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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 9, 1961)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o MEDFORD M&IL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. MONDAY, JANUARY 9. 1961 tz- - ' ;x lc'v wd 1 FAMILY REUNION Robert Sayre of Port land, Ore., spends a happy reunion with his family after arriving at West Palm Beach, Flafrom Havana. Sayre was one of 74 per sons that left Cuba aboard an ocean-RoinR ferry wnen me bnuea Siaies ciosea lis embassy there. (UPI Telephoto) S-o-o Pretty j Cool scooped - neck pina fore becomes a party-pretty dress by adding the separate collar! . She'll love this style, you will too - it's sew-very-easyl Pattern 7186: child's sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, included; pattern; em broidery transfer; directions. Send THIRTY-FIVE cents (coins) for this pattern -add 10 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Medford Mail Tribune House hold Arts Dept., P. O. Box 163, Qld Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PAT TERN NUMBER. JUST OUT! Our 1061 Needlecraft Book. Over 125 designs for home furnishings, for fashions - knit, crochet, embroider, weave, sew, quilt -toys, gifts, bazaar items. FREE - six designs for pop ular veil caps. Quick - tend 25c TODAY. REBELS KILL FIVE Jakarta, Indonesia -WPII- Fa natic Dural Islam rebels plun dered the vilage of Bantljar an 10 miles south of Bandung last week killing at least five Villagers, the government re ported Sunday. PEANUT OIL Raleigh - Peanuts yield oil for salad oils, cooking, mar garine and soap manufacture. Quotes From the News BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL New York Herbert Lehman, former governor and sena tor, on his Sunday meeting with President-elect John F. Kennedy: "He's off lo a fins start. He will make t great President," Virginia City Larry Dacek, 15, on being brought up by a rope lift from a mine shaft where he was trapped 11 hours: "I was never io happy in my life as when I saw all those people standing around up top." Paris French Premier Michel Debre on the Indicated .victor of President de Gaulle's plan for Algeria: , "The nation has surmounted its divisions and has ex pressed deep confidence," -. New York-Beatnik coffee house . owner 'John Mitchell charging firemen have been harassing him in an attempt to close his Greenwich Village spot: "Man, like it's getting to be a real drag down here!" 49 SOC Students Get NDEA Loans Ashland - Forty-nine stu dents received National De fense Education act loans for the fall term at Southern Ore gon college with the average loan per term amounting to $200, according to Dr. Alvin Fellers, director of student af fairs. .. . Eighty-six applications were received, with freshmen ap plying for 19, other under graduates 64, and graduates 3. Fifty-six loans have been approved for a total of $22,195. Approved for loans have been 12 freshmen, 42 other undergraduates, and 2 graduates. 1 Distribution of loans ac cording to classes is as fol lows: Freshmen 12, sopho mores 7, juniors 12, seniors 23, and graduates 2. Approximately 50 new ap plications have been received for consideration winter term, Dr. Fillers announced. Retired Publisher Dies in Portland Portland-flJPD-Archie Whisn ant, 85, retired secretary of the Pacific Logging Congress and a former newspaper pub lisher in Oregon, died Sunday night. Whisnant was secretary of the logging organization for more than 25 years. He also once owned the former Coos Bay Times and the Bend Press and was a reporter for the old Portland Telegram. Whisnant, a native of Wis consin, is survived by his wid ow, Grace, a daughter and a son. aS YouCanRe,y milM lS on Us for WW "J lilrQ Understanding K& p Help 5 We so conduct every funeral ' Xj-k C ' as to leave enduring memories LOi?9 Vtte 4 of a beautiful tribute, reverent- rSjX 'v expressive of eternal love fjtT' ' and faith. f f PERL ft?., 1 n itt -A PERL 1 T T unerai nome AFL-CIO Will Resist Anti-Labor Bills Salem -(UPll- Approximately 200 representatives of the Oregon AFL-CIO agreed Sat urday that the prime concern of labor at the 1961 state leg islature would be resistance to anti-labor legislation. Representatives of unions throughout Oregon attended the session, They listed the defeat of the three-way work men's compensation proposal and the Improvement of un employment compensation as labor s second and third prio rities at the legislature. Court Records DISTRICT COURT Nitn . Zumwalt, violation of ba sic rule, $15. Richard Guches, failure to stop, $15. Robert E. Bcare. overload, S52.58. Walter A. Groff, overload, $58.50. Bert Lee Jackson, no lights. $10. Mary Lou Parton. no liqhts. $5. John F. Cody, 23 Newtown st Medford. driving while under the influence of Intoxicating liquor, $300. Ada M. Zink, no lights, $5. Robert O, Shute, excesiivt noiie, 17.50. Larry J. Freemon, violation of basic rule, $50. Albert P. Laborde, overload, 1S0. Lavonne L. Samp, improper head lights, $7.80. CIRCUIT COURT Nancy Lee San ford v. Richard Allen Sanford, divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATION Alan Glen McKlnnis. Pines Trai ler Court. Ashland, and Christine Verndel McGee. 317 North Main st., Ashland. DISTRICT COURT LaVonne L. Samp, improper head lights, S7.50. Donald W. Ellis, no motor vehicle license. $5. Henry O. Geyner, improper liphts. $7.50. Earl L. Murcock Jr., disobeyed stop sign, $15. Nnra J. Sheppard, failure to dim lights. $7,50. Albert L, Harrison, excessive noise, $7.50. Grancille L. Floyd, no headlights, $7.50. Othniel E. Hayes, Inadequate brakes. $10. Harold E. Roberts, failure to dim lights. $5. Anthony A. Monroe, disobeyed stop siRn. $5. Inez L. Church, violation of basic rule. $15. Sandra Malot. failure to slop, $15. Leroy D. Haele. no lights, $7.50. Leroy V. Draper, overload, $168. Delia V. Mollenhaver. failure to stop. $15. Don W. Johnson, nn tall lights, $10. John C. Wright, no lights, $V Daniel D. Benjamin, no lights, $10. Struggle for Rules Committee Control Involves Ullman,t?reen By YVONNE FRANKLIN Mail Tribune Washington Bureau Washington - (Special) -Reps. Al Ullman and Edith Green are involved in the power struggle over who will control the rules committee in the House of Representatives. Will it be a small group of conservatives, or the more lib eral Democratic majority of the House? Ullman is concerned direct ly with the uncomfortable problem of whether or not to discipline a recalcitrant fel low Democrat, Rep. William Colmer (D-Miss.), by banish ing him from the rules com mittee. Ullman has just been named to the house ways and means committee, which lias among its duties the power to name Congressmen to commit tees. He expects a fight within the committee, and he will be in the thick of it, for, as he says: "I feel that the removal of one obstructionist from the rules committee, and his re placement by a forward-looking congressman who will rep resent the prevailing senti ment in Congress will at least In large part solve the prob lem." The problem he mentions is immensely complicated and not easy of solution. Colmer's immediate difficulty springs from the fact that he bolted the party ticket and support. ed, through an independent slate of electors, Sen. Harry Byrd of Virginia for president. But Colmer's long - standing habit of voting with conserva tive chairman Howard Smith of Virginia and four equally conservative Republicans oil the rules committee to pre. vent liberal legislation from coining to a House vote is the real reason for the almost un precedented purge , , , if it comes. The rules committee acts as a clearing house for the orderly transmission of legis lation to the House. It serves a useful and needed function, but its members during the close of the 1960 session, thwarted the will of the ma jority of Democrats, who are now determined to put a stop to it. Last summer, to the anguish of Reps. Green and Ullman, the committee suc cessfully bottled up a housing bill, an aid lo education bill, and a minimxim wage bill. These are three of the president-elect's five-point legisla tive program on which he wants immediate action. The other two are aid to depressed areas, and a medical care for the aged bill, tied to social security. Smith and Colmer, with the four Republicans can tie the six votes of other Democrats on the committee who support legislation which they do not want. A tie pre vents the measure from going to the House for action. Majority Leader Sam Ray- burn has been reluctant to punish anybody, and his prob lem of getting rid of Colmer is complicated for several rea sons. If he purges Colmer, why not others? Four other southern congressmen bolted the ticket last Fall. Also, Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, has moved up to the chairmanship of the important labor and education committee; he wasj not relieved of his seniority rights when he bolted to the GOP in 1958. A further complication lies in the ways and means com mittee, of which Wilbur Mills (D-Ark.) is chairman. If his committee acts to banish Col mer, then Mills is in trouble back home! Arkansas will lose two Representatives as a re sult of the last census; and since Gov. Orval Faubus will control the legislature, M'Us, If he axes a fellow southerner, may be rcdistriclcd right out of his House seat. Ullman says that the north ern Democratic liberals, who, with over 100 members, con stitute considerable pressure on southerner Rayburn, will carry the fight to a Democrat ic caucus if ways and means do not act. The liberals are determined to move, for the rules committee was success ful in embarrassing Kennedy last summer and promises to and they protect the seniority do so again. 1 The pressure on Rayburn is internal as wojl, for now that he has ij Democratic president in the White House, he is un derstandably eager to help him with his program. But it comes hard; for, be cause of the seniority system and the one-party South, here in Congress things are run pretty much by southerners, system and one another mother bear defends her cubs. Mrs. Green is indirectly af fected, in that through the seniority system should Rep. Colmer bo replaced by liberal southerner Carl Elliott, she will then be in line for Elli ott's chairmanship of an edu cation and labor subcommit tee. But Mrs. Green remembers well that two years ago when the Democratic liberals threat ened to take action, Rayburn nullified them by assurances that major bills would get through the rules committee. He was unable to deliver, and this year Mrs. Green has a "show me" attitude. She is, however, ever hopeful, for as she said; "As one of the supporters of Kennedy, and one who has been placed in the so-called liberal bloc, I think the change in the rules committee is essential if we are to enact the Kennedy program. Mr. Rayburn has promised to uso his efforts to accomplish this; and with this promise I feel very optimistic that a change will be made, so that the rules committee is no longer tho resting place of necessary legislation." Local Man Arraigned In District Court Robert Murray Crandall, 30, of 145 South Grape St., Medford, was arraigned in district court Friday on charg es of uttering and publishing a false check. Crandall waived rights to a premilin ary hearing and is being held on $1,500 bail, pending ap pearance before a grand jury. Crandall was arrested on Wednesday by Ashland police. GET A CASH LOAN TO CLEAN UP HOLIDAY BILLS from (fie friendliest people in town Start the year right. Clean up old bills. Just pick up your phone, then pick up your loan. ' $25 to $1500 CITY FINANCE COMPANY 2 2-Lb. IO-oi. Reg. 49e J V - Iti'f T ; 1 V 1 ni Re, 57c 43 W'SU 3 Minute Oats Mayonnaise Velveeta Kraft 24-01, Hi w Kraft 2-Lb. Loaf BRADSHAW Spun Honey UBBY - Deep Minted Pineapple Chunk Package to Plato- In 5 Minutes Minute Rice Rice 10-oz. Carton Reg. 35c No, 2 Can 79' 25c 39c p-iP"'Tinnr-f m n m iibi mbw a. mL, 'a v 11 Economy Size 13-oz. 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