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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1960)
WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER IS, 1961 MEDFOFD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. Cure Said Devised for Europe's Growing Industrial Problems By HENRY J. BECHTOLD UP1 Financial Editor new York - (UPI) - Fawick Corp. is standing by with an "aspirin" it says will cure ,i tne evergrow- ing pains ,of Western Eli rope's indus- trial problem of a mountine backlog of or ders For the past year the re. sureent inHne. ' Henry Bechtold tries of West ' em Europe have seen their order backlogs rising stead ' ily above productive capacity. ims orainaruy would be a blessing in dlSSHkp tnr mnct ' firms, but in Europe it is caus ing mucn concern. The Eu- ropean cannot pour out a -'large CRDltal investment u,iih out unbalancing his present costprice structure on which nls markets depend. Nor can he hire thp man power to operate additional machines to meet production schedules. " Industrial Clutch Solution Fawick's solution to their "problem is an industrial clutch ; wnicn aoes tne same job for a machine that an automo bile clutch does for a car, This, clutch, according tn Fa. ., wick .will enable these firms .;. to increase the productive ca pacity of present equipment be speeding up the existing .. machines and nhtainino- mnm . productive hours through less . downtime due to maintenance , problems on the drive systems . and controls. w Eawick explained that its Judges for Art Tomorrow is the last day entries in the first annual art - competition may be delivered to .the. Rogue Art Gallery, members of the Rogue Valley Art association, sponsors of . the event, reminded artists to- . day. Entries will be judged by a three-man jury made up of members of the Oregon Art Alliance, which is composed 4 of gallery, museum and art , associations throughout the -. state. .The art exhibition will open ," in the Rogue Art Gallery, 220 ... West. Mam St., Medford, fol ... lowing a preview and recep tion for exhibiting artists Dec. , 4. It .will close Dec. 23. Artists living in the area from the coast to Klamath tans .and from Roseburg soum to Mt. Shasta, Calif., ,are eligible to enter. All . media are eligible for entry. , and nominal cash awards will be presented. Judges for the competition ' are Rught Groves, director of Cascade Artists and an in structor in the Lincoln county art center; Sid W. White, pro . fessor of art education at Ore- gori State college; and James , Robertson, curator of the mu seum of art, University of Ore--. gon, Entries have thus far been received from Medford, Ash . land,' Mt. .Shasta, . Klamath .'. Fajls, Crescent City, Calif., Central Point, and Yreka. Eisenhower Calls Security Council Augusta, Ga.-IUPD-President Eisenhower today summoned . his top military and diplo- " matic advisers to his vacation headquarters Thursday for a meeting of the National Se- , curity Council. Eisenhower appeared cer tain to discuss a new govern ment drive to cut U.S. over seas spending and halt the flow of gold and dollars abroad at the unusual council - session. ' The chief executive was ex pected to issue, probably late this, afternoon, a sweeping se ries, of orders to federal de partments and agencies to re- duce their foreign outlays. industrial clutch connects and disconnects power from a mo tor to drive the moving parts of a machine, such as in cy clical stop-start operations as sociated with production lines, and on such equipment as hoists, conveyors, presses and punches. To Increast Output The Cleveland firm's un usual design, which has been a well known major machine part on the American assem bly lines for years, shortly will begin helping to increase productive output at the stamping plants of one of the major suppliers of automotive stampings In England. The . British firm hopes to fave on capital expenditures for new equipment and achieve needed increased pro ductive capacity at a fraction of the cost. Quotes From the News BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL United Nations, N.Y. U.S. Ambassador James J. Wads worth, attacking Soviet Ambassador Valerian A. Zorin's statement that the Russians are ready for disarmament talks with "the new government of the U.S.A.": "How would it bt if I were to say: 'Perhaps when your premier or primt minister has been thrown out of power, we can talk business?' I don't think that is the way to do busi ness in the United Nations." New York Edward Kane, 32, in an "open letter to an unsuccessful burglar" who he said tried to get into his apart ment three times, only to find Kane and his family were at home: "Frankly, we're just poor. From one guy to another, man, you'd do better knocking off someone else's pad." Washington The Russian youth newspaper Komsomol skaya Pravda, denouncing black marketeers who are selling jazz records cut on discs made from used X-ray film: "A sloppily dressed man in a beret busies himself over a rusty phonograph. He puts on a disc cut from an X-ray film with traces of someone's cervical vertebrae. The hoarse voice of a jazz singer comes out of the horn." Edwards AFB, Calif. X-15 test pilot Scott Crossfield, shouting an answer to the pilot of a jet plane who radioed to him "hang onto it" as he cut in the power of the world's most powerful aircraft engine: "Don't you worry, buddy!" Ex-Civil Employees Schedule Meeting Clarence G. Davis, Ashland, state president of the Oregon Federation of Retired Civil Employees, will visit the southern Oregon chapter of OFRCE Friday. The group will, meet at 2 p.m. at the Army reserve building, Columbus ave. near Mc Andrews rd. . Davis, who recently re turned from Washington, D.C., is one of a seven-man commit tee named to reorganize and reconstruct the organization. He will explain progress being made by the committee and also discuss other matters of interest to retired and about- to-retire civil employees. All members, retired em ployees and- their wives or husbands are Invited. ' State Institution Said Overcrowded Salem-IUPII-Fifty inmates of the Oregon Correctional. Insti tution east of here are sleep ing in hallways because of overcrowded conditions, Supt. Paul J. Squier said today. The institution, which open ed last year, has a capacity of 296 but current inmate popu lation is 334, Squier said. He said the crowded condi tions are a result of failure of the ' 1959 legislature to ap prove five new buildings that were scheduled for construc tion in the current biennium. Squier said he will seek about $1.3 million in the 1961 legislature for four buildings, including two dormitory units, a vocational building and a multi-purpose structure. Dr. Haines To Speak At Lions Meeting Jacksonville - Dr. Frank Haines, associate professor of social science. Southern Ore gon college, will speak on the history of Jacksonville at a meeting of the Jacksonville Lions club at 6:30 o'clock this evening. Jacksonville is Ore gon's second oldest town. All valley Lions club mem bers and their guests will be welcome at the meeting, which will be held in the community hall. FUNERAL INSURANCE The Oregon State Funeral Directors' Association (about 130 members) heartily recommend the ' Oregon Fu neral Plan Insurance to you. It's wise to investigate now. May we assist you? LITWILLER FUNERAL HOME Highway 66 at Normal Ave. Ashland Dial MU 5-4541 s C. M. Lltwiller Mrs. Lltwiller Ashland's Leading Funeral Director Since 1935 'Back to School' Night Set At Mac McLoughlin Junior High school will observe National Education week Thursday, Nov. 17, with a "back to school" night starting at 7 p.m. Parents and patrons of the school will report to the boys gymnasium for a short as sembly featuring the school orchestra, directed by Elmer Ayres, before visting their child's classrooms for ten minute periods. The assembly will include a short welcome, instructions and a concert. In the classrooms, parents will have an opportunity to talk with teachers and review class objectives and procedures. Parents who fall to. receive a copy of. their child's sched ule before the event are asked to report to the school office on arrival Thursday night. McLoughlin Parent-Teacher association will hold a baked food sale in the school cafe teria after classroom visita tion. Mrs. Max Weston and Mrs. ' Alva Wright are .com mittee chairmen for the sale and refreshments. The execu tive board, headed by Mrs Richard Melum, president will serve refreshments. Bread Pan Sizes Effective Nov. 23 Salem -(UPI) The State Ag riculture Department an nounced Tuesday it has re vised the sizes of bread pans that bakers in Oregon may use, effective Nov. 23. The move to standardize pans was ordered because of the praetic of some bakers to 'balloon their bread. This is where a one-pound loaf baked in a one and one-half pound pan so that the loaf appears larger than it really is. The new order defines a pan as including pans, frames, screens or any type of con tainer in which bread is baked. The new regulations do not apply to pans used to bake round loaves or French. Vi enna or rye loaves. Portland Youngster Bruised, Burned Portland-(UPIl-An 18-month- old girl was hospitalized to day with bruises about the face and head and authori ties said they planned to take the case before the grand jury. lhe girl, Debra Lyn DuBay, was reported much improved. Earlier her condition had been listed as critical. Police said the child had black eyes, bruises about the face, a cut lip, a swolen forehead and two burns on the buttocks. Circuit Judge Donald E. Long Tuesday ordered cus tody of the child be given to Juvenile Court. The girl is the daughter of Mrs. Dorothy DuBay, 22. The mother told the court hearing that a friend had punished the child and the girl got the bruises when she fell. She said the girl got the burns when her body touched a stove. toititti.n!:v ISteaR . ,-'v j---'"'"'TrV'v-J SP May Withdraw Myrtle Point Agent Salem -IUPD- A joint applica tion by Southern Pacific Co., Pacific Motor Trucking Co. and Railway Express Agency to withdraw their agent at Myrtle Point has been ap proved In part by Public Utili ty Commissioner Jonel C. Hill. Hill said a lack of business at Myrtle Point justified re moval of the SP agent but the same did not go for the truck ing firm and Railway Express. Hill ordered all three to present a plan whereby Pa cific Motor Trucking and the express agency would have a A 5 commission agent at Myrtle Point. When SP withdraws its agent at Myrtle Point, SP cus tomers will be served at Co- qui le and Powers. Hill said movemen oC trains, railroad tracks md other facilities will not be a fected. ORBITAL SIMULATOR Scientists will bring a piece of space down to earth, using this high vacuum orbital simu lator, , shown in a cutaway of an architect's drawing. The new facility is scheduled to be completed in August, 1961, at Lockheed's "Satellite Center" at Sunnyvale, Calif. The space simulator will be used to test satellites and space craft under near-actual orbital conditions by duplication of the heat absorbed from the scaring radiation of the sun in space, and the freezing, ncar-absolute-zcro cold of space. (UPI Tclephoto) CUSTOM DEER & ELK GUTTING Soparate Cooler Beef and Pork Ask About Our Killing Service HARPER Lockers & Storage SP 3-1713 or SP 2-6381 WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY? Because of sin in the garden, man's eyes were opened, they knew sin, and they knew they were naked. Gen. 3;6,10. Here is a situation where there was only one man and woman, they were naked, and they had the rommon decency to be ashamed. 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