Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 22, 1961, Image 2

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    deadlock Over Major Tax Legislation Predicted in Legislature
Overhulse Agains
Most Tax Bills
Offered in House
"Salem - (UPD - Members of
the Senate Tax Committee
uredicted today the 1881 legis
.lature will end in a deadlock
.'over major tax legislation
and nothing will be done.
Former Senate President
Jjoyd Overhulse (D-Madras)
-said he opposes most of the
House Tax Committee bills,
Including the net receipts in
come tax and 3-cent cigarette
tax measures.
; Overhulse ... added there
iccms to be no sentiment on
'the House side to Senate tax
.'proposals, including the bill
-he and Sen. Walter J. Pearson
'have introduced allowing each
taxpayer to deduct. 10 per
Cent from his Income tax bill.
Since Oregon is in the black
'tnd doesn't have to raise
taxes, the proposals have
focused on tax relief and re
form. Ideas on how to go
About this are many and
. rvaried.
.Mui Aonu
::z Senate Tax Committee
"Chairman Ben Musa (D-The
-Dalles) agreed there is a pos
sibility of a deadlock. Another
rcommlttee member, sen. ver
sion Cook (D-Troutdale) said
.there seems to be' "no real
Tarea for compromise."
"---Musa gave the House net
'receipts tax bill little hope un-
:lets the House Tax Committee
puts back the part allowing
.deductions and exemptions.
'.'House Tax Committee mem
, bers are more optimistic al
though Hep. Victor Atiyeh (R--portland)
said a deadlock is a
"distinct possibility, and it la
jregrettable."
rT.Rep. Richard Eymann,
3iouse Tax Committee chair--man,
said "it's too early to
predict a deadlock, especially
since there is a possibility of
ra tax cut."
.Political Anarchy Sean .
mother highlights:
i -Conventions: Sen. Robert
Slraub declared a bill under
which state party conventions
"would not be allowed to per
suade a party member on how
lie should vote on candidates
'and Issues would create "po
litical anarchy."
Armed Forces: The Senate
Approved a House-passed bill
granting fuel tax exemptions
ion armed forces ordera for
delivery outside the state.
,C,Gas Taxes; Portland asked
Ilia. House Highways commit
tee for an additional half mil
lion dollars a year from state
gas taxes. The city said 219
-.cities in Oregon got tax
-money on basis of their popu
lation but its share was al
rioted on the basis of two
thirds of the population.
-'"'Drivers: Rep. KenMaher
;(J?-Portland) said a "citizens'
anarch on Salem is a distinct
possibility" when a bill to
raise the age of drivers to 18
Teomos up for a second hear
ing, March 23.
HIPS FUEL ELEMENTS
Lynchburg, Va. -OJFD- The
.final load of $9 million worth
.of nuclear fuel elements has
"been shipped to Camden, N.J.,
.for the nuclear merchant ship
Savannah, it was announced
'here Tuesday. The Babcock
and Wilcox Co. said the 32
.elements will be assembled as
'the core of a . reactor system
capable of propelling the Sa
vannah 14 times around the
.world without refueling.
Court Records
blSTRICT COURT
' Roier E. Cordis. Inadequate
brakea, S10.
Leroy L. Register, violation o'
basic ruli, 990.
; Ramey 8. Johmon, no open
tor's llcenie, 93. - .
- Glen M. DuBoh, failure to dli
lights, 97.90,
' Donald C. Gary,- no horn, 9;
v. Nina A. Newsome. William
Ore., driving whllt under the Ir
Iluenco of intoxicating liquor, 9301
-Arthur Madien, no motor va
hide llcenie, 99.
Lome H. Anited. failure to
-Slop. 910.
' Arthur H. Ooode, overwldth, 919.
,. XiUia Eliai Medina, ahootins in
restricted area. 930.
... Kldred E Monla, no address
liven. Illegal poaieailon of veni
son. 9199.
Orvllle H. Stewart, overload, 990.
Robert A. Cabler. overload, 9179.
Arthur O. Walaar, overload. 91s.
:.'Jenle C. Hart, overload. 923.90.
Melvln L. Mitchell, overload,
.138.90.
- Wllmer R. Luncefard, overload,
H0.
- Robert L. Gardner, Inadequate
brakea, 99.
Arthur C. Hunter, no brakea, 910.
' Jonnle S. Schaffer, vlolaUon of
beatc rule, 99.
Paul J. Stewart. 33SS Crater
Xaka ave.. Medford. auipanded
;pperator'a llcenie, 979.
.. Roy E. Blcknell, no operator'a
4lcc-nae, 919.
... Clyde H. Hampton, dtaobayed
-ftop algn. 919.
Z. Alden G. Yatea. 2007 Grlffen
Creek rd.. Medford, driving while
.under the Influence of Intoxlcat-
Bill for Registration
Of Lobbyists Debated
Salem -(UPD- Former Oregon
Republican Chairman Peter
Gunnar, now a lobbyist, to
day testified In favor of a bill
to require lobbyists at the
Oregon legislature to register
and report their expenses.
The House state and federal
affairs committee had a hear
ing on HB1413 introduced by
Rep. Edward N. Fadeley CD
Eugene), sponsor of the meas
ure. Fsdeley spoke for the bill
as did Don Ball of Eugene, a
political science graduate stu
dent at the University of Oregon.
Chairman Norman Howard
(D-Portland) said opponents
would be allowed to testify at
a later date.
Gunnar, who resigned two
weeks ago as GOP chairman
and became an insurance lob
byist, said the bill would pro
tect both the legislator and
the lobbyist from the "general
misunderstandings and suspic
ion currently existing and will
benefit the public by prevent
ing Oregon from falling into
the abuse of the legislative
process which has plagued
other states.
Gunnar offered amend
ments requiring the report
ing to and for whom expenses
were incurred.
Fadeley said it is "not an
anti-lobbyist bill," but one in
the public interest.
Lobbyists at Salem now
sign an informal register on
Cub Scouts
Cub Scout Pack 10
The Blue and Gold dinner
was served at the Howard
school cafeteria recently for
Cub Scout Pack 10. Walt Dis
ney's "Beaver Valley" was
shown in the multipurpose
room.
Den S presented the ' flag
ceremony. Awards were given
as follows: Mark Chisum and
Dale Bell, silver arrows; Allen
Bell, lion badge and gold ar
row; , Cort Traylor, denner
stripe, wolf badge, and gold
arrow: Curt Charley, wolf
badge; Jimmy Marshall, wolf
badge and gold arrow; Uary
Swindler, gold arrow and as
sistant denner stripe; Billy
Marshall, bear badge and gold
arrow; Larry Marshall, lion
badge and two gold arrows;
Gary Montgomery, denner
stripe; Billy Perdue, assistant
denner stripe; George Head
assistant denner stripe; Keeth
Henderson, wolf badge; May
nard Hadlcy, wolf badge and
denner stripe; Keith Guislng
er, bear badge. , ;
Dexter Kinnard, institution
al representative, presented
the Cub Pack charter to the
sponsor, the Howard school
PTA, which was received by
Mrs. E. E, Chrlss, president.
Initiation Set at
Legion Hall Tonight
Medford Post IS of the
American Legion will hold its
annual initiation ceremonies
and Past Conmmanders' night
at 8 o'clock tonight in the
Legion home, 404 Walnut st,
New members will be in
itiated in both the Post and
auxiliary by past command
ing officers' ritual team and
ladies. Refreshments will be
served, and entertainment
provided by The Shadows.
Comamnder Granvil Brit
tsan said all legionnaires,
their wives, and any interest
ed persons, are invited to at
tend.
4-H News
Howard Bakt 'n Stitchers
The third meeting of the
Howard Bake 'n Stitchers 4-H
club was held at our leaders
home Feb. 18.
We saw films on kitchen
safety, cake baking and mak
ing frosting. We were asked
questions on them. Daunis
and Diane Millard brought
cookies they baked at home.
We had these with chocolate
for refreshments.
The next meeting will be
held March 4 at pur leader's
home.
Tari Martin,
Reporter
a voluntary basis but under
Fadeley's bill it would be an
official legislative register
with all required to sign or
suffer penalties.
On the 60th day of the ses
sion, lobbyists would have to
report the first 45 days of
their expenses, and periodic
reports thereafter.
He said some lobby groups
in Salem have budgets of
"many tens of thousands of
dollars " for influencing legis
lators on certain legislation.
Thirty-one states now re
quire lobbyists to register of
ficially and 20 states require
reports of expenditures and
receipts.
Ball said the reporting
would remove lobbyists from
the "realm of rumor" and
make them professional.
Fadeley said he knows of a
"confidential list" that some
lobbyists have listing the fi
nancial condition and other
personal affairs of any legis
lator they are interested lm
He said the Informal roster
of lobbyists in Salem carries
102 names one lobbyist for
every legislator with 12 left
over but that there are more
lobbyists than that around.
Miss Johnson To Be
At Council Meeting
Miss Julia Johnson, execu
tive secretary of the Oregon
Council on Aging, will give a
report on the White House
Conference on Aging in Med
ford Thursday.
Miss Johnson will speak at
the third annual meeting of
the Rogue Valley Council on
Aging Thursday at 2:30 p.m.
in the Red Cross auditorium,
60 Hawthorne ave.
A question and answer ses
sion will follow the talk. Miss
Johnson will speak instead of
Mrs. Marshall Cornett, Kla
math Falls, who is hospital
ized in Salem with a broken
hip following a fall there
Tuesday. She is a patient at
the Salem Memorial hospital.
Prior to the meeting from
1 to 2:30 p.m. the senior ac
tivity center orchestra will
will give a program.
Regional Edition
Medford?
Page 2A
Tribune
MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1961
Stocks Again Fail
To Set Year's High
On Mixed Patterns
New York - (UPD - Stocks
tried and failed again Tuesday
to crack their high for the
year.
Heavy churning produced
mixed patterns in most groups
with the better gains scored
by those issues outside the
popular averages.
Money-lending and building
shares once again led the up
side movers while electronics,
motors, national defense is
sues and store chains were
mostly higher.
Preventing the Dow-Jones
industrial average from crack
ing the resistance level that
has plagued it for days now
were Eastman Kodak, Gener
al Electric, Westinghouse and
International Nickel, all
down.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York-OIPD-Dow-Jonss
final stock averages: 30 in
dustrials 652.40 off 1:25; 20
rails 143.86 off 0.19; 15 util
ities 107.53 off 0.14; 65
stocks 220.4S off 0.37, Sales
Tuesday wore about 5.07
million shares at compared
with 4.68 million shares
Monday.
Tueaday'a pricea on - aelected
stock,:
Alum Co. Am 601
American Can
American Molora (xd)
AT&T..
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper
Armco Steel
Bcndix Corp
Bethlehem Steel
Brunswick
Caterpillar Corp
Chrysler Corp
L.oca uoia
Continental Con
Crown Zcllcrboch
CurtUs WrlKht
Dow Chemical
Du Pont ..
Eastman Kodak
Firestone ..
Ford
General Electric
General Foods
General Motors
Georgia Pacific
Graham Paige
Grayhound
Gulf Oil ....
Homestake Mining
Idaho Power
I. B. M. ..
... 37
... 181
...113;.
... 72
... 52 r,
... 72 i
... GO a,
... 44 V,
ll'a
... 38 a
... 43 V,
... 88 ','4
... 30(4
... 55"!
... l!P,s
... 74?,
.2101.
..1071.
... 38 'i
...70i
.. 631.
.. 74',
.. 43
.. 30,i
.. 2 '.'4
... 22(1,
.. 30 'i
... 46?k
.. 341,
.640
Int Paper
Johns Manville
Kennecott Copper
Lockheed Aircraft
Merck
Montana Power
MontBomery Ward
Nat'l Biscuit
New York Central
Northern Pacific
Pac Gai tc Elec
Penney, J. C -
Penn RR ...
Proctor and Gamble
Radio Corporation
Safeway .....
Sears
Shell Oil ...
Socony Mobil Oil
Southern Co
Southern Pacific (xd) ....
Sperry Rand
Standard California
Standard Indiana
Standard NJ
Sun Mlnei
Texas Co.
Texas Cult Sulfur (xdl
Texas Pac Land Trust ..
Transamerlca
Trans World Air
Trl-Continental
Union Carbide
Union Pacific
United Aircraft
United Air Lines
U. S. Rubber
U. S. Steel
Westinghouse
Youngstown S & T
... 34 n
... 64 'i
... 84
... 34 "i
... 843.
... 32 r.
... 311,
7711
... 17.i
... 461,
... 80 -4
Hi
13',
...1471,
.. 41,
... 38",
... 961,
... 431.
... 44'4
... 40 Va
... 22
... 25',,
... 50 li
... SO',',
... 44 'i
... 8'.,
... 911,
... 23
1714
31
.. 1ST,
... 401,
...1241',
.. 31 li
391,
.. 42 li
.. 49 li
.. 84',
.. 421,
..10014
Local Student Takes
Part in Arts Parade
Eugene - Mira Frohnmayer
of Medford was the contralto
in a trio featured in the Live
Arts Parade last week on the
University of Oregon campus.
Other members were Eliza
beth Goldhammer, Eugene,
flute, and Dean Madsen,
Chico, Calif., clarinet.
Live Arts parade featured
student artistic achievement
in the areas of poetry, the
dance, choral and instrumen
tal music, and the short story.
It is part of the University
Festival of Arts and is spon
sored by the Creative Arts
Committee of the Student
Union.
Miss Frohnmayer, a gradu
ate student majoring in music
here this year, lives at 1656
Spring St., Medford.
Living Human Cells
Said Frozen; Revived
San Francisco IUPD Two
University of Oregon surgeons
reported Tuesday they have
frozen living human cells and
small animals - and revived
them without apparent ill ef
fects. Drs. Stanley W. Jacobs and
J. B. Dunphy reported on
'Neuberger Law'
Studied by Senate
Salem-OIPB-A bill to make
the "Neuberger law" a part
of the Oregon constitution has
been introduced in the Sen
ate. The law, sponsored by the
late Sen. Richard Neuberger
when he was a member of
the Oregon Legislature, re
quires that appointees to fill
a vacancy in an elected office
belong to the same party as
their predecessors.
The bill is in direct con
trast to a measure introduced
in the House last month by
Rep. Hoomissen, D-Portland.
That bill seeks to repeal the
Neuberger law.
their experiments with a "super-cooling"
process at a meet
ing of the Pacific Coast Surgi
cal association.
However, the scientists
found thaUfreezing did not
slow the growth of cancer
cells. It had been speculated
that cold might be used to
slow cancer growth, since it is
known that heat speeds the
manufacture o f malignant
cells.
Jacobs and Dunphy over
came the main difficulty of
freezing living tissues-the for
mation of ice crystals which
damage and destroy the cells.
They solved the problem by
removing as much water as
possible from the tissues and
lowering the temperature un
der tremendous pressures,
since ice cannot form unless
the cooled water is permitted
to expand.
NOW YOU KNOW
United Press International
The rainiest place in the
world is Mount Waileale,
Hawaii, on the island of
Kauai, with an average
rainfall of 471.68 inches. .
The surgeons said their
work was aimed at two ulti
mate possibilities:
-The prospect of freezing
humans into a state of sus
pended animation so they may
travel for years out into the
far reaches of space without
dying of old age along the
way.
-The ability to deep-freeze
and store whole human organs
or tissue indefinitely, so they
will be- available in banks
when it becomes possible to
transplant them from one per
son to another.
Back at
1132 Court St.
Vern Chapman
C&E Business
Machines
TYPEWRITERS
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) Title Insurance
Collection Escrows
- r : c........
Mining Abstracts
CHARLES ELY - r.ar rrep.ranon JANI PACE
Till Examiner. Eicrow Officer
Ik )
TV -
your
name
on the
collar
or
your
monogram
on the '
bodice
vlolaUon ot
-snff llauor. SlSfl.
' . Rosalie S- Skov,
a,le rule. SIS.
Thomas M. Scott Jr., 724 N.W.
Fourth at.. GranU Pass, reckless
.drlvlns, 1300.
'smcuiT COURT
.T. Robert Charles Anderson vs.
-Gwendolyn Doreen Anderson, dl
rorce .decree.
-Galle Margaret Hornsby va.
Xewii Gene Hornsby, divorce de
cree. . r. Clara M. Lee vs. Dennis M. Lee,
.divorce decree.
' T Olffa Marie Adams vs. Theodore
-Melvln Adams, divorce decree.
' Carolyn Jean Eldman va. Walter
.wenzel Eldman. divorce complaint.
. JIAHRIAOK LICENSE
APPLICATION
, Z.Xldon Robert Wlmer. 33 Quince
t.-, Medford, and Lucia Grace
' 'Snyder, Days Creek.
A Vjf- X J
-? si
this
your
monogram
on the
skirt
nams
on it f
ONLY
Your name or your monogram (styles shown at
left) will be embroidered for free on this new
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float skirt dress tailored in classic sailing
blue cotton chambray . . . detailed with red stitching
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in red. More news: plunging neckline,
flat wide collar.
i
Monogramming service is quick, easy. You mail
dress in envelope provided. State where embroidrey
is to be placed. Give your name and return address.