Local and
Fir Pul Out - Firemen
extinguished a fire in a trash
barrel in the 1100 block of
North Central ave. about 7:45
a.m. today. They said that the
barrel was too close to a
building and grass.
Dinner Planned - Grants
Pass, Medford, and Ashland
chapters of the National Asso
ciation of Retired Civil em
ployees will hold a potluck
dinner in Grants Pass Wed
nesday, July 11, at noon.
Those attending should take
some item of food and table
service. Those needing trans
portation may call Edwin Eg-
gers. 773-4376. or A. E. Hutch-
lllsuii. i "
I
SHAK1TS
PIZZA PARLOR
TRY OUR FAMOUS
PIZZA SUPREME
MADE WITH 7 KINDS
OF CHEESE, BAKED
IN 750 OVENS
FRIENDLY FAMILY
ATMOSPHERE
large or Small Parties
ALWAYS WELCOME
OPEN NOON
DAILY
ORDERS TO GO
773-7721
BETWEEN RIVERSIDE AND
CENTRAL ON EAST JACKSON
215 E. JACKSON
MEDFORD
1MB
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HOW MUCH BIG EXCITEMENT
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...miS MUCH!
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On at 8:25 pm & 12:20 am
: KENNEDY
! ROCK HUDSON. -'
UtEND OF
: THE RIVER
! TECHNICOLOR '
;
lULIt lOlMS-UW NtlSOH-afflT M0RG1W
Iiiiiiiiiiiiiiw
DOORS OPEN
AT EIGHT
,! STEWART VfflE k4EM
ARTHUR LWm i
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY!
A
COLD
WIND
IN
SO TORRID.
SO TENDER
AUGUST
Personal
Meeting Set - Crater Lake
chapter. Oregon State Em
ployees association, will meet
Tuesday, July 10, at 8 p.m. in
the Carpenters Union hall
123'2 West Main st.
Car Entered - A car owned
by Rich McDowell, Central
Point, was broken into during
the week end, the owner told
state police Monday. Thieves
cut the top of the sports car
convertible and stole the
chrome gear shift, he said.
Dead Fith Found - A pile of
dead fish just off the River
rd. out of Shady Cove was
reported to state police dur
ing the week end. Officers
say the fish might have been
dynamited.
Grange To Meet - Griffin
Creek Grange will meet
Thursday. July 12, at 8 p.m.
Mrs. C. V. Calkins and Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Smith will
be in charge of refreshments,
i
Picnic Planned - The an-
nual Montana state picnic will
j be held in the Grants Pass
; city park Sunday, July 15.
j Luncheon will be served at
! noon, with coffee, beverages,
j and ice cream furnished,
j Those attending should take
I table service and an article to
I be sold at a white elephant
' sale.
Presented Award -Fred
Lyon, parts sales manager for
Crater Lake Motors, Inc., has
been presented the first an
nual Golden Circle award by
Ford division of Ford Motor
company. The award is based
on accomplishments in mana
gerial responsibilities. The
winner received a certificate
of qualification and a coat
lapel gold pin.
Investment Funds
! Nnnn quotations on selected
stocks:
fund Rid Asked
Bullock 11 35 12.45
I Chemical Fund 8 96 9.75
I Colonial Ener 10.20 11.15
I Eaton Howard Stk 11.53 12.46
. Fidelity 13.46 14.53
i Fundamental Investors 8.17 8.95
' Group Sec-Avia-Elec 6.05 6.64
Group Sec-Corn Stk .. 11.56 12.66
Group Sec Petr 10.21 11.18
Kevstone B-3 14 60 15.93
Kevstone B-4 8.86 9.67
Keystone K-2 4.39 4.79
Kevstone S-l 18.89 20.62
Kevstone S-2 ' . 10.B2 11.82
Kevstone S-3 1176 12.84
Kevstone S-4 3.50 3.83
Mass Inv Grth Stk .... 6.56 7.17
Natl Growth . 6.66 7.26
I TV - Elcc 6.53 7.12
I United Accum 12.16 13.29
I United Canada 15.40 16.74
lTnltprf rnntinentai .... 5.95 6.50
United Income 10.61 11.60
l!i!H s,.fnc 5.48 5.99
I Value Line Ine 4.85 5.30
1 Welllnston 13.22 14.41
B neHHIKSMt u. - TICHUCOtoe I
e-relIM !' 0"10 BTIS"
On at 10:25 pm
WINCHESTER
"73"
THE GUN THAT
. WON THE WEST
: o.t r. f.i.is:
n at
-Thirty"
LOLA
ALBRIGHT
scon
MARLOWE
4k
Family
Council
Editors note: The Family
Council consuls of a Judge, a
psychiatrist. three rlerrymen,
three editors and a women's editor.
Each article is a summary of a
familv dtsacreemenl presented to
the Council. The council deals
with prublems. major and minor,
encountered by guidance coun
selors and social workers. Edited
bv Mrs. Alma lienny. iCopyritht
by General features Corp.)
Mrs. I. B. He refuses to
entertain his brother on the
campus.
Jeffrey B. He should make
friends with kids his own age.
Mrs. I. B. We have two
sons, six years apart in age.
The older one, Jeff, is 21 and
is remaining at college over
the summer to earn credits
toward a graduate degree in
fine arts. Since our younger
boy has no special plans,
we've asked Jeff to invite
him up to the Maine campus
for a week, or at least a long
week end. Ronny was up
there two years ago with my
husband and me, and loves
the place. But Jeff says no.
He thinks we're just pamper
ing Ronny by letting him get
away from home.
The truth is that Ronny is
at an awkward stage. He's too
old for camp and loves to be
among adults and older stu
dents. Most of the kids his
age bore him. He's extremely
bright, an A student. We feel
he'll find just the right group
of friends when he's older.
Meanwhile. Jeff should help
us add to his contacts and ex
periences. Jeffrey B. Ronny insists
on ignoring all the attractions
which are right in his own
back yard. Distant hills look
green to him, especially the
ones around me. The truth is
he's snobbish toward most of
the kids in the neighborhood
and he has no reason to be.
He's brainy, yes, but he can
learn plenty from them, even
if they don't get A's. They
know how to be friendly and
how to fill their time pleasant
ly. They don't walk around
moping with a long face on
them, like Ronny.
What gets me is the way
my parents fall for his big
act. He's unhappy at home,
he has no friends, he has noth
ing to do. Boohoo. So what?
So send him to Jeff. Jeff will
cheer him up. They're also
planning to send him to Vir
ginia to visit our uncle, and
maybe to Canada for a French
course. They should force him
to join in with the teen-agers
at home instead of being so
standoffish.
The Council: Jeff knows all
the rules. Now he must learn
about the legitimate excep
tions. In general, yes, a teen
ager should hobnob with teen
agers. Most of them do. But
occasionally one of them, for
a psychologically valid reason,
is a holdout. We believe this
is true of Ronny and that his
deviation from the norm is a
temporary one, not an ingrain
ed isolationism.
In finding some justification
for Ronny's dim view of local
pickin's, we point out to Jeff
the circumstances which may
make his brother a "special
case." Being a 6-year-young
brother, he's grown up to the
tune of advanced and adult
conversation. He's always
been at home with older age
groups. This, in turn, may
have made him rather poor
company for his contempor
aries. Who knows but that his
early efforts at joining in, at
becoming one of the guys, met
with rebuff. He may have
I been hurt and discouraged
from trying to "crash" groups
where the only common bonds
(for him) were age and
neighborhood. Il isn't neces
sarily snobbery which makes
Ronny keep his distance, n
may Well be self-protection.
And forcing him to mix local
ly, as Jeff suggests, might re
sult in further emotional
hurts and really turn him j
antisocial.
No. we agree with Mrs. B.,
who hopes that Ronny will en
rich his social sense through
far-ranging personal contacts
during this period of his life
when his peers and he may
not see eye to eye mentally
and emotionally. By the time
Ronny reaches college age, '
two factors will ease his way
socially. First, glaring differ
ences in height, weight, tastes
and talents aren't as conspicu
ous on a college campus as
on a high school playground.
Second, there's a varied in
gathering of young people,
providing a wide choice of
friend?: attachments occur
through similarities of out
look and enthusiasms, cross
ing lines of age and back
ground. Ronny will find his com
fortable' niche in a few years.
Meanwhile Jeff should coop
erate in permitting him to
fish f"r social experiences
from a larger pond than runs
past his front dnor. The im
portant thing is that he learn
how i enjoy a group. It
doesn't matter where.
MfcDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
FATHER wandered into the kitchen late cne night and
found a persistent and in the father's eyes utterly
undesirable suitor of his daughter chewing on a succulent
turkey leg. "Tell me,"
rasped the father, "what
other kinds of work do
you do besides cleaning
out refrigerators?"
Mr. Thompson came home
from the office one even
ing with a horrendous tale
of the lunch he had eaten.
"The restaurant looked in
viting." he said, "so I tried
It for a change. Sine
enough, the soup, salad, and
rjeef were delicious. But the
pie was inedible and the
coffee was slop. Do voti
know what I discovered?
The place had changed hands right In the middle of my meal.''
A young man who was making quite a name for himself in a
Western TV series mined everything by resorting to an analyst's
couch. Now, reports Hank Giant, every time the sheriff asks
him, "Which way did the varmint go?" our hero bursts Into teals
and cries, "I'm not sure, I'm not sure."
One of old Deerfield's thriftiest citizens bore the quaint name
of Consider Dickinson. Consider paid his serving maid the prince
ly wage of one dollar a week. Then he found she was saving'
money on it. So he married her.
C 1962, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by Ktnt Features Syndicate
In the Day's News
By FRANK
Hodgepodge in the news;
In Washington, the big
question is whether or not to
cut taxes (meaning federal
taxes) and if so WHEN. A tax
cut is endorsed by such oddly
mated organizations as the
Chamber of Commerce of the
United Slates and the AFL
CIO. At his new? conference,
President Kennedy said he
will stand by his intention to
wait until next year for a gen
eral tax reduction. The AFL
ClO says he is dead wrong in
not asking for it RIGHT
NOW.
The AFL-CIO statement
adds: "The economy is not re
sponding as it should. Every
thing looks bad and nothing
looks good."
WHY a tax cut?
The theory is that it will
leave more money in the peo
ple's pockets for the people to
spend. If the people spend
more money, the theory goes,
business will gel belter and
there will be more jobs.
SOMETHING to think about:
J A tax cut will also IN
CREASE the NATIONAL
DEBT if we don't stop spend
ine and putting it on the cuff
The conservative viewpoint:
SPEND LESS, and then in
time we can safely TAX
LESS.
A RUGGED moment came
the other day to Mrs. Ed
mund Brown, wife of Califor
nia's governor, when she dis
covered while riding with her
husband in a motorcade of
cars carrying delegates from
the Governors Conference at
Hershcy, Pa., to nearby Inde
pendence Hall in Philadelphia
to listen to President Ken
nedy's speech, thai she had
left her money and her valu
ables behind at the hotel in
Hershey. The Hershey police
were notified and they has
tened to the hotel, but found
the dresser drawer where she
had left them EMPTY.
IT HAD a happy ending.
An AIDE to Governor
Brown (a REAL aid, let's
add) had frirked the room, in
cluding the dresser drawers,
found the valuables and took
them to Philadelphia for safe
keeping.
It's aides like that that are
worth while.
TjROM Wichita Falls, Tex.:
A 100-pound blonde, wav
ing a spike-heel shoe like a
war club, sent a 215-pound
The Songs and Piano of
FRED
SKINNER
AT THE
PIANO BAR
HOTEL MEDFORD
"A FLASHBACK TO THE WONDERFUL
WORLD OF BOOGIE AND BLUES"
". . . Hal had it all , . . radio, rtn, TV, re
cordings, nam engagements!" Featured at the
Hollywood Ambassador, the Chicago Congress
hotel, and the Kit Kat Club, WABC-New York.
He has also appeared with George Raft in "The
Class Key" and "Whistle Stop". He has toured
Mexico, Hawaii, end Europe.
-s
JENKINS
wrestler to the hospital with
lacerations that equired sev
eral stitches to close. The
blonde was a young woman
named Sue McFarland. She
said the wrestler had pinched
her.
So she waylaid him out
side his dressing room and
bushwhacked him with the
deadly shoe when he came
out.
TRIPLING was apparently
right. The female of the
species IS more deadly than
the male. Especiall.- since the
advent of the spike-heeled
shoe.
Over-fhe-Counter
Western Slocks
Dv United Press International
Bid Asked
Bank of America 49 u
Cl Pac Util 22
Con Freiftht 10
Cvprus Mines 23' 4
Equitable S & L. 35
First National Bank .... 55
Jantzen 25 "i
.12
34
lls
25'.
38',,
.19',
2B',
32 Is
S'.a
29',
lis
2fi
2S,
71'j
2.1's
IS".
21Ak
Morrison Knudsen ...... 30'
Mult KenneU 4'i,
N.W. Natural Gas 27a
Oregon Metallurgical ., 1
PP&L 24'
PCE 24
U.S. National Bank flR'i
United UH1 24
West Coast Tel 18 'i
Way erhae user 2Mb
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPII IfSDA
Cattle 1400. Choice 985 lb. steers
27.40; mixed good and choice 900
1080 lb. 26.50-27: standard and
good 20-26: slaughter heifers 825
lb. 26: cutter cows 12-16; canner
cows 10-12.
Calves 200. Good and choice
vcalers and slaughter calves 24-27.
Hogs BUO. f ully aieaay on an
hogs: 1 and 2 butchers 19.75-20:
2 and 3 at 19-19.30; sows 1 and 2
13-16.30.
Sheep 2.000. Choice and prime
slaughter spring lambs 20.50-21;
good 70 lb. 19
Portland Produce
Portland (UPII Dairy market:
Eggs To retailers; AA extra
large. 34-37C; A large 36-41C: A
large 34-37C; AA medium 31-37c:
AA small 24-34C cartons l-3c
higher.
Butter To retailers; AS ann A
prints 67c; cartons lc higher; B
prints 86c.
Cheese (medium cured! - To re
tailers: 47-48' 2C: processed Ameri
can 3-10 lb. loaf. 43-46,c.
Portland (UHli uressea
chickens No. 1 grade dressed to
retailers: Fryers, whole drawn, ju
38c lb.: cut-up. 36-42C lb-: hens
light tvpe. whole drawn. 23-29C
lb.; light type hens, cut-up 26-34C
lb.; heavy whole 36-39C lb.
PROMOTED
Jack M. Shoemaker, son of
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Shoe
maker, 2070 Ridgeway dr.,
was recently promoted to the
rank of lance corporal in the
United States Marine Corps
He is serving with Marine Air
Base Squadron 11 in Iwakuni,
Japan.
Funeral Tuesday
For E. W. Brown;
Former Plumber
Funeral services for Km
mett W. Brown. 70. of 121
Genessee St., who died Satur
day, will be held at 1:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Perl Funeral
home. Officers of the Medford
Masonic lodge will officiate.
Entombment will follow in
the Medford IOOF mauso
leum. Mr. Brown, the son of
George Brosvn and Adeline
Tibbctts, was born on Jan. 13,
1892, in St. Joseph, Mo. He
i came to Medford from Port
Angeles, Wash, in 11118 and
worked as a plumber for var
ious plumbing shops. In 1940,
he opened his osvn plumb
ing business at 339 Mae si.
known as Brownie's Plumb
ing. Later he moved Ihe shop
to 519 Crater Lake ave. and
retired in 1957.
He was a member of the
Port Angeles Elks lodge, the
Medford Masonic lodge, and
the Crater Lake chapter, Roy
al Arch Masons. He was a life
member of the Malta Com
mandery Knights Templar,
Medford Consistory Scottish
Rite and the Hilah Temple
Shrine.
On Feb. 21, 1931, in Klam
ath Falls, he was married to
Fern I. Lewis, who survives.
Other survivors include one
sister, Mrs. Harry Egbert, Ya
kima, Wash.; two nephews,
Sherwood Egbert, South
Bend, Ind. and W. E. Egbert,
Tacoma, Wash.
Honorary pnllbearcrs will
be A. C. Lcighton, Lewis
Jantzer, Henry Enders. Ches
ter Hubbard, Paul Lea and
J. H. Creagcr. Active bearers
will be Charles Bottjer, How
ard Bush, A. K. Morse, Joe
Jorgen.en, Ray Frisbie and
Les Taylor.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair
through Tuesday. Chance of brief
early morning cloudiness over the
valley. Low tonight 43-50. High
Tuesday 63-88.
Western Oregon: Low cloudiness
along coast, spreading Inland dur
ing late night and early motning.
A little drizzle in morning; o.ner
wise, fair through Tuesday. Low
tonight 48-35. High Tuesday 60-78.
except 85 in extreme south Interior
and 60-65 on coast.
Northern California; Fair lonlglil
and Tuesday, but fog a.ul low
clouds on coast. Little temperatura
change.
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day 73; above normal 2.
Record high this ante ltn in inn.
Record low this date 44 in 1011.
PRECIPITATION. None.
Total this month 0, .08 In. below
normal.
Total since Scnl. 1 13.38 in.. 2.40
in. below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
l.Vr. hlghesl this a.m. 80',;,.
High' 4:00 34-'"
CITV Vaster- a.m. Iir.
day Low Pre.'.
Brookings 64
Grants Pasa fin
Howard Prairie .. . 70
Klamath Falls .. . 82
MEDFORD Ill
Portland 70
36
Seattle 73
Spokane 83
Yaklma 91
Eureka 37
Red Bluff 94
Sacramento 90
San Francisco .. . 36
Los Angeles . 87
Phoenix .
Denver
-.108
Chicago
68
7fl
73
73
Miami Beach .. ..
New York .
Washington. D.C.
88
96
94
FIVK-I1AV FORKCAST (Through
Julv 14):
Western Oregon - Western Wash
ington Little if any precipitation,
except drizzle at times along coast.
Temperatures averaging near or a
little below normal. Highs mostly
63-75 western Washington and 72
82 western Oregon. Night time
lows mostly 4o-35.
Northern California No pre
cipitation likely. Temperatures
averaging near normal.
COMPLETES COURSE
Pvt. Robert L. Eastman, son
of Mr. and Mrs. George W.
Eastman, Trail, recently com
pleted a seven-week machine
operators course al the Engi
neer school, Ft. Belvoir, Va.
Eastman, a 1961 graduate
of Eagle Point High school,
entered the Army in Febru
ary, 1962. He completed basic
combat training at Fort Car
son, Colo.
SI HIS, p I ajavjasssssisss
.fcWrt-lsW--sJ,
OBITUARIES
EDA RICHARDSON
Funeral services for Mrs.
Eda Richardson, 91, of Trali,
who died Saturday, will be
held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in
Hillcrest Memorial chapel, on
the North Phoenix rd. The
Rev. Thomas McNeil of tht
First United Presbyterian
church will officiate. Commit
tal will be in Hillcrest Mem
orial park, with Conger-Morris
funeral directors in charge
of arrangements.
Mrs. Kicnardson was born
March 7. 1871, in Germany,
and had lived in Trail for the
past eight years, coming from
Gold Beach. Her husband,
Charles Richardson, died in
1949. She was a member of
the First Presbyterian
church; Nevita chapter. Or
der of Eastern Star, Central
Puint; and of the White
Shrine, in San Francisco.
Survivors include a niece,
Mrs. Ross Lynn, in Florida;
and a nephew, Carl Tamm,
Hollister, Mass.
Pallbearers will include Al
len Rodger?, Wayne Jamison,
Kennedy Warned
Racial Order May
Reduce Housing
Washington-lUPII - The Na
tional Association of Home
Builders has told President
Kennedy that an executive
order barring racial discrim
ination in housing could cause
a 75 per cent drop in new
home construction.
Association President Leon
ard L. Frank said Sunday a
survey showed 51 per cent
of the builders replying to a
questionnaire believed the
anti discrimination order
would force cutbacks if il ap
plied to Federal Housing Ad
ministration, Veterans Admin
istration, and privately fi
nanced housing. Forty two per
cent predicted a decline if the
order applied only to FHA
and VA financing, he said.
Of the builders expecting a
cutback, Frank reported, one
third predicted it could be as
deep as 75 per cent.
A total of 5,905 of the 15,
335 members of the associa
tion replied to the survey.
Plan Offered
Frank offered Kennedy a
plan designed to help lessen
the Impact of the proposed
federal order.
He suggested that the While be held on Thursday, July
House organize "a major, na
tion-wide education campaign
to lessen tensions over hous
ing discrimination."
Kennedy told his news
con
ference Thursday he would
sign the non-discrimination
order at a "useful and ap
propriate time."
Frank said he felt a nation
al program could develop
greater public awareness
the significance and conse
quences of housing discrimina
tion. He said it also could
stimulate means of "improv
ing community acceptance of
changing living patterns."
Valley Student In
Graduation Class
Donald E. Wisely, Central
Point, was one of more than
550 students awarded degrees
and certificates at the 1962
commencement exercises at
Idaho Stale college in Poca
tcllo. He received a bachelor of
science degree in pharmacy.
London Sir Winston Chur
chill, 87, battling against a
possibly dangerous side effect
to his broken thigh bone,
spent a "comfortable night,"
Middlesex Hospital officials
said today. A hospital spokes
man said the wartime British
leader was being given anti
coagulant drugs to treat phle
bitis, a condition in which the
vein is inflamed and which
could lead to the formation
of blood clots.
TWIST-TWIST
:,f -TWIST-
tl w
MONDAY. JULY 9.
Oliver Gustison, Wallace
Brill. Clarence Young, and
Russell Fair.
KENNETH R. WOLGAMOT
Funeral services for Ken
neth Rae Wolgamot, 50, of
285 High St.. Ashland, who
died Wednesday, will be held
at 2 p.m. Tuesday In the First
Presbyterian church, A s h -land.
The Rev. B. J. Holland
will officiate. Committal will
be in Mountain View cem
etery, Ashland, with the Ash
land mortuary in charge of ar
rangements. Mr. Wolgamot was born
Aug. 9. 1911. He had lived in
Oregon for 40 years, the past
12 years in Ashland. He was
married Sept. 20, 1961, in
Ashland, to Doris Henry, who
survives.
Other survivors include two
sons, Terry Wolgamot and
Toby Wolgamot; his mother,
Mrs. John Brant, a sister, Mrs.
Lila Cunningham, Gresham,
Ore.; and two brothers, Myrll
Wolgamot, The Dalles, Ore.
and Wendel Wolgamot, Port
land, Ore.
HOMER W. MARSHALL
Homer Woodrow Marshall,
57, of Talent, died Sunday at
his home. Funeral services
will be held at 10 a m. Wed
nesday in Hillcrest Memorial
chapel on the North Phoenix
rd. Committal will be in
Hillcrest Memorial park, with
Conger-Morris funeral direc
tors in charge of arrange
ments. CHARLES M. McKINNIS
Charles M. McKinnis, 73,
of 502 Pearl St., died Sunday
morning in a local hospital.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Conger-Morris
funeral directors.
ALF BREWOLD
Alf Brewold, of 2646 Jack
sonville highway, died yester
day at his home. Funeral ar
rangements will be announc
ed by Conger-Morris funeral
directors.
CAMERON PARR
Cameron Parr, of Grants
Pass, died Sunday in a Grants
Pass hospital, runeral ar
rangements will be announc
ed by Conger-Morris funeral
directors.
CLIFTON E. GUERINGER
Funeral services for Clif
ton Earl Gueringer, 44, of
6131 Azalea rd.. Central
point, who died Thursday in
Vancouver, Wash., Veteran's
Administration hospital, will
at 11 a.m., in the Chapel
Memories, Memory Gardens
Funeral home.
of
POSITIVELY
Hg DRIVE-IN A'
JWjrrl .(! HIkMv
I ' M-4-M nr ! I
jjjjl JAN PAW j
Academy A ward Winner,
Only 1 Show Nitely
Doors Opan 7:30
Show Start 8:00
soencer Tracv Burt Lancaster Richard Wlilmark
MaHene Dlcirtch Judy Garland Maximilian scticll
UHAHQIIUH
Mnn nnmp.rv r
IHUIilJiUlnui j win
All Seats
Children .
$1.00
50c
TO THE
MUSIC
-SUN
BAR of
MUSIC
Open at
7:30 P.M.
ADULTS ONLY
Pleese
Medford Hotel
1962
Sen. Byrd Breaks
With U.S. Chamber
Washington - iUPII - Sen.
Harry F. Byrd, a former
member of the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce board, has pub
licly broken with the organi
zation, terming its call for a
tax cut "dangerous and pan
icky." Byrd. chairman of the Sen
ate Finance Committee, Sun
day questioned whether thn
Chamber's stand on the lax
cut had the backing of th
membership.
In a letter to President H.
Ladd Plumley, Byrd said h
was inviling stale Chambers
of Commerce "to comment"
on the action.
Byrd, a long time budget
watchdog, said the Chamber
call for an immediate tax cut
in the upper and middle in
come brackets would cost tlu
government $9.5 billion in
revenues annually.
GRADUATES
Pfc. Rodney L. Snyder, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin C. Sny
der, 343 South Grape St., was
graduated recently from Avia
tion Electronics Fundamen
tals school at the Naval Air
Technical Training center,
Memphis, Tenn.
Snyder attended Eagl
Point High school before en
tering the Marine Corps.
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