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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1960)
Ct- o 0 n o u o VJestern Press Endorses Ike's Charge of Sabotage by Khrushchev Stocks Irregular In Early Trading; Steel Prices Firm New York - (UPD - Stocks formed an irregular price pat tern in the early dealings to il ay. Uncertainitiei growing out of the summit crisis kept the market off balance, although the stocks of companies in volved in defense and mili tary contracts did well. Steels firmed with Yoting town, Bethlehem and U. S. Steel up a half or more. Mo tors were mixed. , Douglas rose more than a point in the aircrafts and In ternational Business Machines more than 2 in the electronics. DOW-JONES AVERAGES Ntw York - 'IPD - Dow Jontt final slock averages; 30 industrials 617.39, up , 1.36; 20 railroads 139.42, off 0.05; 15 utilities 89.41, up 0.22, and 65 stocks 203.63, up 0.36. Sales Monday were about 3-530.000 shares com pared with 3,750,000 shares Friday. Monday pricea on selected stuck; Allied Chamfral .... Alum Co. Am Aincikaii Cr. American Motors .. AT&T Anaconda Copper .. Armco Steel BendiJf Aviation .. Bethlehem Steel .... Boein Air Caterpillar Corp Chrysler Corp. ixdj Crown Zeilrrbnch . Curllsz Wright .. Dow Chemical Du Pont Enstnuin Kodnk .Firestone . 4H4 . U2A rt7'4 . 2Vi . HH . SOli . fi4 . 45', . 2.1 . ...2 Ml', ..n:iJ4 .. 35J, BACK DELLENBACK ON MAY 20 Pick a Candidal You Can Vots for in the General Election Paid by Dellcnback far State Represantativ. Com mittee. S. V. McQueen, Chairman 2136 Hillcrest Rd. Vote For . . . Arthur M. Boner for Justice of Ashland Arthur M. Boner will see that lubtice is rendered im partially, obiectively and in- accordance with the law. Clect a man ol proven administrative ability. Pd. Pol. Adv. by Arthur M. Boner Box 67, Phoenix, Oreqon i rO . 8"i .112', ... 44', ... 57 '. ... 2, ... 22 '4 ... 2! ... 39 ... fln'i .. 4li2' ... 09 '4 . 1 1 j ... 4'. ... 77", ... 22 ... 2(i'i ... 47 ... 51i4 ... 22. ... til '. .. 121 i, ... ... 7li',4 ... 72 ... :t(li ... 30 1 j ... 32 '4 ... 3.1 'a 4.1 HI'. ... 40. ... 3.1'.. ... 41 ... .1'. ... 68 1, ... HI". .. 14'. Ut'ntTMl roiKH (.L-nrrj.! Motors fieorjia I'lieiiic C.raharn Paine l.revhounrt Ciulf Oil Homeititkc Mtmrif .... Idaho Power IBM Int. Wiper 1 Kaiser Ind ... Katy Kennrcntt Copper Lockheed Aircraft Montana Power Co. .. Montgomery Ward ... Nat l Blcuit New York Central .... Pac Ohi & Llec Pernio . J. C Penn HR Hadin Corporation .... Ktchlield Oil Safewa.V Sears Shell Oil Socony Mobile Oil .... Southern Co Southern Pacific Standard California .. Standard Indiana Standard N. J Sun Mines Tex a Co TexaK Gulf Sulfur .... Tex Pnc iJind TruU Traimarnenca Trans World Air Trl-Coiilinental I'nion f nrtnde Union Pacific Untied Aircrnft United Air Lines ......... If. S. Rubber V. S. Steel Youngfttown SAT. ...133 .. 2.1 .. 5n" .. 7'. ..104'4 Smilh Proposes Spy Withdrawal Klamath Falls-d'PII-Ex-Gov. Elmo Smith, campaigning for the GOP nomination for U.S. Senator, said Monday night that when we withdraw our U-2 flight- over Russia, we should demand withdrawal of all Russian spies In U. S. Ter ritory. Commenting on President Eisenhower's statement from Paris, Smith said we must accomplish a world condition of "open skies, open borders and open land inspection wltn open minds." The President said at the summit conference in Paris that U-2 fliRhts have been suspended and would not be resumed. Smith called the President's proposal for a United Nations aerial survey "an important step in the right direction.' The former governor said we must accomplish interna tional control of nuclear arma ments or face annilation. "We have to accomplish this control In spite of Russia's treaty breaking record of ir responsibility. We must not make unwise concessions. We can't afford a nuclear Mu nich," he suid. the Peace District ins SEND General Flerlric A VfSOJtOVS VOICE rOR ALL OKCCONMNS IN TNI U.J. SiNATt MEDFORDtJSSWTRIBUNE Regional Edition u:iv,fr Vi I f .?f J- : - If' II H III rjrK'aL& I - 11 il f i r Jtur; " ? him 2c&7sr--h7 MORSE SEES VICTORY Sen. Wayne Morse, (D-Ore.) pre dicted Monday that he will get 60 per cent of the Democratic votes In Oregon s primary election Friday against Sen. John F. Kennedy (Mass.) and three others. (UPI Telephoto) Strings Believed Tied To Nikita's Action at Meeting Rflitor'a note: What hMden mnllvei drive Nlklt. K h r u-slii-liev on Ills starlliii course of Muster and blunder al the Paris summit ronferenre? In the fol lowing dispatrh, a veteran diplo matic rorresponilent offers an assessment based on Intimate kmiulrdKe of the Communist world. By K. C. THALER Paris - WI'D - American of ficials ate convinced Niklta Khrushchev came to Paris with strings attached: to his Stalinist critics in the Krem lin, to a skeplical Red China and to a powerful Soviet army unhappy over his sweep ing disarmament proposal. If the strings truly arc there, they are manipulating the Soviet premier in an er ratic and dangerous revision of polity that has brought one of the worst diplomatic crises of Hie cold war. As powerful as Khrushchev is, it is generally accepted that he has had to cope with strong internal challenges to his attempts to "liberalize'' Communist rule in Russia and seek accommodation with the West. Spy Plane Adds Fuol The downing of an Ameri can reconnaissance plane in side Russia 15 days before the summit conference could not help hut add fuel to Com munist critics of moderation and undermine the premier's position at home. Khru 'ichev, in an extra ordinary remark hidden In the abuse he heaped on Presi dent Eisenhower Monday, as much as admitted this domes I tic dissension by saying the Wli Willi U UU TOTTE EHfifl REPUBLICAN dD.S. SENATOR The man who knows Oregon Best I i Far V. X. Page 2 ' fx aj," U-2 incident deeply involved the internal politics of the Soviet Union. It is considered highly sig nificant that the premier was accompanied here by Soviet Defense Minister Marshal Roclion Y. Malinovsky. Osten sibly the military man was brought to Paris to give his advice on questions connected with disarmament and a nu clear test ban. In the minds of some ob servers, h o w ever, Malinov sky's presence could only serve as a steady reminder to Khrushchev of the Red Army's still powerful influ ence in Soviet politics. Ac cording to all reliable infor mation, the military is dis turbed by Khrushchev's re cent reduction of ground forces, particularly in the ar bitrary retirement of mem bers of the professional offi cers' corps. Communist China also has made no secret about its con tempt for any slackening of military preparations or other attempts to rench a concili ation with the Wesl. This stand on the pari of the Pei ping regime gives impetus to the die-hard Stalinists in Rus sia and perhaps is the onlv reason Khrushchev has not at tempted to purge these back yard cri'lcs. For all his international thunder, Khrushchev is faced with one persistent fact of life: he is a Communist in a system w here Communists are expendable. TO WASHINGTON! Sfokjr Co"' Soviet Leader Berated From Paris To Tokyo London - ITT' - The Western press today boomed a thump ing endorsement of President Eisenhower's charge that So viet Premier Nikita S. Khru shchev came to Paris tolely to "iabotfigf'" the summit con ference. From Paris to Tokyo, news papers berated the Soviet leader for being "crude . . . bellicose . . . rude." The Communist press blam ed the U.S. intelligence plane incident for the summit blow up. Communist China's reaction indicated that if Khrushchev had laid his plans ii' advance, he had not mentioned them to Peiping. Nearly a day after the Khrushchev statement rocked the conference, the Communist Chinese press and radio were silent on the sub ject. Bloody Rud "Don't be so bloody rude,'' the London Daily Mirror ad vised Khrushchev in fat head lines. "Who do you think you are? Stalin?" "The impression grows that all of this was prepared with forethought by Soviet diplo macy," West Germany's Frankfurter A 1 1 g e m e i n e wrote. Aktuelt of Copenhagen said it was difficult to understand why the U-2 incident was "reason to kill the summit," De Telegraaf of Amster dam called Khrushchev's at tack "crude negotiating tac tics.'' "What is now needed is a Western display of determin ation and wisdom of which the wor'd lately has seen too little.'" Darens Nyheter of Stockholm said. Se.s W.ii.rn Solidarity "If it contributes to West ern solidarity, it will have not only its bad side," Le Figaro of Paris commented. The Mainichi, one of Ja pan's largest news papers, headlined: "Khrushchev makes bombshell demands at outset of summit talks." The Asahi of Japan said "Khrushchev makes bellicose speech." The news hit West Berlin hard. Berliners had hoped the summit would bring them some relief from the threat of a Soviet takeover. "It would be most deplor able and outrageous if Soviet mane uvering succeeded in provoking a breakoff of the conference before it has start ed." Mayor Willy Brandt' government said. Persons Injured When Vehicle Hits Two Cars A driver of a car failed to notice a flashlight warning Sunday nighl and plowed his vehicle into two cars on Cra ter Lake highway, injuring himself and two other per sons. Medford police said the two cars had been stopped on the highway near Hilton rd. about 8:45 p.m.. after one of the vehicles had lost a wheel, coming to a stop in the mid dle of the highway. Another vehicle stopped to help tow it off of the road. While a chain was being hooked from one vehicle to the other, a girl was warning oncoming traffic with a flash light. However, a car oper ated by Thomas Jess Mick, 63. White City, failed to see either the light or the cars. i police said, and hit them while traveling at a speed es timated by one witness at 45 miles per hour. : Injured Injured were Mick and a passenger. John W. King, 41, White City, and Glen Ernest Cote, 19. of 1847 Scenic dr. Cote, who was the operator of the car which lost its t wheel, was the most severely injured of the trio, suffering i a broken leg and a deep cut j on his hand, according to po j lice. He was attempting to i attach the chain to his car at the time of the collision. Mick and King sustained numerous nits and bruises, police said. All three were taken to Sacred Heart hos pital. Mirk was cited for viola tion of the basic rule tve ; hide not under control) and operating on an instruction permit without a licensed driver in the car. i DISPATCH CRACK TROOPS Brussels. Belgium-'lTl-Units from the Belgium army's crack "Liberation" Infantry Division have been dispatched from Germany to quell in creasing lawlcusncsi in the 'Efigiari t'ongx I Contenders' Views on Summit Conference Washington - IPl - Here is what the major presidential contenders say about the sum mit conference crisis over the U-2 plane incident. Republicans Vice President Richard M. Nixon: No comment. Democrat! Sen John r. Kennedy (Mass.): ""e can hope that the voices of moderation and mu tual self-interest in preserving world peace can prevail . . . but on one point, Mr. Khru schchev should be absolutely certain. He cannot divide America on partisan lines in Xfe j ifx (SI HATFIELD GETS HAT Oregon Governor Mark Hatfield has a Seafair hat placed on his head by Queen Diane Gray during welcoming ceremonies for the western governors con ference at Seattle. Hatfield was one of 10 governors honored at the civic function. (UPI Telephoto) f r 7 ht mew SAVINGS Bt a Good Hart All Elks Rally in Easy Valley May 26, 27, 28 Medford a Uia matters affecting the security of the United States. '' Sen. Stuart Symington : (Mo.); "All Americans had j looked forward to this sum ; mit conference with hope and j the new? is most distressing. ' I Lyndon B. Johnson (Tex.): I Khrushchev's apparent price Khrushchev's apparent price J for negotiating at the summit I "is one that is obviously un- acceptable to the United i Slates." Johnson questioned whether the Soviet Union "ac tually wants a world of peace or . . . constant tension which must end in disaster." I Sen. Wayne Morse (Ore.): li.. 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