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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 15, 1958)
8 MAIL TRIBUNE. MeiforJ, Oregon, Tuesday, April 15, 1938 British Budget Proposals Presented London (IP Britain's Con servative government puts its 1958 proposals before Parlia ment today. They are armed against inflation, with prom ises of a quick policy shift if the U.S. business recession strikes Europe. Chancellor of the exchequer Derick Heathcoat-Amory will be presenting his first budget since taking over the nation's top economic post from Peter Thorneycrof t in January. Nine U. S. Presidents have been Episcopalians. He 1 SAN FRANCISCO go to the . HOTEL that offers the "MOST' Belleviie O I A IT at TAVIOR Downtown center of everything, only 2 blocks from Union Square and the finest shops. At the Belle vue you'll find complete hotel service 300 Beauti ful rooms. Moderate Rates. Convention Facilities. MIVE-IH a. f h WALLACE G. STEELE Jakarta Paper Says Filipinos Helping Rebels Singapore (IP) The Jakar ta newspaper Bintang Timur today accussed U. S. diplo matic and military officers in the Philippines of "openly aid ing" the Indonesian rebels. It also accused Philippines President Carlos P. Garcia and Foreign Minister Felix berto M. Serrano of giving "open aid" to the rebels, now facing a combined land-sea attack in Sumatra to crush their last stronghold. Warning on Intervention At the same time the Indo nesian government warned against "foreign intervention" in Indonesia and reported that an American-made B25 bomb er presumably based in the Philippines had raided Makas sar Airport this week end. Bintang Timur specifically named .raui j.auenDure, a U.S. Embassy official in Ma nila, as one of the Americans aiding the rebels. It also listed U. S. Navy officers stationed at Sangley Point and Clark Field, Dr. Yung Ross, a Chi nese-American member of the U.S. Veterans Association of Manila, and a James Flaming, identified as an "American pilot flying for the rebels." Loyalists Massing United Press Correspondent Robert Monahan in Jakarta re ported that government troops which left the Indonesia capi tal during the last three days were said to be massing in East Sumatra for a final over land assault on the rebel forces. Government warships were reported gathering off Su matra's West Coast for a si multaneous amphibious attack. The landing was expected momentarily. The hermit crab lives in an other creature's shell and moves each time the quarters become too small. MANNED MISSILE Pictured here is the first official artist's conception of the X-15 rocket-powered airplane under development at the Los Angeles Division of North American Aviation. The plane, expected to make its first flight sometime next year, is designed to carry man higher than he has ever flown before 100 miles above the earth. Navy To Inactivate 48 Ships in 1959 Washington (IP) The Navy announced Monday that 48 ships including four aircraft-carriers, four cruisers, 11 submarines and one destroyer would be inactivated during fiscal 1959. To be placed in the moth ball fleet in the Pacific North west include the carrier Box er, destroyer escort C. E. Brannon and the aviation tender Kenneth Whiting, which will be assigned to the Bremerton Reserve Group, and the destroyer escorts Spangler, U. M- Moore, Goss and Gilligan, and auxiliaries Sussex, Chara, Karin and Merapi, which will be as signed to the Portland, Ore., Reserve Group. Air mileage from Tokyo to San Francisco is 5,250 miles. Lack of Enthusiasm Shown By Voters in New Jersey E Newark, N. J. HP! New Jersey voters headed for the polls today to select nominees for Congress in an off-year primary election distinguish ed by the presence of many candidates and the absence of visible public enthusiasm. Both parties must resolve a three-cornered contest for the U. S. Senate nomination in the scramble for the seat to be vacated by the retiring Re publican H.- Alexander Smith. Test for Meyner All 14 congressional seats also will be on the block with contests in six of the districts. Gov. Robert B. Meyner an nounced his support of form- s sale vwtNI xilyn " STARTS t 1 WEDNESDAY : t j i APRIL 16TH Lb j lil!i;LOHIKQg flips' sal 39.95 59.95 qaal. 66-pc I china set-8.95 Mel. jnac 16-pc set free I sale $69 3-pc white bath out fit. Choice of 4ft' or 5 steel tub. t safe 70c 10-lb. bag charcoal. Fast-starting, cteon-burningl sale 19.00 REG. 26.98 plastic tile kit for 5-ft. re cessed tub area, sale 9.00 17.95 spin outfit 6 or 7' rod with 7 oz. Clipper reel. IUBM etrtfeft 5T-W1NT J IQSS8 sale 409 sot. 5.79 Super Hons in one or five gal. can. Whit or 1 1 colors. sale $177 195.95 5-HP De luxe. 10 down, no payments 'til June 1st! sale 1.40 6 Qts. Heavy Duty for price of 4 get 2 free at low pricel ...see scores of other bargains for the family and home in this big circular! Watch for it! 117 S. CENTRAL Open 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Mon. 9:30 to 9 p.m sale 44C REG. 55c Riverside spark plugs replace every 10,000 miles. sale 44.00 REG. 59.95 rotary lawn mower. $5 dru, no mo. poyt 'til June. , sale 6.00 8.95 garden cart holds 3-cu. ft. Sturdy troy, AibbsNircd. on er Rep. Harrison A. Williams Jr., in the Democratic sena torial contest, with the result that his position as party leader will undergo a critical test. Knock-down battles for the control of local political or ganizations also will be head lined in the numerous muni cipal and county contests today's board. A united .Press survey showed 2,734,390 persons reg istered for the election, but most observers expect a vote of only between 500.000 and 700,000. Other Candidates Williams has the backing of all but two of the county D e m o c r a tic organizations Other Democratic senatorial candidates are Mayor John J. Grogan of Hoboken, presi dent of the Marine and Ship building Workers Internation al union who is backed up by Hudson and Atlantic county organizations and the state AFL and CIO organizations; and Joseph E. McLean, state commissioner of conservation and economic development. Republican senatorial candidates are Bernard '. M. Shanley, former appointments secretary to President Eisen hower; Rep. Robert W. Kean, and Robert Morris, former counsel to the Senate Intern al Security committee. Reeds Lose Round In Road Dispute Portland (IP) A father and son involved in a dispute with the State Highway com mission and who were hos pitalized after an altercation resulting from it lost a legal round in Circuit Court Mon day. Frank Reed, 84, and his son, Francis, 54, were treated in a hospital last week after, an incident with a construction crew on their property at Reeds landing near Corbett. Circuit Judge Paul R. Har ris ruled that the state had the right to possess the land before a jury decides how Much Reed should receive in damages. Inventor of Traffic Signal Dies at Home Salt Lake City (IP) The man who invented the first electric traffic signal died in his Salt Lake City, home Mon day of a heart attack. He was Lester Farnsworth Wire, 70, a long-time local po liceman who helped solve 43 murders. COMMUNIST DIES Baltimore (IP) Frank R. Kent, 80, one of the foremost political Communists in Mary land and a syndicated political writer, died Monday in Johns Hopkins Hospital. REDUCE and CONTROL WEIGHT ' with proloRged-acffM LEEW Appetite- " suppressant capsules Take wily ONE capsule daily IEEN prolonged - action capsules are self-regulating, and taken in the morn ing will provide a smooth, uniform appetite suppressant effect lasting throughout the day ... making re ducing and weight control easier than you ever dreamed possible. 30 days supply in plastic case, only 3.95. 60 days supply, $6.95. Now available without prescription. Wainscotfs Pharmacy 322 E. Main - Phon. SP 2-6449 Portlander Suffocates 1 Portland (IP) Vernon V. Davis, 55, apparently asphyx iated while asleep today when fire caused an estimated $600 damage to his home here. Firemen, who answered the alarm about 6 a.m., blamed smoker's carelessness for the blaze. ARRIVES IN SUDAN Hiartoum HP) James S. Moose, former U.S." ambassa dor to Syria, arrived here Sunday to. take over as am bassador to the Sudan. He suc ceeds Lowell C. Pinkerton, who came here as the first American ambassador in May 1956. Hamburg (IP) A total of 102 German ships are idled in West German ports, the German Shipping Lines as sociation said today. A spokes man said that international freight rates would not allow any decrease in the number of lad-up ships in the near future. SURGEON KILLED Walnut Grove, Miss IT" . Dr. Allen Robert Knight.4, one of the leading orthopedic surgeons in the South, was killed Sunday in a head-or collision near here. Dr Knight's wife and nine-year-old son were hospitalized with injuries. ILQK1E i A new name for Soufhw a- than II yecrs of seiTlrI0 2 million p"na?Z J WMch ahnos Flv PAricis A!, ... formerly SOUTHWEST AiRtVAYS For reservations call SPring 2-6161 or your Travel Agent Only With Your Help Can She Know Truth f .-Don't Left' D-Ses Win The IBattle For Her EMI . What goes Into little Martnka's mind today wftl affect you profoundly five or ten years from now. If she learns only the Communist "party line," your future Is in danger. But she can learn the truth If you help. little Marmka's classes are not at all like those your daugh ter attends. In civics class, she learns to report on her parents' every "incorrect" political statement. Her geog raphy teacher tells her how American troops "occupy" Western Europe and threaten the borders of her country. And m her physical education class, Marinka will be taught how to operate a rifle. How is she to learn the facts? How wiH she know we want only peace? The truth can still get through to her. Because Marmka's family and millions of other oppressed people behind the Iron Curtain can still Eaten to Radio Free Europe. Every day, every hour, the 29 super-powered transmitters 'of this freedom network are at work, over powering Red efforts at "janiming," slashing through Red lies, renewing hope that freedom will some day return be hind the Iron Curtain. , , . What you must do: Radio Free Europe needs your help to stay on the air. It is a private organization supported by the American people. Your dollars are needed to help operate its transmitters, pay for equipment, supplies, announcers and news analysts. Freedom is not free! Send your truth dol lars todav to Crusade for Freedom, care of your local Postmaster. Thn Monftori ag racsivar con wacr :, must be repaired at great cost. Send your dollars! Keep Radio Free Europe operating! Without your help, his voka at stilled. Your truth dollars pay the salaries of announcers Mia him. Are you giving? It costs $1 minute to put free dom en me air. One doHaC'buys" one minute of time on Radio Free Europe. Keep it on the air! Send your truth dollars te CRUSADE fir- FREEDOM Care of jour local Postmaster MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE