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About La Grande observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1959-1968 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1959)
1 71 . Px?P$)j23 . '-y v. v I 1-- I ' WOUNDED FIGHTING REDS Royal Laotian soldier, wounded in battle against Communist rebels advanc ing on military headquarters in Samneua, Laos, is plac ed aboard single-engine plane for evacuation to Vien tiane. The Communist forces are reportedly launching a massive attack in Samneua Province. NORTH POWDER NEWS Powder Valley Extension Holds Organization Meet NORTH POWDER (Special) The Powder Valley Home Exten sion club held its first meeting of the year, Tuesday evening, at the home of Mrs. Nick Nicholas. They organized for the coming year. The officers are: Pres ident, Mrs. Merlin Smith; vice- president, Mrs. Eldon Hobbs; and, secretary, Mrs. Buddy Jacobsen The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Eldon Hobbs on Oct. 6. The annual Teacher's Recep tion, put on by the PTA, will be held Sept. 16. All parents are urged to come. Persons that were registered winning prizes at the Threshing Bee last Sunday were: For the youngest baby, Galen Lee Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Taylor, of Baker: the oldest woman. An ne Taylor; the people that came the longest distance, Mr. and Mrs. Ted McFarland of Tcnnesee. - Mrs. Gordon Gorham, Mrs. George Geils. and Wilbur Oster- loh attended a monthly Cub Scout meeting in La Grande Wednesday evening. The Cub Scouts will resume their meet ings soon. - - Sophomores Heal Froth man The sophomore class was host tc the annual Freshman Initiation party, held Thursday evening in the gym. Everyone had a good time doing and watching the various stunts, and also dancing to the sock hop. Refreshments were served. Mr. and Mrs. Sesel Bogue of ' Marysville, California visited last week at the home of Mrs. Bogue s sister. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nice. The Bogues also went to Moun tain Home to visit their daugh ter. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bodcn- licimcr. William Teter of Parma, Idaho, visited friends and relatives in Elein and North Powder Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Buck Jones of Tacoma visited Mr. and Mrs. Matts Nice and Anne Taylor, Thursday. The school yearbook staff trav eled to Baker Friday, to sell ads for the school annual. The Badger. Homo Ec Club Moots " The Wolf Creek Grange, Home Economics Club Jield its first meeting at the home of Mrs. Leonard Henderson Wednesday evening. They discussed the Threshing Bee and talked about what to do at it next year. . Plans were made for the Pomo na Grande meeting to be held here on Sept. 26. ' Mr, and Mrs. Dale Dodson have a boy born at the St. Elizabeth hospital at Baker Thursday. He weighed 8 pounds 74 ozs. Mr. Dodson is a former North Pow der resident. Mrs. Pete Hoffman is- in the St. Elizabeth hospital in Baker, where she underwent minor sur gery Thursday. The FFA boys that McGold rick was going to take to the State Fair, were unable to at tend. The trip was called off due to the illness of Mc Goldrick's little boy. The children around the com munity that are attending kind ergarten in Baker arc: Randy Graham, David Boyd, Johnnie Wilson and Wanda Geils will attend as soon as there is a va cancy. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nice of Portland, came over the weekend to get their daughter Marilyn, Pendleton Man Killed When Hit By UP Train PENDLETON UPI Manley Ratcliff. 59. died Wednesday night from Injuries suffered when he was struck near here by an east bound Union Pacific passenger train. Authorities said Ratcliff, who was deaf, didn't hear the train as he was walking along the tracks. who has been visiting her grand father, J. A. Nice. Returns Homo Mr. and Mrs. Arch Saling have l eturned home from Portland and Hood River where they visited Mrs. Saling's sister, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Whitten. Danny Marsh has returned to his home in Myrtle Creek after visiting with his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Gorham. Jimmie and Kennie Nice were visitors at the home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Har ry Nice, over the Labor Day weekend. Wilbur Carnes and Ottp Ert of Hood River visited last week with Ed Carnes. They also visted Wil bur's brother, J. L. Carnes in La Grande. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Gilford of Salem, visited Mr. and Mrs. Har ry Nice over the weekend. They also attended the old-fashioned Threshing Bee. Mrs. Jack Ryan and Billy have returned from their vacation in Kennewick where they visited Mrs. Ryan's daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John Stewart and son. Since her return home, Mrs. Ryan has been 111. Work on the parsonage is re ported to be coming along real well. It is said to be finished within another week or so. LA GRANDE OBSERVER Observer, La Grand, Or., Thurs., Sept. 10, 1959 Pago 9 Nehru 'Eating Crow' Over Border Dispute By PHIL NEWSOM UPI SUH Writer Back in the spring of 19.r4. In dian Premier Jawaharlal Nehru was receiving plaudits on the five-point non-aggression pact he had just signed with Red China Later, in 1953. it was held up at the Bundung Conference of the Afro-Asian nations as a model of the sort of neutrality Nehru advo cated. It had five points: Mutual re spect for each other's territorial integrity, mutual non-aggression, mutual non-interference in each other's internal affairs, equality and mutual benefit, peaceful co existence. Coexistence Key Plank 4 The latter point was and is a key plank in world-wide Commu nism's propaganda platform. Now it is learned that in the same year Nehru and the Chinese signed their pact, there began a series of increasingly irritated notes over which nation owned what along the long border sep arating India and its protector ates from Red China. As long as 10 years ago, Red Chinese maps were showing areas of India or its protectorates, Sik kim and Bhutan, as Chinese ter ritory. In 1954, the Chinese complained that 30 armed Indian troops had taken possession of Chinese terri tory at "Wu-Je" in the Tibetan area. Imbler FFA Team Garners Top Fair Win IMBLER (Special Imbler's F.F.A. team won first place in livestock judging at the State Fair. This entitles them to compete and represent Oregon at the Nat ional F.F.A. convention in Kan sas City, in October, where teams from all SO states will compete in judging livestock. Three Boys and one alternate make up the team: they are, Dallas Craig. Ardel Pugh, Ed John son and alternate, Fred Behrens. In individual class judging, Dal las Craig was top man in the state. Ed Johnson placed sixth. Dallas was judging in sheep, and Ed in the swine classes. The team was compcteing a gainst 63 teams in the state. Their instructor Walt Daniels accompan ied them to Salem. The boys will leave for Kansas City the 9th of Oct. and will be gone one week. But so wild and unmapiK-d the country that it took the Indi ans a year to find out that Wit Jc was a place the Indians call li.u a lloti. Early Dealings Backfire Now that Nehru's trust in Red China has backfired, he is caiichi in some of his own earlier deal ings. He no" says that the Chinese tacitly had recognised the so called Mc.Mahon line, a border line negotiated in 1914 by Sir Hen ry McMahon, a representative of Britain, which established India's border with Tibet. The Reds say. truthfully, that China never formally ratified that accord. But, meanwhile, from Nehru's flank comes Tibet's oust ed Dalai Lama. He says that when India recognized a border with Tibet, it also recognized an independent nation. And that therefore Nehru cannot logically oppose Tibet's case against Red China in the United Nations. As of now, Nehru does oppose it. Two Golfers Die, Others Are Hurt By Lightning Bolt TAMPA. Fla. (UPI i Two golf ers were killed and five slightly injured when lightning ripped through a golf course rain shelter Wednesday. Dead were Dr. John E. Gottsch. 36, and Clark Farber, 49, both of Tampa. Farber was the circula tion manager for the Tampa Trib une Co. and Gottsch was a local bone specialist. The injured were Dr. and Mrs. R. G. Conner, Tampa; Guy Bagli. sportscaster for television station WTVT; Parkman Rankin, New York City; and retired Air Force Capt. John T. McKinney. Tampa- 7,372 Persons File For Unemployment Pay . SALEM UPH-The State Em ployment Department reported to day that 7.250 persons filed claims for unemployment insurance bene fits last week. The figure was 7.372 a wee!, earlier and a whopping 17,942 a year ago. HEAD FOR MEDITERRANEAN ISTANBUL. Turkey (UPI) Two Soviet floating drydocks passed through the Bosnorous to day in the direction of the Medi terranean, where a sizeable Rus sian naval force was known to be operating. Steel Wage Talks Back In Motion i:V YOKK l'PI Union and of 12 shikchound steel companies oiH'iieil negotiations on local issues today, but their work is expected to have little effect on the steel strike impasse. The auxiliary contract talks at the company level were begun a nudiown hotel this morning as the result of a I'lan adopted last week by the tutted Steelwonkers Union and the companies to ex pand their negotiations. The new negotiating teams were expected to make little progress as long as the union and the com panies refuse to budge from their entrenched positions at the na tional negotiating level. Even President Eisenhower's plea on Tuesday foi- an end to "half hearted bargaining" failed to change the static strike picture. The chief executive officers of the big 12 steel firms sent a tele gram to Eisenhower Wednesday night in which they blamed the un ion's refusal to accept two indus try principles for the deadlock in negotiations. They said the princi ples were industry's battle to stop inflation and to operate on a more efficient basis. "While paying lip service to the desirabilitv of retarding inflation they i the union) have repeatedly demonstrated a firm belief that inflation is a healthy ingredient of our economy, the message said. The steel executives turned down a request by Steelworkers' President David J. McDonald for face-to-face negotiations with the chief executives of the steel com panies. They emphasized, howev er, that the four-man negotiating team headed by R. Conrad Cooper has "full authority" to negotiate a settlement within the compan ies' principles. The strike of 500,000 steel work ers began 58 days ago. According to Labor Department figures is sued in Washington, the strike has resulted in the lay-off of an other 150.000 workers in steel-related industries, 50,000 more than reported a month ago. SINGER HIRES GUARDS LAKE TAIIOE. Nev. (UPI) Singer Anna Mania Alhcrghotti plans to hire guards, install a burglar alarm and buy a watch dog to protect her Beverly Hills, Calif., home from burglars. The singer said she felt the precua tions necessary in view of four burglaries sustained by her fam ily in the past month. V ylyTuZ L" ' stffrZu t w- fc i - v - N"11 0ementrtlon Cllmulnf Ford's 3 Voir snd 3 Million " "t Mllos ol lUsoarck end Devolooinont on tht New Ford Falcos . . , ' XlVi EXPERIENCE RUN, U.S.A. I V i A flMt of Fttcotn h foift to 4tr0 final itiustici ttst . . . Over tvtry slrtftt I 91 "Bbffd u s Httiwf . . . atoflf cmscfost roott tint wilt (kitiMHdKtjMMiVB Induttt tM not tnd down of two miior mountain rangti, tho chalttnm of IXiiZmiiMlZllSSl 9X911 81 rM,WIJr ,nd mt,fl nd bourtvattf. TODAY.. .10 P.M. THE NEW-SIZE FORD STARTS ON ITS WAY TO YOU ! The Falcon, the New-Size Ford, already is the most thoroughly tested and proven new car in history. Today this new Ford Falcon starts EXPERIENCE RUN, U.S A, over every mile of numbered U.S. highway This it not a test run in the ordinary sene of the word. For in iu S yean of development and over S million miles of proving, the Falcon hat already pauled and repassed every kind of test that could be devised. It's been dust-tested, heat-tested, and endurance-tested on the test track at Kingman, Arizona. Wind-tested and rain-tested in the 300 mph wind tunnel at the University of Maryland. Shock tested, curve tested, brake-tested, noise- - tested, paint-tested, stability-tested, service-tested . . . wi)liiin tntni on Ford's own proving grounds. The Fal con has already proved to engineers that it takes anything they can dish out. Now, Experience Run, U.S.A. will show you what the Falcon can do over your kind of roads. How many miles to the fallonP Rec ords will be kept of every drop of gas used. Better gas mileage? 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GIANT BOTTLE l jft , GENIE DETERGENT 4K3C '.'ltl:P:K'l l If, Goodl Try N.w ITALIAN DRESSING 35C I!,a"'H'ea CHEESE PRESSING tor. 49C I3 3C MCP, Pen Jel and Sura Jell J0v gfc wm PECTfflS 2 pkgs. 25 ALMOND OR MILK CHOCOLATE JJi nil Giant Hershey Bars ea. fuS) No. 2'2 Tins Hunt's WHOLE UIIPEELEli Apricots Everyone Likes . Campbell's Tomato SOUP New Pack TITAN Green BEANS 8 FOR SE00 MORRELL'S PRIDE FINEST SLICED BACON 2 LB. PKG. HEINZ Regular or garlic flavored Dill Pickles Reg. 19c Bag For. 115 Wonder Brand MILD CHEESE LoYn Roasl Ib. FARMER STYLE ft ff SPARE RIDS lb. 419) PORK CHOPS Ib. 65' FRESHI OYSTERS "EXTRA" SMALL PT 5 FRESHI FRYER PARTS BACKS 10c Ib. WINGS 23c Ib. LEGS 10c ea. FISHERMEN! REG. 69c 1 LB. SALMON EGGS. PKG. 49' Produce TOKAY GRAPES 2 9Q LBS. fiW SEEDLESS GRAPES LBS. Gsi9 Red Torpedo ONIONS LB. 9 SOLID HEAD CADDAGE Green Peppers " 10c USE ODB FBEE DEUVEBY . CMRIS IF: 6lhaSpring,tEN",itF',lRv,;jriN0PH. WO 3-3115 $