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The Family Council
Editor! Note: The Family Council consists of a Judge, a psychiatrist,
three clergymen, a newspaper editor a women's editor and two writers,
fcach article is a summary of an actual tase history. The Council reports
on problems that have been dealt wtb by responsible agencies and
counselors.
Hubert KJ S h e proposed
to me!
Mrs. L. K. She's brazen.
Hubert K. I am 26, still
single, but in great danger
I have been going out
pretty often with a girl of 23
I like Dolly very much, more
than almost any girl I've
known, but frankly I haven't
thought about marriage. She
was just a swell date.
Well, the other night, she
said suddenly that seeing it's
leap year she figures she
might as well say what's on
her mind and that's m a r-
riage to me! You could have
knocked me over with a fea
ther. I was so upset I broke
out in a cold sweat and
couldn't think of a thing to
say. Dolly said I should think
it over and tell her whenever
I have the answer.
I told my mother about this
when I got home and she
thought it was awful of Dolly.
But now that I've thought it
over I think I want to marry
her.
Mrs. L. K. I am really
shocked at a young girl's
being so brazen. I know it's
leap year and all that, but
this is just a sort of joke.
Don't get the idea I'm narrow
minded, because I'm not. It's
just that I think there are
" more subtle ways of going
about a thing like this. A girl
who is well brought up
doesn't just pop the question
at a man.
I'd like to see Hubert get
marrie d but when he's
ready and to the girl he
wants, not anyone who hap
pens to have set her cap for
him.
I feel that Hubert could
never be happy with such an
aggressive girl. A man wants
to feel like the boss in his own
home. A girl like this would
walk all over him. .The
trouble is that he has been so
flattered by this proposal he
has lost his wits. I also think
he's too much of a gentleman
to say no.
-The
Council. We doub
very much whether Hubert is
considering this marriage
purely because he is so flat
tered or because he is such a
gentleman. The running in
stinct is strong in bachelors
Real Estate Course
Location Changed
The real estate study course
to begin in Medford Tuesday,
March 8, will meet in Room
224, Hedrick Junior High
school, It was announced by
William Frohnmayer, presi
dent of the Medford Board
of Realtors. The meeting
place has been changed due
to the large number who have
enrolled, he said.
The course of six sessions
will be of one or two hours
each Tuesday starting at 7:30
pjn. A registration fee of $5
will be charged. Registration
may be made at the Southern
-Oregon Title company office,
-112 West Main st., or at
Frohnmayer's office.
All brokers, salesmen and
other interested persons may
attend.
Salem Newsman
Joins Bend Staff
Bend -flJPD-Glenn Cushman,
32. former managing editor of
the Salem Capital Journal,
has been appointed executive
general manager of the Bend
Bulletin, effective today.
At the same time, the Bulle
tin has been organized into a
corporation. The Bend Bulle
tin, Inc., according to Robert
W. Chandler, president of the
organization and editor and
publisher.
Chandler, his wife, Nancy,
and their children will own
all stock in the new corpora
tion. .
Time
But his new baby was born a
week a60,akd he still. hasm't
WINNING
WUMts W WITH A MONIKER'
UHrwanwj - I
SOUNDS SORT
WUULO CALA.
JOHN
I
TKAMX ANDATlPOP
THE HATU5 HAT TO
and they are seldom trapped
unless they want to be.
We agree , that subtle
methods on a woman's part
are preferable to outright ag
gression, but sometimes
subtle methods don't work
and more drastic . action is
called for. We suspect that
Dolly has been using subtle
methods on Hubert for some
time now. They have had an
effect, but probably she feels
she has gone as far as she can
with this technique.
In short, the fact that Hu
bert has decided he wants to
marry Dolly is a pretty fair
indication that he was thor
oughly softened up for the fi
nal onslaught and is a willing,
even eager victim. We are a
bit suspicious of the story
that he was caught totally by
surprise. Come now, Hubert
not even an inkling of
what was on. Dolly's mind?
If Mrs. L. K. has no other
objections to -Dolly, we think
she ought to give the " mar
riage her blessing. Hubert
does not have to worry about
being the boss or wearing the
pants if he has confidence in
himself. The fact that Dolly's
aggression did not scare him
off entirely may be an indica
tion that he is the type of man
who prefers a strong-minded
woman. However" Dolly
seems willing to give Hubert
plenty of time to think it
over and he doesn't have to
be hasty with his answer.
(Copyright 1960, General
Features Corp.)
: BROOK 3 BROOK
STRAIGHT BLEND
Kich. hearty, fin light, smooth, ex-
Kentucky Straight ceptiooaUy fine
Bourbon whiskey Kentucky taste
$J0O $J60 $J00 ' $60
Pint 45 Q. Pint 43 .
It
v . ijv I k I imi t-. .
Enjoy The Great Whiskey of the Old West 1
'
A ? " f W C ";V w'NN,NO "rr "vvKT
ywVMl "Jltpcllwjm Indian Attack"
L &..ttSi ite.ia3sP.jLMufa C CsJsk rrtft THt nam amimmm artist ,
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3 .tgjgjw.
MtM WWU ITTVCXT -
wmvm.VLmmi.vi . xmaxmRxmrnmawm? Kentucky bundu whiskey k piot.ex esab HaniALSfiEiu
By Jimmy Hatlo
n
OP DISTINGUISHED BUT J
HIM ASGIE"
WILBUR?
l. MncBuBm-i Svulicrrtr. hr. VnrH rnrhw mrrml. '
Legion fo Observe
Birthday Next Week
Medford post, American
Legion, will join in the na
tionwide observance of the
Legion's 41st birthday March
15 to 17, Post Commander
M. C. McElhiney, announced
today.
Among the activities will
be the annual birthday party
by the local post's auxiliary
Tuesday, March 8, at 6:30
p.m. The event will be held in
the Red Cross building, 60
Hawthorne st. .All Legion
naires and their wives are in
vited to attend.' -
The local observances will
coincide with the date of the
Paris Caucus in 1919, when
the American Legion was
started.
Although closely associated
with the field of veterans' af
fairs, the American Legion is
also concerned . with other
services which are of benefit
to the general public, Com
mander McElhiney said.
These services include child
welfare and related youth ac
tivities, the junior baseball
program, and extensive citi
zenship programs such as
Boys' Nation, Boys' State,
high school . oratorical con
tests and school award med
als.
IN HOSPITAL
Hollywood - (DPB - Comedi
enne Edie Adams, wife of
comic Ernie Kovas, suffered
a miscarriage Saturday. She
was reported resting comfort
ably today in Westside Hos
pital. The couple has one
child, an 8-month-old girl.
Ifontuelxy Straight
or Kontudxy Blend...
Sunny Brcoli tastes
better, richer than
any other whiskey !
t
By barrel and bottle, by pack hort. and wagon.
Sunny Brook rolled westward with the early settler..
Why this Kentucky whiskey? It tasted best It Still' .
does. That's why it has so many loyal buyers today.
What Is The Law?
This column is prepared as a public service by the
College of Law, Willamette University, Salem, to
explain basic legal principles, not to provide legal
advice. The reader is cautioned not to apply these cases
to his own problems without an attorney's advice, for
differing facts may change the outcome.
The Right To Privacy
In their own dwellings peo
ple are relatively protected
from unwanted communcia
tions. The radio and television
are under their own control.
Newspapers are not delivered
unless they are ordered. The
principal source of commune
cation within the home which
is likely to cause annoyance
is the visitor at the door and
his accomplice, the doorbell.
An individual householder
who does not want to receive
solicitors can post a "no tres
passing" sign, and a majority
of states have statutes which
permit prosecution for tres
pass after warning. But can
the community adopt restric
tive regulation on its own ac
count? First1 Experiment
It seems that so far as pure
ly commercial visitors are
concerned, the community can
adopt any kind of regulation
it likes without raising any
free speech or free press prob
lems. The town of Green Riv
er, Wyo., was apparently the
first to experiment, in 1931,
with an ordinance banning
house -to- house commercial
canvassers. The ordinance was
upheld by the state supreme
court against charges that it
interfered with interstate com
merce, took property without
due process, and denied equal
protection of the law. . The
U. S. Supreme Court dimis
sed the appeal without ruling
on the validity of the regula
tion. For non-commercial door-to-door
canvassing, the situa
tion is not so simple. In 1943,
the Supreme Court was faced
with an ordinance of Struth
ers, Ohio, which made it un
lawful for a person distribut
ing handbills, circulars or
other advertisements to ring
the doorbell or otherwise sum
mon the occupant of a resi
dence to the door for the pur
pose of receiving such ma
terial. The ordinance was ap
plied against a member of Je
hovah's Witnesses who was
distributing a dodger announc
ing a meeting and lecture. The
particular motivation for the
ordinance appears to have
been to protect the daytime
sleep' of this industrial town,
many of the people being em
ployed on night shifts in fac
tories.
Ordinance Held Invalid
The Supreme Court, in
holding the ordinance invalid,
noted that door-to-door visita
tion was a customery part of
the techniques of many po-
-
litical, religious, and labor
groups, and "is essential to
the poorly fianced causes of
little people". An ordinance
which specifically controlled
the distribution of literature,
and which substituted com
munity judgement for the de
sires of individuals, many of
whom might be glad to re
ceive the literature, was in
valid because in conflict with
the freedom of speech and
press.
The question arose again
in 1951. At issue was a Green
River ordinance, but applied
here against salesmen of mag
azine subscriptions, which
gave rise to a free press prob
lem not present in the liti
gation concerning the 1931
Wyoming ordinance. In hold
ing the ordinance valid, the
Supreme Court felt that the
case turned on a "balancing
of the conveniences . between
some householders' desire for
privacy and the publisher s
right to distribute publica
tions in the precise way that
those soliciting for him think
brings the best results." Com
munities which had found
house commercial canvassing
obnoxious had a right to con
trol it by ordinance. Maga
zines could be sold some other
way.
BUBO
Lf MWii.fsS ..... . ...yvii . SS
fc--w'-TtrT-r-j-'-,i"'YViilliiii la-r'iriiaistirirtwwniMTiiii vtmmmmmm lanTiif" '" i i i P .. , -
H liILL f TO
Up . . . out . . . and away! No ife, ands, or buts! No drop-down in
gear! No jerks! No Hesitation Waltz just plain, unadulterated
m-o-v-e in one smooth fell swoop! This is TURBINE DRIVE.
This is safety! This is why you buy a Buick instead of something
else. Transmission that transmits! . ;
Now if you've had a notion that Buick quality might be a bit
beyond your budget, this is the situation: Buick Dealers are
dealing. Nothing sells another Buick like one on the road and they
know it. Take advantage of this. You know what you can pay for
a car. FuuTout if your Buick dealer can't take that figure and
make it deiiver Buick. quality. His number is in the Yellow Pages.
Prosperous Business Man
May .Have Been Original
By MICHAEL POSNER
Washington-flJPi-The cynics
who don't think there's a San
ta Claus or an Easter Bunny
also scoff at Uncle Sam,
But they never heard of
Samuel Wilson,' the "Kilroy"
of the War of 1812.
His daddy was a Minute
man at Lexington. As a boy
Sam hauled supplies for the
patriots of the American Rev
olution. Later he walked to western
New York beside a wagon
train to seek his fortune. And
Lenten Season Said Dangerous
Time If It Results in Pride
By the Very Rev.
William F. Maxwell Jr.
Rector of St. Christopher's
Episcopal Church Oak Park,
. m.
Written for UPI
Lent is a dangerous time of
year.
Lent is dangerous if our
consciences are soothed, if -we
feel that by giving up some
thing we have won a great
spiritual victory.
Lent is dangerous if it re
sults in pride, if we feel that
we are accomplishing much as
the result of our own efforts,
if we disparage the efforts
of others.
Real Purpose
. To die to self in order that
we may be raised with Christ:
This is the real purpose of
Lent '. It is a gift which no one
can earn, but which all may
JV
fa
TAKE A TURN IN
SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED QUALITY BUICK DEALER NOW!
he found it. He became a pros
perous owner of a brick
works and meat packing
house and was known to
friends and employees as
"Uncle Sam" Wilson.
. Congress soon may declare
Wilson the . "original Uncle
Sam" and make his grave at
Troy N.Y. a national shrine.
House Approves Bill
The House has approved a
bill to do this. The Senate
public lands subcommittee re
cently passed the measure.
The Senate Interior Commit-
have as a eift from God.
To give something for Lent
is a simple beginning; thus
children are taught to do it.
Mature Christians recognize,
however, that it is only a be
ginning, that spiritual victor
ies are not so cheaply won.
Real Danger
It is this recognition that
we have at best done only
what we ought to do that we
subconsciously feel to be the
real danger in Lent. Our pride
and self-esteem are threat
ened when we recognize that
any benefits, we gain from
Lent are gifts from God. Jesus
told his apostles, ". . . when
you have done everything
that you are told to do, you
can say, 'we are not much
good as servants, for we have
only done what we ought to
do."'
A TURBINE
of 1800s
'Uncle Sam'
tee and the full Senate are its
final hurdles.
Wilson, who had the tall,
slender build and gaunt face
of the Uncle Sam pictured in
thousands of cartoons, was
born in Arlington, Mass.,
Sept. 13r 1766: He was one of
11 children of Scotch-Irish
parents.
During the War of 1812,
Wilson's packing house sup
plied meat to the American
Army. Each barrel of meat
bore the initials "E.A.-U.S."
the EjV. stood for Elbert An
derson, a contractor, and the
U.S. signified United States.
U.S.-Uncle Sam
But the story circulated
through Army camps that
U.S. stood for "Uncle Sam"
Wilson. The initials on the
barrels and Wilson's name be
came as well known in the
War of 1812 as the motto
"Kilroy was here" during
World War II.
One story has it that Wil
son showed up at a Fourth of
July picnic in Woburn, Mass.,
white striped trousers, a blue
vest sprinkled with white
stars, a red and white striped
coat and a tall hat.
- Sketches of him in this get
up appeared in newspapers of
the time. The costume and the
name Uncle Sam grew into
national symbols. But Samuel
Wilson was nearly forgotten
until the legislation was intro
duced to recognize him as the
"original Uncle Sam."
I
000
HOW MUCH FOR BUICK QUALITY?
THE MANUFACTURER'S SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE FOR A
BUICK LESABRE TWO-DOOR SEDAN WITH HEATER AND
DEFROSTER, EASY EYE GLASS, BACK-UP LIGHTS, GLAREPROOF
MIRROR, PARKING BRAKE SIGNAL LIGHT, SAFETY BUZZER, ' .
MAP LIGHT, WHITEWALL TIRES, AND DELUXE WHEEL COVERS
IS LESS THAN $3000. Standard equipment on this popular
model includes MirroMagic instrument panel Direction signals
Fin-cooled brakes with aluminum drums on the front wheels
Electric windshield wipers Instrument panel safety padding
and Trip mileage indicator.
Induding reimbursement for Federal Excise Tax and Suggested Dealer
Delivery and Handling Charge. Transportation, state and local taxes, i
other accessories and optional equipment additional. jJ
DRIVE BUICK
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or.
Monday, March 7, 1960 A "
Man's Age Told by
Pet Name for Girls
London (UPD The Sunday
Pictorial said Sunday that if
man calls a girl "my dear" he
is in his 50s and if he calls
her "young lady" "he's be
tween 40 and a bit more.".
The Pictorial's guide for
young ladies said the term
"sweetie pie" means the man's
in his 30s; "my darling"
means his late 20s; "babe"
that he's a teen-ager, and "hey
you" that he's too young to
matter. ;
CHARGE PLATE
STORE MEMBER
Use your Medford Charge Plate
for a complete medical record
for tax purposes. '
WE FILL ALL
PRESCRIPTIONS
with unfailing
accuracy from
fresh stocks of '
ouie, potent
drugs.
Open 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Daily
CLOSED SUNDAYS
Green Stamps
Main and Central
FREE DELIVERY
'60
- - -ir - a, t mssmtmm -
lip g1 '
IB