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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1962)
14 A They'll Do It Every SoURBERRV W0ULWTT60 FOR STORM COVERA&E WHEM PAL ENDUPANTZ ,THE INSURANCE MANJRiEO TO SELL HIM- VOL) EXTEND V MORE INSURANCE Jg TAIn VOUR COVERAGE THAN 2 NEED TJE dtIJ Ji? L$?csl ) A M2.fS?i TO INCLUDE Jl NOTMIN' DOIN'.' M ASnBTfffi W v i&TV WINDSTORM-ftvOU'RE THE OMLV ft cffunS'TWP S . V .' ,V I IT WOULD ONLV ( BI6 WIND AROUND LI 7 ftiu'ii tAufi't T ' 1 Denni.s tfee Menace French Teachers Attend Institute Etifieno-ElRhty high school tcnchers of French are partici pating in the University of Oregon's National Defense Education act second -level French institute in Tours, France. The Kroup departed from New York recently on a char ter flight after attending a re ception in New York at the cultural headquarters of the French Embassy. Mrs. Jean B. Jones, teacher in the Chap man school of Portland and assistant director for the sum mer session at the institute, acted as supervisor of the group. On their arrival in France, the teachers were met by Dr. David M. Doucherty. director LEGAL NOTICE S V M MONK iwrnoppi.n a-n like insur ance COMPANY, a corporHtlon. riainmr. WX t. 'nil. I. A VOU and JANE IOF. nil.I.AVmi. hulimri mnA Witt, tiifl KWHKItTA L Oll.LAVOU Nu) JOHN DOE. witc hisli1. DetrnckH. ( JANE !): DILLAVOU. Altt fffil wile of l'X K ntllnvau- 1N iiw-: nanw-: Ti-: staim K tHkea.ON: You we herrky rr onrrd In i- ant) miwer rmplil fi.i-i i-kM mm the rui r-r1t W-rl court tvtd c-r oil nt IxWuic tk rpira1i ol (our Wiln rM tltr iV f fit At pub- l .4 tli H--MMam-.. lo Mt n Wrb r !. !' of !''. 1 1 1 , if y V 1 5 to a -IV' ' tti(f f. V,iw w. ).. v lo the - --.--- ' tt t- rfll .'.Al il M t-it)lMit W Wit '.it h !'('. V tt c w . mTf 1 l-r ri'nv-itif4 t.'ii(tMn si nW to )4 : H '. v'iiVi 'fni, l'iuairi'1 it tW' Ot vvt iw W V-e (Wlri llts t W '.. V:4 .t i.. V U H 4 , M k 4 kt'l . .Vrt'i irr Win J . fMl-w-fi snilHi!VrHfc.lN In rM w MhWr Iiv of r i..'K'Mn UiW, a t.ife-e of . r i w- r : 'iS i'.t Vi ( Mvd rT , v WmI. iM itt tWc,-r Went l'2S 0 w lt of tract y.m i ohinie 421, pace .'11 ! thf Drcd HTyrt of .lrk nit Count , rr$oiv tl hit North 2H 3 frrt; thrncf Writ H,M1 Iff I; Ihrmc North ftt. (ht-tn-e KnM .14 irr to tlir it liter 1 1 hp of Hronkflftlr ItoHd. hctttfC the KaI ttne of Hid II lot' k 3; thriup South l" l' Knl 140 0 frt to the trur point n( hrjtinninit, Ihrnre WphI 17n frrt Ihrnrr Sou'n i Ifi' Fast 71)0 teel. thriur Et 17.10 fret, thrncf North 1 1' WmI 70 0 feel tn the true point of he ftinntiiK, and for mrh olhr and further re lict the Court may deem meet and rqultahle. Thi iiinimnm U published hv nrdrt of the Honorable Jsmn M Main, Judne o( the alMwe-entilleil rourl, nuide and entered on the IMh dny nf May, Iftrtl, dlrectinf puhllrMiinn of thu iiimmnm once fHtli w rek tor four cnnecuti e urrkH in I he Medforrt Mail Trib une a neum)er of enerl rlrru Imtnn puhllihed in Jackaon County, Orrcim DATE Or FIRST PUBLICATION June 12. H2 DATE 1F LAST PUBLICATION July a. i'ti;i. MAUTZ SOUTHER. SPAtM.D IN. KIN'SEV & WILLIAM SON and DOUGLAS M THOMPSON AtlorneM for Plalnltff B'ard of Trade Ruildinff Portland 41, Oregon. TUESDAY. JULY 3, 1962 Time l j 9 ! it I of the institute and head of the foreign language depart ment at the University of Ore gon, who guided them on a six-day tour of Paris and sur rounding points. They visited Versailles, F o n t a I noblcnu. Chantilly and Chartres, While in Paris, teachers were guests of honor of Jean Basdevant, director of cultur al relations at the Quid d'Or say. They were also guests at a garden parly given by the new prefect of the Indre et Loire deportment in Tours. For nine weeks, the group will study French, methods of leaching, and Prench culture. At the end of nine weeks, the group will return to the Unit ed States. River Swimmer Lewiston, Idaho- UTU -Ex-Navy frogman Spencer Can.i bell, 24, planned another leg of his swim toward Astoi m, Ore., and the mouth of the Coluiabin river tKlay. Campbell started his S."7 mile sfc'im Monday and about 50 miles down the Clearwater river from Oiofino to Lewiston. lie was unable tn gel through his first ob stacle - the Washington Water Power Company fi-Oi ladder -hofvever. been u s e it was ltvked. Campbell snid all he had to eRt W.oialay was a light b'.vaU f.Vt and !() cans of liquid fotl supplement . Campbell, clad in light run Ut sin diving outfit and a sian tle, - phins to make the trip in "Jl days. l&Vl 30'o CQN-0-CLEAK Prtfessional Dry Cleaning With Coin Operative Economy! MINIMA m ft. o" Clponiog and Spotting Cenlyl CRYSTAL WHITE LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 811 North Central DUMAS DOMESTIC LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 30-32 North Rivcriide GRESSETT'S DRIVE-IN CLEANERS 702 Wot Main NU-WAY CLEANERS 601 East Main By Jimmy Hatlo But LO AND BEMO-HO-SOURBERRy C-OT HIT-NOW LISTEN TO HIM BACKPEDAL-' Mountain Sheep Dam Site Said 'Second Best' WashinKlon - IL'PII - A pub lic power spokesman has add ed his voice to those of pri vate power officials clamor ing against Interior Secretary Stewart L. Udall's recom mendation that a federal dam be built in the mountains be tween Idaho and Oregon. Alex Hadin, general mana ger of the American Public Power Association, n'.nde it clear, however, that ln ob jection was chiefly to the site rather than to federal con si ruction. 'Second Best Project Radii, termed the proposed High Mountain Sheep dam on the Middle Snake riv.'r a "second - be.sl project" and said Udall's recommendation it be built was both "untime ly" and "incredible." Pacific Northwest Power Co. is seeking Federal Power commission permission 1 o build the High Mountain Sheep dam, also being sought by the Washington Public Power Sunily System, as a possible al.rnaiiv'e to its first choice ol die N07. Perce sile 18 miles downstream. Uriall recommended that both petitions he rejected by the KPC and that Congress be asked lo authorize a feder al dam at the Mountain Sheep site. WPPSS is a joint operating agency formed by Hi Wash ington Slate public utility districts, while PNP was created by four private pow er companies to construct the High Mountain Sheep dam. Hadin said construction of that dam instead of the Nez Perce project would result in the loss of more than 2 mil lion kilowatts of power. Position Said Reversed He said the two applicants had spent more than S-l mil lion in preliminary engineer ing and in connection with FPC proceedings begun in IflSH. The Interior Depart ment had not become a party to ttie action, he noted. "Now, at this 11 til hour, the department . . . lias re versed its previous position, asked the FPC' to throw out all applications, and instead has endorsed a second-best project for construction by its own agency The Bureau of !cclainal ion." Kadin said. "This action is incredible, and to me seems directly con trary to the principles of maximum, comprehensive de velopment endorsed by the Kennedy Administration." he added. ; THUNDERING HOOVES WaliTtown. I'olin. Il'l' Mrs. Iiul Wi-siun w;icd tli;ililtJ to Ihivr trc'l ;u:n u ho politflv trltu'il tlir'.r lioisi-s 0 the ro;id. sulr to j.llow her Miialt fill' to pns A tru m-i-iukN l.iti'r slu' i hriird thiimtcfini; luovis Jind a Iioim and ridiM' l.nutcd on ' tlir cm roof. !e-iuv chui Ki'd tlio riili i'.t with rn'klrss n,-o of ; a hiitliwu.v. OS MOKE! Unemployment Plan Leads To Record Grants - By Congressional Quarterly Washington, D. C. -(CQ) -Federal grants - in - aid to state and local governments reached an all-time high of $7 1 billion last year. In addition, $2.7 billion in grants was paid directly to individuals. Treasury department fig ures indicated that total grants in fiscal 1081 were $!) 8 billion, an increase of $651 million or 7 per cent over !he previous year. This reversed the fiscal I960 decline when grants decreased by $415 mil lion nr 4 per cent from the 1953 level. A major factor in the in crease in grants was the en actment March 24, 1961 of a temporary extended unem ployment compensation pro gram which resulted in pay ments of $481 million during tiie fiscal year. This was the main reason for a 28 per cent increase in grants to indi viduals over fiscal I960. Grants to state and local governments ro.mz by only 1 per cent last year. But the increase continued a trend un broken since 1 953. In dollars, state and local governments received $91 million more and individuals $581 million more than in 1900. Increased Expenditures Grants to state and local governments and to individ uals are expected to pass the $10 billion mark in fiscal 19H2 because of increased expen ditures under some present programs and the addition of new progranis. For instance, where Presi dent Eisenhower had called for "orderly withdrawal" of federal construction grants to airports, President Kennedy in 1961 asked for a five-year, S75-million-a-year extension of the program but was giv en only a two-year grant of $150 million. President Kennedy also asked and received increases in water pollution grants, while his predecessor in I960 vetoed increased funds for water treatment facilities. Ex tension last year of aid to dependent children of the un employed was expected to cost about $200 million be tween May 1, 1961 and June 30. 1962. President Eisenhower ini-, tinted the largest of all 97 separate grant programs -building a 41,000-mile inter state highway system. In oth er fields, however, he fought ' a long but unsuccessful battle with Congress to reduce fed eral grants and throw more of the burden on slate and local governments. President Kennedy, by con trast, has made it clear that he feels the federal govern ment should do a great deal more to assist the other gov ernments, through new ex panded grant channels. Giv en the probable support of 1 Congress for a number of his proposals, grants may be expected to continue rising in the years ahead. Slate's Share Grants paid in fiscal 19(11 to the governments and indi-i viriuals of Oregon totaled SlUli. 4:tO,0U0. Based on Ihej state's population of 1.799, 000 111 toe 1961 census estimate, this amounted to $76 per cap ita, contrasted with a nation al averace of $54 per capita, a liic.li of $207 for Alaska, and a low of S;i 1 for Now Jersey. The nine largest programs iof 1961 accounted for $6 6 ! billion or 67 per cent of to 1 tnl grants. The amounts paid to Oregon under these pro grams were as follows: High "HOW 010 DA6 HAMMARSKMP REALLY DIE?" W.is .1 lii$!i,Kkrr lesion S'h'e (or Ins ric.iih.' W.is the r .s'H' cr.is'i List Soptemlirr t.iwod hv ori un.i'Oid.ih'o .-i.-ulfit' Kinvlv Weekly t.ikcs .1 loi'K ,it the rnvten Cii 5 c : I ( II I" ;.',vu es sur. rounoii'c ti'0 p'.fc (ijs't 'ih'i tooK the L'.N o'fi C'.il's h'e. July 8h Imu MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE jrnaz' ".y it-'.'.' way construction, $35,637,970; aid to dependent children, $6. 226.513; temporary extended unemployment compensation, $3,820,601; Army National Guard, $4,874,617; unemploy ment compensation admini stration, S3, 883,493; conserva tion reserve program. $3,473, 324; veterans readjustment benefits, $1,390,391; and Air Force National Guard, $1, 752.955. As indicated by the wide range in per 1 capita figures, some states got relatively more in grants, in proportion to their population, than did others. This is because allo cation formulas vary from one program to the next and in clude such other yardsticks as area, per capita income, incidence of specific diseases, and road mileage. Generally speaking, however, grants-in-aid tend to help the poorer stales at the expense of the I wealthier states, j To measure this factor, j which amounts to a redistri bution of income among the states, Congressional Quarter ly computed each state's per centage share of total grants, then compared it with each state's share of the 1961 fed eral tax burden as computed by the Tax Foundation, Inc. No stale, of course, receiv Holiday Specials well aged well trimmed Full Cut Bone-in Delicious STEAKS Right for CJTCflFC Barbecuing 0 I UUiO So Good Everyone's Favorite Lean & God s frszea Flsrids Tall 12-oi. Cans Reg. 2ft Can Cm mm 'JrtAi'Ai' 'IVV t ir.rt.t.! BC (I cat roop SAFFPLI, 83c Vjlut Safflower Oil Full Of. Limit Rights JOBS Pticcs Good Tues. Nite Thru Sat. 1202 No. Riverside SUP" MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON' ESn - i ed as many dollars in grants as it paid in taxes. Federal tax collections increased by $2.6 billion in fiscal 1961 but the ration of grants to collec tions remained at 10 per cent. In percentage terms, how ever, 34 states received rela tively more in grants than they paid in taxes, while 16 states paid relatively more than they received. By dividing the percent age share of grants by the percentage share i' the fed eral tax burden, CQ derived a relative "benefit to - burden" ratio for each state. At the top was Alaska; its .49 per cent share of grants was more than four times its'. 11 per cent share of taxes. At the other end of the scale was Delaware; with .22 per cent of total grants and .52 per cent of the tax burden, its ratio was .42. 'ut another way, Delaware's relative bur den was almost two times its relative benefit. For Oregon, grants receiv ed in 1961 amounted to 1.33 per cent of the $9.8 billion total. The state's share of the 1961 federal tax burden, ac cording to the Tax foundation, was .95 per cent. This gave the state a relative "benefit-to-burden" ration of 1.45. (Copyright 1962. Congressional Quarterly Inc.) for Outdoor Living: STEAKS JUICi SlaacMay PineappJe-ftra)4rt Driik 46 ez. caas, Reg. I for Del Wonte fiixssafJ. Jwwe 4-e. Dl Mnf Pinaff-lkvafie4rik Drink 46-i. lhasta Crape Drink Jhata Orate Prin4-V. urn mx. mm chips OrilHl 1 VbJ km, mi easnsuuiPE ltrg fvrtf ;5 WW) 5l Sne of th fintsf Pluis Red Bluff Tiltons Just Right Tor Refreshing Reserved J Phone 773-4462 Market OPEN TILL 1V1IDNOT ffll STAR -Br CLAY &! MAR 22 JK Your Daily Activity Gua M According to tht Stan. " To develop mesioge for Wednesday, read word cwreiponding to numbers of your Zodioc birrh stga J7-62-74 , TAUhul K, APR. 21 1 MAY 21 IYw 3IAd 61 Wonders 4 S'de.'fO I-"' o4 Bu..rS bCuiifcd jV-og-c ejTnp 6 Mov So Or 06 Hunciics 7CoGd 17 0 Wtm 8 Apucis .'8 For cS Afid 9 Dun l Ne ft' RcwIfS 10 Deals, 40 Aie.it 70 In 1 1 Travel 4i Vtnj 71 Kaorab' 2 Moke 2 tMierxjl 7 Try IjRccei-. Financial 7J botitecK 1 4 Heed 41 Chip 74 Moulders liCood 45 The 7bOedr ItSTtio 46 Momen t 76 Aspect i 17 Let 47 On 77 dgmenf 18Fir 46TitorojonV 78 Or 1 9 Advice 49 Diitorr 79 And 20 li SO Korher 80 Kc 21 Persons SI iatuhed 8' Ne 22 by S2Tmoo 82 InfLenct rSS Ir b3 Are 83 Yojr 2 -ales Si InvitariofU 84 Decisions 25 fcmonons 55 Influence 85 Be 26 Day So kxperienced 86 tndcovori 27 And S7 Short 87 Recreation 28 Of S8 Achieved 83 Frank. 1-9 Vi.rring S9 Work 89 A"g1ri 30 Wim bO Arrange 90 Beho't '-) 7- 8-38.M y64-68-at-e GIMiNt MAY 22 JUNt 22 Cl2--J5.59l 'y61-70-83-Yd CANCER -57-6S-79-97 uo JULY 24 AUG. 2i 20-32-40-51 VIRGO AUG. 2 m SEPT, 22 K) 3-10-12-24 (VjGood (K) CUTTER REPELLENT New cream formula is concentrated so that a liIHe bit goes a long, long way. Non-greasy, non-sticky. Pleasant-smelling, easy to use. Comes in a pocket size, unbreakable flask. GK't famous large meaty birds from Sor ans cut up for frying whole for barbequing. $HI9 E-a. SAUSAGE OK's own grind, lean, delicious a real treat. S A LE ! I.Kt 3-69? 3 for SJ.00 69 Midnight ( M Srn lb. Eating lb. Cold Watermelon Seedless Gripes Cardinal Grapes Nectarines Many More Delicious Items 39 19 GAXER R. POLLAN- OCT. 23 4L p3-37.4S.58if k9-72-a0-89, KOIFiO OCT. 24 i-iOV.22 ll-27.29-53.v- B3-71-76 vs. SAGITTARIUS NOV 23 J DEC. 22 f5 1 2- 5-22 359 50-52-66 U CAPRICORN DEC. 2J ?f ;an' 20 ve 1- 4.13-150 P3-36.J4 : AQUARIUS AN. 21 :4 fEE. I 14-16-19-28' 1 nscEi FEB. 20)". MAi II Adverse 9-17.25-49Sf l77.7MJ-84kSJ INSECT J- X Vl'f X INSECt REPELLENT Regular Valu.c-s t3 SI. 23 Family Sise 3y lb, Ml Jar FROM1 CENTENNIAL OILS f if !lkan 1 I I rmii". I i .J q& m LADY ELBERTA PEACHES Ta V Cam iltmed or KK3 . . . 4th of mm ilLEY II Rf . Vs Gtllf Carton Two Vi Gallon Cartons Don't torget ice, fishing supplies, camera film, sun tan lotion, thongs, fireworks FOR LATE SHOPPEHS Indianapolis, Ind -IT! - Mar ion county clerk Edwin Mc dure has announced plans lo keep the marriage license bu reau open Thrusday niiihls to accommodate late shoppers '.3 VtiiiirtM -fir !ihn-;'"" " ": FURNITURE 341 No. Csr.tral Headquarters for ate. MS V,nwrtfvA J" Alice Lov Preserves Strawberry Apricet-Pineappls and Grape Top Quality in, W 6.le 47 Save 5c 7 DAYS A WEEK