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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1960)
KENNEDY BRIEFED News Producer Don Hewitt, right, briefs Sen. John Kennedy, center, and J. Leonard Reinsch, Kennedy's communications adviser, on plans for the Quoting By United Press International Vice President Richard M. Nixon: (In Washington, In outlin ing his aid-to-cducation plan): "We are living in a civiliza tion and in a world and at a pitch of crisis that put an ul timate premium on sheer brainpower - fully develop ed and unstlntlngly applied. We dare not waste it; we dare not misapply It; we dare not be satisfied with standards of mediocrity. "Because the blunt fact Is that anything less than performance- at sustained level of excellence will endanger for all time to come the ful fillment of our goals and our dreams." (In opposing any aid funds for teachers' salaries he ex- Oregon Traffic Toll Reaches 10 Since Thursday By Uniltd Pran International A car struck a bridge near Myrtle Point late Saturday killing two persons and bring ing Oregon's traffic death toll ince last Thursday to 10. Glen Eddie Rogers, 27, and Dnrleno Jane Hcmple 21, both of Coos Bay were killed in the accident. Two accidents claimed two lives in Douglas county. Mar garet Leffler, 17, Grants Pass, was killed after the car In which she was riding appar ently blew a tire and struck B bridge near Glendale. Delvls R. Battisc, 21, Riddle, died in a one car accident about 11 miles south of Roseburg. Portlander Killed Glen Van Gorder, 68, Port land, became that city's 41st traffic death of 1980 when he was struck by a car while walking his dog. ' Another double fatality oc curred late Friday when Or ville W. Holmes, 24, Elmlra, and John L. Janes, 28, Venc ta, were killed In a two-vehicle- collision south of Eugene. Two persons were killed In other Friday accidents and another died In a traffic mis hap late Thursday. MedfordJTribune kegional Edition Page 2A Pays To Save Regularly Here! 6 INTEREST PAID SEMI-ANNUALLY Withdraw principal and all accrued Interest whenever you choose. Any multiple of $10.00 accepted. Nm gf Board of Director on Request CRATER FINANCE 135 PINE cp27ntl NO 4-1273 the Candidates plained): "We must avoid the danger of rigid federal con- trol over who teaches and what is taught." (In summing up his pro gram): "I do not claim either that it Is exhaustive or that each element in it must be adopted in one precise form that nothing more or leu will do. Clearly, It will be the Job for the executive and the Con gress to work out details, to estimate costs and to make precise outlays for the period of testing ahead. (In Chicago Sunday night on being met by 2,000 airport groctors): "With a gathering like this I thought the White Sox had won the pennant again. I will be back in Chi cago at a later date. We In tend to really campaign in this ate." Sen John F. Kennedy: (At a Cleveland rally): "The forgotten man of I960 Is the American consumer. The forgotten woman is the American housewife. In 1982 (the start of the Elsenhower Thoroughbred Horse Discovered by Police Medford police located thoroughbred quarter horse valued at $1,500 this morn ing, lust a little more than an hour after the horse was first reported to be missing from its pasture. Mrs. Beverly Charlcne He witt. 295 DoBarr ave., report ed the horse missing at 8:15 a.m. She said it apparently broke out of Its pasture some time during the night and escaped. Police found the horse graz ing contentedly at 2600 Mer riman rd., at 7:15 a.m. U of O Fraternities Pledge 445 Students Eugene - IUPI) - University of Oregon fraternities pledg ed 445 students during rush week which ended Sunday. MORE 'K' SPEECHES Gloncove, N.Y.-IUP1I- Soviet Premier Nlklta Khrushchev told newsmen he Intended to address the United Nations 10 more times before leaving this country "Just to Justify my travel expenses." first joint Nixon-Kennedy debate broadcast at a meeting in Chicago Sunday. The first nationally televised and broadcast debate, is scheduled for tonight. (UPI Telephoto) administration) they were promised lower prices, They neard endless Republican commercials about a stable dollar and a cheaper market basket. "But under eight years of Republican rule, the cost of living has gone up and up and Republicans have done nothing about it." "Finally, last year, the Re publicans decided to do some thing bold. They appointed a committee." (Referring to the price sta bility committee headed by his opponent, Nixon): "The committee met and talked and studied and, as a result, they acted, They didn't bring prices down. They didn't send our growth rate up. But they did file a report" Noting that the Republic ans have had much to say re cently about experience, but "somehow that commltle was never mentioned. But I in tend to mention the high cost of living every week of this campaign." (In Chicago at an airport greeting): "The Republicans say "mayebe" to everything when they are askcr about prospects of solving the na tion's problems over the next 10 years. I say we can solve them." Oregon Democrats Tour Coast; Harbor Development By United Press International Oregon s top Democratic candidates for stMowlde of fices toured the Oregon coast from Tillamook to Rccdsport today in their second campaign-by-bus swing. Earlier they toured Eastern Oregon. Mrs. Maurlne Ncubcrger, seeking the U.S. Senate scat held by her lute husband, call ed In Tillamook today for a harbor development program resources of the coast would be tapped through ad vantages of water-borne trans portation. She said "proper navigation facilities'' at Tilla m o o k, Newport, Florence, Reedsport, Coos Bay, Port Or ford, Gold Beach and Brook ings would "give a new lift to advancement of Oregon's economy." Better Roadi Aikod In Astoria Sunday Mis. Nouberger urged Improve ment of highways and recrea tional facilities so the coast would get Increased tourist business. Monroe Swcetland, Demo f1- rvw. !U w. t "I WfjJi Urri I W ct1' -fc- i t JW . : I.'-V.n TITO CONFERS Marshal Tllo of Yugoslavia, In New York tor the UN General Assembly meeting, was conferring with President Nasser of the United Arab Republic when this picture was taken. tUPt Telephoto) OrV, !M Campaign Washington - (UP1I - All po litical higns pointed to Chi cago today where the rival presidential candidates lim bered up in criss-cross city campaigning preparatory to confronting each other to night in a nationwide TV radio "debate." Both candidates addressed Mental Patients Receive Help From Hypfran Columbus, Ohio -(Science Service) - Mental patients can get a good night's sleep wlthgave up more than 1 new tablets called Hyptran, which contain a combination of barbiturate and a slow- act ing tranquilizer. Dr. Oscar Rozett, medical director of Fair Oaks hos pltal In Summit. N. J., report ed here that the tranquilizer used is phcnyltolozamine. In studies conducted for more than a year, Dr. Rozett and his associates experimented with several tranquilizing drugs, and finally found one that worked well in combina tion with secobarbital, a slow- acting but safe barbiturate. Hyptran tablets contain a small amount of secobarbital and a divided dose of the tran quilizer. Sleep is Induced within an hour and anxiety is controlled by the release of the tranquilizer from an inner core two hours later. - The average duration of sleep for 112 patients who took Hyptran tablets was seven and a half hours. Nine per cent of the patients woke during the night, but second doses returned them to sleep. Veteran Attorney Dies at Portland Portland - IUPI) - Funeral services will be held Tuesday for James R. Greenfield, 93, veteran attorney who prac ticed law for 68 years in Ore gon. Greenfield, who retired from law practice at the age of 89, died in a hospital last Friday. cratic nominee for secretary of state, said he has asked Gov. Mark Hatfield to set aside the week of Oct. 1-8 as voter registration week. Oct, 8 is the final day to register for the Nov. 8 election. Attorney General Robert Y, Thornton; State Sen. Ward Cook, candidate for state treasurer; Marv Owens, can didate for Congress In the 1st district, and ex-Gov. Robert D. Holmes, representing Sen John F. Kennedy, campaigned with the group in Northwest Oregon. Owens said if elected he would work for the Forand bill for medical care for the aged, anti-water pollution leg islation and to eliminate waste in the military. Norblad Hails Military Rep. Waltor Norblad, Owens' Republican rival, said In Portland Saturday night the United States holds a better military position than any nation in the world. He said this country was in front of Russia because it had avoid ed the Soviet position of "rely- W h Kv rt T"7T""VTrK 1 : ?r Kennedy Sharpen Prongs fffl a convention of the Interna tional Brotherhoods of Car penters during the day. Vice President Richard M. Nixon led off In a morning speech, followed by an afternoon ad dress by his Democratic op ponent, Sen. John F. Kenne dy. The "debate," first in a Stocks Fall Back In Early Selling New York - UPD - The stock market fell back under a burst of early selling today. Carter Products dropped more than 2 in the drugs and American Home Products With steel operations ex pected to continue at current ly depressed levels, the steel group was mostly easy. U. S. Steel, Republic, Bethlehem Steel and Youngstown declin ed by fractions. Autos edged lower, as did rails and utilities. Polaroid toppled around 3 in the cam eras, Universal Match more than 1 in the vending ma chines and Beckman more than a point in the electron ics. Evolution Idea Receives Support Washington-(Sclence Serv-Ice)-The idea that there were two paths of evolution, one of which led to mammals and man, has received new sup port here. Dr. Nicholas Hotton, pale ontologist of the Smithsoni an Institution, reported that the two evolutionary lines are distinguishable, from dif ferences in changes In the structure of the Jaw. These changes in turn affected the structure of the middle ear. Both evolutionary lines made experiments to estab lish themselves on dry land and adapt to this kind of ex istence, Dr. Hotton's studies show. In many cases the smaller cold-blooded animals, presumably the most active, were most successful in achieving this. Proposed ing almost completely on the ballistic missile." State Sen. Howard Bclto.n the incumbent Republican state treasurer, said today about $300,000 has been saved this biennium in operation of MacLaren school for boys, He said increased services at the local level by courts and other agencies as well as "a realistic and effective" operation at MacLaren contributed to a de cline in numbers handled at the school. Foster Anderson, chairman of the Lane County Republi can Central Committee, criti cized Rep. Charles O. Porter, (D-Ore.). for what he called "wide distribution" of a re print of a speech made by Porter in Congress which he said was sent in the mails in a franked envelope. Anderson said he had sent a telegram to Postmaster-General Arthur E. Summerfleld. Kennedy-Johnson headquar ters announced - that Bob Reynolds, former Oregon foot ball player, had been named registration coordinator and special projects director of the Oregon Citizens for Kennedy Johnson Committee. Reynolds is on leave of absence from a teacher's Job in Los Angeles. i--v i mig Lettuce, pgs'' ifsplao acom) jVSK PIP Cured ffC I it 1 WSSJ in It's Delicious lUJ 2 V ' I ' S 2-9990 . J VljS" : ' - """" ' ' - I v e. w..,oKv., COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. r Stewart and Kina PrlM"HvM"'.y,Tue.day,wedne,. Medferd Shopping Center "'S Sep.. 26, 27, 28. limi, riBh,. reserved. 1 ' Appearances Around Mitest; series of four, will be broad cast' on all networks. Kennedy tuned up for the meeting by lashing out at Re publican "tight money" poli cies in a speech before an en thusiastic Democratic rally In Cleveland, Ohio, Sunday night. He drew some of the larg est crowds of his campaign - a parade route throng esti mated by police at 200,000 -in his foray by plane to the Ohio city and back to Chi cago that night. Nixon, too, got a good re ception when he flew into Chicago Sunday night from Washington and was met at the airport by partisan greet- ers. Tells Aid Program Before leaving Washington, the vice president unveiled an aid - to - education pro gram calling for increased federal spending for school construction but still oppos ing federal funds for teach ers' salaries. Nixon outlined a 4,700 mile, six-day campaign sched ule for the week carrying him through 11 states and in cluding another swing into the nominally Democratic South and into Kennedy's home territory in Boston. Kennedy provided a possi ble preview of his line of at tack for the TV-radio debate in his Cleveland appearance. The debate Is expected to be limited to domestic issues. Kennedy charged in Cleve land that under "eight years of Republican rule, the cost of living has gone up and up and Republicans have done nothing about it." He accused the GOP of failing to make Photo Studied For Clues in Reno Killing Reno-IUPD-Police today were studying a composite photo graph of a man allegedly seen riding with a Santa Rosa, Calif., manufacturer, Paul G. Allison, 59, last Tuesday. Assistant Chief William Brodhead said the composite picture was constructed from details supplied by a Love lock, Nev., service station at tendant who said he recalled Allison's truck and camper pass through town. The body of the camp coach I company president was found at 10:30 p.m. Saturday in an i alley in front of the Reno j Harlem club on a cot in back of one of his campers. i Beaten, Stabbed County Coroner William Becmer said Allison had been bcaton, and stabbed several times in the back, apparently with a large curved butcher knife found in the pile of clothes and bedding covering the partly clad body. He said the victim had been dead sev eral days. Brodhead explained that the composite photograph was being used "to eliminate pos sible suspects rather than to point the finger at any one person." Assistant District Attorney Erich Richards said investiga tors "do not have any good suspects in mind." Allison was returning from Missoula, Mont., where he had taken his son to begin classes at Montana State uni versity last Monday, He was last heard from Monday evening when he call ed his wife in Santa Rosa to tell her he would be home Tuesday night. An all-out search started Friday when he could not be located. good on promises of a stable dollar and lower prices. Mounting Controversy "I Intend t mention the high cost of living every week of this campaign," Kennedy asserted. The week of campaigning opened amid mounting par tisan controversy over Nix on's sharp recent charges that Kennedy was "naive" oooooo o o o o (Facial Tissue vmrron 400 Count 1 Reg. 29c o o I GREEN I ISTAMPS o o Reg. 55c Quart Jar Pitted 12-ox. tin Req. 31c o o NtSTABUSHEO 1896 1 GREEN Utam PS, o 2V2-IB. pkg. Reg. 41c and too inexperienced to han dle international affairs. Nixon and other Republi cans also called for a mora torium on criticism of the nation's economic and mili tary strength during the U.N. visit of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and other Com munists. Obviously stung by the crit icism, Kennedy fired back wigglyij eWDBO OPEN EVERY DAY UNTIL rt for Plymouth Mayonnaise Early Calif. Cadet Ripe Olives 4 - Fisher's All Purpose Crisp, Solid Heads f ' w w; ; that he would continue to point up weaknesses in the-' hopes that corrective meas-';. ures coulfi be taken. Sen. Howard Cannon (Dv Nev.) Sunday said Nixon was asking Kennedy and ofh.-': er Democrats to join him jn a "conspiracy of silence or misrepresentation in order to mislead the American peo-' pie." 9 P.M XT $1 00 $noo Mix x $11 00 Iwl