Mil
Fife toiHttei
Union Plans To
Set Up Further
Negotiations
Pittsburgh - (LTD - The pow
erful Wage Policy Committee
of the United Steelworkers
Union today rejected an in-
'dustry proposal to end the
crippling steel strike as "completely-
unacceptable."
' However, USW President
David J. McDonald said union
negotiators would contact th
industry bargaining team in
.an effort to arrange further
negotiations, "possibly this
afternoon."
.,. "The Wage Policy Commit
tee has made a detailed an
alysis of terms submitted by
the industry to-seitle this dis
pute," McDonald told news
men in a hastily prepared
statement. , 1
Completely Unacceptable
"These terms were rejected
unanimously by the commit
tee members as being com
pletely unacceptable."
The US W's Executive Com
mittee Sunday rejected the
' peace proposal aimed at end
ing the 83-day strike which
has idled 500,000 steelwork
en and 200,000 workers in
related industries
- McDonald said he expected
. to meet with the Wage Policy
', Committee again this after
noon. . The union president said
Sunday he would advise the
White House by telephone on
the status of the negotiations
in the nation's longest steel
walkout. However, no report
of the conversation was forth
coming from the union, Wash
. ington or President Eisenhow
er's vacation White House in
Palm Springs, Calif.
May Shift Talks
Eisenhower warned" in
meetings with union and in
dustry chiefs last week that
.the economy -choking strike
must end quickly. The Presi
dent's words were taken to
mean that he might invoke
80 -day back-to-work provis
ions of the Taft-Hartley law if
settlement was not near -possibly
; when he returns
from his Palm Springs vaca
tion Thursday- . v
Sources in Washington said
- Sunday night that the govern
ment may call the negotiators
to Washington if ian impasse
is not broken here in an ef
fort to "pressure" a settled
ment without direct govern
ment intervention..;.
; If the talks are moved and
still no agreement reached,
the source told UPI, the gov
ernment then would be ready
to invoke the Taft - Hartley
Act.
Russian Premier
In Vladivostok
Moscow-ffiPD-Soviet Premier
Nikita S. Khrushchev. ' re
mained in Vladivostok today
on his surprise visit to that
Sea of Japan port.
Government sources here
renorted that Khrushchev had
made a speech in Vladivostok
on Sunday, but its text was
not yet published here. It was
expected to be released later
tndav or Tuesday.
There was as yet no official
explanation of why the. pre
mier flew to Vladivostok from
Peiping Sunday instead of re
turning directly to Moscow,
nor of how long he intended
to stay there.
Grange News...
Greenhorn Grange
Yreka-The regular meeting
of the Greenhorn Grange was
held at the Greenhorn Grange
hall in Yreka. Master Kenneth
Bley presided.
Mr. and. Mrs. Frank Bear
visited- from Hornbrook
Grange. Both of them gave a
short talk.
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Can
non of Grenada are delegates
from Greenhorn Grange to
the National Grange conven
tion in Long Beach, Calif, in
wnvmhcr. Others from the
Grange who plan to attend
the convention are JVir. ana
Mrs. Kenneth Bley and Mr.
and Mrs. John Collie, of
Yreka; Mr. and Mrs. Bay
Wheeler of Montague; and Mr.
and Mrs. Vayne Rolston, dis
trict deputy and secretary of
the Greenhorn . Grange, of
Grenada.
- Miss Carol Petersen, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Aage
Petersen of Montague, re
ceived an invitation to be on
the seventh degree "Trumpe
tures Drill' at the National
Grange. This invitation was
read to the Grange members.
Attendance of the Grange
was small'because of the ope ri
sing of deer season.. Refresh
ments were served.
t
I .i i in..... i .mmw1-0nmtmmAitmf, alAafinmKe
LnJaortw wrk e ' 1 T 1 iTi imlT -- 1
t
WATERFRONT IDLE-Ships lie at anchor, , until Oct. 15 unless striking dockworkers
freight rains stand idle and crates linethe return to their jobs. The International Long
docks on the New York waterfront. Ship- shoremen's strike has tied up more than 100
pers say they won't resume contract' talks ships in New; York alone. -(UPI Telephoto) .
Expected
Washington (0PD - Govern
ment intervention in the five
day old dock workers' strike
was expected today in an ef
fort to end the paralyzing tie-
up in Atlantic and Gulf ports.
Federal officials were re
ported to regard the dock
walkout as more critical than
the 83-day-old steel strike.
Hundreds of ships and mil
lions of dollars of cargo are
tied up in ports from Sears
point, Maine, to Brownsville,
Tex. '
To Seek Court Order
Federal authorities prepar
ed to seek a court order to
stop walk-outs by two New
Orleans locals of the striking
International Longshoremen's
association.
Gloom at
Somewhat
Moon Rocket Plans
Cane Canaveral. Fla. -UPD-
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration reveal
ed today it is studying plans
to launch another moon rock
et from the cape. ,
No date was indicated, but
the brief announcement had
the effect, of wiDing away a
little of the gloom that spread
among American missilemen
with Russia's firing of Lunik
III this week end.
TI. S. scientists had hoped
hn weeks aeo that the week
end would see a satellite head
ed for an orbit around the
moon. The trick was accom
plished - but with a bit of
variation.
The "U.S." with which
they planned to mark the
satellite became instead "U.o.
S.R." signifying the launch
ing of Lunik HI's 967-pound
navload toward a- nrogram-
med ciear-shaoed orbit around
both moon and earth.
Must Repair Damage
NASA estimated that about
five months would be requir
ed to repair damage at com
plex 12" on the cape. .
"Complex 12" was the
launching pad for the Atlas
Able moon rocket that was
s u pp o s e d to have carried
America's own 375-pound sat
ellite toward a lunar orbit
sometime early this month.
But the Atlas-Able blew up
during a static test Sept. 24.
The first and second stages of
the four -stage rocket were
destroyed and the pad itself
heavily damaged.
Plans Considered ''
NASA said it was consider
in ir Dlans "to conduct a simi
lar exDeriment using other
launching facilities at Cape
Canaveral." The satellite re
mained in storage, but a new
moon rocket appeared to be,
at best, several weeks away.
Maj. Gen. Donald N. Yates,
commander of the Air Force
Missile Test Center here, had
no immediate comment on the
Russian shot. -
Beaming Railroad
Officials Apologize
London-UPD-The "Red Rose
Express"' pulled into Liver
pool from London 27 minutes
ahead of schedule, and Engi
neer Harry Gore beamed from
the cab while station officials
stood around waiting for pas
angers to offer their congrat
ulations. .
One irate passenger march
ed up and complained that the
train moved into a tunnel ap
proach, - stopped, and just
stood here for 17 minutes.
"We were so taken aback
we felt we just had to apolo
gize." an official said. "What
a life". ..
DnferveirtDoi,
on Pock
If they succeed, it may pave
the way for similar injunc
tions to halt work stoppages
in other Southern ports.
Action to halt the pier tie
up on both coasts under the
Taft-Hartley Act was expect
ed within two or three days
unless there are signs of early
settlement.
General Counsel Stuart
Rothman of the National La
bor Relations Board planned
to ask the five-member board
for permission to seek an in
junction to halt the New Or
leans walkout.
Hearing Would Follow
If the NLRB gives Roth
man a green light as expect
ed; its New Orleans office
will seek ; a temporary re
Canaveral
Erased by
But one official said the
fact that Lunik III was design
ed to take and relay pictures
of the moon's far side "really
hurt" the morale of missile
men here. : . -
U.S. missilemen had hoped
to get nictures of the moon's
far side with their satellite.
The Atlas-Able was the only
vehicle -being prepared for
the trip when it exploded.
Thousands Forced
Out of Homes in
Southwest Flood
Oklahoma City -OJPD-Floods
ripped the Southwest today
and thousands were homeless
with no immediate end to the
five-day surge of water that
has kept rivers and streams at
flood level. '
Tornadoes and torrential
rains pounded a big area Sun
day. J ,
: -At least six were dead,
another missing and 65 in
jured. '.'
Flood waters injured at
least 57 in Oklahoma, where
five accidental deaths earlier
were blamed on the weather.
Texas reported one dead, one
missing and eight injured.
Missouri - also - was hit by
floods.
Tornadoes Hit Texas
Eight tornadoes hit nine
communities in Texas, and a
twister destroyed a farm home
in southern Oklahoma. Much
of Oklahoma, Texas, Louisi
ana and Arkansas spent Sun
day night under alert for more
possible tornadoes.
National Guardsmen from
Edmond, Okla., were called
out to relieve Guthrie, Okla.,
guardsmen as flood waters
from Cottonwood creek surged
over West Guthrie for the
third time in nine days and
kept over 600 families from
returning to their homes.
The Arkansas river flooded
again at Tulsa, Oklahoma's
second largest city, and in
neighboring communities. Oth
er streams flowed out of their
banks in other parts of the
state.
8,000 Persons Affected
' The Red Cross estimated
that flood waters damaged
more than 1,000 homes in
Oklahoma alone, affecting
nearly 2.000 families, or more
than 8,000 persons.
Weathermen offered some
hope that the flood-producing
weather conditions might end.
The forecast was for occasion
al light rain or drizzle in parts
of. Oklahoma today. But
weathermen warned that more
rainfall would make flooding
even more serious. i
u.
iryflg JfBJJi !"VT-
Stroke
straining order from a feder
al judge against the strike by
the two ILA locals. Then a
hearing on the government's
plea for a preliminary injunc
tion would be scheduled. A
temporary order could be ef
fective for up to five days.
DuPont, GM
Sustain List
New York-JUPD-Strength in
DuPont and General Motors
shares sustained ' the . stock
market today in the face of
selling in many sections of
the list. At their tops, General
Motors and DuPont rose to
the amount of one billion dol
lars on the basis of shares
outstanding.
Chemicals, were higher with
gains ranging to more than
a point in Allied Chemical
and Union Carbide. In the
drugs Vick Chemical rose 4
points and held most of the
rise.
At their best levels, DuPont
scored a gain of more than 4
points and General Motors
was up more than 2. -
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York-dlPD-Dow-Jones
final stock averages: 30 in
dustrials 637.01. up 0.44; 20
railroads 157.82. off 1.03; 15
utilities 88.24, off 0.62, and
65 stocks 212.23, off 0.47.
Sales today were about 2,
100,000 shares compared,
with 2,270,000 shares Fri
day. Tnriav'c nrires nn selected stocks
Allied Chemical 114M
Alum Co Am 1083,4
American Can
44
American Motors
58
79
A T T
Anaconda Copper
59
76
69
572
30 e
32 i
64V2
48
55
3lVx
84?i
.258!4
86
.126
Armco &teei
Bendix Aviation
Bethlehem Steel
Rnpintr Air
Caterpillar Corp
unrysier jorp
Continental Can ..
Crown Zellerbach
Curtiss Wright
now Chemical
DuPont .....
Eastman Kodak ..
Firestone
General Electric
79
96 '4
. 56VX
44 V
General Foods -
General Motors ..
Georgia Pacific
Graham Paige
; 2i
.... 20
.--111
. 44 rt
45
. 412
126",
50 ?i
Greyhound
Homestake Mining
Idaho Power
I B M
Int PaDer
Kaiser Ind
Kennecott Copper ; 92i
Lockheed Aircraft
25T
Katy
Montana Power Co
6i
24 Yt
51 "
Montgomery Ward
Nat l Biscuit
. 52 V2
. 31
. 62
.105
. 17
. 56
. 71
. 37
. 49
74 4
41
New York Central
Pac Gas & Elec
Penney J C
Penn RR
Radio Corporation
Richfield Oil
Safeway
Span ..
Shell Oil
Soconv Mobil Oil
Southern Ca
3T1,
Southern Pacific , 7iy2
Standard California 48
Standard Indiana .
Standard NJ
Sun Mines
. 41 ','2.
47 12
6,i
75
18
30
20
38
-142 2
31
38
42 y2
60
100
13
Texas Gulf" Sulfur
Trancsm.riran
Texas Co
Trans World Air
Tri-Continental
Union Carbide
Union Pacific
United Aircraft
United Air Lines
U S Rubber
U S Steel
Youngstown S & T
ON HONEYMOON
Hollywood - 03PD Television
emcee Art Linkletter's daugh
ter, Dawn, 19, and Air Force
Lt. John Zweyer, 23, were
honeymooning today aboard
a private yacht , in Mexican
waters. They were married
Sunday. - ,
CLOGSTON'S
' Metal
Weather Stripping
and Screens
Estimate Gladly ,
Phone SP 3-1014 Evenings
I 7
Administration Adopts Hands-Off Policy
Concerning Oregon National Seashore
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Mail Tribune Washington -Correspondent
Washington (Special) The
Eisenhower administration is
planning to take a hands-off
attitude for jp&-i-" n&
the .moment . I
4- a J T s ; J A K
differences be
t w e e n Gov.?
Mark Hatfield
and Sen. Rich
ard . L. , Neu
berger CD
Ore.) concern
ing the crea
tion 01 a na- a. Boot, smith
tional seashore on the Oregon
coast. . . -1
.- This means that the admin
istration will , not come out
for or against 1 the pending
bill sponsored by Neuberger
for establishing a 35,000-acre
seashore recreation area be
tween Florence and Reeds
port; nor will it take any
stand on the proposal of the
governor for creating such
an area on the Clatsop Plains
near Astoria. ;
The National Park Service
strongly favors . Neubeger's
position. And a; National
Parks Advisory Board, com
posed of leading private cit
izens, last April recommend
i;; favor of the Oregon Dunes
as a shoreline area which
ought to be preserved under
the park system. -Key
to Aloofness
But Secretary of the In
terior Fred A. Seaton has nev
er acted on the board's recom
mendationand there in lies a
key to the . adniinistration's
current aloofness toward the
dispute between the governor
and the senator.
Seatan and his top aides
are convinced that the thing
which has held back creation
of national seashores, other
than Cape Hatteras, has, been
a mistaken approach. That ap
proach has been to introduce
bills naming specific shore
line areas, where inevitably
local opposition was voiced
and succeeded in blocking
enactment of the legislation.
Wants General Authority
What Seaton wants is gen
eral authority,, granted by
Congress, to go out and de
termine where national sea
shores should be established.
He doesn't want Congress to
specify where they should be.
Consequently, Seaton fav
ors his own proposal, sent to
Congress in May and intro
duced for the administration
by Neuberger, which would
autLorize him to establish
three national seashores and
to spend $15 million in ac
quring land. That bill doesn't
say where they would be lo
cated. Once Seaton is granted this
authority, he and his associ
ates at Interior believe the
door will be 'opened for the
first time to the establishment
of a string of shoreline areas
as seashore parks, as money
becomes available. He doesn't
want to start with more than
three for fear the cost would
force a slowdown in the cur
rent "Mission 66" program of
improving existing national
parks. More would come lat
er.; "
Oregon Area Favored
Without doing violence to
the principal of seeking un-
specified authority, Interior
APPLES
officials have let it be known
that they think highly of the
Oregon Dunes area and that
it would probably be among
the first three selected by the
secretary . if Congress gives
him authority. But that was
before Hatfield came out
against it.
Neuberger and other mem
bers of Congress-take quite
the opposite approach. They
have introduced bills author
izing seashores at specific
places : in their Jiome states.
They, want Congress, hot the
secretary, ' to : decide . where
these parks shall be located.
Neuberger's. bill for the Ore
gon Dunes is but one of sev
eral in this category. Others
cover shoreline areas -in Tex
as, ' Massachusetts, California
and Indiana:
The Eisenhower adminis
tration has" not . taken a po
sition on these specific sea
shore bills. Although Neu
berger has Wen urging the
Interior Department to come
out for ;his bill, for Oregon
Dunes; when hearings are
held at Reedsport, the depart
ment apparently will not
make this move.
Reports Customary
It is customary for the ad
ministration to file reports of
its views on . pending . bills
when hearings are held but
not luring field hearings.
"We'd "rather wait and let
the people in Oregon have
their -way before we submit
our report," said a high In
terior official. He denied that
Hatfield had put any pressure
on the department to prevent
its filing a- favorable report
Reportedly two reports were
in preparation one favoring
Neubeger's bill, and the other
favoring only the administra
tion's general authority bill.
Unless there is a last minute
change, it appeared that neith
er would be presented in the
Oregon hearings,
Supreme Court
Opens 59-60 Term
Washington - (UPD - The Su
preme court begins its 1959
60 term today confronted with
a crowded" docket involving
racial issues, labor - manage
ment and Communist cases.
After a brief, formal open
ing session, the court planned
to go into a week-long secret
conference to determine which
of the 300 or more appeals it
will hear, r
Results . of the conference
will be announced next Mon
day.
The largest number of cases
demanding the court's atten
tion were in the field of race
relations. The higli court al
ready has agreed to hear argu
ments in three racial cases.
ICEBREAKER TESTED
Moscow - (DPS - First tests
of Russia's atomic icebreaker
"Lenin" have gone off
smoothly in the Baltic sea,
the official Tass news agency
reported Saturday. Tass, quot
ing an article in the Soviet
Naval magazine "Sovietsky
Flot," said the Lenin could
push through an ice pack 88
inches thick and make sev
eral trips around the world
without touching port.
MedfordTribune
Regional Edition . Page 2
Lack of Ag reement
On Summit Meeting
Issue in Britain
London -fflPD-White House
Press Secretary James Hager
ty's comment that no agree
ment has yet been reached on
a summit meeting became a
British election issue today.
Labor Party Secretary Mor
gan Phillips accused Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan of
playing party politics with the
summit.
Would Be Tragedy
"It would indeed be a trag
edy if the prospect of a sum
mit conference were to be
Air Cadets Faint
During Inspection
Benson, . England- (UPD - Air
Commodore John Whitworth
walked onto the Benson Royal
Air Force station here Sunday
with the temperature in the
70s and began inspecting 300
cadets drawn up on parade.
Plop, plop, plop. Three ca
dets fainted. Whitworth car
ried on,; but the plop - plops
became more; and more : fre
quent. Before he had finished,
nearly 60 cadets-had passed
out and been carried away by
medical orderlies.
"I have a few words to say
to you," said Whiteworth aft
er the inspection was finished,
"to all of you who are left,
anyway;"
Five Hunters Are
Cited by Police
Five hunters were cited for
failure to tag; deer by. state
police game law enforcement
officers during the week end,
state police reported. ,
Those cited included Lonnie
William Jones, 18, of Riddle,
Ore.: Tony Santo DemartinL
28, of 3522. Allen lane, Med
ford; - Allen George Winters,
22, of 364 Liberty st.; Ash
land; John Auburn Holland
2590 Walnut ave.. Grants
Pass; and Herbert Wayne Col-
lum, 665 Chestnut st.,r Ash
land.
WINS UNIVERSE TITLE
Warsaw - (DPD - Gouin Mier
czuk, a blond, blue -eyed
French weightlifter of Ukrai
nian extraction, won the title
of Mr. Universe of 1959 in in
ternational competition here
Sunday night. Mierczuk, 25,
succeeds last year's title hold
er, Tommy Kono of the Unit
ed States. " .
We Give
GREEN STAMPS
CENTRAL REXALL DRUG
Main and Central
-worsened by Mr. Macmillan's
clumsy attempts to bring the
issue into the final stages of
his election campaign." Phil
lips said.
He was commenting on Hag-
erty's report made in Palm
Springs, Calif., Sunday. Hag-
erty in turn was commenting
on a Macmillan statement that
tne summit was ail set," ex
cept for "the date, the place
and the people. -
Phillips, the Labor party's
chief spokesman, said that "it
was bad enough that he (Mac
millan) should have taken the
opportunity of President Eis
enhower s visit to boost his
government's and his own fad
ing reputation.
Britain Votes Thursday
"It is intolerable that he
should now play- party poli
tics pii such vital world issues.
It can only anger and irritate
our allies."
Phillips said it was interest
ing to notethat Hagerty said
the U.S. still was waiting to
hear from . Britain, France
and West Germany before
making any commitment to
attend a summit conference.
The back and forth on the
summit has been the one time
when foreign affairs issues
have played a large part in
an election campaign. The na
tion goes .to the polls Thurs
day to elect a new Parliament.
Macmillan was reported to
have said last week that the
summit date would be an
nounced in the near future.
He denied Saturday - that he
had said this, but added that
the summit was "all set."
Today, with public opinion
polls predicting a neck' and
neck election, outcome, Mac:
millan appealed for a large
Conservative majority to help
him negotiate at the.summit.
Asks for Big Majority
Speaking - on an election
tour in eastern England, he
said "we are now approaching
a most critical period in the
relations between the Com
munist world and the Free
world. If there should be a
tiny majority, or a stalemate
in this election, or a small
Labor majority, I assure you
that will not enable us to play
the role at the summit we
hope to play."
GOOD ADVERTISING
REALLY SELLS!
When you tell them, they know. But when you
sell them, they buy! And buying makes the
difference in your business profits.
Apply this same thinking to your advertising.
A listing in a business directory tells the pub
lic that you're in business, A timely, pointed
ad in the Mail Tribune Classified Section tells
'em . . . and sells 'em! A Want Ad shows the
customers that you have what they want right
now . '. . and gives them good reasons for buy
ing it right now.
When you have something to sell . . . use the
advertising medium that knows the difference
between telling and selling. Use the Want Arjs
... they make the profitable difference!
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
Acheson Urges
'Unity' Group
Bonn- (UPD -Ex-Secretary ef
State Dean G. Acheson has
proposed the creation of a
'high council" of eminent men
to oversee efforts to increase
unity among the United
States, Canada and Western
Europe, o
Acheson told a German-
American conference here that
the council should include
representatives of neutral na
tions like Sweden. Switzer
land and Austria as well as
men from the Atlantic Pact
nations.
They should be free, he
said, to vote according to their
consciences rather than as rep
resentatives of national gov
ernments. The former U. S. official
said the problems of divided
Europe are now being tackled
"in too narrow a frame."
"The aiyes west of the At
lantic should be included (in
these efforts)," Acheson said.
"This would offer greater
flexibility.
"If you have problems, per
haps we can help to make
them simpler. We need institu
tions to guide us along the
common path."
India Sets Terms
; o
For Negotiations 1
New Delhi (DPD India has
notified Red China that there
will be no negotiations for a
settlement of their border dis
pute while' Conjmunist troops
remained on Indian soil.
In a firmly-worded note de
livered Saturday in Peiping,
Premier Jawaharlal Nehru
also advised the Beds that
they "will have to cease their
"threats - and intimidation? if
they want border talks with
India. : .-
Lads & Lassies
Days
TO EARN MORE
Deposits Made
by the 10th...
EARN From the
1st...
Jackson County
Federal
Savings ft Loan Ass'n
126 East Main
Medford, Oregon
(3 M
43
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