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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1962)
Titov Heads Homeward QUICK Turn to our ad on the classified page . . . then hurry down! WE'RE OPEN TONITE 'TIL 9:00 DEAN & TAYLOR PONTIAC CO. 6lh and Grape L GLIDDEN PAINT Famous Glidden's Latex Paint Spred Satin Colors Gallons Only. Reg. 4.99-SALE Check Our BARGAIN TABLE! Odds & Ends Paints In discontinued colors Midden Endurance Outside White House ROLLERS & PANS Um& pans I mm WALLPAPER CO Stock Patterns OPEN FRIDAY COLORAMA 315 East Main Kff.lWV''Sr.y rfiTmaa Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Davies WIN FREE COLOR T.V. From White City iu?m SAVE a : 4. If Stop wm w SUPER SAVE SERVICE White Nevw York UPI Soviet cos monaut Ghcrman Titov said today that his 13-day jyisit to the United States had con vinced him that Americans want "peace and the cutting off of the armaments race." He said his meetings with U.S. astronauts John H. Glenn Jr. and Alan Shepard "strengthened my belief that there will be enough room for all in outer space." Sightieeing Tour Planned Titov and his wife, Tamara, left for Halifax, Nova Scotia, on the first leg of their return trip to Moscow. At Halifax the cosmonaut will take a 15 hour sightseeing tour of the city at the invitation of civic and Nova Scotian officials. Titov, in Russian, said he wished to thank Americans "who invited me to visit sev eral U.S. cities and also those who have sent me gifts, cor dial letters and cables with words of friendly greeting." He said he believed "the American people as well as the peoples of the Soviet Union . . . don't want a devas tating nuclear war." Titov's plane will leave Halifax at 2:30 a.m., local time, Saturday and will make fuel stops in Gander, New foundland, and Prestwick, Scotland, en route to Moscow where the plane is due late Saturday. The 27-year-old spaceman's day Thursday was typically varied. He went from the Princeton University campus Velvet Rcg.6.n.... 4.49 4.69 Paint Reg. 6.43 BOAT PAINT Quarts Only S969 Reg. $4.80 Qt. 6m Qt. L J 0 off! NITEI PAINT CENTER Ph. SP 2-4564 t . . H a v-1 '1 3 Next FREE Drawing May 17th You Havan't Entered, Be Sure by for Your FREE T.V. Ticket City Across From Hospital to the prize ring at St. Nicho las Arena in Manhattan. At Princeton, he spoke to abou't) 1,000 students on the problems of man in space, such as weightlessness, space ship control, eating and sleep ing. "It is possible to l!ve in outer space as you can see for yourself," Titov told the students. Titov, who last August or bited the earth 17 times, later told a rally at the sports arena his "number one impression" of the American people was their "friendly attitude." The affair, sponsored by the National Council of American Soviet Friendship, drew a cheering crowd estimated at 4,000 by a Soviet official and 2,500 by a spokesman for the arena. Titov, -standing in a ring whose canvas had been re placed by a red carpet, de clared; "The time will come when Soviet and American cosmonauts and astronauts will fly to Venus, to Mars, to other planets as friends and partners in this daring ven ture for the good of mankind." The forest industries in the United States employ 1,375. 000 full - time employes and have an annual payroll of more than $5.5 billion. Obituaries ZUBA A. STACK .. A requiem mass for Mrs. Zuba A. Slack, 64, of 4;!8'i North Main St., Ashland, who died Wednesday, will be of fered at 11:30 a.m. Saturday in Our Lady of the Mountain Catholic church at Ashland by the Rev. William S. Walsh. Recitation of the Holv Rosary will be at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Ashland Mortuary Chapel, Fourth and C sts. Committal will be in Mountain View cemetery, with Ashland Mort uary in charge of arrange ments. Mrs. Stack was born June 22, 1897, in Missouri, and had lived in Ashland since 1046. She was a retired teacher from the Phoenix public schools. Survivors include a daugh ter, Mrs. Ralph Leach, Ash land; a sister, Mrs. J. D. Shcp pard, Ft. Collins, Colo.; a brother, Archie Doolin, Boone, Colo.; three grandchildren and three great grandchildren. RUDOLPH H. CLAUSSEN Rudolph II. Clausscn, 851, of 1016 Mira Mar dr., Med ford, died yesterday in a local hospital. Funeral services will be private at 10 a.m. Saturday in Conger-Morris downtown chapel. The Rev. Melvin W. Dixon of St. Luke's Metho dist church will officiate. Committal will be private. Mr. Clausscn was born Sept. 13, 1876, in Heide, Germany, and moved lo the United States when he was 9 years old. He lived in Medford since 1931, moving here from Crown Point, Ind. He was a member of the Eagles Lodge. He was married Jan. 10, lnofi. in Hebron, Ind.. to Anna Marcison, who survives. Other survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Harold Loop er, Medford; and two broth ers, Herman Claussen. Crown Point, Ind.; and Gus Clausscn, Tampa, Fla. Casket bearers will Include Murray Bell, Jerry Clark, Robert Forbes. Jack Dough- 33 SERVICE STATION Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Davics from Eagle Point, Oregon, are shown with their new color television set they won at the White City Super Save Service Station on the April 19th drawing. Mr. Davics has lived in E.igic Point for the past 36 years and is retiring this year from hit teaching job at the Eagle Point High School. We wish Mr. Davies the best of luck on his forthcom ing retirement. and Now STATIONS Entrance O O Stocks Break Up Chain of Five Consecutive Dips New York - 0!PD - Stocks inched forward in fairly ac tive trading today, breaking a chain of five consecutive de clines. Autos firmed with Ford up more than a point and chem icals were higher featuring Union Carbide up about 2 and Eastman Kodak nearly 1. Steels were erratic with In land off roughly 1 and Jones & Laughlin up about a point. DOW JONES AVERAGES New York - t'fll Dow Jones final stock average.: 30 industrials 647.23, off 7.47; 20 railroads 135.46. off 1.38; 15 utilities 121.20. off 1.89, and 65 stocks 223.25. off 2.73. Sales Thursday were about 4.73 million shares compared with 3.67 million shares Wednesday. Thursday', prices on .lock.: Allied Chemical Alum Co Am American Air Line. American Can American Motor. - AT&T. American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Armco .. - -- Bendix Corp Bethlehem Steel Boelne. Air Brunswick Caterpillar Corp Chrysler Corp Coca Cola CBS Continental Can Crown Zellcrhach Crucible Steel Curliss Wrlftht Dow Chemical - Du Pont Eastman Kodak Firestone - - Tord General Electric - selected 2'i st; II)1, 42'i 15Ji 117'a 38 . 44 SS'i 2'.J 37 .. 35 i .. 48 , .. 90 ' j ... 38 '4 .. 42', .. 40 i .. 17', ... W, .. 52 .221 ...lOS'i ... 3, ... 92, .. 70',. .. 82 .. ill'. ... 45'. ... 27', .. 3!), .. 40', .. 3H, .453 .. 31", .. 49', ... 78 'i ... 42'i ... 21-, ... 85', ... 38', ... 31. ... 87', is', .. 38', .. 30', .. 45' .. 35", .. IB I, .. .11', .. 79 J, .. 55 .. 38". .. 4B', .. B2i, .. 37 .. SO'i .. 48', 25'. .. IB'. .. 58'i .. 53', .. S3', .. 7', .. 53', .. 17', .. IB'i .. 2B'i .. 421, .. M!i .. 44 ..100 .. 31 .. 48-', .. 29 H .. 44 .. 48 '4 .. 55 'i oeneral Fond General Motors C.corfila Pacific Greyhound Gulf Oil . Homestake Idaho Power I.B.M Int Paper Johns Manvllle Kennecott Copper - Lockheed Aircraft .. Martin Co Merck Montana Power - Montgomery Ward National Biscuit New York Central Northern Pacific Pac Ga. Elec Penney. J. C Penn RR Pernia Cement Phillips Procter & Gamble Radio Corporation Rlrhfleld Oil (xdl Safeway Sears . Shell Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Co Southern Paciric Sperry Rand Standard California Standard Indiana Standard N. J. Sun Mines Texas Co. Texas Gulf Sulfur Texas Pacilic Land Trust Thloknl ' Trans-America Trans World Airline. Tri-continental Union Carbide Union Pacific United Aircraft United Air Lines (xd) U. S. Plywood U. S, Rubber U. S. Steel West Bank Corp WestlnRhnuse erty, Jim Henry, and Ralph Bross. ELMER VANLINDT Ashland - Funeral services for Elmer L. Vanlindt, 73, of 287 Morton St., Ashland, who died in Vancouver, Wash., Tuesday, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Monday in Litwiiler's Ml. View chapel. The Rev. B. J. Holland will officiate. Interment will be in Memory Gardens Memorial park, Med ford. Mrs. Vanlindt was born June 15. 1888, in Ballingcr, Tex. He moved to Klamath Falls In 1932, and to Ashland in 1948. He was a retired Southern Pacific railroad en gineer, and a member of the Brotherhood of Railroad En gineers. Survivors include his wid ow, Mary Vanlindt, Ashland; two sons, William Vanlindt, San Jose, Calif., and Elmer L. Vanlindt Jr., Happy Camp, Calif.; one daughter, Mrs. Bcrnire Thorpe, Weed, Calif.; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Helen Leach, Corona, Calif.; one sister, Mrs. Addic Holder, Olga, Wash.; seven grandchil dren and one great grand child. ANNA C. ROBERTS Anna C. Roberts. 52. of 247R Spring si.. Medford, wife of Roscoe Roberts, died in a local hospital Thursday. She was a charter member of the Roxv Ann Grange and active in the Oregon and National Grange. Funeral arrange ments will be announced by Perl Funeral home. JOSEPH c7TROCH!NSKI Joseph C. Troehtnski. 66, a resident of the Veterans Ad ministration Domiciliary, died Thursday, lie was a veteran of World War 1 and World War II Funeral arrangements will be announced by Perl Funeral home. OTTO F. KONSCHOT Otto F. Konschot. 77, of 1.1SR Siskiyou blvd., Medford, died at his home early this morning Funeral arrange ments will he announced by Perl Funeral home. CHARLrs R. HODGDON CharlPs 1 lloi;grlon, 89. of Rogue River, died yestgrdny at the home of his daughter, Mrs. John Shoemaker. Q Funeral services will be held at noon Saturday at the ) rhtirrh nf r!,i4 l,t P. T?.-. Politics: By United Press International Ex-Congressman Charles O. Porter and House Speaker Robert Duncan continued to '.hammer away at each other with Oregon s primary elec tion just a week away. They are two il the four candidates for the hotly-contested fourth district congres sional nomination. Duncan Monday night re jected a statement by Porter they had no issues between them and said Porter had ad vocated recognition of Red China. Porter claimed Dun can was "parroting the very distortions which he helped me to refute in the 1960 cam paign." Duncan cited 1959 news re ports quoting Porter as favor ing recognition of and trade with Red China and said "if the congressman has changed his views on these issues, let him say so and I will con gratulate him." Porter Replies Porter, in Eugene Thurs day night, said "Democratic voters might well be skeptical of Bob Duncan suddenly dis covering that he and I appar ently disagree on important foreign policy matters. On these closing days of the cam paign, as candidates strike for advantage, Bob knows my for eign policy views have not changed, just as he knows that these views are not what he represents them to be. If there were a basic disagreement be tween us, it would have come ur before now." Porter added, "Duncan would do better to explain to Bjorklund To Speak AISOCTFA Event Norman Bjorklund, chief forester of the Industrial For estry association, Portland, will speak at a meeting of the Southern Oregon Conserva tion and Tree Farm associa tion at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the Rogue Valley Country club. A social hour is sched uled at 7 p.m. Bjorklund will discuss legis lation affecting the public timber supply and other top ics, according to Dale Pren tice, secretary - manager of SOCTFA. Bjorklund also will report on the House commit tee hearings on S. 174 which have been under way this week in Washington, D.C. Dr. Arthur Kreisman, Southern Oregon college, has been invited to attend the meeting to discuss the propos. ed home rule charter for Jack son county. This will be the final meet ing of the organization until next fall, Prentice said, and i all members were urged to at tend to be brought up to date ; on association activities. man, of the Church of God, and the Rev. Roland Stewart, of the Free Methodist church, Medford, will officiate. Com mittal will be in Woodville cemetery, Rogue River, with Conger-Morris Funeral direc tors in charge of arrange ments. Mr. Hodgdon was born April 20, 1873, in Benton county, Iowa, and had lived in Oregon for 74 years, the past 16 years in Rogue River. He was a member of the Free Methodist church. He was married April 20, 1902, in Portland, Ore., to Ottie Ruth Adams, who survives. Other survivors include two sons Bernard Horigdon, Port land, Ore.; and Lewis Hodg don, Ncwborg, Ore.; two daughters, Mrs. Thomas Con ner, Placentia, Calif.; and Mrs. John Shoemaker Rogue River: 12 grandchildren, 28 great grandchildren, and three great great grandchil dren. Casket bearers will include Clarence Arnold. Floyd Shroy er, LcRoy Calkins, Harold Lawes, R. S. Snider, and the Rev. George Hobson. DOWNTOWN SIXTH AND CENTRAL NOTHING DOWN $2 a month 0nAcp,p.dr Duncan Democratic voters why as speaker of the House in 1961 he permitted the daylight time bill to pass in . . . shock ing disregard of what the peo ple of Oregon voted at the polls on four occasions." Other fourth district candi dates are State Sen. Robert Straub and Eugene fireman Pat Flynn. Unander Speaks Sig Unander, one of six Re publicans seeking t' e U.S. senatorial nomination, criti cized the "administration's current attacks on business" in a Portland speech today. Unander, former state treas urer, said that "if, because of these attacks, investors shy away from business invest ments, if businessmen curtail present expansion and moder nization plans to meet for eign competition, and instead, concentrate on automation to lower labor costs, employ ment in this country could shrink by a million or more." Sen. Wayne Morse said in Roseburg Thursday he did not approve the proposal for For Regional Edition Medford&JTribune MEDFORD, OREGON, Foreign Briefs RED CHINA ISSUES 'SERIOUS WARNING' London - Wll - Communist can military plane flew over "China s territorial air space near the Hsisha islands of Kwangtung Province Thursday, The Communist New China News Agency said the for eign ministry in Peiping had 202nd serious warning about such overflights. LIGHTNING KILLS SIX IN IRAN Tehran, Iran - lUPII - A lightning bolt killed six persons in Iran's southern Province of Mamsani, reports reaching here said today. ADENAUER ASKS PRICE HIKE BE RESCINDED Bonn, Germany - IUNI - Chancellor Konrad Adenauer asked representatives of the West German automobile in dustry Thursday to rescind recent price increases. Informed sources said it appeared unlikely the industry would accede to his request. PORTUGAL ORDERS RELEASE OF INTERNEES Lisbon - IIPII - The Portuguese Overseas Ministry Thurs day ordered the release of Indian subjects interned following the takeover of Goa "in accordance with agreements reach ed" by intermediaries for the two governments, according to an announcement here. It said the Indians must leave Portuguese soil within three months. OUT On if 20" 2'a 3 i" j n - Porter est Service development of the Waldo like area in the Cascades. Hc.said the revised plan failed to say, for each resource, "what will be done, why it will be done, where it will be done, when it 'vill be done and how much will be done." He said he could find no hint as to why the modest boundaries for the area have been further reduced. He called the area one of Ore gon's "rough and uncut gems and proposed "we handle Waldo as carefully as a gem expert would in polishing the Hope Diamond. It is a gem that must be mounted just right in its setting." Governor's Race State Sen. Walter Pearson, a Democratic candidate for governor, said property taxes are one thing that is keeping business from coming into Oregon. He said between 1950 and 1960 the per capita prop erty taxes went up 104 per cent in Oregon. His primary rival, Atty. Gen. Robert Thornton, in a talk at The Dalles, pledged Page 2A FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1962 China charged that an Ameri been authorised to issue its INVITE EVIQTHEH TO DINNER Her Special Day iii mm W&mt CANDLE ROOM Sunday 4 P.M. Till 11 P.M. DINING ROOM 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. HOTEL BEDFORD MTiOTihtlllitiir--' fli.i If TITAN ROTARY H. P. MOWER 88 Cotnp. Value 54.95 "Biggest mowrr value on the market," say our buy ers. fo many quality fea tures; extra-close trim, chrome-plated handle, others. Heavy steel, rust itistunt enamel finish. Feud Continues more economy in state gov ernment. He said Gov. Mark Hatfield has failed to live up to campaign promises of four years ago to reduce state ex panses rather than raise tax es. Robert W. Chandler, Re publican candidate for Con gress in the second district, criticized incumbent Demo crat Al Ullman in Pendleton Thursday. He chided Ullman for taking credit for introduc ing legislation for a two-piece system for wheat. The Bend publisher said it was first in troduced in 1935. He also said Ullman was unable to get the legislation passed. In Tillamook GOP Senate Candidate R. F. Cook of Scott Mills Thurs day night challenged the statement ' y Rep. Edwin Dur no (R-Ore.) that Durno is more opposite from Sen. Wayne M Morse (D-Ore.) than any of the other five Republican sen ate candidates. Cook, an avowed "Goldwat er conservative," said that Durno takes "the same posi tion as Morse on one import ant issue, that of foreign aid. I state that foreign aid should COUPON FLINT SANDPAPER 5 iheeti of any grit flint sandpaper regular 35c save 83 NOW ONLY Sc with this coupon. INTERIOR FLAT COMTlNrKltt FINISHES LATEX Quick tirylntj entt edor.frte. Wash- cHQD ' r remr r tvn In one coat beautiful J Q< eaPrI 'ors. i "c"o"u7o""J I t roiiii Diuaii . No. 9201 4" nylon 1 house paint brush. Mfg. suggested retail $7.00, our sale price $4.95. SAVE 1 4 31 tartw riwi v so "Jb7 with this coupon GLIDDEN'S Cr GENERAL PAINTS SSI $39G9 iSPBIW $1-49 Qt. SAVE 30 to 70 This Week Only I - , COUPON 1 QUART 4 HOIR ENAMEL INTERIOR OR EXTERIOR for patio furniture, boats, bathrooms, etc. 19 colors, full gloss silatone enamel. S2.95 value, our sale price $1.99. SAVE $1.73. 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