Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 13, 1960, Image 2

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    Guerrillas Ordered To liberate Capital of Laos
Private Education
Seen in Louisiana
New Orleans - flJPD - City
school officials today saw
Louisiana moving toward
state-supported private, ra
cially segregated education.
They also predicted a tiny
band of white parents will
ride out a wave of violence
and abuse and leave their chil
dren in an integrated school.
"The Legislature must have
come to the realization that it
must either accept some form
of integration in the public
schools or operate private
schools," said the school
board's outgoing president,
Lloyd G. Rittiner.
' Crater Greenhouse
I Sold by Meadows
',' Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Mead
" ows, owners and operators of
' the Crater Greenhouse,- 1048
r Crater Lake avc., for a num-
ber of years have sold their
' business to Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Niedermeyer, 2905 Larch St.,
" Medford.
The Meadows plan to assist
'' the new owners for a few
; months, It was reported.
U.S. War Department ex
penditures during 1789-91
were $632,804. In 1944 and
1945 they were $50 billion
each year.
The Legislature meets to
day to vote on an apparently
already doomed move to un
seat the board. The new bill
is virtually the same as a new
law rendered unenforcablc
last week by federal court or
ders. The lawmakers have re
solved to stop paying teachers
at the city's two integrated
schools, but the board has as
sured the teachers they will
be paid.
Medco, Highway
Group in Agreement
Salem - IUPII - The Oregon
highway commission Monday
entered into a cooperative
agreement with the Medford
Corporation for disposition of
a railroad line which stands
in the path of the relocated
Pacific highway in Medford.
The agreement calls upon
the corporation to remove the
ties and rails by July 15, 1961.
The state then builds a truck
road along the same general
route and reconstructs a company-owned
telephone line.
The corporation is respon
sible for maintaining the
truck road, about three
fourths of a mile long.
Warehouse Clearance
30
Off List Price
ON EVERY TIRE IN THE STORE
except Dual 90 and Winter Cleat
670x15 S.T.M. Tyrex
F$Qfl Black
.( 1
Plui Tax and Recappable Tire
fiPl
Type H 1 1 i ''.1 1
mm
I THIS YEAR TRE J I
Medford
Grants Pass
1112 Court Street
1149 Hi way 199
y J
ifr-irr -tt- rr - ...
J -a-1
DEBRIS SEARCHED Firemen search a smouldering saving two of the four children, Billy, 5, and Karen, 3.
corner of the Gale Deardorf home at Merlin for the body The mother rescued the baby, six-months-old Cindy. The
of Sharon Deardorf, 4. The father is in Josephine General family lost everything they owned in the fire,
hospital at Grants Pass with cuts and burns suffered while ' (UPI Telephoto)
Deadlines Set
For Gl Loans
Salem - IUPD - The Oregon
Veterans' Affairs Department
said today the veteran bond
ing amendment approved Nov.
8 sets deadlines for applying
for state GI home and farm
loans.
The deadline for World War
II veterans is Jan. 31, 1980,
Deadline for Korean veterans
is Jan. 31, 1988. There were
no deadlines before.
There also are some.changes
eligibility requirements
that became effective Dec. 6.
Second World War veterans
to be eligible for loans must
have served at least 90 days
between Sept. 15, 1940 and
Dec. 31, 1946. These dates
used to be Sept. 1, 1940 and
Sept. 2, 1945.
Korean vets must have
served at least 90 days be
tween June 25, 1950 and Jan.
31, 1955. , .
In both cases, they must
have been Oregon residents
at time of entry into the serv
ice, or a resident for at least
two years between discharge
and Dec. 31, 1960.
Stocks Go Into Early Slide;
U.S. Steel Gives Up Fraction
New York -iUPfl The stock
market went into an early
slide today.
U. S. Steel gave up a small
fraction in its department,
while Union Carbide dropped
more than a point in the chem
icals. Allied Chemical and Du
Pont held steady.
Ford firmed after an easier
opening, but Chrysler slipped
off a bit and General Motors
was unchanged. American
Motors met support.
Electronics were irregular
ly higher, rails mixed and air
crafts, vending machines and
scattered specials steady to
somewhat higher.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York-IIIFII-Dow-Jonet
final stock averages: 30 in
dustrials 611.49. up 1.04; 20
railroads 127.88, up 0.09; 15
utilitias 97.28, up 0.26, and
65 stocks 202.92. up 0.35.
Sales Monday were about
3.02 million shares com
pared with 4.46 millions
shares Friday.
Monday'i prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 53 i
Alum Co. Am 663h
American Can 333a
American Motors 18
AT&T 95'i
Anaconda Copper 44
Armco Steel fiS1,'
Bendlx Corp. 63
Bethlehem Steel 39 ','
Boeing Air .. 38
Caterpillar Corp 31 V2
Chrysler Corp 393a
Continental Can 34 V
Crown Zellerbach 49 V
Curtiss Wright 17
uow unemlcal loTm
Du Pont 184 ',i
Eastman Kodak 112
Firestone .... 36
General Electric 771i
Regional Edition
Medford
Page 2A
Tribune
MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1960
General Food 74
General Motors 4 Hi
Georgia Pacific 52 Va
Graham Paige IV
Greyhound 20
Gulf Oil 30Si
Horn est alee Mining 47 3i
Idaho Power 51
I. B. M 596
Int. Paper 92i
Johns Manville 56VB
Kennecott Copper 76 14
Lockheed Aircraft 27
Montana Power 29 Vfe
Montgomery Ward 27,i
Nafl Biscuit 72 ti
New York Central IGi
Pac Gas & Elec 68V
Penney, J. C 43!'n
Penn RR lift
Radio Corporation 55 !i
Richfield Oil 86
Safeway 373i
Sears 35
Shell Oil 30 tt
Socony Mobil Oil 38','g
Southern Co. 47 tt
Southern Pacific 20
Standard California 45
Standard Indiana 44 tt
Standard N. J 39B
Sun Mines 7
Texas Co 80 Ti
Texas Gulf Sulfur 17H
Texas Pac Land Trust 16
Transamerlca 25 J,'
Trans World Air 14
Tri-Continental 36 tt
Union Carbide 120tt
union aciric t
United Aircraft 38
United Air Lines 37
U. S. Rubber 433i
U. S. Steel 76 '
r
v 'I 1
. 'v " : , A
Repeat of a sellout!
WARDS
ONTOOMCRV
V1- IF YOU MISSED IT THE FIRST TIME
WsT I
DON'T MISS IT AGAIN
Incredible? Yes . . , but even more mcredible fhe second timel
fabu
ous pure
cashmere coats
MILIUM LINED FOR ALL-WEATHER COMFORT ... SALE STARTS
TOMORROW AT 9:30 A.M. BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN
lait September when we first presented ttiit sale, your response
was overwhelming. As a result, we simply didn't have enough
coals to go around. It has token us 3 months to prepare this
repeat and now, at last, we have more coats. Don't hesitate I
THREE BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS: Burton dosing
the shawl-collar clutch, and the notch-collar clutch.
COSTLY "EXTRAS": Milium metal
insulated lining , . , hand-detailing, rare at this price.
THE FIVE COLORS MOST IN DEMAND:
An incredible choice; black, beige, bamboo, blue, red.
CUSTOM-MADE SIZE RANGES:
Brief 8 to 18 ... or regular misses' sizes 8 to 18.
It's to easy to own one of these coots of Ward . , .
juil tay "Charge It" or pay $9 down,
the balance in convenient payments.
only
) 88
British Women,
Children Told
To Leave City
Vientiane, Laos, -flIPD - The
Communist Pathet Lao com
mand ordered its guerrillas in
to Vientiane today to defend
its against right-wing mili
tary forces and to "liberate"
the royal capital of Luang
Prabang.
A broadcast by the Pathet
Lao clandestine radio in
northern Laos admitted the
leftists were facing "many dif
ficulties" and called for at
tacks to support Vientiane and
against enemy barracks, army
posts and positions in central
and lower Laos.
Premier Elected
The broadcast came soon
after the Laotian Assembly
meeting in the right-wing
rebel stronghold of -Savannak-
het in southern Laos elected
Prince Boun Oun Na Champ-
assak as premier and Gen.
Nosavan Phoumi, military
leader of the rightist forces,
as deputy premier.
The British Foreign office
announced in London it has
ordered British mothers and
young children to leave Vien
tiane. Prince Boun Oum was re
ported to have the full back
ing of King Savang Vatthana
who rules from his own capi
tal at Luang Prabang.
The Communist Pathet Lao
called Boun Oum a "punnet"
of the United States and ord
ered its guerrillas "to increase
their efforts, to attack the
enemy in the rear and to an
nihiliate the enemy forces."
Getting Soviet Aid
There was no indication the
rival neutralist government of
Premier Quinim .Phoisena in
Vientiane would pay any at
tention to the election of
Prince Boun Oum or take note
of the fact the king was back
ing him.
Quinim is getting steadily
increasing aid from the So
viet Union in preparation for
what is expected, eventually
to be a showdown between
the leftist-leaning neutrals and
Phoumi's right-wing forces.
Foundation Picks
Supervisor for
Hotel Restoration
George Brewer, Jackson
ville, has been named to su
pervise restoration work on
the U.S. hotel in Jacksonville
by the board of directors of
the Siskiyou Pioneer Sites
Foundation.
The board announced the
appointment at its monthly
meeting in the historic struc
ture in Jacksonville last
week.
Brewer represents all or
ganizations involved In the
restoration project as a trus
tee of the foundation and a
member of the Jacksonville
city council and Lions club.
In other action, plans for
the hotel's balcony were pre
sented, and a materials list
was discussed. Reconstruction
of the balcony will be the
first part of the project. Prior
to actual construction work,
painted portions of the exte
rior will be sandblasted and
silicone-coated to protect the
original brick surface.
- Volunteer labor, materials
and work supervision will be
used in the project with the
cooperation of the Building
Trades Council of Medford.
Jack Batzer, Medford, will
serve as general contractor.
Jeffrey Shute is the architect,
with Marquess and Marquess
to serve as consulting engi
nees. Cochairmen for the project
are Brewer, Dr. Francis D.
Haines, Ashland, and Jack
Sutton, Grants Pass.
Boivin, Pearson
Asked To Switch
Newport - IUPD- The Lincoln
County Democratic Central
committee has charged Dem
ocratic Sens. Harry Boivin
and Walter J. Pearson with
"promoting Republican con
trol of the Senate" and sug
gested they either reverse
themselves or resign from the
Democratic party.
Oscar S. Knox, chairman of
the committee, said a resolu
tion to that effect was ap
proved Sunday.
Boivin claims enough votes
for 1961 Oregon Senate presi
dent but half of his support
comes from GOP senators.
rearson supports Boivin.
Million More Seen
To Be Unemployed
Washington - IUPD - Another
million workers are virtually
certain to lose their jobs in
December and January, push
ing unemployment over 5 mil
lion, government economists
predicted today. . No drop was
in sight before March.
' Barring a sharp - and un
foreseen - spurt in production
and hiring, the number of
jobless was expected to rise
to 4.2 million this month and
to 5.2 million in January.
Another 100,000 workers were
likely to be laid off in Feb
ruary. The economists painted this
dark picture after the Labor
Department announced Mon
day that unemployment climb
ed by 452,000 last month to
4,031,000, a postwar Novem
ber record. The jobless rate
fell a shade from 6.5 to 6.3
per cent of the labor force.
Seymour Wolfbein, a depu
ty assistant secretary of labor,
said he foresaw "nothing in
Wrong Name Listed
For Fire Chief
In an article about the Cen
tral Point Volunteer fire de
partment in Sunday's Mail
Tribune, the wrong name was
listed as fire chief of the de
partment. The fire chief is Donald D.
Turner, who has served as
chief for the past six years.
the offing which will bring
unemployment down before
the end of winter."
He said the November fig
ures supported -earlier pre
dictions that unemployment
would not drop until March,
falling then to 5 million. He
noted that joblessness usually
jumps in January because
Christmas workers are laid off
and cold weather curtails out
door work.
Boys Arrested for
Three Burglaries '
Two 13-year-old Butte Falls
boys have been lodged in
Jackson county juvenile de
tention home on charges of
burglarizing Scotty's cafe in.
Butte Falls last week end and
the Butte Falls General store
twice, Dec. 3 and on Saturday
night.
The two boys admitted tak
ing $2 in cash from the open
cash register in the store on
Dec. 3 and $8.40 from tha
store Saturday night. They
also- admitted taking $8 and a
large amount of candy, cigars,
cigarettes, beer, peanuts, a
watch and knives from the
cafe.
They were arrested by Jack
son county sheriff's officers
Sunday after they learned the
two boys were missing from
home about the time the latter
two crimes occurred.
RCA VICTOR
AND SIM'S
Present Two New
Stereo Portables
The
MARK 38
Model VP38
$9995
Budget-Priced Total-Sound Stereo
High-Fidelify Portable "Vietrola"
Three speakers, including two Total-Sound
wing-out, detachable speakers
Powerful amplifier
Automatic 4-Speed record changer
e Stereo balance control
Available in CharcoalWhite
' .
The Mark 33
Model VP33-$ 149.95
Deluxe Total-Sound Stereo
High-Fidality Portable "Vietrola'
, Three speakers, including two Total-Sound
swing-out, detachable speakers
Powerful amplifier
Automatic 4-Speed record changer
Diamond stylus
Available in GreenGrey, GreyTan
TIME PAY PLAN IF DESIRED
ii
Ai.
w
iUTinariMii'crHEwcD.oRKottr S
218 EAST MAIN
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