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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1960)
Clefauver and Dewey To Plug for Candidates in 0 regon 17 v t-SS JL. . PA NIKITA WAVES GOODBYE-Looking tired, New York's Idlewild airport for his return Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev has a to Moscow. . -. " salute for newsmen as he prepared to leave ' ' (UPI Telephoto) Mikoyan Believed Falling Out Of Place in Soviet Heirarchy London - (UPD - Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas Ivan- ovich Mikoyan is in eclipse, according to diplomatic dis patches reaching London to n-The' reports said the "Ar menian wizard" of the Krem lin has faded out of the Soviet hierarchy's major activities lately. - There are growing indica tions Makoyan may be on his way out of power altogether, NEW I960 RAMBLERS 12 LEFT 2-DOORS 4-DOOR WAGONS SAVE-SAVE UP TO $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $600 $700 PAUL IEA MOTORS 5th & BARTLETT SP 2-6185 I ISO Wadding Mef . Purchase WHEN YOUNG DREAMS COME TRUE REGISTERED AND INSUR-ED against burglary, theft, hold up,, accidental damage or loss of diamond from mounting In any event your diamond will be replaced without charge. $100 , Both ringi Easy Ttrmi FIRST LOVfi ,... . now available M with all H baatttlfu. .ryUnf and diamond brilliant of rlngi coiting much nor I Rtngi nlorotd i tkow dttatl. ' EASY CREDIT TERMS the dispatches said. One indication that Miko yan appears to be slipping came In' the latest Issue of the Soviet bimonthly history of the Soviet Communist Party, The publication ' describes the history of the Armenian Communist Party without once mentioning Mikoyan's name, Previous Soviet histories of the Armenian party gave top billing to Mikoyan. They used to call him one of the party's first heroes, Mikoyan was not among the legion of Kremlin leaders who welcomed Premier Nikita Khrushchev in Moscow on his return from New York today. Soviet Presidium member Dl- mitri Polyansky told news men Mikoyan was on vaca tion, i Mikoyan also was absent from among Soviet leaders who clustered at Moscow's airport when Khrushchev flew home from a Far East Regional Edition Page 2A Stock Prices Rise in Early New York-TOPD-Stocks kept their rally In contention with a broad price rise in the early trading today. Electronics stood out - with the better gains. Steels were firm, autos irregular , and chemicals steady. . Polaroid, which opened Wedding Announcements Announcements With Your of a first Love uiamona Ring Set $150 Up $260 Vi carat Both rlnfl Iny Terms Established Sine 1945 129 South Central . SP 3-4922 .A - V nr : DOLLAR a rajs trip last April, Omission of leading Soviet figures from official party publications , in the past has heralded their eclipse or downfall. '" ... . . The reasons and circum stances for Mikoyan's appar ent fall remained shrouded in mystery thus far. , : Mikoyan became Khru shchev's first deputy after the ouster of Nikolai Bulganin from- the Soviet premiership in March, 1958. He became Khrushchev's prime trouble shooter in the ensuing years and smoothed the path for the temperamental Soviet pre mier when he preceded Khru shchev's visit to the United States. A strong advocate of the peaceful coexistence policy, he was known to have encounter ed Red China's wrath of late. But there is no evidence at present that his reported eclipse is In any way con nected with the Sino-Russian conflict. . V." in Broad Trading with a 2Vi-polnt loss, more than removered in subse quent trades and by the end of the first hour showed a gain or more than 4. DOW-JONES AVERAGES New York-IUPD-Dow-Jonas final stock average! 30 In dustrials 591.49, up 5.6 Bl 20 railroads 127.43, up 0.78; IS utllties 93.71. up 0.50, and 65 Stocks 197.13. up 1.56. Seles Thursday were about 2.22 million shares compared with 1.89 million shares Wedntaday. Thursday's orices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical Alum Co. Am. , American Can American Motors AT&T Anaconda Copper Armco Steel Bondlx Corn ,. Bethlehem Steel Booing Air Caterpillar Corp Chrysler Corp Continental Can Crown Zellerbach 40 ... 34 ii ... ao',4 ... 03 U ... 41 U .... 601k ... 88 ',1 ... 40 ... 33', .... 36 .... 421a ... 3.1 14 curllas wrlilit Dow Chemical Du Pont j..... 16lC ....... 14 I 180 108 34 1! 74 ij 63 43 14 ...... 48(1 a Mil SB 11 45 Ik 50 S2SI 921i ..... S3 811 731k Eastman Kodak Firestone General Electrle General Foods General Motors Georgia Pacific Graham Paige uieynouna Gulf Oil HomesUke Mining Idaho Power I. B. M. Int. Paper - Johns Manvllle Kaiser Ind Kennecott Copper UKKnera Aircren Montana Power .... Montgomery Ward 33',, 38 11 3714 nail Biscuit New York Central Pac Gas Sc Elec Penney. J. C Pcnn BR Radio Corporation Wchfleld Oil Safeway Sears ........ Shell Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Co Southern Pacific Standard California ... Standard Indiana Standard NJ Sun Mines .... Texaa Co Texas Gulf Sulfur Texaa Pac Land Trust Transamerlca Trans World Air Trl-Contlnental Union Carbide Union Pacific United Aircraft United Air Lines U. S. Rubber , U. S. Steel Youngstown S Sc T . 68(4 ..... i i 6614 ..... 40(4 11(4 . 3414 84(4 3414 ..... 40(4 46 4 20', 4S14 u 41 . 814 7S14 ..... 1614 131 . 33 (4 34 C 11414 33(4 40 '4 31 14 , 4314 7314 ...... SB 14 PI Attendance . Almost DouWe Portland -TOPD- Paid attend ance figures (or the lirst five days of the Pacific Interna tional Livestock Exposition are up almost double from 1959 according to P-I officials. Attendance for the first five days through Wednesday was 40,312 whereas last year's figure was 23,462. Senator Morse To Be in State For Four Talks By United Press International Visits by Sen. Estes Kefau ver, (D-Tenn.), to plug Demo cratic candidates and by Thomas E. Dewey to speak for the Republicans are sched uled in Oregon next week. Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.), also will be in the state Oct. 22-24 to speak in all four con gressional districts. Kefauver will speak Tues day night in Pendleton and on Wednesday the 1956 Demo cratic presidential nominee is scheduled to speak in Red mond and Bend. . Dewey, twice the GOP presidential nominee, will ar rive in Portland next Friday afternoon. He will speak that night to an Associated Gen eral Contractors banquet in Portland and will campaign In Portland and Hillsboro the next day for Elmo Smith, Re publican senatorial candidate. Morse will speak in The Dalles next Saturday evening and on Sunday will speak in Hillsboro and Eugene. On Monday he will address a union group in Portland be fore flying back to New York. Candidates in Coivallis Most maor candidates for statewide office appeared at Gill Coliseum In Corvallis Thursday night. They includ ed Smith, Rep.j Walter Nor blad and Marv Owens, rivals for Congress from the 1st dis trict; Attorney General Rob ert Y. Thornton and his GOP opponent, Sen. Carl Francis; Secretary of State Howell Appling and his Democratic rival, Monroe Sweetland, and State Treasurer Howard Bel ton and his Democratic op ponent, State Sen. Ward Cook. Mrs. Maurlne Neuberg er, Democratic nominee for the Senate, was unable to ap pear because of a prior en gagement in Eugene. At Odds With Nixon Norblad agreed he was at odds with Vice President Richard Nixon on the need for compulsory arbitration in labor disputes. He said he favored It as a means of bring ing about settlement of major strikes. Nixon opposed com pulsory arbitration in" his TV debate Thursday night. Norblad said he., felt .the foreign aid program should be limited. He said he op nosed sending experts to japan to build up what al ready was an industrial giant to compete with this country. Owens said he favored ex pansion of the foreign aid program and would continue to send experts to Japan. He also called for cultural ex changes with other nations, including Russia. Smith Hits World Court Smith said he would be op posed to submitting all con troversies between nations to world court. He said he would not want to commit the free world to a court which included Russians. Appling. and Sweetland dif fered on the value of the State Board of Control. Ap pling said it made available a wider range of experience. Sweetland felt it allowed "buck passing" . which pre vented people from pinpoint ing responsibility. Belton and Cook differed on the value of a bond com mission, Belton said he would have no objection to reestab- llshmcnt of the commission while Cook said he voted to abolish it at the last legisla ture and saw no reason to sup port it now. Thornton defended his rec ord as attorney general and said a lack of funds from the legislature had slowed work on a crime prevention pro gram. Francis criticized Thornton's record. Annapolis Longest hit for a torpedo was 3,000 yards by a German U-boat in 1917 on the U.S. destroyer Jacob Jones. JOHN DELLENBACIl FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE REPUBLICAN "DO YOU WANT TO PAY HIGHER OREGON INCOME TAXIS? The simple truth Is that If ballet measure Ne. 14 eiasaes yen and I will be farced to pay higher Oreten in come Taxes. One of the leaders pushing this bill was and Is from rieht hero In Jackson County Ho Is my Demo cratic opponent. I AM AGAINST THIS UNNECESSARY INCREASE. I am against taxes being any higher than absolutely necessary and as your representative I pledge to work for you toward that goal." Pd. Pol. Adv. Dellenback for State Rep. Comrrt. S. V. McQueen, Chm 2134 Hlllcrest Rd. ,4, f- - A . ' T 4r""- y OLDEST PRESIDENT President Eisenhower today became the oldest president in the history of the United States, eclipsing the age-in-office record previously held by Andrew Jackson. The Chief Executive became 70 Thursday. (UPI Telephoto) President Observes 70th Annive rsa ry; Faces Busy Schedule Washington -tTJPD President Eisenhower celebrated his 70th . birthday anniversary today the first U.S. presi dent to do so in office and admitted that the prospect of retirement sometimes was rather terrifying.' But the President indicated he won't have much time to think about retirement in the period immediately after he leaves office Jan. zu. rie torn reporters he has had more demands on his time for the first six months after he leaves office than he has had during almost eight years in the White House. ' Elsenhower marked his milestone in high spirits and apparently in - tne nest oi health. . Serenaded by Band Meeting with newsmen in his office, he was gay and, at times, a little sentimental. There were indications tie may have shed a private tear or two when the Army Band and Chorus, serenading mm from the south lawn of the White House rendered Army Blue,'" the traditional song of West foint caaeis about to trade their cadet greys for Army blues. The President, . who al ready had thanked the bands men for their early morning birthday tribute, was report ed to have choked Up when he heard the selection. Any- wav. he turned at its conclu sion and beat a hasty retreat into the White House. Calling White House news men into, his office later for an exchange of greetings, the President shook hands all Problem for Police Annlotnn Wis fUPIl Police nnnrforo tnrtnV hllW ' theY ehmiiri fhnrtffi five teen-asers who put on of their number in a laundromat drying ma chine for a lark. Police found a 17-ycar-old eirl haDDlly tumbling in the 37-pound capacity machine after they had received an onnnvmnin teletihone call say ing there was something un usual taking place ai me sen service laundromat. The girl's onmnnnlnnq twn 17-vear-old boys and 17 and 16-year-old gins, nad aireaay leu. V r -v 4 , ' 'ti V i . around and laughed heartily at the press room's birthday card. It showed on its front an Indian fakir performing the - traditional rope trick. "It's quite a trick," the mes sage read on the front page, and on the inside, "The way you stay so young." A reporter asked how the President planned to spend his next 70 years. The President grinned his famous grin and his eyes sparkled. Then, becoming a little serious, he said, "You know, sometimes it's terrify ing to think about retire ment." . 1 In Excellent Health As has been his daily prac tice since his recovery from a 1955 heart attack, the Presi dent rose , . early. He . pro nounced himself 'feeling fine,", a verdict confirming the most recent finding of his doctors who have said his health Is excellent. The President's birthday schedule included a visit from a group of Republican campaign workers .who brought him a basket of 70 red roses, each tagged with a card referring to an event on each of his birhday anniver saries; In addition,' the President marked the occasion with a full schedule of official busi ness and plans for a family fun fest at his farm home in Gettysburg, Pa. YOUR JUNIOR FIRE MARSHAL SAYS IT'S FIRE PREVENTION WEEK... KNOW HOW TO CALL THE Uie the telephone if you are in a lafe place. Keep tho phono num ber of fhe fTro) depart. ment near your phono. Ur, simply coll tho operator (Dial "O" on dial telephones). Sho will connect you wifh the fire department. Bo sure to givo tho location of tho fire clearly : and completely. I III! 1 UaJ 9 11 This safety program presented to our school system as a public service by security insurance and realty. , IP Mankind Claimed Threatened by Population Burst Portland - Mankind is threatening its own existence by uncontrolled breeding. Such is the warning left In Portland by Dr. Brock Chis holm of Victoria, B.C., first director general of the World Health Organization, . who spoke at the First Unitarian church. "The population explosion is more dangerous than the chances of war," declared the white-haired psychiatrist. Dr. Chisholm warned that a nuclear war would mean the "end of civilization as we know it" and pointed out: "There is more than enough destructive capacity in the world to kill everybody in the world." , . Not Taken Seriously But he expressed belief that "there is a good chance we'll avoid war," whereas "the pop ulation is here now, and there is no indication that the hu man race has taken It serious ly." Dr. Chisholm' said United Nations figures show that the world's population will in crease more in the next 40 years than it did "In the last 200,000 years." " . Some countries, like Mex ico, will see their population double in the next 21 years, said- the soft-spoken expert. . "The . population of the world is now almost 3 bil lion," Dr. Chisholm reported. "By the end of the century it will be at least 6 billion. "More than half the people of the world are suffering now because of lack of food. There is no prospect of pro viding food, clothing and the amenities of life for 6 billion people. Land Short "And in short while it will be a matter of space, too. The U.N. reports that if the pop ulation explosion continues at the present rate of 600 years there will be one square meter of land (slightly more than a square yard) In -the woridviper person. That in cludes mountain peaks.",-. To meet the problem, the medical expert urged a "new climate of public opinion over the world" which would encourage limitation of the. number of children born in each family. He declared: "It is not admirable to have a lot of children. We can't compete with rabbits anyway. "A person with five or six or eight children should be considered highly Irresponsi ble socially. "Having that many chil dren makes it increasingly difficult for the human race to survive." FIRE DEPARTMENT Know how to operate fire alarm boxes in your neighbor ly hood. After reporting a fire. wait until firemen arnvo so vou eon direct them to the fire. I jA K I ' II II Hli SUWIL II r-i I I Boys and girls are taught how to report fires as part of the Hartford Rro Insurance Company's public service Junior Rro Marshal program. PROFESSIONAL INSURANCE SERVICE nsurance 48 Hawthorn Ave, SP 3-7325 IT'S A WONDERFUL STOtl Saturday Check List OF GOOD Luxury coats , Only $36.00 . . made to sell for $49.95 and $59.95. Adaptations of the finest French and Italian designers, fashioned in superb domestic and imported fab rics detailed by master craftsmen. Our 1st anniversary special. Mink trimmed coats Only $69.00 . . . made to sell for $98.50. The ultimate in luxury. Large natural mink shawl collars to complement the elegant Worumbo's charmosa fabric in heavenly autumn shades. Cerulean mink on indigo blue. Autumn haze mink on water green, Ranch mink on bamboo, and many other shades to match or contrast. 'Very specially priced. . . 1 Car coats Only $14.99 1 . . regularly. $19.95. Cotton, poplin. and corduroy coats all quilt lined, or. with pile linings. Spec ially .priced for this first anniversary sale; Wool skirts Only $8.88 . regularly $14.98. Fine wool skirts m . piece dye and yarn -dye Tianneis, tweeds and stripes. Many seat lined. Wide se lection of colors and styles to- choose from Aurint mir pint Anniurcsi-u Van Raalte nylon slips Only $3.99 . . nationally $5.95. lav ish nylon tricot slips by Van Raalte and other famous names. Many styles, each . frothy with ruffles and embroidery. All specially priced for this 1st Anniversary -sale. Nylon sleepwear , Only $3.99 . . should be $5.95. Nylon baby dolls and waltz length gowns, lace trimmed or embroidered.1 Heavenly colors. Special First Anniversary offer. New Fashion Dresses J Only $15.88 . . . national best sellers at $17.95 to $24.95. Wools, wool jerseys, ; brocades.' Sheaths, full skirts and jacket ' costumes. Specially priced for our An niversary sale. These are . all. new dresses that have not been shown be- fore. Fall formats ' Only $25.00 ... nationally $29.95 to $35.00. As bright as the formal evenings ahead. A col lection of frothy formats and party dresses priced to celebrate our First Anniversary. . Fur Blend Sweaters Only $8.88 . . . nationally $13.95. Full fashioned lamb's wool and angora sweaters, all in this year's new dress maker styles and colors. Specially priced for our Anniversary Sale. Maternity jackets Only $3.79 . . . nationally $5.95. A new group of maternity jackets, skirts and blouses in a variety of styles. First Anniversary Sale feature. Playtex Bra Sale Now 2 for $3.99. Regularly $2.50 each. Save $1.01. The Fashion Magic Cotton , Bra with under cup panels for support and comfort. All sizes. VALUES