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-PARADE ' r
NEWSPAPER UHJONS '
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STRIKERS ON PARADE A parade of wai the first day of the publication of sep
striking newspaper employees, nearly four arate Oregonian and Oregon Journal papers,
blocks long and Including families and Since the start of the five-months-old strike
sympathizers, marched past the Oregon they have published jointly in the Oregon
Journal building In Portland Monday. It ' lan building. (UPI Telephoto)
Opposition Hits
: Macmillan Over
; Missile Program
London-flJWI-The Labor op
; position and some Conserva
' lives today turned their fire
on Prime Minister Harold
Macmillan for his govern
ment's decision to drop Its
nuclear missile program.
Britan abandoned its $182
million "Blue Streak" mis
sile last week and was ex
pected to seek new American
rockets for Its defenses. Amer
ican Thors already are sta
tioned here.
But Macmillan faced attack
from two sides on the Blue
Streak program, which had
been a symbol of prestige and
independence among Britons
Wait Charged
Labor made a motion of
censure, charging the govern
ment with wasting tens of
millions on the project and
with general mishandling of
defense. The motion will be
debated April 27.
At the same time, many gov
ernment supporters were re
ported deeply disturbed that
Britain may abandon its Inde
pendent nuclear deterrent en
tirely and rely solely on
American atomic and hydro
gen weapons.
A complicating factor ' was
the demand to do away with
nuclear weapons entirely, as
expressed by the 100,000-
strong rally in Trafalgar
Square Monday, the biggest
since the war.
Medford
Tribune
Regional Edition
Page 2A
Industrials Lead
Early Price Rise
Boy Drowned as
Raff Capsizes
La Grande - IUFD - An ex
cursion on a makeshift raft
constructed by four junior
high school boys ended in the
death by drowning of one of
the boys Monday afternoon.
Charles Wesley Schmittle,
13, con of Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Schmittle of Summervllle,
drowned In the Grande Ronde
river about 11 miles north of
here after the raft capsized.
The four boys apparently
launched their craft made of
railroad ties nailed to two-by-fours
after they had finished
their day at the Imbler school.
All but the Schmittle boy
made it to short safely after
the raft capsized. His com
panions tried to pull him from
the river but failed.
New York-UIPD-Stocks stag
ed a mild rally during the
first hour today in routine
trading,
Industrial stocks led the
early rise with a gain of
nearly 2 in their average
Disclosure that steel mills
will boost production this
week brought some firmness
Into the steels. U.S. Steel, Re
public and Bethlehem tacked
on small fractions.
Ford fell a point in a gen-
erally easier motors section.
DOW - JONES AVERAGES
New York-CPD-Dow-Jones
final stock averages: 30 in
dustrials 630.77, up 0.65; 20
railroads 143.53, off 0.36;
IS utilities S9.72, up 0.36.
and 65 stocks 207.64, up
0.20. Sales Monday were
about 3.200.000 shares com
pared with 2,730.000 shares
Thursday.
Monday's prices on stlected
tocki:
Allied Chemical .. so
Alum Co. Am. 08'1
American Can 4071
American Motors 29'
A T At T B5i
Anaconda Coppar S3Ja
Armco Steel BUi
Bendlx Aviation M..M.H 76
Bethlehem Steel .V'i
Boeing Air 23
caterpillar uorp zv
Chrysler Corp 53
Continental Can 42 !i
Crown Zellerbach 44
Curtlss Wright 21
Dow Chemical 92 't
Du Pont ..2l5'i
Eaitman Kodak lll'i
Firestone 37i
General Electric . 02'b
General Fooda H....H..m...H..w...104la
General Motora 411 SB
Georgia Pacific S6's
Graham Paige 2 ),
Greyhound .. 22
Gulf Oil 30
Homeilake Mining 42
Idaho Power 4B'i
t. B. M 485
Int. Paper . 114
John Manvllla .a . 5Mi
Kennecotl Copper 75'
Lockheed Aircraft 23
Kaiser Ind 12"
Katy - 4',
Montana Power 36",s
Montgomery ward ..... ..as1
Nat l Biscuit 55 1i
New York Central 23 '4
Pac Gaa & Elee 63 Y,
penneys. J. c .. 129
Penn RR 13T'
Radio Corporation 7714
Ricnneid on - 74',!
Safeway 40',!
Seara 49 H
Shell Oil :. 36
Socony Mobil Oil 371
southern Co 43!
Southern Pacific .. 201,:
Standard California 42;
Standard Indiana .......... 40'
standard n. J
sun Minea avm
TexBa Co . 74 V,
Texaa Gulf Sulfur - 173B
Texas Pac Land Trust . 1ST
Transamerica ...... 2614
Trans World Air ....
Tri-Contlnental ..
Union Carbide
Union Pacific
United Aircraft ....
3474
13
Veteran Baker
Businessman Dies
Baker-IUPD-Funeral services
were held today for Gerson
Neuberger, 83, who has been
affiliated with a department
store here since 1891. He died
Saturday.
Survivors Include two
brothers, Josef of Baker, and
Slgmund of New York City,
and two sisters, Mrs. Emma
Fishl, and Mrs. Fannie Rosen
baum, both of New York
City.
Fifth Salk Shot
May Be Unneeded
Portland - (UPD - The State
Board of Health aald today
that Oregon residents who re
ceived a fourth Salk polio
shot last year probably will
not need a booster shot this
year.
The fourth shot may give
two or three years of protec
tion if all four doses have
been given according to
recommended schedules, ac
cording to Dr. Richard H. Wil
cox, state health officer. But
he said a final decision was
up to an individual's private
physician.
Young Republicans
Slate Convention
Portland-IUPD-Oregon Young
Republicans will meet May
6-8 at a pre-primary platform
convention here, it was an
nounced Monday.
Wesley A. Phillips of Glad
stone, chairman of the Young
Republican State Federation,
said the convention call was
not a matter of following an
example of the Democratic
state convention In January.
He said Young Republicans
have been holding these pre
primary platform conventions
for years "which no doubt In
spired the senior Democratic
organization's convention at
Salem , . ."
Explosion Rips
Home of Negro
In Tennessee
By United Press International
An early morning explosion
today wrecked the home of a
Negro attorney who has
fought many anti-segregation
suits in Nashville, Tenn.
Police said a bomb appar
ently was tossed at or placed
under the house of Z. Alex
ander Looby, a city council
man. The Negro lawyer and
his wife, who were asleep in
a back room, escaped injury,
Windows Shattered
The force of the explosion
shattered windows for blocks
around the Looby home and
damaged two houses next
door.
Racial violence also erupted
Monday night in Savannah,
Ga., where Negro and white
youths battled with knives
and ax handles in a public
park. Four youths were in
jured, one seriously.
. Police estimated 20 Ne
groes and 12 white boys took
part in the brief, vicious fight
in Forsyth Park near the
downtown section. Two Ne
groes and seven whites were
jailed.
Made Him Mad
Also in Savannah where
Negroes have maintained
daily picket lines and boy
cotts, Benjamin White, 18, a
Negro student at Savannah
State college, told police a
white man, Marvin Crump
ton, 29, slugged him.
Crumpton said White had
nudged a white woman at a
lunch counter, "And it made
me mad." Crumpton was
charged with disorderly con
duct and assault and battery,
and White was arrested on a
disorderly conduct charge.
DECLARE BOYCOTT
Tokyo -UPD- The powerful
General Council of Japanese
Trade Unions has declared
a boycott of South African
goods in protest against South
Africa's racial policies.
'Public-Be-DamnetT Attitude Charged in
Inspection of Processed Meat and Poultry
Union Spokesman
Raps Operation
Of Federal Law
Washington - HIPB - A union
spokesman has accused the
A g r i culture Department of
adopt ing a "consumer-be-damned"
attitude toward fed
eral inspection of processed
meat and poultry food prod
ucts. Arnold Mayer, legislative
representative of the AFL
CIO Meat Cutters and Butcher
Workmen, made the charge at
a closed -door hearing of a
House appropriations subcom
mittee March 14. His testi
mony was made public today.
Operation of Law
Mayer's statement and sev
eral other complaints deliver
ed to the subcommittee grew
out of the Agriculture Depart
ment's operation of a poultry
inspection law which was
passed in 1057.
The law gave Agriculture
Secretary Ezra T. Benson au
thority to exempt some poul
try processing plants from
continuous supervision inspec
tion until June 30, 1960, if he
found It impossible to supply
inspectors. r
Benson supplied inspectors
for plants which slaughter and
process poultry for interstate
trade. But he exempted some
300 "further processing"
plants which produce items
like chicken and turkey pies
and soups using poultry meat.
'Let Buyer Beware'
The administration request
ed $11,296,000 for poultry in
spection in the fiscal year
starting July 1 but it did not
ask for funds for extending
Quotes From the News
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Ithaca, N.Y. Former President Truman, stating his be
lief that twice-defeated Adlai E. Stevenson wants to run
for President for a third time:
"Stevenson wants it like any person wants to be Presi
dent. I know from experience."
Miami Fernando Lopez del Toro, self-styled secretary
of the "Cuban Anti-Communist Rebel Army," stating that
anti-Castro forces in Cuba are ready to revolt unless Fidd
Castro eliminates Communists from his government and
schedules elections:
"The point of attack has already been decided.
Moscow A Russian first-nighter at the opening of "My
Fair Lady," disagreeing with the majority of the audiences
who gave it one of the warmest receptions an American
production ever won in Moscow:
"It's not as funny at I expected. Why didn t you tend
over 'Oklahoma'" I
Memphis, Tenn. An Elvia Presley fan, tagging along at ,
his heels as he waited for a train to Hollywood and begging i
him to kiss her: I
"Look at me, Elvis, look at me, Elvii."
Low June Draff
Issued by Army
Washington - 0IPD - The De
fense department has Issued
the lowest draft call since the
start of the Korean war. It
asked Selective Service Mon
day to induct 5,500 men into
the Army during June.
This was 500 below the
draft call for each of the pre
vious four months. The De
fense department said the low
June draft was caused by the
Army reducing Its strength
to meet budget requirements.
PARK & SHOP
So Easy! So Convenient!
Shop your favorite
ttoreil With every $J
purchase park free
for 1 hour. Park and
Shop customers are
happy customers. TRY
ITI And be happy tool
J I I LIU I J lJ I
STHSt
MAIN ST.
News About
Servicemen
MARKSMANSHIP
Marine Pfc. Neal W. Rob
erts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ros
coe Roberts, 44 North River
side st., is receiving marks
manship training In prepara
tion for the Pacific Ocean
Area Rifle and Pistol match
es to be held May 9 to 14 in
Hawaii.
Before enlisting In May,
1959, Roberts attended Crater
High school.
IN EXERCISE
Army Pfc. James W. Tee
garden, son of Mrs. Vera K.
Poole, 549 Auburn St., Ash
land, recently participated
with other personnel from the
101st Airborne Division in
Exercise Quick Strike at Ft.
Campbell and Camp Breckin
ridge, Ky.
Tccgarden, a wiremen In
Headquarters company of the
division's 502nd Infantry at
Ft. Campbell, entered the
Army in April, 1958. He Is a
graduate of Prospect High
school.
TAILS FOR FLUNKEY
London -HTD- John Taylor,
editor of Tailor and Cutter
Magazine, asked to comment
Monday on why Princess Mar
garet has not requested male
guests at her wedding to wear i
tails, replied: "when knee
breeches went out and trous
ers came in, knee breeches
became the uniform of the
flunkey. That's the way tails
are going."
inspection to the "further pro
cessing" plants.
"The top officials of the
Agriculture Department dem
onstrate an attitude that the
consumer Is really unimpor
tant. Caveat emptor - let the
buyer beware - seems to be
one of their beliefs," Mayer
said.
LEAVES FOR ROME
Brindisi, Italy -(UPD- King
Hussein of Jordan leaves this
southeastern port city for a
private two-day visit to Rome
today. After Rome, he plans
to go to Morocco.
Some 200 different tribes
live in the Belgian Congo.
Ampthill, England (UPD -Frank
Wrathnall, 19, and
David Olney, 20, and Philip
Cherry, 24 and John Everitt,
18, finished in a dead heat
Monday to win a four-mile
baby carriage pushing race
against a field of married men
and women. All four young
men are bachelors.
EARTHQUAKE-RESISTANT
Tokyo (UPD New prefabri
cated houses, claimed to be
typhoon and earthquake-resistant,
will be marketed in
Tokyo for $1,300 to $1,600
this spring. The plastic and
metal houses are patterned
after the fuselage of an air
plane, the builders said.
ATTORNEY DIES
New York-HPl'-George Hen
ry Howard, 75. an attorney
and former president of the
United Corp., an Investment !
a Jtraclition
by Drexel
NOW AT
Dempsters!
TRIUNE
-THE NEW FURNITURE CLASSIC '
A Great New Treasury of
Correlated Furniture
r K M 1
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Desk Chair, 64.00; Desk, 175.00; Tub Chsir,
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Lamp Table, 89.00; Tub Chair, 149.00; Book
cases, tach, 219.00; Lounge Chair, 229.00.
Discover the treasures of Triune . . . Drexel's latest and most eloquent collection
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Chair, 49.00: Panel Beds, each, 119.00; Night
Stand, 64.50; Dreiser and Mirror, 238.50;
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EASY BUDGET TERMS
"Your Family Furniture Store"
concern, died Sunday.
eoimpslheirs
6th & Bartlett
SP 3-4000
OUR "ooor
Is Your Orovyl
BE A K-BOY
Blooper-Snooper
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