in
the middle of the day and com
plete his work at a reasonable
hour.
He might also make the con
cession of washing up and shed
ding his work clothes at his
place of business. Many men do
this. Wives like their husbands
to look presentable, not only for
the sake of the neighbors, but
for themselves.
There is no reason why Gloria
should not respect her husband's
labor or why Larry should not
respect his wife's preference for
a "white collar" outside of
Working hours.
(Copyright 1357, General Fea
tures Corp.)
Country
SALI
British TV Film Shows Birth of Baby; Few Phone Calls
U.P.) The British
Broadcasting corporation t e 1 e
vised a film showing the birth
of a baby Monday night.
Most viewers agreed it was
done with remarkable tact, but
the dissenting tabloid Daily
Sketch quoted a "father of two"
today as saying BBC was turn
ing television "into an ultra-sensational
horror comic."
The BBC said Et noon it had
received a total of eight tele
phone calls following the pro
gram. Six expressed disapproval
and two were in favor. The BBC
switchboard usually is flooded
with calls if viewers dislike a
program.
One of Every 42
Oregon Teen-Age
Workers Injured
Salem tU.R) One of every
42 Oregon teen-agers in indust
rial employment in the past year
was subject to a work injury,
a summary of reported minor
accidents completed by the
State Bureau of Labor shows.
Labor Commissioner Norman
O. Nilsen said the frequency
rate of minors accidents was
slightly below that of the pre
vious year although 1,179 more
industrial jobs were held by
teen-agers in 1956.
Most on Laborer Jobs
The tally showed laborer jobs
as the occupation in which most
accidents occurred, followed in j
turn by food-processing, restau
rant, automobile servicing and
construction occupations.
Five per cent of the accidents
recorded logging and sawmill
work where most jobs are pro
hibited to minors by child labor
laws. Employed girls improved
their usual high safety record
with only one out of every 197
reporting an occupational in
jury, compared with one out of
every 27 male youths.
Hand Injuries Common
The most common work in
juries to minors in the year's
records were hand cuts and
bruises, infected fingers, sprain
ed backs, eye irritations, punc
ture of foot and occupational
dermatitis with such serious in
juries as fractures, amputated
fingers, face burns, concussion,
hernia and crushed hands in
scattered cases.
Nilsen said one-third of the
teen-agers suffering work in
juries in 1956 were hired illegal
ly since their employers failed
to secure work permits for their
employment from the Bureau of
Labor even on types of jobs
which would have been' ap
proved. Barnes Hospital
Expansion Sought
Washington (U.R) A new
750-bed Veterans' Hospital to be
built on the grounds of the pre
sent Barnes hospital in Van
couver, Wash., was called for
in a bill introduced today by
Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D
Wash.) "The present overcrowding in
the Vancouver area makes the
hospital one of the most needed
in the nation, Jackson said,
"and, unless a new and better
hospital is built, the situation
will grow worseduring the next
five years." "
The proposed hospital would
replace the present wooden
structure, built as a temporary
hospital by the Army in the
early days of World War II.
Co-sponsors of the bill were
Sen. Richard Neuberger of Ore
gon and Sen. Warren G. Mag
nuson, of Washington.
The new plant would increase
the hospital s capacity by more
than 250 beds and would in
clude improved medical and
neuro-psychiatric facilities.
Retirement Pay for i
Presidents Opposed
Washington (U.R) A senate .
approved bill to give living ex
presidents and future retiring
presidents S25.000 yearly in re-,
tircment pay faces an uncertain i
fate in the House. I
- Rep. James C. Davis (D-Ga.),
who played a key part in kill- j
ing a similar bill last year, in- ,
dicated today he will try to j
block the measure again if he
gets the chance. j
"They have gone crazy on the j
subject of giving away the tax
payers' money," ' Davis told a
reporter. "There are only two
ex-presidents. Truman and Hoov
er, and neither of them needs
the money."
Davis was chairman of a
House Civil Service Subcom
mittee which last year buried
a presidential retirement bill
ppssed by the Senate and much"
l:ke the measure the Senate ap
proved Monday.
IMS
o
Doctors Voice Protests
The birth of the baby came as
part of a program in which "na
tural birth" expert Grantly Dick
Read defended his system
whereby the mother helps guide
the baby into the world a sys
tem opposed by London doctors.
One of the doctors present
said after the film, "I wouldn't
like any patient of mine grop
ing around trying to help her
baby out." The doctors were not
identified in line with British
Medical association policy.
The film showed the mother
on her back, her knees up, the
baby already half born. One of
the two doctors guided the
MEDFORD
m m m mm
over 85 brand new prints!
RONDO PERCALE
Pick Rondo for fashion, freshness,
easy-care! Watch it bloom into
cafes, skirts, dresses! Toss this
high-count cotton in your washer
. . . sea it emerge fresh for an
other round of hardy wear.
DEEP SET
CRINKLE
P L I S
"Dainty,"
prints .
plisse.
"charming" are the words
. Fresh, pretty patterns
TUFTED
NYLON
SHEER
You'll find heap of carefree virtues in tufted
nvlon . . . Suds and dry ... no ironing necessary.
COLORFUL '
TERRY CLOTH
New arrivals in lovely Spring prints and plains . .
5ew and save on baby things, robes, sportswear!
LUXURIOUS
DESERT GOLD PRINTS
Discover how qlamorous Qold can be in sportswear
. . . modern draperies . . . machine washable, F J
crease-res isranT, presrtrun..
SANFORIZED
REGULATED COTTON
Crease resistant perfectionist prints, unmatched
for styling, quality and color.
PENNEY'S OWN
PENNSHEEN
Beautiful prints, stripes and matching plains in
urease and spot resistant cotton gabardines. 36"
vide.
Deliriously Cool and Airyl
NYLON CHIFFON SHEER
Luxurious to see ... to touch . . .
easy-to-suds, quick drying beauty
destined for all fine feminine
fashions ...
mother's hands and handed her
the newborn babe as a smile, of
bliss spread over her face.
Mother Was Anonymous
The mother was an unidenti
fied South African who volun
teered when the film was made
in Johannesburg last year. She
agreed to its being shown any
where in the world except
South Africa.
The Daily Sketch was the only
newspaper to protest. It carried
a headline "Revolting By a
Father of Two" over a story by
Alan Gardner.
"Revolting! Beyond the pale!
I condemn the BBC for the
worst lapse of taste ever," Gard
ner was quoted.
39
Yard
39
S E
for these new
in easy-car
yd
79
98
yd
yd
69
71
yd
1
19
yd
79c
yard
Soft Pastels
f
Tuesday, February 5, 1957
They showed us a baby be
ing born in all its stark, primi-!
tive detail. All right. We were1
adult. So the children were in .
bed when the program was on.
Viewer 'Sickened'
"But there are some things
which should never be shown on '
television and this was one of
them. It sickened me. It sickened
my wife.
"I did not see my children
born. I didn't want to though
I respect the motives of those I
men who do. I
"But to blazon the moments '.
of childbirth on television j
screens is to turn television into '.
an ultra-sensational horror!
comic."
WATCH
NEEDLE 'N
Packs More Styling, Color, Quality In One
Lovely Assortment! Sanforized, Too-!.
Exclusive Penney cottons abloom in florals for dresses, pais
leys for sportswear, decorator-inspired prints for yonr home !
Cottons that combine such fashion with thrift ... such baauty
with good behavior (sanforizedt, machine washable) . . . such
elegance with easy care! Its performance gives you extra hours
of leisure, its durability keeps the fashions you sew
beautifully. Compore anywhere . . . It's not the 49c you pay, but
the quality and styling at Penney's that makes them outstanding.
tmaxinram shrinkage 1
NEED A NOTION?
PENNEY'S HAS EVERY SEWING ACCESSORY YOU COULD POSSIBLY WISH FOR
Coats boilfast mercerized thread Q Mapic-tab Talon 10" dress J
100 yards : OC placket zipper , O arC
Colorful bias tape - "JJ 700 yards dressmaker thread JO
A sewing must .... 6 yards IOC 50-60 ' ' ' O afC
Color galore in decorative ric-rae Decorative buttons to spice 1ft )
6 yards IwC your prettiest creations lUC'akalW
wVj rH
Mi 111 Ml;
textured cotton!
PETTI-POINT
79
Yard
Charming cotton prints and
matched solids . . . crisped
and casuals or dressy as you
please! Such easy care . . .
crease-resistant, machine
washable!
Express Disapproval
DRIVE-IN CLEANERS
'TOUR CASH AND CARRY CLEANERS"
' ft FASTEST Q BRIGHTER
SERVICE W CLEANING
All Your Garments In Plastic Bags
2 Convenient Locations
844 S. Riverside
FREE FORD
See "FRONTIER DAYS" KBES-TV
Pick A Famous
Penney Cotton . . .
IT GROW IMTO V MIUI
. W
THREAD BROADCLOTH
SILK-A-NUB
ELEGANCE
98
Yard
Luxurious to see ... to touch
Penney's rayon-and-silk fab
ric blend! Machine washable,
cease-resistant prints with
dyed-to-match solids.
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREK
702 West Main St.
TICKETS
Every Wednesday. 10 p.m.
"V
49
WELCOME
"CUPIONI"
98
Yard
The blend that beautiful fash
ions are made of (combed
cotton plus bemberg rayon)
in a new fabric with the look
of silk. Crease-resistant, ma
chine washable.
1 "j -3
1
HI THINGS! i
1
f
3