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About The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1963)
o O The Bulletin, Thursday, November 21, 1963 2 t!WlV,VAl , tgUf - rum ,fj , i,M t Fulbright urges rejection of bill to restrict trade WILL MY FRIENDS KNOW THAT I'M WEARING A HEARING AID? Not if you're, wearing the ill- newRadioeat900I 1 This tiny engineer ing masterpiece be completely hidden by a single wisp of hair. Though small in size, the all-new Radioear 900 is mighty in per formance. Actu ally provides 12 responses and can be precisely fitted to your lypeof loss.Why continue to be hard of hearing? Write or call now for weighs less than free, color brochure) ounce. Fits snugly er visit us for a pri behind your ear and vatedemonstration. RADIOEAR loroeuer nearing..A naturallyr m mm . HEARING AID CENTER 830 Wall 382-5774 WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., said oday the United States would become an outcast in the free world if Congress res tricted trade of non-strategic materials with Russia. Fulbright urged the Senate Banking Committee to reject a bill to prevent the government from underwriting credit terms for purchase of American wheat by the Soviet Union tnd Com munist bloc satellites. Treasury Secretary C. Doug las Dillon tuld the committee Wednesday it was virtually cer tain the Russians would refuse to buy wheat here if Congress adopts the bill proposed by Sen. Karl E. Mundt. Sentiment on the committee has appeared to favor the bill. "It is clear," Fulbright testi fied today, "that our virtual embargo on non-strategic trade with Communist countries has become self-defeating." Meanwhile, Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., attacked the whole plan to sell grain to the Russians, and endorsed the Mundt bill. Scott called the wheat pro- TIME FOR LUNCH FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI) A Fort Worth housewife opened a can of green beans for lunch Wednesday and found a man's wrist watch in the beans. She wound the water-proof watch and it ran. CASCADE riUIMIIPiU INI. "Business Forms" f PHONE 382-1963 posal the latest "in the current trend of one-way concessions to the Soviets." Isolation Possible But Fulbright, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said "if we follow the policy suggested by (Mundt), we are going to find ourselves increasingly isolated, not from the Russians but from our friends." He added: "We may, indeed, find ourselves in the same posi tion in the free world in which the Chinese find themselves in the Communist world. We and the Chinese will be outcasts, splendid in our isolated devo tion to pure dogma." Rights bill clears hurdle WASHINGTON (UPI) - The civil rights bill, still beset by disagreement among both friends and enemies, today moved one more notch up the legislative ladder. The bill aimed at eliminating racial discrimination in voting, education, employment, use of federal funds and public ac commodations was formally re ported by the House Judiciary Committee Wednesday just be fore the House adjourned. The sweeping bipartisan measure was approved Oct. 29, but it took three weeks for sup porters and opponents to get their arguments down on paper for submission to the House in a report. The next step for the bill is clearance by the House Rules Committee. That process is ex pected to take so long that the measure will not be considered on the House floor before the first session of the 88th Congress ends next month. o Wall Street buzzes over AT & T move NEW YORK (UPD-Ameri- can Telephone & Telegraph Corp., one of the nation's most widely held "blue chip" stocks, was the talk of Wall Street today. Shortly after noon Wednes day, AT&T sent a surge through the "street" with the announcement that it would split its common stock on a two-for-one basis next June and was increasing its quarterly divi dend trom 90 cents to ?l per share next April. AT&T reached an all-time hich of 140 a share shortly be fore the market closed and lev eled off at 139 at the close. It pulled other stocks with it and the Dow Jones industrial aver age closed up 5.41. The directors of the corpora tion also announced plans to make a large new offering of stock to shareholders of record next Feb. 18. A check of the records shows that the company paid t h e same $9 annual dividend from 1922 until 1958, a period punctu ated by a depression and a world war without once slip ping, despite the fact the earn ings were sometimes below the amount paid in dividends. Prior to 1922, it paid a divi dend of $7.50 a year from 1900 to 19(b, then boosted payments to $8 in 1906 and held there un til 1920. The rate was raised to $8.50 in 1921 and then to $9 in 1922 where it remained until 1959 when it was changed to the equivalent of $9.90 a share on July 10. After a three-for-one split, the dividend was raised to $3.60 per share each year where it has remained until the latest action. JFK SIGNS BILL WASHINGTON (UPI)-Prcsi- dent Kennedy signed a bill Wednesday authorizing the striking of medals in commem oration of the 150th anniversary of Indiana's entry into the Union. Temperatures Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PST today. High Low Prec. Bend 39 16 Baker 40 21 K. Falls 35 20 Medford 44 33 N. Bend 47 39 .31 Pendleton 46 29 .01 Portland 44 38 .07 Redmond 39 17 Salem 43 38 .04 The Dalles 47 30 Chicago 57 50 .15 Los Angelej 62 53 .08 New York 53 48 Phoenix 73 53 .30 San Fran. 58 49 .04 Washington 57 46 T. Medical group aims resolution at cigarettes PORTLAND (UPI) - The Oregon Society of Internal Med icine came out against cigarette smoking and cigarette advertis ing in a hard-hitting resolution Wednesday. The society recommended that it members not only counsel their own patients on the dan gers of cigarette smoking as re gards heart and lung disease, but speak out in their communi ties to clear away the smoke screen of confusion and ration alization." Persons who stop smoking now cut their chance of getting lung cancer in half, the society said, and added that cigar and pipe smokers who do not inhale have much less chance of get ting the disease. The society is composed of about 170 specialists in internal medicine, including lung ailments. Wallendas back on high wire FORT WORTH (UPI) - The audience fell silent; the aging man barked commands, and the "Flying Wallendas" defied death again in their famous "human pyramid." Twice Wednesday seven members of the German troupe mounted the high wire and piled gingerly atop each other until the three-level stunt was completed. They plan 21 per formances here. The pyramid crumbled just 22 months ago In Detroit and two Wallendas were killed. A safety net hangs mutely be neath the performers here a new innovation. The Wallendas act was origi nated by Karl, 58, in 1954 in Germany. After the Detroit tra gedy, the performers fell dur ing rehearsals at Sarasota, f ia During a runthroueh here Tues day night, someone accidentally switched off the lights while they were on the wire. The Wallendas froze. The lights were quickly re stored, and the aerialists climbed down from their 36- foot high perch. Karl said the "human pyra mid" will be discarded after this circus. Oregon escapee taken in Texas SALEM (UPI) -George Fred erick Siefer, 20-year-old Oregon State penitentiary escapee who led police on a chase through the rugged mountain area near Scotts Mills two months ago, was captured at Houston, Tex., today, police reported. State police said Siefer had been living there under an as sumed name. Siefer, serving a Ave year term for burglary from Multno mah County, fled the penitenti ary annex Aug. 30. For FAS'! 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