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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1960)
Ike's Health Budget Request Increased By House Committee Washington-mPD-The House appropriations committee to day added $197,400,550 to nresiaent Eisenhower s budg et for health, education and FOUR gay sun-separates - quick to cut, sew easy on your budget! Mix-match over blouse with appliqued sun- bodice, shorts, pedal pushers. Printed Pattern 9074: Chil dren's Si?es 2, 4, 5, 6. Size 6 over-blouse yard 35-inch; shorts Va yard; bodice 3A yard. Send Thirty - five cents (coins) for this pattern add 10 cents for each pattern for first - class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, Medford Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. JUST OUT! Big, new 1960 Spring and Summer Pattern Catalog in vivid, full - color. Over 100 smart styles ... all sizes ... all occasions. Send now! Only 25c. It's our 8th! Week's Sewin f 9074 SIZES . 1 V SV welfare, including an extra $1,060,000 for a broad federal attack on juvenile delin quency. The committee charged that the Presidect's request was inadequate to dca! with a host of problems ranging from ju venile delinquency to diffi culties of the aging. The lawmakers allotted 21 per cent more than Eisenhow er asked for educational pro grams and 14 per cent more for health programs. The committee took the actions in sending to the House floor for action next week a $4,184,022,731 money bill. The funds are to finance the health, education and wel fare department and related labor agencies in the fiscal year starting July 1. Sewage Disposal Grants The bill carried $3,619,044, 531 for the health, education and welfare department, $133,670,450 more than the President asked. The labor department was voted $542, 245,300, a reduction of $13, 241.700. The committee allotted $876,929,200 to the public health service, an increase of $113,300,200 over the budget. The Office of Education was alloted $479,836,331, an in crease of $81,790,000. The committee turned thumbs down on Eisenhower's proposal to cut back federal grants to help communities build sewage disposal plants to curb stream pollution. It voted $45 million for this, the same as last year. The Presi dent wanted only $20 million. The committee also rejected administration plans to cut back federal grants to schools crowded by children of mili tary and government person nel. Problems of the Aging The committee even com plained that the President did not request enough money to finance next January's White House conference on . prob lems of the aging.' It approved $550,000 for this, an increase of $28,000 over the budget. The committee also recom mended $2,290,000 over the amount budgeted by Eisen hower for federal research to combat "environmental haz ards" of modern civilization such as polluted . air, water and food, radiation, and ac cidents. Every penny of the $171 million budget estimate for the defense education pro gram was granted. Name Picked for Lane Courthouse Annex Eugene -4DPD- County com missioners have decided to name the new Lane county courthouse annex after the late Judge Lawrence T. Har ris. Judge Harris, 86, died in January. BANKER DIES Greenfield, Mass.-flJPD-Fred-erick Huff Payne, 84, assistant secretary of war from 1930 to 1933 and a bank and indus trialist, died here Thursday. Two very practical advantages of 1960 Cadillac ownership are minimal maintenance costs and exceptional resale worth. Both have been continuous Cadillac virtues for fifty-eight years, as revealed by the fact that almost half of all the cars ever built by VISIT YOUR LOCAL a rffil tes vl I J f ACTRESS WEDS HEIR Lance Reventlow, heir to the Wool worth fortune, and actress Jill St. John are all smiles follow ing their marriage at the Mark Hopkins hotel in San Fran cisco. The ceremony was performed by California Supreme Court Justice Marshall McComb. It was the first marriage for Reventlow, 24, and the second for Miss St. John, 19. (UPI Telephoto) Solo, Ensemble Contest Scheduled The -Southern Oregon Mu sic Educators association will hold . its annual school solo and ensemble contest in Med ford tomorrow, Lynn Sjo lund, Medford High school vocal instructor and chair man of the event, has an nounced. Soloists and small instru mental and vocal ensembles will be judged on the basis of a musical standard and re ceive ratings of superior, ex cellent, good or fair. Contest centers are Med ford High school auditorium and the high school music building. Events will start at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow and will end about 4:30 p.m., Sjolund said. Adjudicators for the event include Delbert Chinburg, Salem, woodwinds; Carl Gut- mann, Hissboro, woodwinds; Ira Lee, University of Oregon, brass; Dr. William Swettman, Salem public schools; string and brass; and . Virginia Elli ott, Linfield college, voice and piano. Contractors Select Massachusetts Man San Francisco-ttJPD-John A. Volpe, commissioner of public works for Massachusetts, was installed Thursday as presi dent of the Associated Gen eral Contractors of America, Inc. The installation ceremonies were conducted before 2,000 delegates at the final session of the 41st annual convention. M. Clare Miller, McPher- son, Kan., assumed office as the new vice president of the organization. Officers 'chosen to head occupational divisions included: Highways - H. L. Royden, Phoenix, chairman. Heavy-Carl M. Halvorsen, Portland, vice chairman. AUTHORIZED ' SKINNER-BUICK-CADILLAC 143 SOUTH RIVERSIDE - MEDFORD, OREGON Interference in Radio-TV Opposed Washington -(UPD-President Eisenhower's new nominee to the federal communications commission said today the government had no business "trying to determine wha programs should be offered to the American public by radio and television." The appointee, Edward K. Mills Jr., also said he consid ered unofficial contacts be tween FCC. commissioners and broadcast offiicals "out of order.'.' Mills told United Press In ternational in an interview that he hoped public demand would bring about an , im provement in program stand ards. He said he felt the public already had indicated it want ed "less emphasis on crime and violence," in radio-TV shows. . Mills, a New Jersey lawyer and until last December a deputy administrator of the General Services Administra tion, was nominated by Eisen hower Thursday to serve out the unexpired 15-month term of former FCC Chairman John C. Doerfer. Doerfer resigned recently under fire from Congress for accepting- plane flights and yacht cruises from broadcast executives. Mills must be con firmed by the Senate. ' Yul Brynner Plans To Marry Chilean Cuernavaca,' Mex. (UPD Film actor Yul Brynner, now filming "T h e Magnificent Seven" here, will marry Doris Kleiner of Santiago, Chile, within the next two weeks, a production spokes man said Thursday. New York - (UPD - The Ford Foundation Thursday an nounced grants totaling $1, 948,700 to fight juvenile delinquency. ',!.w..' . m hi in w iini I V. f Xfc Cadillac are operating today and thirty thousand of these have been on the road for twenty years or more. This notable record of reliability added to the remarkable operating economy makes the Cadillac for 1 960 the wisest of motoring investments. DEALER n. - The Family Council Editor's Note: The Family Council condsU of a Judge, a psychiatrist, three clergymen, a newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writers. Each article is a summary of an actual tase history. The Council reports on problems that taT been dealt win by responsible agencies and counselors. Jonathan D. - My wife won't forgive me.' Emily D. - The whole thing makes me sick. - ' Jonathan D. - I have been happily married for 14 years and am the father of five wonderful youngsters. My problem stems out of a busi ness trip I had to take abroad last year. .' - I had been away from my family nearly two months and I met a fascinating woman during my travels. We were both alone in a beautiful city and enjoyed touring together. Eventually we became . inti mate. After a few days the whole thing was over and, we went our separate ways. A month ago this woman called and asked to see me. We went to dinner and the in discretion was repeated. I told her it mustn't happen again as I love my wife and family, but she besieged me with calls and . letters until finally my wife found out. Now she won't forgive me. i. Emily D. - I don't think loneliness is any excuse. . I was lonely too while Johnny was away and I wouldn't dream of doing such a thing. Just think of all the married people who were separated by war for years at a time. The ones who really loved one another did not have to be un faithful. I opened one of this wom an's letters and learned that Johnny even called her by my pet name. He evidently told her we had a free, open re lationship and didn't look on one another as "nossessions No wonder she feels free to share him with me. ' Personally I think this worn an is nrazv. but that doesn't make things easier for me. I don't want to act like an in jured wife, but how else can I act? The whole thing just makes me sick and I find don't want any lovemaking. .. The Council: We agree with Emily that loneliness is no excuse for infidelity. Count less devoted couples have been able to maintain their lovaltv through far longer and more difficult separations. We also agree witn Emily that the "other woman" is on the crazv side. Sane women don't stage her kind of cam paign for somebody eises vnishand. Her aeeressiveness goes way beyond the bounds of the ordinary lemaie va riety. We would sueeest that Emily try to take this last fact into consideration when she thinks about the problem. Most of us are thrown out of our normal behavior patterns when confronted with an un familiar situation. W omen may have flirted with Jona than before, but it is doubtful Salem -(UPD- Frank T. Stone has learned that he hasn't been a Democrat long enough and withdrew from the pri mary election race for Marion county commissioner. JIMIIJIIIUIJIIJUJUliwJB, iiligli; nmmm that he ever before encoun tered a true vampire. If he had recognized her as such he might have fought back or retreated in terror, but some vampires use subtlety - in the beginning. ' It is natural for Emily to be keenly hurt by the fact that her husband called another woman by her net name and that he said certain foolish things about their relation ship. But it is possible to see something other than false ness in these facts. It is also possible , that Jonathan was making a wild attempt to make wrong seem right, first by seeing the woman, as his wife, and then by imagining his wife wouldn't object to his actions. Jonathan should recognize that he has no right to insist upon forgiveness while the wounds are fresh. Emily shouldn't be urged to violate her own feelings by submit ting unwillingly to lovemak ing. Jonathan's sincere re pentance and desire to . win back his wife will show him the way to help heal the wounds. " (Copyright 1960, General Features Corp.) PiCtf A BOUQUET OF Haw ... jusr in time for Easter. Terrific values in shoes for dad and the boys. Come in tomorrow and take advantage of . these low, low prices. These are all famous name brand shoes you know. e "' ' ' Open Every MONDAY Until 9 P.M. o' If Men Next to Pick's NAACP Claimed Losing Friends Detroit -(UPD-Former Presi dent Harry S. Truman told the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in a telegram Thurs day the organization is losing friends instead of making them. Arthur L. Johnson, execu tive secretary of the NAACP branch here, said the local group had asked the former President if he was correctly quoted when he Reportedly said "If anyone came into my store and tried to stop busi ness I'd throw him out. The Negro should behave himself and show he is a good citi zen." In Truman's answering wire, he said he was correctly quoted and "I would do just what I said I would. If I were in Detroit I would say the same thing to you per sonally." Commenting on Truman's remark, Edward M. Turner, local NAACP branch presi dent, said: "We recognize the fact that even our friends at times may not agree with our methods and fully appreciate our anxieties in our struggle for freedom. "This is the price we have to pay." SAVENOW! tVXJ J . ' . Men and Boys Dress and Casual SHOES! i . .... o mi and Boys Wear it . io) n n fn) rn fo) IS U UJ i UM IS) Apparel Salem Publisher Taken by Death Salem -(UPD- Death Wednes d a y claimed William H. Henderson, 78, publisher of the Salem Shopping News and former circulation man ager of the Oregon Statesman. Henderson, a native of Rochester, N. Y., was a news paperman in Canada and Portland before coming to Salem about 40 years ago. FIRE ENDS TALK Charlottesville, Va. (UPD Joel Cochran, local Red Cross disaster chairman, abruptly broke off his lecture on fire fighting when informed that his warehouse was on fire. Register Now! Spring Term Starts March 28 OPEN SATURDAY 9:00 A.M. - 3:00 P.M. ROBERTSON SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 40 N. Riverside Medford SP 3-4264 619 S.E. Cess Roseburg OR 3-7256 - mm mm m - m mM w h m m m m mji im um m bi mm Boys' Oxfords and Loafers Regular $8.95 Values $195 Regular $9.95 Values 595 MEN'S DRESS AND SPORT OXFORDS Regular $11.95 to $15.95 $ J95 Regular $16.95 to $20.95 $111195 U U . Regular $20.95 to $22.95 $11195 Regular $23.95 to $25.95 $1195 IK )) o Robinson Bros. Carry It! MAIL TRIBUNE, M.dford. Or. 9 Friday, March 25, 1960 A J Man Drowns as Boat Overturns Centralia, Wash. (UPD - Ken Robertson, about 24, Chehalis, drowned in Plummer's lake Thursday when a boat carry ing him and two companions turned over,. ' One of the survivors manag ed to swim to shore, and the other held onto the side of the boat until rescued. The victim sank in 15 feet of water about 30 yards off shore. The body was recover ed by skin divers. 411 Main Klamath Falli TU 2-4126 mm Medford, Oregon