rOUHTETlf MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Thursday. January 23. 1958
r
10-Year-Old Mother Hasn't Asked To See Baby Born Tuesday
PLANNING EARLY MARRIAGE, Actress Paulette God
dard and Author Erich Maria Remarque meet at New York
airport after she quit role in Detroit play. (International)
Registration for Classes Is Open
ing, radio workshop, Spanish,
music appreciation, blueprint
reading, mechanical drawing,
art appreciation, drawing and
sketching, water color paint
ing, sculpture, industrial arts
project, show-card writing,
childrens' games, figurine and
textile painting, beginning
photography, rocks and min
erals, electric arc welding,
driver training, nurses' aide
course, and nutrition course.
Registrations still are being
accepted for adult education
classes sponsored by the Med
ford school system, according
to Lindsay M. Vinsel, director
of adult education.
He said commercial sub
jects seem to be popular, but
registrations are lagging in
some courses offered. Ad
vance registration is neces
sary, he noted, to determine
whether sufficient adults are
interested to hold the class.
Residents wishing to regis
ter for a class may telephone
Vinsel at SPring 3-5341 to
enrol!. Registrations will be
accepted today, Friday and
Saturday, he said.
Courses offered include
clothing, garment alterations,
advanced sewing techniques,
pattern making, lamp shade,
millinery, cake decoration,
general mathematics, -advanced
mathematics, conversation
al English, business letter
writing, beginning typing, be
ginning bookkeeping, begin
ning shorthand, public speak-
San Francisco BP! A 10-
year-old San Jose, Calif.,
school girl, who gave birth
to a seven pound boy Tuesday
night, still doesn't realize
what happened." according to
officials at St. Elizabeth's
Shelter.
The third grader, of Span-;
ish-American ancestry, was j
carrying her doll when she !
was brought to the Catholic j
home for unwed mothers a
month ago. She was delivered j
by caesarean section. ;
Dr. Chester L. Cooley, chief
of the medical staff of St.
Elizabeth's hospital, said both
the mother and the baby were
in good condition, but pointed
out that the girl hasn't even
asked to see the child.
"We will leave that up to
her, of course," he said. "It's
her baby, and if she wants to j
see it she can."
Aiked for Orang
The doctor said the 85
pound mother asked on the
delivery table if it would
hurt.
The youngest such case in
medical annals was that of a
5V year old Peruvian girl
who gave birth some years
ago. A nine-year-old Negro
girl gave birth in Little Rock,
Ark., last summer.
Sister Celestine of St. Eli
zabeth's said the San Jose girl
came to the hospital as a ward
of the Santa Clara County ju
venile court.
The girl charged that the
father of her child was Harry
N. Lee, 29, her mother's com-
monlaw husband. Lee denied
the accusation and pleaded
innocent to charges of lewd Sister Celestine said the
and lascivious conduct in su- girl's mother may adopt the
perior court last week. His baby as her. own, but said the
trial is pending. future of both the child-moth
er and the baby will be de
termined by the court.
The nun said 61 other in
mates of the shelter, all un
wed mothers, have made a pet
of the child and "mothered"
her during her confinement.
"She's had more attention
here and better food than she
ever had in her life," the nun
said. "I think she'll adjust
very well."
Maria Callas Cancels
Eddie Fisher IV Show
Hoftywood OPi Miss
Maria Callas, who walked off
the stage in Rome, has
cancelled her appearance on
the Eddie Fisher television
show here next month.
Miss Callas blamed re
scheduling of her appearance
at New York's Metropolitan
Opera for Feb. 6 for the can
cellation. She said she will
be in rehearsal Feb. 4, the
night of the Fisher show on
NBC.
TOM
thumb
MIDGET PRICES
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY 4 SUNDAY
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79
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MIDWAY MARKET
Phone NO 4-1 511 JMltl
Neuberger Sees
Little Chance of
Toll-Free Bridge
Washington API A bill
drafted by two Washington
senators to make the Portland-Vancouver
interst ate
bridge toll free by using fed
eral interstate highway funds
to finance it today was given
little chance of success by
Sen. Richard L. Neuberger
(D-Ore.).
The proposed measure 'au
thored by Sens. Warren G.
Magnuson and Henry M.
Jackson would grant Oregon
and Washington two alterna
tives to use future federal
highway aid funds to pay off
bridge financing bonds, or to
be reimbursed by the federal
government for all highway
improvements under 10
years prior to enactment ofi
the Federal Interstate High
way Act. The second alterna
tive would cost an estimated
S6 billion across the nation.
Chances for Aid Dark
Neuberger commented that
chances for federal aid for
the Oregon-Washington bridge
were "very dark indeed."
He said when Washington
State Highways Director W.
E. Bugge testified before the
Senate Public Works Commit
tee "he failed to persuade the
Committee that the highway
departments of the two states
acted with wisdom in float
ing the bonds for that bridge
on the eve of Congressional
passage of the highway bill,
which would have authorized
the bridge for 90 per cent fed
eral aid." t
The Oregon Senator also
observed that the Magnuson
Jackson bill would extend the
bulk of its benefits to the
eastern states with their miles
of toll turnpikes, at the ex
pense of western states
where toll roads are a rarity.
Neuberger suggested the
states or Oregon and Washing
ton should pay off the bridge
bonds with receipts from gas
taxes and license plate fees.
Wage and Hour
Vacancy Fil
Salem Wl The appoint
ment of Mrs. Eugene S. (Kay
Meriwether) Kelty, former
state representative from
Multnomah county, to the
State Wage and Hour Com
mission was announced
Wednesday by Gov. Robert D.
Holmes.
Mrs. Kelty, now a resident
of Rockaway, succeeds Mrs.
Frederic W. Young of Port
land on the three -member
commission which fixes con
ditions of employment of
women and minors. Her term
expires Jan. 9, 1962. -
The new commissioner is a
Democrat who served on the
House Labor and Industries,
Fish and Game and Social
Welfare Committees while in
the Legislature. She was born
in Oregon City and attended
Portland schools.
Gov. Holmes also appointed
Dr. Anton L. Latham, Port
land chiropractor, to a va
cancy on the State Board of
Chiropractic Examiners. He
succeeds Dr. Robert A. Wood
of Klamath Falls, who died
last week.
Portland (TO Michael
R. Henderson, 2, suffered
critical burns Sunday night
from a gas stove burner. His
mother told hospital atten
dants the boy apparently
climbed onto the stove off his
hieh chair while his parents
were out of the apartment
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