Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 23, 1958, Image 16

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A MAIL TWJNft ,
I, Men Jay, June 23. 1958
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ACTUAL EXPENDnreilf
0 PRIOR YV&IS
1955-56V 15MT
0
$05,000.00
920.00
30,27iJ)0
4,000:00
f,00.0
700.01
FISCAL TEAR 1957-58 FISCAL YEAR 1958-59 BUDGET
Actual Budget
U Mm. 1957-58 Cod Object Item
SEWAGE DISPOSAL BOND SINKING FUND
ft f 000.00 $ 5.000.00 J-iuoji uonas neaeemea
Allowance
1958-59
300.00
500.00
... $ 5,000.00 .
43E10632 Interest 300.00
43E10645 Transfer Apt Bd. Constr. Fund 5,964.00
Investment
$ 36,191.00 $ 6,190.91
ft 8,100.00 $ 5,500.00
Estimated Balance July 1, 1958
Estimated 1958-59 Receipts
Total!
.$ 50,937.00
$ 11,264.00
o
total Istimated funds Available 1958-59 $ 50,937.00
Tax Levy: None
$ 28.061.14
7,848.29
'C345.'78
$ 28.000.81
ff.lW.t
315.2ft
ftS.tO
IMPROVEMENT BOND FUND
f 1 000.00 $ 40,028.00 51E10631 Bonds Redeemed
ft'147.18 . 51E10632 Interest
I J500.00 51E10633 Bond Sale Expense
... Lien Report
. Warrants Paid
$ 36,255.21 34,683.
f 11.847.18 S 40,528.00
Istimated Balance July 1, 1958
Estimated 1958-59 Receipts:
Special Assessments
Totals
...4193,917.00
.$ 50,000.00
....$ 40,000.00
... 8,150.00
300.00
S 48,405.00
feiej Istimated Funds Available 1958-59 $243,917.00
Tax Levy: None
0
$ 9,000.00
$ 2,000.00
130.00
CONSOLIDATED BOND FUND
,, Bonds Redeemed
Transfer General Fund
130.00
Balance July 1, 1958
Totals
None
$ 201,000.00
: 36,000.00
100.000.00
39,000.00
Z.. 16,000.00
22,000.00
ZZ. 36,000.00
36,000.00
; 4,000.00
234,000.00
Trunk : '- 60,000.00
STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS
CITY OF MEDFORD, OREGON
July 1, 1958
Airport
Armory Construction
Arterial Streets
Fire Department
Jaekson Bridge &
Library
Park Improvement
Sanitary ij2wer
Sewage Plant
Storm Sewer
Sewage Disposal 10,000.00
Camp White Sewage Disposal 240,000.00
Water System Enlargement z.aau.uuu.uu
Kenwood Water District 39,000.00
Grandview Water District 107,000.00
Improvement Bonds 278,000.00
Water Main Bonds 28,419.23
Improvement Warrants
(Water and other as of April 1, 1958) 177,579.12
Total ....-...$4,213,998.35
RECEIPTS:
Water Revenue - -
Service Connects. 9c Work for Custmrs.
Eauioment Rental
Connection fees
Water District Operation
Sale of Forest Products ....
Rents
Interest
Miscellaneous
Estimated Cash on Hand 30 June, 1958
Total .
EXPENDITURES:
Operating Expenses .
Franchise Taxes
Interest on Bonds
Capital Expenditures
- Increase in Inventory of Supplies .
Transfer to Water Bond Sinking Fund
Transfer to Wter System Const. Fund
Total Expenditures
WATER FUND
1 July, 1958 to 30 June. 1959
Actual Actual - Actual Estimated Estimated Estimated
1155-58 1956-57 1st 7 mo. Last 5 mo. Total Budget
1957-58 1957-58 1957-58 1958-59
$355,286.93 $376,598.73 $245,609.30 $153,040.00 $398,649.30 $398,250.00
3,349.42 6,207.70 702.78 200.00 902.78 900.00
0.00. 473.00 73.30 0.00 73.30 75.00
5,560.00 1,785.00 1,975.00 640.00 2,615.00 1,600.00
8,109.81 7,839.05 . 2,998.41 2,150.00 5,148.41 5,150.00
31,821.86 32.04 . 5.00 1,500.00 1,505.00 3,000.00
240.00 240.00 140:00 100.00 240.00 240.00
1,553.78 2,830.12 889.78 1,300.00 2,189.78 2,000.00
10,368.90 2,909.88 173.50 0.00 173.50 0.00
$416,290.70 $398,915.52 $252,567.07 $158,930.00 $411,497.07 $411,215.00
1 171,407.74
' ,
$582,622.74
ft
$114;617.85 $135,473.68 $ 81,841.62 $ 68,128.00 $149,969.62 $162,765.00
3,5,00.00 3,559.50 2,896.06 1,380.00 . 4,276.06 4,550.00
57,025.00 57,667.50 56,757.50 1,977.50 58,735.00 -56,372.50
84,280.41 197,687.93 148,661.12 57,440.00 206,101.12 305,800.00
15.157.33 65,135.91 (35,422.29) (10,000.00) (45,422.29) 0.00
13,200.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 4,760.00
0.00 0.00 0.00 20,000.00 20,000.00 0.00
$287,780.59 $459,524.52 $254,734.01 $138,925.50 $393,659.51 $534,247.50
$ 48,375.24
ESTIMATED BALANCE 88 JUNE, 1959.
BUDGET MEDFORD WATER COMMISSION
WATER SYSTEM CONSTRUCTION FUND
1 July, 1958, to 30 June, 1959
RECEIPTS:
Transfer from Water JTunt
Interest
AssessmntsA runfc Water Mains...
Sale (5 f blgtariel :
.- $
0.00
1,911.88
7,823.00
0.00
0.00
1,993.26
0.00
21,769.64
$
0.00
768.34
0.00
11.00
$ 20,000.00
1,456.43
0.00
0.00
$ 20,000.00 $
2,224.77
0.00
11.00
0.00
2,250.00
0.00
. 0.00
Total Rffaipts
Estimated CasA en XaxI SO June, 1958-
.. $ 9,734.88 $ 23,762.90 $ 779.34 $ 21,456.43
$ 22,235.77 $ 2,250.00
$126,081.87
Total
$128,331.87
EXPENDITURES':
New Construction
$103,709.95
Total Expenditures $103,709.95
ESTIMATED BALANCE 30 JUNE, 1959..
$ 1,889.60
$ 1,889.60
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
$128,331.87
ILLINOIS VALLEY
Jubilee Plans Announced
o.
By RUTH RAUSCH
Cave Junction The annual
Illinois Valley Jubilee will be
handled this year by the three
veteran organizations "and the
auxiliaries with a chairman
and alternate chairman ap
pointed from each of the organizations.
Representing the American
Legion will be Howard Yar
brough with Dr. Stem the al
ternate. VFW has appointed
Al Mellow and Frank Mellow
as alternate. World War I
Veterans group has Blake
Miller as chairman with Pal
mer Lovejfly alternate. C. Y.
Arnold is finance chairman
and-Ed Sturgis secretary.
Any single girl between the
ages of 16 and 20, who wants
to be a candidate in the
queen's contest is to register
at Hazel's Dress shop.
Organizations t r e asked
again to sponsor one of the
eirls. Tommy Owens will
have charge of tickets and
contest data." All contestants
will receive a percentage of
the tickets she sells. Anyone
desiring to have a concession
) should contact Dr. Stem.
A ""meeting of the repre
sentatives will again be held
Monday. June. 23, in the VFW
hall at 7 j.m. to fiiscuss fur
ther plan
The Pfefferles have broth
er Paul of Klamath Falls with
them for tin-dey stay. Mrs.
Pfefferle krother, David
Flaherty, nd daughter, Kath
leen, are expected Saturday
from'P$man, Wash.
Flaherty plans to stay for
only a tf&t of his vacation
now and will return later in
the summer, when he will be
joined by his wife.
Mrs. A. G. Clarke of Glen
dale. Ore., sister of Mrs. Blake
Miller, was a guest this week
end at the Miller home.
Major and Mrs. Frank M.
Trner of Salem left Thurs
day morning after being with
the Blake Millers for the past
week. Turner is in the sani
tation department of the
Army and will embark for
Honolulu from Seattle June
26.
Mrs. Turner is the former
Barbara Williams of Salem
and a niece of Mrs. Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lemm
of O'Brien have purchased
the George Webb place and
will take possession as soon
as Webb's new home is com
pleted.
Mrs. Lemm and her son re
cently moved up from Green
ville, Calif., at the close of
school when he graduated
from high school there. For
many years, Mrs. Lemm was
manager of the school cafe
teria.
The real estate transaction
was handled by Margaret
Crowl and Valerie Rauber of
Spieth Realty.
Richard Rauber left Friday
for Albuquerque, N.M., where
he will be with his brother
and family, Don. Rick ex
pects to work for the summer
before entering the Univer
sity of New Mexico this fall.
The Illinois Valley Cham
ber of Commerce will hold
its annual dinner and meeting
at the Eagles hall in Kerby
next Wednesday evening with
the social hour starting at
7 p.m. The newly elected of
ficers will take office at that
time.
Invitations to the affair are
being sent to presidents and
secretaries of other chambers
of commerce in the area. Spe
cial guest will be Senator
Randolph Collier of Yreka,
Calif., who has been working
for the improvement of Route
199 on the California side of
the border.
The dinner committee is
headed by Carl Spieth with
Allen Markley, Lew Krauss
and Mmes. Ken Hamilton and
Howard Bearss assisting.
Clement Y. Arnold Jr., son
of Mr. and Mrs. C. Y. Arnold,
has been granted a govern
ment scholarship in science to
'Reign of Terror
Exists in Hungary
United Nations, N. Y.
(UPI) The U.N. Hungarian
Investigating Committee said
Saturday that a "reign of
terror" has existed in Hun
gary ever : since Russian
troops struck down the revolt
in November, 1956.
The five nation committee
which last year condemned
Russia for its brutal suppres
sion of the Hungarian free
dom revolt, called on all gov
ernment to provide any in
formation they may havejeon
cerning the arrests, trials'and
executions of Premier Imre
Nagy, Gen. Pal Maleter and
two other leaders of the rebellion.
Klamath Falls Editor
Gets Voorhies Award
Corvallis (UPI) Frank
Jenkins, publisher of the
Klamath Falls Herald and
News and the Roseburg News
Review, Friday was named
winner of the Amos E. Voor
hies award for 1958 at a din
ner meeting of the Oregon
Newspaper Publishers associ
ation.
The award cited Jenkins for
his work in "industrial de
velopment" of Southern Ore
gon. In presenting the award,
Alton F. Baker, publisher of
the Eugene Register Guard
and 1955 winner of the award
referred to Jenkins as a "one
man industrial commission for
Southern Oregon."
Oregon State college. Arnold
received his master's degree
from the University of Ore
gon in 1955, and is now a
science instructor at Philo
moth, Ore.
He is scheduled to start
classes June 23, and the work
will be credited toward his
doctor's degree.
Arnold, with his wife and
children, is visiting with his
parents this week before be
ginning his summer classes.
Illinois Valley Grange 370
honored past masters at their
regular meeting Thursday
night held at the Grange hall
in Bridgeview, Master Ed
Morris presiding.
Past Master Charles R. Mc-
Clintock of Grants Pass and
Past Master Bill Conroy ' of
Deer Creek Grange were
guests honored as. well as
five past masters from
Grange 370, Art Kellert, John
England, Ed Morris and
Mmes. Elsie Cook and Ruth
Wendt.
The candidates . for initia
tion scheduled for the meet
ing were unable to attend.
The degree team conferred
the first degree, full form,
with two courtesy candidates,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Conroy of
the Deer Creek Grange. Mrs.
John England . prepared the
tableau, exemplifying spring.
The ceremony was pictur
esque with the team in the
full costume of floor length
calico dresses and sunbonnets
for the ladies and overalls,
blue denim shirts and red
bandanas for the men.
Tentative plans were made
to hold initiation ceremonies
for the proposed candidates at
the first meeting in July. Cor
sages for the ladies and but
tonnieres for the men pre
sented to the past masters
were made . by Mmes. Clay
Ramsey and Lucius Robin
son. A potluck supper under the
direction of the Home Eco
nomics chairman, Mabel Ram
sey, was served' before the
meeting.
About 19 million checks are
written in the U.S. on an
average day, and the average
face value of each check
figures out to about $30.
BIG CLEAN
Red Fir Slabs
$100 400 u-
tJm LOAD
PHELP S FUEL
SP 3-5878
Drive for Atomic Plant at Han ford Turns First tap
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Mail Tribune Correspondent
Washington The drive of
Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D
Wash.) to have an atomic
power plant
built at Han
ford, Wash., to
supply energy
for the North
west Power
pool has suc
cessfully made
the first lap.
The legisla
t i v e subcom
mittee of the
atomic energy
A. Bobt Smith
congressional
committee has added to the
atomic authorization of $145
million for construction of a
"convertible" plutonium re
actor. The term "convertible"
means that the reactor will be
built to produce plutonium at
the outset, and later, after de
signing has been complete, it
can be converted to produce
electric power as well." This
will convert it from a single
to a dual-purpose " reactor as
Jackson has long advocated.
Total Cost
Total cost is expected to run
to $245 million. It will take
about four years to build.
No figures have been re
leased on the amount of ener
gy this reactor could produce.
But a report issued this spring
by the Atomic Energy Com
mission indicates that a reac
tor costing about this same
amount ($256 million) could
produce both plutonium and
700,000 KW. That is compar
able to two-thirds the output
of a major Columbia river
dam like the . John Day
project.
The AEC has in recent
years been, opposed to con-
OUT OF THE DEEP A Polaris missile emerges from the
water off San Clemente Island, Calif., climbs into the
sky (center) and 100 feet up (right) the dummy warhead
leaves the main section of the missile. The Polaris is Tie
signed to be launched underwate, from a submarine.
Shah of Iran
In San Francisco
San Francisco (UPI)
Shah . Mohammed Reza Pah
levi of Iran was a visitor to
San Francisco today, but it
appeared his schedule would
give him little time to look for
a bride. .
A round of luncheons, re
ceptions, dinners and sight
seeing was drawn up for the
Shah' during his four-day
visit. In between, he planned
to meet Iranian nationals liv
ing in the San Francisco Bay
area. . ,
The Shah arrived Sunday
from Honolulu. Among those
gathered at the airport to meet
him were Prince Goodarz Ar
med Bakhtieri, 33, first cousin
of the Shah's former queen,
Soraya.
The prince said he saw no
prospect of a reunion between
his cousin, and the Shah,
either in the United States or
in Europe.
NO CURSING
Syracuse, N. Y. (UPI)
City Traffic Bureau women
clerks asked for and got a po
lice guard after the chief clerk
Mrs. Carmen Peppone, com
plained many persons paying
traffic tickets paid up only
after cursing the city, the gov
ernment, the police and the
women clerks
f
Sea Lion Escapee
Sought in Lake Erie
Toledo, Ohio (UPI) A
playful sea lion which slipped
away from a London, Ont., zoo
last week, was believed today
to have put out into Lake Erie
after a casual romp up the
Maumee river here.
The slippery fellow, which
apparently was struck by a
sudden yen 'for far places and
slid under a fence at the Can
adian Zoo last Tuesday, was
last seen frisking down the
Maumee on Friday with pa
trol boats in futile pursuit.
"We are going to make an
attempt to catch him," said
Toledo zoo director Phil Skel
don, but he said there was a
possibility the animal had
made its way back into Lake
Erie.
Skeleton said if the sea lion
were sighted, zoo . officials
woul'd try to "shoot" it with
an aluminum syringe filled
with a tranquilizer drug.
structinz this Droiect. But
Jackson laid the groundwork
for a switch in their position
by holding hearings early this
year on whether there was a
need for increased production
of plutonium for weapons.
The joint chiefs of staff testi
fied that there was.
Logical Move '
All plutonium is produced
at Hanford and Savannah
river, so the logical move was
to increase production by in
stalling new reactors. Jackson
argued that it would be prac
tical to build dual-purpose re
actors so electric power could
be generated as a result of the
heat caused by atomic fusion.
Now four of the five com
missioners of the AEC are in
favor of Jackson's plan for
building a convertible reactor
at Hanford. The fifth commis
sioner, Chairman Lewis L.
Struss, is leaving the AEC the
end of the month.
The AEC had, in fact, in
cluded the idea in its atomic
program for the coming year,
but the Budget Bureau took
it out of the authorization bill
before the president sent it to
Congress some weeks ago.
Now the legislative subcom
mittee has put it back in the
bill.
It is possible that, as in re
cent years, there wifi be an
other fight between Republi
cans who oppose the federal
government building atomic
power plants and Democrats
who favor the idea. ' This
makes the outcome for the
Northwest project uncertain.
But it is now in the most
favorable position it has ever
been, and the prospects of it.
being approved appear bright.
KEITH'S
Ornamanlal Iron
111 I J
Let us show 70a how to riv
your home m completely new
appearence, inexpensively, with
our beautiful Ornamental Iron!
Free Estimates Ph. SP 3-3581
2231 Orchard Home Drive
BUT DIRECT and SAVE!
In many states the will of
an unmarried woman is con
sidered to be rovoked when
she marries.
j -
New Class July 7
ROBERTSOII SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
40-42 N. Riverside SP 3-4264 Mcdfore', Ore.
VoN
Now our dry cleaning features "Built-tit
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u that keeps your garments free of of
fensive perspiration odors between cleanings. :
Make your own discovery to-day. let ut
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They are also MOTHPROOFED and
MILDEWPROOFED . . . all at no txfro
OSf.
Medford Cleaners
34 North Holly
Phone SP 2-6500
Registered letters were first
accepted by the U.S. Postal
Department in 1855.
Lost time is
lost money!
A Ir-aKliig poof. Clogged gaiters.
Worn wiring. A warped window
or door. Many people think house
hold repairs are minor matters.
Tbcy keep patting them off.
Bat Might doeset wait. It feeds on
small flaws, spreads stealthfry
through neglect and carelessness.
Delay caases greater decay, more
costly damage. A bouse can grow
shabby much .quicker than yosi
think. A minor repav bi9 cast
mushroom into a major expense
before yov know k.
Stay alert. Tfcne fc moae. Keep she
smpie things from becoming seri
ns in your home, in your neigh
borhood. A few run-down houjci
can be the beginning of a shm...
lower your property values, sob
yoc of local business and school
opportunities.
Ac today. Keep mp your home,
join your neighbors in OHrimtinky
xrjprovemeat groups. Encourage
others by your example. Start now
by writing for useful, effective in
formation to:
lirrrprc Our Neigh Lo hotxJa
Bex 500, Rafft City Station, UT. 28, UT.
Publrshed as a pabflc service la coopersflai
with The Advertising Council and the News
paper Advertising Execotives Assoetatioa.
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