Hacmi)lanfs Mention of Policies on Germany Bring Tantrum fay W
r
CASTRO GREETED High government fig- Dnrlicos, left;
ures greet Premier Fidel Castro on his nr- los Olivares,
rival at Havana from New York in a Russian Armed Forces
plane. In the group are President Osvaldo beret.
Two Bombs Explode During
Big Castro Rally in
Havana - (UPI) - Two bomb
explosions at a giant welcome
home rally Wednesday night
brought a storm of fury
against the United States from
Premier Fidel Castro and an
announcement he was setting
up a neighborhood spy system
to catch "lackeys of imper
ialism." The noisy blasts interrupted
Castro's speech but did no
damage. A panic was averted
when Castro had his lieuten
ants lead the 150,000 massed
Cubans in the national an
them. Five persoiir, including a
man wearing the garb of a
priest, were reported arrested.
The bearded premier scoff
ed at the bombs, blamed them
on the United States and said
he was setting up big-brother
vigilance committees in every
block of Havana to root out
what he called "lackeys of
. Imperialism and tyranny."
, He said civilian militia units
' would be enlarged throughout
; Cuba "zone by zone," .,
; The bombs exploded in
Zayas Park, across the street
' jrom the palace where Castro,
flanked by Soviet Ambassador
Sergei Kudrlatscv and other
honored guests, spoke. Also
! on the stand were the Russian
crewmen of the Soviet turbo
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. lavishly. Has plenty of trunk. Its fully-unitized body is very quiet,
very tough. Lancer is also mannerly. It corners decisively, takes a
well scarred road with aplomb. Parks obediently. More reasons to
buy? Read on. The interiors are rich, but simple: Shed soil, wear
well, feel good. The engine is highly spirited, but extremely light on
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PARSONS
315 East
ft
X A1
. :Jf 'Vr-i
jet -'hich flew Castro back to
Havana from the United Na
tions General Assembly. Cas
tro's Cubana Airlines plane
was Impounded in New York
by a court order.
The blasts resounded
throughout the nation over
radio and television networks
carrying Castro's speech. The
bombs apparently were of the
type known as "petardos" -small
but noisy.
Following the first explo
sion, Castro told the crowd:
"Everybody knows who paid
for that bomb - those are the
bombs of imperialism."
"I believe tomorrow they
will go to charge your excel
lency," he said, in what was
Interpreted as a reference to
U.S. Ambassador Philip Bon
sal. "Mark this well," he added,
"the moment I was talking of
imperialism, the bomb ex
ploded." The crowd responded with
a thunderous chant of "To the
wall, to the wall"' - death by
firing squad.
Medford,
Rogue Valley Edition
la
MOTOR COMPANY
Slh
'L-Wikiiii a Aj.j- nit i
Acting Foreign Minister Car-
center in dark glasses, and
Minister Raul Castro, with
(UPI Telephoto)
Havana
Castro said the bombings
wouid only spur his revolu
tionary program and promised
that each bomb the imperial'
ists" paid for would mean the
nationalization of another
American-owned property.
The crowds carried anil.
American and pro -Russian
signs and chanted such slo
gans as "Viva Castro," "Viva
Khrushchev," '"Viva Lumum
ba," and the familiar "Cuba
yes, Yankees no."
Cement Poured for
New Bridge Beams
Cement for the beams and
girders of the new 10th st.
bridge was being poured to
day, according to Public
"'orks Director Vernon
Thorpe, and pouring of the
v. uj... should start some
time next week.
Thorpe said construction of
the four-lane bridge Is pro
ceeding on schedule with com
pletion set for mid-November.
Inter-City Construction com
pany, Eugene, Is contractor on
the $01,000 bridge.
Tribune
Page 2A
Mtdford
Bonn Defended
Against Charges
Of Plotting War
(Conlinuid From Pag 1)
Macmillari touched off
another Khrushchev tantrum
when he deplored the Soviet
Union's "reactionary and
backward-looking" policies on
Germany and defended the
Bonn government against Red
charges it was plotting a war
of revenge against Russia.
Khrushchev beat his desk
with both hands, grinning as
if he enjoyed the outbreak.
Macmillan then nrnnnspri
that the whole subiect of dis
armament be taken up by a
committee of technical and
nonpolitical experts who
could decide in advance what
needed to be done before the
world politicians tried to
reach agreement.
Macmillan svid the Soviets
apparently felt that any sys
tem of inspection and control
of disarmament was In reality
some sort of a great spy plot,
Khrushchev again began
shouting from the rear of the
iau.
Yells at Speaker
The Russian rose to his feet.
his voice clashing with Mac
millan s while he pointed his
finger at the speaker. Then
Khrushchev yelled in Russian:
Accept disarmament and we
will accept any controls."
Assembly President Fred-
crick H. Boland of Ireland
rapped for order and Khrush
chev subsided.
Macmillan demanded icily
that he be given a translation
of Khrushchev's remarks. The
assembly burst into laughter.
When Macmillan finished
speaking with an appeal for
end of the deep division in
the world today, the assembly
sat in silence for a moment.
Then a wave of applause
swept over the delegates while
Khrushchev, the other Com
munists and the delegation
from Guinea sat stiffly in their
scats.
Khrushchev scowled and
twiddled his fingers as Mac
millan walked down the aisle
and took his scat, Italian
Foreign Minister Antonio
Segnl rose and shook Mac-
millan's hand warmly. Khru
shchev wandered out into the
hall.
Receives More Applaua
Macmillan received longer
applause than either President
Eisenhower or Khrushchev in
their speeches last week. Dele
gates stood and clapped as he
made the long trip from the
podium to his scat near the
rear of the hall.
Afterward, Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko said
he saw "nothing useful" in the
Macmillan speech. When ask
ed about Macmillan's disarm
ament proposals he snorted:
'Controls! Controls! The
League of Nations talked
about that for 15 years with
out any positive result."
Macmillan will follow up
his U.N. speech with a private
summit meeting with Khrush
chev later in the day, bring
ing East-West issues to the
level of the personal diplo
macy both advocate.
The Soviets sought to
change the subjects before the
U.N. General Assembly by
trying to force an Immediate
assembly debate on disarma
ment which would have given
Khrushchev a chance to seize
the initative seized by the
West in a series of defeats of
earlier Russian proposals.
But the 21-mcmber Steering
committee which approves as
sembly agenda Hems voted
overwhelmingly against the
Russian demand in a meeting
that lasted until after mid
night.
Stock List Positive
After Rallies
New York - IHPB - Stock
movements were generally
positive today despite two at
tempted ralllos that failed.
Higher prices in two key
pivotal groups, steels and oils,
failed to spread Into the re
maining sections leaving In
vestors nodding their heads in
disappointment.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York - OTIi - Dow
Jones final slock averages!
30 industrials 570.59, up
l.Sli 20 railroads 114.06. off
0.69i IS utilities 91.0$. up
0.21. and 65 Hocks 190.62.
up 0.19. Sales today were
bout 2.15 million shares
cgmpared with 3.52 million
shares Wednesday.
Todiv'i nricrA on Mltctcd stocks:
Allied Chemlcul Tk
Alum Co. Am. . .w
American On 3 'k
American Motors 30k
A T T - SS'i
Armco Slcel . S9H
Bendlx Corp 57 'i
llethlehtm Stwl 31k
Brxlni Air .in'k
raltrplllar Corp. . 24
Chrysltr frp . 41 'I
ConllnsnlKl Can .......
Crown Zrllarbach
Curtis WrlsM H!a
WELCOMED AT DINNER Secretary of the Hcrters for
State and Mrs. Christian A. Herter pose The dinner was
with Crown Prince Akihito and Princess Washington.
Michiko prior to an official dinner given by
Eisenhower To Plug for
Nixon at
United Press International
President - Eisenhower, re
tiring as undefeated champ,
climbed back into the politi
cal ring today to help one of
the contenders battling for his
crown.
Eisenhower will speak in
support of GOP presidential
candidate Richard M. Nixon
at a $100-a-plate Republican
fund raising banquet in Chi
cago tonight. The President's
speech will be piped to 35
similar dinners across the
country by closed-circuit tele
vision. Nixon also willl address the
affairs by television from Bos
ton, the home town of his
Democratic rival, Sen. John
F, Kennedy. Before the ban
quet, the vice president sched
uled campaign appearances in
Burlington, Vt., and Manches
ter, N.H.-normally Republi
can territory.
Plans Dozen Talks
Kennedy's stumping time
table took him across New
York's Mohawk Valley by mo
torcade from Albany to Syra
cuse. He planned at least a
dozen speeches, expected to
continue his new hard-hitting
attack on Nixon.
Campaign Quotes
By UnlUd Prais International
Sen. John F. Kennedy:
(At Buffalo, N.Y.): "This
year again only a single Re
publican in the Senate voted
for medical care for the aged.
This year again Mr. Nixon, as
the spokesman for his parly.
speaking to 73 million people
on our television debate, said
that our efforts to provide
medical ' care "through Social
Security were 'extreme.'
"But I don't believe it is
extreme' to help our older
citizens get the medical atten
tion they need. I don't believe
it is 'extreme' to work through
our tried and tested Social
Security system. I don't be
lieve it is 'extreme' to relieve
poverty and illness and des
pair." "What is 'extreme' is the
fact of millions of older
Falter
Dow Chemical '!'
Du Pont
Eastman Kodak ... 109
r'treitona - 3J'
General JElectrlc 7Sli
General Koods S
General Motors .. 4.1Tb
GcorRia Pacific - 47
Graham Palso !
Greyhound 20l4
Gulf Oil 2
Hoineslake Mining 45lb
Idaho Power SO'ii
1. B. M SOS
lm. Paper 86'b
Johns Manvllle . 50
Kennecotl Copper :., 74 'k
lckheed Aircraft 24'k
Montana Power Co 2S'k
Montgomery Ward 27's
Nat'l Biscuit 3'k
New York Central - Ill's
Pc Gas and Elec
Penney. J. C - 40i
Pcnn RR H'a
Radio Corporation - 53
Richfield Oil - - 0k
Safeway 34 'k
Scars - - 4" 'b
Shell Oil 36 'i
Socony Mobil OH So 'k
Southern Co , - - 4tsk
southern Pacific
18'k
Standard California
standard Indiana . ..
Standard NJ
Sun Mines
Texas Gulf Sulfur
Tex Pac Land Trust .
Transamerlra
Trans World Air .......
Tri-Conttnental .......,.
Union Carblda
-.. 41'k
; 3ab
3!'s
!
. Ifl
14'k
, 33 k
ll's
... 33 's
10!US
J.Vk
union Pacific
unitcci Aircraft i
l ni ei( Air Lines 30'
V. 8. Rubber 43
It R Sleel .. Tin
Youngstown S & T 8S Is
Chicago
Kennedy dropped his previ
ous relatively mild references
to Nixon and struck hard at
his opponent Wednesday night
in a speech to a frenzied
crowd of 20,000 in Buffalo,
N.Y.-his largest indoor audi
ence of the campaign.
The Democratic nominee
scored Nixon for promising to
help economically depressed
areas after Eisenhower had '
vetoed two bills to aid such j
areas. He said Nixon followed
the 1936 philosophy of Alfred
Landon on medical care for
the aged.
In a day-long swing through
traditionally Republican up
state New York, Kennedy re
peatedly charged that the eco
nomic and social welfare pol
icies of the GOP had not
changed since the days of
Presidents Warren G. Harding
and Calvin Coolidge.
Nixon also campaigned
Wednesday in New York - on
Long Island - in his fight for
the Empire State's valuable 45
electoral votes. He drew large
and enthusistic crowds in the
heavily Republican section
with a defense of the adminis
tration's stand on Commu-
Americans who are unable to
afford the medical care - the
doctors and drugs and hospi
tal rooms - which they so des
perately need. And what is
'extreme' is the opposition of
the Republican party to every
effort to bring help to our
older citizens."
(At Erie, Pa.) He promised
"full steam forward" in com
pleting the local Erie port de
velopment project as a link to
the St. Lawrence Seaway.
(At Lockport, N.Y.) "The
issue In this campaign is not
the bogus issue of how far we
extend the powers of the fed
eral government tomorrow. It
is the real issue of how well
we use the powers of the fed
eral government today."
Vice President Richard M.
Nixon:
(At Commack til suburban
New York) Called Kennedy's
new frontier a "retread - pale
carbon copies of what Ameri
ca left in 1953."
He promised that U.S. mili
tary strength "will be main
tained, at whatever cost, at a
level which will turn an
enemy attack."
(Still on Long Island In sub
urban New York in Hicksville
and Mincola) He called for
"keeping the peace without
surrender."
And in a slap at Kennedy
"People are making a mistake
in blaming our country and
our President for what the
Communists are doing. We
are not going to change our
policies to what the Commu
nists would like because if we
do that means surrender."
(At New York in outlining
a seven-joint program for ur
ban housing and construction)
He pointed out four-fifths of
the nation's "dramatic post
war population increase has
been concentrated In the sub
urbs." (At New York on the Lodge
Nixon ticket): "If we are
elected, you'll have men who
never will be satisfied with
being second best in anything
- you will have men who will
be firm with the Communists
but never heating tip the at
mosphere because of some per
sonal insults." !
the visiting royal couple.
held at Anderson House in
(UPI Telephoto)
HUGE
50-LB.
BALE
MldDSS
v r
" Satisfaction guaranteed CU A D O
or your money back" vJJlKu
East1 Germans Said
Fleeing to
Berlin -WD- East Germans
are fleeing to the West in rec
ord numbers because they
fear a new Communist block
ade may cut their escape
routes, it was reported today.
Heinz Lonchant, director of
West B e r 1 i n's Marienfelde
refugee oanter, said new Com
munist pressures are forcing
thousands of East Germans to
cross the border.
The East German Commu-
Hilts Tree Farm
Is Certified Today
Hilts - Northern California
timberlands of Fruit Growers
Supply company which have
been producing continuous
crops of sawtimber for nearly
100 years, were certified as a
Western Pine Association
Tree Farm today, according
to Loren A. Yoast, general
manager of the company.
The 30,000-acre tree farm
joins more than 18,000' tree
farmers in the nation who
manage more than 52 million
acres of privately owned tim
berland dedicated to the pro
duction of tree crops for the
nation's forest industries.
Fruit Growers Supply com
pany has operated in the Hilts
area for the past 50 years,
Yoast said, and provides em
ployment for about 280 men
annually.
PUSICMASE
H
SOI
Opt
West
nists began putting the squeeze
on West Berlin shortly before
Soviet Premier Khrushchev
departed for the United Na
tions General Assembly . ses
sions in New York. ;
The Soviets have given the
Communist East German re?
gime control over all West
Germans traveling to anc
within the city. But the Rus
sians retained their control
over the Western Allies Irj
Berlin. ,
Lonchant said 18,000 per;
sons fled to West Berlin last
month to set a record for tha
year. In the first three weeks
of September, the figure al
ready has passed the 15,000
mark, he added. More than
110,300 refugees have escaped
from Communist East Ger
many so far this year, as com1
pared to 90,862 for all of
1059. '
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