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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1961)
Where it coaesftoiii. TAX DOLLAR Fiscal Ttar 1952 Estimati I h 7 ' f j . ::.;: .. Corporation Income Taxes C Y ' I. 25$ . ) I where goes . . 76c -p AtaBu rertr , , .. . . . v ' n ark h ,-: ii "a.. An:.. J it. ft : j. m ' TAX DOLLAR President Elsenhower sent his federal budget for 1962 to Congress today. Among the charts which accompanied the budget was this one which shows where the estimated tax dollar will come from,' it will go. CUPI Telephoto) Oregon Reclamation Projects Listed In President's Budget for Fiscal '62 . Washington -flJPD- Two Ore gon projects were among five new reclamation construction projects recommended in the budgets for fiscal 1962 pre sented to Congress today by President Eisenhower. The budget asked for $890, 000 to start work on the Bully Creek Dam, an extension of the Vale reclamation project, and for $350,000 to begin work on the western division of The Dalles project. ; The Bureau of Reclamation also sought $1,034,000 to con tinue work on the Klamath project, and for $789,000 for further . work on the Rogue River Basin (Talent) project. ' The budget called for Con gress to appropriate about $40 million for water resource de velopment in Oregon, of which $36,610,800 was re quested by the Army engi neers for flood control, navi gation and multi-purpose proj ects. The Oregon total was in ad dition to $31 million asked for continuing construction of John Day lock and dam on the Columbia river. Green Peter Funds The major project for which Army Engineers requested funds was $12 million for the Cougar reservoir. The admin istration also recommended $0 million for the Green Peter project. Other Army Engineer proj ects included: sporr clpfe get a LIFT fro 1 . OUR SANIT0NE DRY CLEANING All the dirt's out, so color sparkle like new, t Our Soft-Set nninh hsnislita limpness, give every garment like-new look and feel! Spots and ground-in toil dis appear without a trare, CALL ON US TODAY JUDGE FOR YOURSELF Try Our CUSTOM LAUNDERED SHIRTS Fit Better Look Better Feel Better I I Fit Bitter Look Better iiuu,i J I Feel Better I ' 1 m CONVINIINT PARKING . M M RIGHT AT THI DOOR a If IP 1 fXt-HD. CHRISTENSEN 1 1 Columbia river south jetty, $700,000; Coos Bay south jet ty, $500,000; Hills Creek res ervoir, $1.8 million; Lookout Point reservoir, $600,000; Lower Columbia river bank protection and improvements, $1,240,000; McNnry lock and dam, $285,000; Siuslaw river south jetty, $500,000; Umpqua river $500,000 and Willamette river bank protection, $500, 000. ! The budget asked for $8.2 million for Washington's Ice Harbor dam, For Bonneville Power Ad ministration, President Eisen hower recommended $28,056,- 000, about $1.7 million less than for the current fiscal year. The new BPA budget seeks $15.7 million for construction. BPA's budget requested also asked for additional transmis sion capacity for more power to the Harvey Aluminum com- pany at The Dalles. BPA predicted revenues for the next fiscal year of $73.8 million, an increase of about $4 million over the current year. Park Funds Asked Rep. Waller Norblad (H Ore.) said the budget also ask ed $418,000 for Crater Lake buildings and utilities; $199, 000 for Fort Clatsop and $41, 000 for the Oregon Caves. He said the bureau of land management budget request was $9.2 million including an increase of $1.2 million for O & C lands construction and access road work, and refor estation and recreation. In addition, Norblad said, the budget asked continuing investigations on the follow ing projects: Umpqua river, $30,000; Umatilla, $26,000; Tualatin, $47,000; Red Prairie, $78,000; Monmouth-Dallas $39,000; De schutes central division, $62, 000; Crooked river, unassign- ed space, $51,000; Columbia river basin, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Washington and Wy oming, $80,000; Upper and Middle Snake river basin, $15,000; Walla Walla, Oregon and Washington, $69,000; re habilitation Rogue river basin, $159,000; completion diver sion dam and canal, Crooked river, $Z5U,uuu. For operation and mainte nance, Norblad listed these sums asked: Crooked river ba sin, $20,000; Rogue river. Tal ent division, $58,000; Klam ath, Oregon and California, $55,000. Pair Questioned in Kidnaping of Child Llvermore, Calif. -(UPD- The FBI today questioned a man and his wife about the kidnap ing of a girl suffering from a heart ailment. , The suspects, Richard Ar lcn Llndsey, 30, and his wife, Lainc, 23, were arrested early Sunday by the Highway Pa trol on Highway 50, near here. Authorities said Rose Mnric Riddle, 6, taken from a farm labor camp near Shatter, Calif., Thursday, was not in the car. However, they found spattcrings of blood In the Llndsey car and a two-foot tire Iron on the front scat. Kept for Protection Lindscy, an ex-convlcl from Texas who said he had been a mental patient, told FBI agents he kept the tire iron for protection. Mrs. Llndsey said the blood stains were caused when she struck her nose on the dashboard of the car. Residents of Ihc farm labor camp Identified photographs of Lindscy as the man who enticed the girl Into a car on the pretense of giving her a dollar to do some housework. Kern county authorities is sued a kidnap warrant for Llndsey Saturday, after re ceiving a report he hod been seen in Shatter shortly before the child disappeared. Mother Iisues Plea The girl, daughter of potato planter Everett Riddle, 27, and his wife, Ethel Marie, 23, has suffered a heart disorder since birth. The mother issued a plea after the child dis appeared Thursday urging the abductors not to scare or ex cite her, since doctors said this might prove fatal. The Riddles moved to Shat ter nearly two months ago from their home in Chandler, Ariz. Fiscal '62 Agriculture Budget Higher FOR PAID-UP MEMBERS Wolverhampton, England, -IUP1I - The local engineers un ion announced Sunday It will buy a $280 piece of sculpture but only paid-up union mem bers will be permitted to see it. TV Highlights "Operation Abolition." a film of the. riots in San Francisco lait yaar during hearings before the. Unsmar ican Activities committal, will be scan over KBES-TV at SilO p.m. today. Quotes From the News BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Florence, Italy-Amerlran dressmaker Wally Coons, agree ing with millions of other American men: "If I ever saa another plump woman In ((retch panti I II die." Loudon William Troynck. head of the London branch of Hairdressers, Wigmakers and Perfumers Guild, on one path to political fame and fortune: "Create a charactariitic hair ityle and stick to it through all your political Ufa." Washington House- Democratic Lradcr John McCormack hinted that bad International news had been whitewashed: "I think the world lituation is such now that anyone who reads tha newspapers must raaliie that there's baan a lot of Madison ava. brainwashing going on." Washington -fflPB- President Eisenhower today set Agricul ture Department spending for fiscal 1962 at $5,781,885,000, a big part of it for price supports.- The President in his final budget message to Congress also called for legislation to reduce the cost of farm pro grams through change in price support laws. Department officials said this about the farm budget legacy which will be inherited by the incoming Kennedy ad ministration four days hence: "It will be mighty hard to cut. There are commitments that under law we have to meet. Except for minor cuts, the only way the budget can be adjusted is up." The proposed budget com pares with $5,738,943,000 spent by the department in fiscal 1961 and $9,418,895,000 in fiscal 1960. Indirect Slap at Congress Eisenhower took an indirect rap at Congress in his discus sion of the agricultural bud' get. i "In the fiscal year 1982," Eisenhower said, "federal pro grams for agriculture will continue to require heavy ex penditures for much the same reason as in the immediately Regional Edition Page 2A Medford, Tribune MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, JANUARY 16, 1961 Being Photo Process Is Used For AF Translating Rochester, N.Y. -HIPI)- Pho tography is playing a key role in the success of the Air Force's new translating ma chine that changes Russian to English at the rate of 40 words per minute. The translating device fea tures a process developed by Eastman Kodak Co. of Roches ter. Eastman coats special glass disks, the heart of the translating machine, with high -resolution photographic emulsion. Previous translating mech anisms usually have been modified computers, turning out Russian-English "vocabu laries" on magnetic tape or punch cards. This outmoded operation limited the size of vocabularies that could be stored and the speed with which they could be searched electronically for words and phrases. Stored on Disk In the Eastman process, an entire 55,000-word vocabulary is stored in a -inch channel printed on a 10-inch glass disk. The channel is scanned vertically and horizontally by electronics until the machine matches a Russian word-fed in with punched tape-to its English equivalent, which is then printed automatically on a typewriter. The English-translation Is in a rough but meaningful form which is refined by hu man translators. When more of the capacity of the photographic disk employed, it will store about 500,000 Russian words and id ioms on a single surlace. Words appear in a line code of bars and spaces. The high-resolution film is capable of storing 600 million bits of information per square inch. This means that the con tents of the Encyclopedia Bri tannica could be Imprinted on a single 4-inch square piece of film. Algerian Rebels Ready To Talk Tunis, Tunisia (UPD The leaders of the Algerian rebels who have been fighting a six- year war of independence an nounced today they are ready to open negotiations with France. A statement issued by the Algerian "provisional govern ment" in exile said It was pre pared to discuss "conditions for a free consultation of the Algerian "provisional govern ment" in exile said it was pre pared to discuss "conditions for a free consultation of the Algerian people." French President Charles de Gaulle has declared he would let the Algerians de cide their own future in a referendum after peace is re stored to Algeria. Selection of Finch Jury Continues Los Angeles - IUPD - Attor neys for the state and defense begin their third week today trying to find 12 jurors to hear the third murder trial of Dr. R. Bernard Finch and Carole Tregoff. Attorneys were hopeful the jury would be selected some time early this week, With two previous trials of the illicit lovers, attorneys have had a difficult time in finding 12 persons from Los Angeles county who have not already formed an opinion on the case. Finch, 44, and his red-haired former receptionist, Carole, 24, are accused of plotting and carrying out the July 18, 1959, gunshot slaying of the sur geon's wife, Barbara, 33. Market Heading For 6th Advance New York -(UPD- A heavily traded stock market moved forward today in an attempt to score its sixth consecutive gain. Du Pont rose l'i, Eastman Kodak lli and Alcoa more than 1. Steel issues, oils and motors -were generally frac tionally higher. Gold shares scored broadly on the news that President Eisenhower had banned over seas gold hoarding by Ameri can citizens in a further move to stop the outflow of the mclal. DYNAMITE SYNAGOGUE Johannesburg, South Africa - ll'Pli - Terrorists dynamited the city's main Jewish syna gogue early Sunday in the fourth recent incident against religious property. Hollywood Philip Crosby, explaining why he and his brother. Llndsoy and Dennis now arc solid entertainers on their own merits: "We've got a good clean act that bring. Lai ftl Uauiv trade." STRIKE AGAINST AIRLINE Mexico City -ilTD- The Na tional Maintenance Workers Union went on strike Sunday against Eostern Airlines In support of demands for higher Russian Missile Object Undetected Washington -(UPD- The Rus sians shot an object into the air, it fell - or flew - we know not where. The Defense Department says there has been no trace of the missile-like object since it was detected flying out of Russia and heading toward the Pacific Friday night. The object was tracked for six minutes by an Air Force radar station at Shemya Is land, Alaska. ' A department spokesman said Sunday there had been no further radar or visual sightings of the object which might have been an attempt to launch a satellite or send a rocket into the Soviet Pacific testing zone. The Navy last week spotted three Soviet missile-tracking ships heading toward the test ing grounds, about 1,000 miles from Hawaii. Compulsory ROTC Endorsed at College Corvallis-llPD-The Oregon State faculty senate voted Thursday to continue compul sory reserve officer training for freshmen and sophomores at OSC. The vote was 38-26. The fac ulty senate has discussed the possibility of voluntary ROTC at its past two meetings. Dr. A. L. Strand, OSC presi dent, said he will recommend a "wait and see" attitude when he reports the vote to the State Board of Higher Education. The University of Oregon faculty senate has gone on record favoring a change from compulsory program to a voluntary program. Strand said he would not favor an optional plan at Oregon and a compultory program at Ore gon State. He feels both schools should have similar imams "HI! I'm Patricia Hogue and I'm inviting you to attend our Open House Party. Fri day, January 20th, celebrat ing the merger of The Rogue Valley State Bank Medlord and Tht Oregon Bank Portland Watch for your Treasure Chest key in the mall." Rogue Valley Branch 1 109 Court Streai Eatf Medford Branch 701 Eait JcV.yi preceding years: The luck of adequate modifications in tne price-support laws to make them conform to the increased efficiency and growing pro ductive capacity of the agri cultural industry." He added that "each year the current unrealistic price support program is continued complicates further the pro duction adjustments that will have to be made before pres ent government controls over farm operations can be re laxed." ' Seek Change In Law For years, Eisenhower and Secretary of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson have sought con gressional changes in price support laws. There have been numerous changes, but never as far as they recommended. The big Item in the pro posed budget was $3.4 billion for stabilization of farm prices and farm income, including price support. The department spent $3.3 billion for the same purpose in fiscal 1061. Included in the 1962 esti mate was more than $1.5 bil lion for price support alone. In fiscal 1961, it was $1.4 bil lion. Special activities fi nanced by the Commodity Credit Corporation and in cluded in the category of stabilization of farm prices and farm income were figured at $1.7 billion. This included $1.3 billion to finance sur plus disposal abroad, funds for the international wneat agree ment, national wool act, sugar act, and related activities. CLOGSTON'S Metal Weather Stripping and Screens Eitlmjlei Gladly Phone SP 1-1014 Evenings oooooorpggy wlggly. 0 OPEN EVERY DAY UNTIL 9 P.M. O l ' h Regular 87c TIDE- o o I GREEN l.STArvlPS, o o Angel Swansdown Regular 55c Cake Mix DOG (FOOD WAG Tall Tins Regular 3 for 29c for SnOO o o tSUBUSHtD 1896 RIPE OLIVES ORE LSTAMPSJ o o Lindsay Jumbo Size Tall Tin for 69c Fresh Pan Ready Fryers o o ISlAStlSHCO 18 CREEN .STAMPSj Sweet Crisp Washington fGolden Delicious Apples o o Lb. Cello Bag S t WQ ft Q II d C i n a P,'k,t ffec,iv Monday, Tuesday, Wedna. wiwitmi I UIIU day, Jan. 16, 17,18. limit rights reserved. 4o