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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1960)
O 0. .U . O k0 GOO Oc:;:;::c:3C3 ( X 'DC:: : '' c:::: o c. O :3 co c: o COOOoOrsc'OC""" -:dcdc-;c:::xoocj O on o o c O o CDC MAIL TXIRUNE. M.JIo-d, Or. Friday, May 13, I960 nnedy Plans To Concentrate In Portland Area Portland -H'PD- Sen. John Kennedy (D-Mass.) will con centrate his Oregon activities before the May 20 prirr.ury in t h e Portland metropolitan area, his local headquarters said Thursday. Kenndey, candidate for the Democratic presidential nomi nation, is scheduled to arrive here Sunday. He also will appear In sev eral other communities. A highlight of the five-day campaign will be a public rally Wednesday night in Ben son Tech auditorium. Rep. Edith Green (D-Orc.), chair man of Kennedy's Oregon campaign, will attend. Goes To The Dallas A public reception is sched uled at 11 a.m. Sunday at the Hill Villa restaurant. This will be followed by an appearance at the opening game of the Riverside Little League base ball season, a television pro gram, a reception at the Gresham armory and another reception Sunday night in The Dalles. On Monday, May lfi, Ken nedy addresses students at Lewis and Clark college, speaks at an Astoria lunch eon, flies to Tillamook and returns to Portland for an 8 p.m. speech at the University of Portland. The Tuesday schedule calls for visits to Eugene and Salem during the day and an 8:15 rally In Hills boro. Breakfast Scheduled On Wednesday Kennedy will be in St. Helens for a breakfast meeting then will .MiH'S 1MEWU IUL0VI Ktwlt Men": WAfltPIOOM IHOCi-FI-OOP WATCH 29 re ! IULOVA "lllMbttV' JlAOIH' W.JIWll WKIIT WATCH UWIIIKlIlt UIMlIIN tfft 0 T K 0AINH CO0 IIACUIt J m " ItQUIIlUll.OltlfcNID CMi I " At! 10 U0 011 122 1. Main PK. SP 3-5348 Heuri: 9:30 lo S.30 38 Next Weekend GBQffiD CB3D GT5SB Family "6 Steps to Safeguard Your Child" by Dr. Paul V. Joliet "I Learned to Hypnotize Myself" by Franccsca Liberte "The Ghost of the Good Samaritan" by Wainwright Evans "Nancy Kwan: Hollywood's Honey from Hong Kong" by Peer J. Oppcnhcimcr k "So You Want to go Camping" by Edward II bammis k Junior Treasure Chest "Grilled Meat Favorites" Cookbook Section k "The Trouble with a Kid Brother" by John Hochmann "Miss America's Summer Look" by Allyn Rice Quips and Quotes "Coin-Machine CheaU Never Give I'p!" by Richard Dunlop & rMK ( 4Hv with Stop, Look, Admirelj Fashion's newest excite ment! Bright stripes give an Italian-inspired flavor to this sweater. Jiffy-Knit sweater blouse gay, dashing in multi-color stripes! Choose knitting wor sted. Pattern 7049: directions for sizes 32-34: 36-38 included. Send THIRTY-FIVE cents (coins) for this pattern - add 5 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Med- ford Mail Tribune Household Arts Dept., P.O. Box 168, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, AD DRESS, and PATTERN NUM BER. JUST OUT. Our new 1960 Alice Brooks needlccraft book contains THREE FREE pat terns. Plus ideas galore for home furnishings, fashions gifts, toys, bazaar sellers - ex citing, unusual designs to cro chet, knit, sew, embroider, huck weave, ouilt. Be first with the newest - send 25 cents now! go to Clackamas county for appearances In Oregon City and Sandy. The rally at lien son Tech tops off the day. On Thursday Kennedy visits shopping centers in southwest Portland and ap pears on an evening television show. His election day schedule calls for him to be in Idaho. He will return to Portland about 10 p.m. for election results. Driver Killed as Auto Hits Bridge Albany, Ore. -HOT- Wallace Richard Bothell, 23, Albany, was killed Thursday when his car struck a wooden bridge railing on the old Cor vallis road a mile west of here. Police said the railing went through the car and the vic tim was thrown into the back scat. There were no witnesses to the accident which occurred about 1:40 a.m. XVe&Jcly your Medford Mail Tribune Rockefeller Jr. To Be Buried in New York Plot Tucson, Ariz. - OIP0 - The body of John D. Rockefeller Jr., a philanthropist who gave nearly half a billion dollars away and still remained one of the world's richest men, will be buried in the family plot in New York state. His son, Nelson, governor of New York, and Laura nee, flew back to New York Thurs day to complete funeral ar rangements preceding burial at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery In Tarrytown. Nelson said his stepmother. Mrs. Martha Baird Alien Rockefeller, took Rockefel ler's death very hard. She was in deep mourning, he said. Martha and Rockefeller Jr. married in 1951, three years after the death of his first wife. Health Had Failed Rockefeller, known by many associates as "Mister Junior," died at the age of 86 Wednesday of pneumonia and heart strain in Tucson Medi cal Center. He had been in failing health for some time and entered the hospital Mon day. A shy, retiring man, he devoted his life to his family and sharing his father's Standard Oil wealth. P h i 1 a n thropics by the Rockefeller family began with his father, "JDR Sr.", but reached their full abundance when Rockefeller Jr. took over as head of the family after his father's death in 1937. Give S3 Billion By the lime of Rockefeller Junior's death Wednesday, do nations by the family to peo ples in the U.S. and many parts of the world totaled at least $3 billion. His personal philanthropic donations dur ing his lifetime amounted to more than $475 million. Rockefeller from the time he was a young man exerted himself In giving away parts of the family fortune to worthwhile causes such as the Rockefeller Foundation. The foundation only several hours before his death announced quarterly grants of nearly $4,500,000. A lifelong teetotaler and Baptist, Rockefeller encour aged the same thrift and in dustry in the organizations to which he donated money as he did In raising his own chil dren. Uganda Blows Up Famous Waterfall London - (UPfl - Uganda Is blowing up i famous water fall. But It doesn't matter much - the waterfall is under the water anyhow. Chunk by chunk, Uganda Is dynamiting Ripon falls on Lake Victoria, once believed lo be the source of the Nile river, according to Informa tion reaching here. Five years ago Uganda built the Owen Falls dam, which raised the river to the level of the lake itself, put ting Ripon falls under water. But the falls stayed there, an enormous rock barrier which cut the flow of water at low lake levels. J rS&CV I ro" L . 1w I'ejKSt ' " ft . r , 1 V. mm r . .i.tttv.': : : : : PATIENCE PAYS Los Angeles Police Officer Sam A. John son walks little 16-months-old Brendyth Jane Ramage down the station corridor as police waited for the tiny tot's parents to call reporting her missing. Seems little Brendyth got up quite early, earlier than her mother, and went for a stroll. Patience paid off when the mother called to report her daughter missing, and all turned out well. (UPI Telephoto) Final Plans Being Made for Club Show Ashland - Final plans are being made for the Medford Active clubs' annual variety show, sponsored to raise funds for the clubs child welfare program. This year's show, entitled the "Active Varieties," will be presented Saturday, May 21, in the Medford High school auditorium. Curtain time is 7:1)0 p.m. Chairman Herb Herzogsaid the program will feature many acts including several dance numbers by student1! of the Thurston Dance studio. Featured vocalists include Zo BUY NOW til it III I While This Special Offer Lasts I; J f j I IS llHI.M'U.ll ll All S,. Sl. 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JU All Sliee Sole Priced till WMITi S.70-15 l.B 7.10-1B 17.M 7.60-1S ISS8 jn jo IK II II tti" The Family Council Editor Nate: The fimity Council coiui.U of k Jud. ft psycttitrtit, three clerfyapd, upwpippr dilr wumni'i oditur and two wrheri i-.A.i, .title u a .ua:ni-ry uf aa actai ase hisfrv The Council rcpurti on probirmt mat nv vcen ami connieiort. Mrs. L. 8. - Laura gave up her child. Laurt S. - I can't hold any one who doesn't want me. Mm. L. S. - I am heartbro ken at a terrible mistake made by my daughter Laura. Her 14-year-old marriage broke up because her husband was having an affair with an other woman. I begged her to sit tight and do nothing about it for a whlie but the insisted upon a divorce. As if that wasn't bad enough, she gave up her 10-year-old daughter to the custody of the child's father and his new wife. Nothing I or the lawyers could do would stop her. She said her daughter made Ihe choice. But what can a 10-year-old know about such choices? Now Laura is on the verge of a nervous break down. Laura S. - My daughter was i unusually attached to heri father and I felt she actually ' couldn't survive pmntinhnllv! if she was separated from him. When she first learned that we were breaking up the home, Sue said at once, "I want to go with Daddy." At first I told her she couldn't and it was just too bad. She screamed again and again that she hated me and wanted to be with her daddy. How could I hold her? I guess I'm just not the selfish type. I don't want to hold anyone who doesn't want me. I couldn't look at my husband any more the minute I learned about the other woman. Tht Council: Although Laura takes pride in her un selfishness, she has shown a childish selfishness in handl ing her tragic situation. We'll agree she suffered about the most " wounding blow a woman can know, but she indulged herself much too far in a retreat into false pride and self-pity. Although she suffered, Laura's first thought should have Keen to fight for her home and family. The woman who gives up readily to "the other woman" is no heroine and deserves no special credit. Laura compounded her error when she let her child make the terrible choice be tween two parents. She was in effect saying: "Your father doesn't love me and I suppose you don't either, so go with him." This is just like a child whining when he believes no- Slit UlCf a.oo-f lo.n 0.7O-15 1 1 7.10-15 13.B 7.6Q-18 16, OB 'PUtt toi ofld roppibl tirt 7i 4 tr 1405 7.S0-14 WHITEWALl 18BO on 6.70-1 S HACK HAYON, TUM-TYPf t i in i rrr iriirii irr wi oy xeipoDkiDi agencies ani body loves him because he has been hurt. j A judge would not permit j a child to make a choice of this sort if the mother was not i in some way shown unfit to care for the child. Laura may have shown she was in such a sad state of hysteria that she convii.ced the judge she couldn't and wouldn't care for the child properly. Her law yer undoubtedly made a ser ious error in letting her pre sent her case in this way. The custody judgment is most un usual. Despite Laura's hysteria and immaturity we doubt whether the best decision has been made for the child. Laura must understand that her daughter was as wounded as she was by the events tak ing place in the family. Although the little girl ap pears to have rejected her mother, she probably feels re jected by her and will con tinue to feel this more keenly as she gets older. The poor child probably imagined she would have her daddy all to herself and she will be deeply resentful of the strange wom an with whom she is forced to share his love. We thinks serious problems COME! v vm a l III II1 I II II fll IftyMMSSXS. FUN FOR ALL W Saturday, Ask For Your FREE ENTRY BLANK Te The Texaco TV Contest Win a Trip to Hawaii EXPENSES PAID FOR TWO OR Over 1200 Other Valuable Prizes GET THE DETAILS! Nomad Mers HCi3 ti Tfl'Kllfc llCTui I I lUuUlO 1 Paris-IUPI) - SHAPE head- quarters has announced that Gen. Lauris Norslad, 53, su- preme allied commander in Europe, suffered a "very slight coronary occulssion The brief SHAPE announce ment confirmed rumors that it was more than an attack of "indigestion" that caused Norstad to be rushed to a hos pital in Munich last Sunday. Until now, officials had will arise in this child's de velopment. Laura is in need of psychiatric help and when she begins to feel emotionally whole, she should consider legal means to regain custody of her daughter. (Copyright 1960, Central Feature! Corp.) HELP US CELEBRATE... Hawaiian OANCES From The Colleen Hope Dance Studio One Performance ONLY at COCONUTS PINEAPPLES on 10 or more Gallons Gas BANANAS For All The Youngsters HAWAIIAN LEIS To All Attending JOIN THE FUN SATURDAY, MAY 14! TEXACO SERVICE 8th and Grape Phone SP 3-3479 denied he suffered heart at tack. Norslad. who was on a priv ate visit to southern Germany at the time, was stricken as he plnypri golf a! Gariiiiith Partenkirchen. The announcement from Norstad's allied headquarters outside Paris said it was ex pected the supreme command er wild be fit enough to re turn to duty in two weeks time. YALE PATRON DIES Cedar Hill, Tenn. - (UPI) -Augustus Silliman Blagden, 81, patron and former varsity captain of rowing at Yals University, died Tuesday. Blagden was chairman of the Federal Machine and Welder Co. of Warren, Ohio. Established in 1829 In Wa tertown, Mass., Perkins Insti tution for the Blind was th first training school for the blind in this country. T Mav 14 2 p.m. r.) ('v 1-1 - -v