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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1960)
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER I, I960 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. A 13 U:tOtW ill L sSaiy v vv: 1 CASTS ABSENTEE BALLOT-Mrs. Netlie Minick, 109, of Harlan, Ind., older than the Republican parly, casts an absentee ballot in her home. Mrs. Ethel Oetling, Harlan notary, makes it official as Glenn Lake, Dellenback Reviews Measures at C of C John R. Dellenback, Rcpub-1 lican candidate for the state legislature from Jackson coun ty, said Monday he is in favor of state ballot measure No. 6 because "It will make possible the vast growth of our college population Ballot measure No. 6 would permit the state to increase its bonded indebtedness to construct additional self-liquidating higher education facili ties. Dellenback said it is vitally needed" and "is of real Importance to us here in Jack ton county because of South ern Oregon college. Dellenback addressed his remarks to the Medford Chamber of Commerce round table luncheon in the Jackson hotel. He discussed several of the measures that will appear on the Nov. 8 state ballot and Grange News Phoenix Grange 1 Visiting officers at Phoenix Grange, Oct. 25, during "Booster Night" were State Lecturer Victor Croxton, Sams Valley Grange and State Deputy Roscoe Roberts of Roxy Ann Grange. They were accompanied by their wives. A polluck dinner was serv ed followed by entertainment. Roberts reported on insur ance and Croxton spoke of the various accomplishmcants that have been brought about by the Grange. Mrs. O 1 i n Poe read the names of the charter mem bers and of the first officers as she related the past his tory of Phoenix Grange. A reading titled, "Mama's Bank Account," was given by Mrs. Frank Perl. Mrs. Donald Grimes sang leveral songs while Mrs. Vaughn Quackenbush accom panied her at the piano. "The Meadowlarks." an in itrumcntal group with accor dions and mandolin, helped entertain. They are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Meadows and Mrs. Henry Nahss. Vocal numbers by "The Midnighters," a barber shop quartette were also on the program. In the quartette are Vaughn Quackenbush, W. Kenyon, Thomas Carter and Marvin Holmes. The evening ended with games conducted by Mrs. Lloyd Lacy who was in charge of all the activities. THE SECRET OF Without habit-forming drugs A new technique combines hundreds of tiny beads of medication in capsule. Half of these dissolve to induce sleep quickly. The other hetf Is gradually released to sustain and deepen your natural sleep. Take N:te-Rest tonight for safe, uninter rupted steep. Wake up refreshed tomorrow. You sleep soundly or money back. Nfo-ReiT NO PRESCRIPTION REQUIRED McLains DRUG CENTRE Thrifty Green Stomps I N. Central SP 2-7113 3 who brought the ballots, looks on. Mrs. Minick, born in New York in 1851, was 14 when Lincoln was assassinated and could have voted for Ulysses S. Grant if could have voted for Ulysses S. Grant if sid he is opposed to measures No. 4, 8 and 14 No. 4 would permit the dis trict attorney to commence criminal prosecutions by fil ing written charges or by grand jury indictment as now provided. No. 8 would permit is suance of state bonds to con struct buildings for slate insti tutions, office buildings and for higher education. No. 14 would increase state revenue and at the same time lower the personal income tax rate by abolishing the federal tax deduction on state tax re turns.. Dellenback said measure No. 6 and 8 are somewhat similar but "6 is not to be confused with 8." Essential Differenca The essential difference be tween the two, he said, is that the bonds issued to finance buildings under No. 6 would be self-liquidating where the bonds issued to finance build ings under No. 8 would not. Under No. 6 the bonds would be issued for building such structures as college dor mitories which would pay for themselves through fees as sessed to college students who will reside in them. If this bill is not passed, he said, "we will have students coming (to college) and hav ing no where to stay." He pointed out that already at the University of Oregon the school can not assure students beyond their freshman year of having adequate places to stay. Two Sides to Measure) There are two sides to bal lot measure No. 8, Dellenback said. One contends there is some need for state buildings now and the state should bor row now to build them and pay for them as they are used. The second contends this would be abandoning the "pay - as - you-go" formula which the state has always fol lowed. Dellenback said he favors the second argument. The state should budget for build ings as they are needed, he said, and pay for them out of the budget. He said he is not opposed to additional construction by the state but said he thinks each request for new build ings be looked at by itself. "This is not the time for de ficit spending," he said. Ballot measure No. 14, to increase state tax revenues, according to Dellenback, was placed on the ballot by a ref erendum of the people. The bill had been passed by the 1959 legislature and was ready to go into effect, he said, but a number of citizens petitioned to have the bill placed on the ballot. Party-line Vote When presented before the legislature, Dellenback said, the bill was approved, on a party-line vote. There were 33 Democrats voting in favor and 27 Republicans voting against. The Republican candidate said: "the prime reason I feel it is a poor (measure) as this will raise additional revenue at a time when we already have a surplus." He said earlier that esti mates of the state's surplus QggUQ9 ... J Ballot Luncheon this year range from $20 to $40 million. If this bill had gone into effect in January, 1959, as the legislature passed it, he contended, it would have increased state revenues by an additional $12 to 18 million making this year's sur plus between $32 to 58 mil lion. He said measure No. 4 would allow a district at torney to circumvent the grand jury and bring criminal cases directly to trial after a preliminary hearing. The dis trict attorney would have his choice of whether not to go before the grand jury if the bill is passed, he said. Dellenback said he is op posed to the measure because the right of going before the grand jury "is a precious right. If we had a prosecution happy attorney it (the meas ure, if passed) could be dan gerous." , Displaced Small Businesses Said To Be Successful Washington - (UPD - The government has released a re port indicating that more than 75 per cent of small busi nesses affected by urban re newal projects relocate suc cessfully. Of these, 85 per cent also show an increase in profits within the first year, the re port said. The study was prepared un der a small business admin istration grant by two Uni versity of Connecticut pro fessors, William N. Kinnard Jr., head of the Business De partment, and Zenon S. Mal inowski, an associate profes sor of marketing. No Responsibility The SBA said it assumed no responsibility for the ac curacy of the report and did not "necessarily endorse any opinions, conclusions or rec ommendations." Kinnard and Malinowski based their study on reloca tion projects in Hartford and New Haven, Conn., and added that information from 11 oth er cities and redevelopment agencies across the nation showed a similar pattern. The report, first of a series on small business undertaken with SBA grants, showed that businesses which failed were "submarginal and substand ard and could not exist in any area . . . other than those of a slum area." Businessmen faced with re location, the report said, could increase their chances of sur- STAR -By CLAV R. M Your Daily Activity Guidt M According to the Start, To develop message for Wednesday, read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. 1 4-K.25.3rJ TAUftUI APR 21 1 Snmton 31 P'tvfltt 61 Will 2 You 32 Ot 62 Pretsurt 3 Check 33 An 63 Day 4YUf 34 Poor 64 Of 5U 35Ho-d iS5Strorr3 6 Kp 36 T.m 66 Con-mifltng 7 Impatient 37 Mo tier 67 With S Gu n 38 For 68 Youf wlf 9 5pcal 39 Come 69 Partner 10 Of 40Ehr 70 Be I Your 41 A 71 Oyrw 12 Win 47 From 72 Welcomed 13 Carefully 43 Emo'to, 73 And UF.noo-ej 44 Sotiefh.itg 74 Carefully 15lrntotle 45 Be 75 Watch l6Anolyie 46 9-wiwing 76intol-e 17 f inanool 47 Eorty 77 Paw on 16 Red 4(?Fit 7Wtll 19 Letter 49 Or 7? Co 20 Srxirp 50 Lending 80 Urvier 2! Much 51 Of 81 Control 22 Rr-rnrrJ 5? SvwW 2 Money 23 Angiei 53 TMmofk R3 Of 24 Oov 54 D.et 84 Don 25 Seem 5 Nrwt Bb Deal 26 Through 56$tort 86 Smoothly ?7Pefort 57 Under 87 To 2 Yrxif 5P On 88 l-aut 29 And 59 A fi?Nw 30 T0 60 A 90 Under itand GoM (gh.UTtne tut?il ' MAY 31 44-78-84.89 GEMINI MAV 22 VS41-48.51-55 Z'VA 1.7ft. 7? CANCft iJULV 23 59-63- 64-65 no - AUG 33 HNNK-33-47-56 58-60-82 85 it AUG 2 Weapons Continues High AEC Washington - HIPIl - The Atomic Energy Commission says it will continue to give "the highest priority" to wea pons research in the next de- Florence Adland Takes Husband Hollywood -fllPU- Mrs. Flor ence Adland, 63, presently appealing a one-year jail sen tence on her conviction of contributing to her daughter Beverly's delinquency, was married Monday night to Wil liam B. Rail, 31. The civil ceremony was performed by a woman judge at a hotel. Mrs. Adland was convicted of contributing to Beverly's delinquency following the ac tal shooting by Beverly of ac tor William Stanciu, 21, as the couple struggled in the nude in the Adland apart ment April 9 over a gun. Mrs. Adland presently is out on bail. Business Expert Sees 6 Per Cent Growth Increase Washington - IUP1I - The United States can increase its rate of ecomomic growth by perhaps as much as 6 per cent annually, according to a business expert. William F. Butler, vice president of the Chase Man hattan Bank of New York, told Nation's Business Maga zine in an interview that 4 per cent is an adequate rate of growth for the United States. But he said the 6 per cent figure was possible if cer tain "obstacles to growth" were removed. He listed them as: repressive taxation, tar- iiis, restrictive Business reg ulations, featherbedding prac tices and inefficient business management. Butler said the business outlook should improve in the final half of 1961 and called for a sense of national purpose "to accelerate our rate of ecooomic advance. certain adjustments now underway in the economy will tend to encourage growth in the future," he said. "Great er emphasis in business on cost-cutting, on greater effi cency, new products, the greater pressure to sell, to en courage progress all of these things should work to give us a higher rate of growth in the years ahead." Butler warned that the na tion cannot resort to prac tices such as "shorter hours" and "restriction on the intro duction of new equipment merely to provide jobs" with out slowing down its econom ic progress. He said the United Slates was "too willing to go along with measures that positively impede growth, such as re strictive work rules, tariffs, featherbedding . . , and a farm policy that has definetly blocked growth." Butler also called for a moderate reduction in the corporate income tax, con siderable liberalization in the treatment of depreciation and some reduction in upper-level income tax rates. vival by following four recom mendations: - Working closely with re development authorities and ignoring minors. Carefully re-evaluating location and space needs. Utilizing available finan cial and technical assistance when needed. And preparing to act in-i dependently, if necessary. Copies ol me report are available at the SBA's 56 field offices and from the University of Connecticut. GAZER POLLAN UBIA :ept. 23 r-ji OCT. 23 J. vj-l8-19-?4.3)(fu' P7-32-79-86 " SCOIO OCT. 24 t'' fJOV 22 1316-17-23 27-6668 L Sagittarius 4Cy a , 0C 22 b4-36-38 40 14-36-38 40ti UO-4V- CATtlCOIN jan 20 Vv;, 5- 35 87-90, AOUAtlUt V' - rte. 1- B-JI-26-&(,! men l WA 31 ?.r 6- 11-IJ204I Research To Have Priority cade "unless a positive dis armament program is achiev ed." "There remain many ave nues of nuclear weapon re search and revelopment," it said, "which promise designs that could materially im prove our military capabil ity." These statements are con tained in a report published by the House-Senate Atomic Energy Committee on the fu ture rule of AEC laboratories. The report covered peace time as well as military re search during the next 10 years. The commission said it "believes that the labor atories must continue to be supported vigorously." 1 1 listed- weapons research as a field in which "unforeseen developments" could affect the cost and volume of work. For Next 10 Yean But in the absense of an effective disarmament pro gram, it said, "weapons re search and development can be expected to remain at a high level of effort during the next 10 years." Today's report contains the AEC's response to a request by the Congressional commit tee for a statement on the fu ture of some 20 commission laboratories. It also contains comments on the AEC's state ment by industrial firms, uni versities and other interested groups. The tenor of the comments was that the laboratories should be retained but that the AEC should turn research over to private institutions where feasible, and should improve its system for dis seminating its non-secret re search results to the public. The 20 AEC labs are doing research and development work which will cost $600 million in the fiscal year ending June 30. Of this, $400 million is in non-weapon work. The laboratories .occupy government, - owned facilities which cost $947 million. Facil ities costing an additional $462 million are under con struction or authorized. As of June 30, 1959, the labs em ' Ask Those Who Know Him And Then . . . VOTE FOR HOWARD BELTON FOR STATE TREASURER Secretary Janie Guelzlaff a First-Time Voter, Says . . . "I have met Mr, Bellon on several occasions. He is a warm and likeable person. This, together with his ex perience and reputation for sincerity, makes him the kind of a man I want to have as our Oregon State Treasurer." Pd. Pol. Adv. Bellon for Treas. Comm. Richard W.' Courtright, Chm., 1 005 E. Min, Medford, Ore. 3! m i iU "H ployed 41,500 persons, 11,500 of them scientists or engin eers. The commission attempted to forecast trends of AEC spending over the next 10 years on research and devel opment in a number of fields, including: Nuclear engines for merchant ships: not expected to rise much from current levels. ' Nuclear propulsion for Navy ships: Gradual reduction in development work. Above Present Level Manned atomic aircraft: Slightly above present level for next three to four years with further increase if test ing gets to advanced stages. Decorator Designed! Handsomely Cradled! CORNING WARE DELUXE DISH $1295 Ouaronld not to crack from quick Ismptralur change I Toki from freer tr lo range, to toble for feitivo nltrlalnlng, buffet lupperi. family meal. PERFECT GIFT FOR SHOWERS AND WEDDINGS All-Purpos 10" Six Matching Cover Brati-Plaied Cradle Detachable Handle Matching Piecei $5-95 to $14-95 GARBAGE CANS At Hubb.ud Bros, you can select the can belt suited to your needs because they stock eight different garbage cans including liquid tight hot dipped xinc coated cam which give much more serv ice for just a little mora original cost. Reg. $10.95 LEAF RAKES Select from sis different all metal leaf rakes as well ai a good quality bamboo. All have flat teeth to promote self cleoning. Metal rakes. $350 STORE HOURS: 8:30 A.M. to BUY fOll YOURSELF fif'IK Jtmmir 1 7WT BUY FOR OIFTS f f iff JT TOMORROW 1 U s V 4H 14 kri,mm Up t BROS., INC.i8i5&h MAIN AND RIVERSIDE Nuclear rocket and ram jet programs: Expected to in crease substantially. The commission said the level of research on H-bomb reactions for power will drop somewhat below the present in the first half of the decade but could rise thereafter. Among research programs which will require increased spending over the next 10 years the commission listed biology and medicine, with emphasis on radiation studies. In general, the report said the overall volume of AEC re search and development will increase in the coming de cade. It said commission labs will continue to develop new concepts in science but will T at HUBBARD BROS. Choose From 6 Different Credit A Plan for Every Need! Bench Grinder Power House model No. 950. One each fin and coorte wheels 4'ixVi siie. Has tool rests. Eye shields and electric light directed to your work. m95 Wheelbarrow Boyco Shamrock with 1.75x10" rubber tire wheel as illustrated. Regular $10.95 $799 BUCK SAWS Swedish buck sows with steel tension bow fromes. Sites from 24 Inch to 48 inch blode length. Several types of frame construction. 22i to $9 25 5:30 P.M. MON. THRU SAT. phone sp 2-6189 fMmmmiris-J- put more and more responsi bility on Industrial organiza- Re-elect ROBERT Plans mm POWER SAW stainless steel SINGING TEA KETTLE with solid copper bottom Bright West Bend stainless kettle has handy push button to operate spout cap. Genuine copper bottom. 2'4 qt. capacity. comparable kettles $45 only WEST BEND AUTOMATIC 6 to 8 cup Coffee Maker Electric perk makes good cbf. fee without watching or adjust, ing. Polished aluminum with walnut brown handle and base. $399 peolal PRUNING TIME! FAN NO PRUNING SAWS Folding type, rigid handle, pole saws, types for all needs. PRUNING SHEARS Hickok, Cartwright, True Temper brands both 26 and 32 Inch handles. REPAIRS FOR SHEARS Handles, bumpers, shear bolts for popular brand pruners. Drill Set 13 sites from 116 to V by 64't. Packed in a plastic roll. $225 ... . Hons possessing the necessary facilities and skills. DUNCAN (Democrat) State Representative Economy in State government means lower state taxes Duncan for Lag Comm. W. Spati, Chm., 1036 Reddy Ave., Medford, Ore. Elk Hunters Model F15 White Stag Sleeping Bags Sin 36"i81" with full lipper. 10-ot. water repeltent'duck cover. 5 pounds of Silver Seel Thermofill. Iniulated weather flop. e Double olr mattress pocket. Flannel liner. Factory Price $27.95 Special One C95 wecK uniy g McGraw Edison 7'4 Inch blade cuts, VA" at 90 degrees. Full 2" at 45 de greos. Develops Wa horse power. 5000 RPM. Full ball and needle bearing, construction. Includes rip guide. Externally adjustable clutch Factory list $46.95. 29 95 $399 fveready Brand Transistor Radio Batteries 6 Most Popular Types 25c to $1.35 FREE DELIVERY Within Medford City Limits 3-29-54-74 i i i. Couti otreei Chone SP 3-3102 V75.76-8: MEDFORDOREGON