Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 29, 1959, Image 2

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    MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or.
Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1959
Conservatives
Hammer Angle
Of Summit Talks
London-(UPD-The Conserva
tive party hammered at the
summit meeting issue today
in an attempt to flatten the
booming Labor party bid to
return to power in the Oct. 8
general elections.
Prime Minister Harold Mac-
millan all but told the voters
it would be suicidal to send
anyone but himself, to meet
with President Eisenhower
and Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev at the summit.
Congratulations Sent
The prime minister Monday
nieht sent messages of con
gratulations to Khrushchev
nad Eisenhower on their joint
communiaue regarding the
week end talks at Camp Da
vid. Md. He told them that he
hoped to meet them soon-ob-
viously at the summit.
And in the speech, in West
London Monday night, Mac-
millan took some of the credit
for arranging the Eisenhower-
Khrushchev exchange visits.
"Do you .think Mr. Khru
shchev and President . Eisen
hower would have been pro
moting and discussing togeth
er at Camp David if I had not
decided to break the ice and
go to Moscow?" he asked a
Conservative rally. r
Proud of Help
"We are on our way to the
summit. I am proud that Brit
ain has helped to clear the
way."
Leaders of the Labor party,
which has shown a steady
gain in popularity in newspa
per-sponsored public opinion
polls, did not neglect the sum
mit issue but they continued
to attract huge crowds
throughout Britain by concen
trating on domestic issues.
Some Booms Blamed
For Noise in Portland
. Portland-flJPD - A series of
loud booms over the Portland
metropolitan area Monday
night were thought to be sonic
booms.' .
However, Portland Air Base
said none of its planes were
flying at the time, about 10:23
p.m. - Many residents- in an
area from Oregon City to Van
couver, Wash., reported win
dows and dishes rattling. No
Injuries or damage were re
ported. As late as 1880, about two
thirds of ; America's homes,
. were still heated by wood.
How to Get
ran
from your Airline
.v ticket to
EUROPE
For full details, call or visit
George Lewis
ROGUE
TRAUEL
SERVICE
We Reserve end Sell Airline
: and Steamship Tickets
FHONI SP 2-6779 -
111 L 8th
.-S 4t JSP
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8fokt tft Scat tttvd C3oi.ls "
i ICrjClwr tSc&ttrrc3 C laud x ;
DpODUg
Chiiia
Contains
Tibet
fit
Slave
Atrocities
Labor
DSD
Systen
SATELLITE PICTURE-First crude picture
of earth taken by TV camera on satellite
Explorer VI is shown at the left. Photo,
showing a sun-lighted area of the . central
Pacific ocean and cloud cover, was trans
mitted to a ground tracking station at South .
Point, Hawaii. Photo was made when the
satellite was about 17,000 miles above the
surface of the earth. At right is interpreta
tion of picture, superimposed on a picture
of the globe. Lined areas represent a cloud
over map. -(NASA Photo-UPI Telephoto)
NATO Allies OnvSted for
Briefing on Conferences
Washington (DPD Repre
sentatives of the 15 NATO al
lies were invited to the State
Department today for a brief
ing on President Eisenhower's
talks with Soviet Premier Ni
kita Khrushchev.
Livingston T. Merchant, as
sistant secretary of state for
European affairs, and Foy D.
Kohler, the deputy assistant
secretary, were to fill in the
foreign diplomats on the dis
cussions at Camp David, Md.
In Line With Promise
The consultation was m
line with Eisenhower's prom
ise to keep America's allies
fully informed of conversa
tions with the Russians on
Berlin, disarmament and
other international issues.
Secretary of State Christian
Herter gave similar informa
tion Monday to representa
tives of the SEATO pact na
tions. However, it was report
ed that Eisenhower ana
Khrushchev .touched only
Air Pollution
Meeting Sfafed
A progress report on Rogue
valley air pollution abate
ment has been called Oct. 20
at 1:30 p.m. by the Jackson
county court. ' j
Among those summoned by
the court are Dunbar Carpen
ter, representing fruitgrow
ers, George Flanagan, repre
senting lumber operators, and
representatives of City Sani
tary service , which operates
garbage dump near Jack
sonville.
Others invited include Ted
Gerow, state sanitary engin-j
eer, ' , Orie Moore, Jackson
county sanitarian, Jack Eaton,
county planning technician,
Rudy Tetreault of the Jack
sonville planning commission,
and Medford city officials.
Local Man Waives
Preliminary Hearing
Reginald Mayer, 40, of
1966 Ross lane, Medford,
waived preliminary hearing
in district court Monday and
was bound over to the grand
jury on a charge of "draw
ing a bank check with insuf
ficient funds to pay same in
full." ..
' He was committed to Jack
son county jail . in lieu of
$1,500 bail, court records
showed.
briefly on Far Eastern matters.
The briefings of Allied dip
lomats were viewed as a nec
essary prelude to substantive
negotiations on the Berlin
problem and a proable Big
Four summit meeting this
winter before Eisenhower vis
its Russia in the spring.
No Agreement
V Informed sources said that
Eisenhower and Khrushchiv
reached no agreement during
their week end talks on where
the Berlin negotiations should
start, or when or at what dip
lomatic level.
The President told his
news conference Monday that
Tougher Policy
Promised in Draft
Portland -(UPD- State Selec
tive Service headquarters
warned today a "get tough'
Dolicy may be adopted" if
draft-eligible men do not sign
up on time.
Lt. Col. John H. Neilson,
deputy state director, said
there-- have been - increasing
failures to register on tune
for the draft. He said this waff
creating headaches for many
Oregon boards and could lead
to heartaches for those failing
to sign up.
Normally, draft registration
in Oregon runs between 1,200
and 1,500 per month. In the
past two months the figure has
dropped to only about 800,
he said.
"This indicates that about
700 a month failed to regis
ter," Col. Neilson said. '
The law says that all young
men must regsiter within five
days after becoming 18 years
of age.
Hubbard Man Killed
In Fall From Silo
Hubbard-(UPD-Frank Kout-
ny, 56, Hubbard, was killed
instantly Monday when he
fell from a silo. . . .
The accident, occurred on
the farm of Manton A. Carl,
Hubbard, where Koutny had
been building the silo.
For a party punch bowl,
freeze a fruited ice ring.
Drain canned fruit cocktail,
and-save the syrui' for the
punch. Spoon the fruit -into
ring mold, fill with cold
water and freeze solid. Un
mold and float in the punch.
his discussions with the Soviet
leader removed and cleared
the threat of force over Ber
lin and cleared away most of
Eisenhower's objections to a
summit conference.
. United Nations, N.Y.-fUPD-Nationalist
China condemned
the Communist Peiping re
gime today for its atrocities
in Tibet and the slave labor
commune system on the Red
held mainland.
Nationalist A in b a s s ador
Tingfu F. Tsiang said his
government welcomed the op-
Endless Rows of
Wood Coffins Hold
-
Japan Storm
Nagoya, Japan-flJPD-Endless
rows of wooden coffins and
sodden straw mats for the
dying: Stricken peasants mov
ing past in never-ending
search for their families in
this twice dead city.
The story of typhoon Vera,
most destructive storm to hit
Japan in centuries, could be
outlined in statistics: 1,799
dead, 1,953 missing, 8,073 in
jured, 970,000 homeless.
Horror in Faces
But its horror lay in the
faces of the people, their
struggle for food and water,
the dysentery which ravaged
their bodies, the glazed look
on their faces as they search
ed the rubble for those who
were lost.
It lay in the face of an old
woman dressed in threadbare
Vyj
LYING IN INCUBATOR, Siamese twin daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Schultz, Chesterton, Ind., are in
Chicago hospital awaiting possible surgery to separate
them. They are joined at abdomen. Schultz and his sister
in-law, Mrs. Emma Schultz, are viewing the children. '
Stocks Advance
Along Broad Front
New .York-ttJra-Stocks ad
vanced along a broad front
front today with virtually all
major groups moving with
the tide.
Steels were firm for the
most part. Lukens was un
changed, and U.S. Steel was
down around a point. Youngs
town advanced more than 1
and Bethlehem firmed.'
DOW JONES AVERAGES .
Dow-Jones 2 p.m.' stock av
erages: 30 industrials. 639.72,
up 3.25; 20 railroads 156.86,
up 2.09; 15 utilities 87.60, up
0.40, and 65 stocks 212.22, up
1.43
by JOSEPH N. BELL
sr? i v
A MAN YOU SH0U LD M EET- M r. U. N.
As Secretary-General
of the United Nations,
his delicate job is to : -
prevent international
squabbles from be
coming world wars
r
October 4th
Arriving to take over as UN head in
1953, he.is.greeted by'Trygve Lie.
, - i " .
Lev of ouldoert took Hdmmarskjold on climb of 9,000-foot
Mt. Ruopehu in New Zealand with England's George Smith.
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
Hatfield Appoints
Welfare Officials
Salem-!UPD-Gov. Mark Hat
field Monday made the fol
lowing appointments to pub-
he welfare commissions:
Mrs. Alta May, Grass Val
ley,. Jsherman county, reap
pointed.
Mrs. Cleon Clark, Prine-
ville, Crook county, reappoint
ed.
" C. F. Noll;' Tillamook, Til
lamook county, replacing
Mrs. Ida Boquist, Tillamook,
whose term expired.
Two Men Killed
As Auto Hits Tree
New Meadows, Idaho-IUPD-Two
men died after their car
went out of control and hit a
tree one mile south of here on
state highway 15, Adams
county Sheriff Charles Burk
holder reported.
Burkholder said killed in
stantly was Dewitt G. Bowles,
28, McCall. The other victim,
James Combs, also of McCall,
died about 5 a jn. today in a
McCall hospital.
Dark Hollow Rd.
Widening Starts
Widening of Dark Hollow
rd. for- about a half mile
south of Stage rd. began this
week, Jackson County Road
Engineer Paul Rynning re
ported. Rynning said the widening
would make the roadway a
full two lanes.
Population of the U. S. will
increase by about 63 million
in the next 20 years, the cen
kimono, her lips pressed tight
ly against toothless gums,
watching intently as the lid
of a coffin-like box was rais
ed. .
She steeled herself and
then peered within. Wordless
ly and with a slight shake of
head she moved on . to the
next box and the next and the
next.
Not Enough Boxes
There were not even enough
of the wooden boxes to hold
the bodies in this city which
suffered more than 1,000
dead.. Some of the bodies lay
on' straw tatami mats, their
faces covered with scraps of
cloth.
Long lines of survivors
trudged past these boxes
through the day, wondering
when help would arrive from
Tokyo. But communications
were smashed by -the fury of
a storm that set off landslides
and floods.
The wooden boxes them
selves were hurriedly built
for the gruesome chore of
identification. The head end
of each was hinged so it could
be quickly opened and closed.
Linfield College
Loan Gets Approval
Salem - (DPI) - The Commu
nity Facilities Administra
tion informed Rep, Walter
Norblad (R-Ore.) today it had
approved a loan of $825,000
to Linfield College at McMin
ville. . The money will be used to
wards construction of a cam
pus cafeteria and two student
dormitories.
- The American Automobile
Association estimates that
Americans paid out more than
4A billion dollars for auto
mobile insurance in 1958.
portunity for a full 'debate
in the U.N. General Assmbly
on the Communist excesses.
Pledge Repeated
Tsiang also formally repeat
ed for the U.N. record Gen
eralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's
pledge of last March 26 that
Tibetans will be granted the
right of self-determination if
and when the Nationalists re
capture the China mainland.
"The atrocities committed
by the Communists in Tibet
are even more abhorrent to
the Chinese people than they
are to the international com
mittee of jurists," Tsiang said.
"From this rostrum, as rep
resentative of China, I de
clare that Free China con-
Humphrey Warns
Against Invoking
Taft-Hartley Act
Milwaukee (DPD Sen. Hu
bert Humphrey (D-Minn.) said
Monday night the American
people will take "a beating"
if the government invokes the
Taft-Hartley act to get strik
ing steelworkers back on the
job.'
"W hen big government
gangs up with big business,
the American people are ,in
for a beating, and this is what
is in store for all of us if the
Taft-Hartley act is invoked at
this stage of the steel strike,"
he said.
'Feeding Flames'
Humphrey, a leading con
tender for the 1960 Demo
cratic presidential nomina
tion, said the administration's
action in threatening to in
voke the Taft-Hartley act is
"feeding the flames of infla
tion." The administration, Humph
rey said,, has not- protected
"the reasonable requests" of
the strikers and, moreover,
has failed to crack down on
the "rampant profiteering" of
the companies.
Steel companies have "re
fused to curb their insatiable
appetite for higher prices and
ever soaring profits," Humph
rey charged.
demns the Communist atroci
ties in Tibet and welcomes
any. proposal to examine them
in the present session of the
Assembly." . . . -Debate
Requested . " ,. ,
Tsiang referred to an in
vestigation of the Tibet situ
ation carried out by an im
partial international lawyers'
committee under Indian
chairmanship which condem
ned Red China's bloodbath in
the kindom ruled by the now
exiled Dalai Lama.
Ireland and : Malaya Mon
day night submitted a request
for a full Assembly, debate
on Red China's suppression
of civil rights and religious
liberties in Tibet. The As
sembly's Steering committee
was expected to consider it
later this week.
Man Bound Over on
Larceny Charges
. Lee Roy Hancock, 28, of
route 3, box 62, Medford,
waived preliminary hearing
in district court Monday and
was bound over to the grand
jury on a charge of larceny
of livestock.
Hancock was released on
$1,000 bail.
He was arrested last Fri
day by Jackson county sher
iffs deputies and Livestock
Brand . Inspector Rex Wood
ward in connection with the
attempted sale at Midway
Auction yard of three Hol
stein heifers belonging to
James Alvin Carlson, route
3, box 76, Medford. - .
There were 198,208 ' male
prisoners and 7435 female
prisoners confined in state
and Federal prison and re
formatories at the' end of
1958.
W Give
GREEN STAMPS
CENTRAL REXALl ORUG
. Main and Central
111
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III t M I I
October 1, 2 & 3
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