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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1960)
Ct SUNDAT, SEPTEMBER 25, 1980 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. TOMB DECORATED Crown Prince Har- forces full honor wreath ceremony. Maj. aid of Norway placed a wreath at the Tomb Gen. George O. N. Loden, at attention of the Unknown Soldier Saturday at the (right), was host for the occasion. Arlington National cemetery, Arlington, Va. The decoration was carried out as an armed (UPI Tclephoto) Market Loses $7.6 Billion; Damage Done in One Session New York - I1IPI) - The stock market lost $7.6 billion in market values last week and the damage was done in one session - Monday. Traders, beset all this month with declining stock prices, grew more nervous last week end over the continued cloudy outlook for business and the arrival of Khrushchev and Co. This brought much caution Into Monday's opening and prices dipped from the start. When they fell through the I960 resistance point, which had held three previous times this year, a selling wave was touched off and prices at the close were down as much as 21 points. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 15.42 points on th day, the sharpest break since it fell 31.89 points nearly five years ago follow Oregon Guard Praised At State Conference Col. Waldo E. Tlmm, Port- land and a member of the A 1 r National Guard, was elected president of the Ore gon National Guard associa tion at an association confer ence in Medford last night. Some 300 officers attended the conference and heard Maj. Gen. Chester E. Mc Carty, commander of the Third Air Force Reserve re gion, Robins Air Force Base, Georgia, say that "we must fight tomorrow's wars with the personnel and equipment and state of training of to day. General McCarly praised the Oregon National Guard for emphasis on training of the individual soldier, train ed manpower, and the deter rent effect of coordination among Army, Air and Naval forces. He also stressed the Importance of reserve forces. Other officers elected to as sociation offices besides Col onel Timm were Col. Paul L. Kltever, Salem and Army National Guard first vice president; and Lt. Col. Robert D. Hlchards, Portland and Air National Guard, second vice President. Elected to the board of trustees were Col. William B. Foster, McMlnnvllle, Lt. Col. John G. Nelson, Portland, and Lt. Col. Harold W. Helscr, Salem. The conference also heard an address by Spraguc H Carter, state director, selec tive service system of Oregon Carter told the Guardsmen that some 6,000 registrants arc currently classified as scrv lng their military obligation throuih the Oregon National Guard. Carter said 1,000 18- year-olds are being registered each month. Maj. Gen. Gllman C. Mud Belt, deputy commanding gen eral of the Sixth Army, San Francisco, discussed thu tech nlcal revolutions which have produced an offering of an tastlc weapons of war, yet emphasized the importance of the foot soldier and his roie In safeguarding the peace. The annual convention abio heard remarks by Col. Dono van F. Smith, director 25th NORAD operations and train lng, and Col. Donald Wash ington, senior Army advisor, Oregon National Guard. Col onel Washington told tne firouo that summer field training of the Oregon units it Camp Rilca, Warrcnton ' and Ft, Lewis, Wash., was outstanding. He said the state can be proud of the accom plishments of the Oregon Na tional Guard. Warne Nunn, executive as sistant to Gov. Mark O. Hat field, spoke on behalf of the overnor at the coniorcnce He encouraged the Guardsmen to keep abreast of current sit uations, and extended Gov ernor Hatfield'a feeling of 1 n g President Eisenhower heart attack. A slight technical recovery was made in the next two ses sions. But with no new mar ket stimulants coming inio. the picture prices backed down again on Thursday and Friday. Taking the economic and International outlook into market context, market analy sts say there is not much to brighten prospects for an early development of a major uptrend or a sustained buying Interest. A worsening of the situation is feasible, they add, should investors become more disappointed with the state of affairs. One expert also believes that the 600 level In the Dow Jones industrial average, which halted selling drives In March, May and July before pride at accomplishments of the ONG units which parti cipated in a disaster role at Roseburg, Immediately after the explosion of last year, and in fighting forest fires recent ly in eastern Oregon. Oregon's adjutant general and commanding general, 41st Infantry division, Maj. Gen. Alfred E. Hlntz, told the gathering that new training and shop facilities are being constructed for Oregon's Na tional Guard units In many areas throughout the stale. In addition to the new armory recently dedicated at Oswego, construction is now under way on the new auditorium- armory in Salem and shop fa cilities will be completed within the next year in many areas throughout the state In cluding Medford and Klamath Falls. General Ilinlz described the Oregon National Guard as representing a $53 million in dustry in the state. He also emphasized Intensive training on the unit level and called for Increased enlistments, to achieve the necessary strength to function at even greater efficiency. The Guardsmen attending the conference, many of whom were accompanied by their wives, rounded out the con ferencc Saturday evening with a dinner dance All events were held in the National Guard Armory at Medford. Ted Kennedy To Visit Oregon Portlnnd-IUNI-Ted Kennedy, youngest brother of Sen. John Kennedy, (D-Mass), Demo cratic president lal candidate, will arrive in Portland Sun day to begin a two-day cam paign for his brother, The younger Kennedy, wes tern director of his brother's campaign, will start the day's activities at a reception open ing the Kennedy - Johnson headquarters in Oregon City. At 4 p.m., Ted will attend the opening ceremonies of the Salem campaign headquarters and return to Portland to speak at 8 p.m. at the Slate Kennedy-Johnson headquart ers. He will visit Roseburg Mon day with a luncheon mecllng, then go to Medford for the opening of that city s cam-j palgn center and a dinner at 5 p.m. He is scheduled for a meet ing in Klamath Falls at 8:30 p.m. Demand for trained engine ers will go up steadily, lt is predicted. By 1966 15 gradu ates will bo recruited for ev ery 10 hired last year. A' giving in last Monday, now may be a formidable obstacle to any rally which gels under way in the future. Very little happened In the business world this week to bolster Investor scnti m e n t, and the economists are be coming more bearish every day as to business prospects for the fourth quarter. Potential stimuli to busi ness activity - Including in ventory rebuilding, Increased capital outlays, and large de fense spending - have not. de veloped to any strong degree. Sales last week picked up sharply from the previous week's three month low, amounting to 14,030,330 shares, or a daily average of 2,986,068 shares. The week before they totaled 12,071,740 shares, or 2,414,348 shares per day. AMC Most Active American Motors was the most active issue with sales of 212,000 shares. It closed at 21 off Vi. Standard Oil, (New Jersey), Sludebaker-Packard, when - Issued, Bcnguct and Telautograph rounded out, to top five. ' At the close Friday the Dow Jones Industrial Average was off 16.98 points on the week at 585.20, the lowest since Feb. 12, 105S; 20 rails off 3.17 to 129.25, the lowest since Aug. 18, 1958; 15 utilities off 1.35 to 93.62; and 65 stocks off 4.86 to 196.42, the lowest since Dee. 16, 1959. It was the fourth consecu tive weekly decline but brokers said there was little In the pattern of trading sug gestive of a typical selling climax. Some analysis expect a period of irregularly lower prices over the near term until a base can be formed somewhere In the range of 550 to 580 in the Dow Jones Average. No section was spared in the decline, and electronics continued to take the heaviest beating. IBM fell 11 '..points on top of an 18-polnt loss the preceding week. Texas In struments and Minneapolis Honeywell dropped 8 each, Motorola 7'i and Zenith 4. General Dynamics halved its dividend and the stock fell 4"s. Coca-ola and Minute Maid announced merger plans and bolh stocks finished frac tionally higher on the week. Maurine Asks New Medical Bill tugene-lura-Mrs. Maurine Ncuberger said Saturday new legislation to place medical aid for eldorly citizens under Social Security should be "the first order of business" when Congress reconvene In Jan uary. In remarks prepared for de livery at a dinner meeting of Eugene Business and Profes sional women, the Democratic senatorial candidate said the need for action was urgent be cause of the "confusion and inadequacy' of the medicare bill recently signed Inlo law. She cited a statement by New York's Republican gov ernor, Nelson Rockefeller, that he did not regard the present law as any "real so lution" to the problem of pro viding medical care for the aged. V. I i mm fcii , Nikita's Week End Hideaway Has 'Capitalist' Luxuries By ALINE MOSBY United Press International Glenn Cove. N. Y. - UPD - Khrushchev's weekend hide away is an unprolctarian mansion featuring such cap italist luxuries as two pools and a croquet court. UMC Film Proves Popular; Requests For Use Are Many The United Medford Cru sade film which was recently completed by UMC volunteers has proven popular, according to Publicity Chairman Richard Courtright. Requests for show ings have come from as far away as Roseburg. One local business man said that it would make a good chamber of commerce film, Courtright said. Most of the scenes are of the Medford area. Those show ing child care agencies in Portland were taken earlier this year when a group of lo cal citizens toured the agen cies. All photography was done by Richard Simonson. Richard Carter and James Lattie edited the film using the facilities of KBES-TV. The script was written by Court- right, Genevieve Gardner and Bill Abbott. Narrates Film ABC Newscaster Frank Hemingway of Los Angeles volunteered to do the narra tion. He visited Medford Sept. 10 and recorded the narration at KMED at that time. Ellis Finstcin added the mu sical background to the re corded narration and synchro nized the recording to the film. "After viewing the film, a person can't help but realize the importance of the 28 UMC agencies to our community," Courtright said. A date for showing the UMC movie may be made by telephoning Ken Brown at SPring 2-6025. The film is 15 minutes long. The first report luncheon of the 1060 United Medford Crusade campaign will b e held Monday noon at the Red Cross building on Hawthorne st. The luncheon 'is being fur nished by the Medford Ro tary club and is open to all campaign volunteers, accord ing to UMC Arrangements Chairman Murray Gardiner. Dr. Justin Dyrud has prepar ed special entertainment. Lumumba's Aide Placed in Jail Leopoldville, The Congo-IUPD Deposed Premier Patrice Lu mumba s former right-hand man has been arrested on charges plotting the attempted assassination of Congolese strongman Col. Joseph Mobu tu, army sources said today. Former Vice Premier An toinc Gizcnga, 41. a pro Communist, was jailed along with Maurice Mpolo, former minister for youth and sports in the Lumumba government, the sources said. Gizenga's nationalist oppo nents claimed he was behind efforls to establish strong Communist lies in the Congo. BURIED TOGETHER Burnet, Tex. - IHPII - Mr. and Mrs. Jim Guthrie, whom neighbors said were more in love than when they were married 50 years ago, were buried side by side Friday. Guthrie, 79, a retired drug gist, died Thursday. His wife, 81, wasn't told. But a few hours later she joined her husband in death, LIVING COSTS STABILIZE Washington - WPP - Price cuts on food, home appliances and new cars held the cost of living steady in August, halt ing a six-month climb. The price index remained at 126.6 per cent of 1947-49 costs. Station K-BOY Sundays 9:45 A.M. V CHRISTIAN j I SCIENCE J HEALS Herb Hunter FOR COUNTY ASSESSOR Footprints In the lands of time were not mod by titling down. Pld Political AH bv Hunter for County Assessor Comm. 409 Lynnwood Avt. The Russians bought the three-story, English Tudor style home in keeping with the Moscow custom of hav ing a "dacha," or country place. No Moscow dacha looks like it. The Communist chief will rest in an area filled with so many millionaires that, as one resident tells me, they seldom use the numer ous country clubs around. They have their own ten nis courts and private beaches on their estates on Long Island Sound. Neighbors Remember Guards keep out all but Soviet U.N. personnel from their "dacha." But folks on neighboring estates remem ber the place, particularly hospital president Sherman Pratt, whose father built it in 1912 of gray stone hauled in on barges. After the iron front gate you drive nearly a mile along a landscaped drive be fore you even get to the coun try manor. On the ground floor are the kitchen and servants quarters, larger than most So viet delegates' apartments in Moscow. Up the stairs, re called Pratt, are the living room, dining room, breakfast room and two libraries. On the third floor are 12 master bedroom suites. The rooms have panelled walls and murals. Covers 30 Acres Outside, the 30-acre estate is resplendent with a swim U II I VI II IK I ming pool, croquet court, glassed-in sun porch, tea house and outdoor tennis court. Statuary graces the for mal garden. One part is sunk en, steps leading to a fish pool. Outside the area the So viets bought is an indoor ten nis court, now the Glen Cove YMCA. The movie, "Disraeli," was filmed on the grounds in the '30's. "Personally, I'd never have thought of the house for my self, it's much too big," said Pratt. "Not many homes like this left. The upkeep is too high and to build it today might cost $1,500,000." Sold in 1938 Pratt said his stepmother sold the mansion in 1938 to a manufacturing company. The indoor tennis court be came a factory, the house an office building. The Russians bought the gray stone "white elephant" shortly after the war and put up a fence around the 30 acres. Khrushchev will sleep in a house whose builders are related to none other than Secretary of State Christian Herter. One of Pratt's uncles, Fred, is Herter's father-in-law. The townfolk here have varying views about the house. One wealthy matron said it was "just like a cas tle, magnificent." But a local journalist sniffed, "just junk that rich Americans built when they didn't know any better." 7 4; , dsJ 1! SfSscLm Quotes From the News By United Press International . New York Mrs. Eve Stillman of New York City, in a sidewalk interview, stating why the United Nations head quarters should not be moved from the United States: "It belongs in America. We're the greatest nation in the world." Glen Cove, N.Y. Robert Murray, editor of the weekly Glen Cove Record and Pilot on why local residents should ignore Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev: "Glen Covers hardly blink an eye when former baseball star Roy Campanella (a resident-driver through town, so why should there be any exceptional notice of Khrushchev. After all, he never baited over .300 in hit whole lifetime." New York Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev replying to a query as to whether he felt like a bride left waiting at the altar, after Cuban Premier Fidel Castro kept him waiting a half hour for a dinner engagement: "I was never in the condition of a bride." Tokyo-Seiichiro Kudo, principal of a Tokyo primary school, after smashing a chair over the head of his deputy principal during a drinking party: "I guest I have teen tod many American films.' LAWYER OFFERS $1,000 Knoxville, Tenn. - fliPD -Knoxville lawyer Thomas G. McConnell offered $1,000 Fri day to help Russian Premier AMANA FREEZER SALE -AT COST! Stocks Limited One Each 16 CU. FT. UPRIGHT SOjt095 Regular $499.95 SALE iJO 20 CU. FT. UPRIGHT S10095 Regular $599.95 SALE HtW BAUDER HARDWARE, Ashland Phone Mil 9-1234 Jorgensen's palate-pleasing FIESTA ICE CREAM comes in YOUR favor ite flavor, fortified with that added nutrient NUTRIMIX to make it bettor and more nutritious than over! For after-school snacks, for desserts and parties, there's nothing quite to downright GOOD as this extra-smooth and flavorful FIESTA ICE CREAM! Always Ask for Jorgensen's" Nikita Khrushchev speed his proposal to move the United Nations headq-iarters out of the United States. fall tii IS- FUN TIM That Calls For- Clf&IEAM occasions! MUSIC DIRECTOR DIES New York - tUPB - Dr. Hugh Porter, 63, director of tha School of Sacred Music at Union Theological Seminary, died Thursday. Mi MATSON CRUISES Dec. 21 -2-week Christmas New Year's Hawaii cruise Dec. 22 -12-day Christmas New Year's Acapulco cruise A- Nov. 16 -42-day Thanksgiving Christmas South Seas cruise Dee. 11-45-day Christmas New Year's South Seas cruise See us today for reservations and full information. George Lewis ROGUE TRAVEL SERVICE Wt Reserve and Sell Airline and Steamship Ticket PHONE SP 2-6779 111 E. 8th i Of SGaWmrl What a WONDERFUL season of the year! Warm Indian Summer days . . . fall parties on the patio . . . bulb planting . . . the smbll of burning leaves the World Series and Football. Fall is truly FUN TIME and that's a reminder that you should keep YOUR refrigera tor packed full of those bright, handy-size cartons of luscious , FIESTA ICE CREAM for ALL Don't Forget! GIVE THE UNITED WAY i Everybody Give Everybody Bentfitt