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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 11, 1955)
o TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Sunday, December 11, 1955 Russian Leaders Continue Speeches In Middle East New Defiii, India U.R) Soviet Russia's top - ranking vis itors continued to woo India with sugar-coated speeches Sat urday. But their aides got down to hard economic bargaining. Premier Nikolai A, Bulganin and Communist Party Chief Ni kila S. Khrushchev uvouid up a two-day visit to the Himalayan " state of Kashmir, which is in dispute between India arxl Pak istan, In their speeches, the visitors have asserted that Kashmir un questionably belongs to India. They also have denounced Great Britain for separating the In dian sub-continent so as to sep arate Moslem Pakistan from Hindu India. Angry Reaction Reaction in Pakistan was angry. A foreign office spokes man in Karachi, the capital, said the mere fact of the visit of the disputed area was "not friendly" even aside from the pro-Indian speeches. It was disclosed that before the Russians went to Kashmir, the Pakistana foreign office no tified the Soviet embassy m Karachi that a visit there would imply that Russia was taking sides in the dispute. Pakistan protested also against the proposed visit of the Russians to Afghanistan, next stop on their tour. Pakistan and Afghanistan are feuding over border territory. In New Delhi, three members of, the big Soviet delegation started brass-tacks business talk with key Indian officials. Negotiators Listed Andrei A. Gromyko, deputy foign minister; Pavelov Lumy kin, deputy minister of foreign trade, and V. B. Khlebnikov, deputy minister for the -steel industry, were the Soviet nego iators. They discussed a proposed deal for 700,000 tons of Russian ste( the construction of a big steel plant, the setting up of In dian plants for the separation of manganese and chrome ore, and aid by Soviet experts in Indian diamond mining. Bulganin and Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru are to include economic questions In a joint communique to be issued next week, it is understood. GERMAN APARTMENT HOUSE EXPLODES Rescuers carry injured occupant from debris of a new five-story apartment house in Frankfurt which collapsed after an ex plosion. Police estimated 25 to 28 of 35 persons believed in the building were killed. Seven were hospitalized with injuries. U. S. soldiers and equipment were rushed to the scene to aid police in digging victims from the wreckage. Around Hollywood By ALINE MOSBY United Press Correspondent wu--nnifii"nii,-nfi:-iii ROBERT E. LEE OPTOMETRIST 309 EAST BTH ST. DIAL (... Years of specialized study with practice for preventative vis ual troubles make possible highly satis factory results with lenses and treatment. Special attention to children's eye problems. J Hollywood . (U.R) Twice a month Joseph Cotten rushes to 20th Century-Fox Studio to star in a super-colossal movie with lavish sets and top technicians that runs for six minutes. These little movies have no plot, but Cotten finds Aline Mosby his job in them the hardest he's had in 15 years of being a top per former. He has to portray him self, as host of the behind-the- scenes segments of "The 20th Century-Fox Hour" on CBS-TV. "This hasn't got much to do with acting," reflected the suave actor today. "It seems odd to be acting a character named Jo seph Cotten. How should I be have." Cotten was handed the host job after he played "moderator" on David O. Selznick's spectac ular on electricity last year. Sometimes the six-minute mov ies take three hours to make, sometimes four days. In each junior-size picture .Cotten takes the TV audience behind-the-scenes at Fox Studio for a les son on how to make movies. He also interviews players of forth coming Fox CinemaScope theat rical pictures. This same format is followed on the MGM and Warner TV programs. MGM's sponsor, in fact, asked the studio for, please, more entertainment and less plugs. And various critics have wailed that TV shows put on by film studios wind up being just one, long commercial for a movie. Cotten admits the studio pro grams are "propaganda" for pic tures but entertainment, too. "If Ed Sullivan can devote 30 minutes to "Guvs and Dolls" I don't ' think anybody could ob ject to my six minutes of talk ing about a Fox movie," is Cot ten's opinion. "I don't think my segments have been too commercial. Once or twice I suggested the adjec tives sounded too commercial and theyvere happy to remove them," he added. Cotten's share of the Fox show is made by Oscar-winning cam eramen, writers and directors Sets are built and a script writ ten for Cotten and his "co-stars" the actors and technicians he interviews. The technicians, he says, "come well, prepared, know their lines and .are on the set on time. One woman in the research department was a won derful actress." The actor thinks his six min ute TV shows could go on for ever because of "so many in teresting departments in a stu dio to visit." Once he asked fans to request what behind- tne-scenes views of a studio thev would like to see. "One man wanted to see Mari lyn Monroe changing her clothes," he sighed. CARS COLLIDE Vehicles operated by Donald Ernest Grimes, Route 1, Talent, and Joan Combes Herd, also of Talent, collided at the junction of Creel rd. and the old Pacific hwy. south of Talent at 4:05 p.m. Friday. A passenger in the Grimes' car, Susan Grimes, 4, received a minor cut on her head. Grimes was cited by Ore gon state police for failure to operate in the right lane of traffic. Kefauver Says US Should Give Israel Chance To Buy Arms San Francisco U.R) Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.), said last night the United States should give Israel the opportun ity to buy arms in order to re store, the 'middle east balance of power upset by Communist arms shipments to the Arab na tions. In an address before the an ual Chanukah festival of the Jewish National fund, Kefauver called for a clear statement of U.S. national inferest in the Middle East. "Certainly, this nation wants no arms race in the middle east" he said. ."But if arms from the Soviet system do go there, there is no question in my. mind that inso far as they threaten to change the balance of power, we must counter such a move by -giving Israel the opportunity of ob taining defensive arms." Responsibility of U.S. The Senator said the United States, as a sponsor of the foun ding of the state of Israel, has a grave responsibility to suport this "bastion of democracy sur rounded on one side by the sea and on the other three by hostile neighbors." "The United States must not permit Israel to fall victim to a Kremlin-engineered campaign to drive her into the sea," he said. Apart from Israel itself, he said, the United States is faced with the problem of blocking a Russian beachhead in Africa site of important American tias- "On these bases in large part, depend our ability to provide instant retaliation in case of an atomic attack on Americans,"' he said. Kefauver urged that the Un ited States extend to the fullest its diplomacy through the Un ited Nations and the Security Council to maintain peace in the Middle East. Leader of Drive Sees Local Medical Center if Hospital Is Built The Rogue Valley Memorial hospital, in cooperation with Sacred Heart hospital, will make Jackson county a medical cen ter to serve southern Oregon and northern California, accord ing to Otto J. Frohnmayer, gen eral chairman of the campaign. Frohnmayer urged each Jack son county resident to contri bute his "fair share, according to ability," to help create such a medical center. "The financing of Rogue Val ley Memorial, hospital will re quire the united effort of all who are in a position to work in the campaign and give to the best of their ability," Frohnmay er said, so "money can be raised now "in order to make possible the building of the community owned, financed and controlled, non-profit hospital." Campaign Starts A campaign to raise $714,000 of the $1,900,000 needed for construction of the hospital is now under way by the advance gifts committee. A general fund raising campaign will start in the near future, Frohnmayer said. About $600,000 had been con tributed prior to the advanced gifts campaign. An additional $586,000 has been requested from the federal Hill-Burton hospital funds", and the State Board of Health has recom mended a grant of $563,000. The hospital will be construc ted on a 20-acre site at the corner of Barnett and Murphy rds. in the southeast section of Medford. Abandon Community If sufficient funds are raised locally, the present Rogue Val ley Memorial hospital (Commun ity) will be abandoned, Frohn mayer said. The new building will be designed for expansion by adding additional beds and operative facilities in the future, he pointed out. Frohnmayer noted "the peo ple are awake to the critical shortage of modern hospital fa cilities in Jackson county," and urged to "welcome the united effort to make the county a great medical center." Posters Distributed Distribution of over 500 po sters proclaiming the start of the general drive for hospital funds started Saturday by Boy Scouts of Troop 3. Distribution of the posters is sponsored by the Medford Lions club and the Boy Scouts. Scouts requested permission from local business establish ments to display fund raising campaign posters in windows. Step-Father Held in In Death of Idaho Boy Weiser, Ida. U.R) Funeral services were held here Friday for 13-month-old Steve Lamar Bickley, who died Monday night of a brain hemorrhage. The boy's step-father, Ken neth Dean Ahrenkiel, 26, form erly of Salem, Ore., was held in jail here on a second degree murder charge in connection with the death. A pathologist's report listed the cause of death as "three or four blows to the head." Ahren kiel told police when arrested Thursday the boy injured him self In a fall. Public Prosecutor Kent Pow er said Ahrenkiel rvould be ar ranged in district court next week. HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS Station Sundays KWIN 10:15 1400 K.C. A.M. Hearing on Klamath River Plans Slated Yreka Public hearings on the California Oregon Power com pany contract and a possible interstate compact pertaining to use of Klamath River water will be held Monday and Tuesday in Yreka. Representatives from official bodies in other areas, private individuals from Siskiyou coun ty, farm group representatives and the Siskiyou county board of supervisors are expected to attend. A written statement will be heard outlining views of the Siskiyou board of supervisors relative to the contract between Copco and the bureau of recla mation, and the compact of the California and Oregon Klamath river commission. JUST ARRIVED! The Grandest CHRISTMAS GIFT of All THE NEW 2-DOOR YU! Ill: II LI FREEZER Plus REFRIGERATOR! . . . the Answer to ALL Your Food Storage Problems You must see it to appreciate it. Come in xiow. OPEN WEDNESDAY EVENINGS COUEY'S APPLIANCE STORE PHONE 3-5433 New Location 225 E. 6th formerly Crain & Mohr Hardware Nine Persons Jailed; Four Are Juveniles Nine persons, including four juveniles, were placed in the county jail Friday. Earl R. Schneider, 56, and Roy L. Thurman, 58, of 1728 North Riverside ave., and Mrs. Florence E. Doney, 46, Talent, were arrested by sheriff's of ficers and are held for question ing in connection with the rec ent burglarly of a Talent groc ery. Also in jail is William L. Heizenbuttel, 52, San Leandro, Calif., who was arrested near Gold Hill by state police Friday and cited for operating on the left side of the highway. Ralph A. Fennemore, 59, a transient, was jailed in connec tion with the theft of a brief case belonging to James Arm son, of the county juvenile de partment. . The juveniles, two 16 years of age and two 17, are held in connection with the theft of four tubeless tires in Central Point. They were arrested by Central Point police and sheriff's officers. Babe Ruth not only set the major league record for 60 home runs Li 1927, but he also hit more than 50 four-baggers three other years 54 in 1920, 59 in 1921 and 54 in 1928. 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