Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1959)
levBlonMont off :$Qcialisi;rantriies Premier Helping Red China Mark 10th Anniversary Tokyo -UPB- Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev said to night tha the development of global Communism is giving western leaders "the creeps." "There is no stopping the swift development of the so cialist (Communist) countries, and this is giving the creeps to the capitalist , chieftains," Khrushchev said at a recep tion -in Peiping attended by Soviet and Chinese Commu nist leaders. His remarks were carried In English by the official So viet News Agency Tass. Khrushchev arrived in Peiping earlier today to at tend . the celebration ot :. tne 10th anniversary of the found ing of the Red Chinese re gime He took off from Mos cow about 30 hours after ar riving homeCfrom the United States. r ' On his arrival in Peiping, Khrushchev told leaders of the Communist world . that "we must do everything with in our power to clear the at mosphere and create condir tions for friendship among the peoples." "Exerting all our efforts we must attain a situation in which universal peace is made secure," he told an airport Catherine which included such notable Communist lead ers as Mao Tse-tung oi Hea China, Ho Chi Minn of North Viet Nam and leaders .-of the satellites in Europe; :X May Free Prisoners- -y There was widespread spec ulation the Peiping regime would use the day to free five imprisoned Americans and perhaps to fire a rocket-missile in a token gesture of Chi na's growing power. Khrushchev told the Com munist world leaders he and President Eisenhower h a d frank talks on "all questions, requiring solution for the cre ation of atmosphere of co operation and peaceful exist ence.'" i V.;,-- He' reassured the Commu nists they had nothing to worry about from the Eisen hower talks. He said they dis cussed "big problems which must be settled" and that the talks were' t'profitable." He said they will improve U. S. Soviet relations and prevent revival of international ten sions. Khrushchev's state ments were broadcast both by Peip ing and Moscow radios. 1 "I have come to you imme diately after my return to Moscow from my trip to the United States, literally by changing from one aircraft to another," Khrushchev said. 1 V l i ' ' ''S '.'A -,'y-4 -,,? OVER HURRICAN EYE-Photo released by Defense Department shows an F8U photo Crusader plane from Cecil field, Ga., fly ing over the eye of Hurricane Gracie. The photo shows the circular formation of the storm, and directly above the plane's tail is the eye of the storm which ripped . into Charleston, S.C., with winds up to 125 miles per hour.1 - (U.S. Navy Photo by UPI Telephoto) HURRICANE DAMAGE This is a street scene in Charleston, S.C., photographed as Hurricane Gracie passed through Tuesday. Most of the downtown streets were flooded and all power : and telephone lines were ' knocked out. y (UPI Telephoto) . Firamice f ells To Keep aovds iff Algeria (Problem United Nations, N.Y.-flJPI)-France in effect told the Unit ed Nations today to keep its hands off the Algerian prob lem and said the Algerians themselves "m u s t choose their own destiny." ! French : Foreign , Minister Maurice Couve de Muryille said U.N. resolutions on Al geria in the past "did not con tribute-quite .the contrary-to facilitating the solution of the Algerian problem." , "To keep passions alive, to omc OUND SYSTEM a wm.WQih I jp Iwww wnf 1 Models EP1120 and AS2 offer a complete stereophonic sound system that plays con ventional records too. Both with sound that's . guaranteed to please. Here are just son .of their features: Soppliift styii 4 spaofcf Mmd systess Two ampltfters for grscKr powf Tw sts of controls Pilot fight and oooMcHiia polarized cord with AS2 AS RPM sptodlo inctuded with phonograph iosyoa clsnrw rwggodly buitt cabinets. Comt In, Ask far an Ear-Pleasin DmonrtrHeii 115 E. MAIN MEDFORD a ca ( arouse them, can never serve the cause of peace," Couve said. "Even though it has de cided to exceed the limits of its competence as set by the charter, I do not really see how our organization could now explain its intervention.' It is not incumbent on it to take, on behalf of its mem bers, decisions for which the latter alone are responsible." Couve outlined to the As sembly the proposal of French President Charles . de Gaulle for a referendum in Algeria within four years to decide the future of that North Afric an territory. Australian External Affairs Minister R. G. Casey opened today's chapter of the As sembly's general debate by indorsing the big , powers' plan for disarmament discus sions in a 10-nation commit tee evenly balanced . between East and West. But he declared that East- West parity in diplomatic ne gotiations is an "unhealthy doctrine" that should be kept out of the United Nations. Negotiations Woleoraod . Casey also welcomed direct negotiations between Presi dent Eisenhower and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and the increasing likelihood of a full-blown summit con ference. He gave credit to British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan for having initiat ed these developments.,: Both Casey and Couve promised careful study of Khrushchev's program for general and complete" dis armament but emphasized that the Russians must agree to ironclad inspection and control over any arms reduc tion plan. MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford. Or. Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1959 Market Backs Off In Leading Issues New York - (UPD - The stock market backed off late today with losses in leading issues running to more than 3 points. Motors, chemicals, steels and electronics were weak and even rails, strong , most of the session,, gave up some of . their gains in the final hour. Early hesitancy turned into selling when U.S. Steel lost more than 3 points. Lukens gave up more than 4, Youngs town a fraction. DOW-JONES AVERAGES . New York-(UPD-Dow-Jones .final stock averages: 30 in dustrials 631.68, off 8.42; 20 railroads 157.40. up 0.27; 15 utilities 87.91, up off 1.56. Sales today were about 2,850.000 shares com- : pared with 3.220,000 shares Tuesday. Tuesday's stocKs: Allied Chemical ' Alum Co Am American Cai. American Motors AT&T Anaconda Copper Armeo Steel E3ndix Aviation Bethlehem Steel Botemg Air . Caterpillar Corp Chrysler Corp Continental Can Crown Zellerbach Curtiss Wright i Dow Chemical Du Pont Eastman Kodak Firestone General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pacific Graham Paige Greyhound Gull oil Homestake Mining idano .rower IBM . T . T ' xilfc rtipcr - Kennecott Copper Lockheed Aircraft Katy prices on selected . 113 Si ill 43 ,i Montana Power Co Montgomery Ward Wat i Biscuit New York Central Pac Gas & Elec Penney J C L.X. Penn RR ....... Radio Corporation . Richfield Oil Safeway . Sears Shell Oil : Socony Mobil Oil Southern. Co Southern Pacific v.. Standard California Standard Indiana Standard NJ . Sun Mines Texas Co. Texas Gulf Sulfur Tex Pac Xand Trust , Transamerica (xd) Trans World Air .. Tri-Continental Union Carbide Union Pacific : United, Aircraft United Air Lines U S Rubber U S Steel ..J Youngstown S & T . 57?, 79 V 60 7654 67?i 57 30i 32i,i - 64 49 ?4 . 56 31 80 258 4 87 -127 78 59 56i,i 45 2 19 114 42 45 -.423 -127 z 26 5 24 51 52 29 61 , 104 16 58 73'i 37, 49 74 42 37 . : 73 49 42 49 6 - 78 - 18 ...;18 30 38 38 .140 30 39 41 59 ...103 ...137 Dead and Missing I n J a pa n Typhoon Pass 5,000 Figure the dead lay on dikes covered with mud. There was no water to wash the bodies, no place, to bury them. Nagoya, Japan (UPD The toll of dead and missing in typhoon-ravaged Japan soared above the 5,000 mark today. Typhoid and dysentery swept through the area, adding new despair to a stricken people unable even to bury their dead. - , v. !'?;'' Japanese police released new casualty figures from Ty phoon Vera, the worst in Japan's recorded hi s t o r y, showing 3,265 dead and 1,770 missing. More than 10,000 per sons were injured and a mil lion and a half were homeless. Foreign Countries Aid " The government, aided bv foreign countries including the United States, was rushing aid to the disaster area but flood victims complained that help was slow in coming. Morale was at rockbottom and discouraged refugees said they felt even more helpless at the lack of immediate aid and the scenes around them. "Where do you begin?'f asked ward official Taro Iwa tani of the town of Yoshida, once a rice granary, now a sodden mass. "It's like having your arms and legs torn off. All we know is that the whole district is under water, and the bodies are buried down below.",, . ' Nagoya was the hardest hit with more than 1,000 persons known dead. Floodwaters still covered Minato and Minami wards and small boats sailed across what were once pros perous streets. ' "Help is too slow in com ing," said Eiji Hirano, a teach er at Nagoya's Nanyo Pri mary School. "The local ward office has its hands full dis posing of the bodies. It may be disrespectful to the dead but it is more important to help the living." The living were short of drinking water and food and faced with outbreaks of the two disaster diseases - typhoid and dysentery - from drinking contaminated water. ' . U.S. Carrier Sent A The U.S. Navy sent the air craft carrier Kearsage to give assistance with . its planes. American and Japanese heli copters dropped food and sup plies and picked up the strand ed, but it was not enough. Commercial airlines flew in supplies free of charge. At the village, of Mushiro Niagara Falls is partially "shut off late at night and in winter when there are few sightseers around. The feat is accomplished by diverting waters of the Niagara River away from the falls and into power, plants. A loss about $7 billion a year to oods and crops is caused by insects and various kinds of fungus, according to the estimates of the U.S. De partment of Agirculture. . We Give GREEN STAMPS; CENTRAL REXALL DRUG Maia and Central - W9' RCA VICTOR PORTABLE Stereo-Orthophonic HI-FI The Mark XXVI. Portable 4-tpaker Stereo-Orthophonic High Fidelity "Yletrola" with convenient "Snap-Off' compan ion speaker. Powerful 12-watt dual-channel stereo amplifier. Calibrated bas,treble,leudnes and balance controls. 4-speed "Floating Action" record changer. Charcoal-and-gray simulated leather. Model PF26. 1$ OCA "As Low as $10 Down" Easy Monthly Payments 7 Stop Sign Planned At Evans Valley School A "stop" sign will be placed on Pleasant Creek rd. at East Evans Creek rd. in front of Evans Valley Union school in response to a request, the Jackson county court reported today. -, The sign wan asked in a letter by Grace Heer, clerk of Evans Valley school district. The court reported, referring the matter to. County Road Engineer Paul Rynning, who was quoted as saying the sign School District r . - Buys Building Site Medford school district 549C has acquired a 15-acre piece of land in the. Crest brook, orchard tract, as a site for a future junior high school. The property is south of the Rogue Valley Country club golf course and east of Mur phy rd. The $39,000 transaction was recorded yesterday i . the Jackson county recorder's office, although the deed itself had been executed July 15. ' The property was acquired from Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Hudson and W. G. Bishop. Medford School Superinten dent Dr. Leonard B. Mayfield explained today that the la.d acquisition was another step in the school district's long range building program. He said it was expected the junior high school would be needed there m a few years, based on population growth, studies. Portland-fOPE-Elmo F. Jacks, 42, Portland nightclub operator, pleaded guilty be fore U. S. Judge Gus J. Solo mon here to a charge of caus ing metal plates to be made in the likeness of U. S. cur rency. 5 -J&GRErS IFF Portland-(DPB-A group head ed by Portland Young Demo crats has been named Ore gon Draft Stevenson for Pres ident Committee. YOU'RE GOING TO PAY $1.25 FOR JOCKEY SHORTS ANYWAY, SO WHY NOT IUY IT AT BARKER'S AND GET S&H GREEN STAMPS? MM Wools..". Tweeds..; o Rain Coats, o Leathers... Cottons . . . wools . . . jerseys for street . . . work or after five. All at less than V2 price! 2" to Parker Woods 99 21 North Central would be installed. -