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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1962)
r . v. i.T : ; ? 1 - .rVv .V I,. . - ' e . -W .ii- POWER PROVIDER - This is an artist's concept of SNAP (Systems for Nuclear Auxiliary Power), an "atomic battery" to provide power for an operational navigation satellite. The generator is an advanced model of a nuclear generator which was launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., a year ago. It is being built for the Atomic Energy Commission by the Martin Co. (UPI) GOING TO if THIS SUMMER? Wherever you go, a vaca tion takes money . . . but what can take the place of a well-earned vacation? Up to $1500 on your signa ture only, car or other se curity for vacation and oth er purposes. IDCAL 1DAN 535 E. JACKSON BLVD. Madfortf Shopping CinUr Ftone: 773-7456 Dick Webb, Mgr. Opin Frldiy Evvningi 'Til 7 FINAL CLEARANCE of BOAT OUTFITS before we move io the Medford Shopping Center You can make the deal of the year, right before the holiday season. We are nearly clear out, so don't delay. Only 1963 models will go in to our new store. DORSETT SKI-BIRD 900 lb. capacity Tilt Trailer Evinrude Speed Twin Mir. Controls, Skis, Other Extras All Brand New and Ready Right Now To Hitch to Your Car $ 1595 $300 14' LAPSTRAKE It's a Dandy Canadian-Built Fishing Boat 619 lb. capacity Trailer 5V2 HP Evinrude Motir $595 Brand New BARGAIN P14 mm mi Steering ft tyhcddtwy W'jPaS? c 14' bit tni JOHNSTON STORES 112 South Riverside Eagle Point Man Is Arraigned Charles Edward Smart, 34 Eagle Point, was arraigned Wednesday on a fugitive war rant from Crescent City Calif., charging grand theft. The warrant was issued fol lowing a Joint investigation by Del Norte county, Calif., deputy sheriff, Eldon Beck ner, livestock theft investiga tion officer, and Oregon state police. Two heifers were involved which were reported stolen from California and recovered in Jackson county, state police said. GRANT APPROVED Washington IUPI) A $10,000 grant to study possibilities of a resort development on the Warm Springs Indian Reser vation has been approved by the Area Redevelopment Ad ministration. We'll take a Trade-in Tool dawn Ready To Go $100 down Traikr $213 McKenzie Group Pleads Case for North Bank Route Salem - (WD - A citizens' group protesting a proposed relocation of the McKenzie highway at Blue River took their case to the governor's office Thursday, charging the Oregon Highway Department with bias." A group called the North Bank Road committee told Warne Nunn, Gov. Mark Hat field's executive assistant, that highway department en gineers were unable to jus tify their proposed South Bank route on U. S. 126 but were going ahead anyway. The State Highway com mission was scheduled to make a decision on the South Bank plan here today, and the North Bank committee urged the governor to ask the commission to veto the pro posal. Said Death Blow Edwin Zeitz of Blue River, chairman of the committee, said the relocation would be a death blow to existing busi nesses on the north bank. He also said the south bank route would destroy much of the wild natural beauty of the area, adding the south bank route isn't necessary. The committee, and numer ous citizens in the area, want the north bank route retained, and improved. Zeitz said the highway de partment held a public hear ing on its plan in Blue River June 5, and it was evident the highway officials are "very biased" for their own plan, ignoring arguments for the north bank. Petitions Presented More petitions were pre sented, adding to a number the governor has already re ceived. Nunn said he would confer with the governor late Thurs day on the matter, and a re port would be transmitted to the highway commission be fore its meeting today. Zeitz also said that a re port contrasting the log traf fic on both routes issued by the forest service was "inac curate" and "inadequate". Yet, Zeitz said, the highway department is using the re port in its recommendation to the highway commission. Other committee members that conferred with Nunn were A. M. O'Dell and Ger ald Hollingsworth, both of Blue River, and Mrs. Sylvia Cuthbert and S. F. Patter son, both of Eugene. ' Persons Holding Stocks Increase To 17,010,000 New York -IUPII- The New York Stock Exchange has re ported that the shareholding population of the United States reached a new high of 17,010,000 in 1962, and ex plained how it arrived at this figure. The NYSE census, fourth it has made, showed a more than 250 per cent increase in the estimated number of share holders since the first one was issued in 1952. Not Individual Count In telling about the census, Keith Funston, president of the exchange, said it was not, of course, a person-by-person count, but that it drew on "sampling techniques of prov en validity." A research organization (Al fred Politz Research Inc.) col laborated with the exchange in the effort to determine how many people hold stocks, where they live, and how old they are, among other things. To get the information, the investigation had to encom pass 6,278 public corporations. In 1959, the job was a little simpler: 5,098 corporations were figured in. In getting the figures for 1962, the re j searchers found that the cor I porations had 8,898 common and preferred issues outstand ing, representing 14.4 billion ! shares. Value Reduced 1 The market value of these shares at the end of 1961 was $531 billion; presumably the I recent actions in the stock ex changes generally has shrunk this figure substantially. : The file showed public cor portations had an aggregate total of 45,528,000 stockh'-ld ers of record early this year and 42,092. 00U of these rep resented individual stockhold ers of record, females, males, joint accounts and fiduciary individual. saMSvrv?aMSJsgfJMSjar LHM tOTICIS NOTICE TO IRKDITORS Votlce I. hereby given that I have been appointed bv the Cir cuit Court of the State of Ore gon for Jack'Ol County. Admin istrator ol the Estate of Julli Ellrabeth Rust. Deceaied. and have qualified All person, having claim, sg.in.t the Eitate of said Dece dent are hereby notified to pre sent them, with proper voucher., duly certified to me at my office, 1005 East Main Street. Medford, Oregon within six month, from the date of this notice Dated and flr.t published June IS. 1912 Ronald L Rlcke'.n Adminl.trator. MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. The Family Council Kdttor's note: Th. Family Council eonai.t. of a Judge, a phyrhialrl.t. three clergymen, three editor, and a women', editor. Kach article 1. a summary of a family disagreement presented to the Council. Tbe Council deal, with problem., major and minor, encountered by guidance coun.elor. and social workers. Edited by by Mr.. Alma Denny. (Copyright by Augu.U M. - He -hasn't deserted me; he's looking for a job. Mrs. S.E. - He's perfectly willing to let us support his family. Augugti M. - Cliff and I were married four years ago, when he was 19 and I was 18. We have two babies, aged 2 and 3. Unable to get a job in our small city. Cliff went out West eight months ago and I moved in with my parents. He's written me saying he moves from job to job and wants to give it another year's try, hoping to land something good and send for us. Meanwhile life is extremely hard for me. The only money I have is a small aid-to-chil-dren check plus what's left of S50 Cliff sent for Christmas. Naturally my parents aren't wild about having us all here, especially since I'm so com pletely dependent upon them. My mother wants me to insist that Cliff return, since we can't join him out there. But he has more of a chance where Implied Consent Law To Be Sought Salem -(UPD- The Oregon Traffic Safety commission has decided to press for an im plied consent law in the 1963 legislature. This would require drivers to submit to a chemical test in cases of suspected drunken driving. Failure to consent to a test could result in suspension of the suspect's driver's license. A similar proposal failed in the 1961 legislature. The commission also decid ed to set up a committee to study whether Oregon should have a stiff penalty for those who deliberately flee from police cars. Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF TWO TEEN-AGE ASPIRANTS to a stage career were trying out foe their very first part, and discussing Helen Hayes, Katharine Cornell, Audrey Hepburn, and Anne Bancroft in their dressing room. As they mentioned each star's name, they pooh-poohed emphatically, and assured themselves that they would be ever so much better if they got the op portunity. Suddenly one interrupted to hand the other her greasepaint and inquired, "Say, how do you put this makeup Oft?" A proud Washington hos tess was instructing a new maid before a diplomatic cocktail party. "Dress modestly," said the hostess, "and don't wear any jewelry." The new maid said, Thanks for the warning. Ma'am." One unattended, itty bitty advertising magnate fn the Twin Cities, according to Jerry Beatty, coined the following six un intentional malapropisms in the course of a five-day, 36-hour week: 1. Chafing at the dish. 2. Dropped it like a ten-foot pole. 3. Get on your bicycle and run like crazy. 4. He's just an ignor-t ant ramus. 6. Let's not downgrade this up. 6. There's a dirge of good music on the radio. Clever Walter Freese found a way to cure hin 15-year-old son's habit of being late to school. "I bought him a car," boasts Freese. Now he has to get there early to find a place to park." C 1963, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King: Features Syndicate i B1G20" G.l7"7 I 3-SPIID FANS 1 in 2?97 I G.E. slim style-bifj 20" siie for real air moving. I 3 speeds with control knob. Manually reversible. I i : OPEN TILL 9:00 FRIDAY NIGHT II I Sundays-10:00-S:30 i SHOPPING CENTER ST MEDFORD. OREGON General Feature. corp.) he is than back here. Mri. S.E. - My poor daugh-1 ter doesn't want to face the I fact that her husband has simply run off. There are jobs here for a man who wants to work and hold his family to gether. But Cliff pretended to be looking for about six months, turned down things that looked like real work, insisted upon office work only. Roll up his sleeves and dig? Not Cliff. When all the money was used up and he couldn't meet the rent, he carted Gussie and the babies to our house and skipped town. It's an impossible situation. We ourselves don't have much, the rooms are over crowded, and Cliff gives no sign of being able to send for Gussie. For us to move them all out West would cost over $1,000, which we can't afford. The only solution is for Gussie to make her husband come back and take care of her. But all her sympathy is with him, not us or her children. Tha Council: Six months out of work locally, eight months out of work (most of the time) out West, and plans to remain 3,000 miles apart for a total of at least two years - these don't add up to the picture of a devoted, responsible head-of-a-household. Cliff seems to think he can put his wife and children into deep-freeze and find them "ready for use" whenever he chooses to re turn to them. That may work with turkeys. But human re lationships require day-by-day care for their health and preservation. Regardless of how Augusta sugarcoats Cliff's intentions, his vague program and his meager contributions toward her support make his flight to the West look mighty simUar to desertion. It's understand able that a teen-ager who mar ries and soon finds himself the father of two babies would seek to get out from under on ..ANNE banjboft; v any pretext. A better Job? That's a fine sounding one. But how long does a man dump his responsibilities on his wife's family? Not more than a few weeks, usually, if he's any sort of a man. At any rate he tries harder than Cliff to send money and send hope and send ideas for re uniting his family. Certainly Cliff must be making some money, however scanty. Certainly he should be sending Augusta what-1 Ntwtsr Lightwtighf ICE CHESTS bv Thermos Discount Prices Reg. Holiday Featherweight $4.88 $15.50 Icy-Hot Chest .. $12.95 $18.95 Icy-Hot Chest . $15.95 $27.95 Thermos-Steel $23.95 $25.95 Thermos-Alum. $21.95 Efficient Picnic Jugs Newest lightweight Styles All at DEEP CUT Prices AIR MATTRESS Inflatable, Built-in Pillow. Specisl $1.99 $2.69 Air Mattress Without Pillow PORTABLE ROOM COOLERS New ESKIMO Models $5.95 - No. 302 $28.88 No. 402 Z:i $33.88 Stand for above .., $6.88 No. 602 n9,, $38.88 No. 802 Zll $42.88 Stand for above $7.49 1 iiRirtiCMimii iv u"rrr rllT l I7TT3TR H II u.vffWton- I f5 .rx 1 1 - - 1 w v-"wif Dffye I Jf mm imsxi $1 UU irp1-' J "ft. TiM 35 mm KODACHROME ' J .V-v,. Ji vl 'r.'';.''.':.i$288 TUSSY MIDNIGHT ".V 8 mm KODACHROME i?&u!! $1-00 V '-' V 7 Ni ( NM1V Mori. Film and $058 1 ' Jj . Tablet ?.Lf "zlw" thokgs f , ., ... I MIAOACMts . MUSCie acms colos 1 iUlM I llUllllW I Hot ond told SW.t jfc- q L Foam ,ubb ..nd.l., OC ?tJ ,,,., $le7 Fa-mily VaJue Size .n ...... zoc 'I Attached cord ond njuj wom.n mi chiidn. Pair h Compl;.v mtmte&m fifo - I dg iwDKitE mm mm $k Spring titled for For RicnU., iHfV V 7"tf f ' 94. ta 5a ztr $ .C .mil Add FeTd'cral Excise tax on Tanabfe MnSandVie Pre atfliWu. jjj r 'f 'SSyXlSZI MEDPORD'S ORWrtttfi DISCOUNT STORE JE TgEF i mmfflMm'- OPEN WEtK cver'j left from his room, board and laundry expenses. And certainly he should be more specific as to when they'll all be together and whether it will be in the East or West. We advise Augusta to get tough on this, to insist on funds and on a time limit to Cliff's rovings. If these are not forthcoming, if he con tinues to hem and haw, she should - in all justice to her parentt, her babies and her- self - take what the lawyers Special Holiday Hours July 4, 9 A.M. to 2 P.M. 131 M 21 R0 FULL 8-INCH $4.88 B 11.1 UJ III ' DAXS 8 TO 9 SUNDAYS 9 TO 2. FRIDAY. JUNE 29. call "steps." At this early stage of wak ing up, however, a lawyer may not be necessary. A fam ily agency's prime reason for being is to keep families to gether and, in this spirit, a social worker might arrange for Augusta to visit her hus band for a personal appraisal of his progress and prospects. At present it looks as though Cliff's irresponsibility, not hardshop, is what's keeping this couple apart. wags mm for 3'x5' FLAG Fast Color Sewn Stripei $2.88 TRADE IN AN ELECTRIC FAN OR ROOM COOLER NOW FOR A GIANT DISCOUNT, ON THE FINEST PORT ABLE MADE . . . 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