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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1958)
They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo MOVE THE PUPNlTUQE.' H MMyE4H4 LITTLE CONCPETE WILL FIX THIS- ; H4MO ME THE H4MMER WHEPE'S THE TROWEL ? SCALPEL SUTURE CLAMPS VtXJ'O TfllNK HE VV4S BUILDING .4 HOSPIT4L.' I'M GETTlN' CX IT PC MFCF RFCfiPF HE WRECKS THE JOlrtT.' . A WHO'S OOT 4 PULER ? H4VE WE COT 4 r. XSSi. HITS Ji? "IHE d GOTT4 H4RMESS HIS A x". Y; WVjSE Ljf7 CQ-GO-OO WHILE HE'S j TA. rVkTvJ IN THE MOOD HE'S (7 f'-ifO 'V1'' 'I BEEN STDPINQ UP R iVffeA H4MMOCK All. lU L4ST TIME X4 f I r- i liven ill SO MUCH CEMENT HE PL4STERED UP A DOCK WAV SO IT WOULDN'T GO TO WASTE.' HIM SOMETHING RIGHT ACROSS HIS. W4vy SKULL S-T.8 VS'SAV I I V I Who ever named iT4,DO-rr-youRSELF"? Thamx AHO A TIP Of . The family Council Editor's note: The Family Council consists of a Judge, a psychiatrist, three clergymen, a newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writers. Caen article is a summary ot an actual report. The Family Council does not give advice: it merely reports on Droblems that have been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. Sally S. I'm afraid to elope. Dick V. - I don't want to wait any longer. Sally S. - I am 20 years old, the eldest of a family of six. I am very much in love with a man I've gone with for the past year and a half. Dick is 28 and has a good job and wants to get married right away. When I told my parents I wanted to get married they hit the roof. My father says I'm too young, and that I should be working and con tributing to the family's sup port for at least another five years. My mother says that Dick Is too old for me. ,1 now give my parents about three fourths of my salary. Dick wants me to elope with him and we made our plans, but at the last minute I lost my nerve. I don't want to make my parents angry. I'm afraid they'll never speak to m again. But I don't want to lose Dick. Dlek V. - I told Sally if she doesn't elope with me very soon, I'm just going to give up. I don't think it's at all fair of her parents to try to get us to wait five years. Even though we've known one another only a year and a half, it seems to me like five years already. I realize I'm a lot older than Sally, but Just the same I think she's old enough to get married and I don't want to wait much longer. My par ents like Sally very much and are In favor of our eloping. I think Sally's parents just don't want to lose her yet. But they've got to some day. Besides, it's unfair that they take so much of her money. She should be allowed to save something for her own home. Her parents will ruin her life. The Councils If Sally Is giving a true report of her parents' position, she is in deed, in a very unfortunate spot. Her father's demand for money for the support of his children is unfair and her mother's argument that Dick is too old is a very flimsy ex cuse. In spite of this, we feel Dick should try to ease up a bit on his pressure for an im mediate elopement. If he sincerely loves Sally he will give her a little more time to understand her own feelings and arrive at a decision. Sally, on the other hand, should try to reach a clear cut decision quickly and not keep Dick on the string. Most individuals have some doubts and hesitations about marriage. - In a . happy home with intelligent and coopera tive parents, a girl like Sally would have a chance to talk out her feelings. If her par ents had no reasonable ob jections to the young man, they would probably give her a little encouragement or ad vise her to wait until she feels more certain. Sally cannot talk things out with her parents because their position is completely un reasonable. The normal amount of anxiety any girl might feel before marriage is intensified by her fear of her parents' anger. Possibly Sally has a notion that her parents are right - that she's too young, Dick is too old, and that she really ought to spend the next few years contribut ing to the support of this family. t If Dick keeps applying pres sure, Sally will be forced either to give him up or to marra. him in violation of her own conscience. Without pres sure, Sally will be free to try to fully understand her own feelines and her parents' atti tude. If she decides she real ly wants Dick, she should recognize that she is within her riehts and .should find the courage to tell her par ents so. (Copyright 1958. General Features Corp.) Pooling Prison Facilities Aired Denver (DP8 Governors and attorneys general of 13 western states and Hawaii are studying plans today to pool prison facilities for better care of women and maximum security convicts. " The plan was agreed to Tuesday by Govs. Steve Mc Nichols of Colorado, Milward Simpson of Wyoming and George Clyde of Utah at a meeting here. It would permit a state to confine an inmate in an in stitution in another state if he could be handled better there. The state where the convict was sentenced would pay for his care and maintain jurisdiction over him. The plan will be submitted to governors and attorneys general for study and it will be placed before the Western Governors Conference and each of the western state leg islatures. It must be approved by two or more contiguous states. U. S. TO SUSPEND TESTS President Eisenhower an nounced in Washington that the United States is ready to suspend tests of nuclear weapons providing Russia does not resume its tests and agrees to negotiate a world test ban. The President's announcement followed close on the heels of an agreement reached by scientists of eight nations, including the U. S. and Russia, that an interna tional ban on the testing of nuclear weapons could be policed effectively. . . Slum Clearance Money Available Washington - (LTD - Presi dent Eisenhower Wednesday made available $2 million of federal funds for slum clear ance and urban renewal. His action followed failure by Congress to approve an administration-proposed housing bill calling for a six-year pro gram of federal aid for urban renewal totaling $1,300,000, 000. The money Eisenhower re leased will be allotted to var ious cities by the Housing and Home Finance Agency. It has received applications from cities for about $400 million worth of slum clearance and urban renewal. Reserve Officers School Planned Ashland-The Navy reserve officers' school at Southern Oregon college will go Into its second year of operation this fall, according to Com. Leren E. Messenger, adminis trative officer of the local school. Courses in Navy leadership, instructed by Lt. Com. Eugene W. Bowman, and in organiza t i o n for national security, taught by Cmdr. Marshall E. Woodell, will be offered. Bow man is professor of mathema tics and education at the col lege and Woodell is professor of social science. Registration for the courses will be Tuesday, Sept. 2, at 8 p.m. in room 203 of Church hill hall. Classes will meet every Tuesday evening in the same room from 7:30 to 9:30 fc'clock. Officers may earn 12 promotion and r e t i r ement points for the 20-week ses sion. Further information may be secured from the administra tive officer or any instructor at the school. Chrome Producers Plan Meeting Saturday Members of the California Oregon Chrome Producers as sociation will meet at tht American Legion hall in Cave Junction Saturday, Aug. 30, 2 p.m. All interested persons may attend the meeting, at which time results of the death of the Congressional mineral and subsidy bill will be dis cussed and future procedural plans will be outlined. Pro posals for continuation of chrome mining without fed eral aid will also be discussed. Grange News... GRIFFIN CREEK GRANGE Griffin Creek Grange will meet tonight. An open program will pre cede the meeting. This will be recreation night, and the program will start at 8 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Davies from Australia, who are guests in the Sturgill home, will speak. Grangers and friends are welcome. A short 'business meeting will follow. Shadows fo Leave For Fair Sept. 5 The Shadows vocal group, talent winners at the recent Kiwanis sponsored county fair, will leave Sept. 5 to compete in the Oregon State Fair in Salem, according to Rus Jamison, local. fair man ager. , Members of the vocal group attend SL Mary's High school in Medford. Leader is Paul Smith and members are Tom Newcomb. Clare Mansfield, Bill Smith, Mike Feiss and Rick Carrara. Mrs. Mary Car rara, Medford, will accom pany the group. They will ap; pear on the state at the state fair on Saturday, Sept. 6. Accredited judges of the talent contest here were Mrs. Scott McKendres, Klamath Falls; Mrs. Chester Main, Tulelake, Calif., and Mrs. E. A. Bay, 156Ya Third St., Ashland. WARNER IMPROVES Cannes, France- (ITD-U. S. movie magnate Jack Warner, 66, who suffered a skull frac ture and crushed ribs in an auto accident here Aug. 5, may be released from the hospital in "several weeks," his doctors reported Tuesday. ... ;v - v i "J?SS all HOLDING 19TH CHILD, 9 pound 12li ounce girl, Mrs. John Gallagher, wife of $70-a-week laborer at Mahopac, N. Y., says she feels "very well." She is a grandmother. Porllander Raps Tax Support Idea Portland-flJPD-S t a t e Rep. Shirley Field (R-Portland) said Wednesday she had seen a press release from former state representative Keith Skelton of Eugene suggesting that Portland taxpayers should pay part of - the cost of Portland State : college. Skelton is again a candidate for the state Legislature. - Miss Field released the text of a reply sent to the Eugene Democrat in which she made a counter suggestion that Eu gene taxpayers should sup port the University of Oregon. Miss Field's letter said Portland State college draws students from all parts of the state, not just from Portland. She added, "I assume this is the situation at the Univer sity of Oregon as well as Ore gon State college." The first medical school in America was established In 1751. MAIL TRIBUNE, Mad-ford, Oregon, Thursday, Aufurt 21, 1 958 9K DEFIANT Governor Orval Faubus (left), after a meeting with the Little Rock Scnow tsoaru, in uwe -, indicated that he and the school board could not get to gether on means to keep Negroes out of Central Bgh SchooL School SupL Virgfl Blossom (right) i said, We. agreed to explore every legal angle" to keep from lettmg Negroes into the school. - r mum mmmmam Qm Jy- f SUNBEAM If - rD i Steam Cr Dry Iron rr2L I k aV AT .sW a ?Sbl7JJ! Now I288 SUNBEAM ELECTRIC Automatic Fry Pans REG. 16.95 Unw I 488 STANDARD medium? NOW I588 I... Now I988 Now 21s3 r REG. 26.95 SUPER AUTOMATIC SAUCE PANS 3 ?EQG-a?t7-.95 Now 2295 REG. 29.95 5 Quart DESERTION CHARGED Berlin -fllPD Pfc. Frank E. Meyer Jr. of Stark City, Mo., will be court-martialed Thurs day on charges of desertion for allegedly spending four months in Communist East Germany, the U. S. Army an nounced Tuesday night. . THE DANMOORE HOTEL 1217 SW Morrison Si. 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