Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1960)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. MONDAY. .NOVEMBER 7, 1960 6 A I ' - X. Tn bf FIHST FAMILY? cide Tuesday who will be the next First his family. Nixon is shown with his wife, Family of the United States for the next Pat, and two daughters, Julie, 12, left, and four vears. The Republican Party hopes It Patricia, 14, second from left. (UPI Telcphoto) Quoting the Candidates By Unittd Preis International Vice President Richard M. Nixon (Prepared nationwide TV address Sunday from Los Angeles): If elected, he would Invite the leaders of Soviet satellite rations to visit the United Stales - and "1 would suggest they arrange Indi vidually or collectively to ex tend state invitations to Presi dent Eisenhower and former Presidents Truman and Hoov er so they can make next year ... a tour of the European Communist nations , . ." Eisen hower "assures me that he is more than ready to carry the torch of freedom on such a journey. "There is no religious issue in this campaign . . . you should vote for neither me nor Sen. Kennedy on the basis of the religious issue ... we differ so far as faith Is con cerned but we both have faith In God . . ." Nixon (Statement Issued at Loi Angeles): Kennedy "Is trifling with human needs" in Voters will de- will be Vice ills medical cure proposals which would only lead "down the path of a compulsory gov ernmental health insurance program" and could result in "sociiili.alion of all of our health services." If elected, Nixon will urge Congress to provide tux credits or deduc tions to parents for payment of tuition costs and oilier ex penses in giving children high er education, as well as "sub stantial federal matching grants to states" for their schools. Nixon (Speech prepared for delivery in Alaska Monday): "I would expect the Congress next year to join ine in resist ing the unjustifiable practice of short - changing or over spending on our defenses . . ." Sen. John F. Kennedy (Speech at Commack, N.Y. Sunday): "We pledge our selves to seek a system of high er education where every young American can be edu cated - not according to his WE APPR NTHUSIASTIC Available at your Food store. . . HOURS FRESHER!! President Richard M. Nixon and race or his means - but ac cording to his capacity." He proposed, as part of a three point program of bolstering higher education, "federal scholarships for a limited number of needy and quali fied students - perhaps 15,000 or 25,000 initially." The pro gram included two previously delivered proposals for in creasing funds available for federal loans to needy students and for an adequate college housing program. Kennedy (Speeches in Con necticut): "I don't think there's any doubt that Mr. Nixon has been proven wrong about our 'unexampled pros perity' in 1060 . . . there is more unemployment now than in the recession of 1S58 . . . there arc more unsold cars thun ever." "In my judgment, future events will clearly bear out the position the Democratic party has taken" in regard to the alarms about the economy and U.S. prestige. "How many (hi UVl UU S WW oagSjgfeK ECIATE YOUR JW:jM OUR NEW w Nixon in En Route With Nixon - UPI) -Vice President Richard M Nixon swung through the Great Lakes region today on a final non-slop 36-hour whirl wind campaign for the presi dency. The Republican candidate rounded out his campaign pledge to visit all 50 states with a trip to freezing Alaska Sunday night. Following an address before 3,000 persons at the Anchorage High school auditorium, Nixon departed for an airport rally at Madi son, Wis. Opponent Accused In remarks prepared for his appearance at Madison, Nixon accused his Democratic opponent, Sen. John F. Ken nedy, of persisting in "his desperate tactics of predicting a recession in order to win an election." However, the vice president said, "fortunately our econ omy is so strong Mr. Kennedy cannot talk it into trouble. ' Nixon said the nation's economy is strong, "but it can be stronger." He promised, if elected, he would "use every practical measure" to make it stronger. "History will record the Kennedy recession of 1960 as his political wish which did not come true," Nixon said. "What started out to be a pleasant day dream for Sen. Kennedy will turn out tomor row to be a horrible night mare - and all this to the pub lic benefit." Telethon Unprecedented The vice president moves on to Detroit for a noontime speech and an unprecedented four-hour nationwide question and answer telethon this aft ernoon, 2 to 6 p.m. EST. He will slop in Chicago for an other half-hour telecast be fore returning to Ontario, Cal if., at midnight tonight - just hours before Ihe election be gins. Nixon launched his final 36-hour drive in Ontario Sun day, after taping a television show which he described as countries will follow a leader who is not able to maintain the leads?" "I believe on Tuesday the people of this country are going to choose to go forward. They are tired of silting still . . . I do not know of any candidate (besides Nixon) whose speeches have shown less reaction to the aclual facts since Stanley Baldwin in 1035 in England." ui u r b i u ii u i m r svsssii BETSY BEA S - Q) MADE WITH PURE AND WHOLE EGGS - ENRICHED TO GIVE YOU GOOD NUTRITION and GOOD EATING Great Lakes Region In Final 36 - "perhaps the most important half hour of the campaign." In the telecast from Holly wood, he said that if elected he would ask former Presi dents Eisenhower, Truman, and Hoover to visit Soviet Iron Curtain countries on a goodwill tour next year - if the Soviets would extend the invitation. He told the nationwide tele f M ft f '( K i ( TV. ft h & m VP ' Wis vv SPECIAL DELIVERY James LaChapelle, attaches a sales order slip to a carrier pigeon at Milwaukee, Wis., in start of an experiment by Chicago Steel Service Company which is trying to determine the value of birds in expediting orders. Takeoff points at six other points in the midwest include Beaver Dam, Wis.; Kalamazoo, Mich.; Rockford and Bloomington, 111., and Newton and Bonne, Iowa. A capsule in a pigeon's leg carries the order. The only drawback thought up so far is the possibility of competitors shooting down sales orders. "1 can think of no better representative of Oregon in Ihe Congress of the U. S. than . . . Eddie Durno." Mark O. Hatfield Governor of Oregon (Excerpt from letter to Edwin Durno) ti. Ait. Dutntor Congtw Committee llotwiS. 16) Ifil ABSOLUTELY NO HARMFL PRESERVATIVES ADDED vision audience the next presi dent should invite leaders of each Iron Curtain nation to visit this country and see it as Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev did last year. In a dramatic last minute bid for the three electoral votes of traditionally Demo cratic Alaska, Nixon drew a standing ovation when he de clared, "I know Mr. Khru- - liriyXnT I (UPI Telephoto) Muliam, mc. &c., Rt.4, Ban 147, Itigtm, Ort, J 1 jff ri "MEDFORD MADE BUTTER" shchev, and I will keep our defenses strong. And I assure you Alaska will play its part in the defense." Hits Kennedy Proposal - Nixon reminded his listen ers that they were closer to the Soviet Union than any other state. Anchorage lies only 650 miles from the near est Soviet territory - and one point in this vast northwest ern frontier is only 65 miles from Russian territory. In a statement prior to his departure for Alaska, Nixon said Kennedy's proposal for sending young volunteers to underdeveloped countries in lieu of military service "is su perficial and obviously con cocted solely for campiign purposes." "If put into effect, it would be harmful to both the Svlcc tive Service and to those so ably representative of the United Stales abroad," he said. Nixon said Kennedy's Re elect EVE STATE REPRESENTATIVE Eve Nye believes: That Jackson County needs representation in the state legislature which is free from political pressures ' honest in evaluating proposed legislation t ; dedicated to the interests of Jackson County Vole to return EVE NYE io Ihe Oregon Legislature SHE WILL BE WORKING FOR YOU! Pd. Adv. Eve Nye for Rep. Com., Phil Lowry, Ch.( Cooley Bids Hour Campaign "peace corps" proposal would only be bait for so-called "vol unteers" who "in truth" would be trying to escape the draft. He said he would propose, Burn Casualties Aided by Victims Chicago, (Science Service) -Blood transfusions from re covered burn victims, help those who are severely burn ed. This method of treatment was used for nine children burned in the 1958 Our Lady of the Angels school fire in Chicago and proved benefi cial, three Chicago scientists reported here in the current Journal of the American Med ical Association. The treatment is based on the premise that a burn re leases a toxin, or poisonous substance, into the blood stream and that the blood of a person who has recovered NYE Fresh! Fresh! Fresh! Fresh! Fresh! Fresh! if elected, an extension of the foreign service program, but that "It would be a tragic mis take to include those whose primary objective Is to escape the draft.' from such a burn contains an antitoxic like substance. Study of the method was re ported by Dr. Sol R. Rosen thal, Dr. James B. Hartney and Wilma A. Spurrier. They said their findings should be considered "pre liminary" because the total effect of transfusing blood from a recovered burn vic tim has not yet been deter mined. WET SPOT Honolulu - Mt. Waiaolaele on the island of Kauai, Ha waii, is said to be the wettest spot in the world with an an nual rainfall of 476 inches. I K A 1" J .1;