Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 22, 1962, Image 10

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    10 A
FRIDAY. JUNE 22. 1962
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
f'li'i,At.U..t x
HOLD THE FORTI The 11 children of Louis Crosswhile
are firmly entrenched In the family station wagon at
Hydesville, Calif., after deputies had arrested the 50-year-old
laborer for obstructing the law. Deputies from Eureka
attempted to repossess the car with a tow truck. Cross-
white told the children to gel into the auto, lock the doors
and let no one In. While the sheriff's men think over new
strategy, the children live in the car in shifts while their
father sits in Jail. (UPI)
STAR GAZERO
') 2- 7-26-31
-By CLAY R. POLLAN-
39-40..3I
66-76-80 891
GfMINI
" MAY 22
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CANCIS
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JULY 24
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All-18-28-38
468-72-81-861
VlflGO
, AUG 34
SEPT. 32
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31 Who..
32 Will
33 Important
34 Day
35 Fresh
61 Limelight
62 On
63 To
64 On
63 Ideas
36Concenfrat 66D,rticuk
frt Your Daily Activity Cuido JK
According to fhs Start.
To develop message for Saturday,
read words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth siga
1 Keep
2 Cater
3 You'll
IS.t
SToke
6 Down
7.To
8 Just
. 9 Oppof it
lOAn
1 1 Focing
12 Probably .
13 Average
14 All
15 Relations
16 With
17 Kinds
IB Issues
19 Nor
20 Awaken
21 01
223ood ...
23 To
24 Your
23 A
26 Those
27 Sex
28 Moles
29To.loy
30Wim
37 Take
38 Conditions
39 On
40 Your
I Expert
42 Be
43 Most
44 Good
4b Interesting
46 It
47 Look
48 To
49 With
50 Be
51 It'll
52CarofrM .
53Poy
54 Atrocted
55 At
56 Others
57 Easy
58 In
59 To
60 Act
Adverse t)Ncul
67 You
68 Much
69 Where,
70 Ever
71 A
72Trsughr
73 You
74 Today
75 Develop
76 Problems
77 Personal
78 Advisor
79 Money
80 And
81 To
82 Happy -
83 Keel
84 You're
85 Headed
86 Today
87 Feeling
88 Handle
89 Act
00 Hurch
a''-!.' i
icutr.il
SEPT.
OCT.
5-25-44-47 it
559-cuU85'
SCOfFrO
OCT. 24 fcSfc
1-15-39-50,
SAGITTARIUS
OK. H
KtM KO sAT.I
t64-71-79-90
CAPRICORN
DEC. 29
4
8-10-13-34 tfl
P7-46-57
AQUARIUS
JAN, 21 .?,
FEB. 1 Oji
9-27-32-4J0
154-63-73
PtSCIS
MAR. 21 '
3-12-20-29 rOI
-52-82-87ii
Many Countries
Pushing Plans To
Enlarge Sugar Mills
Cities Starting To
Suffer 'Hardening
Of Their Artemis7
"Any American city over
25 years of age is already
starting to suffer from hard
ening of its artcrials and
thrombosis of its parking
spaces."
This observation was voiced
by Mayor John Snider in a
luncheon address before the
Medford Rotary club this
week.
Snider, who is now serving
his third term as mayor f
Medford, told Rolarians that
"unfortunately there isn't a
vaccine on sugar cubes to
feed to an ailing city. Neither
is there a single tonic to make
a drooping city perk up and
act like the teeming young
ster It used to be."
Speaking at the Rogue Val
ley Country club. Mayor Sni
der recalled that 20 years ago
Medford sustained the shock
of thousands of soldiers at
Cnmp White, followed by the
shock of losing the same thou
sands of soldiers who had
caused citizens here every
thing from Inconveniences to
riches.
Downtown Problems
Snider said that across the
country cily governments are
paying special attention to
downtown problems because
of the lax burden sustained
by these areas and the fact
that the central business dis
trict of a community has be
come a symbol of the city.
Mayor Snider reviewed the
findings of Richard B. Hay
ward, well known planning
consultant affiliated with the
bureau of municipal research.
Hayward, who conducted a
survey of this city, envisions
a functional distribution of
land uses in the central busi
ness district, according to the
speaker, with the core area
compact, easily accessible safe
and convenient for shoppers
The central business district
pattern must be modified from
the present gridiron street
plan with Medford's govern
ment center to the west ad-
BEEF HANDLER
Providence, R.I. 0IPD Rob
ert S. Hayes, 62, Is man
who specializes in one type of
work. He recently retired
after 31 years in a Job where
he answered any beef that
came into the New England
Telephone Co. Thursday he
started a new Job as boss of
a farm in Wooster, Ohio,
where he still will handle
beef - this lime on the hoof.
The farm has a herd of whltc
laced llercfords.
)
Jacent to the new Federal
building and county court
house. '
Special attention must be
given to off street parking
and the development of mall
type areas downtown for the
convenience of shoppers.
Tools of Planning
We have available all the
tools of planning and project
ing but the real leadership
must come from the mer
chants and property owners.
Mayor Snider emphasized.
Traffic patterns, zoning, off
street parking areas all of
these are cold and without
meaning until we add to them
the magic warmth of Ameri
can merchandising, he said.
Mayor Snider is past presi
dent and member of the board
of the League of Oregon Cit
ies, chairman of the Oregon
Sister Cities program and vice
chairman of the State Board
of Aeronautics. He was intro
duced by City Manager Rob
ert Duff.
Washington tUPD The for
eign Agricultural Service said
Thursday many countries are
going ahead with plans for
building or enlarging sugar
mills and refineries despite
obvious surplus stocks and
low prices of sugar in the
world.
Such activity is going on in
most major parts of the world,
the agency said, but it is most
in evidence in Asia and Afri
ca. This expansion is going
on in some countries, FAS
said, because of the desire for
self-sufficiency and the need
to earn foreign exchange. It
noted that these considera
tions "sometimes outweigh
questions of cost and efficien
cy of production."
Limited Future
FAS , said the continued
drive toward self-sufficiency
and the rapid increase In
world production of sugar in
recent years "Imply a limited
future for profitable exports
of sugar."
The world has had no diffi
culty in recent years in pro
ducing more than enough
sugar for a rising population
and an increase in per capita
consumption. So, as the export
market shrinks in proportion
to total production and con
sumption of sugar, it is likely
that new construction and ex
pansion of sugar mills will oc
cur primarily to meet grow
ing domestic requirements
rather than to provide for ex
panded exports.
American wheat has been
put to a new use in Pakistan
- wages to pay labor cost of
construction of a school.
School Needed
When Secretary of Agricul
ture Orville L. Freeman was
in the village of Gangu Baha
dur, Pakitan, last year, he
was informed that a primary
school was needed.
Freeman offered American
wheat to pay the labor costs
if the village would supply
the necessary funds for build
ing materials. The funds were
collected through donations
from villagers and a special
grant from the Pakistan gov
ernment. The U.S. wheat wil be re
leased from Pakistan govern
ment storage to pay the labor
costs of building the school
that will accommodate 100
children. The laborers' wages
will be paid one-half in cash
and one-half in wheat. Half
of the wheat released to the
village authorities will be sold
on the open market for cash.
This will then be paid to the
laborers on a weekly basis
along with an equal amount
of wheat.
The Family Council
Kdltor's note: Tho Family Council consists of ft Judse, a
phyctitatrlst, thrr-a clergymen, three editors and a women's editor.
Each article Is a summary of s (amity disagreement presented to the
Council. The Council deals with problems, major and minor,
encountered by guidance counselors and social workers, edited by
by Mrs. Alma Denny. (Copyright by General Features Corp.)
Raymond U. - Why couldn't
she have told me she was
studying voice?
Lorna U. - He makes fun
of me when I tell him my
ideas.
Raymond U. - Lorna and I
have been married 12 years
and have two daughters. I'd
like to know why she talks
to me as though I'm a mental
defective - Just baby talk
and nonsense, or else requests
for money or help - but she
saves all her important talk
for her friends and her family.
Even the children know more
about how she spends her day
and what she s plotting and
planning than I do. And I'm
her husband, her next-of-kin.
What brings me to this slow
boil is meeting a neighbor on
the bus and having him ask
me how Lorna's music les
sons are coming along. I did
not even know she was taking
any, but this guy's wife had
told him. Well, I mumbled
something to- pretend I was
up on things. But evidently
she leads a private life right
under my nose. I'd like an in
side track, and right away.
too.
Lorna U. - A woman can
be laughed at just so much.
What's a wife to do with her
hopes and dreams and bright
ideas if she knows all she can
expect from her husband is
ridicule?
From the beginning of our
marriage I used to tell Ray all
the things I'd like to do with
my life - travel, study, create
and work. He'd nod or grin
or just grunt. But when the
children were out of diapers
and on their feet, I began to
talk more seriously and earn
estly. That's when he began
to make fun of me. And it hurt
terribly.
So when our younger
Ike To Address
Republican Dinner
Washington -0JPD- Former
President Dwight D. Eisen
hower visits Washington to
day for a series of political
conferences and a speech
labeled as a "hard-hitting at
tack on New Frontier do
mestic policy."
Eisenhower planned to ad
dress about 3,000 Republi
cans tonight at a $100 a plate
GOP fund-raising dinner.
Former Sen. John W. Bricker
of Ohio, chairman of the din
ner, said the event was a
sellout.
The net proceeds from the
dinner will be divided, with
75 per cent going to the GOP
Congressional Campaign Com
mittee and the remaining 25
per cent to the Republican
Senatorial Committee.
The former chief executive
and his wife were scheduled
to arrive in Washington this
afternoon from their Gettys
burg, Pa., farm.
TRIES CON JOB
New York -1UPI1- The Irish
International Airlines office
here has received a letter
from someone who read about
its "spontaneous" group tours
to Ireland. "Please rush bro
chure. Trip, long overdue,"
said the letter from an inmate
of Los Angeles county jail.
SAMBO'S
NOW OPEN
24 HOURS
7 Days a Week
1025 South Riverside
BREAKFAST ANYTIME
DANCING
DINING
Under the Stars!
Chicken Prime Rib Steaks
Lobster Tail Salmon
Charcoal Broiled
AT YOUR TABLE! .
Your Favorite Beverage
No Increase in Menu Prices ,
fU I VI ERA ciub
Halfway between Gold Hill and Rogue River
on old 99 . . . Freeway turnoff: Redwoods
Hwy., Foots Creek.
Phones: J U 2-1107, 855-1207
daughter started kindergarten
this winter, I signed up for
voice lessons at the Commu
nity House. Some of my
friends criticized me for being
flighty and stage-struck. Oth
ers approved. I figured I'd tell
Ray when I could invite him
to a class concert.
Th Council: How do you
think bartenders got so popu
lar, Ray? They listen (or pre
tend to) and they heave a deep
sigh at the right time. And
that's more than many hus
bands and wives do for each
other.
When two people have
joined their fates unto eter
nity, a rebuff tendered by one
to the other takes on grave di
mensions unless there's a
healthy flow of communica
tion between them which neu
tralizes it. Lorna says Ray's
mockery hurt terribly. We'll
bet it did. For she was ex
posing her inmost pain, her
fragile aspirations. And from
the eyes where she most
sought sympathy and encour
agement, she felt scorn and
dismissal.
Here is a clear illustration
of the special nature of the
talk between a husb""d and
wife. It's so differr . from
the conversation eac.i might
have with anybody else. Dis
approval by others can be
shrugged off. A woman who's
told, for example, that she
looks like a frump consoles
herself by thinking, "That's
your opinion. I can take it or
leave it. Regardless of what
you think, I still have my hus
band's okay." Lorna lacked
that consolation. Not only did
she despair of Raymond's
staunch backing-up in the
spirit of We-Two-Against-The
World. She felt he'd be the
first to desert her, rather than
the last, if at all.
Lorna is a lonely woman,
Ray. Even though you're side-by-side
with her every day,
you're not giving her what
every human being needs
whether married or not -friendship.
For that, for a pa
tient ear and a non - judging
heart, she must seek others,.
Perhaps it is too much to ask
of a husband - to be bread-,
winner, mate, repairman, fath
er, good citizen and all the.
rest. If so, two comments: you.
can try to become Lorna'
confidant by being less caustic
and frightening; and, if you.
continue to puncture all her
"bubbles" you must expect
her to continue bringing themf
to others for comment and re-y
view.
A husband's smile mean
more to a wife than the cheer
of a multitude. Similarly, hi,
frown can make her "trembla
with fear" like Sweet Alice in"
"Ben Bolt." That's why others;
can blurt top-of-the-head opin
ions, but husbands must with-,
hold judgment until dictate
by top-of-the-heart impulses. ?
AT THI BIG Y HIWAY 9 NORTH
St0 N,Y STEAKS
Delicious Jumbo Shrimp
at prices you can afford
Open 5 a.m.-12 p.m.-Fri. & Sat.-24 Hrs.
Y'ALL COME!
To the music of
JAY STOUGH DIXIE DRIFTERS
'At featuring Ray Ashcraft
VOTED
Most Popular Band in Southern Oregon
and Northern California!
OASIS BALLROOM
Eagle Point
SATURDAY NIGHT
June 23, 9:00 to 1:00
Don't Miss the Special "Lighting Ceremony"
af 1 1 p.m. of the newly installed Modulas, Transistorized Music System featuring
a fabulous, unique new lighting arrangement completely controlled by the
sound of music and custom made especially for the Dixie Drifters! Nothing Ilk
It on the West Coastl
June is Jacks onvillc Museum Month!
I w
Featuring . . , (aaaw
BROASTED familyX
CHICKEN special
... at Cubb,', mod.rn, """V ,ub thick"'
Darkling Driva-ln Ros- I rrtnch fries, l-pinr cols jl
tauranr and Nevr Codes I slaw and garlic brtad! A II
SS,! -iL-St' '"d tor . . . I
f PATI0 $395
, PACK
I tl-pc. tub of chicken, 1- l"isii
Hunt potato salad, 1 -gallon I 'nir delicious
II root bear, buttered rolls. I r t .s
11 (or in, pi, n.pkin,, jl Dreaktast!
I """Jlg 0,'v "f s,,v,d,""n 7 ""
Cubhv cSi
PHONE ORDERS . . . 773-2919
1 ,
the colorful clays of the
Old West ... the thrills of the gold
rush mid Indian wars!
Visiit itflne JIacIkswimviMe Mraseramm!
IT'S EXCITING IT'S FREE -IT'S YOURS
Th entire. Rogua River Valley ii rich in the romance of the
Old West, and thara't no finer, mora tnjoyabla way to relive
thoia days than to visit YOUR Jacksonville Museum. You,
your family and especially out-of-town guests will delight in
th mors than 6,000 individual collections. Among its most
popular exhibits ar th Brirt Gallery, a replica of Peter Britt's
Photographic Studio, on of th earliest in th Pacific North
wit, th lualiafl R.om, containing artifacts and relics mad
and used by th valley's first inhabitants, th Gun Room,
mineral displays and fluorescent room, a children's room,
parlor, collection of wedding dresses and a Civil War exhibit.
Th Southern Oregon Historical Society administers and main
tains this museum on of th finest In th West and ap
proximately 466,000 names appear on th registration book.
So, with JUNE JACKSONVILLE MUSEUM be sur to make
data to visit th museum . . . you may spend all th Mm you
wish and it is all PRlil
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
A.