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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1960)
5 0 o Medford Se(P MEDFORD, 1 f - of ;t o i i - - - o . . J . . , i MUtyciH AHITEi - Princess Grace of Monaco is shown ; after her arrival at New York's Idlewild airport, en route to : the bedside of her ailing father in Philadelphia. The former movie star arrived from London. (UPI Telephoto) The Family Eaitor'i Note: Tke Fail! Cnicll tlaee clereysaai, a DewsaapY eaater Beuarttcle ka a saaiajary of aa acauj on oroaieaw uaa wve oewi w cuaofteivra. . Allea . - We're living for trie house not lryt, - Harjorie . - We 11 pull through with flying colors. : Allen S. - My wife and I have ben married 12 years and have three youngsters. ' We recently moved into a new home and this has caused me a lot of grief. . My wife wanted a big place In a particular community the most (pensive, of course. I felt it was much beyond our means and I feel more and pore so evey dap. This big house calls for so much more in, the way of expenses than I had expected., We also have lb furnish it in a suitable way and that's costing an arm d a leg. I feel we're living for the hpuse instead of in it. I fcnow When I'm licked and I want to cell it quit. I Know nicfc little place wi can fit for a aortg and funvtsb. it in up tat style. r-- ftujoiie R - All m life I dreamed of spacious house ia a nic comrunit. I wat brought up i the city and lived 11 '4 yeare of our mar ried life in cramped quarter. Allen thinks I juit want to show off and be a big ahot by living in a swank neighbor hood, but that isn't true. I want the children to have the advantages of better schoole and contact with better edu eatad families all available jn (his community. I don't tnjoy beats ia debt J telephone Pioneers Plan Sakra Meeting A delegation from Crater Lata council, Tilepkone Pio- wn at America, will attend e tha aauaanl Pi(gie ylanaing laaetiaf in Sulem June 3 and Clarowe t. Bjca, presl te C Crater Lake council, will head th local daltMtion. Other attending are Henry Jelvorean, v 1 c president; i ler. Lola Boomer, secretary; ? ttart Lyster, W. W. Williams, Jack Creager, Vic Kasser, lrank Little, Keith Fletcher, ) Bruce Kellow, Otto Ludwig, j Neil Borsain, Charles Sweat, j Gaston Floux and Walt Har i ing. ',. The Pioneer organization g) formed in Boston in 1911 is ; composed of active and re- tired employees with 21 or more years in the telephone industry, here are 200,000 "members In the UnitedgStates 'and Canada. j Craler Like membeMbip -comes' from Jarwbn, Jose- "phine and Klamath counties, 'Corvallis Population Figured at 21,353 i Corvallis-IUPD - The popula, lion of Corvallis Is now 21, 353, an Increase of 816 above the federal census preliminary fiaure. Cltv Manager John Porter said Wednesday. j Porter said newly annexed areas accounted for the In crease. The annexations took clace after the federal nose count. i The frozen food Industry, which barely existed 20 years aso. now represents an invest- .ment of well over five billion dollars-about one-third of It OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 2, o W - aTfc comIsM dt Juice, a nsvcalatrfel l a woaiea's editor aajd two writers. rase saaajry The Cougcll reports wi a ay resatjitii aeeicia any better than Allen does, but I think there is every pros pect that vg 11 be able to put) through the next few years with flying colors. I don't want Allen's poky "nice little house." O r The CoiHKll: Allen wants peace of 'mind and Marjorie wants the greatest possible benefits for her children. Cer tainly these are both worth while goals and they shouldn't be incompatible for they are deeply dependent upon one ' another. We think, for example, that these children will not bene fit very, much from their su perior environment if their father is a harried, nerve-1 wracked man. We also think I that Allen cannot have peace of mind if he is made to feel he is depriving his children of important advantages. As ve get the pictuW Allen ajlotycd himself to be talked into a bigger involvement than he could handle. He may have been over-persuaded or 1 slightly deceived. Perhaps ! Harjorit realized that the bi(P ger house entailed dohsider- abla bigger expenses and slurred the fact over, even to ' hersfclf. 0r, she may have felt ; owe the family ws in the hou, the problems would eork themselves out." I ny case, in such mfjor matters as buying house, it ia vital that both husband end wift understand fully every thing, involve. It is foolish few, on partner to use too j muph pressure on th other I because nobody can live hap-1 pil? With situation that ia againat his better judgment We cn t scflve alien and Marjories ppobleii by telling them to move or not move. We caa only point out that a compromi.v) is essential. If ltrjori can cut down ex penses enough to give her hus band a littleO more mental ease, perhaps he'll be able to relax enough to live in the house and not for it. (Cyr ien. (M Pfitari Csap.) Made to pamper your cat ...they're not ust flavors thure the real tiling LIVER MEAT KIDNEY'. MEAT CHICKEN MEATY MIX CHOPPED FISH Council Tribune I960 Pages 1-8 Man in Red Tux To Serve Passejters New York Passengers who Veye intercontinental trips this spring via Scandinavian air lines System w(Jl) have not only stewardesses at their service, but also "The Man in the Red Tuxedo," Officially known as the "Maitre de Cahine," he'll su pervise all service aboard your SAS DC-8 jet flight. -o kttml wwrfeWCtlttlt) ?!, r fyiilnfr Lockport, N.Y. It's not rainPnor sleet, nor storm that kept mail carriers from swift completion of their appointed round here. It's painted porches and locked giffis. Postmaster William A. Mail let ftfed residents to relocate thei mailboxes or put out iP, box for mail in such cases. ii " . . . .. i i m aww - ti w ii II, SlllfelCf I I wwmmmr . 32?- - i II HtetbCBn4rChiX)P I I 'Rippirtg Geeel' I Sf Bf fJ tSQ' 5v.oalrilali-Ha-J-.r9 I I A kift Crwms, C.c, afs, 1 . . J ' jmMlda . . (I t M:'.$famn -lie i wii&M wm si-i Ii . r v . . o . X. , .-.jr . I i ruMk ii7v r wv '.f"'.-- II 1 w liv Ik II k I .... -iI -Jt W ll 1 .cCL. m i w xw.m- W ll v s u m r vi ii Diw6) cut ib. tzJ As I III I Calfia ValMMaiv-JeKW 8 M' , , Tl. . .- .-.-r . .M IriLLfcWJIY't UW9 KftJttJ) yTC8 O " , I I Iff It" tilA -31 T T'T n . If o It i mmm T tft' ,oinraol y33w . v nt2l i i! Olff vip. ,,...o ! ;98e Only CjS O & a........,..:...:....,...s m Complete Line of Asst. lor. . . . o P" ' S 6c Gerber'Ctrined u O fc. CO i tapS2ir 27 1 Baby Food. O (o)v Cat Food Dog Food I ;m' :vi - Bonnie All Fish Veil LfxJlll 2-3-4 I SiYfrtSfffll Cold Beverages nA Onli 1 AWck Nikita Expected to Weather Trouble in Soviet Hierarchy Washington - (UPD - High American officials expect Premier Nikita Khrushchev to wither the trouble in the Soviet hierarchy ich they think forced him to turn tough inQdealing with the West atMhe Paris summit conference, But they believe his actions and speeches reveal some fancy footwork necessary to quiet his home front and Chi nese Communist critics while at fi-' same time burning be hind him no bridges which eventually may lead back to better relations with the al lies. O Officials expressed particu lar interest in the sharp con trast between Khrushchev's vitriollic Paris performance Texas holds about 48 per cent of the nation's petroleum v in yx rauna oi cj mmm) u maimmm .iv, . cn m uti iisr i r.i mmm i tri rkJb alp t of his Kremlin "shock" workers. Wh to Khrushchev's call for an enlarged summit conference to include Red China, India and Indonesia was dismissed as another propaganda ges ture design particularly to jpander sentiment in the two H4ig neutralist countries where the reaction to the American U2 spy plane in cident has apparently been less critical of the United States than the Kremlin had hoped. Officials here noted with interest that, while continu ing his attack on President Eisenhower and the United States over the plane incident, Khrushchev had carefully re frained from toughening up his attitude on the big East West issues that really count Berlin, Germany, disarma ment and a nuclear test ban. Khrushchev's state ment that he was re,tlng to the workers on orders from the powerful Comm'tat party cei.t'al committee was taken as an effort on his part to tell Eisenhower and others that he was not a free agent when he torpedoed the Paris meeting. This had been hinted be-' fore when Khrushchev, in an nouncing the downing of the U2. said he had been "in structed" to report on the af fair oWcials here adnowledg ed that much of Khrushchev's fury over the spy plane un doubtedly is real, since it showed up one of the Weak nesses in the Soviet ufrtun's hitherto vaunted defenses. Mounting Pr6dra SHn But they have some a?gbts whether he would actually have usef it to sabotage the summit had It not been for mounting pressure from off ers in the Soviet hierarchy, in cluding military) leaders, and the Chinese Communists to alter his so-called "softer" policy toward the West American officials saldJt is obvious that Russia willH-on- Where 0 tinue its propaganda attacks I . w l - I against the United States, hop- 1 Sa" T" " Ul S-ll 90 I ing to win more vocal support M4Mn3jC5S99B55HSS In the U.N. Gencial Assembly than Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko got in the Security Council. But the feeling here is that the Soviet Union has over THE FRESH FLAVOR OF Far ejff Ml 's?v im.Mt e 1 -'LIO played its propaganda hand to the point of diminishing re turns. There Is strong evidence from the neutralist countrVK and other non-Communist na- KORNER FARM EGGS is DELICIOUSLY DIFFERENT lne HoMsWif says: aieting new-try deep-fried deviled eggs. Put deviled ta((ier r ltuffinj-and deepfry oackly. Serve eity cefc sauce. A sure fire iiiinniiiiiiniiTiiairitiiiiiiiiimiiiinimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMi o Hons that they are not Inter ested In further exchange ol recriminations over the UN fated U2 but want the big powers to try to get together and talk. O hit! 1 o In ime freezeri. .. saa.