Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 25, 1956, Image 9

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    Screens at Savage Rapids
May Be Operating by 1953
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rnnd lnc.il nrnnizatinns such a
;in'i.n1io:i districts' and conser
' va'i'isi cf";'" "is t cooprmt.
: Cn!. V.'riianr! said. Need for such
,1 pro-ran in !h Fnnif River
and Bff.r Crock ba?.ns was
1 rcsFcd
. Most Advanced
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HAUPERT
PACIFIC HIGHWAY
MEDFORD
Tri-City Skipper
id. Ore.
Don
ies. managed of the Tri-City
aves of tiie Northwest lea-Lie.
-tcrciav va indefinitely sus
nfied by league Prest-int Jau.es
n.hrt for his part in a r bu
rr tliat df".eio;:rd during last
:dav n:r:i:t s uane between tile
a, es and Wenatchee.
At tiie tune of the incident,
por's iiad said Pries bun'ped
noire f!i.ss Fisher as lie bent
r ro dust c.ff the pla'1.
Er
Ki
eked
F!ei h,man said Fisher and
Oregon uaier law pro', iries the
ipost advanced administrative
-'. sieni of us kind in the 48
states lie outlined some of the
provisions of tiie law.
S'a'ine that the L". S. Supreme
court s decision on the Pellon
dam case gi'.cs federal agencies
exclusu. e authority over all
iT-.eri fi power si'es as rver all
r'-s'T'. ed land. W'eiiand said that
fi r Oiuiiin this is 52 per cent of
state. "Thus.'' he remarked.
Oregon lost control of its wa
ter." The Kngiie River is unques
tionably one of the Nation's fin- :
est sea run fish streams, accord- i
ins to V.'ciland. The summer !
stcelhead and spring chinook !
runs are unique on tiie Rogue, i
yet tiiis stream is not a good '
trout river and never will be'
because nf the mineral content .
of Tie water.
lead
. fine
reP'accments
- - :
-See us, too, for Triple-Chechd used
iH&TRIBUE
Fined, Suspended
Pries both denied tne report.
Fisher said Pries kicked dirt
onto the plate and to fans it n ay
have appeared he kicked the um
pire. In adririon to 'he si, -pension.
Pries as iev I' d a SiiO fine. Tne
suspension v.iil become effective
July 2a. the niitht after Tri-City
has a Don Pries -Ninht planned
to honor the manager
In other action. Fleishman
fined Tom Perez of Tri-City Sl."
and issued a suspend ed t!iree-riay
suspension for riiargins the Spo
kane dugout ri'.irin-i a game be
tween the 1wo clubs.
Minger Captures
Junior Golf Toga
Portland cJ.P Tom Mincer,
a Portland youth playing out of
Wavetiey Country club, yester
day captured the state title in
qualifying play for a berth in
the junior amateur US OA tourn
ament to be held next month.
-Minger toured the Riverside
Golf and Country club layout
!ire in one-oer par. coming m
with a 7i!. With the state title
went a ticket to the junior ama
teur USGA tourney at Taconic
Gold club at V.'illiamstown,
Mass.. August 8-11.
Jerry Cundari. another Port
land golfer, finished second to
Mmger. one stroke behind at 74.
Ron Weber. Prineviile. carded a
75 for third spot.
in
IN MOTOR TRANSPORT
LEADS THE
4
Cuts Traffic 1
Ilvdra-Mau. .merom eVery
stopends engine luftfimS
or'"
trucks'
PHONE
Tircomb Has 34
Horseshoe Wins
Murray. Utah ' J R Don Tit
con, b. Sunnyvale, Calif., loomed
today as the new national horse
shoe pitching tournament cham
pion, as he went into the finals
of the week long event at Mur
ray Park with a record of 34
w ins against one loss.
Ted Allen. Boulder. Colo., de
fending champion and six times
holder of the national title, went
through four days of perfect
pitching and then dropped three
games Tuesday to fall into third
spot. Allen's record 15 32-3.
Fernando Isais. I.os Angeles,
seven times national champion,
was in second spot with a record
of 33-2.
Portland Prices
Approach Peak Year
Portland LP The
monthly report of the bureau
of labor statistics showed that
Portland retail food prices in
mid-June averaged higher than
in any month for more than
three years, and approached the
!caks reached in 1952.
The figures show tiie increase
over May came to 2.3 per cent,
one of tiie sharpest monthly in
creases on record. The food
price average was 4 9 per cent
higher than in June. 1955. and
14 per cent higher than in
June. 19.30.
The downward trend of meat
prices of the previous year was
reversed, meat prices rising 2.8
per cent. Even with the increase,
the price level for the meat group
remained 3.4 per cent below its
year-ago level.
V A Y
3 - 5383
1 Wednesday. July 25. 1958
GOP Campaign Managers Dispute
Claim Nixon Weakens
Washington 'J.R Managers
of the Republican Campaign to
regain control of Congress today
disputed Harold E. Stassen's
claim that the reuomination of
Vice President Fichard M. Xixon
would weaken their chances of
winning.
Sen. And.'ow J. Schoeppel
Kan." and Rep. Richard M.
Simpson iPa.) chairman of the
GOP Senate and House cam
paign commit tees, both disagreed
with Stassen. Both said an Ei-senliovver-Xixon
ticket would be
the "strongest possible'' one to
help the Republicans win back
control of Congress in the elec
tion next November.
These viewpoints were ex
pressed w hile Republican profes
sionals were writing off Stas
sen s proposal to substitute Gov.
Christian A. Herter of Massachu
setts for Nixon as the GOP vice
presidential nominee.
The Stassen Proposal
Stassen. White House disarma
ment adviser, made his proposal
Khrushchev Criticizes
M iserable Conditions
For Siberia Workers
London -lU Rl Soviet Com-1
munist party boss Nikita S. j
Khrushchev admitted Tuesday !
that life is pretty miserable for ;
the workers on the collective
farms in his pet project, the
Siberian "virgin lands'' cultiva
tion drive.
And, he said, certain state and
local government and party of
licials were not facing up to the
facts. He singled out for special
criticism the ministers of agri
culture and state farms and the
minister of tractor and agricul-
Morse Pledged
Support by Labor
Portland UP Labor leaders
from five western slates met
nere yesterrif.y to discuss politi
cal plans for 1he coming elec
tion and pledged thrir all-out
support 10 Democrats Wayne
Morse of Oregon and Warren
Magnuson of Washington. These
two senatorial contests were
billed as top priority by the
labor leaders.
Leaders from Washington.
DC. and from the Pacific Coast
states, told ihc gathering that la
bor must get out its vote if it
expects to gain its wishes in the
balloting
"Our people, through lazi
ness, through indifference,
through stupidity, if you please,
are the ones who fail to register
and, if they do. sometimes fail to
vole," Al Barkan. an assistant
director of the political educa
tion committee, told the
members.
Hodman Denies Part
In 'Dump Nixon' Move
; New York U.R Paul Hoff
; man. newly appointed U.S. dele-
gate to the United States, today
j emphatically denied that he was
: one of the men behind Presiden-
tial Assistant Harold E. Stassen's
"dump Nixon" move.
' Hoffman was questioned about
a report in a Washington col
umn that he was active in a be-
hind the scenes move to promote
: Gov. Christian Hefter of Massa
I chusetts as GOP vice presiden
i tial candidate.
"It is completely unconfirmed
jand it is not true. No one has
j approached me on a dump Nixon
j move, and I wouldn't go along
j with it if they did."
Neon Tube Benders
Vofe To End Strike
Portland (U.R) Striking
neon tube benders here voted
yesterday to end their walkout
against nine Portland sign com
panies and return to work under
a new contract.
The new agreement provides
for pay boosts of 29 cents an
hour spread over two years and
a health and welfare program.
Prior to the agreement the basic
scale was S2.95 hourly.
WHEN YOU NEED
f?EABY-SV2IX
CONCRETE .
M. C. LININGER & SONS
Phone 2-5336 or 2-5897
Ashland 8121
Monday after notifying Mr. Ei
' senhovver in advance of his in
: tentions. The announcement
created a day of uncertainty
among GOP leaders who had
believed Mr. Eisenhower had
given his blessing to the renom
malion of Nixon but wondered
whether there was a White
House plot to dump the vice
president.
The Stassen statement said
public and private polls showed
I an Eisenhower - Nixon ticket
would be. six per cent weaker
1 than one composed of Eisen
: bovver and Herter. He said this
I difference could mean the dif
ference between victory and de
feat in the GOP drive to regain
control of Congress.
' Questioned about this argu
ment. Schoeppel told the United
' Press:
"I subscribe to the theory that
'the Eisenhower-Nixon ticket
j would be the strongest possible
ticket for the Republican party.
' I am sure it will contribute to
1 the greatest possible degree to
tural machine building, Gregori
Khlamov.
Khrushchev lias been making
a tour of Siberia. Tuesday he
spoke to agricultural workers at
a conference in Novo Sibirsk.
Khrushchev said there was a
shortage of housing, no clubs or i
other cultural or social amenties,
poor shops and only sporadic
delivery of goods to the new
farms.
Many youths who responded
to his appeal to "go east" had
no place to spend their free
time, he added.
Lack of Strength
"It is possible that the execu
tives of the ministries and the
local party and Soviet organs
lack the strength and ability to
get to the bottom of this state
of affairs." the Communist party
chief said.
Khrushchev criticised Khal
mov because he failed to change
harvesting machine production
to cope with the fact that collec
tive and stale farms are now
switching over to harvesting in
stages.
"As before, the enterprises of
the ministry are producing wide
sweep combines which are com
pletely useless for harvesting in
stages," Khrushchev said.
Charges Waste
"And what does it mean to
work for a year with a useless
machine'.'" he asked. "It means
throwing away millions of rubles
and spoiling the material."
Khrushchev said that "the
ministers" are responsible for
this.
The Communist party chief
also criticized the ministries of
agriculture and state farms for
the "indifferent attitude toward
appraising the system of soil
cultivation proposed by T. S.
Maltev."
Khrushchev said that two
years was "quite enough time"
for the ministries to make a de
cision of the Maltev system but
none has been forthcoming.
Typhoid-Type Virus !
Blamed in Michigan
Ypsilanti, Mich. (U.R) A
typhoid-type virus -was found re
sponsible Tuesday for hospital
izing at least 40 Eastern Michi
gan College summer students
with food poisoning.
Dr. Otto K. Engelke, Washte
naw county health director, said
the disease was known as "sal
monella typhi murium." He said
the sickness was a form of ty
phus but "not nearly as serious."
"While very distressing." En
gelke said, "the sickness is almost
never fatal."
The students. 38 of them wo
men, were stricken earlier this
week and are now reported in
good condition at the hospital.
Engelke said the germ prob
ably was passed on to the stu
dents by food handlers in one
of the college's dining rooms or
by infected poultry.
- CALL -
LININGER'S
MEDFOHD (OREGON) fclAIL TRIBUNE NINE
Chanc
insure the election of a Repub
lican House and Senate.''
Simpson in Agreement
Simpson also used th
"strongest possible'' label for
the Eisenhowcr-Nixon ticket. He
said the fact that Nixon is v. cil
known and an "cliicient cam
paigner" would help restore a
GOP majority m the House.
Stassen's anu-X i x o n move
brought growls of dissatisfaction
from many Republicans. They
said he had raised a threat to
party unity and had heeled up
the health issue to lie u.-ed by
Democrats against j;r. Eisen
hower. Tiiese Republicans said
a party argument over tiie vice
presidential nomination could
serve only to raise the question
of whether Mr. Eisenhower
might be able to survive a sec
ond term.
Unconfirmed reports circu
lated in Congress that Stassen
was "on his way out" from his
White House job.
Despite Hall's announcement,
Stassen said he would press for
the nomination of Herter. But
Sen. Everett M. Dirkscn iR-Ili (
summed up the attitude of many
Republicans in Congress with
this comment:
"This leaves Harold on a cake
of ice on 3 warm day on a
downhill slide."
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