lODGEV
73
ffn in i n irtotu w't ' i aaslrltsSaMamM
ROSES FOR MRS. LODGE Mrs. Emily
Lodge is presented a bouquet of roses from
nn admirer as Henry Cabot Lodge, Republi
can vice presidential nominee, waves to the
crowd during their one-day campaign swing
into Oregon Thursday. At the Portland
Civic Auditorium Lodge presented a for
mula for a better America, saying that the
United States should keep militarily strong
and "practice what we preach."
(UPI Telophoto)
America Must 'Practice What
We Preach Lodge Maintains
Portland - IUPII -: Henry
Cabot Lodge, Republican vice
presidential candidate, car
ried his campaign tour into
the state of Washington to
day after stops at Corvallls
and Portland.
.The former U.S. ambassa
dor to the United Nations and
present running mate of Vice
President Richard M. Nixon
ended a full day of campaign
ing in Oregon Thursday night
with an address to 3,000 fol
lowers at Portland Auditor
ium. . Lodge said his formula for
a better America was to keep
militarily strong and "prac
tice what we preach."
"If we do what we're cap
able of doing, all around the
world the promise of the
Amberican revolution will be
so glowing that the appeal of
the Communist revolution
Will wither and die," he said.
- He told bis audience the
'West must stand up to the
Russians in the United Na
tions. '
Show By ExampU
"But more than that, we
must show by example that
our system of human happi
ness and human aspirations Is
better than any slave sys
tem," he said.:
He- said the Issue of civil
rights In America was not a
matter of international rela
tions - "to be true to our own
national purpose, that's a
good enough reason." But he
added that "we must show
the world that we can con
tinue to make . democracy
work."
"Our watchword for I860
should be: Go forward to
gether and leave none be
hind," Lodge said.
His 20-mlnute talk was
given before nn audience that
failed by a third to fill, the
auditorium. He was given a
standing ovation of nearly a
minute's duration and the
hall was full of campaign
signs. He was Introduced by
Gov. Mark Hatfield, who
described Lodge as history's
best qualiflep man for the
vice presidency .
Holds East's Imagination
, Lodge referred to Hatfield,
one of the few Republican
governors , elected two years
ago, as "that clear-eyed, clear
headed, clear-spoken Mark
Hatfield whose hold on the
imagination of the East is as
great as In the West."
Earlier Lodge told an Ore
gon State College audience in
Corvallls . that "there Isn't
anything that has a higher
priority than an excellent edu
cation system available to all
who are capable of using it."
Stock Prices Edge
Up in Routine Deals
- New York-fllPII-Slocks edged T.rl,-Con'1"tV"1
Union Pacific
United Aircraft
United Air Linen ...
U. S. mibher
U. S. Steel '
Youngstown 8 St T .
up in generally routine trad'
Ing today.
' The better gains were reg
istered by stocks outside
those used to compile the av
erages. Polaroid, a heavy los
er Thursday, bounced back
with a gain of more than 1
today. "
'! Merck added a point and
American Home Products
nearly 2 in the drugs. Oliver
Corp., which' announced the
sale of its farm equipment
business to White Motor, lost
a point at 204. White added
a small fraction on the news.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
' Now Yoik-IUPII-Dow-.Jon
final stock avaragati 30 in
dustrials 583.69. up 4.81: 2D
railroads 125.78. up 0.74; IS
utilities 92.64, up 0.53; and
65 stocks 194.62, up 1.40,
Bales Thursday war about
2.(1 million shares com
pared with 2.85 million
hares Wednesday.
Thursday's prices on
SlnpkK:
Allied Chemical
Alum Co. Am. ;.
American Can
American Motors ,
AT&T
Anaconda Copper ..
Armcn Sleel
ncndlx Corp
llethlehem Sleel
Boelns Air
Caterpillar Corp.
Chrysler Corp ;
Continental Can
Crown Zellerhach .
Curtia Wrlnht .
T)nw Chemical
Du Ponl .. ....
Fn.lman Kodak
Flreatonr
General Electric
General Foods
General Motors
Georgia Pacific
selected
...... SIP.'
n
a
... at ;
BDli
44
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SB
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42',
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BS'k
42",
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Invasion Force
Reported in Cuba
Havana - (UPI) - The Cuban
government has announced
that a 27-man invasion force,
including three Americans,
landed in eastern Cuba Tues
day and clashed 24 hours later
with the Cuban military.
The announcement said the
leader of the Invaders was
killed, two others were cap
tured and Cuban soldiers were
chasing the the other 24 In
the rugged country of Oriente
Province.
The government communi
que charged the invaders
came from the United States
and that they carried an
American flag which was cap
tured In Wednesday's encounter.
Gun on
Homestake Mining 4B',,
Idaho power 3(1
1. B. M.
Int. Paper
Johns Manvllle
Kaiser Ind
Lockheed Aircraft -
Montana Power Co
Montgomery Ward
Nai l Biscuit
New York Central
Pac Gas and Elec
Penney. .1. C. ....
Penn RR.
Radio Corporation
Richfield Oil
Safeway
Sears
Shell Oil
Pocony Mobil OU . ..
Southern Co
Southern Pacific
Standard California
Standard Indiana
Standard NJ
6un Mines
Texan Co.
Texaa Gulf Sulfur -
Tex Pac Land Trust
Tranaamerlce
Trans World Air .
50!)
... nn
.... 51',
i... B's
.... 231,
... 2B
.... 271,
.... 64 ',
... IB',
. .. 4',
... 40',
.... 11
.... 34i
. sa
.... 34 ,
....
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.... .in',
.... 4.V,
.... m,
.... 44'i
.... SB's
.... 404,
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... uw
Savage Rapids Dam
Filled Alter Work
Grans Pass Rogue river
behind Savage Rapids dam
started rising early this week
and the lake was drained for
repairs to curtains, which hold
water off the turbines in ihe
dam. ,
Ncal Shaffer, vvatermnstcr
or the Grants Pass Irrigation
district, said the repairs were
necessary when a concrete
cylinder weight which holds
the curtains away from the
turbines broke loose. Four
cables hold the curtain in
place, he said.
STOP!
Don't Buy Any Compact
Car 'HI yeu sae the
LL naw 1961 RAMBLER
PAUL LEA
RAMBLER
5th ft iartlert
Phone S 2-61 S3
Speaking in Gill Coliseum,
Lodge said if it means public
funds, these must be provided.
Southwest Highwayman Gang Broken
Up With Arrest of Ringleader, Aides
Lancaster, Calif. - IUPD - A
maurading band of highway
men that posed as police to
terrorize motorists throughout
the Southwest was broken up
today when its leader was
captured here and named his
partners in the long crime
spree.
Elton H. Hale, 42, barrel
chested, ex-convict leader of
the gang, admitted more than
100 robberies. He also ad
mitted raping a young woman
Wednesday near El Paso, Tex.,
and attacking a 12-year-old
girl near Wheeler, Tex., last
week. .
Accomplices Arrested
Hale said E. J. Minor, 31
and Leroy Coates, 27, both of
Yuma, Ariz., were his ac
complices in the attacks. Both
were arrested by Yuma sher
iff's deputies' a few hours
after Hale was captured and
identified them.
Hale, arrested with his 17-year-old
son, Robert, told the
boy while deputies listened:
"What they say I've done is
true. I don't want you to do
nothing like this. The cops
will have to hold you here for
awhile, but afterwards I want
you to go home and take care
of your mother and brother
and sisters and work hard."
Used Sirens .
The gang - using red lights
and sirens to stop motorists,
was believed responsible for
robberies ' In Merced, Calif.,
Kingman, Ariz., Wheeler and
Roby, Tex. Four motorists
were robbed ol $1,000 by the
gang near EI Paso Wednesday
Deputies said Hale would
stop his victims, rob them,
chain them with padlocks and
sometimes beat them. If the
motorist was a woman, Hale
usually raped her, deputies
said.
Hale was captured by two
Sukarno Favors
Ike-Nikila Talks
Washington - IUPD - Indone
sian President Sukarno said
Thursday after a talk with
President Eisenhower that he
still believes Eisenhower
should meet with Soviet Pre
mier Nikita Khrushchev.
Sukarno, who met with the
President ; for 35 minutes,
said Eisenhower explained
why he does not wish to see
the Russian leader at this
time.
"He explained his answer
to me and now I have a more
clear picture of the situation,"
Sukarno told reporters.
Then, bringing his index
fingers together to illustrate
his thoughts, he said:
"I still stick to the idea that
Eisenhower and Khrushchev
should meet." ,-.
California highway patrolmen
without a struggle shortly be
fore midnight as he and his
son drove west on U.S. 138.
' The boy denied any Impli
cation in the highway crimes,
saying he had been picking
cotton for several months in
Yuma, Ariz., until his father
picked him up Wednesday
night.
Prompted by Evidence
An illiterate cotton worker,
the S-foot-11, 200-pound Hale
was brought to the sheriff's
station here' where he soon
broke down. '
Deputies said his admissions
were prompted by evidence
reported found when his home
in Livermore, Calif., near San
Francisco, was raided shortly
after his arrest. ,
"Thousands of dollars
worth of loot" were reported
found in the home. Deputies
said the loot included watches
and jewelry reported stolen
from highway robbery victims
in at least three southwestern
states.
Father of Six Children
"I'm not a smart man,"
sobbed Hale shortly after his
confession, deputies reported.
"I'm sorry I brought this bad
thing on my children."
Hale is the father of six
MEDFORDt
JTRIBUNE
Regional Edition
Page 2A
children aged from 6 months
to 22 years.
He lived with his wife,
Thelma, 37, at their Liver-
more home. Deputies said an
expensive watch Hale recent
ly cave his -wife was one
stolen from a highway rob
bery victim.
' Hale and his ion were book
ed on charges of kidnaping,
robbery, rape and unnatural
sex acts. '
Tourists Believed
Detained in Russia
Washington 0IPD The State
Department said Thursday It
has Information indicating
that two American tourists
missing in Russia since Aug
ust are being held for taking
photographs near the Soviet
border. .
The two are Harvey C. Ben
nett, 28, Bath, Maine, and
Mark Kaminsky, 28, Jefferson
Township, Cass County, Mich.
State Department spokes
man Francis" W. Tully Jr. said
an American tourist reported
to the U.S. government that
he had seen Kaminsky Aug.
25 at the Soviet border con.
trol point in the Intourist Ho
tel at Uzhgorod on the Czech
border. The tourist said Ka
minsky had "stated he was
under detention for having
taken a photograph."
THE
PURSUIT OF
EXCELLENCE
BY GEORGE ROMNEY
President, American Motor Corporation
How dedication to people's needs resulted
in America's Most Trouble-Free Car
Many voices today urge that Americans set their sights
on higher plateaus of excellence in all fields. In a recent
article in Life magazine, John W. Gardner, president of
Carnegie Corporation of New York, said:
"How docs one contribute to
the greatness and strength of
free society? That is a question
1 to which there are many true an
swers. One answer is pursue ex
cellence. "At the simplest level, the pur
suit of excellence means an in
creased concern for competence
on the part of the individual. -
"But excellence implies more
than eompetence. It implies a
striving for the highest standards
in every phase of life. We need
individual excellence in all its
forms, in every kind of.. .industry
in short, universally," .
In our company, striving for basic
product excellence has resulted in
the Rambler and its trouble-free su
periority, a revolutionary force in
itoday's car business.
Competitors hustled to reshape
their product planning and to reor
ganize their efforts. In contrast, our
technicians could pursue their tasks
carefully and unhurriedly; their
pioneering work on compact cars
was long behind them.
Our solid and mule-free car with
Single-Unit aircraft type construc
tion had been pioneered 21 years
been designed, engineered and man
ufactured by men and women who
take great pride in workmanship and
whose motto is "Build every Rambler
as though you were going to own it
yourself." Our 1961 models have
reached a new industry level of basic
balanced excellence.
ft lOltiHtfes
n mil hub ToTvCfc Y
Deep-Dip ruslproofing
ago. Other manufacturers are now
following our lead in part.
Freeing Ramblers from rust by
dipping the entire car body into a
ruslproofing balh was another by
product of American Motors' pur
suit of excellence.
Rambler's gasoline mileage rec
ords, year after year, cepresent at ill
. another area of achievement.
Eleven Years of Rambler Experience
Behind '61 Line.
Our newest line of Rambler cars has
What can this mean toyou?
It means that the strongest safe- .
guards in auto history are set up for
your benefit. A year ago Rambler
dealers were informed we would ex'
tend our warranty coverage against
product defects for 12,000 miles of
operation, or 12 months, whichever
comes first. Today, we are formally
extending to all new car buyers this
warranty protection to cover total
replacement cost, including parts and
labor, on all 1961 Rambler models
and to original owners of all 1960
Ramblers still under this warranty
period.
Our assurances don't stop there.
We now guarantee that the new
Ceramic-Armored mufflers and tail
pipes on 1961 Ramblers will last as
long as the original purchaser owns
his Rambler.
New Ceiling Reduces Road Noises
Another 1961 Rambler advance is a
new cushioned acoustical ceiling of
molded fiber glasson Rambler Classic
and Ambassador models that reduces
road noises by 30.
I n the Rambler Classic Six Custom
model, you'll find America's first
die-cast aluminum engine block, a
quality engine capable of improved
performance and economy.
Those are just a few current exam
ples of American Motors' advances.
The most basic is the type of car
Itself. The compact car, pioneered by
Rambler, is today's outstanding
motor car value. ,
Just what is a true "compact" car?
Loosely applied, the term has been
used to describe a car providing
better-than-average gasoline econ- .'
' omy, or a particular size of vehicle,
or a car in the new lower price range.. .
The compact car concept is broader" .
than these things,
Values Found In True Compact Cars
Balanced proportions of passenger
and utility space,, riding comfort,
handling ease and maneuverability,
performance, economy, durability,' -dependability,
attractiveness and
safety have been and will be the ele
ments of value most desired over the
years by car buyers. , .
. Today the best balance of these
elements is achieved in cars ranging
,'' from 170 to 200 inches in length.
' Below 170 inches, interiors are
skimpy. Above 200 inches, economy,
zestful performance and handling
ease are sacrificed.
In Rambler's compact cars you
enjoy a balanced combination of
values most sought in a passenger -car.
Today's Rambler is the end
product of our pursuit of excellence.
Widest Choice of Compact Cart
At least 3 out of 4 motorists would be
better off with one of the basic types
of compact cars. Rambler, alone, "
AW cushioned acoustic! ceilinf
offers all three basic types. Let me
describe them, Aiefly:
1961 Rambler American Lowest
priced U. S. car, built with Single
Unit construction, room for six aver
age adults. Holds nation's top econ
omy run records. New contemporary
styling that does not require annual
change, plus engineering simplicity,
assure that depreciation costs will be
held to a minimum. Offers more
value than any compact car on the
market today.
1961 Rambler Classic, 6 or V-8
All-purpose compact with the best
balance of room, performance and
economy. Custom 6 model equipped
with die-cast aluminum engine block,
an industry first. Styling continuity
cuts depreciation cost and appear
ance obsolescence. Has substantial
price and utility advantages over
"low-priced" standard-sized cars
and new luxury compacts.
1961 Ambassador V-8 by Rambler
The compact car that offers top
performance and luxury features of
most expensive cars, yet avoids os
tentation, high depreciation, high
operating costs, and gives owners
advantages not found in larger,
bulkier and less manageable cars.
Equipped with either 250 or 270
H.P. engine. Will save medium- and
high-priced car buyers hundreds and
even thousands of dollars.
Your Rambler dealer is conduct
ing his 1961 previews now. Why not
visit him today?
In our pursuit of excellence we
pledge you: ' '
To chaufe the dtsilu of our auto
moMes only when chant represents
tenuine improvement, never to
chant for ihe sake of mere change
... 7 continue the search for new
ways to offer freattr usefulness to
the user . . . To halance compact if
sifn with interior room and cenvew
itnee . . . To avoid fads and ex-
treme, impractical stylinf . . . To
strive constantly to understand
America's chanfint motorinf needs
and build cars to meet them , . . To
dedicate ourselves to the pursuit of
basic excellence , '. . This is Ameri
can Motors' pledit to all America...
This is Rambler
SP0TU6HT PREVIEW HOW!
See th Beautiful
1961 Rambler at til
Rambler Dealers Now
IT' A WMlrVl Ttl
Saturday .
Check
list
OF GOOD VALUES
Dresses, Dresses, Dresses
Only $9.00 and $12.00 . . . were
$14.95 to $24.95. Jacket dresses,
sheaths, full skirts. Arnels, daerons. Two
full racks to choose from.
Imported knit drcssts
Only $13.99 . . . Very specially priced one
piece Italian flat knit dresses. Several outstand
ing styles. Elasticized ribbed waist band for fit.
Garnet, copper, green or gold.
Nylon jersey, dresses
Only $10.98 . . . nationally $.4.91.
Famous maker V sleeve shirtwaist in
lovely Persian paisley. Machine wash
able. Drip dry. Never needs ironing.
Sizes 10 to 20, 1214 to 20'i.
Maternity sportswear
Only $3.79 . .'. should be $4.50. Washable
cotton bedford cord skirts, capris and pedal
pushers. Easy to fit Helenca stretch front and
special back let-out feature. Black, loden green
or beaver brown. Visit our Stork Nook.
aby dolls
Only $3.79 . . . regularly $5.98. Sheer
nylon over nylon tricot baby dolls with
square neckline design and full cap
sleeves trimmed with lace and satin
bows.
Nylon slips
Only $3.29 . ". . instead of $3.98. Smocked
bodice front and back. Lined with 15 denier
tricot in scalloped effect. Trapunto trim at hem
line, edged with double sheer tricot. Three
lengths. Sizes 32 to 40. '
' ') '
Robes
Only $3.49. A real big value for such
a small price. From a large selection of
many styles, your choice of cotton flan
nel, embossed nylon or easy to care for
cottons.
Japanese mink stoles
Only $189.00. Made by American furriers
in fashion's most desirable styles. You will
wear them with true pride. p'"sx
Coat sale
Only $36.00 . . . Would be $49.95 or
more if not specially purchased. Smart
styles, luxury fabrics only. Solids and
tweeds. Many with famous Forstmann
label. Unusual even for La Point es'.
Bandstand skirts
Only $5.98 . . . nationally $6.98. The new
short lengthOwool skirts with the knees show
ing. In bold plaids, monotone plaids tweeds
and checks. Swingy and unpressed pleats.
Wide selection to match sweater colors.
o
All wool sport suit
Only $17.95 . . . should be $19.95.
Briefly jacketed. Single and double
breasted styles. Flannels or tweeds.
Jackets fully lined. Skirts seat fined.1
Many patterns. '
1-
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